SPIRIT OR EGO?

SPIRIT OR EGO?

Humanity’s condition can easily be compared to that of a terminally ill patient — kept from recognizing the nearness and inevitability of death by medication and painkillers.

The darkness — which is not “the bad guys” — but a reality we ourselves have created through our relentless pursuit of the material and the earthly, surrounds us on every side in the form of technological progress, numbing us to our eternal demise.

So even when war is raging around the world, as long as we can continue “enjoying” what the matrix offers, “life” goes on.

On social media, thousands of likes still flow to shows about sculpting the perfect abs and glutes, or to tempting deals for indulgent vacations abroad.

Those who are slightly more awake busy themselves with political analyses of the war. Yet despite their differing views, they all point an accusing finger at someone — the Iranians, Bibi Netanyahu\Trump, the New World Order — while refusing to take even a single grain of responsibility themselves.

Yes — that is precisely what the darkness does. It lulls the overwhelming majority of humanity to sleep with slogans and theories of every kind, driven by one purpose alone: to prevent the awakening of the spirit and its salvation in its final opportunity — at the Judgment of the End of Days.

A few messengers, who truly see the bigger picture from the higher vantage point of The Light and understand where humanity is headed, strive with all their might to awaken and illuminate whoever they can. But more often than not, they are met with ridicule and abuse.

“Stop spreading fear!” “Who says there’s only one Truth?”

The crowd lashes out at the messengers and sinks deeper into its spiritual slumber.

How is this any different from the fate of the prophets throughout human history? It is no different. Their shared tragedy was always the same: only when their prophecies came to pass did humanity realize they had been right — but by then, it was already too late.

Thus, the heavy slumber continues across the world.

“It will pass.” “It doesn’t affect me.” “There are people whose job it is to handle this.”

Everyone scrolls past the headlines — a mass shooting in one country, a terror attack in another, wildfires consuming entire regions, floods displacing millions — and returns, within seconds, to the next video, the next deal, the next distraction. As long as the sirens are not outside their own window, life goes on.

Those who are slightly more engaged busy themselves with analysis. They debate. They post. They assign blame — to governments, to world leaders, to shadowy forces pulling strings behind the scenes — while refusing to take even a grain of personal responsibility for the state of the world, or of their own inner life.

And so everyone becomes an expert. On geopolitics. On climate. On warfare. On economics. Armed with a smartphone and an opinion, the crowd processes the collapse of civilization as content.

What they all share — beneath the noise — is the same quiet assumption: this is not the end. We have been here before. It will stabilize. It always does.

But has it always?

Do you not remember that the Jewish people of Europe watched the situation deteriorate — step by step, law by law, year by year — and the majority did not believe it could end in annihilation? In 1994, the entire world watched Rwanda and chose to look away, even as those on the ground were screaming that what was coming was beyond anything the world was prepared to face. In both cases, by the time reality became undeniable, it was already too late.

These were not failures of information. The warnings were there. They were ignored.

So, awaken, and finally ask yourselves: if the pattern keeps repeating — if every generation faces its moment of reckoning and the majority sleepwalks through it — what does that tell us about the real nature of what we are facing?

This is not a political crisis. It is not an environmental crisis. It is not an economic crisis.

It is a spiritual one.

The question is not whether suffering awaits humanity, but whether that suffering will lead to a catastrophe on the scale of an atomic bomb or to a suffering after which healing will come.

The suffering can no longer be prevented, for it is the only thing that may still help those who still carry a living spark of spirit to save their existence.

Yes, this is not merely about saving our earthly lives, but about saving our existence itself.

Here is the essence of the entire teaching in a single sentence: life here on planet Earth is nothing more than a school for the development of the spirit. If we have squandered all the incarnations granted to us by sinking into materialism instead of cultivating spiritual consciousness, then in the End of Days our condition will be exceedingly dire.

For the spirit — which in its weakness and indolence allowed the ego to suppress and deny it — will be in the ethereal world too weak to vitally sustain itself. It will then be forced to endure a second death — a spiritual death.

And that death is far more tragic than the death of the physical body.

Therefore, the fateful question facing each and every person at this time of Judgment is this:

Will the spirit succeed in awakening, overcoming the ego, and ascending toward The Light — or will it surrender to the ego and be dragged, inevitably, into the disintegration of darkness?

Anyone who has begun this inner work — and has even made progress in it — knows how fierce the battle within us truly is, the struggle between spirit and ego, and how easy it is to lose.

I do not pray only for others, that they may not falter — but for myself as well.

Alma School for Humanity
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