25/55 SPIRITUAL MANIFESTATIONS A BRIEF RECORD OF MY OWN EXPERIENCES By Sir WM. EARNSHAW COOPER, CIE.
SPIRITUAL MANIFESTATIONS A BRIEF RECORD OF MY OWN EXPERIENCES By Sir WM. EARNSHAW COOPER, CIE.
Audiobook
That my old friend had never ceased to remember, even in his spirit-state, what I did for him, affords not only evidence of immortality but of life’s continuity. It, moreover, proves that we carry with us into the Hereafter all our remembrances of the Here. To say that we enter upon a fresh life in the ‘ Beyond ‘ is only true in a sense.
It would be more correct to say the life is the same, but the conditions environing it change. The spirit, which is our real Ego, changes not. Life with all its pleasure and pain, its joys and sorrows, its omissions and commissions, its good and its evil, knows no change, nor is it discontinued, even for a brief moment.
” He is careful that I should impress this upon your mind, for some very good reason, no doubt,” said the Sensitive, and this is further corroboration that, in the state beyond the earth-life, the same thoughts, considerations and recollections influence discarnate-spirits as move and sway the impulses of life on this plane.
But, be this as it may, this much remains clear—an act done in the flesh is not, and cannot be, forgotten in the spirit-state. Moreover, the power of expressing gratitude is not confined to the human entity in his state of spirit-incarnate, but may, and does, extend to the state of spirit-discarnate. The evidence on this point is conclusive.
- The extraordinary evidence in regard to the Lalla’s pet name for me is also of remarkable significance. Not only was the name given correctly, but in an Eastern language with which Mr. Beard was totally unacquainted. But the most singular part of this link in a chain of evidence of connected strength is in the way the single word ” Homra,” used by the spirit, was pronounced.
The term used by the Lalla in speaking to or of me was ” Homra Sahib,” meaning ” My own or very own Sahib.” The word really is “Hamara,” the middle ‘a’ pronounced broadly like ‘ah,’ but the Lalla, although a perfect Hindu scholar, slightly ‘ mouthed ‘ a few words, and this was one of them, which he pronounced like ” Home-ra ” in English, or sometimes like ” Ome-ra,” with the aspirate omitted.
It will be remembered that he first gave the name as ” Omra” and afterwards as ” Homra ” which, while being in itself a startling manifestation of spirit power is, moreover, of enormous importance, in that it affords another proof of the fact that, although these disembodied ones are divided from us by the curtain mists of Death, nothing, even of a comparatively trifling nature, is lost, not one single deed, word or thought done or expressed in the earth-life is forgotten, ox permitted to be forgotten.