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                         > 
                        > --- In 
                        
                        shriadishakti@yahoogroups.com, ashishcool tandon 
                        > <ashishcooltandon@y...> wrote: 
                        > > 
                        > > Dear Jagbir, 
                        > > 
                        > > JSMJ, 
                        > > 
                        > > Experiencing the Loving Mother through innocent 
                        > > children has been a honour and a privilige. I have 
                        > > read every word with great reverence. 
                        > > 
                        > > I have often longed to read more but unfortunately 
                        you 
                        > > have not updated the visits to the Kingdom of God. 
                        > > 
                         
                        --- In 
                        
                        shriadishakti@yahoogroups.com, "jagbir singh" 
                        <adishakti_org@y...> wrote: 
                        > 
                        > Today morning i was updating some files and decided to 
                        confirm yet 
                        > again what has been cross-examined numerous times over 
                        the years. 
                        > At about 7.30 am 10-year-old Lalita was asked about 
                        the Light: 
                        > 
                        > 
                        > Question: What is above Shri Mataji's head? 
                        > 
                        > Lalita: The Light. 
                        > 
                        > Question: Can you look at it for a long time? 
                        > 
                        > Lalita: Yes, you can look at it. 
                        > 
                        > Question: Does it not blind you? 
                        > 
                        > Lalita: It doesn't blind me. 
                        > 
                        > Question: Is it different from the sun you see on 
                        Earth? 
                        > 
                        > Lalita: Yes. 
                        > 
                        > Question: Why? 
                        > 
                        > Lalita: It's smaller. 
                        > 
                        > Question: Anything else? 
                        > 
                        > Lalita: It doesn't blind you. What else ...... It's 
                        brighter. OK? 
                        > 
                        > myself: Thank you Lalita. 
                        > 
                        > 
                        > This Light is always above the Great Divine Mother, 
                        and this Spirit 
                        > of God Almighty resides within the Sahasraras of all 
                        humans. Unlike 
                        > Her incarnation on Earth as Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi, 
                        now an aging 
                        > octogenarian, She is eternally youthful and of 
                        unsurpassable 
                        > beauty. Kash, Arwinder and Lalita have always 
                        maintained that they 
                        > have never seen any woman as beautiful as Shri 
                        Maha-Devi who is 
                        > truly the Great Primordial Goddess. (Shri Saraswati, 
                        Laxshmi and 
                        > Kali are also extremely beautiful but none are 
                        comparable with the 
                        > Maha-Devi.) 
                        > 
                        > "The Devi Gita, or Song of the Goddess, presents a 
                        grand vision of 
                        > the universe created, pervaded, and protected by a 
                        supremely 
                        > powerful, all-knowing, and wholly compassionate divine 
                        female. She 
                        > is Maha-Devi, the Great Goddess, wielding all power 
                        (Shakti) in the 
                        > universe. Yet power is not just an attribute of the 
                        Goddess; she is 
                        > power or Shakti itself. To her most devoted followers, 
                        known as 
                        > Shaktas (worshippers of the supreme Shakti), she is 
                        the auspicious 
                        > Mother of the World, ever anxious for the welfare of 
                        her children. 
                        > Unlike the ferocious Hindu goddesses such as Kali and 
                        Durga, the 
                        > World Mother of the Devi Gita is beautiful and benign, 
                        although 
                        > some of her lesser manifestations may take on terrible 
                        forms. And 
                        > unlike some other beneficent female divinities as 
                        Parvati and 
                        > Lakshmi, she is subject to no male consort. Subject to 
                        none, she is 
                        > the Shakti of all." (The Devi Gita, pg. 1) 
                        > 
                        > It is the last sentence that is most profound and 
                        true: "Subject to 
                        > none, she is the Shakti of all." Unlike Shri Shiva, 
                        Krishna, 
                        > Brahma, Rama, Vishnu with their female consorts, 
                        neither Kash, 
                        > Arwinder or Lalita have ever seen the Great Divine 
                        Mother with any 
                        > companion. She alone sits on the Timeless Throne with 
                        the Eternal 
                        > Light above Her at all times. All the greatest gods, 
                        prophets, and 
                        > messengers bow down in humble reverence and homage 
                        before 
                        > meditating on Her. Each and every soul in the Spirit 
                        World also 
                        > meditate on Her at all times. There is nothing higher 
                        or supreme to 
                        > the Shakti in heaven or earth! 
                        > 
                        > Jai Shri Mataji, 
                        > 
                        > 
                        > jagbir 
                        > 
                         
                        Is God All in the Mind? 
                        A review by Michael Shermer 
                         
                         
                        Why God Won't Go Away Brain Science and the Biology of 
                        Belief 
                        Andrew Newberg, Eugene D'Aquili, and Vince Rause 
                        Ballantine, New York, 2001. 234 pp. $24.95, C$37.95. 
                        ISBN: 0-345- 
                        44033-1. 
                         
                         
                        About ten years ago, when I began to research why people 
                        believe in 
                        God, I asked a colleague in a religious studies program 
                        to recommend 
                        the latest path-breaking scientific work in this area. 
                        "William 
                        James's 1890 Varieties of Religious Experience," he 
                        responded 
                        sardonically. In his opinion, he explained, the field 
                        was largely 
                        moribund. 
                         
                        That perception was an exaggeration, of course, but his 
                        point was 
                        that with the exception of a handful of psychologists 
                        teaching at 
                        theological seminaries, mainstream social and cognitive 
                        scientists 
                        had largely ignored the question. The situation has 
                        changed 
                        dramatically in the past decade, as the renewed debate 
                        on the 
                        relation between science and religion has exploded onto 
                        the cultural 
                        landscape and scientists from a variety of fields have 
                        entered the 
                        fray. Why God Won't Go Away presents an interpretation 
                        developed by 
                        Andrew Newberg and Eugene D'Aquili, physicians at the 
                        University of 
                        Pennsylvania. Newberg holds joint appointments in 
                        radiology and 
                        religious studies, and D'Aquili, now deceased, was a 
                        professor of 
                        psychiatry. Co-author Vince Rause is a free-lance 
                        writer. Their 
                        breezy and speculative book was written for general 
                        readers, but it 
                        provides enough new material, especially on the 
                        neurophysiology of 
                        mystical experiences, to hold the interest of 
                        professional scientists. 
                         
                        God won't go away, the authors argue, because the 
                        religious impulse 
                        is rooted in the biology of the brain. When Buddhist 
                        monks meditate 
                        and Franciscan nuns pray, for example, single photon 
                        emission 
                        computed tomography scans of their brains indicate 
                        strikingly low 
                        activity in the posterior superior parietal lobe. The 
                        authors dub 
                        this bundle of neurons the orientation association area 
                        (OAA). The 
                        area's primary function is to orient the body in 
                        physical space; 
                        people with damage to this area have a hard time 
                        negotiating their 
                        way around their surroundings. When the OAA is up and 
                        running 
                        smoothly, there is a sharp distinction between self and 
                        non-self. 
                        When the OAA is in sleep mode--as in deep meditation and 
                        prayer--that
                        division breaks down and, consequently, the lines 
                        between reality and
                        fantasy are blurred. Is this what happens to monks who 
                        feel a oneness
                        with the universe or with nuns who feel the presence of 
                        God? 
                         
                        Yes, say the authors. They claim to have "uncovered 
                        solid evidence 
                        that the mystical experiences of [their] subjects--the 
                        altered states 
                        of mind they described as the absorption of the self 
                        into something 
                        larger--were not the result of emotional mistakes or 
                        simple wishful 
                        thinking, but were associated instead with a series of 
                        observable 
                        neurological events." Although this is an odd 
                        distinction to make, 
                        the authors maintain it throughout the book. They 
                        recognize that a 
                        skeptic might explain "all spiritual longings and 
                        experiences, 
                        including the universal human yearning to connect with 
                        something 
                        divine," as delusions that stem from misfiring brain 
                        cells. Indeed, I 
                        am one such skeptic, but I fail to see the difference 
                        (outside a 
                        minor linguistic distinction) between a delusion and a 
                        decrease in 
                        OAA activity. Delusion is simply a description of what 
                        happens when 
                        the OAA shuts down and the brain loses the ability to 
                        distinguish 
                        self from non-self. It's still all in the brain. Unless, 
                        of course, 
                        one believes these neurologically triggered mystical 
                        experiences 
                        actually serve as a conduit to a real spiritual world 
                        where God (or 
                        what the authors call "Absolute Unitary Being") resides. 
                        That is, in 
                        fact, what they believe: "our research has left us no 
                        choice but to 
                        conclude that the mystics may be on to something, that 
                        the mind's 
                        machinery of transcendence may in fact be a window 
                        through which we 
                        can glimpse the ultimate realness of something that is 
                        truly divine." 
                        Thankfully they are honest enough to admit that this 
                        conclusion "is a 
                        terrifically unscientific idea" and that to accept it 
                        "we must 
                        second-guess all our assumptions about material 
                        reality." 
                         
                        Gopal Gopinathrao 
                        Postdoc Fellow, 
                        Nandi Lab Cancer Research Lab 
                        491 LSA UC Berkeley, 
                        CA 94720 
                        P:510-642-4712 
                        F:510-642-5741 
                         
                        [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 
                         
                         
                        
                    
                    
                    
                    "The godly light is exactly the beginning of parousia in 
                    holy souls" 
                        
                        
                        "The Light is not more in Buddhas and not less in 
                        ordinary beings." 
                    
                    
                    Guru Nanak: "My Light is the name of One and only God" 
                    
                    
                    Mishkat al-anwar: We are two spirits dwelling in one body 
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    "The discoverer of the Atman must also discover this inner 
                    Light" 
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