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THE TEACHING MISSION |
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From: <fsb60@utah-inter.net>
To: "tmtranscripts" <tmtranscripts@virtualbiz.com>
Subject: [tmtranscripts] Abraham & Mary 5/23/05
Date: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 7:25 PM
ABRAHAM & MARY
MAY 23, 2005
WOODS CROSS GROUP
I am ABRAHAM. Greetings. I always love this time of year here in
this region. The spring like weather helps our minds to focus on new
things, on re-birth and becoming free from past regret.
As you know, from time to time I am given the task to train new
teachers. You are the average mortal group, which is good for the
beginning training of new teacher prospects. I tell my teachers in
training that your open-mindedness and craving for truth make you
wonderful students. For quite some time now you do your utmost to
place Father as your Sovereign, which makes it easy for the accuracy
of words to come through. Again, I leave you to Sister MARY.
Greetings, my friends, for me it feels like you, the students, are
training the teacher and I am probably over enthusiastic to learn. I
am finding teaching to work best when we start from the beginning.
Our experience is all we know. We are an expert at our own
experience. I believe in telling you my story many of you will
relate and in the understanding, we can all make sense out of it and
find healing. Mind you, as I speak I mean not to elicit sympathy. I
simply mean to share my story with practicality with those who know
whereof I speak.
As a child I had always felt unwanted, underfoot, and defective in
one way or another. My mother had her own difficulties. She was
quite a fearful woman. She was always in search of something I think
she never found. To her, Father was an angry deity, whose main task
was to punish the unrighteous. Her prayers were fearful, they were
always apologetic and seriously--there was really never anything to
apologize for. To her, learning the ways of righteousness were
indeed more important than love and nurturing. I deeply missed that
love you can only receive from your mother.
My father was rarely present in the home. He took to drunkenness and
other women. He placed very little value on women. To him they were
to be used, as you would use any animal. Many a night in his
drunkenness I seen him beat my mother. I seen her cower. She never
fought back or did one thing to change her situation. I always
wished I had been born male. I learned early on that women seemed to
have little value. I also missed that fatherly affection and I
suppose I spent a great deal of time looking for it.
I mean not to sound as if my childhood was a complete misery, no. I
would spend time with the other women in the village helping them to
do chores and reaping their precious praise. I did see examples of
loving families and so wanted that for myself. I had some close
childhood playmates, which we would act out our fantasies of being
some sort of super hero or savior to the world. Always would we be
valued and loved for our kind works.
By the time I reached my teen years I was quite confused about God.
I figured my father placed women in a league with farm animals and
so too that must be true with God. Having very little personal value
or esteem, I allowed myself to be used and abused. I also learned
how to use my charm for profit. I felt there was not a soul who was
going to help me along in this life, so I may as well learn to help
myself. I had deep anger and resentment toward men, seeing how they
thought themselves superior and women as mere servants. At this
point I cared not who I hurt. The anger was indeed overpowering.
I began to make small attempts at rallying women to band together
and demand some sort of justice--not even equality, just some sort
of small justice. Most women of that day and age were fearful, but
there were still some women whose strength was silent and in that I
learned a valuable lesson. I needed not a podium to be noticed and
heard, no. I needed to help one woman at a time.
Eventually I married a man who was abusive, like my father and again
my mind wavered between weakness and my true desires. I had my
place, but I was still so unhappy. How could a God be good for some
but not for all? Believe me, I had some issues over this. I do
however thank God for the day when I had met my friends, who would
later become the women apostles and servers of Christ. This was
indeed life changing and the beginning of the melting of my icy
heart.
To listen to the Master speak filled me with a new esteem, a new
hope, a new place in the Kingdom. Jesus taught me that Father was
not watching for me to err and then punish me, no. He was a
helpmate. He did love us all, rich, poor, free or bond, male or
female. The charm and majesty from this God-man filled me with the
drive to serve Him, to follow Him wherever He went and do whatever I
could to further the growth of the Kingdom. No task was too small,
caring for the elderly, the sick, children, gardening, cleaning, it
didn't matter. It was all for Him and the coming Kingdom.
I will stop there. I am not yet permitted to answer questions. You
are a joy, my friends. Farewell.
I am ABRAHAM. Well done Mary. I believe we have a great deal to
learn from you. Mary spoke of past childhood beliefs that solidified
on into adulthood. Let us review our own beliefs that may have
become a part of us that possibly do not pertain any longer. I love
you children. Go in peace. Until next time, shalom.
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