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Djwal Kul conta uma história que ilustra um elemento da ciência espiritual:  
Djwal Kul conta uma história que ilustra um elemento da ciência espiritual:  


<blockquote>I am come tonight to bring to you the fresh winds of the Zuider Zee; and I begin with a tale of the land of the dikes.</blockquote>
<blockquote>Venho esta noite para vos trazer os ventos frescos do Zuider Zee e começo com uma lenda da terra dos diques.</blockquote>


<blockquote>There lived by the sea a gentle soul who was a miller. He and his wife served together to grind the grain for the people of their town. And it came to pass that in all the land there were no communities where so much happiness reigned as there. Their countrymen marveled and wondered, for they recognized that something unusual must have happened to make the members of this community so singularly wise and happy. And although the townsfolk themselves were born, grew up, matured to adulthood and passed from the screen of life within the community, never in all of their living were they able to understand the mystery.</blockquote>
<blockquote>There lived by the sea a gentle soul who was a miller. He and his wife served together to grind the grain for the people of their town. And it came to pass that in all the land there were no communities where so much happiness reigned as there. Their countrymen marveled and wondered, for they recognized that something unusual must have happened to make the members of this community so singularly wise and happy. And although the townsfolk themselves were born, grew up, matured to adulthood and passed from the screen of life within the community, never in all of their living were they able to understand the mystery.</blockquote>

Revision as of 00:20, 6 May 2020

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Djwal Kul is known as the Tibetan Master, or the “Tibetan.”

Tibetan depiction of Asanga (Aryasanga) being visited by Maitreya

Encarnações

Há dois mil anos, viajou com El Morya e Kuthumi como um dos três Reis Magos que seguiram a estrela até ao local do nascimento de Jesus. Nesse serviço prestado à Trindade, focalizou a pluma rosa no campo de força do menino Jesus. Morya focalizou a azul e Kuthumi a dourada.

Antes do afundamento da Lemúria, Djwal Kul ajudou o Senhor Himalaia a transferir antigos registros para os retiros dos mestres nos Himalaias; mais tarde, estudou em conventos de lamas na Ásia. Os teosofistas dizem que esteve encarnado como Kleineas, aluno de Pitágoras (Kuthumi), como um dos discípulos de Gautama Buda e como Aryasanga.[1]

Como “D. K.” e Gai Ben-Jamin trabalhou com Madame Blavatsky e a Sociedade Teosófica, juntamente com El Morya e Kuthumi. Pela sua disposição em servir, tornou-se conhecido como “Mensageiro dos Mestres.” Djwal Kul foi o discípulo mais importante de Kuthumi e acredita-se que tenha vivido perto do seu instrutor, no Tibete.

Seu serviço hoje

No final do século dezenove, Djwal Kul, El Morya e Kuthumi fizeram a ascensão. Por volta de 1950, começaram a trabalhar com o Mensageiro Mark L. Prophet e, mais tarde, com Elizabeth Clare Prophet, para que as suas instruções fossem publicadas pela Summit Lighthouse.

Junto com Kuthumi, Djwal Kul instrui-nos sobre a aura humana. Ele deu-nos uma meditação sobre a câmara secreta do coração, e é um dos mestres que nos inicia nesse templo interior como parte da senda do amor. Divulgou um exercício respiratório para integrar os quatro corpos inferiores, que pode ser encontrado no livro O Fortalecimento da Aura. Djwal Kul também ensina a grande astrologia dos mestres ascensos – as 12 linhas do relógio cósmico, relacionadas às 12 sendas de iniciação, sob o comando das 12 hierarquias solares. Ele ensina-nos como invocar a chama para termos mestria sobre a nossa astrologia diária, que corresponde ao nosso carma diário. Dia a dia, o carma – positivo e negativo – que chega à nossa vida pode ser recebido e controlado por meio dessas doze sendas e dessas doze chamas.

Djwal Kul conta uma história que ilustra um elemento da ciência espiritual:

Venho esta noite para vos trazer os ventos frescos do Zuider Zee e começo com uma lenda da terra dos diques.

There lived by the sea a gentle soul who was a miller. He and his wife served together to grind the grain for the people of their town. And it came to pass that in all the land there were no communities where so much happiness reigned as there. Their countrymen marveled and wondered, for they recognized that something unusual must have happened to make the members of this community so singularly wise and happy. And although the townsfolk themselves were born, grew up, matured to adulthood and passed from the screen of life within the community, never in all of their living were they able to understand the mystery.

Tonight I shall draw aside the curtain and tell you what made the people of this community so happy and prosperous, so joyous and wise.

It was the service of the miller and his wife and the love that they put into the flour. For this love was carried home in sacks of flour on the backs of those who patronized their mill and was then baked into their bread. At every meal the regenerative power of love from the miller and his wife was radiated around the table, and it entered their physical bodies as they partook of the bread. Thus, like radioactive power, the energy of this vibrant love from the miller and his wife was spread throughout the community.

The neighbors did not know the reason for their happiness and none of the people were ever able to discover it. For sometimes—although they live side by side—mankind are unable to pry the most simple secrets about one another. And so the mysteries of divine love continue to defy probing by the human consciousness, but we of the ascended masters’ octave occasionally choose to make them known to you by sharing these gems with you.

The instruction which I would bring to you tonight concerns physical properties and their power to retain the radiation of those who handle them. The food you eat, beloved ones, when prepared by hands charged with divine love, enters into your physical body and creates a much greater degree of spiritual happiness than mankind would at first realize. Those who are wise will recognize the truth of what I am saying; and if they must partake of food from unknown sources, they will be certain that they have removed by the violet transmuting flame those undesirable momentums of human creation whose radiation can do no good to the individual who partakes thereof and much harm to him who is unwary and therefore unprotected.[2]

Retreat

Main article: Djwal Kul's Retreat in Tibet

The focus of Djwal Kul’s golden flame of illumination is in his etheric retreat in Tibet. From that point, he assists in the raising of the consciousness of India through her embodied teachers, the yogic masters of the Himalayas, under the influence of his understanding of yogic principles in preparation for future advancement in the science of invocation and the release of Christ-power through the seven chakras.

Sources

Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Masters and Their Retreats, s.v. “Djwal Kul.”

  1. Annie Besant e C.W. Leadbeater, The Lives of Alcyone (As Vidas de Alcyone), capítulo 47.
  2. Djwal Kul, “The Radiant Word,” Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 15, no. 15, April 9, 1972.