How Evolution Helps Purify Our Essence And Brings Closer Union With God




 Whence we have come, journeyed into the darkness and uncertainty—all for what? Who are we, and where did we come from? What are we doing here? I can categorically tell you what is on your mind with 75% accuracy: you are drifting towards the epic universal evolutionary tales that govern the bedrock of philosophical and religious thinking. We can choose to go that length in complicated intellectual discourse and still not do any good for both our mental synthesis, yes, for the both of us. We can choose to delve into the depths of scholastic dichotomy, revel in facts, swim in postulations, and drown in wishful theoretical propositions that would only feed our imagination with wishful thinking and mentally masturbate us.

Maybe you needed the help or not, but I'm willing to offer it in full service of the heart, to answer the self-mirroring questions as outlined at the beginning of the first paragraph. Who are we? We are emissaries and droplets of infinite essence. Where did we come from? We came from bliss, from stasis, oneness, and descended forth. What are we doing here? We have descended into darkness to expand the frontiers of creation, to extend the territories of the bliss that we came from. An earthly translation is that we came to bring heaven down to earth. There you go, the meaning that explains everything: We are minuscule and tiny portions of the divine essence seeking to remember ourselves after the descent so as to fine-tune our energy to reconnect with the essence and receive the necessary guidance to lead us in replicating the bliss and the stasis from above.



Now, let’s realign with the intent of the article—a documentation of the necessity of evolution in the transmutation of our God nature into a refined version that is in perfect similitude with the parent essence, of which we are a part. Evolution is the key; it is the singular evidence of the flux of the universe outlining the purpose of everything: to dwell in bliss, to work in bliss, to achieve in bliss, and to manifest in bliss. Every aspect of our being, emotion, and action should be aligned with bliss, exuding the effortlessness of creation in the “stasis of diligence.” A quote I once came up with (sorry if I'm bothering you with one of my quotes—ugh, it's almost becoming a habit, or is it already?) is: “Evolution is the only profit, and energy is the true currency.” This was what it meant to be enlightened. Evolution is the singular reason why we are here. Even the young Xxxtentacion attributed this fact during one of his interviews, stating that the singular purpose of why we are here is to evolve and create—a thought that can only be as true as it gets. To evolve and create—the thesis is even analogously backed up in some religious and spiritual circles. To evolve means we have to keep stripping and fine-tuning ourselves into much purer—or for the sake of religious convention, “lighter”—forms. Evolution, in this context, means defeating our demons and spiritual hindrances and whatever embargo is holding us down from attaining our true spiritual potential. This comes from a concentrated effort of our attention into our core of being in innocence and acceptance before we can orchestrate any change from within ourselves.



Evolution is the transmutation of our essence, refining our divine signature into becoming one with the divine state of the universal Father. Yes, I know what you might think, and it’s quite a truthful thought: if we came from the Father, then we should of course embody the essence of the Father, who, by the way, exists in “bliss.” So why should we have to refine ourselves to become like the Father again? Did anything happen to us? This question obeys all the complete parameters of good critical thinking and quickly beckons to the freethinker. The answer lies in understanding the need for the alchemy of God in the first place. The alchemy of God here is in tandem with a popular Carl Jung quote that the purpose of man is to liberate God from the darkness of matter. But let’s not stray too far; let’s remain within the conversational sequence of rationalizing how we are not in complete likeness of the Father from whom we descended. This lack of form similitude results from why we descended from God in the first place. The parent essence, God, wanted to expand. To do this, it had to send offshoots of itself into the dark mist of nothingness. These offshoots landed in the dark mists, confused, and lacked a remembrance of themselves. In this instability of the soul came forth behavioral manifestations that echoed an SOS: “I don’t know myself.” The chaotic experience this soul (God essence) goes through makes it begin to search for answers. This is the answer to the prevailing question within this paragraph: the reason why the offshoots of God didn’t carry the same height of bliss was because they had to journey into the darkness to alchemize the God project and then beam their light within the darkness, from where expansion continues onward. Close analogy? We came to create heaven on earth.

Evolution is the process of transcendence of our divine essence into higher states of purity on the journey to getting close to the BLISS state of the parent essence (God). It is a necessary rite on the journey to knowing and attaining oneness with the universe. Evolution is the necessary prerequisite for us to attain mastery of the darkness within us by becoming self-aware and intentional about our daily affairs. It is a necessary sacrifice, one that can take a person through the throes of hell sometimes, but only for the purpose of burning off the chaff that has identified itself with the individual. Evolution is the mandatory path of self-reconfiguration, which entails uniting us with our authentic individualism. The 20th-century renowned philosopher Carl Jung called this process the path of individuation, where one focuses the attention of the conscious into evaluating the darkness in the unconscious and consciously figures out how to alchemize it into a state of resolution where it unites with the conscious and exudes, in one single personality, the complete height of individualism—which is “the birth of the soul.” Note that conscious here means the periphery of our awareness: our state of directly comprehending our environment with our awareness of self, while the unconscious refers to the dark underparts of our mind that our consciousness is formed upon and that we are not directly aware of in its actions on our conscious mind.



Evolution helps us attain the clarity needed to consciously know that certain thought patterns and mentalities are not in tune with the wisdom of the divine. It naturally affords us a change of perspective, bringing us into awareness of more clarity and self-knowledge of power. Evolution sometimes is not a friendly or trivial affair; its requisites may demand us to let go of aspects of our current persona. Our human nature may strive to resist, leading to intense amounts of pain arising from a lack of willpower and resolve to let go. In all of this, evolution always means well, for it is an attribute of divine will working in the intelligence of a benefit for the individual and the collective.

One more time for that quote: “Enlightenment is to simply understand that energy is the true currency and evolution is the only profit.” Being open-minded to evolution may lead us down a rabbit hole of not-so-pleasant experiences, but we can be assured that it is for our spiritual benefit and expanding our glory.




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