Good and Evil: The Polarization Principle and Unified Creation
CORE-044
Bashar addresses the nature of good and evil from a non-dual metaphysical perspective. 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.
Source
Multiple sessions on polarity, dark workers, and the nature of evil