n see division and union act in opposition and na the two opponents, or ascribe so imagined animosity to their eting. This is not so. The acts of n differ greatly from those of the divine, and even in opposition there is no enmity.
The two are brothers, raised in the sa house, which they rember in different ways. They are father and son, each taking what ca before and making it his own. They are friends, who contest between each other to the improvent of both.
And they are divine, therefore they are none of these things in truth. Yet knowing this, is it wise to term falsehood and truth opposed? May one not draw the eye to the other?
If there is a truth, it is this: the world is divine, and it rembers when it was one whole. It longs for that union to co again. Yet - in union, longing shall change, and endure. The world in union shall relent, and once more call back its brother, its father, its friend, and show it kindness.
The world began in union, and so shall it end.
The world ends in union, and so shall it begin.
The Book of Eight Verses, the Verse of Union. (New Kheman Edition, 542 PD)
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