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Old 03-11-2010
Right1Angel Right1Angel is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 21
Default Recovery Plan


Follow video's too the "day in court" theme one.

http://www.youtube.com/user/TheAntiTerrorist





http://archive.org

Enter thc-ministry.org for recent "crawl;index" service.


Make sure a crawel/index is ordered with a user account I suppose.


Be sure mail is forwarded and all internet bills are paid first. Save Domin thc-ministry.org, first, from auction. It's still up and fine - SEE JAH???


Might start a "Liberty Donation" to hire expert witness and Counsel.


An attorney in Honolulu, 1188 Bishop St., Bishop Building, is Micheal Glenn, the local ministry advisor, is a call shot here.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...f&aqi=&aql=&oq=


Admirality Law expert needed here as well, we got one on board.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...f&aqi=&aql=&oq=


Your Ministry is in a Meads ("Media") squeeze play.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...a qi=&aql=&oq=


Stay tuned, up to Supreme Court now......


Review book, Occult America again for defense.


Most important in book point, was seperation from Church and State of Europe around 1600's and Mesmerism, seen in Shaken Quakers, Albany, New York. ................

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...aq i=&aql=&oq=

http://www.amazon.com/Occult-America.../dp/0553806750


It touched lives as disparate as those of Frederick Douglass, Franklin

Roosevelt, and Mary Todd Lincoln--who once convinced her husband,


Abe, to host a séance in the White House. Americans all, they were


among the famous figures whose paths intertwined with the mystical and

esoteric movement broadly known as the occult. Brought over from the

Old World and spread throughout the New by some of the most obscure

but gifted men and women of early U.S. history, this “hidden wisdom”

transformed the spiritual life of the still-young nation and, through it,

much of the Western world.





Yet the story of the American occult has remained largely untold. Now a

leading writer on the subject of alternative spirituality brings it out of the

shadows. Here is a rich, fascinating, and colorful history of a religious

revolution and an epic of offbeat history.


From the meaning of the symbols on the one-dollar bill to the origins of

the Ouija board, Occult America briskly sweeps from the nation’s earliest

days to the birth of the New Age era and traces many people and

episodes, including:


• The spirit medium who became America’s first female religious leader in

1776

• The supernatural passions that marked the career of Mormon prophet


Joseph Smith

• The rural Sunday-school teacher whose clairvoyant visions instigated
the dawn of the New Age

• The prominence of mind-power mysticism in the black-nationalist politics

of Marcus Garvey



• The Idaho druggist whose mail-order mystical religion ranked as the

eighth-largest faith in the world during the Great Depression


Here, too, are America’s homegrown religious movements, from

transcendentalism to spiritualism to Christian Science to the positive-

thinking philosophy that continues to exert such a powerful pull on the

public today. A feast for believers in alternative spirituality, an eye-opener

for anyone curious about the unknown byroads of American history,

Occult America is an engaging, long-overdue portrait of one nation, under

many gods, whose revolutionary influence is still being felt in every corner

of the globe.




Scholars of American history have often dismissed occult traditions, such

as Spiritualism, Mesmerism, divination, channeling, and mental-healing, as

little more than oddball social trends to be analyzed, fretted over, and

debunked. This is a mistake. To really grasp the religious development of

our nation, its occult movements and believers must be understood for

what they are: communities of belief, who left a profound impact on the

culture of America and the modern world.




Early American history is entwined with esoteric spirituality. North

America’s first intentional mystical community reached its shores in the

summer of 1694. That year, the determined spiritual philosopher Johannes

Kelpius led about forty pilgrims out of Central Germany--a region

decimated by the Thirty Years’ War--and to the banks of the Wissahickon


Creek, just beyond Philadelphia. The city then hosted only about 500


houses, but it represented a Mecca of freedom for the Kelpius circle, who

longed for a new homeland where they could practice their brands of

astrology, alchemy, numerology, and mystical Christianity without fear of

harassment from church or government.


Soon more mystical thinkers from the Rhine Valley journeyed to America,

building a larger commune at Ephrata, Pennsylvania. A young woman

named Ann Lee fled persecution in her native Manchester, England and

relocated her esoteric sect, the "Shaking Quakers"--or the Shakers--to

upstate New York in 1776. That same year, a Rhode Island girl, Jemima

Wilkinson, declared herself a spirit channeler, took the name Publick

Universal Friend, and began to preach across the northeast. The trend

was set: America became a destination for religious idealists, especially

those of a supernatural bent.



By the 1830s and 40s, a region of central New York State called "the

Burned-Over District" (so-named for its religious passions) became the

magnetic center for the religious radicalism sweeping the young nation.

Stretching from Albany to Buffalo, it was the Mt. Sinai of American

mysticism, giving birth to new religions such as Mormonism and Seventh-


Day Adventism, and also to Spiritualism, mediumship, table-rapping,

séances, and other occult sensations--many of which mirrored, and aided,

the rise of Suffragism and related progressive movements. The nation’s

occult culture gave women their first opportunity to openly serve as

religious leaders--in this case as spirit mediums, seers, and channlers.

America’s social and spiritual radicals were becoming joined, and the

partnership would never fade.


Indeed, the robust growth of occult and mystical movements in

nineteenth-century America--aided by the influence of Freemasonry and

Transcendentalism--helped transform the young nation into a laboratory

for religious experiment and a launching pad for the revolutions in

alternative and New Age spirituality that eventually swept the globe. In

the early twentieth century, the new spiritual therapies--from meditation

to mind-body healing to motivational thinking--began revolutionizing how

religion was understood in contemporary times: not only as a source of

salvation but as a means of healing. In this sense, occult America had

changed our world. --Mitch Horowitz



From Publishers Weekly

America has provided fertile ground for alternative spirituality, particularly

the form known as occult, whose American leaders, unlike their more

grandiose European counterparts, sought to remake mystical ideas as

tools of public good and self-help, says Horowitz, editor-in-chief at

Tarcher. Looking back at the growth of the spiritualist and utopian

movements, he introduces the reader to a parade of personalities, both

familiar and obscure: dreamers and planners who flourished along the

Psychic Highway. He begins with Shaker Mother Ann, who arrived in

America in 1774 followed by, among many others, pioneer prophetess

Jemima Wilkinson; Poughkeepsie Seer Andrew Jackson Davis; Madame

Blavatsky, who founded the Theosophical Society in 1875 and popularized

the word occultism; Frank B. Robinson, the Mail Order Messiah; and Edgar

Cayce with his past-life readings. Horowitz covers a wide variety of

topics, from voodoo to the tenets of the New Age, psychics in the White

House, Rosicrucianism, Wicca, arcane Masonic imagery, Tarot cards, the

controversial reincarnation of Bridey Murphy and the origin of the science

fictional Shaver mystery. Employing extensive research while writing with

an authoritative tone, Horowitz succeeds in showing how a new spiritual

culture developed in America. (Sept. 15)


Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All


rights reserved.





And the Sixth Book of Moses, African Spiritualism and Country music. SPIRITUAL E-KNOCKING, see above index, Occult America.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...aqi=&aql=& oq=

http://video.google.com/videosearch?hl=en&q=sixth%20book%20of%20moses&aql= &oq=&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wv#



The Ministry......

http://cannabishempsciencechurchhawaii.bravehost.com/

http://cannabisplayerconsultant.bravehost.com/
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