Wednesday, October 31, 2007

More on alternative reading

mess.jpg picture by Pootchie  The Messianic Legacy by Baigent-Leigh-Lincoln (1989)

• What extraordinary meaning lies behind Jesus' title — "King of the Jews"?
• Was there more than one Christ?
• Who really constituted Jesus' following — and what were the real identities of Simon Peter and Judas Iscariot?
• Who now has the ancient treasure of the Temple of Jerusalem?
• What is the true source of today's Christian "Fundamentalism"?
• What links the Vatican, the CIA, the KGB, the Mafia, Freemasonry, and the Knights Templar?
• What is the stunning goal of the European secret society that traces its lineage back to Christ and the House of David?

The Messianic Legacy. Here is the book that reveals the answers to these intriguing, potentially explosive questions. Utilizing the same meticulous research that catapulted their first book onto the best seller lists, the authors again bring an enlighteneing message of truth — and urgent importance — to Christians and non-Christians the world over.


Senzanome.jpg picture by Pootchie  Discovery of the Grail by Andrew Sinclair (1998)

In writing "the first complete history of the Grail," Sinclair (The Sword and the Grail) demonstrates his familiarity with the copious literature about holy relics from the Byzantine Empire to Carl Jung with numerous allusions to religion, myth and history. He writes of the Grail's many manifestations: the chalice of the Last Supper, used by Joseph of Arimathea to catch the blood of Christ; the Holy Lance; the Pentecostal tongues of fire; the dish bearing the bloody head of St. John the Baptist; the cornucopia; the philosopher's stone; the Ark of the Covenant. Offering no precise definition, Sinclair is free to trace Grail history with an eclectic choice of holy relics, using ancient chronicles, medieval epics, Celtic Arthurian legends and representations of religious art as source material. He describes the past uses of the relics of the crucifixion, including the perversion of such relics by the Nazis. For Sinclair, the Grail is ultimately "a symbol of each person's direct approach to the divine light." In part because his subject is so amorphous, in part because he assumes a vast store of knowledge on rather obscure figures and terms, Sinclair's narrative will be daunting to the general reader. Nor is the writing always elegant ("Himmler enthused about the legends of King Arthur..."). No one, however, can doubt Sinclair's religious fervor and the sincerity of his deeply personal quest.
Posted by Gra at 11:02:34 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |
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