God said: If they think they are unworthy, then they are not seeing themselves as they are, and they will not see you as you are either
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The fault you find with anyone is your own. Faultfinding is your greatest fault. Instead of finding fault, see the innocence of one who commits a fault, and you will emulate and reveal Me.
I do not find fault. I see Truth. I see the truth of you.
No matter how it seems, no one is trying to displease you. Whatever someone does, they are trying to please themselves. They feel they are unworthy, and they want to make up for it. If they think they are unworthy, then they are not seeing themselves as they are, and they will not see you as you are either.
Also, the reverse. When you try to please someone, it is yourself you are trying to please. You have this untrue dissatisfaction with yourself, and you want something outside you to help you feel better. Remove the dissatisfaction with yourself.
Please Me. Please Me with your joy in yourself and others.
Must you try to solve everything? Can you not let things be?
Your desire for outward perfection makes you see fault.
Do not desire outward perfection. Outward perfection does not exist.
And yet every moment of life is its own perfection in the moment of its uniqueness. You would change this and that about everyone and everything, but then, that would not be life.
And you ask, “What about murder? Should I not find fault with that? What about genocide? Should I smile on it?”
No, but I reply to you: If something is so obviously out of harmony, why must you point it out? Why must you rail about the obvious? Everyone knows that taking lives is opposed to life. The fault in one who murders lies in their view of life. Their perception was off. And so is yours.
We are realigning your perception now. We are realigning it to Mine.
Let go of past preoccupation.
Occupy yourself with Me.
Heavenletter #41 Published on: December 17, 2000
RPK: This is an excellent update. It brings up a few issues: 1. Judgement and 2. Worthiness and 3. service
Say for example, a person is trying to be a good person, or to see themselves as worthy, they might want to do some good deeds. Makes sense right? Except, the games have probably begun… a person who considers them self either above or below others, has a few tricks up their sleeve, namely, how can I FEEL worthy, BUT to do as LITTLE AS POSSIBLE, to FEEL worthy?
Another example…. Esu and the last supper. Let’s say that everyone is worthy according to God… therefore someone is always trying to force them self into your life… like a rapist… wouldn’t a rapist think, “well God says I’m worthy so what’s YOUR problem? Why not just barge into Esu’s life with the same confused attitude, “I’m worthy so Esu… fix me some dinner… and if you don’t you are judging me”.
Another example, “I gave you dollar once, so I am worthy to be your friend all the time… give me your phone number so we can keep in touch”…. meanwhile, the person who gave the dollar is living in the past, and in fact, is not all that friendly, and the person who received the dollar, couldn’t even buy a sandwich”…. but now is expected to give up their freedom, their privacy, their CHOICE.
So lets make a few more points:
1 Why is it that people don’t think Christ is worthy of their help? Real help, not half-assed help?
2. Just because everybody is worthy, doesn’t mean they deserve everything they want or ask for.
3. If you honestly believe everyone is worthy, why do people believe the ones who help them, are not worthy or proper assistance?
4. If people realize that in God’s eyes everyone is worthy, why are people always left to fend for themselves, or like Christ, to serve the masses without as little assistance as possible?
Sooooo me thinks that some people are basically full of it…. but they are still worthy. The thing is, just because you are worthy doesn’t mean you should expect people to be there for you, while you are not there for them. That’s just delusion.
Remember, judge actions, not people.
People need to be able to determine what is against the Laws of God and the Creation and what isn’t….so that does involve judgement.
Now let’s look at a most tricky example:
Let’s say that someone shows up to your door all the time, and they ask you for food… but the thing is, they have money for food but they want you to pay for it. They want you or Christ or anyone, to pay for their spiritual nourishment. Ask yourself, why would someone who actually believes they are worthy, would come up with every excuse under the sun, to not actually help Christ, or to be responsible, or to pay for their own food? Could it be because they don’t think they are worthy, and therefore they don’t think Christ is worthy, either. Then they expect Christ to shut up and serve the food as an unworthy being who is not worthy of help?
That is actually how people BEHAVE… .then they wonder why Christ has to remind himself that he’s worthy of help… real help, not fake help.
Soooo don’t be surprised if you discover that those who celebrate Christmas, don’t usually come up with reasons to help christ… instead they want to be seen as celebratory, and christ-like, because deep down they know they see themselves and thus, others as unworthy. Meanwhile, someone who celebrates them self as a christ, everyday, feels worthy and it is not bullshit. Giving is their nature. It is their nature, to help others to be more wise, more powerful and more loving. It is natural, not forced, no pretense.
Just because everyone is worthy doesn’t mean they are entitled to service, attention, especially during times of emergency when they refuse to help the tribe. If you cannot help put out a fire, don’t be surprised if the firemen don’t want to hang out with you…. who deemed who unworthy?
Soooo if you cannot help someone who is feeding you, that means you think you are unworthy, and so is the person helping you. Meaning this is not the high road, this is the low road of delusion, poverty and fake friendship. This also means that you don’t see yourself or anyone for who they truly are, you only see whatever convinces you to continue to live a lie. Like a child picking their nose in the corner and calling it dinner, don’t be surprised if no one wants to eat what you are serving.
Let’s finish with God’s statement:
The fault you find with anyone is your own. Faultfinding is your greatest fault. Instead of finding fault, see the innocence of one who commits a fault, and you will emulate and reveal Me.
Finding fault with SOMEONE is different than finding fault with their ACTIONS.
Everyone is worthy, but not everyone is worthy for every job, every situation, every friendship, or every circumstance.
Everyone is worthy, but that doesn’t mean everyone is capable.
Everyone is worthy, but that doesn’t mean they are willing.
Everyone is worthy, but that doesn’t mean they are helpful.
Everyone is worthy, but that doesn’t mean they think Christ or anybody else is worthy.
If you are the type of person that likes to go around getting support and giving blessings… ask yourself, WHY ARE THE PEOPLE WHO ARE HELPING YOU SO UNWORTHY OF YOUR AUTHENTIC HELP? IF YOU ARE WORTHY, WHY DO YOU INSIST ON CONSTANTLY RECEIVING MORE THAN YOU GIVE, THUS CREATING IMBALANCE IN THE UNIVERSE?
Yes a car with worth something even if sits in the driveway, but isn’t it worth more, when it actually works and does what it is designed to do?
When you help the people THE LEAST who have helped you THE MOST who need your help THE MOST and you know it… then you definitely don’t think you are worthy. Pretend all you want.
Christ Zombie Syndrome: The Unspoken Epidemic Among the Awakened
“Possibly one of the boldest spiritual texts ever written” -Wrinklebuddy / Christ Zombie Syndrome goes where few dare — straight into the decaying heart of faux spirituality. This searingly honest and darkly funny book shines a light on the freeloaders of the faith, the polite cannibals of the consciousness community, and the spiritual elite who ghost their teachers while pretending to glow. Christ is back, he’s got a broom, and this time he’s sweeping the temple clean. If you’ve ever felt unseen while carrying the light — or suspect you’ve been feasting at the table of truth without barely lifting a finger — this book is your mirror, your medicine, and your wake-up call. “It walks the line between searing truth and laugh-out-loud comedy — but never loses its soul. The voice is unfiltered Christ in human drag: brilliant, fed up, forgiving, and wielding a broom.“

