The Hidden Adept and the Inward Vision
$20.00
Includes teachings and spiritual techniques, insights into the development of the modern Glastonbury Mythos, a chapter on the influence of J.A. Goodchild, a chapter on the complex relationship between A.R. Heaver and Wellesley Tudor-Pole, and (Part Two) A.R. Heaver’s teachings on the Star Temple or “GlastonburyZodiac.”
The Hidden Adept and the InnerVision, The Story of Ronald Heaver,Polly Wood and the Sanctuary ofAvalon including A.R. Heaver and the Star Temple or GlastonburyZodiac by R.J. Stewart
“In 1934 it was my task to re-activate the Light at the Garden Tomb of Joseph of Arimathea inJerusalem; in 1936 at Aurolzmünster in Austria, the major magnetic center in Europe, and in 1948 at Livingstone in the heart of Darkest Africa.”
The Hidden Adept tells the remarkable story ofAlfred Ronald Heaver (Zadok), his partner PollyWood, and their influence on the spiritual revival of the 20th century.
Shot down during the First World War, Ronald received disabling spinal injuries. Within a few years he had cured his paralysis by “unorthodox methods,” working with spiritual Fire according to an ancient alchemical Kabbalistic method. The inscription on his tombstone tells the secret.
In 1934 Ronald Heaver buried a thaumaturgic talisman in the Garden Tomb, Jerusalem, earthing a spiritual power “to bind Apollyon”, the demonic consciousness arising in Europe as Hitler came to power. This astonishing story is told here for the first time.
In 1936 He was in Austria, investigating a revolutionary new kind of physics for the British NavyIntelligence service. The story is told here for the first time from his own files and documents recently found in the Austrian State Archives.
By the 1950’s Ronald and Polly had opened the Sanctuary of Avalon, a sanctuary of silence nearGlastonbury, attuned to the Divine Name. Together they mediated the spiritual energy of this dedicated place for more than twenty years. Its legacy continues today.
The Hidden Adept and the Inner Vision includes teachings and spiritual techniques, insights into the development of the modern Glastonbury Mythos, a chapter on the influence of J.A. Goodchild, a chapter on the complex relationship between A.R. Heaver and Wellesley Tudor-Pole, and (Part Two)A.R. Heaver’s teachings on the Star Temple or “Glastonbury Zodiac”.
Illustrations include a previously unpublished sketch of a goddess, by Frederick Bligh Bond, from1908. 255 pages, 12 illustrations, 3 astrological charts, Index. R J Stewart Books: