The Becoming God

Friday, October 02, 2015

Jethro, the Beginning of the Universe and Pentecostal Oneness

The Hebrew word jethro means "his excellence" and "his jutting over." It is easy to apply this concept to our experience as prosperity. It may be applied also to the universe. There was nothing, not even a dimension, and then his excellence. A source inconceivable to us which had intelligence and power imagined existence, and BAM! The Big Bang as existence flows from the thought.

The Aramaic words t'lah qnu-meh mean trinity. T'lah is three and qnu-meh, like the Greek pneuma, is wind or spirit; so, the three-spirit or the three-wind. Jethro is a part of this, "his excellence" that has the nature of the Big Bang, the nature of the "wind" of the spirit that is intelligence that is power. God can meet our every need.

E'had in Hebrew means one that is made up of others. Like the air in a balloon that is made up of countless atoms of gas. Or a rock that is made up of millions of grains of minerals. Or the universe, which is made up of innumerable particles intelligence is imagining to exist, is from one source. God hates divorce.

My philosophy is very similar to Pentecostal oneness. As a group they believe that when we die and go to heaven we will only see Jesus, for the Father and the Holy Spirit are incorporate and invisible. The only facet of the Trinity that has a body is Jesus. But I do not believe that anything about God is anything like us. Our lives, the world and the universe are illustrations of the winds. Winds. Invisible forces emanating from the existence of the Ineffable, the incomprehensible Source.

"God," "the Father," "Consciousness," "the Holy Spirit," "Jesus," "Adam," "Abraham," "Jacob," "Moses," "I" -- these are all winds of THE existence springing forth from the intelligence of the Source. When we die we will know as we are known. We always have. Each time a little different. But we will only eventually be aware of our being Jesus and the Father and the Holy Spirit. We do not meet a God, we realize that we are God. We are the wind, the spirit as an individuality, and not this physical human at all. We are Jesus, the Life-giving, living branch of God. Submit everything you desire to God: "Not my will, but thy will be done." Jethro is, after all, his excellence.

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