Diosa de la Libertad

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La Estatua de la Libertad

La Diosa de la Libertad es la portavoz del Consejo Kármico y la representante del segundo rayo de ese Consejo. Es la jerarca del Templo del Sol, su retiro etérico sobre la isla de Manhattan (Nueva York). Ella tiene la conciencia de Dios de libertad para la tierra.

Encarnaciones

La Diosa de la Libertad estuvo encarnada en la Atlántida; y como miembro de la raza amazona, un pueblo de gran estatura cuyas mujeres gobernaron una antigua civilización donde actualmente se encuentra la cuenca del Amazonas.

Tan grande era su impulso acumulado de dedicación al Espíritu de la Libertad encarnado en la llama trina del corazón que, cuando ascendió, esta maestra fue llamada a llevar el título de Diosa de la Libertad, denotación de su cargo en la jerarquía como la autoridad de la conciencia cósmica de libertad en la Tierra.

Durante su encarnación en la Atlántida, erigió el Templo del Sol donde hoy se encuentra la isla de Manhattan, haciéndolo de acuerdo con el patrón del Templo Solar en el Gran Sol Central. El altar central se dedicó a la llama trina de la libertad del Cristo, que procede del núcleo de fuego blanco del Ser concentrado por los amados Alfa y Omega. Este santuario estaba rodeado por doce santuarios menores al cuidado de representantes de las doce jerarquías solares, quienes, junto con la Diosa de la Libertad, invocaban por las evoluciones de la Tierra la radiación espiritual del Sol detrás del sol.

Justo antes del hundimiento de la Atlántida, la Diosa de la Libertad transportó la llama de la libertad amparada en el templo hacia un lugar seguro en otro retiro de la Gran Hermandad Blanca, el Château de Liberté en el sur de Francia. Cuando la Atlántida se hundió en un cataclismo, el Templo del Sol se retiró a la octava etérica y las actividades de la Hermandad de la Libertad continúan en el plano etérico donde una vez estuvo el templo físico.

Her service following her ascension

El Espíritu de la Libertad inspiró a los primeros patriotas americanos a fundar una nueva nación «bajo Dios» y a forjar una constitución basada en el plan de la Hermandad para la emergente conciencia Crística que llegaría a su madurez en el suelo virgen bajo la dirección de Saint Germain, el Dios de la Libertad para la Tierra.

La Diosa de la Libertad se apareció al general Washington durante el invierno de 1777 y le desveló el destino de los Estados Unidos, dándole la fortaleza y el valor de terminar su misión como liberador de las primeras trece colonias.

La Estatua de la Libertad

La Estatua de la Libertad

It is no wonder that the Statue of Liberty, a gift of the French people, was erected on Bedloe’s Isle. The flame of liberty drew the focus of the Statue of Liberty as an outer symbol of hope for liberation from all forms of tyranny to the “tired, the poor, the huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”[1]

The Goddess of Liberty wears a crown of seven rays, focusing the power of the Elohim and their implementation of the seven rays in form, in Matter (Mater), the mother aspect of Divinity. Her crown is also a focus of the seven rays anchored in the forehead of every son and daughter of God. The Goddess of Liberty represents the “Lady with the lamp” whom Henry Wadsworth Longfellow prophesied would “stand in the great history of the land, a noble type of good, heroic womanhood.”[2]

The Goddess of Liberty represents the archetypal pattern of the World Mother who carries the Book of Divine Law, the Book of Illumination containing the knowledge that will show mankind the way out of the night of human error. At the base of the Statue of Liberty are broken chains, symbolizing a being free from the bondage of human creation, stepping forth to enlighten the world. Her torch is the flame of cosmic illumination.

Her service today

Liberty proclaims:

The song of creation is the song of hope, and the hope that is born of the heart of God is a tender flame that blazes in the torch that I uphold! I uphold it now and I uphold it for aye and I uphold it for all.

Will you join me in the upholding of that torch? Will you join me in standing fast when all the world assails you? Will you join me in the hour of twilight, knowing that with me you shall watch out the coming dawn?[3]

The Goddess of Liberty stands at the seven o’clock line of the twelve solar hierarchies (opposite Saint Germain) as the authority for the attribute of God-gratitude on behalf of the evolutions of this solar system. Of gratitude and America’s destiny she has said:

Gracious ones, I AM God in action! As I come to you today, it is to reveal the wondrous thought in the idea of “Immigration”—I AM gratitude in action. Behold, then, that America was intended to be a land where gratitude in action would produce, through the power of the cosmic liberty bell, that wondrous attitude of freedom that would make men responsive to God within the citadel of their hearts....

Immigration from the heart of God to the planet Earth, precious ones, is an opportunity. And immigration back to the heart of God is an opportunity. Individuals must, then, recognize the boon of gratitude. “I AM gratitude in action!” And therefore, the goings out and the comings in of mankind ought always to be accompanied by a manifestation of gratitude to the Deity.[4]

Although she has attained initiations at cosmic levels and need not remain with the planet, the Goddess of Liberty has taken the vow to remain in the service of the earth until every last man, woman and child has made his ascension. This is the bodhisattva ideal.

The Goddess of Liberty has said:

When I stand in the Temple of the Sun, when I stand in the harbor of New York, beloved ones, I say to myself, the mantra of the bodhisattvas, “It all depends on you.” That is why I stand and still stand because I believe the mantra of my Guru, beloved Vesta, who shines in the sun and who repeats the mantra of her Guru, “It all depends on you.” When you know it through and through you will not fail, for the Eye of Compassion, the mother’s eye, so mild and pure, looking upon the lifewaves beneath her feet, cannot escape the truth. It all depends on you. Children of my heart, rise and pass through the door of objectivity and become the Woman clothed with the Sun.[5]

The Goddess of Liberty has called for one thousand faithful ones to decree to preserve America’s destiny. May the students’ great love for the destiny of God in man inspire them to answer Liberty’s call!

See also

Temple of the Sun

Sources

Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Masters and Their Retreats, s.v. “Liberty, Goddess of.”

  1. From the poem “The New Colossus,” by Emma Lazarus, inscribed on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty.
  2. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, “Santa Filomena,” Stanza 10.
  3. The Goddess of Liberty, “The Awakening,” Pearls of Wisdom 1986, Book Two, p. 7.
  4. The Goddess of Liberty, Liberty Proclaims (1975), pp. 13, 15–16.
  5. Goddess of Liberty, December 6, 1979.