Thursday, February 26, 2009

Annie Besant common men and women now masters






Leadbeater , Man How Whence and Whither












The 27 chapters of this book cover Atlantis, Peru, Chaldea,early Aryan, the Arabian, and the Iranian and will be covered later



The men and women in the table in Leadbeater's book are now masters,examples of which I have given in my former post .They have unfolded the God force within themselves .Their road was not only of toil but denied the flesh and mortified it. Peter once wrote if we do not suffer with the Christ, we will not be glorified with him (Him). These masters have toiled and are the superhuman. They have fulfilled what we are to be ,true, following the universal pattern of the zenith of our evolving into the highest spiritual perfection. They show what perfection is and their stories are accessible as a guide in our undertakings. The research was done and recorded.



I will check other allusions also listed below:



I will also consult the reference on Brihaspati.







'The Theosophist, under the general title “Rents in the Veil of Time”--
rents through which glimpses of the past of individuals may be seen. A volume of
these, named Lives of Alcyone,









Mrs. Van Hook and Don Fabrizio Ruspoli, were good enough to write down all
we said, exactly as we said it;










The names of those who constantly appear in this story as ordinary men and
women, but who are now Masters, may make those great Beings more real to some;
They have climbed to where They stand on the same ladder of life up which we are
climbing now; They have known the common household life, the joys and sorrows,
the successes and the failures, which make up human experiences. They are not
Gods perfect from unending ages, but men and women who have unfolded the God
within themselves and have, along a toilsome road, reached the superhuman. They
are the fulfilled promise of what we shall be, the glorious flowers on the plant
on which we are the buds.





BRIHASPATI ...
Now the Master Jesus.
VENUS ...
Now the Master Ragozci (or Rakovzky), the `Hungarian Adept,' the Comte de S. Germain of the eighteenth century







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