Edgar Cayce's Origin and Destiny of Man by Lytle Webb Robinson

Edgar Cayce's Origin and Destiny of Man by Lytle Webb Robinson

Author:Lytle Webb Robinson
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: A.R.E. Press
Published: 2008-03-19T16:00:00+00:00


From the Cayce Records

Perhaps the real story of the Mayas properly begins in Lemuria and Atlantis with the first land changes. At that time there were the beginnings of the moral decay within Atlantis that eventually brought dispersion and annihilation to a “proud, wicked, adulterous people.” Materialism, wars within, self-indulgence, and the misuse of spiritual knowledge and power were their undoing. Some of the Atlanteans were aware of the coming catastrophe and sought to gather all the knowledge and wisdom of man to combat it. A high council was held in 10,700 B.C. without result.

The first upheaval with the shift of the poles, which brought the last of the great Ice Ages, had already occurred. Lemuria, lying in the Pacific Ocean and bordering what is now the west coasts of North and South America, began to sink. The continent of Atlantis was broken up into several large islands and the southern portion sank altogether.

Migrations to Yucatan from Lemuria began with the first cataclysm, but it was not until the second, the Biblical flood in 28,200 B.C., and the third, in 10,600, that the great exodus from the principal remaining Atlantean islands of Poseidia, Araz, and Og took place. These movements toward the visible portions of Yucatan, then called Yuk, thus occurred over an era of many thousands of years. In the later periods some came by aircraft.

The peninsula of Yucatan was quite different from what it is today. Instead of being flat and tropical, it was much larger, more temperate in climate, more varied in topography. It was during the third and final land upheavals that it became changed to its present outline, losing much of its territory in the process and forcing many of the inhabitants inland.

Thus there was a merging at wide intervals of time of the red race from Atlantis in the east with those earlier settlers of the brown race from Lemuria in the west and Peru to the south, and mixing of many faiths and cultures. Further complicating the cultural scene, some of the early inhabitants of southwestern U.S., Israelites of the Lost Tribes of Egypt, later drifted as far south as Yucatan, bringing with them, among other things, their metals and clays. As a result, more than one civilization has been and will be found as research progresses. They Mayas, too, led a communal life of “all for one, one for all.”

With the beginning of the exodus to Yucatan, the Atlanteans took with them the common knowledge of their great civilization but not all the technology. They could not, of course, at any time transplant it in its entirety, but they were intensely interested in preserving some of their culture and learning, especially the religious tenets of the Law of One.

They expressed their influence at once in the building of their cities. This was manifest in the magnificence of their temples and courts, their astute form of government and keeping of records, their knowledge of agriculture, mathematics, decorative art, precious jewels, and textiles.

“Before that



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