WHEN it is said that “wise men of old spake as they were moved by the Holy Spirit”, we are, I think, rightly disposed to believe that in such case the Spirit would not dictate otherwise than in terms of the laws of Being which in their creative effects were seen by God to be good and pronounce to be so. This view entails the concept that Law and Order are the essentials of life, and in some manner, unseen, or but dimly comprehended by us, lie at the root of seeming chaos and confusion. The root is one. The branches are many and divergent. That the purpose of life is realized in the orderly unfoldment of events, or in what has been called the “correlated successiveness of events”, is perceived by the Idealist who, according to Emerson, “sees the whole circle of events, of persons and things, not as painfully accumulated act after act, atom by atom, in an age creeping past, but as one vast scene painted on the instant Eternity by the hand of God, for the eternal contemplation of the human soul.” Sepharial – The Basis of Scripture Prophecy
About Author: Sepharial – The Basis of Scripture Prophecy
Dr Walter Gorn Old (born 20 March 1864, at 2:06 a.m. LMT in Handsworth, England; died 23 December 1929 in Hove, England) was a notable 19th century mystic and astrologer, better known as Sepharial. Sepharial – The Basis of Scripture Prophecy
An eminent English Theosophist, Sepharial was a well-known and respected astrologer in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and wrote numerous books, some of which (particularly those on numerology) are still highly regarded today. He was editor of “Old Moore’s Almanac”, which is still published in the 21st century.
Overview Sepharial – The Basis of Scripture Prophecy
As a young man Sepharial initially studied medicine and followed this up with studies in psychology, oriental languages, astrology and numerology. In 1886 he started to write an astrology problem page in the Society Times, where he answered the public’s questions, and in 1887 at the age of just 23 was admitted to the “inner sanctum” of the Theosophical Society. He was in fact one of the founder members of the Theosophical movement in England. Madame Blavatsky (whom he lived with until her death) called him “The Astral Tramp” because of his nightly explorations into the astral plane (Ref: Kim Farnell’s book).
Influential legacy
He became a very influential author in the fields of the occult, astrology and numerology, and his writings had a considerable impact on E. H. Bailey and Alan Leo, who he introduced to Theosophy. He can be credited as the first astrologer to use Earth’s “dark moon” Lilith in his calculations. Genuinely erudite, Sepharial had for example a greater knowledge of mathematics, astronomy, and historical methodology than most of his astrological contemporaries and this showed in his writings. Sepharial’s “Degrees of the Zodiac Symbolised” (co-written with Charubel) foreshadowed Marc Edmund Jones’s subsequent (and nowadays better known) work on Sabian Symbols. However, many of his books and other works were put together in a rather slapdash way, which made his reputation less enduring than it might have been. A colourful character, Sepharial started a number of astrological magazines, all of which failed to establish themselves.
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