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Jesus - the Son of GodWhen the apostle John wrote of the "true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world" he was describing the Son, whom he believed dwelt bodily in Jesus Christ. The Light, the Son, is also known as the Word and the Universal Christ. The Universal Christ is individualized for each one of us as our Higher Self. You can think of your Higher Self as your Inner Christ. Your Higher Self represents your potential to realize God and to become one with him.
The term Son of God is therefore a title that all can earn by merit. None can lay claim to this title on the grounds that he is a born Jew or a reborn Christian. Sonship is not automatic, for it is written: "God is no respecter of persons: but in every nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousness is accepted with him."
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Although this is not the portrait of Jesus that orthodox Christians have chosen to paint, there is plenty of evidence to support it. The Book of Matthew records that Jesus urged us to strive for perfection. "Be ye therefore perfect," Jesus said, "even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect." Paul taught the Galatians, "I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you....I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me." Likewise Paul wrote to the Corinthians, "We have the mind of Christ," and to the Philippians, "Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus." Further evidence that Jesus taught that you, like him, are meant to realize your own Christhood is found in the Gnostic gospels and Christian texts unearthed in 1945 near Nag Hammadi, Egypt. Gnosticism is a term used to describe a diverse group of sects within Christianity that flourished in the second century, before the canon, doctrine and creeds of the Church were solidified. The Gnostics claimed to possess an advanced teaching that had been secretly handed down to them from Jesus and his close circle of disciples. Some Gnostics offered a radically different view of Jesus' role and mission than did the churchmen of their day. Because the teachings of the Gnostics threatened the unity of the growing orthodox Church, Church leaders banned, suppressed and almost totally destroyed Gnostic scriptures. The few Gnostic texts that have survived teach that a true disciple imitates his teacher in order to become equal to him or even surpass him. An early collection of wisdom sayings found at Nag Hammadi, called the Sentences of Sextus, instructs: "A good man is the good work of God....A man who is worthy of God, he is God among men, and he is the son of God." In the Apocryphon (Secret Book) of James, Jesus says, "Verily I say unto you, no one will ever enter the kingdom of heaven at my bidding, but only because you yourselves are full....Become better than I; make yourselves like the son of the Holy Spirit!" The Gnostic Gospel of Philip describes the follower of Jesus who becomes "no longer a Chris-tian but a Christ." It says: "You saw the spirit, you became spirit. You saw Christ, you became Christ. You saw the Father, you shall become Father." In the Gospel of Thomas, which claims to record the secret sayings of Jesus, the Master tells his disciples, "Because you have drunk, you have become intoxicated from the bubbling spring which I have measured out....Whoever drinks from my mouth will become like me. I myself shall become he, and the things that are hidden will be revealed to him." The Universal ChristThe bubbling spring that Jesus speaks of is the fount of the Universal Christ. Jesus promises that when with love and gratitude you have drunk and assimilated those waters of everlasting life, "You will become like me, like the Christ. I myself, the incarnation of the Christ, shall become you." The mystical paths of the world's religions bear witness to the universal truth that whoever drinks from the fount of the One Source will become one with that Source, whether we hear "You can become one with Brahman," "You can become one with the Tao," "You can become a Buddha," "You can cleave to Ein Sof and the sefirot" or "You can become the Son of God."
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In the ancient Hindu epic the Mahabharata, the sage Sanat Kumara teaches that Brahman, the Absolute, "is awake in every creature. They that know Him know that Universal Father [who] dwelleth in the heart of every created thing!...The Brahman-knowing person...is equal unto Brahman." The Chinese philosopher-sage Chuhsi says, "If we would know the reality of Tao, we must seek it within our own nature. Each has within him the principle of right; this we call the Tao, the Way." One Buddhist text instructs, "The Germ of Buddhahood exists in every living being. Therefore, forever and anon, all that lives is endowed with the Essence of the Buddha." The Buddhist teacher Saicho says, "When I worship thee, O Buddha, this is a Buddha worshiping another Buddha. And it is thou who makest this fact known to me, O Buddha." We believe that the New Testament and Christian Gnostic texts portray Jesus as an elder brother who teaches what all the great teachers of the mystical paths of the world's religions teach: that you can attain your own intimate and transforming relationship with God and that you can realize your potential to become a Son of God, one with the Christ.
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