Rise and Shine

E. CRAIG HENDRICKS

At the heart of both the Holy Mother’s message “Good Vibrations” and the song “Rise and Shine” lies the understanding that spiritual reality is vibrational. Life is not random chaos but a symphony of frequencies—some low, Read more

At the heart of both the Holy Mother’s message “Good Vibrations” and the song “Rise and Shine” lies the understanding that spiritual reality is vibrational. Life is not random chaos but a symphony of frequencies—some low, heavy, and discordant, others high, radiant, and unifying. • War as lack of vibration: Conflict is not simply noise; it is a void where resonance has thinned, a field where harmony has been forgotten. • Peace as higher vibration: Peace is not passive stillness but a living resonance—an active, luminous frequency of alignment with love. • Transformation within chaos: The Mother reveals a paradox: even within war, peace begins to hum. Higher vibrations emerge inside the very heart of discord, pulling humanity upward. The song “Rise and Shine” embodies this teaching in poetic form. It celebrates the resilience of the human spirit, proclaiming that each of us is a note in the great melody of love, sent into the world willingly, with blessing and purpose. The repeated affirmation—“We are love, we are light”—serves as both reminder and activation, a mantra of identity. Together, the message and song declare: every child of God enters the world of chaos as a bearer of harmony, carrying a flame of love that restores the song of creation.

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