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[[File:0000160 paul-the-venetian-ruth-hawkins-2103AX 600.jpeg|thumb|upright|alt=caption|Portrait of Paul the Venetian by his twin flame, Ruth Hawkins]]
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[[File:0000160 paul-the-venetian-ruth-hawkins-2103AX 600.jpeg|thumb|upright|alt=caption|<translate>Portrait of Paul the Venetian by his twin flame, Ruth Hawkins</translate>]]
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'''Paul the Venetian''' is [[chohan]] of the third ray of divine love. He is hierarch of the [[Château de Liberté]], his retreat on the etheric plane over southern France on the Rhône River.  
'''Paul the Venetian''' is [[chohan]] of the third ray of divine love. He is hierarch of the [[Château de Liberté]], his retreat on the etheric plane over southern France on the Rhône River.  


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Later, he was embodied in Egypt as a master of esoteric architecture and worked closely with [[El Morya]], then a master mason, at the time of the building of the [[Great Pyramid|pyramids]].
Later, he was embodied in Egypt as a master of esoteric architecture and worked closely with [[El Morya]], then a master mason, at the time of the building of the [[Great Pyramid|pyramids]].
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[[File:Paolo Veronese (Paolo Caliari) (Italian - Portrait of a Man - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|alt=caption|''Portrait of a Man'', Paolo Veronese (c. 1577), thought to be a self-portrait]]
[[File:Paolo Veronese (Paolo Caliari) (Italian - Portrait of a Man - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|alt=caption|<translate>''Portrait of a Man'', Paolo Veronese (c. 1577), thought to be a self-portrait</translate>]]


<translate>
=== Paolo Veronese ===
=== Paolo Veronese ===


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He illustrated the steps of [[initiation]] on the path of Christhood and was prolific in painting the martyrdom of the saints. His most impressive work is the vast ''Marriage at Cana'', which hangs in the Louvre. His other paintings included the ''Temptation of Saint Anthony'', the ''Coronation of the Virgin'', the ''Deposition from the Cross'', ''Supper at Emmaus'', the ''Holy Family'' and the ''Raising of Lazarus''—each one of these an important initiation in Christhood.
He illustrated the steps of [[initiation]] on the path of Christhood and was prolific in painting the martyrdom of the saints. His most impressive work is the vast ''Marriage at Cana'', which hangs in the Louvre. His other paintings included the ''Temptation of Saint Anthony'', the ''Coronation of the Virgin'', the ''Deposition from the Cross'', ''Supper at Emmaus'', the ''Holy Family'' and the ''Raising of Lazarus''—each one of these an important initiation in Christhood.
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[[File:Paolo Veronese 007.jpg|thumb|upright=1.7|alt=caption|''Feast in the House of Levi'', Paolo Veronese]]
[[File:Paolo Veronese 007.jpg|thumb|upright=1.7|alt=caption|<translate>''Feast in the House of Levi'', Paolo Veronese</translate>]]


<translate>
On one occasion he was summoned before the tribunal of the Inquisition under suspicion of heresy for the “irreverences” in his painting of the Last Supper, which included in it a dwarf, a parrot, guards in German armour, dogs and a jester. Veronese staunchly defended the artist’s right to freedom of imagination. The tribunal found a solution by suggesting that the painting be renamed ''Feast in the House of Levi''.
On one occasion he was summoned before the tribunal of the Inquisition under suspicion of heresy for the “irreverences” in his painting of the Last Supper, which included in it a dwarf, a parrot, guards in German armour, dogs and a jester. Veronese staunchly defended the artist’s right to freedom of imagination. The tribunal found a solution by suggesting that the painting be renamed ''Feast in the House of Levi''.


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It was the Goddess of Liberty who inspired the idea of the [[Statue of Liberty]] as a gift of the people of France to the people of the United States, which was dedicated on Bedloe’s Island October 28, 1886. A symbol of their friendship and more, it was the spanning of the arc of liberty from the Château de Liberté back to the Temple of the Sun with the intent that the descendants of Atlantis reembodied at both her East and West gates (at France and the United States) would hold high her torch until Liberty’s culture should once again appear in a golden age founded upon the balanced and expanded [[threefold flame]] in the hearts of the freedom-loving people of these sister nations.
It was the Goddess of Liberty who inspired the idea of the [[Statue of Liberty]] as a gift of the people of France to the people of the United States, which was dedicated on Bedloe’s Island October 28, 1886. A symbol of their friendship and more, it was the spanning of the arc of liberty from the Château de Liberté back to the Temple of the Sun with the intent that the descendants of Atlantis reembodied at both her East and West gates (at France and the United States) would hold high her torch until Liberty’s culture should once again appear in a golden age founded upon the balanced and expanded [[threefold flame]] in the hearts of the freedom-loving people of these sister nations.
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[[File:1200px-WashMonument WhiteHouse.jpg|thumb|alt=Aerial view of the Washington Monument and the White House|The Washington Monument]]
[[File:1200px-WashMonument WhiteHouse.jpg|thumb|alt=Aerial view of the Washington Monument and the White House|<translate>The Washington Monument</translate>]]


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Seventy-six years later, in a dictation given in Washington, D.C., September 30, 1962, the ascended master [[K-17]] announced the bestowal of another gift from France to America, this time from Paul the Venetian:  
Seventy-six years later, in a dictation given in Washington, D.C., September 30, 1962, the ascended master [[K-17]] announced the bestowal of another gift from France to America, this time from Paul the Venetian:  


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== Studying with Paul the Venetian ==
== Studying with Paul the Venetian ==
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[[File:Golden Rule by Norman Rockwell.JPG|thumb|upright|alt=caption|''The Golden Rule'', by Norman Rockwell. ''Saturday Evening Post'' cover, April 1, 1961.]]
[[File:Golden Rule by Norman Rockwell.JPG|thumb|upright|alt=caption|<translate>''The Golden Rule'', by Norman Rockwell. ''Saturday Evening Post'' cover, April 1, 1961.</translate>]]


<translate>
Embodied mankind who serve in the arts attend the retreats of Paul the Venetian for instruction in all of the arts, and through their service, they learn to balance and expand the threefold flame within the heart. Paul explains that the purpose of art is to enhance the love of Christ always.
Embodied mankind who serve in the arts attend the retreats of Paul the Venetian for instruction in all of the arts, and through their service, they learn to balance and expand the threefold flame within the heart. Paul explains that the purpose of art is to enhance the love of Christ always.


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[[Category:Heavenly beings]]
[[Category:Heavenly beings]]
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