Goddess of Liberty

From TSL Encyclopedia
The Statue of Liberty

The Goddess of Liberty is spokesman for the Karmic Board and representative of the second ray on that Board. She is the hierarch of the Temple of the Sun, her etheric retreat over the island of Manhattan, New York. She holds the God consciousness of liberty for the earth.

Embodiments

The Goddess of Liberty personally liberated millions of souls on a number of planets prior to her ascension.

She was also embodied as a member of the Amazonian Race, a people of great stature whose women ruled an ancient civilization where the Amazon Basin now is.

During her embodiment upon Atlantis, she erected the Temple of the Sun where Manhattan Island now is, patterning it after the Solar Temple in the Great Central Sun. The central altar was dedicated to the threefold flame of the liberty of the Christ, which proceeds from the white-fire core of Being focused by beloved Alpha and Omega. This shrine was surrounded by twelve lesser shrines attended by representatives of the solar hierarchies who, together with the Goddess of Liberty, invoked on behalf of the evolutions of the earth the spiritual radiation of the Sun behind the sun.

Just prior to the sinking of Atlantis, the Goddess of Liberty transported the liberty flame enshrined at the temple to a place of safety in another retreat of the Great White Brotherhood, the Château de Liberté in southern France. When Atlantis went down in cataclysm, the Temple of the Sun was withdrawn to the etheric octave. The activities of the Brotherhood of Liberty continue at the etheric plane where the physical temple once stood.

Her service following her ascension

So great was her momentum of dedication to the Spirit of Liberty embodied in the threefold flame of the heart, that after her ascension, this lady master was called upon to bear the title of Goddess of Liberty, denoting her office in hierarchy as the authority for the cosmic consciousness of liberty to the earth.

The Spirit of Liberty inspired the early American patriots to found a new nation “under God” and to frame a constitution based on the Brotherhood’s plan for the emerging Christ consciousness that would come to maturity on virgin soil under the direction of Saint Germain, the God of Freedom for the earth.

A considerable number of Americans at that time accepted the presence and divine intervention of heavenly intercessors as a natural part of life. The art and literature of the period frequently depicted angelic beings, gods and goddesses, and clouds of glory. The Goddess of Liberty, patroness of the “sacred cause” espoused by the patriots, was perhaps the most revered of all the heavenly hosts. In 1775, Thomas Paine honored her in a ballad called “Liberty Tree.”

The Goddess of Liberty appeared to General Washington during the winter of 1777 and revealed to him America’s destiny, giving him the strength and the courage to complete his own mission as the liberator of the thirteen original colonies. [See Washington’s vision.]

The Statue of Liberty

It is no wonder that the Statue of Liberty, a gift of the French people, was erected on Bedloe’s Isle. The flame of liberty drew the focus of the Statue of Liberty as an outer symbol of hope for liberation from all forms of tyranny to the “tired, the poor, the huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”[1]

The Goddess of Liberty wears a crown of seven rays, focusing the power of the Elohim and their implementation of the seven rays in form, in Matter (Mater), the mother aspect of Divinity. Her crown is also a focus of the seven rays anchored in the forehead of every son and daughter of God. The Goddess of Liberty represents the “Lady with the lamp” whom Henry Wadsworth Longfellow prophesied would “stand in the great history of the land, a noble type of good, heroic womanhood.”[2]

The Goddess of Liberty represents the archetypal pattern of the World Mother who carries the Book of Divine Law, the Book of Illumination containing the knowledge that will show mankind the way out of the night of human error. At the base of the Statue of Liberty are broken chains, symbolizing a being free from the bondage of human creation, stepping forth to enlighten the world. Her torch is the flame of cosmic illumination.

In July 1986, four days of festivities marked the hundredth anniversary of the dedication of the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor. Presiding at the relighting ceremony of the Statue on July 3rd, President Reagan proclaimed: “We are the Keepers of the Flame of Liberty. We hold it high tonight for the world to see.”

On July 4th, millions around the globe witnessed the largest fireworks extravaganza in U.S. history as America celebrated Lady Liberty’s presence in our land. As part of the celebration, Chief Justice Warren Burger administered the oath of citizenship to over 15,000 new citizens gathered at various sites across the nation.

An initiation of the threefold flame

The next day, July 5, 1986, the Goddess of Liberty gave this teaching on American citizenship:

Those, then, who become Americans do so by the initiation of the Goddess of Liberty, whose office I hold, which being I AM.

Therefore, it is an initiation of the heart and of the threefold flame. And those who enter into that sacred commitment to be citizens of the United States do receive an impetus of my threefold flame, which is an action for the balancing and bringing into alignment of their own threefold flame. I place there the fleur-de-lis of my being as an electronic blueprint, or matrix, if you will. And therefore it is like a rudder, a steadying force that keeps the individual re-creating and raising up those three plumes in balance. And thus, I work very closely with beloved Gautama, Lord of the World.

The initiation of the heart which I give must be earned and won. As I give, therefore, the etheric blueprint, so from the day of citizenship onward, beloved, there must be a proving, there must be a working, there must be a knowledge of the Word.

Therefore, I carry the Book of the Law that represents not alone the Constitution but the divine document citing the divine rights of the sons of God upon this planetary home. And it remains for you to distill from my heart through your Christ Self what are those divine rights so that you may come to understand that every line of the Constitution does reflect an inner divine right which has been made applicable to the human scene of karma, of the building of a nation, and of the dealing with the economy and the settling of old scores with the fallen ones.

Therefore, beloved, those who become Americans must prove their ability to be the Keepers of the Flame of Liberty. Thus, understand how it is that the one occupying the highest secular office of the nation, the President of the United States, did affirm for all people of this nation the vow of those who take their initiation from me—“We are the Keepers of the Flame of Liberty.”[3]

The Statue of Liberty

Her service today

Liberty proclaims:

The song of creation is the song of hope, and the hope that is born of the heart of God is a tender flame that blazes in the torch that I uphold! I uphold it now and I uphold it for aye and I uphold it for all.

Will you join me in the upholding of that torch? Will you join me in standing fast when all the world assails you? Will you join me in the hour of twilight, knowing that with me you shall watch out the coming dawn?[4]

The Goddess of Liberty stands at the seven o’clock line of the twelve solar hierarchies (opposite Saint Germain) as the authority for the attribute of God-gratitude on behalf of the evolutions of this solar system. Of gratitude and America’s destiny she has said:

Gracious ones, I AM God in action! As I come to you today, it is to reveal the wondrous thought in the idea of “Immigration”—I AM gratitude in action. Behold, then, that America was intended to be a land where gratitude in action would produce, through the power of the cosmic liberty bell, that wondrous attitude of freedom that would make men responsive to God within the citadel of their hearts....

Immigration from the heart of God to the planet Earth, precious ones, is an opportunity. And immigration back to the heart of God is an opportunity. Individuals must, then, recognize the boon of gratitude. “I AM gratitude in action!” And therefore, the goings out and the comings in of mankind ought always to be accompanied by a manifestation of gratitude to the Deity.[5]

Although she has attained initiations at cosmic levels and need not remain with the planet, the Goddess of Liberty has taken the vow to remain in the service of the earth until every last man, woman and child has made his ascension. This is the bodhisattva ideal.

The Goddess of Liberty has said:

When I stand in the Temple of the Sun, when I stand in the harbor of New York, beloved ones, I say to myself, the mantra of the bodhisattvas, “It all depends on you.” That is why I stand and still stand because I believe the mantra of my Guru, beloved Vesta, who shines in the sun and who repeats the mantra of her Guru, “It all depends on you.” When you know it through and through you will not fail, for the Eye of Compassion, the mother’s eye, so mild and pure, looking upon the lifewaves beneath her feet, cannot escape the truth. It all depends on you. Children of my heart, rise and pass through the door of objectivity and become the Woman clothed with the Sun.[6]

The Goddess of Liberty has called for one thousand faithful ones to decree to preserve America’s destiny. May the students’ great love for the destiny of God in man inspire them to answer Liberty’s call!

A dispensation of her Electronic Presence with us

On August 10, 1985, in a dictation delivered at the Inner Retreat, the Goddess of Liberty said:

In the joy of Lanello’s heart, I take my leave. But I leave my torch with the Mother for you. My torch, as an Electronic Presence, then, is here and shall be there and shall be wherever chelas place a focus of my statue, so signifying their desire to hold it high until the mission of the World Mother is finished and all are home at last who are called in this dispensation.[7]

See also

Temple of the Sun

Statue of Liberty

Sources

Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Masters and Their Retreats, s.v. “Liberty, Goddess of.”

Elizabeth Clare Prophet, “A Tribute to the Goddess of Liberty,” March 13, 1993.

  1. From the poem “The New Colossus,” by Emma Lazarus, inscribed on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty.
  2. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, “Santa Filomena,” Stanza 10.
  3. The Goddess of Liberty, “The Keepers of the Flame of Liberty,” Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 29, no. 65, November 23, 1986.
  4. The Goddess of Liberty, “The Awakening,” Pearls of Wisdom 1986, Book Two, p. 7.
  5. The Goddess of Liberty, Liberty Proclaims (1975), pp. 13, 15–16.
  6. Goddess of Liberty, December 6, 1979.
  7. The Goddess of Liberty, “Our Origin in the Heart of Liberty,” Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 28, no. 45, November 10, 1985.