Narciso Olalo True Faith in Action A Simple Path to Salvation
- Jun 27
- 5 min read
The "Plastic Bottle" Path to Salvation: 5 Counter-Intuitive Lessons on Faith, Love, and Roulette
1. The Search for Tangible Truth
We live in an age that demands receipts for the soul. In the realm of spirituality, "proof" is often dismissed as a crude requirement, a lack of faith in the unseen. We are coached to rely on intuition, to seek the divine in the silence, or to inherit ancient traditions without question. Yet, for many of us, there remains an unshakeable, even desperate desire for a bridge between the ethereal and the empirical.
True divine connection should not be a matter of mere assertion; it should manifest as a demonstrable "Power of Mind." When the spiritual becomes verifiable, it moves from the category of an empty claim to a witnessed truth. This intersection of the miraculous and the mundane suggests that salvation isn't found in a complex theological puzzle, but in how we navigate the "code" of the universe when no one is watching.
2. Beyond Intuition: The "Power of Mind" as Empirical Proof
To distinguish a genuine dialogue with God from the cacophony of those who merely "hear voices," there must be evidence that transcends human capability. This "Power of Mind" is not a personal talent but a diagnostic tool—a way to prove that the communication is objective and real.
The Evidence of Predictive Knowledge The most harrowing proof lies in the awareness of events buried in shadows. Long before the public record caught up, the speaker detailed confidential, gruesome crimes: political assassinations where bloodlines were betrayed for elections, and the specific geometries of dismemberment. Most notably, he predicted the fate of the "missingero" (missing e-sabong cockfighters) involved with Atong Ang. In July 2022, he stated that the victims had been thrown into the waters of Taal; it wasn't until 2025 that witnesses finally confirmed this grim reality. To see three years into the future of a crime is not intuition—it is access to a ledger we are not supposed to read.
The Casino Anomalies This power extends into the high-stakes environment of Australian casinos, where the speaker sees the "program" inside the machines—the very logic of the jackpot. His routine was a study in statistical impossibility: he would take $100 and, through an uncanny ability to call roulette numbers before the dealer even threw the ball, turn it into $3,000 or $5,000. This was not greed, but "funding" to sit at the "Grand" jackpot machines until they hit. After securing over ten "Grand" payouts, the establishment took notice.
"They treated me like a criminal because I could do things they couldn’t explain. They banned me, accusing me of 'Man-Rin'—laundering government funds—even though I have no government record. I am not a criminal. I simply saw the program of the machine, a glimpse of the design that is usually hidden from human eyes."
3. The Great Divorce: Why Faith and Love Are Not the Same
There is a common religious fallacy that Faith and Love are a single, monolithic entity. In reality, they are distinct forces. One can possess "Faith"—a cold, intellectual belief in God—while lacking "Love," the action-oriented compassion for the world. Conversely, a person can act in "Love" without ever uttering a prayer.
The speaker offers a biting critique of the "Sunday-only" believer. Many claim they are "saved" by virtue of their religious membership, yet their daily conduct remains stagnant. In the speaker’s vision, the divine census is stark: the many who perish are like sand; the few who are saved are like gravel. To move from the fragility of sand to the solidity of gravel requires more than a hymn; it requires the "Thesis of Alignment":
Change: A fundamental, visible shift in one’s nature.
Repentance: A genuine turning away from the harm once caused.
Absolute Belief: A conviction so total it dictates every reflex of the day.
4. Love for the "Heartless": Expanding Compassion to Objects
The most profound test of a spiritual life is not how we treat those who can love us back, but how we treat "heartless" objects. This is the concept of Environmental Love—applying the divine impulse to the non-living.
Consider the analogy of the Bus and the Plastic Bottle. A passenger may be perfectly polite to others—the "hearted" beings—while ignoring a plastic bottle rolling across the floor. They assume that because it is not their trash, it is not their problem. This is a failure to understand Hazard and Risk.
A plastic bottle left on the road is a hazard. That hazard creates a risk—the risk that a fellow human might slip and be injured, or that the bottle will flow into a river, polluting the water and killing the fish that the Creator designed for our sustenance. To pick up the bottle is an act of love for the "heartless" (the road, the river) specifically to protect the "hearted" (the person, the fish). As the speaker reflects, the hazard is an affront to God’s design. If you love the Architect, you cannot be indifferent to the maintenance of the building.
5. The Performance Trap: The Danger of Public Goodness
There is a chasm between "Public Goodness" and "Secret Goodness." We see the "performance" in pastors and politicians who do good for a return—praise, reputation, or a future vote. When an act of kindness is performed for an audience, its spiritual value is liquidated.
True Faith is a solitary act. The speaker describes using his own expensive, high-quality fishing line to tie down a council platform—a piece of public property—just to keep it from drifting away in the current. He spent his own money and his own time to save a "heartless" object that didn't belong to him, knowing no one would ever see it, let alone thank him. This "Secret Goodness" is the only currency recognized by the Divine. It is the act of maintaining the world when you are the only witness.
6. The Simplicity of the "Incomplete Roof"
In a vision, the speaker saw a roof that was sturdy and well-crafted, but it had a one-meter gap at the very edge. To the casual observer, the roof was nearly perfect. But when the storms came, the person beneath it still got wet.
This gap represents incomplete belief. Many people grasp parts of the truth—they attend church, they are kind to their families—but they leave a "meter-wide gap" in their understanding of how to apply Love to the totality of creation. They remain "mostly good," but in the eyes of the Divine, mostly good is still wet. Salvation is not a reward for a high percentage of effort; it is the removal of the gap. It is the consistent, simple practice of goodness toward everything—man, animal, and object alike.
7. Conclusion: A Final Thought to Ponder
We often wait for a grand sign or a complex theological breakthrough to confirm our spiritual standing, but the test is far more immediate.
The next time you see a stray plastic bottle on the sidewalk or a piece of trash in the aisle of a bus, do not ask whose responsibility it is. Instead, look at that object and ask: Is my roof complete? Your reaction to that "heartless" hazard, in the silence of your own company, is the most accurate map of your soul. God is not found in the volume of your hymns; He is found in the trash you didn't throw, and the hazard you chose to remove.




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