David Deal circa 2006
I once had a dear friend who often said he was the man who knew too much. He was a devotee of the Sufi tradition and he loved all topics metaphysical. Often when we were having one of our in-depth discussions, he would lament the fact that he knew too much. I would always advise him to forget it all, to let it go, to let it be. He understood the concept, but could not embrace the spirit of it. I think I now understand what he meant. At times I feel jaded, perhaps calloused, by the worldly knowledge I have attained. I find myself finding it difficult to feel love for my fellow humans. During these times, I’ve felt the need to reach deep into memory for the great love I’ve felt for pets, and attempt to transfer that feeling into daily interactions. I hear my mother’s voice telling me, when I was very young, that if I could love people as much as I loved animals, I’d be “all right”. This void I’m feeling is what reminded me of my dear friend, David Deal — the man who knew too much. I will try to take the advice I once gave to him, to forget everything and “let it be”. The divine Love which flows through the universe is always there, I only need be empty enough to let it fill me.
“The vital part, the heart and soul of Christian Science, is Love. Without this, the letter is but the dead body of Science, — pulseless, cold, inanimate.”
Mary Baker Eddy - Science & Health Page 113:5-8
“Any relationship you would substitute for another has not been offered to the Holy Spirit for His use. There is no substitute for love. If you would attempt to substitute one aspect of love for another, you have placed less value on one and more on the other. You have not only separated them, but you have also judged against both. Yet you had judged against yourself first, or you would never have imagined that you needed your brothers as they were not. Unless you had seen yourself as without love, you could not have judged them so like you in lack.”
A Course in Miracles T-15.V.6:1-6

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