Palace of Light/es: Difference between revisions

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El '''Palacio de la Luz''' es el hogar de [[Special:MyLanguage/Chananda|Chananda]] y su hermana, la maestra ascendida Najah.  
El '''Palacio de la Luz''' es el hogar de [[Special:MyLanguage/Chananda|Chananda]] y su hermana, la maestra ascendida Najah.  


[[El Morya]], [[Saint Germain]], the [[Great Divine Director]], [[Daniel and Nada Rayborn]] and others of the ascended hosts frequent this retreat as guests. The retreat is located in a valley in the Himalayan mountains; the [[Cave of Light]] (focus of the Great Divine Director in India) is situated in the mountain behind this retreat.
[[Special:MyLanguage/El Morya|El Morya]], [[Special:MyLanguage/Saint Germain|Saint Germain]], el [[Special:MyLanguage/Great Divine Director|Gran Director Divino]], [[Special:MyLanguage/Daniel and Nada Rayborn|Daniel y Nada Rayborn]] y otros maestros ascendidos frecuentan este retiro como huéspedes. El retiro se encuentra en un valle de los Himalayas. La [[Special:MyLanguage/Cave of Light|Cueva de la Luz]] (foco del Gran Director Divino en la India) está situada en la montaña detrás de este retiro.


[[Godfré Ray King]] journeyed to the Palace of Light with [[Alexander Gaylord]] and [[Rex and Nada, Bob and Pearl|Rex, Nada, Bob and Pearl]]. In ''The Magic Presence'' he describes a magnificent building of white onyx, four stories high with a great dome in the center. “As we came up the steps, the tones of a beautiful bell announced our arrival and welcomed us as guests of the retreat. In a moment, the great door opened and Najah stood there to greet us.... We were shown to our quarters on the second floor, overlooking the valley.”<ref>Godfré Ray King, ''The Magic Presence'', 4th ed. (Chicago: Saint Germain Press, 1974), pp. 377–78.</ref>
[[Godfré Ray King]] journeyed to the Palace of Light with [[Alexander Gaylord]] and [[Rex and Nada, Bob and Pearl|Rex, Nada, Bob and Pearl]]. In ''The Magic Presence'' he describes a magnificent building of white onyx, four stories high with a great dome in the center. “As we came up the steps, the tones of a beautiful bell announced our arrival and welcomed us as guests of the retreat. In a moment, the great door opened and Najah stood there to greet us.... We were shown to our quarters on the second floor, overlooking the valley.”<ref>Godfré Ray King, ''The Magic Presence'', 4th ed. (Chicago: Saint Germain Press, 1974), pp. 377–78.</ref>

Revision as of 00:00, 11 February 2020

Other languages:

El Palacio de la Luz es el hogar de Chananda y su hermana, la maestra ascendida Najah.

El Morya, Saint Germain, el Gran Director Divino, Daniel y Nada Rayborn y otros maestros ascendidos frecuentan este retiro como huéspedes. El retiro se encuentra en un valle de los Himalayas. La Cueva de la Luz (foco del Gran Director Divino en la India) está situada en la montaña detrás de este retiro.

Godfré Ray King journeyed to the Palace of Light with Alexander Gaylord and Rex, Nada, Bob and Pearl. In The Magic Presence he describes a magnificent building of white onyx, four stories high with a great dome in the center. “As we came up the steps, the tones of a beautiful bell announced our arrival and welcomed us as guests of the retreat. In a moment, the great door opened and Najah stood there to greet us.... We were shown to our quarters on the second floor, overlooking the valley.”[1]

Godfré describes Chananda’s private dining room on the first floor, decorated in white and violet: “Toward one end of the room stood an enormous teakwood table, seating at least twenty people, heavily inlaid with a substance that looked like gold, but was in reality a precipitated metal. Toward the other end of the room was a white onyx table of the same size, the top of which was inlaid in violet and gold, it too being a precipitated substance.”[2]

Godfré was taken on a tour of the retreat, seeing a music room, a “Cosmic Observatory” containing scientific instruments not yet known to the outer world, and a council chamber seating seven hundred people. “The walls of this room were of a beautiful milk-white onyx with the most marvelous blue trimmings. On the floor was a thick carpet of the same wonderful blue. There were no windows, and the room occupied almost the entire floor of the palace.... At the side was a dais on which stood an altar and a golden chair.... The main part of the altar was precipitated gold, but the top was made of another precipitated substance, the shade of blue that borders on to violet.”[3]

On the ground floor were electrical and chemical laboratories, and in the center of the west wall, the entrance to the half-mile tunnel leading to the Cave of Light.

See also

Chananda

Cave of Light

Sources

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

  1. Godfré Ray King, The Magic Presence, 4th ed. (Chicago: Saint Germain Press, 1974), pp. 377–78.
  2. Ibid., p. 379.
  3. Ibid., pp. 384–85.