Our destination in Spirit is a vibration rate not a location. There is no path; there is no way. Getting there is a procedure not a thought.
I call this rate the Vibration of Holy Communion. (“VoHC”)
Ecstasy characterizes the VoHC. It can be achieved only through effort. The idea here is that you can’t just say “OK, I”ll tune to ecstasy” It is, rather, the capstone of your efforts. This is the work of consecrating® prayer.
To find the VoHC you need to go inside and come to a place where there is a frequency. One way to find the VoHC is by finding the ecstasy—that is its fundamental tone.
The sacred tone that I teach—shanah sheket—is tuned to the VoHC. The frequency of these ancient Hebraic words, when charged by the Living Breath® consciousness, carries that sacred vibration.
Arriving at the VoHC takes patience. You must wait until the VoHC opens the door for you. It is a natural process. It will happen. You will do it though you haven’t done it before. There is no learned skill. There is only the primordial urge to return to the Father.
We are all capable of this. We all have inward receptors to the relentless, endless throbbing pull of Spirit. The love of the Creator draws our True Nature naturally and effortlessly into it.
Ecstasy is the epitome of Grace. Finding pure ecstasy is the death of karma. Your yourself can do nothing—only surrender to the ecstasy.
Tightly coupled to ecstasy is patience. it is a nearly identical vibration. Patience is required to unlock ecstasy. There is sanguinity in the awareness that tuning to ecstasy is the final phase of achieving full awareness of the VoHC. The final steps of the walk home to the Father are deliberate and performed with patient reverence.
Finally, there is here a new law of spirit—the Law of Balance. The diaphragm points energetically to the “tisra til”—the third eye. To find the VoHC one must find the vibrational balance point between the Tisra Til and the Tan Tien (root chakra). The key to this balance I call the fulcrum of consecration.
When progress is made toward the VoHC there is joy and contentment—the knowing of a job well done. You will say, “Today I have consecrated myself to the Lord.”