Thursday, February 3, 2022

Most real prophets tend to be epileptics or Catatonics: (there are other categories like this of prophets the last several thousand years too).

I found this article about Elizabeth Clare Prophet written in 1999 near where she lived in Montana. I was surprised to find out that she dealt with epileptic seizures most of her life which when I think about it isn't surprising to me. I also had epileptic types of night time seizures from age 10 to 15 years old caused by a concussion around age 8 or 9 that was never treated medically when I fell while rock climbing with my father and hit my head. Luckily, my problem resolved itself when my skull grew and released the pressure upon my brain by age 15. This is why this often is called "Childhood epilepsy" because it is the only type that goes away by adulthood.

I joined the Summit University as a student in the  Archangel Gabriel and Hope's quarter which was in Winter of 1977 and later went on staff there in the computer department working on the computer  mainframe which also had many dumb terminals at that time for a few months. However, my son got whooping cough and I needed to move to San Diego to take care of him and so left staff then in Spring of 1978.

So, this article clears up a lot of question I had. For example, I wondered if her twins she had in her 50s both survived and one did who is called "Seth" so he was about 4 years old when Elizabeth was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and retired in later 1999. She then passed away in 2009. I first met her on the beach in Del Mar, California in 1975 when I lived in Rancho Bernardo through friends of mine then. Rancho Bernardo is within about 1/2 hours drive from Del Mar, California and she did have one of her churches in Del Mar at that time too.

The apocalyptic nature of her teachings at times makes more sense to me when I hear that she was having regular epileptic seizures. There is what is called an "Aura" which is very terrifying to endure which is a feeling that you are about to be murdered when you are near to having a seizure. So, within this context thinking that "The world is going to end soon" would make sense to someone having an aura before a seizure. I personally found that having a night time seizure was very similar to being murdered each time. It is something that I was always amazed that I had survived each one as a child because it is about as traumatic as being murdered is psychologically and when you get past 30 seizures are often fatal because people will suffer heart attacks or strokes often during a full seizure because it is so rough on your brain and body.




begin quote from:

https://www.hcn.org/issues/150/4852

A biography of Prophet's most recent life

  • "GURU MA": Elizabeth Clare Prophet

 

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue's feature story.

Guru Ma's got troubles. Lots of them.

At the age of 59, she has both a preschool child and Alzheimer's disease.

All four of her adult children have turned their back on the Church Universal and Triumphant, the institution she spent almost 40 years building. Three of them have publicly criticized her church and the way she ran it. One even calls it a "dangerous cult."

Her fourth marriage has crumbled.

By summer, she'll be out of a $96,000-a-year job, although church officials have agreed to pay her a $67,000 annual retirement package.

A judge must decide who will make her legal, financial and business decisions in the future. Another judge may have to decide whether she retains partial custody of her fifth child, 4-year-old Seth.

And the world isn't out of hot water yet. Though she has choked back the alarmist tone of statements she made 10 years ago, her recent prophecies said that apocalypse still could be just around the corner. It all depends on how people behave.

"The coming age, the Aquarian Age, can be a time of turmoil, war and even cataclysm," Elizabeth Clare Prophet said last November, three days before doctors told her of the Alzheimer's disease. "Or it can be a time of tremendous spiritual and technological progress."

She says she has lived hundreds of lifetimes. "I believe that my preparations for my life's call had been ongoing for a number of embodiments and that this lifetime was to be the culmination of my soul's tutoring in the universal mysteries of Christ," Prophet said in a church promotional brochure.

Born Elizabeth Clare Wulf on April 8, 1939, in Long Branch, N.J., to a World War I German U-boat captain and his Swiss wife, Prophet grew up being called Betty. She says she had her first metaphysical experience as a small child; while playing in a sandbox, she suddenly remembered doing the same thing thousands of years earlier along the banks of the Nile.

Though she denied it for years, she now admits she has suffered most of her life from epileptic seizures, a condition that has worsened in recent years. She told her followers about her Alzheimer's disease on New Year's Day, at a conference in Miami. A few weeks later, she announced plans to retire this summer.

Her first marriage, at the age of 20, was to Dag Ytreburg, a Norwegian-born lawyer. It ended a year later, after she met Mark Prophet, a former traveling salesman 19 years her senior, married and the founder of what was then called The Summit Lighthouse. Within two years, Mark Prophet, too, divorced, leaving behind his five children by his first wife, and he married Elizabeth on March 16, 1963.

They had met before, Elizabeth says, in Arthurian Camelot. She was Guinevere and Mark was Lancelot.

The union produced four children; Sean, now 34 and a video producer in Los Angeles; Erin, 33, a writer in Bozeman, Mont.; Moira, 30, a marketing executive in Los Angeles; and Tatiana, 27, a graduate student in Georgia.

Mark taught Elizabeth to take "dictations': Dozens of Ascended Masters ranging from Buddha to Jesus to K 17 (head of the "cosmic secret service') have spoken through her mouth on subjects ranging from reincarnation to global politics.

The Ascended Masters, she says, are "extensions of God." They speak only through her, according to CUT doctrine, and they have done so more than 2,000 times. She sometimes closes her eyes during a dictation, or looks serenely at the crowd before her, often with her hands to her temples, bent slightly at the waist. Her voice raises in pitch and takes on a nasal tone. "The energy ... is stupendous," she told an interviewer in 1989. "It is exhilarating."

After living in Washington, D.C., for several years, the Prophets moved their growing church to Colorado Springs, Colo., where Mark died suddenly of a stroke in 1973. According to the church, he is now considered an Ascended Master called Lanello, a combination of the names Lancelot and Longfellow, two of his previous lives.

Prophet's followers call her Mother or Guru Ma. Her other titles include Vicar of Christ, Messenger, Mother of the Flame.

A few months after Mark's death, Prophet married an aide, the former Randall Kosp, who had changed his name to King. The church grew rapidly in the 1970s and moved to Santa Barbara, and then Malibu, where it purchased a former private college that church members renamed Camelot.

The marriage to King ended in a bitter 1980 divorce. King has said he no longer follows the church's teachings but he believes that Prophet believes in them. "She honestly thinks she's doing it for the greater good of mankind," King said in 1990.

Prophet married Ed Francis, 11 years her junior, in 1981. In 1994, when Prophet was 55 years old, she bore a son, Seth Thomas Francis. Prophet and Francis divorced in 1998 and the child spends time with both parents.

Many CUT members remain devoted to her every word and credit her with bringing them spiritual enlightenment, taking them closer to God, showing them the pathway to ascension. They believe she has the power to tell people who they were in past lives, and they compare her to biblical prophets of the Old Testament. Others, including her daughter Moira, are less kind. They say she's a hypocrite, a megalomaniac and a manipulator.

Among some, distrust runs so deep that they scoff when she says she has Alzheimer's.

"I don't buy it," said former member Peter Arnone, adding that it could be a stunt designed to keep her from testifying in potential lawsuits filed by ex-members. Her doctors and family members say that Arnone's assertions couldn't be further from the sad truth. People close to her say the disease is in its moderate stage.

"In any conversation of length, you realize that there's something lacking," said one associate.

A Montana judge has been asked to decide soon who will become her guardian. Church vice president Murray Steinman is Prophet's choice. Sean, Erin and Moira Prophet, however, are fighting that move in court, saying Steinman has a conflict of interest and that they can do a better job.

The disease may have been worsening for the last five years, according to the Prophet children. The Alzheimer's diagnosis "helped to explain some of the difficulties we have had in our relationships in the 1990s," Sean, Erin and Moira Prophet wrote in an open letter to church members earlier this year.

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