SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2000
CONTENTS:
Editorial -- "Signs of Shamballa"
Wherever we see examples of sacrifice and its counterpart, forgiveness, we encounter the Shamballa force, even if in the smallest degree. All incentive to put the well being of the whole over the interests of the part in order to achieve a greater and more inclusive good, is the Shamballa force in expression.
The Nature of the Will -- Djwhal Khul
The Way of Intuition - Jan Nation
To become more intuitive we have to face ourselves, know ourselves, and find how to let go of spiritually limiting and corrosive habits, ambitions, and the separatist tendencies of a little self. We have to learn how to ask ourselves the right questions, and how to hear and act on the answers that come.
The Feminine Principle and the Plan - Nancy Davison
The pairs of opposites are never separated from one another, for just as the positive photographic image can only be developed from the negative, so each partner in these pairs reveals the reality of the other half, a truth the Taoist symbol, the Yin-Yang, portrays so beautifully.
Spiritual Leadership - Alice Bailey
Spiritual movements originate on abstract levels as far as we are concerned and are sent forth by Those Who have achieved and Who are the Servers of the race. They are then fathered by a peculiar type of person who is usually a mental type, functioning in a peculiarly responsive type of body.
Triangles For a New World - Barbara Domalske
Through Triangles each of us has an opportunity to bring the Godhead of Light, Love and Will within himself outwardly into manifestation.
Right Human Relations: An Esoteric Perspective - Richard Bryant-Jefferies
A relationship in which goodwill is present requires each person to feel a particular way towards the other: warmth, caring, constructive intent are factors that come to mind. These feelings are beyond personal emotion, however, they are centred in the heart and are linked to a deep knowing that sees through the "heresy of separation".
Florence Nightingale: A Forerunner - Eileen Allen
Florence had long ago decided that compassion and caring were not enough to help the sick. Early in her life when she first began nursing she realised that training was needed.
BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS

|