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Spiritual Objectives of Life: 7 Priorities

Spiritual Objectives of Life. These seven priorities can help to fill your life with love.

Spiritual Objectives of Life. Sounds big. So lets make it manageable

Here’s a simple summary of what matters in a human lifetime. Yours, for instance.

Eventually this incarnation will end. What will happen if you live in such a way that you give beautiful answers…

To all seven questions in this post?

Differently Put, These Can Become Your 7 Priorities

Designed to Help You NOW

Because it matters, believing in Spiritual Objectives of Life. And following them as best you can.

Just in case you’re wondering, where did these 7 Priorities come from?

The answer is, Energy Spirituality™. And just in case you’re wondering, what’s that?

Energy Spirituality helps people like you to grow emotionally and spiritually.

Using energy skills that work now, in the Age of Awakening.

Just the thing for those of us who are spiritual but not religious! (Although all readers are welcome, of course.)

Of Course, Let’s Give Credit Where Credit Is Due

Blog-Buddy JANICE HOOPER inspired today’s short-and-sweet post. While writing Comments #160-162, over at “What Is My Soul?

At the main article, and our developing comments, see how these seven ideas came into play.

Janice asked, “Do you mind if I just post them again, all together?” Great idea!

Thus, Here They Are. All 7 Priorities for Doing Justice to this Soul Expression of Yours

In fact, I’ll give them to you in two batches.

First Set of Spiritual Objectives of Life

Depending on how you choose, you can turn this lifetime into something spiritually beautiful.

1. What would you learn?
2. How would you use your free will?
3. In which ways would your consciousness evolve (such developing as what, now, would be called your “consciousness lifestyle”)?

From my perspective as an Enlightenment Teacher, these first three questions are extremely important.

Somewhat less important? We could call the following to be “secondary considerations about a human soul expression.”

Second Set of Spiritual Objectives of Life

4. In which ways would the version of you in that lifetime help others?
5. How would you treat other people? (Impacting both your own spiritual evolution within this lifetime. Also presenting opportunities for evolution to those other people.)
6. Within yourself, how much integrity and self-honesty would you develop?
7. In what ways would you contribute to human-type Collective Consciousness on Earth, at that time in human history?

Although I Offer No Conclusion in Particular

You’re all cordially invited to comment here.

And thanks again to JANICE HOOPER.

I hope today’s article inspires you.

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  1. 1
    Graham says:

    Well done, Rose and Janice. Simple is a refreshing change for those of us who aim to make spiritual progress in this life.

  2. 2

    Thanks, GRAHAM. Simple, easy, and effortless — to me these are all signs of cocreating with God.

    By contrast, teachings that are astrally sourced tend to be full of unnecessary complications, in my opinion.

  3. 3
    Melissa says:

    I love the picture at the top of this post. With those 7 questions, to me, they are all about love.

    I’m used to thinking of myself as mushy, not spiritual. This is encouraging.

  4. 4

    Love and Light and Power: You’ve got all three. All humans do.

    Energy Spirituality™ exists to help you make the most of all three, MELISSA. You and every single person reading this website!

  5. 5
    Steve says:

    I like the useful clarity, Rose. The list rings true to me, too.

    It’s short and sweet and to the point, BUT, captures a lot of the major complexities of incarnating as a human!

  6. 6

    STEVE what a wonderful way of appreciating this blogpost! Thank you.

  7. 7
    Myra says:

    No altar? No puja? And yet what you’ve written in this post does count as spiritual to me.

  8. 8
    Myra says:

    For some of us, it’s a bit unsettling, letting go our attachments to religious rituals and ceremonies that we once were taught to consider absolutely necessary.

  9. 9

    If it helps, MYRA, you might consider that those religious rituals and ceremonies were taught to you by people who lived deeper into the Age of Faith, even more so if those ceremonies were family traditions.

  10. 10

    Back in the Age of Faith, many people really needed religion. They felt “Homesick for Heaven,” and going through the rituals, ceremonies, beliefs, and mood-making… were the best they could do to connect to the Divine.

  11. 11

    Not so for those of us living in the Age of Awakening — especially those of use who are flexible enough to change. Often, the older folks get, the more they cling to religious teachings and promises.

  12. 12

    Regardless of your chronological age, those of you who read this blog and are considering ideas like these very Age of Awakening “Spiritual Objectives of Life” can evolve far more rapidly. Living in this new Age of Awakening offers us this opportunity, if only we’ll take it.

  13. 13
    Wendy Vincent says:

    Thank you for this post.

    Thanks in particular for providing something that is spiritual but not religious… and yet there’s really something to it.

  14. 14

    Sweet! Thanks, WENDY VINCENT. Good to hear from you at my blog!

    You’all come back. :-)

  15. 15
    Violet says:

    Thanks for this post, Rose. It puts things into perspective for me.

    It takes me away from thinking about my “purpose” in life and directly to noticing how many ways I choose my free will to grow even when it is seems hard or scary.

  16. 16

    VIOLET, you’re so welcome. You know, I hadn’t thought about it before but I think you’re so right in flagging a connection between thinking about a big Life Purpose, versus exploring the spiritual objectives of life.

  17. 17

    Life Purpose is conspicuously lacking from this list of seven life priorities:

    * Neither seeking The Answer to one’s life purpose.
    * Nor following one’s life purpose.

  18. 18

    If any of you Blog-Buddies would like more counter-culture perspective, see this article on how Life Purpose has changed since the Shift into the Age of Awakening.

    Again, VIOLET, thanks for this fascinating comment from you.

  19. 19
    Janice H. says:

    Thanks, Rose! I thought this list seemed so important, so I’m glad you’re highlighting it in a blog post.

  20. 20

    Wisdom point, S. SMITH. Wisdom point!

  21. 21
    Emily Turner says:

    Thank you, Rose, for these spiritual objectives.

    And thank you, Janice, for inspiring this post!

  22. 22

    Sweet of you, EMILY TURNER. You’re so welcome.

  23. 23
    Ryan says:

    When I find articles by exvangelicals like me, all the energy seems to be around anger, victimization, etc.

  24. 24
    Ryan says:

    Thanks to Energy Spirituality I’ve found ways to grow emotionally and spiritually.

    So many aspects of what you offer fit me like a glove.

  25. 25
    Ryan says:

    A great way to sum up this article is “Spiritual but not religious.”

    Thank you so much for this perspective. I found it really inspiring.

  26. 26

    RYAN, thank you. I find it so helpful to serve as an Enlightenment Teacher, a spiritual teacher, who is spiritual but not religious.

    Lighter! Freer! Also, flexible for you readers, whatever your chosen spiritual path; including those of you who do enjoy being part of an organized religion — rather than the disorganized kind.

  27. 27
    Oscar Manuel says:

    Honestly, I have read these over a few times, and I’m a bit at a loss for what to comment.

    I want to contribute here so I’ll just say… I’m letting them sink in.

  28. 28

    What a delightful way to contribute, OSCAR MANUEL. Thank you.

  29. 29
    Erica says:

    Thank you for this clear list, Rose.

    Are the second batch ‘secondary’ priorities, compared to the first batch?

  30. 30

    ERICA, you’re welcome. What a useful distinction!

    Yes indeed, the second batch supplied “secondary” priorities, compared to the first batch.

  31. 31

    ERICA and others who seek to meet your own high standard for spiritual objectives of life — your own synthesis combining what I recommend here (that suits you), plus your own wise priorities…

  32. 32

    I encourage you to read tomorrow’s blog post for an example of somebody who perhaps hasn’t succeeded at fulfilling her spiritual objectives of life, and by now she is likely mired beyond change for the rest of her life.

    Details tomorrow!

  33. 33

    That blogpost is definitely out now, revealing via a Skilled Empath Merge some details about what it might be like to live as Queen Elizabeth; living now, after nearly 70 years on the throne.

  34. 34

    You can appreciate this extra nuance as well, ERICA, having an Australian’s relationship with the Queen. Unlike many Americans, for instance, I’ll bet you know that she is nominally the head of the national religion, the Church of England.

  35. 35

    Here comes a quote about this queen from an article in Christianity.org/uk on “Queen Elizabeth’s faith.” (The article at the link in our previous comment.)

  36. 36

    “Queen Elizabeth II has a strong Christian faith that has been evident throughout her life in her words and actions. As well as her formal role as ‘Defender of the Faith and Supreme Governor of the Church of England’, which came with monarchy, her personal faith was evident even before she was crowned.”

  37. 37

    Granted, the monarch’s aura was better in just about every way, if you compare how she’s doing currently in her chakra databanks, compared to researching those same ones from a photo dating from her early years as “Supreme Governor of the Church of England,” etc.

  38. 38

    However, “faith” is not a Spiritual Objective of Life; no longer, anyway, since the Age of Faith is over and we’re all now spiritually “called” to live in the Age of Awakening.

    Meaning no disrespect to Queen Elizabeth II, who has served dutifully for nearly 70 years.

  39. 39
    Engineer Jesse says:

    Hi Rose,

    Great post! I appreciate that there’s not one BIG question to answer, such as Life’s Purpose (comments 15 – 17).

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