Synopsis The Legacy of Eden by : Frederick Guttmann
The third part of this saga is a prequel that revolves around the character named Jivah. This work is divided into several sections based on the most important incarnations of Jivah. Thus, the first account is when Jivah was the biblical Eve, narrating how she met Fanvar (the biblical Adam) and how she was deceived by the ministers of the archons who guarded Meruah (a garden that was to the east of the site of E-Din ). Here Jivah recounts the judgment of Ialdabaot for the actions that occurred in Meruah and the damage caused by the ministers of the archons to her lineage. The following story revolves around another of the most important incarnations of Jivah, when she was Mariam, the wife of Jesus of Nazareth. In this case Jivah mainly exposes all the great mysteries that Yeshua (Jesus) would have told his disciples after the crucifixion. Jivah recounts when the apostle Philip was an incarnation of the Buddha and when she migrated to Paris to establish a philosophy based on her interpretation of her teacher's teachings. She tells why they did not have children and the trips they made as teenagers to various countries before Yeshua (Jesus) began his work with the Jewish people. Although Jivah's exposition deals with the main teachings of Yeshua after the crucifixion, it exposes some details of the appearance of Metatron and Sandalphon (the prophets Elijah and Enoch) on the "mount of transfiguration", in addition to the words of John the Baptist and from Yeshua to Nicodemus on reincarnation. Likewise, Yeshua explains the role that Yehudah (Judas) had, and that he was already a member of the 12 before coming to Earth, and will continue to be so in the distant future. He also explains the true meaning of the bread and wine, and the most extensive details of the talk that Yeshua and Pontius Pilate had before the execution are exposed. “- Pilate: tell me something to absolve you, because the Jews want you dead. - Yeshua: you have no more power over me than what has been allowed to you, because everything obeys a destiny, to which you yourself are subject. - Pilate: then you are a kind of messiah, a king. Have you come to save your people? - Yeshua: I am certainly a king, but my kingdom is not of the material world. I have come this time to bear witness to the Truth. - Pilate: the truth… what is the Truth? - Yeshua: that the universe does not exist, Pilate.” After the crucifixion Yeshua maintains a constant visit to his followers for 11 years, beginning by appearing to them to explain that he was not a ghost. Later he tells them how the first human race inhabited the Lyra star system, before being attacked by the draconians. He explains to them why the 12 tribes represent the 12 constellations of the zodiac. He explains to them what the animal laws at Sinai meant. They discuss the points of view found with the philosophy of the apostle Paul. He explains to them what are the bodies that we possess and their energy centers, what they are for and how they should be used. He explains to them the laws of the universe and the electromagnetic power of the mind and emotions. He explains to you about all aspects of the collective mind and consciousness webs, and about the lower planes, the parallel planes, and the higher dimensions and their realms. He explains to them how matter is formed and maintained by the unconscious and subconscious power of the mind. He explains to them the symbolism of what happened in Eden, the meaning of the elements mentioned there and with Cain and Abel. He explains to them how the law of free will and destiny come into harmony and conflict. Including many teachings on genetics and ADAM, Jivah ends with other anecdotes and curiosities, such as states of consciousness and awakening and the Christic mind or Buddhahood. At the end of this account, Jivah expresses some talks he had in private with Yeshua about the things that would happen later and where he would go. Jivah then tells another story, but this time not of an "incarnation" of his, but of his existence before he came to flesh (a body). He describes how he lived in the pre-universal heavenly realms of Eden and how the first rebellions broke out, both before, during, and after Ialdabaot. He recounts how the first gods appeared and how they created their principalities, powers, hosts of evil, demons, angels, spirits, and races, and how the first wars broke out before and after the formation of Jaleb began. Narrating another story, Jivah tells how the Battle of the Seven Heavens took place, and how on behalf of his mother, Wisdom, he helped Yahweh (at that time known as Tzabaot) in the fight against the principalities and authorities of the chaos. He recounts how the angels and spirits of light were created to support Tzabaot in the conflict against the Draconians and Orions, and their hierarchies.