Pyeong Hwa Gyeong (145) Book 8. The Reunification of Korea and World Peace CHAPTER 14. The Course of Life for the Princes and Princesses of God
5. Our attitude toward the independence of our homeland - 2
In order to overcome all the resentment and execute your mission, your hope for the dawning of a homeland needs to be a thousand times, ten thousand times greater than the influences of the present reality.
If by some chance an emissary were to die due to some unfortunate situation in the line of duty, God can dispatch a new emissary to the same place who can carry out that person’s responsibility.
Even though he or she has already passed on, people will appear who can become the new emissary’s friends and allies. Even though he or she became a sacrifice, because he or she died as a model, people who were his or her allies will remain.
Since those people remain, God can send someone in the emissary’s place on that foundation. However, if he or she was not ready to die in that situation, no matter what he or she may have achieved, it will end with that person’s death.
From this viewpoint, what attitude should you have toward this new age? The desire to begin the original homeland must burn in your heart more passionately than anything else. You have to feel pride that you are a leader who is building the homeland for which God has longed for six thousand years.
You have to take pride in bearing the responsibility for this incredible pioneering mission, as a member of the elite group standing on the front line. Many people in the past yearned for this mission, but it was not available to them. You are taking on this one-time-only, privileged mission, so you must have a very solemn sense of responsibility.
Every aspect of your lifestyle—eating and sleeping, coming and going—has to be for the establishment of God’s homeland. How much do you think God has been longing for you to step forward and joyfully and confidently declare you will carry out this mission?
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