30,474
edits
(Created page with "A Greek seaport in southern Italy where, in the sixth century B.C. Pythagoras, the Greek philosopher and mathematician (an embodiment of Kuthumi), founded a brotherhoo...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
Members of this scientific-religious brotherhood progressed through a series of initiations. They delved into the mysteries of preexistence and the afterlife, and of creation. The students were taught that by mastering their feelings and purifying their souls, they could become, as Pythagoras’ “Golden Verses” states, “a deathless God, Divine, mortal no more.” | Members of this scientific-religious brotherhood progressed through a series of initiations. They delved into the mysteries of preexistence and the afterlife, and of creation. The students were taught that by mastering their feelings and purifying their souls, they could become, as Pythagoras’ “Golden Verses” states, “a deathless God, Divine, mortal no more.” | ||
About 500 B.C. a rejected candidate of Pythagoras’ Academy incited a violent persecution resulting in the Master’s death, the dissolution of his community, and the tragic destruction of much of his teaching. | About 500 <small>B.C</small>. a rejected candidate of Pythagoras’ Academy incited a violent persecution resulting in the Master’s death, the dissolution of his community, and the tragic destruction of much of his teaching. | ||
== See also == | == See also == |