
Jesus and the Ho’oponopono
In Matthew 26 we read, “You know that the Passover is in two days, and that the Son of Man will be delivered up to be crucified.” This is the “Son of Man” we are talking about, and it is important to note that Jesus does not use the words “the Son of God.”
Jesus; The embodiment of a message
How should we interpret this statement of Jesus? This is indeed the key to its embodiment. This corresponds to the expression by example of his teaching through a human body. He did not merely “prophesy,” as was the case in the Old Testament. He directly embodied God’s word and did not just transmit it.
In this sense, we must recognize the absolute love and generosity of the man Jesus in this mission. It is in this sense that he can be described as “the best son of God”… He fully accepted to become “the Lamb of God” in order to embody the “shepherd of the sheep.” He was the expression of the highest consciousness of his time. His best followers fell asleep three times when he asked them to stay awake while he prayed. This is a clear indication of the fact that their consciousness still lacked elevation from his.
The crucifixion of Jesus is a total letting go. The expression of his humanity when he asks that this cup be taken away from him is not addressed to God but to us. It expresses unshakable faith. He pretends to doubt only to absolve us in advance of the doubts that illusions connected with the flesh might give rise within in us.
Faith and freedom
Jesus was fully aware of the path that laid ahead of him, and he accepted it fully. He knew that the only way to reveal the evidence of Christ was incompatible with any attachment to the materiality of the incarnation. It was the Father who spoke through him, he never doubts it and proves it when he declares: “If my words abide in you, you will never know death”…
In mystical circles, the emphasis is often put on the suffering of Jesus. But isn’t this a projection of our attachment to the comforts of the physical world? The Spirit of the Father, who is in him and in us from all eternity, is in no way subject to pain. The spectacle of Jesus’ suffering is only the spectacle of the pain we might experience because of our attachments.
Jesus did not come to encourage us to suffer; he simply came to bear witness in the flesh to the total freedom that is ours in the Father. The letting go he teaches is natural. Suffering is just a choice. Many mystics have chosen this path as an option, it is not essential.
The reason for this is that the divine consciousness within us is not something to be gained. It’s something that’s already there and always has been. This is the power of “immaculate conscience.” What is important is the separation we must make between the temporal and the eternal within us.
Getting rid of our thoughts about the “body”
The only thing that binds us is not the body, which is the indispensable vehicle of our incarnation. What produces attachment are all our ideas about that body. It is our identification and attachment to this ephemeral vehicle. This is where the free choice between letting go and suffering is made. The Ho’oponopono designed by Morrnah Simeona is the choice of letting go.
Rediscovering the virginity of the spirit represented by the “Virgin Mary”, the “Mother of God”, expresses the “zero state” or state of total emptiness of the “Uhane”, the inner Mother of the Ho’oponopono in her version of Morrnah.
The first episode of the “Avatar” series helps us understand things clearly. In this film, otherworldly beings use bodies designed to travel to a planet where everything is in harmony…
The word “avatar” comes from the Sanskrit avatara, composed of “ava”, “below”, and a derivative of “tarati”, “he crosses”. This expresses the idea of the “descent to earth of superterrestrial beings”. Originally, this term referred to the incarnation of the god Vishnu on earth in different physical forms to restore cosmic order.
The incarnation of Jesus is also an illustration of this return, and the story of his life is a kind of “virtual film” designed to help us remember our true nature. It is only our attachment to our earthly memories that has locked us in an imaginary prison. The avatar Jesus has come to try us again to get out of the millennial dream with which we identify.
He gave us a clear indication of the Way of Return when he said, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” It is this “poverty of spirit” that the practice of Ho’oponopono, conceived as “Self-Identity”, allows us to achieve. It is a shortcut through our human memories to the divine memory of our Source.