John Blair (facebook info) Today, February 9th, 2026 :::: Christianity, Children, Rembrandt's afterlife experience, and Jane and Rob's new framework ::::
"Recently, I have been looking through the book, "The World View of Rembrandt", by Jane Roberts,
Laurel Davies.
As I have been doing this, I have come across excerpts having to do with a lot of different topics, such as: painting, art, Rembrandt's wife, his times, Christianity, Children, evil, animals, God, notes from Rob on an Oversoul Seven film, did Christ exist, angels, reincarnation, and the artist within, the artist within, the artist.
There is also about half a page of material where Jane Roberts apparently also gave us some information from the world view of Michelangelo and the world view of DaVinci. Wow.
Cool.



For myself feel like a kid in a candy store; so many awesome excerpts to choose from. Which ones should I choose first.

Given all of this then, I think I'll start here with this one having to do with, Christianity, Children, Rembrandt's afterlife experience, and Jane and Rob's new framework.
++++++++++
"(3:32. At a slower pace:) I am pleased to see that Christianity endures, even though it is broken into thousands of fragments."
"(Pause.) I thought that it was indispensable (pause), that man used it as a kind of sounding board, or a framework, in which he tried to explain his experience and the connections between the body and the soul. (Pause.) I am also pleased to see that the Bible endures - for in the same way it also serves as a sounding board, containing stories that somehow fitted to man's highest hopes and most profound anguish. I thought that Christianity was a spiritual framework upon which the world of ethics and law evolved. (Long pause.) In my day every child new the biblical stories by heart. They were considered morality plays of a kind, and I must say that I do not understand what could conceivably replace Christianity where it to disappear."
"(3:38.) I did want to mention that I will of course try to answer any questions when you have them. (Pause.) There may be some I cannot answer, or I may have to think some over for a while, but you may always feel free at least to inquire."
"( Alright.""
"(Long pause.) I am surprised that religious subjects are not used more frequently in your time as a proper subject matter for paintings; for I believe that the biblical stories alone united we need varieties of people, so that they did indeed have a universal quality."
"(4:02.) During my lifetime, we considered anyone who is not Christian to be an infidel."
"Shortly after my own death, I understood for myself how wrong that attitude was. Somehow, then, I instinctively realize that this fast Universe opened its doors to everyone. No one was left out -"
"(4:07.) An almost exultant feeling of being welcome permeated everywhere, and I understood that each and every creature, regardless of its degree, was somehow will come here. Not only welcome, but desired - and that no exclusions ever applied."
"I had long thought, even in my lifetime, that Christianity somehow misrepresented the Jews, but I was so used to the concept of hell or damnation that it was with a sense of shock that I understood that no hell or damnation existed. No matter how foul a man's deeds might have been on earth, here they were somehow redeemed. Such an atmosphere of loving acceptance exists in this afterdeath dimension that I found it almost impossible to imagine that I had ever believed in punishment or damnation. So certain attitudes of mine have changed, and certainly for the better."
"I also understood that Christianity itself was actually a frail vehicle, that its framework was far too small to contain the reality that I was and am experiencing. This does not mean that I do not still feel a genuine fondness for Christianity, because regardless of its shortcomings I grew up in its atmosphere. (Long pause.) I am filled, however, with the greatest sense of acceptance, of being where I should be, and of the rightness of being who I am. I barely remember having such feelings in my early childhood. It now seems to me that all children are born with the sense of freedom - and that by adulthood, however, the old sense of rightness vanishes. I am not sure why."
"(Pause at 4:16.) It occurs to me that you and others are indeed trying to form a new framework large enough to contain man's experience, and that such communications as ours serve in that regard."
As I have been doing this, I have come across excerpts having to do with a lot of different topics, such as: painting, art, Rembrandt's wife, his times, Christianity, Children, evil, animals, God, notes from Rob on an Oversoul Seven film, did Christ exist, angels, reincarnation, and the artist within, the artist within, the artist.
There is also about half a page of material where Jane Roberts apparently also gave us some information from the world view of Michelangelo and the world view of DaVinci. Wow.
Cool.
For myself feel like a kid in a candy store; so many awesome excerpts to choose from. Which ones should I choose first.
Given all of this then, I think I'll start here with this one having to do with, Christianity, Children, Rembrandt's afterlife experience, and Jane and Rob's new framework.
++++++++++
"(3:32. At a slower pace:) I am pleased to see that Christianity endures, even though it is broken into thousands of fragments."
"(Pause.) I thought that it was indispensable (pause), that man used it as a kind of sounding board, or a framework, in which he tried to explain his experience and the connections between the body and the soul. (Pause.) I am also pleased to see that the Bible endures - for in the same way it also serves as a sounding board, containing stories that somehow fitted to man's highest hopes and most profound anguish. I thought that Christianity was a spiritual framework upon which the world of ethics and law evolved. (Long pause.) In my day every child new the biblical stories by heart. They were considered morality plays of a kind, and I must say that I do not understand what could conceivably replace Christianity where it to disappear."
"(3:38.) I did want to mention that I will of course try to answer any questions when you have them. (Pause.) There may be some I cannot answer, or I may have to think some over for a while, but you may always feel free at least to inquire."
"( Alright.""
"(Long pause.) I am surprised that religious subjects are not used more frequently in your time as a proper subject matter for paintings; for I believe that the biblical stories alone united we need varieties of people, so that they did indeed have a universal quality."
"(4:02.) During my lifetime, we considered anyone who is not Christian to be an infidel."
"Shortly after my own death, I understood for myself how wrong that attitude was. Somehow, then, I instinctively realize that this fast Universe opened its doors to everyone. No one was left out -"
"(4:07.) An almost exultant feeling of being welcome permeated everywhere, and I understood that each and every creature, regardless of its degree, was somehow will come here. Not only welcome, but desired - and that no exclusions ever applied."
"I had long thought, even in my lifetime, that Christianity somehow misrepresented the Jews, but I was so used to the concept of hell or damnation that it was with a sense of shock that I understood that no hell or damnation existed. No matter how foul a man's deeds might have been on earth, here they were somehow redeemed. Such an atmosphere of loving acceptance exists in this afterdeath dimension that I found it almost impossible to imagine that I had ever believed in punishment or damnation. So certain attitudes of mine have changed, and certainly for the better."
"I also understood that Christianity itself was actually a frail vehicle, that its framework was far too small to contain the reality that I was and am experiencing. This does not mean that I do not still feel a genuine fondness for Christianity, because regardless of its shortcomings I grew up in its atmosphere. (Long pause.) I am filled, however, with the greatest sense of acceptance, of being where I should be, and of the rightness of being who I am. I barely remember having such feelings in my early childhood. It now seems to me that all children are born with the sense of freedom - and that by adulthood, however, the old sense of rightness vanishes. I am not sure why."
"(Pause at 4:16.) It occurs to me that you and others are indeed trying to form a new framework large enough to contain man's experience, and that such communications as ours serve in that regard."
- "The World View of Rembrandt", Deleted Session July 22, 1983, page 173 - 175, by Jane Roberts,
Laurel Davies.








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