Invisible truth

12 faced with extrasensory phenomenon, as they have nothing to compare it with. But they still feel “well-informed“. Their explanation is that anything to do with the transcendental, is superstition.  Knowledge is always based on experience. There is a lot of knowledge based on experience, but it is not taught at any academy or university. Academics believe that any knowledge not accepted by universities cannot correspond with the truth. This is an enormous mistake many journalists fall prey to. One doesn’t take note of the fact that besides all this academic knowledge, there is also an enormously important knowledge based on experience accessible, which is also available in print. But one doesn’t find it necessary to inform oneself about it. A very good proverb states: “Put everything to the test: but keep only what is good”. 2 There is scarcely one journalist who knows anything about the KNOWLEDGE that exists in the private sector. If somebody insists that he’s so well-informed that he doesn’t believe in peculiar phenomenon, he really wants to say that he’s not one of the foolhardy, who thoughtlessly accepts any kind of nonsense. This applies to all judgement they offer the masses. They then accept this defamation for intelligent elucidation and agree with the opinion of the journalists. But what is really unfortunate is the fact that a great many of the more notable scientists also accept the “well- informed’ newspaper knowledge and thoughtlessly judge and think along those lines.  I therefore warn mankind not to depend on newspaper intelligence, as newspapers are not universities and journalists are not professors. Significant specialised knowledge exists outside of universities everywhere. All one has to do is deal with this! School - acquired wisdom (Transmission from the year 1965) Where would man be without his school-acquired wisdom? But it’s not quite enough to be able to deal with life. There are young people who do not know what to do with this gained wisdom, once they leave the university. It takes more than school-acquired knowledge to deal with life.  More important than handed down knowledge is one’s own common sense, the ability to think clearly and make one’s own decisions; in short, self-criticism. There are schools and universities, who succeed in robbing their students of their own logic, so that they end up believing only that, which somehow coincides with their school-acquired wisdom. But if they’re faced with an incongruity, their own thought process breaks down and anything beyond their experience is considered an impossibility. Schools and universities are in this respect antagonistic towards GOD! 2 First letter to the Tessalonians 5, Verse 21 states: ”Put everything to the test: but keep only what is good”.

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