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Further teachings given during group meditation in the holy center of Glastonbury.
A wonderful sequel to The Revelation of Ramala.
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The Famous Twelve Steps To Recovery From Addiction Has Been Successfully Used By The Characters In This Remarkable Book. The Key Spiritual Facet In This Healing Process Is Surrender To A Higher Power In Life, God. Recovery Actively Seeks Divine Grace. The Personal Nature Of These Stories, Their Intimacy With The Reader, And The Powerful Stories Of Recovery Will Touch The Heart Of All Readers. Each Narrative Is Told From A Personal Perspective Of A Journey Into Hell, And The Slow Journey To Recovery. In Each Instance, Divine Love Is The Instigation For Recovery And Ultimate Healing. God S Love Is The Ultimate High. The Stories Are Comforting, Source Of Grace, Inspiring And Challenge To Each And Every Reader. Every Person Has A Story; Some Dramatic, Some Painful, Some Successful In Terms Of Wealth. These Are Stories Of Addiction, Failure And The Depths Of Degradation And The Slow And Steady Road To Recovery With The Love And Guidance Of The Divine.
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In this study of channeling, earlier called spirit communication or mediumship, Klimo, who teaches at Rosebridge Graduate School in the San Francisco Bay Area, writes with clarity about "the communication of information to or through a physically embodied human being from a sourceā¦on some other level or dimension of reality other than the physical as we know it." He profiles recent channels and their sources, goes back to preliterate societies and the advent of monotheism and identifies as channels such figures as Moses, Solomon, Muhammad, Merlin, Nostradamus, Swedenborg and Edgar Cayce. He discusses the sorts of people who are channels, kinds of information channeled, sources of information channeled and varieties of channeling like clairvoyance and automatic writing. According to Klimo, few people tap into their abilities to perform channelingand for those who think they can, he serves as guide.
The New Age movement is a twentieth-century socio-cultural phenomenon in the Western world with Glastonbury as one of its major centers. Through experimenting with a number of ways of analyzing this movement, the authors were able to develop a novel theory of social religious movements of broad applicability. Based around contradictions relating to such central anthropological concepts as communitas, egalitarianism, individualism, holism, and autonomy, it reveals the processes by which, having abandoned a mainstream lifestyle, people come to build up a counter-culture way of life. Drawing on their own work on tribal shamanistic religions, the authors are able to point out interesting similarities between the latter and the Glastonbury New Age movement. Not only that: their model allows them to explain such wide-ranging social and religious movements as the Hutterites, the Kibbutz, and Green communes. In fact, the authors argue, these movements may be regarded as variations of the Glastonbury type.
Claiming Sacred Ground Pilgrims and Politics at Glastonbury and Sedona Adrian J. Ivakhiv A study of people and politics at two New Age spiritual sites. In this richly textured account, Adrian Ivakhiv focuses on the activities of pilgrim-migrants to Glastonbury, England and Sedona, Arizona. He discusses their efforts to encounter and experience the spirit or energy of the land and to mark out its significance by investing it with sacred meanings. Their endeavors are presented against a broad canvas of cultural and environmental struggles associated with the incorporation of such geographically marginal places into an expanding global cultural economy. Ivakhiv sees these contested and "heterot...
Intended to help Man become more aware of the God in him.