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Chapter3
t;But ; he asked.

    quot;Last nigo bed, you told me t this morning was go and buy a pair of shoes you badly needed.

    You also said you felt too muche shoes.

    Its my experience t t t before going to bed at nig t t morning.

    So I merely guessed you must be at tore,quot; the wife answered.

    t;t for me to say, because you are right.

    I  t over the shoes.

    And ted t became, ted the name of God.

    I may ing Gods name out inside I was involved in a fighe shoemaker.

    You are rigemple.

    quot;

    Entering a temple is not so easy -- it is not t you can enter any place and say t you are in a temple.

    Your body may ered temple, but  your mind? rust ? And once your mind ered temple, ? trance into temple suddenly discovers t it is surrounded on all sides by t temple, t no is impossible to step out of temple.

    ill be emple.

    You may go to the moon.

    .

    .

    .

    Recently Armstrong landed on it.

    Does t mean  Gods temple? tep out of Gods temple.

    Do you imagine t wside emple?

    So temple temple of God, and t no temple of God exists outside of it, they are wrong.

    And t temple sroyed because God is not present hey are equally wrong as well.

    emples? If ep out of our illusion t God exists only in temples, our temples could become very beautiful, very loving, very blissful.

    A village, in fact, looks incomplete  a temple.

    It can be a very joyful to emple.
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