Sunday, October 14, 2012

Justice Eternal

They say that justice delayed is justice denied. This is more true than perhaps it was intended. If justice is not immediate then it simply cannot be justice. There is, fortunately, immediate justice for all infractions in the universe. In fact, you can use this truth as a touchstone to determine what infractions are real and which are mere fabrications (imagined). If justice is not invoked by the act, then the act is not universally criminal, but is rather superficial and unimportant. True consequences are eternal, in fact, as the Bible concures, a sin (i.e. “universal crimes”) is already “paid for” by the very existence of “God in man” (i.e. “the Christ”). This means that real justice has already occurred and will continue to occure both before and after any “sin” is ever committed. A philosophical consideration of the term “instantanious” reveals that in order for something to be instantanious then it must also be eternal (occuring both before and after any given event eternally).

There ultimately is only one possible eternal consequence. This consequence goes by as many different names as the One Eternal Being Itself. For convenience here I will call it “separation from the One Eternal Being” (or more correctly, perhaps, the illusion of said separation). All suffering comes from this illusion. Time itself is perhaps the most powerful form that this illusion portrays. Timeless existence is enlightenment, also known as heaven, or eternal life. And it is also known as knowing the will of God, or being one with the universe (or God).

(Originally written by Joseph E. Duncan III in April of 2010)

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