Xxiii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 89 XXIII. What sayest thou, Neontu, that thou hast fallen away from the Higher Thought? Nay, nay, say not so, because it is not, cannot be true. Rather say that the Higher Thought never was thine own "For once Mine, always thine!" If thou...
Xxxix : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 155 XXXIX. My soul is an hungered and it lifteth up its voice to the angels, yea, even unto the Infinite, pleading for food such as earth giveth not. Every oracle and every book in the world faileth to give me the supply my soul needeth...
Xxv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 97 XXV. The world declares, oh, Death, that thou art cruel and relentless. That thy mission is to shatter and destroy all that it holds of the beautiful. That thou lovest to wound the mother-heart, and to rock and sway the proud father-heart...
Xlvi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 188 XLVI. Then spake Neontu: Oh, Master, I would seek the easier pathway. My feet are torn and bleeding, and my heart is sore from many a dagger thrust. Why labor for others to make their pathway easier while ours lies over the untrodden...
X : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 37 X. I proclaim the gospel of myself. Be ye not copies of me--but instead be ye first originals. The light, although it may still be beautiful, is weakened by reflection. Let the light that is within thee shine out through all the windows...
Title Page : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], WISDOM OF THE AGES REVELATIONS FROM ZERTOULEM THE PROPHET OF TLASKANATA AUTOMATICALLY TRANSCRIBED BY BY REV. GEORGE A. FULLER, M. D. INTRODUCTION BY SUSIE C. CLARK SECOND EDITION CHRISTOPHER PUBLISHING HOUSE BOSTON [1916] Cover Inscripti...
Xx : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 77 XX. I call no one great, unless I call all great. Each fills his place in the great plan of Omn. Each has come at his own time. Some have travelled farther than others, have seen more, have heard more, have lived more than others. And some...
Xxxi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 121 XXXI. Tis well for every one to seek spiritual gifts, but it is far better first for every one to know his own spirit and something of its possibilities. First let character, the sweet flower of the soul, be well developed. It is...
Xxxv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 137 XXXV. He who sends the healing thought is doubly blest, blest in giving that which others need, and blest in receiving that which he had not before. Send forth no vacillating thought, freighted with the hope and trust for better...
Xxi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 81 XXI. Sing, oh, my soul, thy sweetest song! Strife is but for a day, while love endures forever! Over the miasma fields and swamps filled with dank and poisonous growths, Let its clear sweet tones echo far and wide! Over the valleys richly...
Tlaskan Words : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 211 TLASKAN WORDS. Akasa. The great ocean of ether sweeping in and through all things. Lomkatos. Omn taken; those who have passed through the change called death. Neontu. One of the disciples of Zertoulem most deeply loved by the Master. Omn...
Xxxviii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 151 XXXVIII. If others near thee in the sense-world annoy thee, shut them out from thy real life. The ego may drive from itself all consciousness of that which it does not need. The ego, the vital spark, that which is divine, dwells afar...
Xi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 41 XI. Upheavals toward perfection are met everywhere in the universe. Yet matter has its metes and bounds; these are determined by indwelling spirit. As the child fashions out of wet clay various forms and gives to them names that suit its...
Xxvii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 105 XXVII. Inasmuch as the higher spiritual states are those of Wisdom and Love, so may the earthly states approach unto these. If thou art self-centred thou canst draw near unto these gates of Light even when thou art in the midst of seeming...
I : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 1 I. Zertoulem spake unto the multitude and said: Inasmuch as ye are led by the desire to gratify selfish propensities are ye excluded from the higher light which is the natural birthright of every soul. Be ye seekers after the higher truths...
Xxxii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 125 XXXII. Let no sound of martial strain be heard throughout thy world, oh, soul! March not forth with banners flying and trumpets echoing afar. Let not, oh, soul, thy path be strewn with human wrecks and tortured forms. Let not thy way be...
Xxvi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 101 XXVI. I am tired and sick of the cry, I can't do this and I can't do that. The world cares only for what thou canst do. Show the world, then, that thou art capable of doing something. No man ruled by "I can't" ever amounted to anything...
Xviii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 69 XVIII. How beautiful is Life! Radiant with the attributes divine! How beautiful in its morning time, When the jewels of innocence and purity sparkle upon its brow! How sweet the prattle of childhood, like the murmur of the laughing brook...
Xliii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 174 XLIII. How strange that thou, Neontu, shouldst ask concerning the moral code of the new religion! For have I not again and again tried to make plain unto thee that ethical codes were of little value, because they can never usurp the place...
Xli : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 165 XLI. The Master continued: The new religion lightens every labor and will give rest to the weary ones of earth. Does it not also reveal the fact that much of the labor of the world is both unnecessary and a hindrance to man's true...
Xvii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 65 XVII. Think ye that life is not worth the living because it is a ceaseless struggle after the unattained? Because so many of thy hopes and aspirations fall to the ground seemingly fruitless? If thou thinkest thus thy view is narrow...
Xxii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 85 XXII. Neontu said unto Zertoulem: Behold how the people suffer! Go into the homes of the people, likewise into the great hospitals and asylums, and the sights thou shalt see and the sounds thou shalt hear will make even one like thee think...
Ix : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 33 IX. Rise, oh, my soul, to still loftier heights-- Unfettered be all thy wings! Let earth's empurpled mountains fade upon my vision. Rise, oh, my soul, to still loftier heights-- Unfettered be all thy wings! Let the great sun sink and fade...
Viii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 29 VIII. I speak the universal language of the spirit, and in time all men will hear me and understand. The language of the spirit translates itself into all dialects. The stars speak the same language to all men, yet are they ever understood...
Xxxvi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 142 XXXVI. Rest, oh, my soul, not in the slumbers of the night, Nor in the idleness that far too often accompanies the day, But in the ceaseless doing of that which is right and good! Out of turmoil and strife, thou shalt arise, oh, my soul;...
Xiv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 53 XIV. How unwise to say: How substantial and real is matter? For matter is only a state of that which is substantial and real, an expression of energy. Truly may it be said, matter is the appearance and not the reality. Matter is ever...
Xiii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 49 XIII. Let not thy heart be troubled; thou believest in God, believe also in thyself. Think not I speak of the outward, the transitory and fleeting, but of that which is as permanent as the Eternal One. Thine own self is changeless...
Iv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 13 IV. Thus spake Zertoulem: Worlds age; suns grow cold and cease to give forth light; both return to chaos whence they had birth. Their substance never ceases to exist; but the form it had been compelled to take is no more in the external...
Xlii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 170 XLII. Again the Master spake concerning religion as follows: Yea, I did say, oh, Neontu, that man had drifted away from God, and it was the purpose of religion to show him the trail that leadeth to the source of all wisdom and truth. M...
Xlviii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 197 XLVIII. The states after death are dependent upon the states before death. I have sought, whenever the opportunity offered, oh, Neontu, to impress upon thee the great law of consequences. In other words, that it is impossible for m...
Xix : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 73 XIX. The Illuminated One is he whose spiritual faculties have all been quickened. This the one whose illumination is perfect. Of course there are many degrees of illumination. One faculty may be quickened into newer and higher life while...
Xlvii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 193 XLVII. Again my teachings have been misunderstood when thou sayest, oh, Neontu, that man should ever look inward. I have declared again and again that the source of all truth is within, but, at the same time, its streams are ever flowing...
Introduction : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. iii INTRODUCTION Truth is eternal, exhaustless, unfathomable. Its Divine Fount is far beyond human discovery, however rich the intellect which aspires towards its inaccessible heights. It lies far above the topmost clouds which eye of man c...
Iii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 9 III. Purple and gold are the mountains of Sebas-th-ontu; above hang wavy billows of golden fleece; for he that giveth life to all terrestrial things, mighty Th, sleeps in the Chamber of the West. The valleys are filled with purple mists...
Xxxiii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 129 XXXIII. These little jars and perturbations in everyday life simply emphasize the harmonies of the deeper spirit-life. The All-Pervading Life that in time must overcome and master all things, in thy present life is only revealed by...
Xliv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 179 XLIV. Nature unbosoms all her secrets to the votary at her shrine. But when the crude and materialistic approach, they find thick veils interposing between their eyes and spiritual realities. To the physical scientist the spiritual side...
Xxix : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 113 XXIX. As in the wild-wood there is a great variety of form, color and odor of the flowers we meet with, so is it with the auras of human beings. Some of the flowers are regular and beautiful in form, others irregular, and some few...
Ii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 5 II. When the faithful ones were gathered together Zertoulem appeared in their midst and said unto them: Let peace and love abide ever in your midst. For without peace there can be no true spiritual growth. It is the foundation upon which...
Untitled : * This book, a product of automatic writing, first came to my attention in a footnote in William James' Varieties of Religious Experience. James compared this text to Oahspe, as well as the case of Helene Smith, described in From India to the Planet Mars. The book claims to be the revelati...
Xlv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 183 XLV. In vision of the spirit I beheld the man that is to be! He who wearily had climbed up through the ages until he had reached the summit of physical development. Beneath him lay Error's mangled form and by its side that of Selfishness...
Xxxvii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 147 XXXVII. From spaces inconceivable, from depths beyond human comprehension, from heights incalculable, voices call out to us, and hands reach down, through and up to us. We are ministered unto by all that is. Our way is not solitary...
Vii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 25 VII. No longer is anything new unto me. Surprise never overtakes me. For back of all outward forms I perceive spirit, that produces all things. I have stood with universes without number; have assisted at many births celestial and have...
Xxviii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 109 XXVIII. Neontu asked the Master: Why is it that I am affected by all individuals that come into my presence, not only mentally but also physically? Some give me the sensations of peace and joy, while others almost completely destroy my...
Xii : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 45 XII. He who entertains the truly religious life and takes pleasure only in things spiritual has already become immortal. That which is gross and material is not forbidden him, but instead he rises above it and it becomes repulsive to him...
Xlix : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 202 XLIX. Well dost thou ask, oh, Neontu, How can we deal with these conditions? How free the unfortunate one of the parasites that have attached themselves to him? First, bear in mind this great truth: Occult Science never interferes with...
Xxiv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 93 XXIV. There are so many opinions abroad in the world, asked Neontu, how can one know the right? The Master replied in substance as follows: There are many rights, and it concerns thee only to know that which is right for thyself. Be not...
Xl : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 160 XL. The hills of earth rejoice, yea, the mountains shake their hoary heads with joy; For a new religion is born unto the sons of men. It is mightier by far than all other religions, for incorporated into it is the life of all...
Xxx : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 117 XXX. Yea, Neontu, I did say, One Life throbs and pulsates through all from star-dust on through man up to the Infinite, a kind of vital spirit making out of the infinite variety of forms a divine unity. Yet, I did not intend to imply th...
V : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 17 V. Spirit is not born, therefore dies not. It is individualized not as a whole, but as a part of the Infinite One. Each soul possesses an atom of the Supreme Consciousness. This atom possesses the power to attract other atoms to itself...
Xv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 57 XV. Into the Silence, oh, soul, would I walk with thee. Into that chamber whose walls are adorned with the unexpressed ideals of the soul. Here are thoughts that never yet were given outward expression. Here are poems excelling in beauty...
L : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 207 L. Open, ye pearly gates that lead to eternal bliss! A soul imprisoned would seek the freedom of the Upper Spheres! While yet enrobed in flesh, he fain would partake of the celestial viands and sip the nectar of the gods. Thou art long...
Xvi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 61 XVI. One asked the Master: What shall be the nature of our homes in the world of the Lomkatos? Just then Zertoulem came near to a shallow pool of water, and he stooped and picked up a pebble from his path and cast it into the water, and it...
Xxxiv : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 132 XXXIV. Spirit not only moulds and shapes the physical body which becomes its outward expression, but is also vibrating in its every atom. If a part or portion of this outward expression of spirit is loaned another individualized spirit...
Vi : * "Wisdom of the Ages", by George A. Fuller, [1916], p. 21 VI. Neontu asked Zertoulem, What is Religion? The Master plucked a wayside flower, and turning to Neontu, said: Perceivest thou this flower I hold in my hand? How beautiful in form and color! And how exquisite its fragrance! Man with all...