Twenty-Seven (1832)
of us try, we will always fail in this regard, because of the intrinsic conflict with our own
free will to do whatever we want. Whenever any one of us has been or is given absolute
power to limit the free agency of others, this power is inevitably subjected to the perverse
and selfish nature of our unrestricted free will, which, rooted in self-interest, creates the
possibility that we will act for our own sake and not the sake of others.
Thus, the need for a Christ. A Christ has absolute power to lead, judge, and enforce
laws that are equitable for all. How can he do this? Because he has no free will that would
cause him to make a mistake in judgment or misuse. (For any who are interested in why this
is and how it can be, the book explaining this was published in the English language under
the direction of advanced human beings. It is referenced in this biography as HUMAN
REALITY—Who We Are and Why We Exist!)^61
When Christ takes over, we must be guaranteed that we will not get annoyed by the
fact that someone exists who has the ability to limit our free will and tell us what to do. To
make certain of this, our advanced monitors have allowed us to first experience the broadest
possible experience of the adverse effects of our free will. That is what we have been doing
ever since the first human essence was placed in an imperfect body on this earth tens of
thousands of years ago. Since that time, we have witnessed (by each of us living many
incarnations during different time periods) the consequences of not having a Christ to rule
and reign over us.
Eventually, humankind’s experience led to the creation of the United States of
America, where, in our arrogance during the last two-plus centuries of mortal existence, we
have supposed that we could supersede a Christ and establish ourselves as “one nation
under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”^62 We thought that a democracy,
where the people governed themselves by the vote of the majority, whether in direct
elections or through representatives, would work to establish the “greatest nation in the
history of the world.”^63
Supposed “Liberty and Justice for All”
The establishment of the United States of America is part of the final lesson we
needed to learn to realize that we cannot exist as a human race without a Christ—a
righteous dictator who will limit and control human free will.
In our arrogance, from the beginning, the white-skinned Aryan (the term ironically
means “honorable, respectable, and noble”) race began to dominate the world. Having
different colors of human beings was part of the lesson plan. Whether black, white, or in-
between, humans are equally human in all aspects, and are each endowed with free agency.
The Roman Empire was the greatest nation the earth had ever known until it was exceeded
by the United States of America. The Roman Empire was composed of all white people,
relegating the darker-skinned people to be servants and sub-humans. Our advanced
monitors, however, see all human beings equal in every way.^64
Eventually, the concept of a Christ became centered on him as a white-skinned man,
who, convoluted by Christianity, became the Aryan (white man) world’s hero and Messiah.
Aryan nations are generally the Christian nations of the Northern Hemisphere and
Australia. Based on their Christian beliefs and prejudices, it was impossible for white men to
consider the darker-skinned races to be equal human beings, thereby justifying the
subjection of the darker skinned people to conquest and colonial rule.