When
you take your clothes off without guilt, and you put them under your
feet like little children and trample them, then you will see the son of
the living one and you will not be afraid. (PGoTh, Logion 37)
This is the essence of what the teaching of Jesus is all about, for naturally all feelings of shame and guilt are related to a feeling of inadequacy that goes along with our choice for the ego thought system, and our mistaken identification with the false ego self, with the roles we play in the world, father, mother, husband, employee, employer, bum, bumette, etc. none of which represent who we truly are. Of course we would be full of shame and guilt while we are trying to be someone whom we are not. Therefore when we truly practice quantum forgiveness as Jesus teaches in the Course, we regain that childlike innocence, in which no pretense that we are somebody is further necessary, we can just be ourselves, children of one father, who made a mistake and lost the way home, and are now finding it back in total innocence. By then we are on the path of realizing that truly my brother's interests and mine are completely the same, because we're all looking for the way home. By definition if we regain that innocence, not out of recklessness, but because we cleaned the Augias stables of our mind, we are in inner peace, and without care or worry, just like the image that is evoked by Logion 37.
And now for the premise of the show. The premise of the show will be to ask a number of non-religious stand-up comedians to play out their own version of Jesus, and in preparation they will be given a Bible, and an Ipod version of the Gospel according to Mark. They will be left completely free otherwise. The title of the show is: A Man Walks on Water. Interesting.
If you want to check it out for yourself... The magazine he posed was a special issue for men, titled L'Homo, and the tone of the publication was for men in general, be it heterosexual or homosexual. So there is also an undertone of confronting that issue, and Arie, though being heterosexual himself (he's about to get married in California this year), clearly feels that God loves us all, whatever our preferences. Very interesting.
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