Before anything was, the Son was face-to-face with the Father
(I AM) in Love (Spirit). The bible describes Him as being permanently ‘turned
toward’ the Father. He intentionally wills within his soul to remain focused
on His Father and what it is His Father wills – that is, for Him to Be the Son that He is. This
is the Obedience of Christ, the Light. This face-to-face union between the Father and the
Son is Eternal Life which is called Heaven.
Adam, a Son, an extension of this union,
enjoyed blissful Life in fellowship with ‘I AM’ within himself, living in the Light. ‘The eyes of his heart’
remained focused on 'I AM' and he enjoyed the reality of the ‘Obedience
of Christ’. He was being his True Self.
Over time however, through deception, a change took place
whereby Adams vision shifted from his inner ‘I AM’ to an outer ‘I AM NOT’. The separation
within his soul from ‘I AM’ resulted in fear and the darkness that this
created was such that he could no longer ‘see' ‘I AM’ within – he could
therefore no longer be Himself. In order
to try and deal with the shame, he attempted to ‘cover it up’ by creating a
false self, called the ego.
The ego-life was one of trying to overcome this ‘I AM NOT',
however, this was impossible in the darkness. It was a life of pretence,
reason, cause and effect, control, pain, sickness and poverty - an endless
cycle of disappointment. This ‘covered up’ lie-life is called Hell.[1]
Then when the time came, the Father sent Jesus, His
first-born Son, to Adam, to shine His Light into Adams darkness. Before being
crucified, Jesus was ‘covered up’ in kings garb exposing the ultimate in Adams self-deception and three days later he left the grave clothes of Adams 'I AM NOT' behind in the tomb, revealing the Truth to him.
In the Light of Truth, Adam could once again ‘see’ ‘I AM’ within,
choose to turn towards Him and Live in Heaven - the Father and His Son in
perfect union.
האמת חשפו
[1] The modern English word Hell is
derived from Old English hel, helle (about 725 AD to refer to a
nether world of the dead) reaching into the Anglo-Saxon pagan period, and ultimately from Proto-Germanic *halja, meaning
"one who covers up or hides something" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hell#Etymology_and_Germanic_mythology