The following was written by Neale Donald Walsch,
author of "Conversations With God" on the occasion of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New
York, the Pentagon in Washington, D.C and in Pennsylvania.
Now is the time for all of us to join together in love and prayer, praying for and sending love to
everyone. - Larry James
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Special Statement from Neale Donald Walsch
Author, "Coversations With God"
September 11, 2001 - 12 Noon, PST
Dear friends around the world,
The events of this day cause every thinking person to stop their daily lives, whatever is going on in them, and to ponder
deeply the larger questions of life. We search again for not only the meaning of life, but the purpose of our individual and
collective experience as we have created it-and we look earnestly for ways in which we might recreate ourselves anew as a
human species, so that we will never treat each other this way again. The hour has come for us to demonstrate at the highest
level our most extraordinary thought about Who We Really Are.
There are two possible responses to what has occurred today. The first comes from love, the second from fear.
If we come from fear we may panic and do things-as individuals and as nations-that could only cause further damage. If we
come from love we will find refuge and strength, even as we provide it to others.
A central teaching of Conversations with God is: What you wish to experience, provide for another.
Look to see, now, what it is you wish to experience-in your own life, and in the world. Then see if there is another for
whom you may be the source of that.
If you wish to experience peace, provide peace for another.
If you wish to know that you are safe, cause another to know that they are safe.
If you wish to better understand seemingly incomprehensible things, help another to better understand.
If you wish to heal your own sadness or anger, seek to heal the sadness or anger of another.
Those others are waiting for you now. They are looking to you for guidance, for help, for courage, for strength, for
understanding, and for assurance at this hour. Most of all, they are looking to you for love. This is the moment of your
ministry. This is the time of teaching. What you teach at this time, through your every word and action right now, will
remain as indelible lessons in the hearts and minds of those whose lives you touch, both now, and for years to come.
We will set the course for tomorrow, today. At this hour. In this moment. There is much we can do, but there is one
thing we cannot do. We cannot continue to co-create our lives together on this planet as we have in the past. We cannot,
except at our peril, ignore the events of this day, or their implications.
It is tempting at times like this to give in to rage. Anger is fear announced, and rage is anger that is repressed, and
then, when it is released, that is often misdirected. Right now, anger is not inappropriate. It is, in fact, natural - and
can be a blessing. If we use our anger about this day not to pinpoint where the blame falls, but where the cause lies, we can
lead the way to healing.
Let us seek not to pinpoint blame, but to pinpoint cause. Unless we take this time to look at the cause of our experience,
we will never remove ourselves from the experiences it creates. Instead, we will forever live in fear of retribution from
those within the human family who feel aggrieved, and, likewise, seek retribution from them.
So at this time it is important for us to direct our anger toward the cause of our present experience. And that is not
necessarily individuals or groups who have attacked others, but, rather, the reasons they have done so. Unless we look at
these reasons, we will never be able to eliminate these attacks. To me the reasons are clear. We have not learned the
most basic human lessons. We have not remembered the most basic human truths. We have not understood the most basic spiritual
wisdom. In short, we have not been listening to God, and because we have not, we watch ourselves do ungodly things.
The message of Conversations with God is clear: we are all one. That is a message the human race has largely ignored. Our
separation mentality has underscored all of our human creations. Our religions, our political structures, our economic
systems, our educational institutions, and our whole approach to life have been based on the idea that we are separate from
each other. This has caused us to inflict all manner of injury, one upon the other. And this injury causes other injury, for
like begets like and negativity only breeds negativity.
It is as easy to understand as that. And so now let us pray that all of us in this human family will find the courage and
the strength to turn inward and to ask a simple, soaring question: what would love do now?
If we could love even those who have attacked us, and seek to understand why they have done so, what then would be our
response? Yet if we meet negativity with negativity, rage with rage, attack with attack, what then will be the outcome?
These are the questions that are placed before the human race today. They are questions that we have failed to answer
for thousands of years. Failure to answer them now could eliminate the need to answer them at all. We should make no
mistake about this. The human race has the power to annihilate itself. We can end life as we know it on this planet in one afternoon.
This is the first time in human history that we have been able to say this. And so now we must direct our attention to
the questions that such power places before us. And we must answer these questions from a spiritual perspective, not a
political perspective, and not an economic perspective. We must have our own conversation with God, for only the grandest
wisdom and the grandest truth can address the greatest problems, and we are now facing the greatest problems and the greatest
challenges in the history of our species.
It is not as if we have not seen this coming. Every spiritual, political, and philosophical writer of the past 50 years has
predicted it. So long as we continue to treat each other as we have done on this planet, the circumstance that we face on this
day will continue to present itself. The difference is that now our technology makes our anger much more dangerous. In the
early days of our civilization, we were able to inflict hurt upon each other using sticks and rocks and primitive weapons.
Then, as our technology grew, it became possible for clans to war against clans and, ultimately, for nations to war
against nations. But even then, until most recent times, it was not possible for us to annihilate each other completely.
We could destroy a village, or a town, or a major city, or even an entire nation, but only now is it possible for us to
destroy our whole world so fast that nothing can stop it once the process has begun.
That is what makes this point in our history different from any other. And that is what makes this call for each of us
to have our own conversation with God so appropriate and so important. If we want the beauty of the world that we have
co-created to be experienced by our children and our children's children, we will have to become spiritual activists
right here, right now, and cause that to happen. We must choose to be at cause in the matter.
So, talk with God today. Ask God for help, for counsel and advice, for insight and for strength and for inner peace
and for deep wisdom. Ask God on this day to show us how to show up in the world in a way that will cause the world itself
to change. That is the challenge that is placed before every thinking person today.
Today the human soul asks the question: What can I do to preserve the beauty and the wonder of our world and to
eliminate the anger and hatred-and the disparity that inevitably causes it - in that part of the world which I touch?
Please seek to answer that question today, with all the magnificence that is You.
I love you, and I send you my deepest thoughts of peace.
Neale Donald Walsch
Preview Neale's book, Conversations With God and The New Revelations.
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