About the Author
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Sylvia Browne was a psychic and the #1 New York
Times bestselling author of End of Days, Blessings from the Other
Side, Adventures of a Psychic, The Other Side and Back, and Life
on the Other Side.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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“Sylvia Browne gave me a psychic reading that was so accurate and
profoundly moving it changed my entire outlook on the possibility
of life after death.”
—Melvin L. Morse, M.D., author of Transformed by the Light and
Closer to the Light
“[A] down-to-earth approach to the supernatural . . . ample fare
for readers with a taste for comfortable excursions to the other
side.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Providing exercises designed to call up to a personal Spirit
Guide and past-life history, Browne spawns a sense of
exhilaration about being here and eases much of the fear about
being there.”
—NAPRA ReView
“Sylvia Browne is more than a psychic—she is a master at
conveying the truth that exists in the fourth dimension.”
—Caroline Myss, Ph.D., author of Anatomy of the Spirit
“A Fodor’s guide to the Beyond: how to get there, what to expect,
how to get back to Earth. Readers will be delighted . . . Browne
offers a comforting view of the other side.”
—Booklist
“So what is the secret of staying y and happy in this life?
Understanding past lives, argues bestselling psychic Browne, who
gives us some special guidance here.”
—Library Journal
“Possibly the most famous psychic in the world. [Sylvia Browne]
is very good.”
—Mystic Living Today
Also by
Sylvia Browne
In
Phenomenon
Prophecy
Visits from the Afterlife
Sylvia Browne’s Book of Dreams
Past Lives, Future Healing
Blessings from the Other Side
Life on the Other Side
The Other Side and Back
Adventures of a Psychic
SYLVIA BROWNE
The
MYSTICAL LIFE
of
JESUS
An Uncommon Perspective on the Life of Christ
Dearest Lord, look past the blindness of our eyes.
And help us see truth as the aeons of time flies.
The values you taught reside in our soul.
Let the lessons of life, to love God be our goal.
Walk with us, Lord, through the harshness of life.
And smooth over all the innumerable strife.
I ask your blessing from God for everyone.
Especially since He in greatness sent His beloved son.
To my readers . . . bless you, everyone.
Preface
IT IS VERY HARD sometimes to describe oneself, but as many of you
know, I am what the world calls a psychic. I was born in Kansas
City, Missouri, in 1936 and inherited my psychic gifts from my
beloved grandmother and a long list of ancestors who had psychic
abilities that go back more than three hundred years. In my youth
I was tested many times by doctors and scientists, and they all
came to the conclusion that I had very distinct paranormal
abilities. They would throw terms at me such as clairvoyant,
precognitive, clairaudient, prophet, sensitive and trance medium.
While I more or less knew the definitions of these words, as a
young woman I really didn’t understand them that well, especially
as they pertained to me. I just thought that maybe I was nuts or
mentally ill.
As a young girl I would sense things, see things and hear things
and sometimes they were very frightening to me. If it had not
been for my grandmother Ada, I just think that I would have gone
into a shell and locked myself out from the world. As it turned
out, with my grandmother’s loving counsel (and much, I’m sure, to
the chagrin of my parents) . . . I didn’t. I was nothing if not a
handful—very precocious, outgoing, loud, energetic and
incessantly asking questions and talking. My constant talking got
me into trouble more times than not, as I would sense things and
just blurt them out to family or even complete strangers. I
really couldn’t understand why my her would bury his face in
his hands or why my mother would turn and yell at my her to do
something with me. I’m sure it was hard on my family to raise me,
for I would consistently do things that would embarrass them.
Some may have seen my behavior as “cute” or “charming,” but I am
sure others would have just seen me as a little “brat.”
I was eight years old when my spirit guide, Francine, first made
contact with me. To hear the words “I come from God and you have
nothing to fear” when no one was there was quite terrifying, and
I immediately ran to my grandmother screaming. From that time on
my gift of clairaudience has never left, and Francine would give
counsel and solace to me many times over the years. She said to
me in the beginning that she would not help me with my own
abilities, as they needed to develop on their own, and to this
day she does not help me with my private readings or in answering
questions from audiences or groups when I do lectures.
I first became aware of my trance mediumship ability while taking
a class on hypnosis in my late teens. Fortunately, I was with a
few close friends whom I had grown up with and already had talked
to them about Francine. The teacher started a group hypnosis
exercise on the class, and I went under easily. Then, for the
first time, Francine came into my body. She quickly introduced
herself to my astonished friends and gave them a few tidbits of
information so they would be convinced it was not me. When I came
back to consciousness, my friends quickly informed me of what had
happened and I instantly became infuriated. I was confused, angry
and frightened. Francine immediately began talking to me to calm
me down. She logically explained that she had to do this to show
me my trance mediumship ability and that it was not harmful in
any way. She knew I would never have allowed her to do it
otherwise. The truth be told, she was probably right, as I was
already in the mind-set that I could possibly be crazy. We made a
pact that day that she would never enter into my body in trance
again without my permission . . . and she never has.
As most of you know, I have written many books on a variety of
subjects dealing with spirituality and God and the paranormal.
Much of the information in these books was heretofore unknown and
comes from research trances with Francine. Over the years she has
given me information that I have had transcribed into thousands
of pages. Some of this information is very controversial and has
caused me, as well as others, to research extensively for
verification, as I have always been what I call an “open-minded
skeptic.” Most of the time I have been able to verify in varying
degrees the information she has given me. Sometimes I cannot due
to a lack of substantial documentation. I have found that many
times it is a crapshoot at best because the farther you go back
in time or history, the more obscure documentation becomes. You
find yourself dealing with legends, myths, corruption, lies,
deceit and traditions. So it is not always easy to verify her
information. Much of what we think of as truth (historical or
otherwise) has so many potential holes for untruth, you sometimes
scratch your head in wonder as to why it is considered truth in
the first place. This is especially relevant when you are
researching and trying to get confirmation on religious subject
matter.
Religion is so subjective and so steeped in traditional and
historical beliefs that it is hard to discern and separate truth
from fiction in many cases. Add to that the fact that all the
major religions have bloody histories of corruption and schisms
and holy wars, with different sects and factions constantly
rising and falling, and you have the proverbial confusing and
bewildering murky mess. Thank God that numerous scholars and
writers and historians are taking a new interest in various
religions, especially Christianity. With new discoveries being
made in archaeology and with books like The Da Vinci Code by Dan
Brown coming out, it has sparked a renaissance over the many
controversies that have remained unanswered in Christianity and
other religions.
With that in mind, when my publisher called me and asked me to
write a book on Jesus Christ and his life, I was stunned into
disbelief and silence. I am nothing if not controversial already
and my publisher wants me to write a book on our Lord? Being a
Gnostic Christian, I am already considered heretical by most, but
this assignment would really bring out the critics and skeptics
and would be a daunting and often frightening task.
I then thought about my life for a bit. I had dedicated my life
to God and to bringing forth the truth about our Creator by
trying to help others through my books, my counseling and my
lectures. I most surely have my faults, but I have tried to live
a good life by helping others as much as I could. Would doing
this book jeopardize all that I have tried to do for them? With
what I know and believe, I would have to tell the truth as I know
it, and that truth will create an inevitable
controversy . . . but then, isn’t that why I am here?
I have given my life to teaching and nurturing others, to helping
people in any way I can for God. To write about such a holy
figure as Jesus Christ may be madness on my part, but it would be
an even greater madness to not put forth the truth about him and
his works for God so that people can better understand his
teachings and from whence he came. To that end, this book
contains verifiable truths, and where verification is not
possible, it contains logical and truthful information from my
spirit guide, Francine. In the more than sixty years of knowing
and working with her, I have never found her to be untruthful in
any way, and she brings with her the wisdom and knowledge of the
Other Side.
In this book you will find many things that will “rattle your
cage,” “rock your boat” and “shake your tree” . . . in other
words there are many things about Christ’s life that I know to be
true that fly in the face of the traditional teachings of
Christianity. But truth is truth and you can feel it tangibly
within your soul if you open yourself up to it. Close off from
truth or don’t acknowledge it and you will find yourself a slave
to the powers of deception and lies and your soul will
spiritually suffer. Christ said, “The truth will make you free”
(John 8:31); but you have to accept the truth for it to make you
free. I’m as free as a bird flying on the four winds . . . are
you?
CHAPTER 1
Birth and Childhood
THE LIFE OF Jesus Christ has been a topic of more books than
anyone could count, let alone read. What I propose to do in this
book is to give you real and researched facts according to the
latest findings of scholars as well as information from the Other
Side by my guide, Francine. In many cases they agree and in some
cases they disagree; but the information will be put forth
objectively so that the reader can come to his or her own
conclusions. Much of the information from Francine is more than
thirty years old and has been kept in safekeeping until the time
was right for its release. Let me preface the following
information right now so that there is no confusion—by no means
is any information given in this book meant to ever discredit the
divinity of our Lord. I have always and still do believe in the
divinity of Jesus Christ, and none of the information put forth
in this book in my opinion threatens that.
I just think it’s timely to not only show the true story of
Christ and his mission, but also how he lived and died as well as
the true message he wanted to bring. In the telling of Christ’s
life, we will not just touch upon the three years of his life
that most people know about, but we will also address the “lost
years” of Jesus as well as other years that no one knows about.
The reader, as I always say, is welcome to take with him what he
wants and leave the rest, but keep an open mind as to what I am
about to relate about our Lord. I do feel in my heart that many
of the facts and research will back up the knowledge that I will
be giving, and then from your heart and soul you can make your
own deductions.
* * *
Let’s start at the beginning . . . Christ was not born in a
manger. It’s true that when he was born the Romans were taking a
census and villages and cities were crowded with those who had to
register according to the law. But even with the overcrowding,
there were still rooms to be had at inns for the wealthy. Joseph
was a direct descendant of the royal house of David (Matthew
1:1–16) and had to register both himself and his wife, Mary, at
Bethlehem, which was called the city of David. Both Mary and
Joseph were from royal and wealthy Judaic families and
consequently Jesus was born in an inn and not in a stable with
animals lying about. You must realize, contrary to what many
teachings try to say, Jesus did not come from a poor, illiterate
family.
The people of Bethlehem welcomed Mary and Joseph with great
fanfare, and the fact that these two royal families had come
together to produce an heir was quite a marvelous event. Israel
at that time was a collection of small communities where word
traveled fast through heralds and traveling minstrels. Most
everyone quickly became aware of his birth and was thrilled. Many
hoped that Christ was the Savior, for the prophecies of the
ancient prophets said a king of royal lineage would grow up and
free them from Roman bondage.
When Christ was born in the inn, the word spread that these two
people of royalty possibly gave birth to the Savior that prophecy
foretold. Do you suppose, as portrayed in the Gospel of Luke,
that a poor peasant family would have been admitted into the high
temple to present Christ after he was born to be blessed and
sanctified? No, because you had to give offerings and money to be
admitted. So a royal family presented Christ at the temple. This
was a country of small communities, and like all communities
people of like class stay together. These royal, wealthy families
would socialize together, help each other, and have
intermarriages between them, and that’s how they all knew each
other. Let’s face it . . . we don’t hobnob with Queen Elizabeth
or even the Hiltons or Rockefellers. They keep to their own
circles. The same as it is now, it was then.
Because Joseph was of royal lineage, he was not poor. He was an
expert craftsman who attracted people from far and near to have
him design and make their custom furniture. It would have been an
honor for a customer to buy a magnificent design from a person
with a royal bloodline. My spirit guide, Francine, says that
Joseph had as many as thirty expert workers who helped build and
sell his designs.
Before we go any further, though, let’s get into the conception
of Jesus by Mary. The premise of a virgin birth by Mary is hotly
contested by biblical scholars. Liberal scholars take the view
that the virgin birth of Jesus was pure mythology based on other
pagan religions of the time. In Greek mythology, Zeus supposedly
impregnated the virgin Danae by taking the form of a shower of
gold, and the result was Perseus. He did the same with the virgin
Semele, using a bolt of lightning, and the result was Dionysius.
Horus, a major god of the Egyptian religion, was born of the
virgin Isis and, coincidently, was also supposedly born in a
stable. Mithra, the main god in Mithraism, which was a major
religion of Rome, was conceived when God in the form of light
entered a virgin. Myrrha was a virgin who gave birth to Adonis in
Phoenician mythology. As you can see, the concept of a virgin
birth was not new, and its mythology permeated throughout
cultures at the time.
Only the gospels of Matthew and Luke mention the virgin birth,
and both are dated by scholars after the Gospel of Mark and the
Epistles of Paul. Neither Mark nor Paul mentions the virgin
birth. Many scholars ask why not? Matthew bases his virgin birth
story on the prophecy of Isaiah (Isaiah 7:14); but that prophecy
clearly states that the name of the child will be Immanuel, not
Jesus. Many scholars believe that this prophecy actually refers
to another child later on in Isaiah (Isaiah 8:3–4) and is not a
prophecy concerning the Messiah. In fact, as we will see later
on, many of the so-called prophecies concerning the Messiah are
very dubious and have blatantly been misinterpreted. I am not
saying this, but biblical scholars are. Paul in Galatians (4:4)
says, “But when the time had fully come, God sent his son, born
of a woman, born under the law, to redeem under the law, that we
might receive the full rights of sons.” Most scholars say that
the message here is that Jesus was a normal Jewish child called
by God. If indeed Mary was a virgin, why not say so? Instead, he
used the term woman.
As we will see throughout this book (as well as others on Jesus),
many of the facts of Christ’s life are based on the Bible. That
is well and good to a point. After all, for many years it was the
only source we had that had any substantial accounts of even a
portion of Jesus’ life. But most people have not done a lot of
research on the Bible and how it came into being, just as they
have not researched how Christianity came into being. The Bible
is considered a holy book and the word of God by many Christians,
but as many scholars have pointed out, the Bible can contain
errors, inconsistencies and downright falsehoods!
We must remember that historically the Bible did not take its
form until the Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D. That is some three
hundred years after the life of Christ. Now, three hundred years
is a long time, but on top of that we must also realize that it
was put together by the early Catholic Church and was edited,
rewritten, purged of what the early Church deemed heretical, and
manipulated for their own agenda. Do you realize that even today
no one knows who actually wrote the four gospels of the New
Testament!
Biblical scholars believe that Matthew, Luke and Mark were
written by the same writer, for the writing style is similar, as
are the stories, and that John was written by another writer
because the writing style is different and also brings in new
portions of Christ’s life. I don’t know about you, but I envision
a little monk about a hundred or so years after Christ writing
these stories that we know as the gospels of the New Testament. I
am not going to go into a long treatise on how the Bible was
written or put together other than to say that as far as the New
Testament is concerned, its beginnings and writings are highly
suspect, highly prejudicial, and were formulated and edited by
the early Christian Church. In other words, as usual, man put his
hand in it and messed it all up.
The Bible was written and edited in a time of extreme ignorance,
in which the general populace was basically uneducated and
illiterate. The early Christian Church was also at that time in
the throes of formulation, with constant infighting and politics
coming into play as Pauline Christians (those following the
beliefs of Paul), Jewish Christians (those following the beliefs
of Christ’s brother James), and Gnostic Christians (those
following the premise of gnosis) vied for position and power
within the Church structure. It all came to a head and was
finally decided when the Roman emperor Constantine adopted
Pauline Christianity as the Roman state religion in the early
fourth century.
When Christians cl that the Bible is their source of truth for
making extraordinary cls such as the virgin birth, then they
must realize that the educated people of today (we are no longer
dealing with an uneducated populace) demand extraordinary proof.
The old adage that “if it’s in the Bible, it must be true” does
not persuade all the followers anymore. Biblical scholars have
found too many errors, lies and inconsistencies in the Bible for
it to remain an unchallenged and only source for truth. Too many
archaeological discoveries have been made that back up their
findings and even put a whole new light on the time of Christ.
I do not depend upon the research of obviously biased Christian
scholars, for their work is tainted with their beliefs; nor do I
accept the biased work of skeptics or anti-Christian scholars. I
always try to find more objective scholars who don’t have an ax
to grind one way or the other and who are really just looking for
the truth. In this day and age, sometimes they are hard to find.
Getting back to the virgin birth of Christ, Francine says that it
was not a virgin birth and that Joseph impregnated Mary. Francine
further states that this does not take away Jesus’ divinity
because in reality God is the one who makes any impregnation
possible for any child and chose Mary to be the mother of
Christ—his direct report and messenger. That is probably a
logical deduction in light of the fact that we all choose our own
mothers and hers when we incarnate, and I know of no virgin
births that are on record as having taken place. Francine states
that the writers of these gospels of Matthew and Luke used the
mythology of virgin births to make the birth of Christ seem more
divine and didn’t want the mythology of other religions’ virgin
births superseding Christ’s birth.
The Bible actually confirms this in a way. According to Matthew
and Luke, Mary and Joseph were supposedly aware of the divinity
of the child who would be born to her and also that they were to
name him Jesus. Now, if this were so, why would they question
Christ’s actions? In Luke 2:42–51 we read about Christ in the
temple at twelve years of age preaching to the teachers and how
his parents, Mary and Joseph, had lost him and then found him
preaching and rebuked him about his absence. I find verses 49–50
most interesting, especially where Jesus tells his parents he is
here to do his her’s business and they do not understand. Why
would they not understand? Didn’t they know he was the Messiah
and a divine messenger from God? Joseph knew from an angel in a
dream (Matthew 1:18–24) and Mary knew from a visitation by the
angel Gabriel (Luke 1:26–38). Do you now see how the Bible can be
inconsistent?
Many religions seem to want an immaculate birth with no male
intervention. Women were looked on as less than nothing at the
time of Christ’s birth. It seems women were elevated when it was
useful to the patriarchs of society, and when they were not
needed women were seen as unclean. If you want to look at it
spiritually, it’s always God’s hand that brings us into being. We
come into an earthly life when we need to perfect ourselves for
God or, as in the case of Christ, we are on a mission for God.
The reason that Joseph is depicted as confused in the Bible is
because he was so much older than Mary and he thought it wasn’t
possible for him to have children. Mary was only sixteen and he
was close to forty, which in that day was very old. If you look
at it in this light, we could all be conceived by God’s
immaculate hand to make sure we got here on earth to learn. If
God wants to make it happen, it will happen. It’s called divine
intervention.
Look at Elizabeth, Mary’s sister, who gave birth to John the
Baptist at an age when women were supposedly past the
reproductive age. John was born about six months before Christ
and was his cousin and eventually became the great prophet and
baptizer who was the “voice crying in the desert.” John also
foretold that Christ was the true messenger and Messiah. Both
Christ’s and John’s families were prominent in the community
because of their royal lineage, and many saw John as the possible
Messiah.
Christ was born in the month of June, according to Francine.
Early Christians had noted his birthday at various times,
including during the months of May and April. The early Church
hers finally settled on December 25 because this was the high
holy day for the Romans celebrating their sun god and it was
their winter solstice (ours is December 21). Romans celebrated
this holiday as a time of rebirth and renewal, so the Church, as
they have in so many instances, took a pagan holiday and
Christianized it. This is but one example that shows how the
Church changed dates and times and facts to fit into their own
political and moneymaking agendas; but we will get more into that
later.
The Bible also tells us of the visit of the Magi at his birth and
of the star of Bethlehem and angels visiting the shepherds
procling his birth. Again, Matthew and Luke give us these
stories about his birth, while Mark and John are silent on the
matter. In the Gospel of Matthew we learn of the Magi, or three
wise men, who come from the East following a star and arrive at
the court of King Herod and ask, “Where is he that is born king
of the Jews? For we have seen his star in the east, and are come
to adore him” (Matthew 2:2). Now, Herod was upset about this news
because he was the king of the Jews and didn’t want any usurpers
running around taking his crown. He tells the wise men to go find
this child and come back to him with his whereabouts so that he
can also adore him; but as we all know he intends to dispose of
the child so that his supremacy is not threatened. The wise men
go from the court of Herod and, following the star, come to
Bethlehem (to fulfill a prophecy), where they find the Christ
child and adore him and give him frankincense, gold and myrrh. We
then are told that the wise men and Joseph both got messages in
their —the wise men to not return to Herod, and Joseph to
flee to Egypt because Herod would kill Jesus if he didn’t.
According to Matthew, Joseph and Mary take the child and flee to
Egypt.
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