| part 2   | 
      1  |
      4 
 
 
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            By 
            the Spirit  of
            
            André Luiz  |  
        
          
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            Through medium Francisco Cândido Xavier  |  
        
          
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            Ist 
            Electronic Edition by GEAE  |  
        
          
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            Translated from the 25th Portuguese 
            edition entitled “Nosso Lar” . First Portuguese edition published in 
            1944 by  
            
            FEDERAÇÃO ESPÍRITA BRASILEIRA. 
            Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.   |  
        
          
            | 
            First 
            English edition by Christian Spirit Center, P O Box 114, Elon 
            College, N. C., 27244, USA.  |  
        
          
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            Revision and editing by Lauren Speeth Luczynski  |  
        
          
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            1st Electronic 
            Edition by Antônio Leite (New York, NY, USA) and GEAE (Advanced 
            Study Group of Spiritism)  |  
        
          
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            Cover design by Ademir Xavier, Jr and Christine Fernandes.
            
             
              
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              Chapter 9 THE PROBLEM OF NUTRITION  |  
          
            
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              Captivated by the sight of the magnificent gardens, I asked Lysias 
              to rest with me for a while on a bench nearby, and he willingly 
              greed. I was filled with a pleasant feeling of peace, watching the 
              graceful sprays of colored water rising in the air, forming 
              intricate patterns.  |  
          
            
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              “Whoever observes this immense colony of work,” I said 
              thoughtfully, “is led to inquire about all sorts of possible 
              problems. For instance, the problem of supply. There in no 
              Ministry of Economy here, is there?”  |  
          
            
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              “That branch of service,” 
              answered Lysias, “used to assume much greater importance here. 
              Then our Governor decided to reduce, as much as possible, the 
              number of practices which might remind us of purely physical 
              phenomena. Therefore the activities of the Department of Supply 
              were reduced to mere distribution, under the direct control of the 
              Central Administration. As a matter of fact, this was a very 
              important decision. Our records show that a century ago the Colony 
              underwent great trouble to adapt its inhabitants to the principle 
              of simplicity. Many newcomers to the Astral City, still imbued 
              with earthly vices, insisted on the most extravagant 
              accommodations, including sumptuous meals and stimulating drinks. 
              Only the Ministry of Divine Union, owing to its inherent 
              characteristics, shunned such abuses; the others spent their time 
              overburdened with problems of this sort. Our Governor, however, 
              spared no efforts to put an end to the deplorable situation, 
              introducing decisive measures against it the moment he assumed his 
              administrative duties at the Astral City.  |  
          
            
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              “Some of our older missionaries have told me about that time. They 
              say that the Governor’s request two hundred instructors came to us 
              from a very high sphere in order to propagate new theories about 
              respiration and the absorption of life-giving elements from the 
              atmosphere. Numerous lectures were given on the subject. Many of 
              our own experts were against those innovations on the grounds 
              that, because the Colony serves as a transition zone, it would be 
              unjust and dangerous to submit newly-arrived spirits to such 
              drastic changes. |  
          
            
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               They 
              believed that such changes could cause serious damage to our 
              patients’ spirit-bodies. But the Governor did not give in. 
               |  
          
            
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              “For thirty years the lectures, illustrative examples, and 
              technical explanations proceeded without interruption. Various 
              eminent spirits went so far as to formulate public protests 
              against the Governor’s actions. They repeatedly crowded the 
              Ministry of Assistance with patients who declared themselves 
              victims of the deficient new diet. During such crises, those who 
              were against the change intensified their attack. Yet the Governor 
              never resorted to punishment. Instead, he would summon his critics 
              to the Government House in a fatherly manner, expounding on the 
              aims and benefits of the new program, emphasizing its superiority 
              as an efficient means of spiritualization. For the most obstinate 
              he would arrange instructive excursions to higher spheres, winning 
              over a great number of them.”  |  
          
            
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              After a long pause, I said:  |  
          
            
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              “Please go on, Lysias. How did that edifying struggle end?” 
               |  
          
            
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              “After twenty one years of persevering efforts on the Governor’s 
              part, the Ministry of Elevation gave in and cut its supplies to 
              the strictly necessary. The Ministry of Elucidation, however, took 
              a long time to follow this good example, owing to the greater 
              number of statistics-minded spirits working there. They were the 
              most obstinate adversaries, still entrenched in their earthly 
              ideas that the ingestion of protein and carbohydrates is 
              indispensable to the human frame. They insisted on maintaining 
              their ideas here, and every week they sent the Governor lengthy 
              reports, full of warnings and observations, tests and numerical 
              data, supporting their claims. Such impertinence even reached the 
              point of arrogance, yet the Governor’s patience never failed.”
               |  
          
            
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              “Having decided not to act alone, he obtained the assistance of 
              the highly evolved entities who guide us through the Ministry of 
              Divine Union, and together they examined every one of those 
              documents thoroughly. While the scientists multiplied their 
              arguments and the government stalled for time, dangerous 
              disturbances were brewing in the Department of Regeneration, now 
              known as the Ministry of Regeneration. Some of the less developed 
              spirits there were caught up in the spirit of rebellion of those 
              in the Ministry of Elucidation and acted simply deplorably. The 
              atmosphere of unrest divided the Colony, exposing the Astral City 
              to dangerous attacks from inhabitants of the lower zones. Such 
              entities endeavored to invade our city availing themselves of the 
              breach of services of the Department of Regeneration, where many 
              workers had been carrying on clandestine dealings in order to 
              satisfy their undesirable addictions to food.  |  
          
            
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              “The alarm was given, and though the crisis posed a serious threat 
              to us all, the Governor maintained his usual serenity. He asked 
              the Ministry of Divine Union for a meeting, and, after listening 
              to our highest council, had the Ministry of Communication 
              temporarily closed. He ordered the dungeons of the Department of 
              Regeneration prepared for the isolation of the more stubborn 
              rebels. He admonished the Ministry of Education, whose 
              impertinence he had withstood for thirty years, and decreed that 
              any further assistance whatsoever to the lower regions should be 
              suspended until further notice. For the first time in his 
              administration he had the electric weapons in the city walls 
              turned on, so as to emit magnetic darts as a measure of defense. 
              There were neither battles nor attacks on the Colony’s side only 
              resolute defense. For over six months the diet of the Astral City 
              was reduced to the life-supporting principles in the atmosphere 
              and the electrical, magnetic and solar elements in the water. Thus 
              for the first time the Colony felt the indignation of a kind and 
              just spirit.“  |  
          
            
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              The Crisis was finally over – the government had won. The Ministry 
              of Elucidation itself admitted its error and lent a hand in it is 
              said that during the festivities the Governor was moved to tears, 
              declaring that the general, good understanding of his fellow 
              citizens was the dearest reward to his heart. The Department of 
              Regeneration was promoted to Ministry, and the city returned to 
              its usual routine.  |  
          
            
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              Since that time only the Ministries of Regeneration and Assistance 
              are allowed greater supplies of nutritive substances, owing to the 
              low spirituality of many of their patients. In all other 
              Ministries the diet is limited to the essentials, according to the 
              rules of the strictest sobriety. Nowadays everyone agrees that the 
              Governor’s apparently arbitrary imposition was a most valuable 
              measure towards our assent. Our contact with material things was 
              reduced, giving rise to a greater spirituality.”  |  
          
            
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              Lysias fell into silence, while I pondered deeply over the great 
              lesson I’d just receive.      |  
          
            
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              Chapter 10 THE WATER PARK 
               
                
               
              
              the flying "tube" seen in background to the left 
              here 
                |  
          
            
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              Noting my growing interest in the processes of nutrition, Lysias 
              invited me to accompany him on an instructive excursion. 
               |  
          
            
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              “Let’s go,” he suggested, “and see the Colony’s great reservoir. 
              There you will have the opportunity to see some things that will 
              interest you and to learn the importance of water in our 
              transition settlement.”  |  
          
            
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              My curiosity roused, I gladly accepted the invitation. When we 
              arrived at the corner of the public square, my kind friend 
              stopped.  |  
          
            
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              “Here we wait for the airbus4.” 
              He said. 
              
              4 An 
              aerial vehicle similar to our large cable cars.
               |  
          
            
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              I had scarcely gotten over my surprise when a large vehicle 
              approached, floating about fifteen feet above the ground, filled 
              with passengers. It descended like an elevator. I looked at it 
              closely – it was very long, like no vehicle I had ever seen on 
              Earth. It seemed to be made of a very flexible material, and, 
              judging from the number of antennae on its roof, I guessed that it 
              was connected to invisible wires. Later, when visiting the large 
              working plants of the Colony’s Department of Traffic and 
              Transportation, I found that my suppositions had been right.
                 |  
          
            
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              Lysias gave me no time for my customary questioning. We climbed 
              in, settled into comfortable seats, and the air-bus started in 
              silence. I felt uneasy in this unusual environment, among so many 
              strangers. We traveled at such a speed that I found it impossible 
              to discern the details of any of the constructions that we passed. 
              We covered a good distance, stopping briefly every three 
              kilometers, until forty minutes later Lysias informed me that we 
              had arrived.  |  
          
            
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              The 
              scenery before my eyes was of exquisite beauty. The woods were in 
              bloom and the fresh air was filled with a gentle aroma. It was all 
              a miracle of 
              
              colors and lights. |  
          
            
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               A 
              great river wound its way leisurely between green banks sprinkled 
              with blue flowers. The slow-moving waters, shimmering in the sun, 
              reflected, like a crystal mirror, the many shades of blue in the 
              sky. Wide paths cut through the woods in different directions, and 
              at regular intervals large trees spread their friendly branches 
              offering areas of shade in the sunbathed landscape. Here and 
              there, fancifully shaped benches invited one to rest. I was simply 
              charmed, and Lysias noticed by enthusiasm. 
               
                
                |  
               
            
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              “This place is called the Water Park. It is one of the finest 
              regions of the Astral City, and a favorite meeting place for 
              lovers. They come here to exchange sweet vows of love and fidelity 
              for their future experiences on Earth.”  |  
          
            
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              These remarks brought a series of interesting questions to my 
              mind, but Lysias gave me no chance to vent my eager curiosity. 
              Pointing to a large and imposing building, he explained: 
               |  
          
            
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              “That is the Colony’s water works. The waters of the Blue River 
              that you see over there are drawn into huge compartments from 
              which they are distributed to every district in the Colony. Beyond 
              the grounds of the Ministry of Regeneration, the waters converge 
              again. The river then flows along its ordinary course towards the 
              great ocean of substances, invisible to the Earth. “As a matter of 
              fact, water here has quite a different density than that on Earth. 
              It is much lighter and purer here, almost fluidical.”  |  
          
            
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              Noticing the magnificent building in front of us, I asked: 
               |  
          
            
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              “Which Ministry controls the distribution of water?”  |  
          
            
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              “It is one of the rare material activities under the Ministry 
              of Divine Union.”  |  
          
            
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              “Really!” I exclaimed, at a loss for how to reconcile the two. 
              Lysias smiled and continued with his explanation:  |  
          
            
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              “On Earth, very few people recognize the importance of water. Here 
              in the Astral City our attitude is different and our knowledge of 
              the subject is far greater. 
                
                 |  
           
            
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               It 
              is obvious that all services that are created need energy and 
              attention to remain in good order. In this spiritual city we learn 
              to be grateful to the Father and His divine laborers for such a 
              gift. Being more deeply acquainted with the properties of water, 
              we know that it is one of the most powerful vehicles for all 
              fluids, whatever their nature. Here, water is used especially for 
              nutritive and medicinal purposes. In the Ministry of 
              Assistance, you will find several departments entirely devoted to 
              mixing pure water with certain elements drawn from solar rays and 
              from spiritual magnetism. In most districts of our extensive 
              Colony, the water thus prepared is the basis of our diet. It 
              happens, though, that, of all of us, the Ministers of Divine Union 
              have reached the highest degree of spiritualization. Consequently 
              they were allotted the task of the general magnetization of the 
              water of the Blue River, to purify it enough so that it might be 
              used by all of the inhabitants of the Astral City. After the 
              Ministers of Divine Union cleanse the water, various institutions 
              carry out the specialized work of endowing it with nutritive and 
              medicinal substances. When the different ducts join again at a 
              distant point opposite these woods, the river flows away from our 
              area, bearing some of our spiritual qualities.” 
               |  
          
            
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              I was completely astonished in the face of these explanations.
               |  
          
            
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              “On Earth,” I remarked, “I never heard of anything like this.”
               |  
          
            
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              “Man is inattentive.” Lysias continued. “For many centuries the 
              sea has kept his environment in balance, rain has supplied him 
              with food, and the rivers have been vital in the formation of his 
              cities. Water is a blessing in his home and work, and is the 
              principal and most important element in his physical body. Yet man 
              goes on thinking himself the absolute master of his world, 
              forgetting that he is, before any other consideration, a child of 
              the Most High.”  |  
          
            
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              “The time will come, though, when he will follow our example and 
              recognize the value of this divine and precious gift. He will 
              understand that the water in every home absorbs the mental 
              characteristics of its inhabitants.”  |  
          
            
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              “In the physical world, my friend, not only does water carry away 
              the residues of material bodies, but it also becomes impregnated 
              with our mental vibrations. It can be harmful in wicked hands, 
              useful in generous ones. When in motion, it current spreads 
              the blessing of life and acts as a vehicle of Divine Providence, 
              absorbing man’s bitterness, hatred and worries, cleansing his 
              physical home and purifying his inner atmosphere.” 
               |  
          
            
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              Lysias fell into reverent silence, while I gazed at the tranquil 
              waters that had aroused in my mind so many sublime thoughts.
               
                 |  
          
            
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              Chapter 11 
                 
              
              
              LEARNING ABOUT THE ASTRAL CITY  |  
          
            
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              My generous friend was anxious to show me around the numerous 
              districts of the Colony, but pressing duties called him back.
               |  
          
            
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              “You will soon get a chance to visit the different departments of 
              our activities,” he said, encouragingly. “You see, the Ministries 
              of the city are vast centers of intense work. A through 
              inspection of any one of them would take several days. 
              However, you will not lack opportunities. Even if I find it 
              impossible to accompany you, through Clarence’s mediation you will 
              be granted a permit to visit any department you like.” 
               |  
          
            
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              By this time we were back at the airbus and in a few minutes we 
              were on our way home. I did not feel again the sensation of 
              uneasiness I had at first experienced, nor was I constrained by 
              the presence of the numerous passengers in the airbus. I was 
              almost at ease and fell to pondering over some of the questions I 
              was anxious to solve. I took the opportunity to question Lysias 
              further:  |  
          
            
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              “Lysias, my friend, can you tell me whether all spirit colonies 
              are like this one? Do they adopt the same characteristics?” 
               |  
          
            
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              “By no means. If, on the physical sphere, each region, each town 
              presents its own peculiar features, you can imagine the diversity 
              of conditions existing on our planes. Here, as on Earth, creatures 
              are grouped according to the common sources of their origin and 
              the goal in view. But it must be remembered that each colony, as 
              well as each of us, stands on a different step of the great 
              stairway to perfection. Collective experiences vary among one 
              another. We are only one example of such colonies. 
              According to our chronicles, our predecessors often sought 
              inspiration in the work of the devoted workers of other spheres, 
              just as settlements in formation now seek our help. Nevertheless, 
              each organization posses essentially unique characteristics.”
               |  
          
            
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              As a longer pause in the conversation ensued, I inquired: 
               |  
          
            
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              “And did the idea of the division into Ministries originate here?’
               |  
          
            
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              “Yes, it did. The pioneers of the Astral City visited New Dawn, 
              one of the most important spirit colonies near us, 
              where activities are distributed into departments. Our founder 
              adopted the system, but substituted the word ‘ministry’ for 
              ‘department’, except in the case of the Ministry of Regeneration, 
              which only obtained its promotion under our present Governor. 
              Their idea was that the organization into Ministries is more 
              meaningful in a spiritual sense.”  |  
          
            
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              “I quite agree.” I assented.  |  
          
            
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              “It is important,” Lysias continued, “that you realize that our 
              Colony strongly stresses the principles of order and hierarchy. 
              Merit is the only standard used to evaluate those who may be 
              assigned to prominent positions. In ten years, only four spirit 
              entities have been granted missions of responsibility in the 
              Ministry of Divine Union. As a rule, after long periods of 
              apprenticeship and service, we reincarnate to continue our 
              struggle towards perfection.”  |  
          
            
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              I was completely absorbed in Lysias’ words, and he went on: 
               |  
          
            
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              “When newcomers arrive showing response to brotherly cooperation, 
              they are lodged in a district of the Ministry of Assistance. If, 
              however, they are recalcitrant, they are taken to the Ministry of 
              Regeneration. As they begin, in time, to improve, they are then 
              admitted as helpers in the services of Assistance, Communication, 
              and Elucidation, in order to prepare themselves for their future 
              tasks on Earth.  |  
          
            
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              “Only a few spirits are allowed the privilege of long stay in the 
              Ministry of Elevation, and very rare indeed are those who are 
              raised to the staff of the Ministry of Divine Union when positions 
              become available every ten years. Let me tell you, the 
              acquisitions required are no mere expressions of idealistic 
              activity. We are no longer on the physical plane, where discarnate 
              entities are obliged to become ghosts. 
               
                |  
             
            
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              Our time here is spent in a round of active work. The work in the 
              Ministry of Assistance is difficult and complex; in Regeneration 
              it requires strenuous efforts; in Communication it demands a high 
              standard of individual responsibility; in Elucidation it calls for 
              a great working capacity and a well trained mind, while in 
              Elevation, abnegation and spiritual enlightenment are 
              indispensable. As to the missions of the Ministry of Divine Union, 
              profound wisdom and sincere universal love are essential 
              requisites. The Government, in its turn, is the busy center of all 
              administrative activities, and numerous services are under its 
              direct control, including nutrition, distribution of electrical 
              energies, traffic and transportation. In truth, my friend, labor 
              regulations are always fulfilled here. Rest, on the other hand, is 
              also rigorously observed. This is necessary in order to ensure 
              that tasks are fairly distributed. The only exception is the 
              Governor himself, who works ceaselessly, even during leisure 
              hours.”  |  
          
            
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              “But does he never leave the Government House?” I inquired. 
               |  
          
            
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              “Only when truly necessary for the public welfare. The one 
              exception is his Sunday visit to the Ministry of Regeneration, the 
              zone which contains the largest number of deranged entities 
              because so many of the spirits there are still attuned with their 
              unhappy brothers in the lower zones. Vast multitudes of 
              transgressor spirits are lodged there. Thus, on Sundays, after the 
              collective prayer in the Great Temple of the Government House, our 
              Governor spends the afternoon working with the Ministries of 
              Regeneration on many difficult cases. He sacrifices much to assist 
              our distraught and suffering brothers.”  |  
          
            
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              We left the airbus near the Hospital where, I thought gratefully, 
              I would soon find my comfortable room. As we walked, I noticed 
              beautiful music floating through the air. I had first heard the 
              melodies on leaving, and now as we returned, I looked to Lysias 
              for an explanation.  |  
          
            
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              “That music comes from our workshops. After long observation, the 
              Government came to the conclusion that music stimulates labor. 
              Since then,  |  
          
            
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              that inspiring incentive has become an established custom in all 
              of our activities.”  |  
          
            
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              Meanwhile, we had reached the hospital entrance hall. An attendant 
              came forward and addressed my companion:  |  
          
            
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              “Brother Lysias, you are urgently needed in the pavilion on my 
              right.”  |  
          
            
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              My friend left with his usual efficient calmness, while I retired 
              to the privacy of my room, once more to return to endless 
              speculations.        |  
          
            
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              After having received such precious elucidations, I felt most 
              anxious to improve my knowledge of some of the facts he had told 
              me about. His references to spirits in the shadowy Lower Zones 
              aroused my curiosity. The lack of religious instruction on Earth 
              is very often the cause of a serious state of confusion over here. 
              What could the Lower Zone be? I had heard Hell and Purgatory 
              mentioned in the Roman Catholic sermons I had attended out of 
              social obligation, but I never had the slightest notion of the 
              Lower Zone. The next time I met my amiable attendant, I had all of 
              my questions at my fingertips. He listened carefully, then 
              replied:  |  
          
            
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              “Well now, how can you be unaware of that region when you were 
              kept there for so long?  |  
          
            
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              With a shudder of horror, I recalled my past sufferings. Lysias 
              continued:  |  
          
            
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              “The Lower Zone begins on the Earth’s crust. It is the shadowy 
              zone for those who, in the world, turned a deaf ear to the call of 
              their sacred duties, which they failed to fulfill, languishing 
              instead in indecision or dragging themselves into the mire of 
              wrong-doings. You see, on reincarnating, a spirit promises to 
              carry out the mission assigned to him in the Father’s work. 
              Yet, when he recommences his experiences he finds it very 
              difficult to keep his word. Instead, he blindly follows the 
              dictates of his own selfishness. Thus, he continues to cultivate 
              old hates and passions, forgetting that hatred is not justice, 
              just as passion is not love. All that is superfluous and useless 
              unbalances the harmony of life. “  |  
          
            
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              “After Physical death, great multitudes of obsessed entities 
              remain in that misty region adjacent to the Earth’s physical 
              sphere. A well accomplished duty serves as a gateway through which 
              we enter the Infinite. It brings us closer towards our goal – the 
              sacred union with the Lord. It is natural, then, that one who 
              neglects the tasks allotted to him should have that blessing 
              indefinitely postponed.”  |  
          
            
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              Lysias perceived my difficulty in grasping the full meaning of the 
              lesson, owing to my almost total ignorance of spiritual 
              principles, and tried to make it more objective:  |  
          
            
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              “Now, suppose that each of us returns to the Earth wearing filthy 
              clothing in order to wash it in the waters of human life. Our 
              dirty garment is our spirit-body, molded by our own hands in past 
              lives. Although we are granted the blessing of a new 
              opportunity on Earth, we generally forget our essential aim. 
              Instead of cleansing ourselves through constructive efforts, we 
              acquire even more stains – we incur heavier debts and imprison 
              ourselves through our own actions. We return to the world to 
              rid ourselves of our impurities, knowing that they are utterly 
              inconsistent with the higher spheres. How, then, can we expect 
              to enter those luminous spheres in an even worse condition? The 
              Lower Zone is a place where negative mental residues are 
              destroyed. It is a sort of purgatory, where the refuse of the 
              illusions acquired by neglecting the sublime opportunity of an 
              earthly life is gradually burned away.”  |  
          
            
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              The image could not have been clearer or more convincing. I was 
              simply lost in amazement. Lysias, perceiving how useful these 
              explanations could be to me, went on:  |  
          
            
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              “The Lower Zone should be a region of great interest to those 
              still on the physical plane, for it contains everything which 
              is out of tune with a higher plane. Consider how wise Divine 
              Providence was in allowing the creation of such a plane around 
              Earth. There we find compact legions of irresolute and ignorant 
              souls, not wicked enough to be relegated to colonies of harder 
              expiation, nor sufficiently virtuous to be admitted to higher 
              planes. Those countless inhabitants of the Lower Zone are close 
              companions to incarnate men, separated from them only by vibratory 
              laws.  |  
          
            
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              It is no wonder, then, that such places are characterized by 
              serious disturbances. There, rebellious spirits of all kinds are 
              grouped together, forming invisible nuclei of extraordinary power, 
              owing to the concentration of their common tendencies and 
              desires.”  |  
          
            
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              “Many people on Earth become desperate when the postman doesn’t 
              turn up, or when the train is late. The Lower Zone is full 
              of such desperate creatures, who, after physical death, are 
              disappointed at not finding the Lord ready to satisfy their every 
              whim. When they realize that the crown of glory and 
              eternal life are awarded only to those who have worked with the 
              Father, they show themselves as they truly are, wasting precious 
              time on petty deeds in the Lower Zone. Just as in the Astral 
              City, entities in the Lower Zone form a spiritual community, but 
              their community is peopled with many different types of 
              frustrated, idle and perverse entities. It is the 
              Threshold, a Zone of tyranny and bondage, of exploiters and 
              exploited.”  |  
          
            
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              Lysias stopped, but I, greatly impressed, went on questioning:
               |  
          
            
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              “But how do you account for this state of things? Do these spirits 
              have no defense, no organization?”  |  
          
            
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              “Organization,” Lysias proceeded with a smile, “is an attribute of 
              organized spirits. You see, the Lower Zone to which we are 
              referring is like a home where there is no bread – everybody 
              complains and no one is right. The absent minded traveler will 
              miss his train; the farmer who does not sow cannot reap. However, 
              of one thing you can be sure: even in the shadows and ordeals of 
              the Lower Zone, divine protection never fails its inhabitants. 
              Each spirit remains there just the necessary time, no more, no 
              less. An in order to carry out the work of spirit care in 
              the Lower Zones, the Lord has permitted the establishment of 
              several settlements such as ours.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I suppose then,” I remarked, “that the Lower Zone must be in 
              close connection with the incarnate plane even a kind of 
              continuation of it?”  |  
          
            
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              “So it is,” he agreed, “and you will see there the net of 
              invisible wires connecting it to human minds. It is peopled with 
              disincarnated entities and the thought forms of those still on 
              Earth. Every spirit, wherever it may be, is a nucleus of 
              radiating forces which can create, transform or destroy, 
              manifesting as vibrations that Earth science cannot yet 
              understand. Thus, whoever is thinking is emitting positive 
              or negative forces, and is, consequently, constructing or 
              destroying something somewhere. It is by means of those mental 
              currents that men establish connection with entities in the Lower 
              Zone whose tendencies are in accordance with their own, because 
              every soul is a powerful magnet. You see, then, that an 
              invisible army is at work behind the invisible one. “ 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “The most strenuous missions in the Lower Zone are assigned to 
              devoted helpers of the Ministry of Assistance. If a fireman’s work 
              in the great cities of Earth is exhausting and dangerous because 
              of the blazing flames and clouds of smoke he has to fight, no 
              lighter is the missionary’s task in the Lower Zone. These 
              missionaries have to withstand heavy fluids emitted by thousands 
              of minds obsessed in the practice of evil, or terribly chastised 
              by redeeming ordeals. I tell you, my friend, a great deal of 
              courage and a superior capacity for self-sacrifice are necessary 
              to be able to help those who are still unable to understand and 
              appreciate the assistance offered them.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              As Lysias paused once more, I exclaimed:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Oh, how would I like to work to help those unhappy creatures; to 
              offer them the spiritual bread of enlightenment.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              My friendly attendant looked at me kindly, and after a few moments 
              of reflection, took his leave with this parting remark: 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I wonder whether you feel duly prepared for such a mission.”
                     |  
          
            
              | 
              
              
              Chapter 13 
                      
              
              
              WITH THE MINISTER OF ASSISTANCE  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              As I gradually became stronger, I began to feel again the need for 
              activity and work. Now that those difficult years of distress were 
              over, I longed to begin again the round of occupations which, in 
              the world, generally comprise a regular working day. I fully 
              realized that I had missed excellent opportunities on Earth and 
              that my physical life had been spent along the wrong path. But, on 
              recalling my fifteen years of medical practice, I experienced a 
              sense of emptiness in my heart. I saw myself as a strong farmer 
              standing in the middle of a field, hands tide, unable to work. 
              Here I was, surrounded by patients, yet not allowed, as before, to 
              approach their beds as their friend, doctor and scientist. 
              Incessant moaning from neighboring rooms reached my ears, but I 
              could not lend a hand not even as a humble member of the nursing 
              or first-aid staff.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              On the physical plane it was a matter of studying the regular 
              books plus some necessary training and one could acquire the 
              rights of a qualified physician. But here, in my new surroundings, 
              spirit doctors employed different methods, their chief 
              textbooks being their own hearts, and their basic treatment, 
              brotherly care and love. Even the humblest of nursing attendants 
              in the Astral City possessed far greater knowledge and 
              possibilities than I, with all my science. Consequently, much as I 
              longed for some occupation, I feared that, at least for the time 
              being, any attempt on my part to apply for work would amount to an 
              encroachment upon the rights of others. Faced with such 
              difficulties, I turned to Lysias as a brother. In reply to my 
              doubts and hesitations, he suggested:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Why not asking Clarence? He never fails to ask about you, and is 
              sure to do his best on your behalf. Go and ask him for advice and 
              assistance”.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I took the necessary steps to obtain an appointment with my 
              generous benefactor, and was told that he would not be able to see 
              me until the next morning, when I was to go to his private office.
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I waited anxiously for the coming interview, and very early the 
              following day I made my way to the appointed place. To my great 
              surprise, I found three other people already waiting for him. The 
              kind Minister had arrived early, long before us, and was seeing to 
              matters even more important than attending to visitors and 
              petitioners. After finishing his most urgent work, the Minister 
              had us shown in, two by two. I was surprised at this manner of 
              holding an audience, but was told later that the measure was 
              adopted so that the solution of one case might profit not only the 
              party involved, but also the others present, thus serving the 
              common well being as well as saving time.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              After several minutes had passed, I was admitted along with an 
              elderly lady who was to be heard first. The Minister welcomed us 
              cordially, putting us at ease to present our requests. 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Worthy Clarence” began my unknown companion, “I have come to beg 
              your intercession on behalf of my two sons. I can’t bear to be 
              separated from them any longer! Moreover, I have been informed 
              that they are leading difficult lives on Earth, with no end to 
              their tribulations. I realize that our Father’s designs are loving 
              and just, yet as a mother I can’t help worrying and being 
              anxious.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              The poor creature broke down and wept bitterly. Clarence looked at 
              her with sympathy and kindness, but replied firmly:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “But sister, if you agree that our Father’s designs are holy and 
              just, what is left for me to do?”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I should like to be granted the means of protecting my sons on 
              Earth myself.” Replied the afflicted mother.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Alas, my friend,” exclaimed Clarence, “in order to protect 
              others, one must have grown in the spirit of humility and service.
              What would you think of a man who anxious to provide for his 
              little children remained comfortably at home? Service and 
              cooperation are laws created by the Father, and no one may break 
              them without causing himself serious damage. Has your conscience 
              nothing to say on this point? How many-bonuses5 can 
              you present to justify your demand?”  |  
          
            
              |   
              
              5Note 
              by André Luiz: An hour-bonus is a convention created to account 
              for each hour of service performed on behalf of the community   |  
          
            
              | 
              
              The anxious mother, thus addressed, answered hesitantly: “Three 
              hundred and four.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “It is a pity,” continued Clarence, smiling, “that you should have 
              been lodged here for over six years and should have given the 
              Colony only three hundred and four hours of work. Yet, as soon as 
              you recovered from your trials in the lower regions, I offered you 
              a meritorious occupation in the Vigilance Patrols of the Ministry 
              of Communication…”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “But that was intolerable work”, she interrupted, “an incessant 
              struggle against malevolent entities! Your couldn’t expect me to 
              adapt to it.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Clarence went on, unperturbed:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “After that I found you a place with the Brothers of Support, for 
              redeeming service.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Worse still!” She protested. “Those chambers are always crowded 
              with filthy creatures. I couldn’t stand their swearing, their 
              immorality, the squalor…”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Realizing your difficulties,” continued the Minister, “I sent you 
              to cooperate in the Ward of Mentally Disturbed entities.” 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “But can anybody but saints put up with them?” Inquired the 
              rebellious petitioner. “I really did my best, but the multitude of 
              raving souls is enough to scare anybody.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “My efforts did not stop there.” Proceeded our patient benefactor 
              calmly. “I then placed you in the Investigation and Research 
              Department of the Ministry of Elucidation. But, you, sister, 
              probably impatient at my unwelcome interest, deliberately retired 
              to the Park of Repose.”  |  
  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I found that place unbearable.” Explained the querulous matron. 
              “I couldn’t possibly endure the atmosphere of strange fluids, 
              exhausting experiments and harsh supervisors.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Remember, my friend, resumed the devoted and enlightened 
              Minister, “that assistance has two inseparable companions: service 
              and humility. In order to help others we must first obtain the 
              collaboration of benefactors, friends and servants. Before being 
              able to render assistance to those we love, it is essential that 
              we establish currents of sympathy, without which no efficient aid 
              is possible. The peasant who tills the soil earns the gratitude of 
              those who enjoy the harvest. The workman who satisfies exacting 
              superintendents, carrying out their orders scrupulously, is 
              providing nourishment for his family. The servant who obeys in the 
              spirit of cooperation, wins the goodwill of his master, his 
              companions, and all those interested in his work. So you see, no 
              average administrator can ever be useful to his loved ones if he 
              has not yet learned how to obey and serve worthily. Let everybody 
              keep in mind that all useful service belongs, above all, to the 
              Universal Giver, and that it must be carried out no matter what 
              difficulties or suffering it may cost.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              After a short pause, he resumed:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “What, then, would you do on Earth, if you have not yet learned 
              how to withstand here? I do not doubt your devotion to your sons, 
              but as it is, you would arrive there as a paralytic mother, 
              incapable of rendering any efficient assistance. To deserve the 
              joy of helping love ones we must enlist the goodwill of many of 
              our brothers, whom we, in turn, have helped. If you give no 
              cooperation, you cannot expect to receive any. That is the Law. 
              And if you, my sister, possess nothing of your own to give, you 
              will have to turn to others for voluntary contribution. But how 
              will you obtain it, when you have not sown anything, not even good 
              feelings? Go back, then, to the Park of Repose, where you have 
              been lodging lately, and give the subject serious attention. We 
              shall take it up again.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              The disappointed woman sat down, drying her tears. The Minister 
              then looked at me and said, kindly:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I rose hesitantly and approached him to present my request. 
                   |  
          
            
              | 
              
              
              Chapter 14 
                 
              
              
              CLARENCE EXPLAINS  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              As I stood there, my heart pounding, I felt like a diffident 
              student about to face a strict examining board. Disconcerted by 
              the sight of that woman in tears, and awed by the Minister’s 
              serene authority, I trembled in my shoes, regretting having sought 
              the interview. Would it have been better to have held my peace and 
              waited patiently for superior deliberations? Would it be presuming 
              too much to apply for medical duties in a hospital where I was a 
              patient? I wished that I could retreat hurriedly to my room and 
              forget all about yesterday’s aspirations. But that was quite out 
              of the question now. The Minister of Assistance, sensing my 
              innermost intentions, addressed me in a firm tone of voice: 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I am ready to hear you, my friend.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Although a prey to indecision, I was about to instinctively 
              solicit any medical activity in the colony, when my conscience 
              prompted a warning: why ask for special work? Would that not be 
              falling again into human error, reverting to that old vanity which 
              does not tolerate any occupation but the one befitting one’s 
              special status and schooling? These thoughts restored my 
              equilibrium, and, rather confused, I began:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I took the liberty to come to you today to ask your assistance in 
              procuring some sort of work for me. Now that the treatment 
              received here has restored my health, I am beginning to miss my 
              old occupations. Any task will be welcomed, as long as it keeps me 
              from inactivity.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Clarence looked at me long and intently, as if trying to gauge my 
              innermost thoughts.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I see. With your lips you ask for any kind of work, but deep in 
              your heart what you really miss is your consulting room, your 
              patients, and all the atmosphere of medical service with which the 
              Lord deigned to honor you on Earth.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              So far his words were most encouraging, and with my heart filled 
              with hope, I nodded in assent. After a long pause, the minister 
              proceeded:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “You must not forget, however, that very often our Father honors 
              us with his confidence, and that we often betray his trust by 
              underestimating the dignity of the call. Your, for instance, went 
              through your medical courses on Earth surrounded by every 
              facility. You never knew the price of a single book, as your 
              parent’s generosity saw to all your needs. As soon as you 
              graduated, lucrative positions were already waiting for you. Thus, 
              you were spared the poor doctor’s hard struggle to build a 
              practice. You prospered most rapidly in your career. 
              Unfortunately, you transformed the advantages you obtained into a 
              means of bringing about the premature death of your physical body. 
              While young and strong, you committed numerous abuses in the 
              exercise of the profession which Jesus granted you.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              At that firm but kind lecture, I felt strangely disturbed, but 
              managed to reply respectfully:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I recognize the justice of your observations, but I should be 
              grateful if you would grant me the means of repaying my debts by 
              devoting myself, heart and soul, to the patients in this 
              hospital.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “A very noble impulse,” said Clarence without severity. 
              “Nevertheless, it must be remembered that the exercise of a 
              profession on Earth is a call from our Father summoning his 
              creatures to come into the divine temples of service. For us here 
              a degree is a mere identification card, but on Earth it usually 
              means an open door to all sorts of abuse. The person who receives 
              such a card is given the opportunity to study and cooperate with 
              the Lord in His divine work on the planet. This principle is 
              applicable to all earthly activities, regardless of their nature 
              and class conventions. You, my brother, were granted a medical 
              card, and consequently were admitted into the temple of Medicine. 
              However, your line of conduct does not justify my endorsing your 
              present wish. How could I appoint you to treat spirit patients, 
              when on Earth you insisted on limiting your professional 
              observations to the physical body?  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I do not deny your capacity as an excellent physiologist, but the 
              field of life is much wider. What would you think of a botanist 
              who based his definitions on the mere examination of the dry bark 
              of a few trees? A great number of earthly physicians prefer 
              mathematical conclusions in their anatomical work. Now, I quite 
              agree that Mathematics is a most respectable science, but it is 
              not the only one in the Universe. As you are already aware, a 
              doctor cannot draw the line at diagnoses and terminologies – he 
              must go deeper, and scrutinize the innermost recesses of the soul. 
              On Earth, many of your colleagues become true slaves to academic 
              conventionalism because of their professional life. Very few 
              succeed in crossing prejudices. The rare exceptions are scoffed at 
              by society, and looked down upon by their colleagues.” 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I was lost in amazement. I had never dreamed of such lofty notions 
              of professional responsibility. I was staggered by the idea of a 
              college degree being merely a ticket giving admittance into zones 
              of work and collaboration with the Lord. Speechless, I waited for 
              the Minister of Assistance to resume his elucidations. 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “As you see,” he went on, “you have not prepared yourself for our 
              activities.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Generous benefactor,” I ventured to say, “I understand the 
              lessons and submit myself to the obvious.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Trying to keep back my tears, I begged humbly:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “I am willing to accept any kind of occupation in this colony of 
              work and peace.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Clarence, showing me a deep look of approval, answered: 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “My friend, you have listened to a few bitter truths. Now let me 
              add a little word of encouragement. You cannot, as yet, become a 
              doctor in the Astral City, but in due time you will be admitted as 
              an apprentice. Your present situation is not the best. 
              Nevertheless, it is a promising one, owing to 
              
              the intercessional petitions sent to the Ministry of Assistance on 
              your behalf.”  |  
  
          
            
              | 
              
              “My mother?” I inquired, transported with bliss.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Yes,” assented the Minister, “your mother, and other friends in 
              whose heart you planted the seed of gratitude. Soon after your 
              arrival here, I requested that the Ministry of Elucidation have 
              your records sent to me. I have already examined them most 
              carefully, and found much rashness and thoughtlessness, and many 
              abuses. I also found that, in your fifteen years of medical 
              practice, six thousand poor patients received free medical 
              attendance in your clinic. Most often you went through those 
              meritorious deeds quite heedlessly. Still, you can see now that, 
              even if carelessly done, a good deed attracts blessings to the one 
              who carries it out. Of six thousand, fifteen have not forgotten 
              you, and have been sending incessant appeals on your behalf. I 
              must explain, also, that even the forgotten benefit of your work 
              weighs in your favor.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Putting a stop to those surprising elucidations, Clarence added 
              with a smile:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “You will learn new lessons here, and after instructive 
              experiences, you will cooperate efficiently with us, preparing at 
              the same time for your own progress towards the Infinite.” 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I was overjoyed. For the first time since my arrival at the 
              Colony, I cried out of pure happiness. Who on Earth would 
              understand such emotions? Still, I felt it necessary to quiet my 
              heart to enter the sublimity of divine silence.  
                   |  
          
            
              | 
              
              
              Chapter 15 MY MOTHER’S VISIT  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Following Clarence’s advice, I tried hard to restore my strength 
              in order to start my apprenticeship as soon as possible. In the 
              old days, I might have taken offense at the Minister’s seemingly 
              harsh remarks, but under the circumstances, recollecting my past 
              errors, I could only feel comforted. As a prisoner of the flesh, 
              the soul is almost always wrapped in thick mists of illusion. Only 
              now did I realize that an earthly life cannot be lived 
              thoughtlessly. The real importance of an incarnation loomed 
              clearly before my eyes. Remembering all the opportunities I had 
              wasted, I recognized that Clarence had plenty of reason to have 
              spoken to me as he had.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I spent many days immersed in contemplation. Although I refrained 
              from asking for any more concessions, deep in my heart I longed to 
              visit my earthly home. The benefactors of the Ministry of 
              Assistance had been extremely generous to me and seemed to follow 
              all of my thoughts. Therefore if they did not spontaneously grant 
              such a wish, it must be because the time had not yet come for it. 
              Thus I held my peace, resigned, though somewhat wistful. Lysias 
              did his best to cheer me up with his lively conversation and 
              encouraging remarks, but I was going through that phase of 
              spiritual retreat when a man retires within himself to face his 
              innermost conscience.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              One day, however, my attendant came into my room and exclaimed:
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Guess who has come to see you!”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Lysias, smiling face and sparkling eyes gave him away. 
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “My mother!” I exclaimed confidently. Stunned with joy, I saw my 
              mother approaching with outstretched arms.  
                 |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “My child, my child! Come into my arms, my dear one.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              I cannot describe what happened then. All of a sudden, I felt like 
              the little boy who used to play in the rain, barefoot in the sandy 
              soil of our garden. In that sacred and joyful moment I held her 
              tenderly in my arms, until even our tears blended. I cannot say 
              how long we remained that way, but at last she broke the 
              enchantment:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Now, now, my boy, don’t give free rein to your emotions. You know 
              that even excessive happiness taxes the heart. You are still weak, 
              do not waste your energy.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Instead of carrying my dear old mother in my arms, as I had done 
              in the last weeks of her passage on Earth, it was she who dried my 
              tears and led me to the couch. I sat down beside her and laid my 
              head tenderly on her knees. She stroked my hair gently, recounting 
              precious memories. I felt at that moment that I was the happiest 
              of men – I had the impression of being anchored in the safest of 
              harbors after a hard struggle on the stormy seas.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              My mother’s presence was a great comfort to my heart, and those 
              moments seemed like a blissful dream. Like a little boy looking 
              for comfort in familiar objects, I attentively observed her 
              clothes, a perfecto copy of those se used to wear at home. I 
              recognized the dark dress, the blue shawl, the woolen stockings. I 
              gazed at her small head crowned with snow-white hair, at the 
              wrinkles on her face, at her invariably sweet and calm expression. 
              Speechless and trembling with joy, I stroked her hands, while she, 
              stronger that I, spoke serenely:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “The Lord never forgets us, my child. We shall never be able to 
              thank Him for all of His kindness. How long our separation has 
              been – but you mustn’t think that I had forgotten you. Sometimes 
              Providence parts us temporarily so that we may learn Divine Love.”
               |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Feeling that her affection was the same as ever, I began to recall 
              again the sting of old grievances. Oh, how difficult it is to get 
              rid of earthly residues. How heavy is the burden of centuries of 
              imperfections! Clarence had often exhorted me to refrain from 
              lamenting. Lysias, too, had spared me his warnings. Yet now, 
              resting in my mother’s arms, all my old wounds seemed to bleed 
              again. I started to bitterly recall my past sufferings, and my 
              tears of joy gave away to those of self-pity. |  
          
            
              | 
               I 
              did not realize then that her visit was not to be taken simply for 
              the gratification of my whims, but as one more blessing from 
              Divine Mercy. Relapsing into my old habit of making my mother the 
              patient victim of my endless grievances, I now began to painfully 
              recount all of my past tribulations. On Earth mothers are often 
              merely slaves in their children’s eyes. Very rare are those who 
              realize the value of their mother’s devotion before being deprived 
              of it . I hade been no exception.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              My mother listened in silence, her face clouded by an expression 
              of indescribable sadness. Holding me tight to her heart, her eyes 
              full of tears, she spoke tenderly:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Oh, my son, don’t complain. Didn’t our generous Clarence give you 
              sound advice on that subject? Let’s be thankful to our Father for 
              this blessed meeting. Let’s never forget we are now in a different 
              school, learning to become true children of God.  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “As a mother on Earth, I didn’t always succeed in guiding you in 
              the best way. Therefore I, too, am working to control my feelings 
              by readjusting my heart. Bu your tears are stirring my old earthly 
              feelings, drawing me back into a path I have already trodden. I 
              should like to believe your complaints justified, to set you up as 
              the most virtuous creature in the Universe, but it would be out of 
              accordance with the new lessons we are learning. In the world one 
              might make allowances for such behavior; here it is quite 
              impossible. We must consider the Lord before everything else. You 
              aren’t the only discarnate man redeeming his errors, nor am I the 
              only mother parted from her loved ones. The merit of our 
              suffering, my son, doesn’t lie in the tears it makes us shed, nor 
              in the bleeding wounds it inflicts on us, but in the gateway of 
              light it opens up to us. Tears and wounds are only a blessed means 
              of helping us to purify our soul.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              After a prolonged pause, during which my conscience addressed me 
              firmly, she resumed:  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              “Why not enjoy these fleeting moments in the sunshine of love, 
              instead of wasting them in the shadows of unhappiness? Let’s 
              serve, my child, and serve cheerfully, while at the same time 
              constantly rejoicing in the Lord. Change your mental attitude, I 
              beg you. Your confidence in my love and your affection for me, 
              bring me sublime happiness, but I can’t return to experiences 
              which have passed. We must love each other now with the great and 
              sacred Divine Love.”  |  
          
            
              | 
              
              Those inspiring words awakened me, and I had the impression that 
              my mother’s love radiated invigorating fluids which lifted my 
              heart. She gazed at me contentedly, transfigured by a radiant 
              smile, and as I rose and respectfully kissed her forehead, it 
              struck me that I had never before seen her so beautiful and so 
              loving.    
              
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