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God, tiny like a flea

A few of us were talking about God during my very first spiritual workshops. I asked the person leading the meeting the following question:

“All the experiences I’ve lived through and all my encounters with God are not enough for me—I want more. Please tell me, where can I meet God?”

I remember the answer exactly:

“Look for God in the grass, in the rustling of leaves, in the rays of sunlight.”

What I heard is only seemingly obvious. One could also assume good intentions on the part of my acquaintance.

Let us, however, look at the same issue expressed from the level of human Souls. Let us assume that a similar meeting takes place in their astral world, for example in environments associated with Asgard, Elysium, or even on Olympus itself.

A question is asked by the Soul of some living god and sounds like this:

“Please tell me, where can I meet the Creator?”

The answer—let us assume—is given by a living goddess and sounds like this:

“Look for the Creator in the grass, in the rustling of leaves, in the rays of sunlight.”

It is possible that someone might accuse me here of nitpicking over words. But do you, dear reader, already see the contexts? Do you see the diminishing of the role of God Himself by the goddess, and more broadly by beings with the karma of deities living on Earth?

Indirectly, I received the following message:

“What about the Creator!
After all, a specific person (a soul) named Adam or Eve (John / Zoe, etc.)—these are the real gods. The Creator has been diminished by them/us in every possible way. He is not here, and you can see that clearly. There is only us (only them) as the most important figures. And God—yes, He exists, but is barely visible. One cannot eliminate the Creator completely, but His role remains minimal, and He is tiny—almost like a flea—hardly interfering in their/our affairs.”

Diminishing the role of God and diminishing God Himself is the desire of many souls and, separately, of many people. They make efforts to eliminate Him entirely from their own lives and from the lives of others.

Take, for example, the divine Mothers. This is probably a Hindu—or even older—idea of sexually possessing other people and their souls by souls perceived in a given situation as female. The cult of divine Mothers spread from India throughout Asia, to the Middle East, and through the Holy Land reached Europe as well. It is also known in the Americas, for example as the cult of the fertility goddess Pachamama. In the astral realm one can see how many ascetic monks actively worship the breasts of the divine Mothers—and how they do it. Not only at the breasts. Moreover, priests of many religions openly encourage these ascetics to cling to the maternal breasts of the divine Mothers. Since the attention of the soul follows, among other things, the thoughts of the personality, one should not be surprised by what is seen. Many people prefer to imagine the benefits flowing from suckling at the maternal breasts of the Divine Mother rather than building and developing their own direct communication with the Creator. With careful searching, one can find stories about the miraculous healing influence of the Milk of the Divine Mothers—on illnesses, old age, and more.

Other techniques of manipulation include vows, initiations, and more—whereby in every possible way the role of God is diminished in favor of all kinds of intermediaries: priests, deities, gurus, statues, phenomena, painted images. Many people manipulated, among others by Souls, think that a pendulum—a small piece of wood suspended on a string—provides all possible information so perfectly that their own conversations with the Creator are unnecessary, impossible, or irrelevant. Others prefer to ask Tarot cards, oracle cards, or divination tools instead of God.

After more than a dozen years, I see that a good answer to my question—

“Where can I meet God?”

—could sound like this:

“Search the grass together with God. Let Him show you the wonders He created there.”

Many people have expelled God from daily life in their own thoughts. Meanwhile, inviting Him in is only a gesture—and not a vain one at that. After all, God is present always and everywhere, in every activity of all beings—people and souls alike.

When playing the piano, invite Him to accompany you in performing or composing your music. Set up a second chair and play together, four hands.

Invite God into your professional work, where you earn money, and see that He truly is there with you.

Invite God to the swimming pool, to the sauna when you go there.

Invite Him into your car—let Him be your companion on every journey. Do I really need to list for you, dear reader, all the benefits of God’s presence with us?

Allow yourself also to feel it, to notice and appreciate the countless divine efforts and His constant presence.

Invite God into your kitchen when you prepare meals, when you bake or cook. Oh yes—God knows about exquisite dishes and cooking. You may think He doesn’t?

Since we are already at the pots—what do you think about vegetarianism?

That a vegetarian is more spiritual than a meat-eater?

When you talk with God in your kitchen, ask Him about human souls that often incarnate also, among others, in cows, pigs, and chickens.

You may think it is right to heal relations with the souls of those who incarnated in these animals. You may think that vegetarians are karmically safer and do not harm anyone.

But who said that human Souls do not also incarnate in plants—for example in cabbage, cauliflower, or coastal palm trees? How does “not harming others” relate to cutting down a Christmas tree, or chopping an onion for soup, or chives for cheese? Perhaps at the level of Souls it is still the same profanation of their material bodies as in the case of a lamb or a rooster prepared for the pot—regardless of the cook’s opinion.

Once God has been diminished, unfortunately one gets the impression that He tells us nothing about it. One does not hear His clear guidance either. I have also encountered the opinion that God does not hear prayers but fulfills them anyway—because that’s just how He is, how He functions.

Well…

A related topic is the article titled “Can God be sought in the grass?” Link

This entry has 1 comment
s_majda writes:
08/12/2015 at 18:53 (Edit)

“ ‘The Lord, Creator of heaven, hangs on the cross’ — the text of this devotional hymn is worth working through as intentions (prayer intentions).”


Opublikowano: 06/02/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: God


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