You Can Do No Wrong

What if you knew you could do no wrong in God’s eyes? Would that open up any doors for you, possibly alleviate some guilt?

“You can do no wrong.” Wouldn’t that statement send all religions into a tailspin?

Religions are all based on guiding you away from wrong doing, and leading you to that which is right. They would lose their power and purpose if that statement were true. The whole industry would collapse. “Is religion an industry?”

Yes, it’s the oldest industry, it’s not a charity, and not a, “not for profit industry.” When you start out with nothing, and you end up with vast wealth all around the world, you can hardly consider yourself a charity.

So, can we do no wrong? Well, right and wrong are just words, and not very specific words. Actions are the result of beliefs, cause by thoughts, which are vibrational by nature. Life is vibration. Life is you and I just being. At any given time we’re being some kind of vibrational frequency, either high, low, or in between. The whole of creation is frequency based, so how can a large portion of it be bad, wrong, or unacceptable? Is much of existence just a pool of quick sand, waiting for some poor unsuspecting person to step into it?

Should guilt be attached to the exploration of some natural phenomenon, which we ourselves didn’t create? The hot burner on a stove can be explored intellectually, or visually from a distance, or close up where we can feel the heat, or directly where we can feel the pain and burning sensation as a result of  touching it. Are any of those wrong?

The last one certainly results in a more complete understanding of what a burner is, and feels like! So was it wrong, or was it just a more complete exploration of a specific area of life.

Should you feel guilt? Is an intellectual understanding of reality a good substitute for the experience of it?

If you side with religion, the answer must be yes. If you were to take that conclusion to the ridiculous, you could have all of creation which has experienced “nothing,” as opposed to one which has experienced everything.

Which do you think is the more realistic viable option?