The Philosopher's stone in the Gospels and in Alchemy



The Philosopher's stone in the Gospels and in Alchemy Flip through

P0241AN  

219 pages

28.75 $ Order

  Français Español Deutsch Italiano

'The Gospels can be understood and interpreted in the light of alchemical science. On the face of it, they are simply giving an account of the life of one man, Jesus, born two thousand years ago in Palestine, but while they recount the different stages of his life, from birth to death and resurrection, they are in fact also describing alchemical processes.
In spite of being an object of condemnation by the clergy, since the Middle Ages alchemy has profundly permeated Christian mysticism and esotericism. And if you study the sculptures both on the outside and inside of cathedrals such as the Notre-Dame in Paris or the Notre-Dame in Chartres, you will discover that the builders of these cathedrals possessed alchemical knowledge, to which architecture and sculpture bear ample witness.'

I - On the interpretation of the Scriptures
1 - ‘The letter kills, but the Spirit gives life’
2 - The word of God

II - ‘It is not what goes into the mouth that defiles a person…’
III - ‘You are the salt of the earth’
1 - Marking matter with the seal of the spirit
2 - The source of energy

IV - ‘But if the salt loses its flavour…’
V - Tasting the flavour of the salt: divine love
VI - ‘You are the light of the world’
VII - The alchemists’ salt
VIII - ‘And as all things are one and come from the One’
IX - The work of the alchemist: 3 over 4
X - The philosopher’s stone, fruit of a mystic union
XI - The regeneration of matter: the cross and the crucible
XII - The May dew
XIII - The growth of the divine seed
XIV - The gold of true knowledge: the alchemist and the gold prospector
Biblical References


  • Man's Subtle Bodies and Centres
  • True Alchemy or the Quest for Perfection
  • Man's Psychic Life : Elements and Structures
  • The Book of Divine Magic
  • The Book of Revelations: a Commentary
  • Truth: Fruit of Wisdom and Love
  • Angels and other Mysteries of The Tree of Life
  • Sons and Daughters of God
  • The Wellsprings of Eternal Joy
  • The Laughter of a Sage

Syntaxes of research

word1 word2: search on at least one of the two words.
+word1 +word2: search on both words.
"word1 word2": search on the expression between" ".
word*: searches on the beginning of the word, whatever the end of the word.
-word: the word behind - is excluded from the search.