“According to Edgar Cayce, unless an individual is seeking to improve their spiritual life by asking for help in terms of prayer, their dreams will primarily be a meaningless jumble.
If, however, we are unselfishly seeking God’s will, then the higher consciousness will monitor our dreams and give us a clearer sense of direction in our daily lives. There is little therapy or value in simply learning the meaning of a dream, especially if it is related to an aspect of behavior unless we want to change or improve ourselves.
Modern-day psychiatry divides the mind into the conscious and the unconscious or subconscious, but Cayce said that a third division exists which he called the superconscious mind. This portion of the mind has retained the memory of God’s presence. It is our remaining tie and our communications link with our original spiritual consciousness. In the Bible, there are constant references to communication between man and God, between man and the angels, and between and his higher self through the medium of dreams.
‘Forget not that if it has been rightly said that the Creator, the gods, and the God of the Universe speak to man through his individual self. Man approaches the more intimate conditions of that field of the inner self when the conscious self is at rest in sleep; at which time more of the inner forces are taken into consideration and studied by the individual.’ (3744-5)”
Venture Inward, “Dreams Your Magic Mirror,” Elsie Sechrist, edgarcayce.org