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Pastimes : Nostradamus: Predictions -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dwight Taylor who wrote (154)3/21/1998 9:29:00 AM
From: Jane Hafker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1615
 
Well, for openers on credibility, look at bibliography. That was originally done so that people not believing any story could go to the proof of the fact in history, and go back to the time it happened and see what first source, second, etc., was ever used to build on through the centuries an dcompare with right now to see how the story had changed from the original documentation of the fact, place, person, etc.

Well, The Mystical Years of Jesus are based on fictions written within the past few years by the other side. There is no mythical reference.
They do not exist. Check the bogus and almost Mad Magazine nature of the "biblographies". There are none.

They are created most of all to hint that Jesus was queer. Period. Positively there is nothing else to the point of them except for the writer to fabricate things which are nonexistant in known history, and to take Jesus to Egypt, which occultists obsess over like n addicts, and make him go there and study the black arts over and over in their fictions.

If it were only fools and retards reading their books, I would understand. But the retards can't and the people reading them are actually a little educated. It is insane to me. The mind of man is so weird I just can't believe I am part of the species sometimes.



To: Dwight Taylor who wrote (154)3/21/1998 11:04:00 AM
From: Richnorth  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1615
 
You wanted to know what kind of credibility Dr. Spencer Lewis has for his "Mystical Life of Jesus". Frankly, I don't know. But what I know , and you know as well, is that big organized religious groups have a tendency to discredit any pronouncements or writings that go against their grain. The big ones are convinced they have the heavenly mandate to propagate the absolute, immutable and infallible truth. Therefore "smart asses" are not to be tolerated, and many of the small ones also feel duty-bound to persuade 'seekers' not to stray from the straight-and-narrow.

I believe the "Mystical Life of Jesus" and "Secret Doctrines" first appeared in California in the mid-thirties. Whether they were well received, pooh-poohed or condemned, I don't know. But what I do know is that Dr. Spencer Lewis was a respected scholar, an author with a powerful and commanding style, a highly multi-talented man and a mystic. He was the First Imperator of the Rosicrucian Order (AMORC) at San Jose, California.

I am sure you will find much info of interest to you at

rosicrucian.org.

By the way, "Cosmic Mission Fulfilled" is a biography of Dr. Harvey Spencer Lewis by his son, Ralph Maxwell Lewis. They were related to the explorer, Merriwether Lewis, one of the leaders of the famous Lewis and Clark expeditions of the late 1700s and early 1800s. I think you will find much info about the aforementioned and other books and publications at the URL given.

RN