Walk-in and Automatic Writing

During the break in my two hour reading at the Berkeley Psychic Institute the woman who had rushed up stairs to move us out of the blissful place were in, sat next to me and asked what I do. I told her I write novels. She told me they were being dictated to me by a powerful entity that roams the universe coming to aid of planets in dire trouble.

I was told people come into my being, and, take! Take! Take!

“You are powerless to stop them. I don’t know why!” said the Seer who saw my death which caused the guide in the back of the room to exclaim – with a smile;

“Are we in heaven? Is this proof there is a heaven?”

As you will read, it has always been very difficult to be me. After my death, and when I saw I could be the embodiment of John the Baptist, it got worse from there, because John’s identity had been ripped from him, and his information he brought to share – utterly corrupted! I suspect this is the reason people come into my being at will, I deprived of the normal boundaries we enjoy when we are born, boundaries that exist because you have some control over who you are. Owning a name is the beginning of this ownership. The chaos over my name – is uncanny!

But, what is truly out of this world is the recognition by family, I was no the person they once knew. And my kindred began to push me out of the nest as if they knew the truth in a subliminal way.

Only when my sister Christine drowned in 1994, did I refuse to move into the background, and allow my family to handle so called – reality. This was because my mother, Rosemary, was saying I prepared Christine’s way. Rosemary, named me after John the Baptist, believing I was born on Yom Kippur. Consider the name in Christine.

There is no blame or shame in anyone, if, you allow the Truth………….to be! For we are in the company of angels and the Holy Spirit. And you will be set free!

Above is a statue of John that looks like me when I was young. In the last five years Jesus is looking more like John, and a Jew. Consider the first Pentecost and folks speaking in tongues. How many were Walk-ins?
Are we gathering again – in His Name?

Jon the Nazarite

Ruth Montgomery From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search Ruth Shick Montgomery (June 11, 1912 – June 10, 2001) was a self-described Christian psychic in the tradition of Jeane Dixon and Edgar Cayce. She was a biographer of Dixon and a protégée of Arthur Ford who claimed he (like Cayce) could access the Akashic Records (or database) of the Universe.

Montgomery initially believed her mission on Earth was to educate the public on her belief in life after death, which is common among spiritualists. However, she also studied reincarnation and came to believe that mental and physical illnesses often have their origins in past lives.

With other like-minded mystics, Montgomery founded the Association for Past Life Research and Therapy. Her many books (which she says were channelled via Automatic writing from her spirit guides) popularised spiritualist notions in public consciousness in the 1970s through the 1990s, and paved the way for what is now known as New Age religion. Montgomery is particularly noted for her popularization of walk-in theory whereby a person’s soul can depart a hurt or anguished body and be replaced with a new soul to take over the body.

Contents [hide]
1 Journalism
2 History
2.1 Race
3 Past Life Regression
4 Predictions
5 Influence in Popular Culture
6 Bibliography
7 See also
8 References

[edit] JournalismMontgomery began her long journalism profession as a cub reporter for Waco-News-Tribune while receiving her education at Baylor University (1930–1935). Later she graduated from Purdue University (1934) and began work as a reporter on the Louisville Herald-Post.[1]

In 1943, she became the first female reporter in the Washington bureau of the New York Daily News, and embarked on her extensive Washington DC career. She covered notable foreign affairs (the Berlin Airlift among them), was a syndicated columnist for Hearst Headlines and United Press International[1] and was a well-read correspondent with the International News Service.[2]

At Franklin D. Roosevelt’s funeral, Montgomery was the only female of the 12 invited reporters.[3] In 1950, while a reporter for the New York Daily News, she was voted president of the Women’s National Press Club.[4] In 1959, she was a member of then Vice-President Nixon’s press corps on his tour of Russia.[5] Montgomery wrote of her 25 years covering Washington in her 1970 book, “Hail to the Chiefs; My Life and Times with Six Presidents”.

Montgomery wrote annual newspaper columns listing predictions by psychic Jeane Dixon beginning in 1952. In 1962, “Once There was a Nun: Mary McCarran’s Years as Sister Mary Mercy” was published and thus began Montgomery’s long career as a non-fiction author. In 1965 her book, “A Gift of Prophecy” about Jeane Dixon was published and became a best-seller, selling over 3 million copies.[1]

Montgomery retired from her journalism career in 1969.[1] As part of their Texas Collection, the Archives Division at Baylor University contains a research collection which include papers of Montgomery.[6]

[edit] HistoryIn her book The World Before (1976) Montgomery presented a pseudohistoric account of the earth which involved the lost continents of Mu and Atlantis.[7] The book was written through automatic writing, Montgomery claimed the information was given to her by her spirit guides.[8]

Montgomery held a number of unorthodox ideas. She had claimed humans had existed with dinosaurs on earth for millions of years. She had claimed the first humans were 12 feet tall giants and had produced offspring with large animals. She wrote that the “original sin was co-habiting with animals” but Later God introduced a law so kinds can only produce after their kind and that man could no longer procreate with “beasts, birds and fish”. She claimed the offspring of the early humans and animals on earth were “half human forms” which had existed for millions of years such as Centaurs, satyrs and nymphs.[9]

[edit] RaceMontgomery wrote there were many adams and eves and five Gardens of Eden, each race was created and positioned in each Garden, she argued for polygenism of the races. She claimed Atlantis was then a semitropical paradise, a golden age peopled by a “red race”. She wrote that the “The black race began in Africa” and the Lemurians were a “brown skinned” race who occupied Lemuria.

Montgomery’s main claim was that that humanity consisted of Five separate family trees and that each race created separately for climatic conditions. According to Montgomery Homo sapiens appeared in five different places on Earth at the same time:[10]

White race – colder regions, originated in the Carpathian and Caucasian mountains. Later migrated to Atlantis, Pyrenees, southern France, Persia, and the Mediterranean sea.
Brown race – Pacific, India and Lemuria.
Black race – African jungles.
Red race – Atlantis and America.
Yellow race – Asia.
She wrote that Australia is a remnant of Lemuria and the Australian Aborigines are descendants of the Lemurians. She wrote that Celts descended from the Red race of Atlantis, but intermingled with the White race to retain the red hair but not the red skin tone. Basques descended from the atlanteans. The Norse were a pure White race who had not intermingled. Montgomery also claimed the Mediterranean race originated by atlanteans intermarrying the White race.

[edit] Past Life RegressionIn her book A World Beyond, Montgomery revealed that in a past incarnation she had been alive during the time of Christ and known as Lazarus’ third sister Ruth, who is not mentioned in the Bible.

[edit] PredictionsEchoing the earlier predictions of Edgar Cayce, Montgomery believed that ancient advanced civilizations of Mu and Atlantis had destroyed themselves thousands of years in the pre-history of modern man. Montgomery claimed we would see remnants of the lost continent of Atlantis rise from the sea after a “Polar Shift”.

Montgomery predicted in the 1970s (allegedly with the help of her spirit guides) that World War III would begin in the mid-1980s when a brush-fire war, started by Ethiopian strongman Mengistu Haile Mariam, would spread first to the Middle East, and then Europe. Montgomery’s “Guides” allegedly stated quite clearly that humans have free will and can make their own decisions regarding their destiny, and during the late 1970s and early 1980s, in fact changed the future, preventing the war.

Montgomery also predicted in the 1970s and 1980s, that America would have a “walk-in” as president in the 1990s, (“unsure which term, 1992 or 1996”) before the Polar Shift, which was to happen “in the last months of the century” as it seemed to “the Guides.”

In the late 1990s, the Guides predicted in her 1999 book, The World To Come, that the walk-in president would not come until 2008 at the earliest, and therefore the Shift would be delayed until 2010-2012 at least. The potential catastrophe of the shift was also reduced by human free will. Except for Florida and the coast of California, the Guides reported, most of America will survive.

[edit] Influence in Popular CultureMontgomery’s book “Aliens Among Us” has been cited by Sammy Hagar as the inspiration for the 1985 Van Halen song “Love Walks In”. [11]

[edit] BibliographyMontgomery was a prolific writer on the subject of clairvoyance, reincarnation, past life regression, psychic phenomena, and clandestine extraterrestrials, most of which were sold as popular mass market paperbacks.

Once There was a Nun: Mary McCarran’s years as Sister Mary Mercy (Putnam, 1962)

Mrs. LBJ (Avon, 1964)

A Gift of Prophecy: The Phenomenal Jeane Dixon (William Morrow & Company, 1965) first appeared in a condensed version as story in Reader’s Digest entitled “The Crystal Ball” (July 1965).

A Search for the Truth (William Morrow & Company, 1967)

Flowers at the White House (1967)

Here and Hereafter (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1968)

Companions Along the Way (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1970)

Hail to the Chiefs: My Life and Times with Six Presidents (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1970)

A World Beyond: A Startling Message from the Eminent Psychic Arthur Ford from Beyond the Grave (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1971)

Born to Heal: The Astonishing Story of Mr. A and the Ancient Art of Healing with Life Energies (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1973)

Companions Along the Way (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1974)

The World Before (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1976)

Strangers Among Us: Enlightened Beings from a World to Come (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1978)

Threshold to Tomorrow (Putnam, 1983)

Aliens Among Us (Putnam, 1985)

Ruth Montgomery: Herald of the New Age (Fawcett, 1987)

The World to Come: the Guides’ Long-Awaited Predictions for the Dawning Age (Harmony, 1999)

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