Bashar addresses the nature of good and evil from a non-dual metaphysical perspective. This entry explains: (1) evil as 'temporary forgetfulness'—not an opposing force to good but a state of profound disconnection from Source awareness, where beings act from fear rather than love, (2) the polarization engine—physical reality requires contrast (positive/negative, light/dark) to generate the experiential diversity that drives cosmic expansion; 'evil' is the label humans apply to experiences they resist, (3) the soul's perspective—from non-physical vantage, all experiences serve growth; even actions labeled 'evil' provide contrast that catalyzes compassion, justice-seeking, and collective evolution, (4) karma not as punishment but as energetic balancing—beings who cause harm set in motion experiences that teach the impact of harm, often through incarnational role-reversal, (5) practical discernment—while all experiences serve evolution metaphysically, humans must still make ethical choices, protect the vulnerable, and establish justice systems in physical reality. Bashar emphasizes that non-dual understanding does not justify harmful action; it provides context for healing and transformation. The entry discusses the 'dark worker' phenomenon—beings who consciously choose service-to-self paths—and how their existence ultimately strengthens the light by generating the contrast that inspires awakening.
Good and Evil: The Polarization Principle and Unified Creation
CORE-044 Deep ·
Controversial Content
未證實宣稱
Translation Note
Good and evil framework avoids moral relativism while acknowledging metaphysical unity behind polarized experiences.
Good and evil framework avoids moral relativism while acknowledging metaphysical unity behind polarized experiences.
Next
None