DWQA QuestionsCategory: Human PotentialA “Bodhisattva” is described as being “a person who is able to reach nirvana but delays doing so out of compassion in order to save suffering beings.” Is a Bodhisattva one who chooses to align their fate with humanity, to the extent that if humanity fails, they too must start over?
Nicola Staff asked 4 years ago
This again embraces a misconception that starting over for the race of humanity in a physical setting that might be required if there is a physical annihilation of those in a current incarnated form means that it is a setback with soul progression. That will not be the case. Those coming down again will have the same advancements and sum total of their enlightenment and divine wisdom gained from their physical journey as they had in prior lifetimes. It will just be a new undertaking, should that be necessary, to give them back their playground to continue in the journey of bringing healing for all the problems they were involved with before and may well rise again. It is a further karmic cleansing and healing journey to do this, and this will be embraced readily by all because all will see the value and the virtue of the learning it will provide. This Eastern term is what is meant by the term "lightworker" in the Western parlance and that, as well, is a good description of the divine human because all have the capability to be workers for the light, for the cause of the divine. It is only that many are complacent through a manipulation to constrain and control and subjugate them that sets apart the lightworker as being different or even special by contrast. All have that makeup, it is only that many are asleep and not engaging with their mission because they have been sidelined to hold them down and hold them back, that all are not exhibiting this faultless quality of compassion.