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Angels, Fairies, Demons, and the Elementals. John Van Auken
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isbn 9780876048009
Автор произведения John Van Auken
Жанр Эзотерика
Издательство Ingram
If this procedure were in any way violated, Cayce would be in serious personal danger. On one occasion, he remained in a trance state for three days and had actually been given up for dead by the attending doctors.
At each session, a stenographer (usually Gladys Davis, his personal secretary) would record in shorthand everything Cayce said. Sometimes, during a trance session, Cayce would even correct the stenographer’s spelling. It was as though his mind were in touch with everything around him and beyond.
Each client was identified with a number in an effort to keep their names private. For example, hypnotic material for Edgar Cayce is filed under the number 294. His first “reading,” as they were called, would be numbered 294-1, and each subsequent reading would increase the dash number (294-2, 294-3, and so on). Whenever a reading is referenced in this book, it will be followed by the reading number. Since quotes from the readings are usually only a small part of the reading given (some readings can include several pages of material), different quotes can have the same reading number. Some numbers refer to groups of people, such as the first “Study Group,” (series 262); and some numbers refer to specific research or guidance readings, such as the 254 series, containing the “Work” readings dealing with the overall work of the nonprofit organization founded by Cayce (the Association for Research and Enlightenment), and the 364 and 996 series containing the readings given on Atlantis. His psychic discourses were termed “readings,” because it was believed that he was “reading” sources. Among the sources read were the minds of the questioners, the Akashic Records (also known as “The Book of Life”), the so-called collective unconsciousness, and even God’s all-knowing mind, which he referred to as the Universal Consciousness.
It was August 10, 1923, before anyone thought to ask the “sleeping” Cayce for insights beyond physical health—questions about life, death, and human destiny and origins. In a small hotel room in Dayton, Ohio, Arthur Lammers asked the first set of philosophical questions that were to lead to an entirely new way of using Cayce’s strange abilities. It was during this line of questioning that Cayce first began to talk about reincarnation as though it were as real and natural as the functioning of a physical body. This shocked and challenged Cayce and his family. They were deeply religious people, doing this work to help others, because that’s what their Christian faith taught. As a child, Cayce began to read the Bible from front to back, and did so every year of his adult life. Reincarnation was not part of the Cayce family’s reality. Yet, the healings and help continued to come, so the Cayce family continued with the physical material, but cautiously reflected on the strange philosophical material. Ultimately, the Cayce’s began to accept the ideas, though not as “reincarnation” per se. Edgar Cayce preferred to call it, “The Continuity of Life.” He felt that the Bible did contain much evidence that life, the true life in the Spirit, is continual. And if there is life after death—the life of the soul—well, then it’s just a short step for the soul to also have life before birth. In fact, he found that deep in the lore of Christianity, the “preexistence of the soul” was an accepted truth, one that explained how free-willed souls incarnate into such varying circumstances. If God created all souls equally, then it stands to reason that each soul had previously used their free will, which in turn brought about their present circumstances. He read in the Bible where Jesus’ disciples revealed their belief in preexistence when they asked Jesus, “Master, who did sin, this man, or his parents, that he was born blind?” (John 9:2, King James Version [KJV]) The only way the blind man could have sinned and been born blind was if his soul had existed prior to his birth. This helped Cayce and his family tolerate the strange idea of reincarnation and karma.
Eventually, Edgar Cayce, following advice from his own readings, moved to Virginia Beach, Virginia, and set up a hospital where he continued to conduct his “Physical Readings” for the health of others. But he also continued this new line of readings called “Life Readings.” From 1925 through 1944, he conducted some 2,500 Life Readings, describing the past lives of individuals as casually as if everyone understood that reincarnation was a fact. Such subjects as deep-seated fears, mental blocks, vocational talents, innate urges and abilities, marriage difficulties, child training, etc., were examined in the light of what the readings called the “karmic patterns” resulting from previous lives experienced by the individual’s soul.
When he died on January 3, 1945, in Virginia Beach, he left 14,306 documented stenographic records of the telepathic-clairvoyant readings he had given for more than 6,000 different people over a period of forty-three years, consisting of 49,135 pages, and more than 24 million words. Of the 14,306 readings, 9,603 were health readings.
The readings constitute one of the largest and most impressive records of psychic perception. Together with their relevant records, correspondence, and reports, they have been cross-indexed into thousands of subject headings and placed at the disposal of doctors, psychologists, students, writers, and investigators who still come to examine them. Of course, they are also available to the general public in books or the complete volume of the readings on DVD-Rom, as well as in an online database (see EdgarCayce.org/membership).
The nonprofit known as the Association for Research and Enlightenment (A.R.E.) was founded by Cayce in 1931 to preserve, research, and share these readings. As an open-membership organization, it continues to index and catalog the information, initiate investigation and experiments, and conduct conferences, seminars, and lectures, and operate online courses and study groups. The association also conducts tours each year to various sacred sites around the world. The Virginia Beach headquarters is host to thousands of visitors each year from all around the world who come to tour the campus, attend conferences, visit the bookstore, or explore the library—one of the largest metaphysical libraries in the world with more than 65,000 volumes.
The Cayce work has grown to include the Edgar Cayce Foundation (the readings preservation and archiving arm of the organization), Atlantic University (a graduate-level, online university), and the Cayce/Reilly® School of Massage. There is also an A.R.E. summer camp in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. The A.R.E. has a large website with an enormous amount of free information at EdgarCayce.org. The address of the headquarters is Edgar Cayce’s A.R.E., 215 67th Street, Virginia Beach, VA 23451 USA, and they can be reached via telephone at 757-428-3588, or 800-333-4499 (toll-free in the U.S. and Canada).
Credit: “Mysterious Old Forest”: © Subbotina/Dreamstime.com.
1
Don’t Look Beyond Yourself
We have a natural inclination to look outside of ourselves for the supernatural world. It is not out here. Well it is, but it is not visible. And it’s important to recognize that those who “see” the supernatural do not have additional parts to their eyes that you and I lack. Our physical eyes are virtually the same as theirs. We all see by the functioning of two types of photoreceptors