Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine
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Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine explores these questions and much more as it unfolds Jesus’ liberating teaching on Woman and on the true nature and destiny of the soul—teaching that has been lost for thousands of years.
With detailed research and penetrating insight, Elizabeth Clare Prophet shows that Jesus actually broke with the tradition of his time and brought a revolutionary and freeing message for women that was later suppressed. She talks about why early Christian leaders denied Jesus’ message on reverence for Woman and on the inner feminine potential of both man and woman. She also reveals the true relationship of Jesus and Mary Magdalene and why the concept of original sin, which was not part of Jesus’ original teachings, was invented.
In these pages, you will also explore the principle and role of the Mother and the Divine Feminine in East and West from ancient times through the teachings of the Hindus, Hebrews, Christians, Gnostics and others. And you will come to see how the story of Mary Magdalene is representative of our own soul’s journey and holds valuable keys for your personal spiritual growth and awakening."
Annice Booth
Annice Booth is the author of Secrets of Prosperity and The Path to Your Ascension: Rediscovering Life’s Ultimate Purpose and has taught widely on practical spirituality, including prosperity, the spiritual dimensions of love and relationships, alchemy and the ascension.
Read more from Annice Booth
Secrets of Prosperity: Abundance in the 21st Century Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Path to Your Ascension: Rediscovering Life's Ultimate Purpose Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine - Annice Booth
Mary Magdalene
and the
Divine Feminine
Jesus’ Lost Teachings on Woman
Elizabeth Clare Prophet
with Annice Booth
Summit University Press
Gardiner, Montana
MARY MAGDALENE AND THE DIVINE FEMININE
Jesus’ Lost Teachings on Woman
By Elizabeth Clare Prophet with Annice Booth
Copyright © 2005 by Summit Publications, Inc.
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced, translated, or used in any format or medium whatsoever without prior written permission, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
For information, please contact:
Summit University Press
63 Summit Way
Gardiner, MT 59030-9314, USA
Tel: 1-800-245-5445 or 406-848-9500
Web site: www.SummitUniversityPress.com
Email: info@SummitUniversityPress.com
Library of Congress Control Number: 2005928341
ISBN (paperback): 978-1-932890-06-8
ISBN (eBook): 978-1-932890-37-2
The Summit Lighthouse, Pearls of Wisdom, Science of the Spoken Word, Teachings of the Ascended Masters, Climb the Highest Mountain, and Summit University are trademarks registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries. All rights to their use are reserved.
Cover: Mother of the World, by Nicholas Roerich.
Contents
Introduction
Foreword
Chapter 1 Jesus Prepares for His Mission
The Lost Years of Jesus
Saint Issa
Jesus’ Preparation for His Mission
A Chronology of Jesus’ Life as We Know It
Jesus’ Travels in the East
Was Jesus’ Revolution for Woman Founded in the Concepts He Learned in the East?
God as Mother—Isis: The Universal Mother
Jesus Returns to Palestine
Reverence Woman, Mother of the Universe
The Meaning of Mother of the Universe
Jesus Walked a Path That We Can Follow
The Beginning of Our Own Quest
Chapter 2 Jesus’ Revolution for Woman—The Women of the Church, Then and Now
Jesus’ Message for Woman
Jesus Broke with Tradition
The Female Apostles
Apostolic Succession: Can Women Convey the Holy Spirit?
Mary Magdalene Was First at the Tomb
Gender Has No Bearing on Spiritual Attainment
Paul Reinforces Jesus’ Teaching on Woman
Misinterpretation of Paul’s Statements
Omission from the Bible: When Women Were Priests
The Gnostics’ Views on Apostolic Succession
Current Views on Women Priests
The Suppression of Jesus’ True Teachings on Woman and the Soul
Chapter 3 The Gnostics—Inheritors of Jesus’ True Teachings
A Treasure Chest in an Earthen Jar
What Were the Gnostics’ Beliefs?
The Gnostics’ Quest for an Individual Experience of God
The Gnostic Paul
Your Divine Self
Spiritual Centers in the Body
Gold in the Mud
The Name of God: I AM THAT I AM
The Call
The End of Opportunity
Chapter 4 The Divine Feminine—East and West
At the Dawn of History
Gnostic Views
Who Is the Divine Mother?
The Divine Couple: God as Father-Mother in the Vedas
The Hindu Mother of the Universe—Vac
God as Mother in the Role of Holy Spirit
The Divine Mother as Shekhinah
The Divine Mother as Wisdom
Wisdom as Sophia
The Word of Wisdom
Chapter 5 Gnostic Teachings on Male and Female
Is God Male?
There Is neither Male nor Female
The Gnostics’ Understanding of the Soul
The Conflict between Peter and Mary Magdalene
A Champion of Woman
The Concept of Yin and Yang and Its Application to Male and Female
Male and Female as Spirit and Matter
The Descent of the Soul and Her Redemption
Reuniting the Elements of the Soul
Summary
Prayer to the World Mother
Chapter 6 The Message Is Suppressed
Jesus’ Lost Teachings in the Upper Room
Teachings Lost or Missing from the New Testament
The Secret Gospel of Mark
Jesus’ Teachings on Woman Are Suppressed
Result of the Failure of the Church to Include Jesus’ Teachings on the Mother
The Worship of the Mother as Goddess
The Persecution of the Gnostics as Heretics and the Suppression of Their Teaching
The Cathars
The Knights Templar
Why Was Gnosticism Suppressed?
Chapter 7 Clerical Celibacy and the Doctrine of Original Sin
The Church’s Insistence on Clerical Celibacy
The Doctrine of Original Sin
The Doctrine of the Immaculate Conception
Jesus Sanctifies Marriage
The Results of the Doctrines of Mandatory Celibacy and Original Sin
The Shortage of Priests
The Solution to the Lack of Priests: Ordain Women as Priests
Chapter 8 The Forgiveness of Mary Magdalene
Mary Magdalene: Personification of the Soul
The Need for Forgiveness
Christ, the Forgiver
Three Episodes in the Life of Mary Magdalene: The First Episode: Mary Magdalene Washes the Feet of Jesus
The Second Episode: Go and Sin No More
The Third Episode: The Recognition of the Risen Christ
The Acceptance of Forgiveness
Chapter 9 A Revolution of Theology in the Making
Was Jesus Married?
A Flesh-and-Blood Concept of Christianity
Reports of Jesus’ Second Journey to the East
Epilogue: The Universal Divine Feminine
Mary Magdalene’s Memorial
Questions and Answers
Following the Grail
Did Jesus Go to School in Britain?
Was Jesus Really Born of a Virgin?
Are Mary Magdalene and Mary of Bethany the Same Woman, as So Many Authors Believe?
Who Was the Black Madonna?
Did Jesus Survive the Crucifixion and Continue His Teachings until Age 81?
Discussion Questions
Notes
Picture Credits
Introduction
The almost forgotten story of Mary Magdalene is one that has intrigued many throughout the last two thousand years. Hers is the poignant tale of one who sinned and was redeemed. Somehow, we can all relate to Mary Magdalene—the plight of her soul helps us to have compassion for our own.
Now once more, Mary Magdalene steps into the glare of the spotlight after centuries of neglect. Unexpectedly for some, but in reality long overdue, she emerges from the dusty corners of forgotten churches and even from the hidden recesses of our own memory.
Authors and scholars have explored Mary Magdalene’s renewed importance. New evidence has come to light about her role in the early Church, and many have asserted that she had a much more prominent role than we have been led to believe over the centuries.
One key source for this new study is the Gnostic Gospels,[1] some of which speak of Mary Magdalene as the principal disciple of Jesus. Early Gnostic Christian texts describe Mary Magdalene as the woman who knew the All
;[2] she was the one whom Christ loved more than all the disciples.[3] She was the apostle endowed with knowledge, vision and insight far exceeding Peter’s.
For some, she is seen as the centerpiece of an underground stream of mystical Christianity, emerging once more on the world scene. This radical reinterpretation of Christianity has been found in several best-selling books.[4] There have also been documentaries that aired on television—The Two Marys and Jesus, Mary and DaVinci.[5]
According to these hypotheses, Jesus was the rightful heir to the Palestinian throne, married Mary Magdalene, had several children and fled either to Kashmir, India; Alexandria, Egypt; or France following the crucifixion. Meanwhile, Magdalene and the other disciples sought refuge in southern France, where Jesus’ bloodline became the foundation of the French Merovingian dynasty of kings of the fifth to the eighth century. The authors of these books propose that the Sangreal, the Holy Grail of Arthurian legend, is a code for the sang real, the blood royal,
of Jesus and his descendants, and they claim to trace this royal bloodline of the House of David down into modern times.
While we neither affirm nor deny these claims, and while the definitive proof of many of these theories may be lacking, we provide in Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine another side of the story of Mary Magdalene, as it has been told by Elizabeth Clare Prophet. Through her personal reading of the akashic records[6] of the events of history and in the teachings released through her by the great masters of wisdom, Mrs. Prophet has new perspectives and much to offer devotees of Mary Magdalene.
She opens a door to the soul of Mary Magdalene and her relationship with Jesus—a relationship that transcends the historical details that may be argued by scholars for decades or centuries to come.
Mary Magdalene is one of the most controversial figures of the New Testament. Even in the Bible itself, there is much uncertainty about her. Was she the woman with the alabaster box who anointed Jesus’ feet in Luke’s gospel? Was she the woman in Matthew, Mark and John who anointed Jesus with the oil of spikenard? Was she the woman taken in adultery whom the scribes and Pharisees wanted to stone and whom Jesus forgave, saying, Go, and sin no more
?[7]
Jesus has revealed to Mrs. Prophet that all of these are indeed episodes in the life of the Magdalene.[8] While modern scholars may debate, the story written on the ethers—and in the soul memory of those who were there—reveals the true life of a soul redeemed through her love for her Saviour and his love for her. For the love between Jesus and Mary Magdalene was not something that was defined by a flesh-and-blood relationship. Whether they were married or not, the inner record is clear that Mary Magdalene was the twin flame[9] of Jesus, and together they shared a profound and deep love—one that extends beyond that lifetime and into eternity.
Some of the controversy over Mary Magdalene and her role has arisen because of a misunderstanding (and even suppression) of Jesus’ true teaching on Woman. Jesus honored Woman. He had women in his closest circles of disciples—a radical liberation of Woman for his day. Yet many in the early Church were not ready to accept this liberation, and therefore Jesus’ teachings on Woman did not make it into the Bible. Many were lost and are only now being rediscovered.
Magdalene’s role as a disciple has been controversial; the evidence for this survives in the orthodox scriptures—she was, after all, the first to see the risen Christ.[10] Even more controversial is the idea that she and Jesus may have been married. William Phipps addresses this question in his book Was Jesus Married? But why should this be so controversial? Is it necessary for Jesus to be so unlike us as to be unapproachably perfect? And in any case, why should perfection necessarily entail not being married?[11]
Elizabeth Clare Prophet asserts that if Jesus were married, it would not in any way detract from his mission or his role as the Piscean conqueror. In her best seller The Lost Years of Jesus, she has published the manuscripts that reveal Jesus went to India as a youth, and these manuscripts include some of his lost teachings on Woman. Jesus’ teachings on Woman are also found in many of the Gnostic gospels that have recently been rediscovered. It is a tragedy that these teachings were lost and suppressed for two thousand years. Indeed, if the true teachings of Jesus on women’s rights had been known and taught in this age, the role of women and the course of civilization would most likely have been vastly different.
Perhaps most importantly, Mrs. Prophet explains that Jesus came to reveal a spiritual path and called us to walk in his footsteps. Whether any of these new theories about his life that are circulating are true or not, it would make no difference to the true spiritual understanding of the path that Jesus and his disciples taught and lived—including the crucifixion, resurrection and ascension that he demonstrated. These are spiritual initiations.
She cautions us not to indulge in a flesh-and-blood religion. Your spiritual body is more real, more solid, more vibrant than the physical body you wear, which is simply a vehicle for the spirit. One day you will lay down your physical body. If you are a true disciple of Christ and have walked in his ways and fulfilled the requirements of the Law, you also can be resurrected—your soul in its spiritual body, wed to Christ, will be infilled with the upward spiraling resurrection flame. The flame of life can fill your being, and you will find that your sense of immortality and everlasting life is not wed to the flesh—nor is the process of the ascension. Rather, you can live forevermore apart from the clay vessel, just as Jesus demonstrated—Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.
[12] And the proof of this path is also seen in the souls of Mary Magdalene, Mary of Bethany,[13] Mary, the mother of Jesus, John the Beloved and others of the apostles who have followed in the footsteps of their Lord and demonstrated this same ascension process.
Jesus’ life and mission did not end on the cross. He was indeed resurrected, and he made his exit from a very controversial situation. The second-century Church Father Irenaeus wrote that Jesus taught until he was forty or fifty years old.[14] The third-century Gnostic text Pistis Sophia records that after the resurrection, Jesus passed eleven years discoursing with his disciples.
[15] And the Bible itself records that Paul received his teaching directly from Jesus.[16] In fact, for two thousand years, the Master has not ceased to walk and talk with his disciples.
But what of Mary Magdalene? Perhaps the mystery of Mary Magdalene is like the black keys on the piano. It is possible to make music without them—but a tune played only on the white keys may be a very different melody. The adoration of Mary Magdalene has long been in secret and deeply devotional. Some claim that the mysterious Black Madonna, found in so many of the great cathedrals in Europe, is really Mary Magdalene. There has long been a hidden stream of devotion to her, but now the underground stream is returning to the surface.
Much of what is now coming to light about Mary Magdalene is well out of the realm of the traditional Catholic and Protestant faith. When seen from a different perspective, the history of persecution within Christianity is more readily explained—the churches have often felt threatened by the power of the divine feminine in both man and woman. And sometimes in trying to stamp out the vestiges of Babylon, the Great Whore, and the misuses of the light of the Mother in ancient pagan cults, they also suppressed the emergent light of the Woman Clothed with the Sun.[17]
Yet given all this, while scholars debate and students research, some things remain.
Mary Magdalene lived and still lives, and it is time for the secrets of her life to be revealed.
Who, then, was Mary Magdalene? What was her role in the early Church and in the last two thousand years? Who is she now and what can she teach us today? And what relevance does the message of her life have for our own soul?
Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine reveals this enigmatic and yet strangely familiar character. Now at last, the long-lost Magdalene, the Black Madonna if you will, can emerge from the shadows to unveil herself as someone we have all known intimately after all. Perhaps now that she is redeemed
once more, our own souls can find the answers and the acceptance we seek. For when one soul is restored to her rightful place, the feminine aspect in all of us can be raised up once again.
Managing Editor, Summit University Press
Paradise Valley
Montana
Foreword
As a well-known female religious leader of the latter twentieth century, the subject of Woman’s role in the Church was something that was very important to Elizabeth Clare Prophet—not only on a personal level, but also as she defined her role and calling in her own organization and on the world scene. She spoke on this subject many times during her nearly forty years of active ministry. The material in this book is compiled from many sources in her lectures and published and unpublished works, particularly a series of lectures she delivered on The Lost Teachings of Jesus on Women’s Rights.
Since those lectures were delivered, the subjects of Mary Magdalene and Jesus’ teachings on Woman have come to the forefront of popular and scholarly debate.
Central to the whole question about the role of Woman in Christianity is Mary Magdalene. Was she a leader in the early Church? What was her role in relation to the twelve apostles? Was she, as some have claimed, the wife of Jesus? What is the role of Woman in the Church? And what is the spiritual understanding of male and female?
With all that has been written in recent years on Mary Magdalene and the divine feminine, the question arises as to whether there is anything new that can be said. Mrs. Prophet brings a unique perspective to the subject. In her lectures, writings and reconstructions of Jesus’ lost teachings on Woman, Mrs. Prophet draws on historical sources, including the Gnostic texts. But most importantly, she brings an understanding of the Gnostics and their teachings that comes not only from a study of their texts but that is also deeply rooted in her own spiritual experience.
Like the Gnostics, she believes in the present possibility of contacting Jesus, even after his ascension (in her terms, as an ascended master). She therefore approaches the Gnostic texts not just through an analysis of their teachings but as someone who has sought and personally experienced the path of which they spoke. Gnosticism for her is not simply an ancient spiritual tradition but a path that she can understand and know more deeply because it parallels her own life and path. Her lectures include the results of her research, but her understanding of the Gnostic teachings is also drawn from her own inspiration and revelations from Jesus.
This, of course, may make her conclusions controversial for some. Not everything will be open to historical verification and analysis. Some things must remain matters of faith and belief and of what rings true in one’s heart and in one’s personal experience. Some scholars are not comfortable entering this realm. Yet it really is the essence of what the Gnostics taught: their path could not really be understood from an intellectual level but only by entering deeply and experiencing it from within. Mary Magdalene did not become the one who knew the All
by study and analysis but by the closeness of her heart to the Saviour.
We invite you similarly to seek to enter in, to join with Mrs. Prophet in her journey to find the essence of Mary Magdalene and Jesus’ teachings on the divine feminine. And above all, we invite you to weigh these things in your heart as well as your mind.
The Editors
Summit University Press
Chapter 1
Jesus Prepares
for His Mission
Jesus Approaching Ladakh as a Youth,
by J. Michael Spooner
CHAPTER 1
Jesus Prepares for His Mission
The Lost Years of Jesus
This book, Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine: Jesus’ Lost Teachings on Woman, is not only about women or for women. It is a book about your right to become who you really are, whether you are in a male or a female body. The leaders of the early Church did not accept this message. And so for more than two thousand years, Jesus’ teaching on Woman has been lost. His message on reverence for Woman and on the feminine potential of both man and woman was almost unknown until recently, when newly discovered texts have brought to light some of Jesus’ lost teachings.
One source of these teachings is found in manuscripts that speak of Jesus’ lost years
in the East. His profound reverence for Woman has been captured in an ancient Eastern text written down by Buddhist historians. These historians chronicled Jesus’ words and deeds during what are called his lost years.
I have published this text in my book The Lost Years of Jesus,[18] which tells the story of these documents, how they were found and what Jesus did during the years that are not mentioned in the recorded scriptures that the Church councils put together.
We have absolute silence in the gospels as to where Jesus was from age thirteen to twenty-nine. It is pure speculation that he was a carpenter in Nazareth all of that time. But it is no longer speculation what he did elsewhere, because these documents, discovered in Ladakh in a monastery, tell the whole story. The people who went there and saw them and wrote down what they saw are all profiled in my book. This is not a book on religion; it’s a book on history, the most important history of our time.
As you know, there is no record in our Bible of Jesus’ whereabouts between the age of twelve (when he was found at the Temple discoursing with the doctors[19]) and about age thirty (when he was baptized by John the Baptist in the Jordan River.[20]) Ancient Buddhist manuscripts say Jesus spent these lost years
in the East, where he was known as Saint Issa.
Saint Issa
In my book, I have published three independent translations of the manuscript about the life of Saint Issa. The first was made by Nicolas Notovitch, a Russian journalist who, in 1887, found the manuscripts in a Buddhist monastery near Leh, Ladakh (a region in northern India bordering Tibet). He published his text in 1894 as The Life of Saint Issa: Best of the Sons of Men.
Swami Abhedananda, a scholar and a disciple of Ramakrishna, saw the document at Himis in 1922. Abhedananda journeyed to the Himalayas, determined to find a copy of the Himis manuscript or to expose the fraud.
His book of travels, entitled Kashmir O Tibbate, tells of a visit to the Himis gompa and includes a Bengali translation of portions of a manuscript that he saw there that closely paralleled the Notovitch text. I had Abhedananda’s version of the manuscript translated from Bengali into English for the first time specifically for my book.
The same, or a similar, text was seen by the Russian artist, archaeologist and author Nicholas Roerich in 1925. Roerich, who spent more than five years traveling through central Asia, also found accounts of Jesus’ journey to the East recorded in the oral tradition of the region.
The Lost Years of Jesus also includes the eyewitness account of Dr. Elisabeth Caspari.[21] In 1939, she was at Himis and the librarian presented a set of parchments to her with these words: These books say your Jesus was here!
In 1951, we find Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas traveling to Himis. He later wrote in his book Beyond the High Himalayas:
There are those who to this day believe that Jesus visited the place, that he came here when he was fourteen and left when he was twenty-eight, heading west, to be heard of no more. The legend fills in the details, saying that Jesus traveled to Hemis [sometimes spelled Himis
] under the name of Issa.[22]
For more than a century, these documents have been known to be there and have been seen. The manuscript and oral tradition about Saint Issa reveal that the seventeen years Jesus spent in the East were a dress