Can meditation and practice transcend your natural physical ability? William
LePar's spiritual source, The Council, in the following exchange answers that
for us.
Questioner: Council, take for example, you wish to be a great
violinist or a fine violinist, something like that. If you meditated on
it and also did the physical practice, could that transcend your normal talents?
The Council: Nothing can transcend what you are. The problem is
you do not realize how much there is to each one of you, so you automatically
put limits to yourself. When you combine the practice with the mental
desire, the meditation, the prayer, whatever, you open up a greater avenue for
that ability to come out and be utilized in the material manifestation or
become a reality to you. Do you understand?
Questioner: Yes.
The Council: Everyone is created equally in the spiritual sense.
Each one of you can be the greatest violinist the world has ever known.
You can be the greatest painter. You can be the most perfect soul.
It is how much effort will you put forth to allow that quality to come forth
and materialize.
Questioner: How much of what kind of effort?
The Council: Well, whatever you put into it.
Questioner: Physical and …
The Council: It is a combination of the physical effort and the mental
effort.
Questioner: Then most of those individuals that are great in various
fields, it is a combination of the both or does one take precedence? Is
there a trend there?
The Council: Actually, if you reach a perfect balance of the material
effort and the spiritual effort, the greatest potential is released into
reality or into the material manifestation. What happens is some people
will go off to one side or the other. Instead of reaching the balance,
they may meditate too much and not enough of the physical practice, or too much
of the physical practice and not enough of the mental practice. Do you
understand?
Questioner: Yes.
The Council: So when you reach that equal balance, then the greatest
potential comes through. Then the circumstances in which you are born,
the circumstances which you have created in your decisions in life, will determine
what that potential will be in reality, how much of it will be available to
you, or how much of it you will be able to demonstrate. You can be the
greatest violinist ever born, but if the opportunities are not there for you to
display this ability, who is going to know your ability other than just a few
people in your immediate area.
For more on William LePar and The Council visit www.WilliamLePar.com
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