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Emissaries of Divine Light

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Emissaries of Divine Light is a global spiritual network of people from all walks of life initiated by Lloyd Arthur Meeker in 1932.[1] The foundational premise of the network is that human beings are divine by nature, and that their true qualities can only be known as they are expressed in daily living.[2] The mission of Emissaries of Divine Light, as cited in its articles of incorporation, is to assist in the spiritual regeneration of humanity under the inspiration of the spirit of God.[3] Meeker saw the work of the Emissaries as the Third Sacred School, an approach to spirituality that transcends physical and mental disciplines, and offers human beings the opportunity to experience their true identity by giving spiritual expression that is consonant with their divine nature.[4]

History

Beginnings

Lloyd Arthur Meeker was born on February 25, 1907.[5] Meeker had begun to experiment with Attunement in 1929.[6] Emissaries of Divine Light dates its origin to Meeker’s spiritual awakening on September 16, 1932. On three successive evenings, Meeker had been compelled to write and, as he did so, he experienced a higher spiritual awareness that flowed through him. He reported that he had been looking for a teacher but realized through his awakening that the teacher he sought was within him.[7]

Meeker lectured, taught, and practiced Attunement in various locations in North America from 1929 to 1945.[8] He wrote under the pen name Uranda, and he was known to his followers by that name. In 1945 Meeker established his headquarters at Sunrise Ranch, which was a dryland farm at the time.[9] From 1952 to 1954 he conducted six-month Servers Training School classes at Sunrise Ranch, teaching Attunement and the spiritual understanding behind the practice, as well as practical spirituality.[10][11] These classes were attended by people from many backgrounds, and included GPC (God-Patient-Chiropractor) chiropractors, led by a former Major League Baseball pitcher, George Shears, and others.[12]

In 1954 Meeker died in a plane crash in San Francisco Bay with his wife, Kathy Meeker. A close associate of Meeker’s, Albert Ackerley, and two children also died in the crash.[13] Martin Cecil, who had worked closely with Meeker, assumed the responsibility for leading Emissaries of Divine Light from 1954 until his death in 1988.[13]

Development under Martin Cecil's leadership

Lord Martin Cecil was the second son of William Cecil, 5th Marquess of Exeter and descended from William Cecil, chief advisor to Queen Elizabeth I.[14][15] He led a ranching operation on his family’s property in the Cariboo country of British Columbia.[16] In 1948 Cecil formed a spiritual community at 100 Mile House, BC.[17] On the death of his brother, David Cecil, in 1981, he became the 7th Marquess of Exeter and a member of the House of Lords of the United Kingdom but never spoke in the House.[18]

Under Cecil’s leadership, the network grew to about 4,000 adherents.[19] Many young people, disenchanted with the Vietnam War and inspired by the idealism of the 1960s and ’70s, were drawn to his message and the network that was growing around him. Twelve centers developed around the world, and numerous other nonprofit organizations were birthed by participants in Emissaries of Divine Light.[20] These included an outdoor adventure educational organization, Educo; an association of spiritually based business people, Renaissance Business Associates; an association of media professionals, Association for Responsible Communication; an association of educators, Renaissance Educational Associates; and Emissary Foundation International.[21][22][23][24]

Bill Bahan became an important leader and teacher for Emissaries of Divine Light in the ’60s, ’70s and early ’80s, offering classes at Sunrise Ranch; Epping, New Hampshire;[20] and Livingston Manor, New York.[25] He was a nephew of George Shears, D.C., leader of the G-P-C Chiropractic Movement. He and his brother Walter Bahan (also active in the Emissary program), along with three other brothers (all five chiropractors), operated the Bahan and Bahan Chiropractic Clinic in Salem and Derry, New Hampshire, using GPC principles.[26] Bill founded the Whole Health Institute, an association of healthcare professionals promoting wholistic health.[27][28] They hosted conferences and lectures around the world, and published the journal Healing Currents. In Bill's words, "Health is the unhindered expression of life through the body, truth through the mind and love through the heart."

Transition after Martin Cecil's death

When Martin Cecil died in 1988, his son, Michael Cecil, became the leader of Emissaries of Divine Light until he left the organization in 1996.[29] In that eight-year period, much of the leadership left the organization, including most of the children of Lloyd Arthur Meeker and Martin Cecil, who had been prominent in the network. From 1988 to 1996, more than two thirds of the participants in Emissaries of Divine Light left as well.[19][29] Many ex-members became bitter about their experience and launched accusations against the organization.[30][31]

As Michael Cecil resigned from his position in 1996, a group of trustees assumed responsibility for the leadership of the network. They set in place ethical guidelines throughout the network and addressed grievances brought to them by participants. They sought to bring the universal truths taught by Lloyd Arthur Meeker into contemporary language and practice.

Recent history

In the 1990s, Emissaries of Divine Light developed new programs for spiritual understanding and personal development. Deepening Spiritual Expression and The Opening are week-long residential programs that are still offered by the organization.[32] They also developed Attunement Practitioner certification training, which is available at many Emissary centers.

In August 2004, the trustees of Emissaries of Divine Light named David Karchere as the leader of the global network. In 2008, David Karchere and Jane Anetrini developed and taught a year-long Leadership Program based on the teachings of Emissaries of Divine Light. A second session of the program was conducted in 2009 and 2010.[33] In 2012 they initiated a new series of seminars under the title Practical Spirituality: An Operator’s Guide to Being Human, led by David Karchere.[34]

Sunrise Ranch

The headquarters of Emissaries of Divine Light was established in 1945 at Sunrise Ranch in Loveland, Colorado, now a conference and retreat center staffed by a community of eighty-five people.[35][36] Sunrise Ranch hosts workshops, seminars and retreats intended to offer the participants fresh thinking and understanding, leading to a direct experience of spiritual renewal.[37] There are seven other major centers around the world for Emissaries of Divine Light, each offering programs with a similar approach.[19]

Sunrise Ranch also offers residential work-study programs in practical spirituality, which it defines as the application of universal spiritual principles to the common issues of human life.[38] These include a program designed for personal spiritual renewal, called Full Self Emergence, and a Permaculture Design Course for people interested in sustainable human systems and sustainable agriculture.[37][39]

Creative Field Project

The trustees of Emissaries of Divine Light lead the Creative Field Project.[40] The project is an exploration of the power of human intention to influence the field of energy held by a group of people. The Creative Field Project began in 2009 with a network of small groups around the world that meet monthly by telephone. It included the first Creative Field Conference in 2011 at Sunrise Ranch that featured Lynne McTaggart, who wrote The Field; and American priest and theologian Matthew Fox.[41] In 2012, Emissaries of Divine Light joined with the Novalis Ubuntu Institute in Cape Town, South Africa, to host the Creative Field Conference—South Africa: Your Destiny Is Calling.[42]

Teaching and practices

Emissaries of Divine Light teach that the key to creative living is the individual’s openness to the source of universal power and intelligence within them, and that human emotions either connect a person to that source or cut them off from it.[43] The educational programs of the Emissaries are designed to assist people to find out what has been emotionally triggering them, so that they can withdraw their emotional attention from the trigger and turn it to the life force within them.[44] The Emissaries believe that behind all emotions is the universal power of love and a universal intelligence that bring spiritual enlightenment. They teach that through deliberate conscious thought a person can let their own emotional current purify, so that they open themselves to the flow of the universal power and intelligence within them.[45]

The One Law

The central teaching of Emissaries of Divine Light is referred to as The One Law. They describe it as a law of cause and effect.[46] They see the causative factor in spiritual regeneration as the universal power and intelligence within all people, and the effect in human experience as dependent on the response to that internal reality.[47] They describe the creative process in human experience as the working of The One Law in a sequence of five stages: radiation, response, attraction, union and unified radiation.[48] Their seminars claim to assist people to withdraw their energetic response from the circumstances around them and direct it to the power and intelligence within them.[49]

Emissaries of Divine Light describe the process of personal spiritual renewal as Full Self Emergence because they believe that a person is renewed when their own divine selfhood expresses through their mind, emotions and their body.[50] They use the story of the Seven Days of Creation in Genesis as a symbolic template for the process of spiritual renewal in the life of the individual, and for humankind as a whole.[51]

Attunement

Attunement is a central practice of Emissaries of Divine Light. The origin of the word Attunement refers to the attuning of the human capacity with the universal animating spirit within all people.[52] Attunement practitioners believe that positive shifts in consciousness release a healing energy through a person’s body, mind and emotions.[53]

Emissaries of Divine Light practice Attunement as a form of energy medicine.[54] Attunement practitioners believe that universal life energy is conveyed to the client through the hands of the practitioner. The primary contact points for the client receiving the Attunement are the endocrine glands. Attunement practitioners teach that the endocrine glands are portals for universal life energy that operates through the physical body, and through the mental and emotional function of the individual.[55]

Emissaries of Divine Light also teach Attunement as a personal spiritual practice.[56] They believe it is a central factor in the conscious evolution of humanity.[57]

Leadership

Emissaries of Divine Light is led by David Karchere, who is the spiritual director of the organization, and six other trustees.[58] Karchere lives, writes and teaches at Sunrise Ranch, and travels in North America, Europe, Africa and Australia, offering programs on practical spirituality and Attunement.

The trustees are elected by an International Emissary Congress with representatives from Emissary organizations around the world. Currently, the trustees are Jane Anetrini, Ruth Buckingham, Cliffe Connor, Hugh Duff, David Karchere, Phil Richardson and Maureen Waller.[59]

Major centers

In addition to their international headquarters at Sunrise Ranch, Emissaries of Divine Light operates Glen Ivy in Corona, California. Glen Ivy is a conference and retreat center and an Attunement teaching center. Glen Ivy is also a natural mineral springs. The Emissaries lease the mineral springs and the spa property, which is adjacent to their center, to Glen Ivy Hot Springs, a popular destination in Southern California.[60]

These are the major centers for Emissaries of Divine Light around the world:[38]

Edenvale, Abbottsford, British Columbia, Canada

Gate House, Constantia, South Africa

Glen Ivy, Corona, California, USA[61]

Joyville, Jeju Island, South Korea[62]

Rainbow Farm, Selma, Indiana, USA[63][64][65]

Riverdell, Gawler, South Australia, Australia

Still Meadow, Clackamas, Oregon, USA

Sunrise Ranch, Loveland, Colorado, USA[66]

Publications

Beginning in the 1930s, Emissaries of Divine Light have continually published their writings and teachings and circulated these to their membership. In 1936, Lloyd A. Meeker published his seven-week meditation guide, Seven Steps to the Temple of Light, as well as his correspondence course, Steps to Mastership.[67][68] In the 1980s, Martin Cecil published eighteen volumes of his own writing and the writings of Lloyd Meeker under the title The Third Sacred School.[69]

For most of its history, weekly talks and writings of Emissary leadership have been distributed by regular mail. Since 2005, the organization has circulated a weekly e-mail message, The Pulse of Spirit, authored by David Karchere and other current leaders of the network.[70] In 2010 they began to publish the Journal of the Creative Field.

References

  1. ^ Miller, Timothy (2005). Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature. New York, NY: Continuum International Publishers. p. 595. ISBN 1847062733.
  2. ^ Cecil, Martin (1968). As of a Trumpet. Loveland, Colorado: Eden Valley Press. p. 13.
  3. ^ "Emissaries of Divine Light -- About Us". Emissaries of Divine Light. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  4. ^ Cecil, Martin (1977). The Third Sacred School. Loveland, Colorado: Emissaries of Divine Light. pp. 291–295.
  5. ^ Van Duzen, Grace (1996). The Vibrational Ark. Loveland, Colorado: Eden Valley Press. pp. 1, 2. ISBN 0-932869-05-X.
  6. ^ Layne, Laurence (2008). Keepers of the Flame: A History of Attunement. St. Augustine, Florida: Health Light Publishing Company. p. 19. ISBN 0-9771193-3-5.
  7. ^ Van Duzen, Grace (1996). The Vibrational Ark. Loveland, Colorado: Eden Valley Press. pp. 13–15. ISBN 0-932869-05-X.
  8. ^ Layne, Laurence (2008). Keepers of the Flame: A History of Attunement. St. Augustine, Florida: Health Light Publishing Company. pp. 14–28. ISBN 0-9771193-3-5.
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  25. ^ Lyons, Richard D. (July 25, 1981). "Catskills Rewakening After a Long Sleep". New York Times. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
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  27. ^ Wilkinson, Bill (1986). Attunement With Life. Loveland, Colorado: Eden Valley Press, Inc. p. 27. ISBN 0-932869-05-X.
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  29. ^ a b Todd, Douglas (September 29, 2003). "Leader left Divine Light behind him". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  30. ^ Cummings, Michael. "Tale of Two Communes: A Scholar and His Errors". Fellowship for Intentional Community. Retrieved May 15, 2015.
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  44. ^ Cecil, Martin (1993). The Third Sacred School, Vol. 14, The Oneness of Heaven and Earth. Loveland, Colorado: Emissaries of Divine Light. pp. 105–110.
  45. ^ Karchere, David. "The Kingdom Within". Emissaries of Divine Light. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
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  52. ^ Henderson, Jaclyn Stein. The Healing Power of Attunement Therapy: Stories and Practice. New Delhi, India: New Dawn: A Division of Sterling Publishers (P) Ltd. p. 21. ISBN 81 207 2442 9.
  53. ^ Wilkinson, Bill (1986). Attunement With Life. Loveland, Colorado: Eden Valley Press, Inc. pp. 25, 26. ISBN 0-932869-05-X.
  54. ^ Laurence, Layne (2006). The Spiritual Nature of the Physical Body. St. Augustine, Florida: Health Light Publishing Company. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-9771193-0-1.
  55. ^ Laurence, Layne (2006). The Spiritual Nature of the Physical Body. St. Augustine, Florida: Health Light Publishing Company. pp. 61–72. ISBN 978-0-9771193-0-1.
  56. ^ "The Attunement Guild". Emissaries of Divine Light. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  57. ^ Meeker, Lloyd A. (1985). The Third Sacred School, Vol. 7, Health Healing and Attunements Part 1. Loveland, Colorado: Emissaries of Divine Light. pp. 367–370.
  58. ^ "David Karchere". Emissaries of Divine Light. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  59. ^ "Emissaries of Divine Light Leadership". Emissaries of Divine Light. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  60. ^ Colby, Anne (May 9, 2010). "The Venerable: Glen Ivy Hot Springs Spa". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  61. ^ Foster, Chris (1989). One Heart, One Way. Denver, Colorado: Foundation House Publications, Inc. p. 217. ISBN 0-921790-00-7.
  62. ^ Geun, Yang Ho (January 2, 2011). "There's just a certain something about Jeju". The Jeju Weekly. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  63. ^ "Rainbow Farm". Fellowship for International Community. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  64. ^ Miller, Timothy (1999). The 60s Communes: Hippies and Beyond. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. p. 277. ISBN 0-8156-2811-0.
  65. ^ "Oakwood Conference and Retreat Center". Emissaries of Divine Light. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  66. ^ "Sunday Service at Sunrise Ranch". Coloradoan. Weekly. Retrieved May 15, 2012. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  67. ^ Meeker, Lloyd A. (2010). Seven Steps to the Temple of Light. Loveland, Colorado: Emissaries of Divine Light. ISBN 978-0-932869-08-1.
  68. ^ Meeker, Lloyd A. (1936). Steps to Mastership. https://emissaries.org/db/edl/store.php: Emissaries of Divine Light. {{cite book}}: External link in |location= (help)
  69. ^ Meeker and Cecil (1980–1991). The Third Sacred School, Volumes 1-18. Loveland, Colorado: Emissaries of Divine Light.
  70. ^ "The Pulse of Spirit". Emissaries of Divine Light. Retrieved May 15, 2012.