Mediumship and Spiritual Growth: A Path of Cultivation and Choice
Mediumship and spiritual growth walk hand in hand in the soul’s evolution
Have you ever wondered why some people have strong mediumistic abilities while others don’t? Or why certain mediums advance in their mission with peace and clarity, while others remain caught in inner turmoil?
The answer lies in the connection between mediumship and spiritual development. All spirits, without exception, are naturally endowed with psychic perception. Mediumship is not a privilege granted to a few—it’s a faculty, just like vision, hearing, or reasoning, that can be developed, refined, or neglected, depending on one’s personal effort over many lifetimes.
What today seems exceptional—such as ostensive mediumship—will become common in the future. We are moving toward a more spiritually aware world, where sensitivity to the unseen will be more widespread and better understood.
Mediumship and spiritual growth result from choices and experience
Like all spiritual faculties, mediumship is the product of progressive cultivation. Those who practice it with clarity and purpose today have likely nurtured it over many lives—with genuine interest, consistent practice, and a willingness to serve.
But let’s be clear: mediumship is neutral. Just as the gift of speech can be used to bless or to harm, mediumship can serve noble or destructive purposes. What determines its usefulness is the intent behind its use.
This is crucial. Lower spirits also use mediumship—often manipulating the weaknesses of the medium to maintain their influence, frequently to the medium’s detriment.
That’s why moral elevation, combined with study and service, is what allows mediumship to truly fulfill its enlightening and healing mission.
Mediumship is a spiritual field under cultivation
Think of mediumship as fertile soil—everything planted there will grow, even what’s sown without love. If a medium chooses pride, vanity, or irresponsibility, they’ll still serve as a channel—but for low-vibration energies.
On the other hand, when one works on inner transformation, studies, watches their thoughts, and cultivates good actions, they become a natural magnet for Higher Spirits. As a result, their mediumship becomes clearer, safer, and spiritually uplifting.
Spiritism teaches us: there is no reliable mediumship without moral effort. The quality of the message is directly related to the character of the messenger. In this way, the medium stops being just a channel and becomes a living testimony of the good.
Conclusion: Mediumship is both responsibility and opportunity
Understanding the link between mediumship and spiritual growth clarifies our role in this sacred path. It’s not a punishment or a spiritual status—it’s a sacred opportunity to evolve, to serve, and to enlighten our own soul.
It’s not only about “seeing” or “hearing” spirits. It’s about becoming accountable for what we attract, what we share, and how we live. The mediums of the future—and of today—will be those who blend sensitivity with discernment and a commitment to goodness.
If you feel mediumship awakening in your life, nurture it with care. Study, join serious spiritual groups, pray, meditate—and most importantly, work on your inner reform with honesty. Mediumship is a gift of the Spirit—and every gift deserves to be handled with love and wisdom.
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