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    The fact that “anointing oil” is mentioned is highly suspicious to me and makes me think there is a secret being conveyed, relating to the mushroom. (14)

    The Mormons, a branch of Freemasonry as Joseph Smith was a Mason, have their own Melchizedek. This blurb appears on the official Mormon website: “Through the authority of the Melchizedek Priesthood, Church leaders guide the Church and direct the preaching of the gospel throughout the world. In the ordinances of the Melchizedek Priesthood, “the power of godliness is manifest.” (D&C 84:20). This greater priesthood was given to Adam and has been on the earth whenever the Lord has revealed His gospel. It was taken from the earth during the Great Apostasy, but it was restored in 1829, when the Apostles Peter, James, and John conferred it upon Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery.” (15) So, it’s official that the Mormons and the Masons both have their Orders of Melchizedek. Is this important? We’ll see.

    The UFO Message of Salvation

    One of the things Vallee comments on, which I had noticed in my youth as well, early on in my studies, was the overtones of totalitarianism that are brought out in UFO channeled writings. Paris Flammod, in his Age of the Flying Saucers notes the same thing. (16) In fact, it’s not just totalitarian concepts that are imparted, but along with these ideas that are being delivered are at least four main areas of ideas that are assumed. It is assumed that humans cannot solve their own problems so therefore UFO occupants must intervene. Vallee puts it this way: “[there is the] widespread belief that human beings are incapable of solving their own problems, and that extraterrestrial intervention is imperative to save us “in spite of ourselves.” The danger in such a philosophy is that it makes its believers dependent on outside forces and discourages personal responsibility: why should we worry about the problems around us, if the Gods from Outer Space are about to solve them for us?”

    Next is the idea of “superiority” of some earthlings to others who are less important. There is a steady stream of racist messages that are being conveyed to the contactee at times. The occupants may be Blond haired, blue-eyed “saviors” who have told the contactee that they descend from and constitute a “higher race” of beings.

    The next idea that is maintained is that of “technical impotence” as Vallee calls it, which assumed that mankind cannot have possibly done all the things that we have figured out how to do, for thousands of years on earth without the help of some off-planet intelligence greater than our own. It assumes that “Ancient Engineers” helped us every step of the way and we are therefore dependent on them for our help and survival if we are to ever “evolve.” And last but not least, the idea of “social utopia” being possible to achieve if we can all just agree to a “one world government.” “World economies” have been proposed, “world governments” have been suggested, and the “channel people” appear to have a vested interest in the way we conduct our political affairs.

      At one point in Vallee’s research and studies he attended a meeting of the Urantia group. I have never considered the channeling phenomenon to be “true,” but I believed it was some form of mind control. Vallee helped confirm that for me as well. Vallee attended a meeting in San Francisco, the subject of which was “The Thought Adjusters.” Writes Vallee: “In the extremely complex cosmology of Urantia, they come from other worlds to live in our brains. They influence our actions by subtle sabotage of our physical and chemical functions!”

    At the beginning of the lecture the “Higher Masters” were discussed and how Dr. William Sadler, a surgeon, became interested in mediumship, and how he had written a book condemning most forms of mediumship as being based upon nothing more than “suggestion.” However, he had found two exceptions, a man and a woman, both of whom he believed to be genuine. Further research revealed Sadler had written a book titled The Physiology of Faith and Fear in 1920, and he had been a Professor of Physiologic therapy at the University of Chicago Medical School and Director of the Chicago Institute of Physiological Therapeutics. Sadler made a revealing statement that gave insight into his thinking when he wrote: “We are now passing through a period of popular reaction against the scientific materialism of the last century. The common people are awakening to the fact that the mental state has much to do with bodily health and disease. The bookmakers, in their efforts to satisfy the universal demand for teaching on various phases of mental healing, have flooded us with literature, much of which is premature, unscientific, incomplete, and highly disastrous in its misleading influence upon the popular minds and morals.”

    Vallee comments: “Dr. Sadler goes on to condemn charms, relics and shrines, various forms of quackery, astrology, palmistry, crystal gazing, trances, and catalepsy.” Then the quoting returns to Sadler: “It is not uncommon for persons in a cataleptic trance to imagine themselves taking trips to other words. In fact, the wonderous accounts of their experiences, which they write out after these cataleptic attacks are over, are so unique and marvelous as to serve as the basis for founding new sects, cults, and religions.” (17)

    This is precisely what Vallee had said earlier, and I’m confident Vallee came to this conclusion on his own because when this information is investigated closely, many people arrive at the same conclusions. Summarizing this, Vallee had found that Sadler had looked into the Urantia book and its “channel” and concluded that not only was it real, but it lends itself to manipulation of the mindset of those who have lost faith in science.


(14)https://www.brad.ac.uk/webofhiram/?
section=york_rite&page=Grandhighp.html
(15) https://www.lds.org/topics/melchizedek-priesthood?lang=eng
(16) Messengers, p. 112
(17) Messengers, p. 136-38; Sadler, Physiology of Faith and Fear, Preface

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