This is a story I heard from someone. I don't know if it's true.
This is a certain person's impression of a certain religious group. There are religious groups like this, aren't there? I won't say where.
- Arrogance
- (While preaching peace and tranquility) Management by a combination of rewards and punishments (self-contradiction, what they say and what they do are different)
- Justification by force (the idea that spiritual power is sufficient)
- Using logic to justify one's own violence. Sophistry. Justification of conflict (although they themselves may not think so).
- Temporary activation through the provision (sharing) of aura (but this is lost over time) (This also includes the transfer of karma, which should be handled with more caution. It is a partial homogenization of nature, and there are both good and bad aspects)
- They are more focused on getting energy from the aura than on their own personal growth. (That is not the essence.)
- On the other hand, there is a tendency to think that giving aura is good. (That is not the essence.)
- Their inner growth is immature. They are mistaken because they have temporarily gained power. They fall into the illusion that they have grown. Indeed, it is a temporary growth, but it is unstable. There is a tendency to neglect true growth.
- The impression is that there is a stark division between those who think the group is amazing and those who have doubts.
- Arrogance in looking down on worldly jobs and considering their own work to be sublime.
- Many people are being cleverly manipulated by the group as an excuse to give self-confidence to those who originally had low-status jobs in the world. People with less intelligence are easily caught in this kind of logic. (Even if you do spiritual practices, a certain level of intelligence is necessary.)
That person seems to have suggested the following to the higher beings they are connected to:
- It might be better to review support for this group from time to time, including the possibility of cutting it off. (Isn't it okay to give opinions to those who are supporting them?)
- Each invisible supporter can decide whether or not to support those who seem arrogant (members of that group).
- There will be some inconveniences, but that is unavoidable. Those who continue without realizing it are ultimately of that level.
- Ideally, arrogance should be improved, but if it is not, support should be cut off.
- If they continue to say that it is effective, even if their attitude does not change and they remain arrogant, that means they have no discernment. It is just a minor exchange of auras between humans, called healing. There is no greater effect than that. Healers are often exhausted. Healers age. Or, they are receiving energy from the client, claiming it is healing.
- This has happened many times before. When a religious group declines, it becomes a place for people to make money. It is already to some extent like that. If that happens, there is no choice but to look for something else. If that is the case, it is unavoidable.
I don't know how it actually is.