Saint Germain Foundation

The Saint Germain Movement is a religious organization, headquartered in Schaumburg, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, with a major facility just north of Dunsmuir, California, in the buildings and property of the Shasta Springs retreat.[1] There is also a facility in the Capitol Hill neighborhood in downtown Denver, Colorado.

Saint Germain Foundation "I Am" Temple, Seattle, Washington. The building is a former cinema on Aurora Avenue North.

The doctrines of the organization are based on teachings and wisdom received by Guy Ballard in 1930. Ballard was hiking on the slopes of Mount Shasta in California, and claimed Saint Germain appeared to him and began training him to be a "Messenger".[2] Ballard published his experiences in a series of books. The organization's philosophies are known as the "I AM" Activity, and its members popularly known as "I AM" Students.[3]

J. Gordon Melton studied the group and ranked it in the category "established cult".[4] Also present in New Zealand, the St. Germain Foundation is considered by writer Robert S. Ellwood as a religious group with theosophical and esoteric roots.[5] The group is recognized by the Theosophical Society and the Great White Brotherhood.[6]

The group was labelled as cult in the 1995 report established by Parliamentary Commission on Cults in France.[7] The group founded a community in France in 1956 and is now located in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence. It counts less than 50 members.[8] In 1997, the Belgian parliamentary commission established a list of 189 movements containing I AM.

Worldwide, the religious group had over one million members in 1940, but it began to decline after Ballard's death.[9] Among the splinter groups of the Saint Germain Foundation, there have been The Bridge to Freedom, The Summit Lighthouse and the Church Universal and Triumphant.[10]

See also

References

  1. James R. Lewis, Jesper Aagaard Petersen (2005). Controversial new religions. p. 283. ISBN 9780195156836. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
  2. King, Godfre Ray. Unveiled Mysteries. Chicago, Illinois: Saint Germain Press 1934. page vii: "The time has arrived, when the Great Wisdom, held and guarded for many centuries in the Far East, is now to come forth in America, at the command of those Great Ascended Masters who direct and protect the evolution of mankind upon this Earth."
  3. Saint Germain Foundation. The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation. Schaumburg, Illinois: Saint Germain Press 2003
  4. J. Gordon Melton (1992). Encyclopedic handbook of cults in America. pp. 58–68. ISBN 9780815311409. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
  5. Robert S. Ellwood (1993). Islands of the dawn: the story of alternative spirituality in New Zealand. pp. 147, 148. ISBN 9780824814878. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
  6. Paul Christopher (1998). Alien intervention: the spiritual mission of UFOs. p. 68. ISBN 9781563841484. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
  7. "Rapport fait au nom de la Commission d'enquête sur les sectes — Les sectes en France" (in French). Assemblée Nationale. 1995. Retrieved 2009-08-18.
  8. Jean-Pierre Van Girt, La France aux cent sectes, Vauvenargues editions, 1997, p. 193,194 (ISBN 2-7443-0049-7)
  9. James R. Lewis (2005). Cults: a reference handbook. pp. 131, 132. ISBN 9781851096183. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
  10. Jean-François Mayer (1993). Les nouvelles voies spirituelles: enquête sur la religiosité parallèle en Suisse (in French). p. 120. ISBN 9782825104125. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
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