Natural Law
The way in which we
define Natural Law, the presumptions we have about how nature works, of which
we are convinced, and what we believe implicitly is natural law determines how
nature presents itself to us.
It is only if we
accept and believe whole-heartedly that the way we were taught in school that
nature works is true that man-made laws can be incumbent upon us. What we were
taught in school were presumptions and cruelly hobbling limitations based on
fear, not Love.
It is only if we
truly believe that a wall can hold us, that shackles can bind us; that
instruments of punishment can be laid upon us that man-made laws that threaten
us with such things can be incumbent upon us.
Natural Law is
precedent to man-made law and all man-made laws are based on presumptions about
what is and is not possible in the natural world.
If we seek to live
only under God's highest order of Natural Law we will be protected by those
Laws from all other, lower, forms of law.
When we commit ourselves completely to live according to God's Natural Law all other systems of law are nullified before us.
This is the meaning of The Promised Land.
When we commit ourselves completely to live according to God's Natural Law all other systems of law are nullified before us.
This is the meaning of The Promised Land.
It is only when we
enter God's natural Laws that we can begin to see Torah in God's natural Light
and be able to read it properly and understand it. Right now we are trying to
read Torah in a very dim light, the dimness of which is an effect of our
limiting misconceptions.
The Rabbis do not see the Light that is called The Light of the Seven Days of Creation. If they did, they would interpret Torah very, very differently.
The Rabbis do not see the Light that is called The Light of the Seven Days of Creation. If they did, they would interpret Torah very, very differently.