Here is something I've been thinking about alot lately that I would like to share with you.
The kingdom of heaven directly overlaps the kingdom of earth.
I'm not aware of this. Or maybe I just don't understand what you are tryng to say.
Humans try to fuse them together, to do this one must have the capacity do to so then they must choose to do so, is what probably is prophetic ability and go in to bring us revelation.
You have really lost me now. Are you suggesting that "prophetic ability" is something we can choose?
But the price paid for that is erosion of the flesh and mind. This way all humans play a roll in the heavenly kingdom coming and great prophets play big rolls. I think mental illness such as bipolar disorder, schizophrenia are symptoms of that erosion. Many of the greats and genius of time that have changed society and civilisation for the better were probably suffered from mental problems, I would go as far to say that all religious founders did.
It seems that you are stating that all the Manifestations of the Great Religions, such as Abraham, Moses, Buddha, Krshna, Zoroaster, Jesus of Nazereth, Mohammed, The Bab and Baha'u'llah were mad. Am I getting this correctly. If that is what you are saying, then why would we want to follow their directions? I would agree they stood out and maybe were considered unusual and peculiar. Truly they wouldn't have been of the norm. We have The Bab and Baha'u'llah to verify these descriptions. But never, in the thousands of personal accounts that document a meeting with these individuals, has anybody ever written that they seemed crazy.
In fact, in 1890 Professor E.G. Brown of Cambridge, wrote these words,
"In the corner where the divan met the wall sat a wondrous and venerable figure, crowned with a felt head-dress of the kind called taj by dervishes (but of unusual height and make), round the base of which was wound a small white turban. The face of him on whom I gazed I can never forget, though I cannot describe it. Those piercing eyes seemed to read one's very soul; power and authority sat on that ample brow; while the deep lines on the forehead and face implied an age which the jet-black hair and beard flowing down in indistinguishable luxuriance almost to the waist seemed to belie. No need to ask in whose presence I stood, as I bowed myself before One who is the object of a devotion and love which kings might envy and emperors sigh for in vain!"
If you go here,
Meeting Baha'u'llah you can read the treatise in its entirety. It is not very long, in fact only about one page copied into a Word Document, but powerful in the fact that E.G.Brown was the first, and as far as I know, the only Westerner to meet Baha'u'llah. His impression of Baha'u'llah are very interesting to Westerners.
Maybe your SAD has a connection to your revelation of the Baha'i faith and I mean that in a very positive way. Saying that, as the Greeks say Iparxi logos, "there is way". I'm sure one day we will eliminate mental conditions.
And at last, it seems you suggest that I became a Baha'i because I am a little kiltered, maybe a little crazy and, what, can't make rational decisions. When I declared my belief in Baha'u'llah in the fall of 1978, the weather was beautiful. October in Western Michigan is a wonderful place to be with the trees changing colors, the air crisp and a lot of sunlight. I have never been accused of being crazy accept by myself. I recognized my depression but wasn't overwhelmed by it. In fact, during that time, I was a Marketing Manager for a professional hockey team. I actually saw a show on PBS about Russian studies in Siberia concerning the effects of the lack of sunlight on its populace and what they did to overcome the ennui people suffered from. I self doctored myself long before the USA and Michigan State University showed any interest or knowledge of SAD.
No, Postmaster, I became a Baha'i because I recognized the truth of Baha'u'llah and was overwhelmed with His message. I reached a point in my life that I couldn't deny the existence of the most recent Manifestation of God. Once you reach that point, you can't go back. Once you become aware of God in all His Grandeur and His Plan in all Its Wisdom, you can't simply table the notion and go back to where you were. I declared my belief in Baha'u'llah amid tears of joy. I pray daily like this,
"I bear witness, O my God, that Thou hast created me to know Thee and to worship Thee. I testify, at this moment, to my powerlessness and to Thy might, to my poverty and to Thy wealth.
There is none other God but Thee, the Help in Peril, the Self-Subsisting."
Baha'u'llah
I have been created to know Him and to worship Him. Anything else is simply in support of those two roles.
warmly,
Mick Zellar