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What spirituality can do

Unique and Powerful Spiritual Workshop to Experience the Divine Essence within your Chakras and Energy Bodies.
As the world reels feverishly from socio-economic and political turmoil, Master Choa Kok Sui draws from the wellspring of the Tree of Life. With incisive simplicity, he offers very practical and in many instances, provocative answers to the seemingly complex problems of our time.
Here is a course that breathes life into the spiritual dimensions of wealth, sex, war, alchemy and other mundane preoccupations. These teachings are infused with an amazingly fresh perspective that may yet restructure, if not alter, the paradigm of many global leaders, politicians, businessmen, religious people and just about anybody sincerely searching for a more balanced mode of existence. Set against a multi-cultural backdrop are the syntheses of various esoteric systems. The chakras, the sephiroth, the triple cross and other symbols are like pearls of wisdom beautifully strung together, bestowing to the ardent seeker a most effective strategy for living blessed life. The Tree of Life is an alternative path towards reclaiming and redeeming spirituality.
The topics covered in this course include:
  • Krishna's Teachings on the Inverted Tree of Life and the Upanishad's Tree of Eternity.
  • Never before publicly revealed correspondences of the Spiritual Anatomy (chakras and auras) in the traditions of Taoism, Christianity, Kabbalah, Sanskrit, Acupuncture, and Egyptian Mystery Schools.
  • Secrets of the "Triple Cross' and how it can activate your chakras and energize your subtle bodies.
  • Use of the Keter Sephira for Spiritual Healings.
  • Direct correspondence of the Lord's Prayer in the Kabbalistic and Egyptian Tree of Life.
  • The 'I AM' Meditation for your Pineal Gland!
Discover your Buddha Nature and Experience the Divine Essence within you.
Connect with your true Divine Nature!
“What is this inverted tree of life? It is you, not you the body, but you the soul. This root is rooted upward into the unknown. What is this unknown? The unknown is the Higher Soul, the Atma, ultimately to the Paramatma.” -Master Choa Kok Sui.
A devotee in a state of trance is calmed by volunteers at a Buddhist temple in Nakhon Pathom Province, Thailand.ATHIT PERAWONGMETHA/REUTERS
“Everyone philosophizes,” writes neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Newberg in his latest book, The Metaphysical Mind: Probing the Biology of Philosophical Thought. We all speculate about the meaning of all kinds of things, from everyday concerns about dealing with a co-worker to our ultimate beliefs about the purpose of existence. Accompanying solutions we find to these problems, there’s a range of satisfied feelings, from “ah-ha” or light-bulb moments upon solving an everyday problem to ecstatic feelings during mystical experiences.

Since everyday and spiritual concerns are variations of the same thinking processes, Newberg thinks it’s essential to examine how people experience spirituality in order to fully understand how their brains work. Looking at the bigger questions has already provided practical applications for improving mental and physical health.
Newberg is a pioneer in the field of neurotheology, the neurological study of religious and spiritual experiences. In the 1990s, he began his work in the field by scanning what happens in people’s brains when they meditate, because it is a spiritual practice that is relatively easy to monitor.
Since then, he’s looked at around 150 brain scans, including those of Buddhists, nuns, atheists, Pentecostals speaking in tongues, and Brazilian mediums practicing psychography—the channeling of messages from the dead through handwriting.  
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