Winston was such a man.
He already knew that in the enormity of Cosmos, of the ever-expanding Universe, the most one can hope for is to add to its diversity, while enhancing its quality.
The only way he could hope to achieve this end was by serving others. While each one of us can contribute an item or two to meet the purpose of one’s incarnation, one can achieve much more by enabling others, as many as possible, to enhance their contribution.
This can only be done by service.
When we become fully aware of this fact, our choices are both few and multiplied. Few (like everyone else who experienced the Second Coming) to make our own contribution, and multiplied by the number of people we can serve who might do so.
The more, the faster the expansion of the Universe.
The more, the greater becomes our task in our next phenomenal incarnation.
Winston was lucky. Few of us are given the opportunity to serve a group of people while experiencing their personal dilemmas at close quarters. This is, of course, the purpose of a family. It is our first experience of giving without expecting anything in return. Pets serve the same purpose.
At least, that’s how it’s intended to be.
Winston, being a majordomo, served, yet also had to oversee the interest of individual members of a family. And he did so from the perspective of a ‘servant in charge’. This is a unique privilege of a majordomo.
A very unique opportunity, usually reserved for mothers of families, who are sometimes referred to as “The Lady of the House”. The difference is that a mother can command with relative impunity, while he had to instill his influence surreptitiously.
A most unique privilege, though it also serves to teach humility.
Many of us have a strange impression of what God or gods are. In spite of Yeshûa assurances that his father (God?) is in heaven, and “heaven is within you” (Luke 17:21) , namely within every single one of us, we prefer to listen to the priests and preachers than to look up the origin of the admonition.
The difference is that one does not “go” to heaven, but one must create heaven within oneself. We are granted the sublime ability to create this wondrous state of consciousness, drawing on the omnipresence of Creative Energy.
This sounds too much like a philosophical dissertation, hence, I prefer to make such statements in novels, in a context of fiction, lest I’d be accused of preaching.
Winston never preached.
He also never refused to share his inner knowledge with his adopted family. After all, he was committed to building his own Kingdom.
He did, and so can you.
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