I Pray All Is Well With Everyone…And Your Hearts And Minds Are Full Of Love, Joy, And Compassion…For All Your Brothers And Sisters In Spirit. And In The Divinity Of The Spirit Of The Living God – The Oneness Of The “Great I AM”- Which Dwells Within Us All…We Are, Indeed, Brothers And Sisters In Spirit…Whether We Acknowledge It, Accept It, Claim It , Or Not! And Although Mankind Has Made Every Attempt – In Many Ways – To Deny This Spark Of Truth…As The History Of Humanity Reveals; In The Grand Scheme Of Universal Things – And Our Divine Connectedness…It Is What It Is! Let All Mankind Understand This…Whether We Agree With This Truth Or Deny It…We Certainly Cannot Change It! Therefore, Being More Loving To One Another And Radiating Those Higher Qualities… Makes Living Life On This Earth A Blessed Experience…For All Of Us! Amen…![]()
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Give Thanks And Praises For Love And Life…![]()
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And Y’all Be Love…![]()
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…A royal prince of India, Ravanna of Orissa in the south, was at the Jewish feast. Ravanna was a man of wealth; and he was just, and with a band of Brahmic priests sought wisdom in the West. When Jesus stood among the Jewish priests and read and spoke, Ravanna heard and was amazed. And when he asked who Jesus was, from whence he came and what he was, chief Hillel said, “We call this child the Day Star from on high, for he has come to bring to men a light, the light of life; to lighten up the way of men and to redeem his people, Israel.” And Hillel told Ravanna all about the child; about the prophecies concerning him; about the wonders of the night when he was born; about the visit of the magian priests; about the way in which he was protected from the wrath of evil men; about his flight to Egypt-land, and how he then was serving with his father as a carpenter in Nazareth.
Ravanna was entranced, and asked to know the way to Nazareth, that he might go and honour such a one as son of God. And with his gorgeous train he journeyed on the way and came to Nazareth of Galilee. He found the object of his search engaged in building dwellings for the sons of men. And when he first saw Jesus, he was climbing up a twelve-step ladder, and he carried in his hands a compass, square and axe. Ravanna said, “All hail, most favoured son of heaven!” And at the inn, Ravanna made a feast for all the people of the town; and Jesus and his parents were honoured guests.
For certain days Ravanna was a guest in Joseph’s home on Marmion Way. He sought to learn the secret of the wisdom of the son, but it was all too great for him. And then he asked that he might be the patron of the child; might take him to the East where he could learn the wisdom of the Brahms. And Jesus longed to go that he might learn, and after many days his parents gave consent.
Then, with a proud heart, Ravanna with his train, began the journey towards the rising sun; and after many days they crossed the Sind, and reached the province of Orissa, and the palace of the prince. The Brahmic priests were glad to welcome home the prince. With favour, they received the Jewish boy. And Jesus was accepted as a pupil in the temple Jagannath; and here learned the Vedas and the Manic laws. The Brahmic masters wondered at the clear conceptions of the child, and often were amazed when he explained to them the meaning of the laws.
…Four-and-Twenty years of age was Jesus when he entered Persia, on his homeward way. In many a hamlet, town, and neighborhood, he paused a while and taught and healed. The priests and ruling classes did not welcome him, because he censured them for cruelty to those of low estate. The common people followed him in throngs. At times the chiefs made bold to try to hinder him, forbidding him to teach or heal the sick. But he regarded not their angry threats. He taught and healed the sick.
In time he reached Persepolis, the city where the kings of Persia were entombed, the city of the learned magi, Hor, Lun, and Mer, the three wise men, who, four-and-twenty years before, had seen the star of promise rise above Jerusalem, and who had journeyed to the West to find the new-born king, and were the first to honour Jesus as the master of the age, and gave him gifts of gold, gumthus, and myrrh. These magi knew, by ways that masters always know, when Jesus neared Persepolis, and then they girt themselves and went to meet him on the way. And when they met, a light much brighter than the light of day, surrounded them, and men who saw the four stand in the way, declared they were transfigured, seeming more like gods than men.
Now, Hor and Lun were aged men, and Jesus placed them on his beast to ride into Persepolis; whilst he and Mer led on the way. And when they reached the magi’s home, they all rejoiced. And Jesus told the thrilling story of his life, but Hor, Lun, and Mer spoke not. They only looked to heaven, and in their hearts praised God. Three wise men from the North were Persepolis; and they were Kaspar, Zara, and Melzone. Kaspar was the wisest master of the Magian land. These three were at the home of Hor and Lun and Mer, when Jesus came. For seven days these seven men spoke not; they sat in silence in the council hall in close communion with the Silent Brotherhood. They sought for light, for revelation, and for power. The laws and precepts of the coming age required all the wisdom of the masters of the world.
…In Persia, Jesus’ work was done, and he resumed his journey towards his native land. The Persian sage went with him to the Euphrates; then with a pledge that they would meet again in Egypt land, the masters said, Farewell. And Kaspar went his way unto his home beside the Caspian Sea, and Jesus soon was in Chaldea, cradle land of Israel. In Ur, where Abraham was born, he tarried for a time; and when he told the people who he was, and why he came, they came from near and far to speak to him.
He said to them, “We all are kin. Two thousand years and more ago, our Father Abraham lived here in Ur, and then he worshipped God the One, and taught the people in these sacred groves. And he was greatly blessed; becoming father of the mighty hosts of Israel. Although so many years have passed since Abraham and Sarah walked these ways, a remnant of their kindred still abide in Ur. And in their hearts the God of Abraham is still adored, and faith and justice are the rocks on which they build. Behold this land! It is no more the fruitful land that Abraham loved so well; the rains come not as in the former times; the vine is not productive now, and withered are the figs. But this shall not forever be. The time will come when all your deserts will rejoice; when flowers will bloom, when all your vines will bend their heads with luscious fruit, and shepherds will again be glad.”
And Jesus preached to them the gospel of goodwill, and peace on earth. He told them of the brotherhood of life, and of the inborn powers of man, and of the kingdom of the soul. And as he spoke, Ashbina, greatest sage of all Assyria, stood before his face. The people knew the sage, for he had often taught them in their sacred halls and groves, and they rejoiced to see his face. Ashbina said, “My children of Chaldea, hear! Behold, for you are greatly blest today, because a prophet of the living God has come to you. Take heed to what this master says, for he gives forth the words that God has given him.” And Jesus and the sage went through the towns and cities of Chaldea, and of the lands between the Tigris and the Euphrates. And Jesus healed a multitude of people who were sick.
The ruined Babylon was near, and Jesus and the sage went through her gates and walked among her fallen palaces. They trod the streets where Israel once was held in base captivity. They saw where Judah’s sons and daughters hung their harps upon the willows and refused to sing. They saw where Daniel and the Hebrew children stood as living witnesses of faith. And Jesus lifted up his hand and said, “Behold the grandeur of the works of man! The king of Babylon destroyed the temple of the Lord in old Jerusalem, he burned the holy city, bound in chains my people and my kin, and brought them here as slaves. But retribution comes, for whatsoever men shall do to other men, the righteous Judge will do to them. The sun of Babylon has gone down. The songs of pleasure will be heard no more within her walls. And every kind of creeping thing and unclean bird will, in these ruins, find their homes.”
And in the temple Belus, Jesus, and Ashbina stood in silent thought. Then Jesus spoke and said, “Behold this monument of folly and of shame. Man tried to shake the very throne of God, and he assayed to build a tower to reach to heaven, when, lo, his very speech was snatched away, because in lofty words he boasted of his power. And on these heights the heathen Baal stood, the god wrought out by hands of man. Upon yon altar, birds, and beasts, and men, yea, children have been burned in awful sacrifice to Baal. But now the gory priests are dead, the very rocks have shuddered and have fallen down, the place is desolate.”
Now, in the plains of Shinar, Jesus tarried yet for seven days, and, with Ashbina, meditated long upon the needs of men, and how the sages could best serve the coming age. Then Jesus went his way, and after many days he crossed the Jordan to his native land. At once he sought his home in Nazareth. His mother’s heart was filled with joy; she made a feast for him, inviting all her kindred and her friends.
But Jesus’ brothers were not pleased that such attention should be paid to one they deemed a sheer adventurer, and they went not into the feast. They laughed their brother’s claims to scorn. they called him indolent, ambitious, vain; a worthless fortune hunter, searcher of the world for fame, who, after many years, returns to mother’s home with neither gold, nor any other wealth. And Jesus called aside his mother and her sister, Miriam, and told them of his journey to the East. He told them of the lessons he had learned, and of the works that he had done. To others, he told not, the story of his life.”
The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus Christ, by Levi H. Dowling, 1920
Music: God Fury – Anno Domini Beats

