The constitutional doctrine of separation of church and state, sends
up a red flag in the minds of legal writers who try to analyze America's
present state bar association crisis against the background of
prophecy, scripture or religious teachings. We were taught in law school
they simply don't mix.
Nevertheless, events rapidly unfolding in California and other states suggest much insight can be gained from such inquiry. The speed at which online information is now communicated and processed, indicates that lawyers from all religious persuasions, and even none at all, are finding it beneficial to expand their awareness by thinking outside the box.
Still, prophecy challenges us to surrender our belief systems and wonder about people with unexplained abilities like American psychic Edgar Cayce, or even disturbing images like earthquakes and end-time scenarios. It is much more comfortable, and we have been conditioned since law school, to focus our time and energies on more practical issues like increasing billable hours and not missing filing deadlines.
We are also continually being "dummied down" by the mainstream legal media, like California's Daily Journal Inc. which censors and sanitizes fair and accurate news about America's largest state bar association.
Still, a growing number of lawyers are convinced that they are witnessing the unfolding of a major and unprecedented spiritual event which will fully reveal itself in their lifetimes.
One such prophecy which is commonly reported online and in alternative print is the Mayan or 2012 Prophecy. This ancient civilization had access to knowledge and technology which was far advanced than their time. But suddenly, the Mayans seem to have simply walked off into the jungle without any trace. All they left behind was a calender system which ended abruptly in the year 2012.
This phenomenon has led many to believe the Mayans were trying to tell us something; specifically that the world, or world as we know it, will end at the end of the year 2012.
A similar ancient prophecy is grounded in the Hopi Indian culture of North America. It is rooted in the belief that the upcoming emergence into the Fifth World will reverse the effects which the white man's encroachment into the lives and onto the land of the Hopi has had for generations.
It is more thought provoking and productive, I believe, to interpret these prophecies as the beginning of a new era, rather than some cosmic event or natural disaster signifying the end of the world.
Nevertheless, events rapidly unfolding in California and other states suggest much insight can be gained from such inquiry. The speed at which online information is now communicated and processed, indicates that lawyers from all religious persuasions, and even none at all, are finding it beneficial to expand their awareness by thinking outside the box.
Still, prophecy challenges us to surrender our belief systems and wonder about people with unexplained abilities like American psychic Edgar Cayce, or even disturbing images like earthquakes and end-time scenarios. It is much more comfortable, and we have been conditioned since law school, to focus our time and energies on more practical issues like increasing billable hours and not missing filing deadlines.
We are also continually being "dummied down" by the mainstream legal media, like California's Daily Journal Inc. which censors and sanitizes fair and accurate news about America's largest state bar association.
Still, a growing number of lawyers are convinced that they are witnessing the unfolding of a major and unprecedented spiritual event which will fully reveal itself in their lifetimes.
One such prophecy which is commonly reported online and in alternative print is the Mayan or 2012 Prophecy. This ancient civilization had access to knowledge and technology which was far advanced than their time. But suddenly, the Mayans seem to have simply walked off into the jungle without any trace. All they left behind was a calender system which ended abruptly in the year 2012.
This phenomenon has led many to believe the Mayans were trying to tell us something; specifically that the world, or world as we know it, will end at the end of the year 2012.
A similar ancient prophecy is grounded in the Hopi Indian culture of North America. It is rooted in the belief that the upcoming emergence into the Fifth World will reverse the effects which the white man's encroachment into the lives and onto the land of the Hopi has had for generations.
It is more thought provoking and productive, I believe, to interpret these prophecies as the beginning of a new era, rather than some cosmic event or natural disaster signifying the end of the world.
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