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I'm Not the Messiah, Says Food Activist... but His Many Worshippers Do Not Believe Him
Members of religious group believe London-born author has come to save the world
The London-born author, 37, thought his slot on comedy talkshow The Colbert Report went well enough: the host made a few jokes, Patel talked a little about his work and then, job done, he went back to his home in San Francisco.
Raj Patel, author of The Value of Nothing. (Photo/Eliot Khuner) Shortly afterwards, however, things took a strange turn. Over the course of a couple of days, cryptic messages started filling his inbox.
"I started getting emails saying 'have you heard of Benjamin Creme?' and 'are you the world teacher?'" he said. "Then all of a sudden it wasn't just random internet folk, but also friends saying, 'Have you seen this?'"
What he had written off as gobbledygook suddenly turned into something altogether more bizarre: he was being lauded by members of an obscure religious group who had decided that Patel - a food activist who grew up in a corner shop in Golders Green in north-west London - was, in fact, the messiah.
Their reasoning? Patel's background and work coincidentally matched a series of prophecies made by an 87-year-old Scottish mystic called Benjamin Creme, the leader of a little-known religious group known as Share International. Because he matched the profile, hundreds of people around the world believed that Patel was the living embodiment of a figure they called Maitreya, the Christ or "the world teacher".
His job? To save the world, and everyone on it.
"It was just really weird," he said. "Clearly a case of mistaken identity and clearly a case of people on the internet getting things wrong."
What started as an oddity kept snowballing until suddenly, in the middle of his book tour and awaiting the arrival of his first child, Patel was inundated by questions, messages of support and even threats. The influx was so heavy, in fact, that he put up a statement on his website referencing Monty Python's Life of Brian and categorically stating that he was not Maitreya.
Instead of settling the issue, however, his denial merely fanned the flames for some believers. In a twist ripped straight from the script of the comedy classic, they said that this disavowal, too, had been prophesied. It seemed like there was nothing to convince them.
"It's the kind of paradox that's inescapable," he said, with a grim humour. "There's very little chance or point trying to dig out of it."
There are many elements of his life that tick the prophetic checklist of his worshippers: a flight from India to the UK as a child, growing up in London, a slight stutter, and appearances on TV. But it is his work that puts him most directly in the frame and causes him the most anguish - the very things the followers of Share believe will indicate that their new messiah has arrived.
Patel's career - spent at Oxford, LSE, the World Bank and with thinktank Food First - has been spent trying to understand the inequalities and problems caused by free market economics, particularly as it relates to the developing world.
His first book, Stuffed and Starved, rips through the problems in global food production and examines how the free market has worked to keep millions hungry (Naomi Klein called it dazzling, while the Guardian's Felicity Lawrence said it was "an impassioned call to action"). The Value of Nothing, meanwhile, draws on the economic collapse to look at how we might fix the system and improve life for billions of people around the globe.
While his goal appears to match Share's vision of worldwide harmony, he says the underlying assumptions it makes are wrong - and possibly even dangerous.
"What I'm arguing in the book is precisely the opposite of the Maitreya: what we need is various kinds of rebellion and transformations about how private property works," he said.
"I don't think a messiah figure is going to be a terribly good launching point for the kinds of politics I'm talking about - for someone who has very strong anarchist sympathies, this has some fairly deep contradictions in it."
To say Patel - with his academic air, stammer and grey-flecked hair - is a reluctant saviour is an understatement. In fact, he rejects the entire notion of saviours. If there is one thing he has learned from his work as an activist in countries such as Zimbabwe and South Africa, it is that there are no easy answers.
"People are very ready to abdicate responsibility and have it shovelled on to someone else's shoulders," he said. "You saw that with Obama most spectacularly, but whenever there's going to be someone who's just going to fix it for you, it's a very attractive story. It's in every mythological structure."
Unravelling exactly what it is that Share International's followers believe, however, is tricky.
The group is an offshoot of the Victorian Theosophy movement founded by Madame Blavatsky that developed a belief system out of an amalgam of various religions, spiritualism and metaphysics.
Creme - who joined a UFO cult in the 1950s before starting Share - has added a cosmic take to the whole concept: he says that Maitreya represents a group of beings from Venus called the Space Brothers.
This 18m-year-old saviour, he says, has been resting somewhere in the Himalayas for 2,000 years and - as a figure who combines messianism for Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, Jews and Muslims alike - is due to return any time now, uniting humanity and making life better for everybody on earth.
Adding to the confusion is the fact that Creme refuses to categorically state whether or not he believes that Patel and Maitreya are one and the same. He suggests that it is not up to him to rule either way, instead blaming media coverage, rather than his own mystical predictions, for making people "hysterical".
"It is not my place," Creme told the writer Scott James, a friend of Patel, recently. "People are looking to Mr Patel because they are looking for the fulfilment of a story which I've been making around the world for the last 35 years."
It is not the first time that Creme, an inscrutable guru with a mop of curly white hair, has courted publicity with his wild pronouncements of a messiah. In 1985 he made another prophecy: that Maitreya would reveal himself to the press in London.
A gaggle of journalists gathered in a Brick Lane curry house for the main event. In the end, the promised saviour failed to materialise. (One candidate, "a man in old robes and a faraway look in his eye", turned out to be a tramp begging for cigarettes, our correspondent wrote at the time).
Patel's rejection of his status as a deity does not seem to have killed off interest from Share's members. Indeed, the situation has invaded his everyday life, such as when two devotees travelled from Detroit - some 2,400 miles away - just to hear him give a short public talk.
"They were really nice people, not in your face, really straightforward - these people do not look like fanatics," he says. "I gave the talk, and they hung around at the end and we had a chat."
It was only then that the pair revealed that they were followers of Creme's teachings.
Patel said: "They said they thought I was the Maitreya ... they also said I had appeared in their dreams. I said: 'I'm really flattered that you came all the way here, but it breaks my heart that you came all this way and spent all this money to meet someone who isn't who you think he is.'
"It made me really depressed, actually. That evening I was really down."
While he struggles to cope with this unwanted anointment, his friends and family are more tickled by the situation.
"They think it's hilarious," he said. "My parents came to visit recently, and they brought clothes that said 'he's not the messiah, he's a very naughty boy'. To them, it's just amusing."
There have been similar cases in the past, including Steve Cooper, an unemployed man from Tooting, south London, who was identified by a Hindu sect as the reincarnation of a goddess and now lives in a temple in Gujurat with scores of followers.
Unlike some who have the greatness thrust upon them, though, Patel's greatest hope is that Share will leave him alone so that he can get back to normal life.
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43 Comments so far
Show Allhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uMJYQ9LKGQ
This would be much more funny, if it wasn't a likely foreshadowing of a future politics...
There can only be one of us, Patel.
Its time we settled this, mano a mano, just among us Immortals.
Blessed are the cheese makers! :-)
It's good to see his parents are fans of Monty Python as well. The irony of course is that Raj talks about the fundamental issues at the root of our civilizational crisis, so it's Raj against the Machine!
But I think the scariest thing for him is the fundamentalists who are already calling him the Antichrist. Man, you can't win.
As the article points out, too many people are looking for someone/anyone to tell them what to do. No one person on this planet can do that. We must ALL work together to try to solve the earth's problems.
Well said, Peggy!
People are so desperate these days.
It seems to me that behind this really funny and entertaining episode is, IMV, an important and fascinating subject, ie is there someone who can save us from ourselves? Where has Maitreya been all these years? Is there a plan? Isn't our culture too fractured for us to get together and solve our problems?
I'd like to see Creme seriously address this situation of people looking for a leader. Yes we need to save ourselves. But how? Competition? Capitalism? How do we know what will work, since it looks like our track record with trial and error, shouting and buying off has produced pretty much only chaos. How come nothing is working anymore? Billions sent to fight poverty have produced what...further poverty. Is there some internal change, inside each of us, that needs attention? What is this Sharing which Creme talks about? I'd like to hear Creme's take on the many questions which have arisen.
Creme is a nut. He once announced some years ago that Christ was now on earth and predicted a date that the Christ would broadcast his arrival worldwide on TV. He's made numerous outlandish predictions that never materialize. He's a complete joke, as are his followers now promoting a food activist as the Maitreya.
The concern is not Creme but that so many gullible people believe him.
What date? What predictions? I'm not sure we can hold Creme responsible for the misunderstandings of people on the Internet.
It's not just "people on the internet", though there is a lot of info about him on the net. I have two close friends who became enamored with his teachings and prophesies, then ended up moving on after his predictions never occurred, and he kept making excuses. He seems like a nice guy, never met him, just hearsay, but really he's a kook, and I'm not spending any more time on the subject.
He could run with it and turn the fundies into REAL Christians following the liberal bleeding heart hippie Jesus.
I just wanted to say. I was following this group for a while about 10 years ago (http://www.share-international.org). I even attended at least one meeting/lecture given by this Benjamin Creme fella. Well, it seemed hopeful and everything and I have to admit he seems like a very nice guy and perhaps even a spiritually enlightened guy. Also, I know this article uses the dreaded lets-make-fun-of-someone acronym of UFO, but I personally believe there is overwhelming evidence of some kind of alien other-worldly presence on this planet (and once you've bought into that you sort of have to wonder about the truth of all sorts of strange things). But the thing that finally did it for me with regard to this group was, in this magazine they publish, this Maitreya was supposed to have said that "he would move the earth closer to the sun" in order to increase crop yields or something. Now, I happen to know that according to Kepler's law of planetary motion, if the Earth were to move close to the sun, the year would become correspondingly shorter. So, since it hasn't, I figured, why is this Maitreya lying to us? Do we want to have our new Messiah to be a liar? But the thing I never got was, why is this group preaching this if it isn't legitimate. They never asked me for a single cent. If they were trying to get people to join their group in order make money from membership dues are something, that would make some sort of sense. But I saw none of that. The people behind this do seem to sincerely want to try to help the people of this planet. So the only thing I could think of is, a bunch of people got together and decided that just to give the world this hope (always just out of reach) would in some way help to save us. Or maybe by pretending this Maitreya would finally emerge, maybe finally the people who believe this so much WILL finally find someone who both fits and is willing and able to take on the role of this new Messiah.
Well, it's food for thought.
significantly, if you make an anagram out of 'maitreya' you come up with: yet i am ra...............the ancient egyptian sun god.
and if you add a 'j' to the end of 'maitreya' (maitreyaj) the anagram then becomes: yet i am raj.................
those share people got it wrong.........they missed off the letter j...................
it spells "I ATE MARY"
also "IRATE YAM"
you can also make: a yeti ram.........
thanks for the laugh...............nice one.
It will take all of us to achieve whirled peas
yeah, peas on earth.................
"One candidate, "a man in old robes and a faraway look in his eye", turned out to be a tramp begging for cigarettes, our correspondent wrote at the time"
Somebody give the Messiah a smoke!
nailed it
No wonder I keep coming back. You guys are funny.
I keep my saffron robe folded in a closet, just in case...the Chinese return Tibet to the Dalai Lama and India and Pakistan agree on a Kashmir settlement.
-30-
It seems that Christian fundamentalists & doomsday fanatics (who have labeled Benjamin Creme the forerunner of their awaited "anti-Christ") are the ones who have fingered Raj Patel, not any of the people who support the work of Benjamin Creme & Share International.
Some readers will want to consider some of things that Creme has said before accepting the views of writers, many of whom form their opinions based on superficial analyses, hearsay, and often vain/cynical imaginings.
"We have to realize our interdependence. That is the key. We are one group, one humanity, & have to work together for the benefit of all. Until now, that has been impossible for us even to recognize, let alone accept. But with Maitreya... showing us the alternative self-destruction we will be galvanized to take the needed steps...
"We think... we can go on in the old ways... more competition, more greed... It is not so... If two-thirds of the world’s population are living in poverty then the economic system does not work. If we think that they will go on without asking that it work for them, then we are sorely out of step with reality. Maitreya will make that clear...
"...the basis of Maitreya's teaching is right relationship: between man & man; man & God; & between man & his environment, the planet. We will come to understand that man, nature & God are One, & that a proper care of the planet is essential to the well-being of the whole... we can look forward to a much simpler style of living (the developed West, that is) without the gross over-production & wastage of resources..." Benjamin Creme
"The time for war has past... Man must change or die. There is no other course." Maitreya
Creme says that the two biggest world problems are that we let 25 to 30,000 people die each day of hunger while tons of food rots, and the environmental degradation that continues unabated. Creme doesn't expect people to believe his talk about Maitreya.
It's easy to say that we don't need a messiah like figure to rally the people and
inspire them to begin acting with some sanity, but the world situation suggests that we do. Don't worry, Maitreya doesn't want anyone to worship Him, and He won't be seen as a religious figure, but as a World Teacher. Naturally most people won't believe He even exists until they experience Him - it won't be much longer til that happens.
KB
Read all about it!
http://www.Share-International.org
--------------
Re: UFOS:
"We've been ordered to work up a national debunking campaign, planting articles in magazines and arranging broadcasts to make UFO reports sound like Poppycock." CIA report January 1953.
They successfully pulled the wool over most people's eyes. In England, farmers are paid to destroy Crop circles. Scientists study them and find them fascinating. The ruling elite feel that their monopolies are threatened by people (space brothers) who are thousands of years more evolved than we are, who have long ago solved many of the problems that confront us now.
Aerial photography of the latest circles
www.temporarytemples.co.uk/
It is funny though:
An Oxford Idealist from the institutions which enslaved the world is slated by prophecy to be the king of kings and liberate eveyone....
Moses working in the house of Pharaoh, Jesus born under a Comet in the sky, Alan Greenspan having been given a name that sounds prosperous...
Let's face it: Homo sapiens are incredibly superstitious.
Maybe this guy Patel should roll with it, like GWB did when he realized "Gwad" was working through him.... after faith-based initiatives bestowed billions in cash at his feet.
Hallllalujah! Praise Gawd!
"Behold, my name is the Prophet Patel! My mother is the six-armed Shiva,"
"Now go and pull down every brick of Wall Street and every brick of every world government and we will start over...."
And Gawd looked down and saw that it was good, and handed the Prophet Patel 100 new banking commandments....
I think we could sell it...
TJ
ALRIGHT! ALRIGHT! I'M THE BLOODY MESSIAH! NOW....FUCK OFF!!!
The posts for this article are as revealing as the article itself. About half indicate some or much sympathy for an arrant con artist who exploits the desperately degenerate mental condition of today's human products of the capitalist system. Maitreya's press agent (B. Creme) is called a good guy, etc., because he mouths some platitudes that the politically feeble-minded 'identify with.'
Compare these posts with those on today's article concerning the hateful outbursts (including racism and homophobia) of today's Tea Party commotion in Washington, D.C. About half of the posts sympathized with the Tea Party on the grounds that at least it was against Obamacare. Some wanted to join with the Tea Party against the government.
If these folks are progressives, then call me a hermit. No wonder Ralph Nader gave up, declaring that Only The Super-Rich Can Save Us.
"The poverty of the human spirit is no better revealed than by the little that satisfies it." --G.W.F. Hegel
solsduff,
You outline the dilemma most concisely. But we are too few in number to ever have an impact as separate third party factions. I submit we must merge together. It's the lesson of all successful Political movements: We must take in strange bedfellows or we will freeze to death outside.
Look, I don't like it anymore than you do, but in politics, timing is everything. If we stay hermits, the tea-baggers, left to their own hatred and Flinstone devices, will gain control of national outrage, and that's not good since it already looks like they are possible brownshirt candidates for the Empire.
If however, we all come together, and issue a vote of no confidence for the whole government: Dem and Repuke alike, then we have a chance to have a Ross Perot step in and force an overthrow of the Corporate Congress. (by vote of course, what did you government spies think I meant?) ;-)
We could demand a 100 percent resignation of the whole congress (which everybody wants), ban K street lobbyists, and just start the whole thing over.
Time waits for no one and the tea kettle is getting close to loud whistling, imho.
United we stand. Divided we fall.
TJ
ThomasJefferson: Then "divided we fall" it is.
The Tea Party crowd aren't going to unite with anything other than our real rulers, the corporate capitalist/imperialist elite; just as the real rulers in Germany allied with the Tea Party crowd of their day, led by a petty-bourgeois archetype calling himself Adolf Hitler. And the first thing that comes out of classic fascism's "marriage of classes" (rulers + petty bourgeois) is war upon the Left; then the middle; then anybody who resists in the rest of the world.
Read Eric Fromm's classic, "Escape From Freedom" (1941), which is all about the social psychology of fascism, based first of all on class analysis, thence to the thinking arising spontaneously in periods of acute capitalist crisis. The Tea Party phenomenon is an old phenomenon, well studied, and inexorably evil. Once you discern where these folks are coming from and where they are going, I don't think you'll fancy uniting with them.
You are not going to cure the Tea Party crowd of "their hatred and Flintsone devices" by trying to join them. You might as well try to cure cancer by making nicey-nice with it.
You are evidently a youngish person of humanistic intent. I am sorry that you'll have to live out your life in an accelerating societal catastrophe. I hope I am wrong; you deserve better.
But these things happen in the long view of history, and it is vanity to think that we today are exempt from the ultimate expression of capitalist insanity, which is fascism.
soloduff,
I'm not as young as you think. I've witness a number of government overthrows in my job as a international pilot. Most fail, but it has been my observation, that the ones that succeed have both the Church and the Military on their side.
These teabaggers are 100 percent Faux News, Religious, Militaristic Right-wingers. They have guns. They're pissed. We can't have any leverage without them. Nobody wants a large confrontation. But after decades of wage-slavery and congressional betrayal the pot has to boil over sometime.
Obama and Clinton are not left imho. If tea-baggers want to go after administrations who betrayed left ideals, I have no problem with it. What I don't want is offensive nuclear world war and that is where I see us heading in the near future. The war drum beats all through the night right now for Iran and doing nothing about it assures us of more of the same.
Don't advocate defeatism my friend!
Your mind is too erudite, your wit too sharp not to get involved in the inevitable fray. And by involved, of course I mean by your fantastic writing ability and uncommon political insight. Health care just passed I heard, and they've got to be pissed at their Repukes who supported it.
It's the golden opportunity to verbally heard everybody who's been screwed into the third biggest party: The Libertarian Party. As in most Confederations or Unions, the grim specter of what lays ahead is what will pull us together. The North American Colonies had absoulutely nothing in common with each other except the oppression of the British to bind them.
We have the oppression of the banks who raid our treasury and wage war in our name overseas.
TJ
"We must all hang together, for we will most certainly all hang separately!" - Benjamin Franklin
Respectfully, I submit that you are missing the point. Intellectuals are always arguing from the mind and the mind is the slayer of the Real. Creme and his story appeal to and properly evoke response from the human heart. The brain can spin destructive webs of illogic when not anchored in the heart's love.
I would rather be informed by the message of the heart than by the brilliant logic of a deluded brain. Democracy, freedom, creativity, justice...are all based on the human heart's drive for betterment, for expression of love. The heart holds the hope of mankind. From it flows life itself. Again, submitted respectfully.
Also submitted with respect--
Unfortunately, those who feel that they are informed by the unerring music of the heart, can and do manage to distort the "real" just as surely as intellectuals using reason and logic. With the intellectuals however, it is possible to point out to them precisely how and where a particular argument breaks down; there is room for dialogue and the potential that everyone will learn something. On the other hand, those who base beliefs on feelings generally remain unswayed by things like facts or evidence which indicate their beliefs are misplaced. Reminds me a bit of GW. He often said his "gut" told him what to do and he clearly didn't like to be bothered with the facts.
Reason and logic, like all thought, is limited and it's important to recognize and acknowledge that. But too often there is an attempt to excuse an inability to support a position through reasoned analysis by citing the source as the heart. Doesn't really matter what the source is. Once the message from the heart is translated into words, it becomes a statement and deserves the same scrutiny as any other.
I suppose analysis of the definitions (widely varying in the world of intellectual analysis) of "facts", "evidence" would be needed here, but is beyond what anyone wants to read. But your statement "those who base beliefs on feelings generally remain unswayed by things like facts or evidence which indicate their beliefs are misplaced. Reminds me a bit of GW. He often said his "gut" told him what to do and he clearly didn't like to be bothered with the facts", states that feelings and "gut" feelings are not to be trusted.
I agree. However, I'm not talking about feelings, warm and fuzzy or guilt-ridden and crafty. Nor am I talking about "belief". I am talking about plain old experience. Intellectual argument can rave on for days about a situation which none of the arguers knows by experience. We talk about "the poor". How many of us know anything about what it is to experience poverty...not just on mission, but every day, day after day, year after year.
It is experience which educates the heart. It is the brain which can carry on without necessarily having any experience in what it is arguing with such brilliant logic. The old logical argument: "All rabbits love lettuce."
"I love lettuce."
Therefore: "I am a rabbit"
Pure logic without reference to experience.
Optimally, both need to work together...heart and mind. But mind alone is no more reliable than "belief".
Some have glanced at Creme and then boldly declared that he's a con artist - even though there is not a shred of evidence anywhere to suggest that such is the case. Naysayers who don't know what they're talking about often speak, apparently for the sole reason that they like to hear the sound of their own voice. For them, that is much easier than admitting that they don't know.
--
"Was it not the so-called professed authorities in times gone by, as they are today, who criticized and disparaged everything proposed for the betterment of man? The kind of proof demanded was premature and could not in wisdom be given. But time and patience finally vindicated those who brought forth the ideas. Humanity is that much better off today because of them—not because of the skeptics! It is no different today." George Adamski
"It is easier to perceive error than to find truth, for the former lies on the surface and is easily seen, while the latter lies in the depth, where few are willing to search for it." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
I sure hope he's not the Messiah. I was once rather critical of his article posted on CD. I suspect a person fries quickly struck by lightning. :-)
"Creme told the writer Scott James, a friend of Patel, recently. "People are looking to Mr Patel because they are looking for the fulfilment of a story which I've been making around the world for the last 35 years.""
This line said it all for me. They are looking for fulfilment of a STORY that he has been TELLING. I mean how nice is it, that this gobbledygook is in the name of Goodness? Where can I sign up?? (drool) Isn't that what we all want? This guy is preying on people. Mr. Patel is right to feel preyed upon! Shame on anyone for propagating this Story.
Why can't we all be saviours? Why do we have to hang it on one able bodied set of shoulders?
It is interesting that just a few months ago the Bhutanese Board of Monks released a huge sacred painting,a Thongol, I think it was called, saying it was in honor of the immanent appearance of the 5th Buddha, Maitreya Buddha, foretold by Gautama Buddha to return at the end of Kali Yuga.
This has been prophesied to happen when there is war and discord everywhere, with disease,and environmental destruction threatening the existence of life on Earth.
At such a time, Maitreya would return to ensure the continuation of life on Earth. They stated He would appear not as His full Buddha Self, but as a man of regal bearing bring sane ideas to bring humanity back from the brink. This Great Soul will offer sane ideas to bring mankind back from the brink.
PlaneJane: You are parroting Mahayana bullshit made up out of whole cloth at least five centuries after the real Buddha died. Your "foretold by Gautama Buddha" is a flat lie.
Either you are ignorant of the source of your assertion or are aware, and in a gross act of irresponsibility are trying to palm off sectarian fabrication as fact.
Your last paragraph belies an utter ignorance of the point of the Buddha of the Pali canon--which is getting off of the wheel of life, not perpetuating the mess.
Too bad Mr. Patel isn't a half-wit like Peter Sellars' role in "Being There." As a half-wit he could settle nicely into the role of being the Messiah. Making quite a few people, 'er cattle, quite happy
I've heard about this "prediction" or "prophecy" of the "coming" of Maitreya - but I'm totally clueless as to how Raj Patel got fitted into that mold. One person, some of those here on CD might be familiar with, was J. Krishnamurti, who passed away in 1986. He too had denied that he was any kind of a special incarnation, even though he was called by some as the "World Teacher", and even though he kept talking to people until he was almost 90 years old. Krishnamurti was considered by the Theosophists as the "vehicle" for Maitreya's teaching before he declared he would have nothing to do with such images and stuff.
Hi, Just to try and clear up the actual time-line of Raj Patel being pinned down as the Maitreya that Mr. Creme says is now giving TV interviews, I'd like to post some of the original links to the discussions that brought it up. The point is simply to show that it was not Share International or its followers that brought up the possible connection. This has been lost and confused in the misleading article in the Bay edition of the NY Times.
The NY Times article was published on Feb 4th 2010. The original discussions took place on Jan 20-25th right after Mr. Creme made his announcement. The interesting thing to note is that these early discussions never say Share International or its followers are saying it's Raj Patel. I'm still not sure where Scott James got that part from.
Links to early discussions:
rr-bb.com/showthread.php?88754-lord-Maitreya-Mahdi/page63
www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message972695/pg1
www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread537505/pg1
Maitreya is not about coming to fix all our problems. It's very clearly stated that it is humanities responsibility to fix the issues they have created. Maitreya brings truth. Pure facts of cause and effect of what is really going on in the world today in just about every aspect of life. With all the conflicting views in the media today its hard to tell what is true and not. This causes the great divisions of people who basically want the same thing in the end. Maitreya does not come to fix the problems for us or have us follow him and do what he says. It will be up to us to judge what will be obvious knowledge and start to change the direction of our leadership and the world from the ground up.
Good points Casey. And it is true, we try to find someone to FIX the problems, it is a co-dependency issue derived from our severely dysfunctional living. Each individual must find their way to healing what they can, participating, and being what was intended all along, LOVE THY NEIGHBOR.
aCCORDING TO a cOURSE IN mIRACLES, EVERY ONE OF US IS cHRIST...AND ERGO
CAN MAKE MISTAKES AND fiX THEM...;-))
I know a good number of people who support Benjamin Creme's Work, and know of none who think that Mr. Patel is Maitreya.
I totally understand the skepticism that many feel when they see any mention made of Maitreya or Benjamin Creme, but for anyone who happens to be open and interested in checking it out it may interest you to know that the web site below "is meant as a testimony to the many people who, since 1875, have known, met and worked with the Masters in Their attempts to guide and enlighten humanity from behind the scenes, while preparing for Their Approach to the everyday world..."
http://www.biblioteca-ga.info/65
P.S. Back in the 90's a compilation of Creme's writings was put together. It describes many of the characteristics of the future that humanity will eventually create. To me it is a treasure, full of hope and wisdom.
http://www.taracanada.com/Promise.html
Understandably, most people won't believe the information about Maitreya until they have irrefutable proof. In a short time the world will agree that this is the biggest news story in the history of our sad little planet. Thanks to intelligence, evolution, love, and lots of hard work, the human family will become functional and at peace, much sooner than most imagine. These days are marking the end of the world (but only as we've come to know it). It's time for the people to seize the power and for corrupt politicians to get the hell out of the way. It's time for us to rebuild the world so that it's a great place for everyone.
Peace on Earth, Goodwill to All
RH