The Parting of the Red Sea

Many of you have asked about Jamie’s small group channeling calls as a way to speak directly with your deceased loved ones. She has three types: The Grievers’ Call (which only accommodates  6 callers,) The Group Phone Call and the Erik Conference Call. Erik conducts the last one, but if you register for the other two, please be sure to ask him to come in an help. He keeps Jamie’s filters down and helps the deceased communicate. Some of them have trouble. Not Mr. Blabbermouth, though! You can sign up HERE. If you want to listen to an example of one of these calls, click on Conference Calls under the “About Erik” tab on the homepage and the audio file will download to your desktop. One of my favorites is the one from 11/15/12 because something pretty shocking happens. Big surprise.

One more “housekeeping” announcement: Someone brought to my attention that the link I posted to preorder the new book was a little confusing. It seems to only show the Kindle version, and the paperback edition is on the page, but very obscure. Here’s a better link: Preorder Now

Enough of the boring stuff. Let’s see what Erik says about the mysterious parting of the Red Sea!

Me: Erik, tell me about the parting of the Red Sea. There have been lots of theories, all intriguing, but give us the low down.

Jamie: Do I have to describe what he’s doing?

Me: Yeah, go ahead. What is he parting? Does it have to do with the female anatomy?

Jamie nods yes.

Me: Oh god, Erik. Couldn’t it be your butt cheeks? Seriously. Well, he’s a guy, so…

Jamie: I don’t know if he does that because it’s his personality or is it about the shock factor?

Me: He does both. He did it with his siblings too. He was wild and crazy trying to make them laugh, yanking their chain.

Jamie: The parting of the Red Sea. So you’re talking about Moses?

Me: Yeah.

Jamie: Erik, you’ve got to o straighten up, all right?

Erik: Well you know how stories get exaggerated and fables get told to teach a lesson?

Me: Oh, yeah.

Erik: I’ll tell you right now that the sea didn’t split and the red carpet didn’t roll down the center of it so that all of these people could walk down it and be saved. I can say that there are occasions where there’s an extremely low tide, but it’s not exactly how it is in the story. I apologize to people who really want to believe in it, and that God made this miracle. God is in all of us, and God is wonderful. God doesn’t have to go by the term, “God,” so don’t get pissed. Use a word that fits your general description. Miracles do happen, but this is a story told to kind of put faith back into people so that they do the (air quotes) “right thing” to be saved or you need to be the right way, and partly—

Jamie: What? Don’t mumble.

Me: Oh, he was a mumbler.

Jamie imitates his mumbling.

Erik: Part of it is government propaganda. Come on. Come one. You know that’s not new knowledge. A lot of religious structures and behaviors are based on government propaganda. It was out of “goodness,” but remember there’s no right or wrong. It was to give people something to believe in, keep them safe. Sometimes it was the need of the government to keep them in line so that there was more control of people. Can you imagine what it would be for a vastly growing country to stand up and say, “What you believe in is your own truth.”

Jamie: That’s my favorite line.

Erik: There are contradictory elements so what they had to do was take some of the belief system and shape it. If your feathers are getting ruffled, I say sit down in front of the computer, and research where your belief system came from. Why do you believe in it? Where did you learn it? Where did the story originate? The parting of the Red Sea is a bit of an exaggeration to get people to believe that something good will happen or something bad will happen to you, and also—

Jamie: Okay, you just mumbled again.

I laugh and she mimics his mumbling again.

Erik: Also, back then not everybody could understand unique weather patterns, and they’re often described as miracles or devastation from God or some higher being because of the behavior of people on Earth. It’s very human of you to accept the responsibility because that means it’s big enough and what you did had so much value that you made it rain for 40 days and 40 nights. Or you might think that you’re a good enough person, so your crops turned out very well. We like to associate ourselves to nature that way, but it’s really not about your ego or your goodness or badness. It’s what kind of footprint or what kind of relationship you have with your environment that can alter your environment. When we’re talking about weather and we’re talking about the earth as a whole, we’re talking about the sea parting, that’s a weather pattern.

(Pause)

Jamie: He’s quiet.

Me: Okay, so what actually happened? That’s my original question. What happened physically?

Erik: Low tide.

Me: And did the tide run back in a swallow up people?

Erik: When you think about a—

Jamie: He’s saying tsunami.

Erik: It’s not exactly like a tsunami, but when it pulls out really far, where there used to be water, it becomes dry land that you can walk on, but flooding happens afterwards. Think of a quick gravitational pull where the water is pulled out during an extremely low tide to become a high tide.

Jamie: He’s not showing me a really big wave. He’s showing me draining out and filling back up.

Erik: So people would walk across it, but there’s no red carpet or avenue with 20-foot walls of water.

Me: Well, did it happen so suddenly—who were the people who were chasing Moses and his followers. The Romans? I don’t really know much about this subject.

(Pause)

Me: It doesn’t make any difference. Did it swallow them up right away, or did they have some distance between them. Were the Romans 15 minutes to an hour away, or were they right on their heels?

Erik: No, not at their heels. They totally had distance between them.

Me: So it wasn’t, “Okay, here’s the last of Mose’s followers squeaking through” and then, “boosh” here comes the water.

Erik: It wasn’t like a game of tag where they were right behind them reaching out to get them but “only the good people got to pass.” The people in the back got swallowed out because that makes for a damn good story. There was a huge span of time before they figured out that they must have used this to leave, and then they, too, tried to do the same thing, but the tide came in.

Me: So how many people died in that?

Erik: Oh, holy shit, Mom. I don’t know.

Me (in jest): You don’t know? I thought you knew everything! Erik, don’t you know everything?

Erik: No, I don’t know everything! Do you want me to get their names, too, so we can create a wall like the Vietnam War Memorial?

Me: Yes, and I want their social security numbers, too.

Erik: All right. I’ll get back to you in a year.

I laugh.

Me: Anything else you want to say about the parting of the Red Sea, Erik?

Erik: No, but wouldn’t it be rude of me to say not to believe everything that you hear?

Me: No, of course not. That’s true. You gotta follow your heart instead of your head.

Erik: Which head are you talking about?

Me: Oh, gosh, Erik. No, for real. It’s about relying on your own intuition rather than the history books.

Erik: Yes.

Me: Okay. Any messages for the people out there?

Erik: My peeps! My people, But really they’re not my people. We’re just like-minded.

Me: Yeah, otherwise you’d be sounding a little bit like Moses, Erik.

Erik: I like to talk, and you like to listen. Always, like my Mom said, listen to your heart. If it resonates with you, hold fast to it. If it doesn’t resonate at all, throw that shit away. Everybody’s going to grow at their own pace.

Me: Well said, Erik.

Erik: If you want to talk about something bigger, in general, I’d like to bring up, again, how people need to connect to the environment that they’re a part of. Sometimes that can be a little bit overwhelming, but if you check it out, my mom and I set up a time—

Jamie: Oh, did you set up a time for people to say a, he’s talking about meditation.

Erik: You wanna get connected with yourself, to others, to everyone as a whole bless everyone. Bless is pretty much saying positive things, setting a good intent and embrace the whole, send energy down into the center of the Earth, and let Mother Earth radiate it to everything. So it goes into every person, every plant, every animal, every city, every bit of water, every fish. It’ll seep into the air, airplanes, clouds, weather, everything gets your love if you send it to the core of the Earth. I think it’s so powerful that we should make t-shirts.

Me: Sometimes I send it to the core of the Earth and then have it radiate up to the soles of people who need it, who are suffering. Yes, we do that in Channeling Erik. We try to create a time when we do it in mass.

Erik: At high noon, everybody take a minute and just send a burst pushing down love from your feet to the core of the Earth so that everyone can experience unity and help Mother Earth out.

Me: What about time zones? High noon to me is not high noon to people in Australia.

Erik: How cool is that, Mom, because then everything is going to circulate all the way around.

The Parting of the Red Sea - Channeling Erik®

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Elisa Medhus


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