Quote:
Originally Posted by craig1120
The good steward is the right-hand-man. He is the humble servant.
In order to come into being, the GS must accept that he is not the main character of his own subjective story. The human body doesn’t belong to him.
He is the detached lurker. From this position, he is able to study the self, to reveal the one who he serves.
The main character is his older brother — the holy and pure firstborn who is the heir of a great kingdom. His brother is also his twin. What the firstborn experiences, the GS experiences and vice versa.
The story of the soul can only be navigated through by the right-hand-man who is the good steward, or the detached, conscious self. He is the bridge to the great man who is the suffering, crucified orphan child.
The GS must believe in his brother and his story. He must become both a mother and father to his brother in order to guide him along.
He is to protect his brother and his life from the great man. But when pain and suffering strike — and the cost of relating to the great man lessens — the GS must serve the great man for the sake of his brother.