Meister Eckhart said—“God’s exit is her entrance.”

What in heaven and on earth is he stating? Omnipresence is defined as existing everywhere. We have heard the statement. ‘There is no place where God is not.’ Therefore, the divine prospering power is with that which exits as well as that which enters our lives. With our faith we create acceptance of our good, the drawing power for the rightful divine inheritance in all ways ever present.

“The death of a loved one, the death of a relationship, the death of a dream: these are endings, but the hollow spaces left behind are openings, too.” —Matthew Fox

God, divine Spirit is in the exits and the entrances of our life experiences. We can count on it. The omnipotence and creative ability of the Divine nature, which is what we are one with, supports, creates, and manifests through us and around us.

Surely we have seen doors close in our experience of living. We also have marveled at opportunities quickly showing up filling and fulfilling, bringing forth the new.

The more we give up to the certainty of a divine good unfolding in all things, places, and experiences, including through us, the richer is our insight and belief in the personal demonstration of prosperity.

I know a friend who went through an unwanted divorce. The individual experienced pain—most likely the pain of holding on to the past and resisting what is. It was not an easy time for my friend. However, the good kept showing up and seeping into the heart and mind of the friend. It was wonderful to watch this person who felt empty and downcast, brighten up with new realizations and spiritual insights that would not have happened or because of the loss, the heart opened receptive and ready for expanded awareness and happiness.

The ending of one thing ushered in a new capacity and self-esteem no one or thing could have given my friend except the experience of one thing exiting and another entering. All the while—an inner and outer expansion of self was taking place within my friend—even in the worst moments of it.

Thus, we hold to our conviction for ourselves and those who frequent our lives—having the truest of faith in divine good ever present and unfolding the sparkling activity of renewed and restored greater good. The statement we move ‘from grace to greater grace’ is a mantra of acceptance of divine goodness ever-unfolding in letting go and accepting the new in our lives.

In ‘Prayer of the Day’ there is a corresponding Truth Message titled “Accepting what I cannot Accept.”

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