Shop
Close 
LANGUAGE

New Day Herald

John Morton Matterhorn Smiling

Heaven On Earth Tour 2018 | Zermatt, Switzerland | Day 5

 

“My job is to awaken the soul into the soul realm, so you can have heaven while you’re on earth.” John-Roger, DSS.

 

Zermatt, Switzerland | Day 5 | September 19

We are met in the lobby at the beautiful Mont Cervin Palace Hotel by Heidi our Mountain Guide. WOW, we have a real mountain guide today. Things are getting real.

We take a gentle walk to the Gornergrat Bahn train station. We take the Bahn up the mountain to 10,134 feet. And indeed we are now at the viewing platform that overlooks The Matterhorn!! What a way to start the day! Who needs coffee? The views are out of this world. As we arrive at the top, we gather together to call in the Light and John takes us traveling with a beautiful talk overlooking the Matterhorn. Afterward we take time to take photos and explore the mountaintop.

We have worked up an appetite and are ready for a delicious lunch at Vis a Vis, nowhere else, alas than at the top of the mountain! We are served a beautiful brunch with chicken, soup and pasta.

Time to head back down the mountain and for those who are more adventurous, they head off with our mountain guide for some hiking to meet us back in town later. We head back to our hotel to prepare for the evening festivities to meet with the group and partake with John Morton and Traveler Sharing followed by a buffet dinner before we drift off into the night on the Soul Train.

In Loving Service,
Love and Light Julie
 

Touring Videos Day 5


 
 
 

Touring Photos by David Sand


Scroll down to the bottom to read David Sand’s travelogue on Day 5.

 

 

Join Us in Planting Light Columns wherever you are and Light up the World together.

Participate in Planting Light columns with us. The map that shows the dates of where we will be on the tour for visualizing Light Columns.

 

From David Sand on Day 5:

The Matterhorn and Zermatt. This is magnificent, inspiring, gorgeous—all the adjectives. Probably the most beautiful mountain scenery I’ve ever experienced, although I haven’t been to the Canadian Rockies. What makes it especially compelling is how well the humans have done getting large groups of people in and out with a minimum of fuss and obtrusiveness, and keeping it spotlessly clean at the same time. (A clean platform in a train station? Come on.) In spite of the many tourists, there are minimal signs with rules or warnings of impending death or harm to the environment, or fences, ropes, lines in the sand, recorded lectures, TV screens, etc. Just a series of trains and cable cars (all immaculate) and simple, comfortable restaurants as you ascend toward the peaks. There aren’t even a lot of displays telling you how to interpret what you’re seeing. Nature and its creator take precedence, and that’s what’s setting the boundaries. There are the least possible attempts to place interventions in between each person and the landscape and what they’re experiencing inwardly.

It seems to me that the ancient sense that mountains and elements of nature are beings, much like humans, and that they’re watched over by even higher beings, is still preserved here on unconscious levels, and that’s what motivates this non-intervention. If you were talking to a person, would you need a voice constantly telling you what you’re experiencing, or warning you that they might hurt you? To see the spiritual relationship with nature preserved in a modern western culture is beautiful. I’ve seen it in the east, or in native cultures, but to experience it in the west, integrated with technology and the proactive western consciousness, is an intimation of the possibility of creating heaven on earth. This isn’t just wilderness kept wild; it’s cooperation between humans and nature. While John is talking a helicopter flies over us occasionally, dropping off building materials for some repairs that are going on, but there’s such a high consciousness of purpose, care, and respect in the workers that it doesn’t feel disturbing. John just pauses his talk for a few seconds and we go on. In the town of Zermatt, there are no cars allowed because in this little town there isn’t a way for the humans and cars to interact harmoniously.

I’ve felt this kind of integration of the human and natural worlds on MSIA properties too—Windermere, Lake Arrowhead. The non-infliction and non-intervention set up a vortex in which Spirit has the freedom to enter. Since there’s so little pushing, Spirit doesn’t get pushed away. It feels welcoming and inviting, both to physical beings and non-physical beings. And John is doing frequent sharings in the evenings, each of which, for me, bring in successively higher levels of spiritual energy, just as the series of trains and cable cars on the mountainsides take us to successive levels of splendor. It’s getting more and more intense, and more and more inner. Enough said.

5 thoughts on “Heaven On Earth Tour 2018 | Zermatt, Switzerland | Day 5”

  1. Incredible for my mind about the endless and limitless manifestations of the Spirit trough the Traveler.I love to be challenged in my mind or emotions with this manifestations.

  2. Julie & David – I looooove reading your write-ups about the trip! You are so vivid in your descriptions – I feel like I’m right there with you! I especially loved the shower descriptions – I got wet just reading!! 🙂

  3. I love hearing that they have preserved things in Zermatt like the sanctity of no cars It was that way when I was there too some 50 years ago There was no trash anywhere either At that time you had to have lived seven years in Switzerland to even think about buying property there

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *