The Kolbrin Bible: Giving
Birth to your Soul
YOWUSA.COM, 02-October-04
Steve Russell
Continued
The Zohar,
166
Come and see: The
soul does not go up to be seen before the Holy King,
before it is worthy of donning the garments of above
so it may be seen there. In the same manner, it
does not descend to below, until it wears the
clothes of this world.
This enormous
ancient text teaches that the soul is dressed with
the earthly body for self preservation in this
physical reality. Upon departing this world, the
soul must then change garments in order to gaze upon
the most divine spiritual light. The Bhagavad Gita
is seen by many as the most brilliant culmination of
Hindu religious thinking, and they too teach the
metaphor of clothing the soul for the various abodes
of reality.
Bhagavad Gita,
2.13
Just as the soul
acquires a childhood body, a youth body, and an old
age body during this life; similarly, the soul
acquires another body after death. This should not
delude the wise.
Bhagavad Gita,
2.22
Just as a person
puts on new garments after discarding the old ones;
similarly, the living entity or the individual soul
acquires new bodies after casting away the old
bodies.
As stated earlier,
while the Bible does its best to avoid the concept
of the immortal soul, the following passage makes
far more sense when read in this context of The
Kolbrin.
1
Corinthians,
15:53-54
For the perishable must clothe itself
with the imperishable, and the mortal with
immortality. When the perishable has been clothed
with the imperishable, and the mortal with
immortality, then the saying that is written will
come true: "Death has been swallowed up in victory."
To further
appreciate The Kolbrin's descriptions of the
soul, it is important to comprehend it's teachings
on the nature of the universe. This quantum
physical reality was discussed in the first chapter
and is encapsulated by The Kolbrin as a
divine melody.
The
Kolbrin,
P317
So from The Inconceivable One there
came a great outpouring melody, the song of
conception, the notes winging vitalising
consciousness outward in radiating ripples. All
that is now existing came out of that which was
harmoniously sung into being, and the sweet echoing
vibrations still sound in rhythm throughout the many
circles of existence. All life and matter vibrate
in response to a divinely originated, orchestrated
melody and rhythm.
It is with this
understanding that The Kolbrin describes how
the soul makes its grand entrance into the spiritual
world upon the death of the physical body.
The
Kolbrin,
P317
…for once through the dark archway
and in the Court of Splendour, the newly released
spirit must introduce itself by song. The good,
clean spirit vibrates with a happy, harmonious
melody, while the dull, evil-doing spirit rasps out
harshly in agonising discord. The first thing the
travel-weary homecoming spirit hears is the
welcoming notes of the Divine Melody.
The Kolbrin
confirms the quantum physicists understanding of
reality and how individual particles of matter are
simultaneously large invisible waves stretching out
into space like that of a light or sound wave.
The Kolbrin continues this understanding and
connects our very souls to the same invisible fabric
upon which the heavenly waves propagate.
Through the spirit, these waves of the soul are said
to encircle our physical bodies and stretch out into
space.
The
Kolbrin,
P120
In the Secrets of the Soul it is
written: "The soul of man is not a small thing
inside him, but wraps him about. It is greater than
the boundaries of the Lands of the Reed and the
Lily, and reaches out beyond the stars."
This significant insight will be quickly recognized
by those who are familiar with auras. Many people
and even specialized photographic equipment have
been able to see these energy fields as various
waves of color, as The Kolbrin confirms.
The
Kolbrin,
P373
The
soulspirit gives out a kind of glow called the
"spiritlight," which can be seen by many of those
who are spiritually awakened. It envelops the
earthly body and forms something like a radiant ring
above the head. In good men it appears bright and
shining, but in the unrighteous it looks dull and
drab.
The auras that surround our bodies are believed to
consist of subtle energy fields with varying
frequencies that define their colors.
The
Kolbrin,
P225
The spirit does not pass to the
Morningland awake. It awakens there as from a
sleep. It does not unite with its spirit twin until
judged according to its colours. When united
together, all over there appears alike to all here.
All past hopes and desires appear before the risen
one.
While Christianity
is content to ignore past actions with the offering
of salvation at a mere cost of faith to ask for
forgiveness, The Kolbrin teaches the eastern
principles of karma. The Kolbrin states that
it is these colorful energy waves that are used for
the judgment of our soul. Those who have studied
auras will know that this is a plausible purpose for
the energy, as it is commonly believed that they
represent a historic record of our entire worldly
experience of good and bad actions. The Kolbrin
also states that it is the soul that is responsible
for such karma memory.
Wisdom of the Soul
The concepts of knowledge retention after death are
fundamental to the teachings of The Kolbrin
and many other beliefs. However some religions take
the polar opposite point of view.
Jehovah's Witnesses take death at face value
believing it to be an absolute end, and teach of a
physical resurrection of the body. Religions such
as this believe that the Biblical scriptures
indicate that there is no such thing as a soul and
that death is therefore the ultimate end until this
resurrection occurs. The biblical book of
Ecclesiastes is commonly used to support this
belief, specifically through the following verse.
Ecclesiastes,
9:10
Whatever your hand finds to do, do it
with all your might, for in the grave, where you are
going, there is neither working nor planning nor
knowledge nor wisdom.
The author and period of this chapter in the Bible
is relatively unknown, and it teaches us that our
efforts on earth are meaningless if we are separated
from God. What is clear about the author is that he
is an old man who spent the majority of his life
separate from God. At the time of writing he has
been faced with death, and having accepted God,
obviously felt the need to warn everybody else that
has lived in ignorance of God to take heed. To
place the foundations of a belief that who we are
dies at death on the ramblings of a man who himself
may never have really known God, seems like very
shaky ground.
While some believe that after death we are lifeless
and ignorant, The Kolbrin is based on the
understanding that our life in this physical world
bound to deceptive and defective senses, is where
the real ignorance is experienced. This view can be
likened to the ancient teachings of the Gnostics.
The word Gnosis by definition means "To Know and it
is taught that only through wisdom and knowledge
that God could be met. The early Gnostics also
believed in the trinity of Man comprising flesh,
soul and spirit. While The Kolbrin states
that the soul is clothed by the spirit, Gnosticism
has it the other way around, but the concepts and
principles are the same. Gnosticism understands
that the spiritual portion within us has been
separated from the most divine source and remains in
exile, unconsciously awaiting recognition, and
intoxicated by the poisonous ignorance of this
world.
The Kolbrin
describes the body's inadequacies to retain
knowledge and that the true memory is within the
soul.
The
Kolbrin,
P251
Mortal man may, in the course of
time, forget his experiences, but within the soul
they are retained forever. The soul is a hunter and
the quarry is Truth, the weapons of the hunt are
reason and experience.
The souls of this world can be seen as part of the
largest spiritual army, or the largest ant colony
dispersed throughout the universe gathering up
wisdom for the President or Queen. Each soul must
learn everything it can before returning home and
presenting its achievements to the family.
The Kolbrin,
P79
"Do I return home radiant in the
pride of blooming consciousness, or, spurned and
humiliated, return without sensitivity, memory or
knowledge? Do I return to be welcomed with joy in
the light of glory, or must I shamefully seek refuge
in the darkness?"
In
order for the soul to gather the necessary wisdom,
it is forced to utilize the deceptive senses of the
body.
The
Kolbrin,
P79
I
am that which reads what the eye sees, understands
what the ear hears, knows what the hand feels,
tastes whatever enters the mouth and smells whatever
is borne on the nose. I am the indwelling
consciousness which knows and enjoys all the good
things of Earth. Those who dwell in the darkness of
delusion cannot know me, and to them is lost the
greatest glory of life. All conceptions of beauty,
love and kindness are due to the consciousness
residing in me. When I depart from my earthly abode
I will carry with me the knowledge of the senses, as
the wind carries perfume from the flower.
Recent research led by neuro-psychiatrist Dr Peter
Fenwick studied the claims of near-death experiences
made by heart patients whose hearts had stopped
beating during surgery or other heart related
conditions. This research by the Institute of
Psychiatry suggests and supports the teachings of
The Kolbrin and other religions.
Scotsman.com, 11
September, 2003
Study into near-death
experiences supports theory of a ‘sixth sense'
"There is now
convincing evidence to challenge the current theory
that consciousness can only exist inside the brain -
and if you can have consciousness without associated
brain function, that is enormously important for our
understanding of the mind," he said.
"That study and other evidence points
to the mind and brain not being identical, and it
seems that the mind may operate in part outside the
brain as a sort of field which works in the same way
as a TV receiver receives programs through the
airwaves," said Dr Fenwick.
Many people have tried to argue that such near-death
experiences are caused simply by hallucinations due
to lack of oxygen after the heart had ceased pumping
blood to the brain. However according to Dr Fenwick
we know that during these unconscious periods the
brain has extreme difficulties creating images, let
alone the ability to be able to remember them. This
is in stark contradiction with the near-death
experience where the person can recall everything
going on around them in vivid detail. But memories
are not the only thing retained during this
experience. Many people have been aware of all
their existing worldly knowledge along with feelings
of fear, love, anger, humor and all the five senses
that had actually become heightened during death.
Now that you have seen these teachings of The
Kolbrin about the soul descending to the
physical world clothed in spirit for protection, and
how the soul gathers knowledge through our defective
and limited senses, one critical question needs to
be answered. Do the ignorance and defective
limitations of this world mean we are already in
some form of Hell?
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