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Neville Goddard 05-03-1963
THE SHAPING OF THE
UNBEGOTTEN
We are
told in Paul's letters to the Ephesians (5:1): "Be imitators of God as
dear children." So, we must find out what God did. We are told: "He
called a thing not seen as though it were and the unseen became seen."
(Romans 4:17) The one who had the vision (and I turn to one, that is
Blake) and Blake said: "Many suppose that before the Creation, all was
solitude and chaos. This is the most pernicious idea that can enter the
mind, as it takes away all sublimity from the Bible and limits all
existence to creation and to chaos." But listen to the next statement:
"Eternity Exists and All things in Eternity, Independent of Creation,
which was an act of Mercy." No scientist today believes that. They
think we came out of chaos; they think the whole thing began to evolve
out of something that wasn't. And here one with vision tells us:
"Eternity Exists, and all things in eternity, Independent of creation,"
which creative act was a merciful act.
Now what does he mean by it? Well, I have
had a vision and I know that Blake is telling the truth, so I am
telling the truth based upon my vision. Everything in this world is
forever. What you now see, what former people saw, what they are going
to see - everything is forever. These are parts of the eternal
structure of eternity; this body, this little lectern, everything in
the world is but a little part of the eternal structure of eternity. It
didn't come into being at all, it always was - all the stars,
everything on earth, all part of the eternal structure of eternity.
Now he speaks of creation as "an act of
Mercy." And here you are as a body, I am as a body, and all these
bodies, everything - and then God, said: "Let us make man in our image,
after our likeness." (Genesis 1:26) For here man is part of the
structure of the universe. But here God is saying: "Let us make man in
our image after our likeness," and that is "an act of Mercy." And so he
takes man as I would take a tree and say to you: "Let us make a tree,
and mold it into our being, after our likeness. Let us give to it the
qualities that we possess - our creativity." It can't create in itself;
it is simply the universe, and it's all part of the structure. The
whole vast world is simply the universe, and it's all part of the
structure. And God is shaping himself now - God, the un-begotten, is
begetting himself. And so he begets himself in me, he begets himself in
you. When he completes the act of begetting himself in us, we are God!
We are that which could now use the same structure to beget anything
that we can conceive of. So God takes man, part of the eternal
structure of the universe, and begets himself in man, and when he
begets himself in man, the state begotten is the one who begot it. God
and man - or the thing that came out of man by God's act - are God.
Now, I am told: let the individual
imitate God as a dear child. I am told: everything is. "Eternity
Exists, and all things in Eternity, Independent of Creation." Now I am
going to create. God was the creator. It all exists independent of
creation. So how would I do it? I can't think of anything then that
doesn't exist. I think of you in unnumbered states of mind - when you
like me, dislike me, you're sympathetic, unsympathetic - I can think of
you in unnumbered ways. But I want to create something now, I want to
create something that is lovely for myself, so I bring you into my
mind's eye, and I bring another in my mind's eye, and then I have in my
imagination a little party - say a cocktail party, a tea, a dinner -
and I control the imagery that I have brought into my mind, for all
exists in eternity. But I bring you without your knowledge, without
your consent. Then I control the entire moment of time - make it a
minute, or five minutes, anytime, not too long - I control it. But I so
arrange the imagery that it implies something other than what it was
prior to the arrangement. I bring you all into my mind's eye and I
allow you to hear something that is taking place. I allow you to see me
as you would see me were things as I desire them to be, and so I am
begetting something. I am actually shaping myself - the unformed - upon
the formed. For all things in this world are already part of the
structure of eternity, every being. So I bring a being - it is part of
the structure; I bring another being - it's a man; another being - it's
a woman, and I so arrange them in my mind's eye that when I put them
into that form, they see me as they would see me were my dream
realized. It's my dream I am begetting, but I am begetting on the
structure of the universe that which did not exist before.
So you and I as living souls did not
exist, but the structure - this garment - always existed. These
garments existed, everything in the world existed, but we - living
souls - did not, and God begot us, begot us just like himself to become
a creative being just as he is. You take the same structure and then
create and create and create. So: "Be ye imitators of God as dear
children." How did he create? Well, this is how he creates: "He called
a thing that was not seen as though it were seen, and the unseen became
seen." (Romans 4:17) That's how he does it.
Let me go back and requote the brilliant
Blake. And may I tell you: I can't read anyone in this world that I
would put even near him. I go back into the Bible - yes, he's equal to
all the great prophets of the Bible. He brought it into our tongue
today so we can grasp and understand it. He said: "Many suppose that
before Creation all was Solitude and Chaos. This is the most pernicious
Idea that can enter the Mind, as it takes away all sublimity from the
Bible and Limits all existence to Creation and Chaos." "Eternity Exists
and All things in Eternity, Independent of Creation, which was an act
of Mercy." Just imagine: if God did not take this that was himself, and
through his wonderful intense desire on his part, create his image out
of that which was, we would not be here as living, creating beings -
creating and miscreating, but creating. If we miscreate unnumbered
times, we can still create. A miscreation is still a creation. I bring
war, revolution, all these horrible things in the world - it still is
creating. And eventually he who started this process will bring us into
his own likeness, and we will be one with God. But just as he did it
out of things that are eternal parts of eternity -that this body and
this little thing here that will seemingly decay - and this will decay,
the garment will decay, all will decay. It does not, really - that's
the great illusion, it is forever. Everything in this world is a part
of the eternal structure of the universe. And out of all these parts
God then said: "Let us make man," for we already existed, like a tree.
We don't make man out of chaos; man exists - it's part of the
structure, part of the universe. But now, let us make man as part of
the structure of the universe, and let us now make him after our image,
after our likeness. And so he takes man and makes man into his image.
Now we go back into the Book of Genesis
and see what he does with man. A word used in the book is "the tree,"
"the Tree of Life" - where man in some strange way is expelled, because
he may eat of the Tree of Life before he's prepared. Well, if you have
a concordance (I have James Strong's Concordance) the word "tree" is
defined as: "the spine, backbone, the carpenter, the gallows." Who is
hanging on the gallows? (It is called, "the gallows.") This word, "the
tree," is the gallows; it's the spine, the backbone, the carpenter - in
other words, the builder, the potter, the creator. There he hangs upon
the tree. Well, the tree is the spine, it is the backbone. And after
unnumbered playings on this calling it "man," he brings out of this
something that is entirely different - it is himself. It is shaped
because he is the unbegotten, and he is shaping himself upon a form.
Just as I would take the potter and I would mold the clay upon some
form, and mold it to my heart's desire, God is molding himself upon
man. And when he has completed the act as he desires it, there are
three definite stages where he reveals the completed work. He molds us,
and molds, and molds us, making us ever more sensitive, ever more
creative, ever more like himself; and when he is satisfied that we are
just like he is, he unveils his work; and the unveiling of the work
begins with the awakening of himself, and that is called the
resurrection. He awakes in the individual in whom he has completed the
work, and that awakening in the Bible is the resurrection.
Then, after the resurrection, he goes
through an act like a birth, and he is born from above. And he is
self-begotten, because the individual who is born cannot conceive of
being sired by anyone other than himself. He can't for one moment -
when he awakes in the tomb of his skull - believe that he is other than
himself, and when he comes out of his own skull, he cannot have any
feeling, any sensation of having any father or mother. So if he is
born, then he must be self-begotten. God is so begetting himself that
when he begets himself the thing begotten is God, and he comes out -
just self-begotten.
Then comes a second stage, where he has
the experience of being a father. Until that moment he didn't realize
that he was. And now, strangely enough, when he sees the symbol which
reveals to him fatherhood, there is no mother. He is the father of
God's only begotten Son, and he knows now who he is. It took the Son to
reveal to him who he really is. (David is the Son.)
And then comes the third symbol, and the
third symbol is where the entire veil that separated the two is torn
from top to bottom. From the top of his skull to the bottom of his
spine, he is severed in two. Hebrews 10:19 tells you the purpose of
that severance. What happened from that moment on, the two become one;
they are not two any more. They were separated by a veil and the veil
was the body of God, and it is torn - the entire thing - from top to
bottom, and then, strangely enough, you see yourself. May I quote Blake
again: "I behold the visions of my deadly dream of six thousand years
dazzling around thy skirts like a serpent of precious stones and gold.
I know it is myself, O my Divine Creator and Redeemer." (Jerusalem,
1:96) At that moment you see the being that created you and you are the
very being who created you. It's a self-creation. God begot himself on
the mold called "man." And at that moment when you see it, after the
splitting from the top to the bottom, you see this moving, lovely,
golden, liquid light and it's you and you know it. And you say: "I know
it is myself, O my Divine Creator and Redeemer." And then you, as the
very being who created you, move up in serpentine form right into Zion.
For all go into Zion, all go into the New Jerusalem. So creation is an
act of mercy.
Now let us go into the silence.