And so, any state of complete knowing would also, therefore, be a state of ineffability. I had decided that the closer we get to knowing the ''non-physical,'' the fewer words we have for clearly expressing it. Ineffable coincided with a conclusion I'd formed relative to it. Decades ago, while searching for plausible answers to my never-ending quest to know what ''it'' is all about, I discovered the word ineffable (meaning ''incapable of being expressed in words''). But it's primarily about how whatever we're asking for is being given to us - and it's also the first book to ever, in such clear terminology, give us the simple practical formula for how to ask for, and then how to receive, whatever we want to be, do, or have. And the deep indigo tint of the Pacific Ocean at this time of the morning seems to match the depth of pleasure I'm feeling as I'm imagining the value you're about to receive from the revelations within this book.Īsk and It Is Given is certainly a book about our ''asking'' being answered by all-that-is. Sunlight is beginning to spill across the Malibu coastline as I begin this preface.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |