T. 25. IX. 4 – 7. Jesus: “The perception of innocence makes punishment impossible, and justice sure. The Holy Spirit’s perception leaves no ground for an attack. Only some loss perceived could justify attack, and loss of any kind He cannot see.
The world solves problems in another way. It sees a resolution as a state in which it is decided who shall win and who shall lose; how much the one shall take, and how much can the loser still defend. Yet does the problem still remain unsolved, for only God’s justice can assure a state in which there is no loser; no one left unfairly treated and deprived, and thus with grounds for vengeance on another.
Problem solving cannot entail vengeance, which at best can bring another problem added to the first, in which the murder is not so obvious. The Holy Spirit’s problem solving is the way in which the problem ends. It has been solved because it has been met with justice. Until it has, it will recur, because it has not yet been solved.
The principle that justice means no one can lose is crucial to this course. For miracles depend on justice. Not as it is seen through this world’s eyes, but as the Holy Spirit knows it and as knowledge is reflected in the sight the Holy Spirit gives.
No one deserves to lose. And what would be unjust to him cannot occur. Healing must be for everyone, because he does not merit an attack of any kind. What order can there be in miracles, unless someone deserves to suffer more and others less? And is this justice to the wholly innocent?
No one deserves to lose. And what would be unjust to him cannot occur. Healing must be for everyone, because he does not merit an attack of any kind. What order can there be in miracles, unless someone deserves to suffer more and others less? And is this justice to the wholly innocent?
A miracle is justice. It is not a special gift to some, to be withheld from others deemed less worthy, more condemned, and thus apart from healing. Who is there who can be separate from salvation, if its purpose is the end of specialness? Where would salvation’s justice be if some errors were unforgivable, and would warrant vengeance in place of healing and return to peace?
Salvation cannot seek to help God’s Son be any more ‘unfair’ than he has sought to be in his illusions. If miracles, the Holy Spirit’s gift, were given specially to an elect and special group, and kept apart from others as less deserving, then would He be but an ally to specialness.
Salvation cannot seek to help God’s Son be any more ‘unfair’ than he has sought to be in his illusions. If miracles, the Holy Spirit’s gift, were given specially to an elect and special group, and kept apart from others as less deserving, then would He be but an ally to specialness.
What He cannot perceive the Holy Spirit bears no witness to. And everyone is equally entitled to His gift of healing and deliverance and peace. To give a problem to the Holy Spirit to solve for you means that you really do want it solved.”