-
Clues To Our Birth May Be Written In Space
dear friends,
http://www.physorg.com/news2783.html
cayce mentioned phosphorus too...
http://www.are-cayce.org/readings/1602/003.html
(q) is it gradually becoming responsive through the restoration of phosphorus
so that man will talk back and forth with the cosmos - like the radio principle
- as prevailed in primitive light man?
(a) this is gradually a development to which the awarenesses of the use of the
spiritual consciousness may be as a medium through which such may be done.
(q) what does the "restoration of phosphorus" signify?
(a) the relationship of the individual to that awareness of the universal
consciousness which should be and is the promise of all who have wholly put on
him. for as he has given, "he that abideth wholly in me and i in him, to him
will be made aware all things from the foundations of the world." this is all
there, in his words, in his promises to man. just as indicated in his
exhortation upon the activities of john and as to what they meant in the affairs
of man. that place, that awareness. and yet when individuals will, even as john,
become aware of being within the presence of life itself, god himself made
manifest, - how few accepted it? only such as had known indeed the reviling of
man!
be well, be love.
david
clues to our birth may be written in space
january 22, 2005
extraterrestrial molecules found in meteorites may hold the key to the origin of
life on earth, according to chemistry research at the university of leeds.
dr terence kee and a team from leeds and bradford universities are examining a
particular source of phosphorus found naturally only in space to discover
whether it could have helped form the building blocks of life.
phosphorus is found in all living cells, but some scientists doubt that the most
common form of phosphorus ? phosphate ? helped form life on earth due to its
insolubility in water. dr kee believes the earliest forms of dna/rna could have
been built from other phosphorus-containing molecules called phosphonates,
because they are water-soluble and more reactive.
[non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Bookmarks