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Saturday, May 1, 2010

Surrender Your Will - Wetherill

If you were asked to surrender your will, would you? Probably not. But have you considered the countless times people do surrender their will each and every day? “No,” you say, “I don’t, and I never would!
Well, think about how you surrender your will to the laws of nature. Do you argue with gravity, ignore friction, grab a live wire, lean to the left turning right?

 People have learned to surrender to creation’s natural laws, but there is a law of nature that virtually everybody has been ignoring.

 While people eagerly surrender to familiar laws such as gravity and friction, sometimes a mistake is made. For example, if they lose their balance by slipping on a wet surface, everybody instinctively struggles to conform to the appropriate natural law(s).

Early in the past century, a natural law of behavior was identified by the late Richard W. Wetherill. In 1952 he presented it in the book, Tower of Babel.

 He called it the law of absolute right, and it specifies behavior that is rational and honest to replace behavioral choices based on a person’s likes and dislikes, wants and don’t wants, judgments and beliefs, thereby, over time, putting together his/her own plan of life.

 Nature’s law of absolute right states that right action always gets right results; if wrong results occur, the law was somehow disregarded.

 What kinds of results are presently occurring? The news media daily report on the tragedies of international warfare, political corruption, criminal activity, economic disasters, foreclosures, and afflictions labeled “cause unknown.”
You might be wondering, who thinks that conforming to a natural law could stop those wrong results? 
The answer comes from persons who have surrendered their will to creation’s law of absolute right. They enthusiastically report right results occurring, as they drop old behavior patterns and respond rationally and honestly to whatever happens.

 The nonprofit group financing this public-service advertisement is telling people that their safety and security exist in trusting the laws of creation rather than trusting the laws and beliefs of human origin. Every natural law requires the action it calls for so that the law is able to complete its rightful purpose.
 That is easily observed when using gravity as an example. When people stumble and fall, they do not form criticisms of gravity. They are more likely to look around for someone or something to blame—sometimes their own carelessness.

 But to achieve success and avoid failure at whatever activity or task they are engaged in, people instinctively know they must obey nature’s laws of physics.
 Prior to the identification of those laws, the ancients worshipped natural phenomena and/or idols. It required aeons until people realized that natural laws provided the forces that guided their activities and further that those laws were immutable and inviolable—not to be worshipped but to be obeyed.
Thus it is with creation’s behavioral law of absolute right. To complement the perfect universe, the human race is now being similarly educated to express perfect behavior. It is behavior that is described by yet another natural law, calling for rational and honest responses to everything that happens. That behavioral change will eliminate all human wrong action and its results, allowing the emergence of a perfect society in a perfect environment created by the perfect laws of whoever or whatever the creator is.

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