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Church of the Divine Sage
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About Me ----
The Church of the Divine Sage
was founded in early 2001 when I had an experience that was
to change my life forever: As others have found through their own
paths, I made contact with the Divine through Salvia divinorum.
I now wanted to share what I have found with as many who care to
listen, to let others know that there is life, consciousness, and
awareness beyond the body, that there is far more to purpose this
world and each of our precious lives than most of us could imagine,
that essential spiritual evolution can be found through love,
compassion, and respect for all humans, and can be found through the
careful, ritualistic use of the Holy Sacrament of Salvia divinorum
when combined with deep meditation practice. I now hope that
by shining as
brightly as I can, through example, in some small way, that I can help to make the world a
more loving, compassionate, peaceful, and non-trivial place than it
was before.
This certainly isn't the only way to find sacred connection, but it
was my way, and it has been the way and religion of countless
Mazatec shaman for thousands of years.
There is no better explanation i have found of the power of what
this sacred plant has revealed to us than James Austin's Zen and the Brain, where he
describes the following 18 characteristics describing Kensho. "Kensho"
means seeing into one's true nature, and corresponds to
enlightenment in Zen:
1. Beyond rationality. The subject later cannot explain the
episode logically in terms of any previous personal experience.
2. Intuitive insight. The insight conveys not only universal
knowledge but clarifies issues of personal existence.
3. Authoritativeness. Depths of truth are revealed with the
very same certainty that attends drinking cold water. No logical
argument refutes them.
4. Affirmation. The basic mood and tone is strongly positive
toward all existence. It remains positive even though the person may
later use words to describe certain qualities of the experience
which are cast in negative terms.
5. Sense of the beyond. The experience may convey a subtle
sense that it is rooted elsewhere. (And afterward, it does
illustrate the paradox of being both "Reality" and otherworldly.)
6. Impersonal tone. Among Buddhists, a sudden enlightenment
makes no References to the image of Buddha, nor to any notion that
his person has intervened in any way. In this respect it differs
from a few mystical experiences set in a Christian context in which
Christ or the Virgin Mary are reported to be present.
7. Feeling of exaltation. The experiant feels an infinite
expansion of new attributes and capabilities.
8. Momentariness. The episode is abrupt in onset and brief.
9. External unity. The whole world is experienced as one. The
central theme of this unity is that there are no subject/object
distinctions, or any other distinctions among parts of the huge
whole.
10. Changes in the boundaries of time and space. Not only is
clock time absent, but a sense of "eternity" pervades the
experience. Moreover, a sense of "infinity" is conveyed, because the
old mental boundaries drop out that had been previously affiliated
with notions that physical space is somehow limited.
11. Ineffability. The experience seems impossible to
communicate, because it eludes all words and familiar descriptive
categories.
12. Objectivity and reality. The experience is "realer than
real." The true nature of things is seen into, things as they really
are.
13. Subsequent persisting positive changes in attitude and
behavior. The experience changes the way the subjects think
about themselves and about the rest of the world, and it transforms
their behavior.
14. Perfection. The world revealed is awesome in its
perfection. This gives rise to the sense that it is sacred and is to
be revered.
15. Beyond doing. There is a distinct disinclination to
intervene. Nothing remains to be done in the face of such
perfection.
16. Sense of release. Fear vanishes. And, as all the other
psychic ambivalences of the I-Me-Mine drop off, the experiant feels
a sense of total mental and physical relief.
17. Memorable quality. The experience strikes deep, and has
great impact, and is highly valued. Some fragments of the whole
remain indelible. But though the person can later dip into the
surface of memory by an effort of will, the whole experience itself
remains a gift which cannot be duplicated either in thought or in
any other kind of mental imagery.
18. Unimaginable. The experience is inconceivable in advance.
True, internal absorption does provide one shallow intimation of the
way the physical self can drop off. But Kensho thrusts deeper. The
experiant will be astonished by the way it cuts off all the psychic
constructs of the I-Me-Mine and leaves only objective vision in its
place.
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