Working with OnenessThe Golden Sufi Center, 02/05/2002 - 172 páginas Humanity has been given access to the secrets of oneness, but we need to learn how to work with them. Working with Oneness brings mysticism into the center of the marketplace, into the world of business and technology, and shows how we can work with it in everyday life. The dynamic energy of oneness has the potential to heal the planet and revolutionize life more than we can imagine, but it requires our individual participation and awareness to become fully alive. The energy of oneness is already present but waiting to be lived, and Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee provides a blueprint for working consciously with this energy. As we understand how our consciousness affects the whole fabric of life, the potential for real global change comes alive. Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee stresses the need to change from hierarchical, patriarchal power structures to organic patterns that allow for the free flow of energy and ideas. Through these patterns the dynamic energy of oneness can become part of everyday life. Working with Oneness includes a number of additional important topics, including: the changing energy structure of the planet and how to work with it; the power of individual consciousness; the danger of the desire for spiritual security; the return of joy to everyday life; the awakening of the heart of the world; a new understanding of magic; the use of the imagination; and mystical participation in life with the energy of oneness. Working with Oneness offers guidance on how to work with the energy of oneness, to learn how to participate in life free of the patterns of the past, so that the divine can come alive in every moment of every day. Working with Oneness is mystical activism at its most potent. “There is a growing and eager audience waiting for a vision of unity consciousness... Working with Oneness offers a salutary antidote to worn-out antagonisms. It challenges readers to join other kindred souls in a mystical activism that can bring new hope to humanity.” —Spirituality & Health “A book filled with wonder and the kind of insights that can leap out to your heart and gladden you for having read them. It's words are simple and straightforward—always a blessing—but its message it the most vital and important for the time in which we live. I recommend it.” —David Spangler, author, Blessings: the Art and the Practice |
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... William Chittick and Peter Lamborn Wilson, p. 79. 2. See Sara Sviri, The Taste of Hidden Things, pp. 72–73. 3. The ninth-century Sufi al-Hakîm at-Tirmidhî writes of the “forty righteous men”: “It is due to them that the denizens of the ...
... William Chittick, The Sufi Path of Knowledge, pp. 309–331. 4. Ibn 'Arabî, The Seven Days of the Heart, trans. Pablo Beneito and Stephen Hirtenstein, p. 44. 5. Rûmî, Light upon 144 Working with Oneness.
... William. The Complete Writings of William Blake. Ed. Geoffrey Keynes. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1969. Chittick, William C. The Sufi Path of Knowledge. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1989. Chuang Tzu. The Book of ...
... William Chittick and Peter Lamborn Wilson (1982), used with permission of Paulist Press (www.paulistpress.com); Pir Publications, for permission to quote from Atom from the Sun of Knowledge, translated by Lex Hixon (1993); Coleman Barks ...