L'esprit de Noël

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Revision as of 11:15, 16 June 2025 by Hbraga (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<blockquote> Celui que l'on appelle l'Esprit de Noël vient donc raconter la naissance de Jésus-Christ sur fond de l'heure la plus sombre de la nature. L'annonce au solstice d'hiver de l'apparition de son étoile est un grand drame du cosmos ; et il est là pour nous enseigner que dans la nuit la plus sombre du désir de l'homme, apparaît bel et bien l'étoile de l'espoir et la naissance du Sauveur.")

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Peinture du Père Noël par Norman Rockwell, tirée de la couverture du "Saturday Evening Post" du 4 décembre 1920.

L'esprit de Noël est un être d'une grande lumière et d'un niveau bouddhique. Lanello parle de ce grand être et de la lumière qu'il porte :

Celui que l'on appelle l'Esprit de Noël vient donc raconter la naissance de Jésus-Christ sur fond de l'heure la plus sombre de la nature. L'annonce au solstice d'hiver de l'apparition de son étoile est un grand drame du cosmos ; et il est là pour nous enseigner que dans la nuit la plus sombre du désir de l'homme, apparaît bel et bien l'étoile de l'espoir et la naissance du Sauveur.

I enter the Spirit of Christmas so that you may understand that it is entirely possible for more than one son of God to participate in a holy office, to co-occupy the divine intent upon the twig that is bent, upon the very point, the focal point of a quartz crystal embracing a world of fiery intent. Dear hearts, I therefore come as the Spirit of Christmas, as you might anticipate the coming of the one known as Santa Claus.

Remember the heart of a child—your child, yourself—thinking about the coming of Santa and how he would enter the house, and how you would leave him cookies and milk and perhaps even a snack for the reindeer. Remember how, in fullest belief, because your parents had told you, you entered into that Spirit of Santa. And remember also the disappointment upon learning that Santa was not real.

But this is not true! Santa is real. And I am here to tell you that Santa Claus himself is the typical vessel of the Spirit of Christmas, the one who embodies this very Presence that I have entered.

It is wrong to tell children that Santa is not real. It is right to explain to them the Spirit of Christmas is indeed a person—a person made real in God, a person who is a cosmic being, who fills the hearts of the people with the anticipation of the greatest gift of all, the gift of personal Christhood.

Those things that bring delight to children—games and toys and things and rings in stockings—beloved hearts, originally the gifts given to the child of every heart were intended to enhance the child’s perception and realization of that Person of Christ. When you think about the gifts that are given these days, you realize that some gifts do assist the individual in a greater sense of identity, while others adorn the outer person and tend to create more maya of idolatry. And thus, attaching importance and attention to the outer self, the individual loses the great opportunity of this hour to truly enter into the heart of that cosmic being known as the Spirit of Christmas.

Therefore, beloved ones, understand that this Spirit embodies the collective consciousness of Christhood of the entire Spirit of the Great White Brotherhood—of all ascended beings and angels and masters, cosmic hosts of the LORD who are that Christ. Let us realize, then, that in all symbols there is Reality; in archetypes there is the original pattern of the image made perfect out of Christ; and in Santa Claus himself is the lingering hope in all that the figure of the Cosmic Christ will come to bring the true joy, the joy of the heart filled with love.[1]

Sources

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

  1. Lanello, “The Spirit of Christmas,” Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 25, no. 68.