sexta-feira, 8 de junho de 2018

Abdrushin Life II






The Life of Abdrushin

By Randolph Freeman Eales

When Abdrushin’s horoscope was shown to me, worked out by Friedrich Mörbitz (Johann Kepler reincarnated) who later became a disciple of Imanuel, reference was made to the fact that the future Son of Man would rise from the middle class of merchants.
I may add that Friedrich Mörbitz was the first man on this globe born next to the birthplace of Abdrushin, in Bautzen, who discovered from the stars the Coming of the Saochyant. As I said, he was Johann Kepler, living from 1571 – 1630, one of the pioneers of astronomy whose name as such will endure. He is known in science on account of his three principles, which are called “Kepler’s Laws”. As they may be of interest I will give them:

1.     Every planet describes an ellipse, the sun occupying one focus.
2.     The line joining the centre of the sun with the centre of a planet passes over equal distances at equal times.
3.     The squares of the periods of complete revolution round the sun of two planets are proportional to the cubes of their mean distances from the sun.

Friedrich Mörbitz, having completed his cycle, passed over into the other world in 1934 or 1935. His body was buried in Abdrushin’s own Church Yard on the Holy Mountain. I was present when the funeral took place. He died full of consciousness. He told of all the stages through which he was lifted to his wife who wrote them down. When his ego stood before the golden gate his physical eyes closed. “Now the beauty is beyond all conception” were his last words.
Going back to Oscar Ernst Bernhardt, the adolescent was not satisfied with the material occupation of a merchant. He felt urged to see the world, to go among men. He settled at Dresden and started a small factory of his own, dealing with metal outfittings for shops. I have even soon a specimen of these in the watchmaker’s shop; an invoice too, dating from the beginning of 1900 with the heading of the firm of Oskar Ernst Bernhardt.
Yet Abdrushin was not happy. He lost money and suffered from all sorts of material set-backs. Finally he gave up the business.
While Alwin, his brother, went to a university to study the administration of justice, and later became a distinguished “Amtgerichtsrat” in Doebeln, Oskar Ernst left Germany and travelled to the East. He became a journalist and settled in Constantinople. His writings, however, were not appreciated, as he ruthlessly discovered the evils in man and described them without any consideration, whether they pleased or not, whether or not they were accepted, printed and paid for. He simply wrote because he had to do so. Thus he prepared himself for his mission. He also wrote fiction but always with an educational tendency, and small plays and even sketches for the theatre. Some of them have been performed on the German stage. He wrote under different pseudonyms, which may be traced in the “Kuerschner”, the German Who’s Who for Writers and Journalists.
Abdrushin was never timid; on the contrary vivacious and full of courage. He was a fighter, but he was also chivalrous. Once he lost himself in a Turkish harem. It was no more adventure. He had discovered a wonderful woman, veiled and well guarded, but had also found out that the Pasha maltreated her. He hurried to her help; he felt urged to protect her. On this occasion he was nearly killed by the Turkish noble; as though by a miracle he was saved by higher agencies.

(To be continued)

This text is part of the collection G+: Grail Message