The Amethyst Cave

Image by Pretty Sleepy Art on Pixabay

The inspiration for this piece came to me in a vision of the Amethyst Room. Saint Germaine stood by my side and he was surrounded by a golden light.  He held a gold chalice in his right hand. He spoke to me and said one word: “Love”.

First, I stood in the nothing.  It was not light, and it was not dark.   There was no emptiness, for that would have not been nothing.   There was no time, no space, and no thing. There was only me.

But wait!  I see color.  I see form. It is vague and distant.  It is unclear. Suddenly I am. standing in a cave.  The walls of this cave are covered in amethyst crystals.  The geode formation is alive, and ever changing before my eyes.  I feel the dampness of the cave on my skin. Mystery lurks, and the dark recesses of the cave are as metaphor for the  same unexamined corners of myself–those areas where the light does not reach. As I study the walls with fascination, they begin to expand.  The cave has become larger.

St Germaine appears and suddenly the cave is a room.  It is the Amethyst Room, that which I have conceived of, and which has been the subject of many dreams.  His light shows the breathtaking beauty of the room, specially designed for me, and by me. I gaze at the brilliant crystals and I am enthralled.

But now the ascended master is inviting others into our sacred room, and they begin to surround us.     First did my loved ones enter, and the cave became an opulent temple, with smooth amethyst walls. The stone Is now polished, and gleaming.  Is this the golden temple of my vision on Mount Shasta? I see family, my beloved children, dear friends, relatives, and those who I have lost and for whom I still mourn.   Happiness overwhelms me. Tears of joy begin to pour from my eyes. But now also enter those who have harmed. I recoil as I observe abusers, both recognized and unknown. There are criminals, perverts, those I fear, and those who present as threatening to my precious ones.  With horror, I witness those who I have judged as unworthy, mingled amongst those who I have perceived as immaculate. “Love them”, he coaxes. 

Now come animals, beloved pets.  My heart smiles again, and I yearn to reach out and touch them, caress them, and play with them.  The room has become like a beautiful meadow, with a soft purple mist surrounding it. I see the beauty of flowers, the paradoxical magic of herbs and mushrooms, and the trees offering their precious fruits.  Yet next I begin to see that amongst them are rabid dogs who will attack me. Ferocious bears, sharks, hungry wolves, and all manner of dangerous animals begin to encroach. Fear rises up inside of me. “Love them”, he reminds me. 

Now appear angels, elementals, the realms of Telos, and Avalon.  Now drift in the Hathors, the Arcturians, and all benevolent beings from higher dimensions.  I welcome them with awe. I am still centered, with Saint Germaine, in the midst of the amethyst place.  It stretches now beyond my field of vision. I know somehow that it is an infinite space. Is this a purple heaven?  But now my smile fades as I see ghosts, fearful creatures of nightmares, and entities from all hells. “Love them”. He commands.  I hesitate, I falter. Saint Germaine is watching me, encouraging me. All are waiting, watching.

Now comes flooding over me the memory of Jesus, and his words to Saint Peter, the Rock.  Do you love me? Thrice he asked, and thrice Simon Peter responded. But was that anger?  Impatience? What was in Peter’s voice as he repeated his answer? This was The third time the risen Christ had appeared to him.  And three times, Peter had denied Jesus. Was this the same journey as Saint Germaine took me on, inside the Amethyst Room? Know the synchronicity of the trigonal ctystal system.

So when they had dined, Jesus saith to Simon Peter, Simon, son of Jona, lovest thou me more than these? He saith unto him, Yea, Lord; thou knowest that I love thee. He saith unto him, Feed my lambs. He saith to him again the second time, Simon, son of Jona, lovest thou me? He saith unto him, Yea, Lord; thou knowest that I love thee. He saith unto him, Feed my sheep. He saith unto him the third time, Simon, son of Jona, lovest thou me? Peter was grieved because he said unto him the third time, Lovest thou me? And he said unto him, Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love thee. Jesus saith unto him, Feed my sheep. John 21:15‭-‬17 KJVA

Is this the story of the greatest love, the unconditional, the true love, agape?  Must we search, and labor in order to find it? And how will we know?

I sought love, but I shall never find it.

I gave love to others, but it crumbles like dried clay in their hands.

I felt love, and it withdraws from me.

I implored of one to love another, and they refuse.

Where is that love?

The purple flame of St Germaine is the catalyst: the power of the three,  the trinity. It is the fire which does not consume. He is the great alchemist and reminds us that we, also, are the same as he.  He decries that we continue look to another to transform all negative emotions–fear, hatred, shame–into true agape love. How, then, is this done?

Go back now, my friend, into the great purple space of infinite love.  And bring the universe with you. Welcome “the others”. Draw them close.

Go back, then, to the lush and fragrant rolling meadow, and embrace the life forms there.  Touch them. Enjoy them. Learn them. Understand them.

Return into the temple, the one of your dreams.  Let all approach you. Feel the energy multiply. Release your judgement, forgive, purge, cleanse, and see the unseen.  Reach out with your hands and with your mind. As the synapses spark and sparkle in the corpus callosum, so, too, do the spiritual sinews of the electronic human.  All is well. All is known. All is love.

Remaining now is Saint Germaine, by your side still, in the purple crystal cave.  But something is different. Gnosis has overtaken doubt. Compassion has overtaken ego.  The violet flames surround you. You feel a connection like never before and you two become merged, and now one.

The One remains, in the nothing.  The nothing is the agape. The One is the agape.  Each soul, created by the One Source, is the One. There is only Agape.  There is only love.

With great love,

Robin

This entry was posted in Bible verse commentary, Robin's Visions. Bookmark the permalink.

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