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Is it surprising that at a given moment, the paths of Gadal and the Golden Rosycross would meet? Their encounter is not fortuitous as it was written in the lines of force of the work of the ‘Threefold Alliance of the Light’.
Jan Leene and Henny Stok-Huizer had immediately recognised Antonin Gadal as the one they had been looking for for a long time, a man with ‘remembrance’, gifted with the maturity of a great soul while being conscious of his mission:
‘We missed the direct contact with a friend who would be also our elderly brother and who would talk to us from a richer experience, about the ancient, present and future Gnosis – which’, as Henny Stok-Huizer will say, ‘is in the end always identical.’
Gadal recognised in these two beings the spiritual co-heirs and carriers of the Gnostic work. He entrusted to them the Cathars’ spiritual heritage.
Jan Leene and Henny Stok-Huizer took the names of Jan van Rijckenborgh and Catharose de Petri.
The spiritual transmission of the ‘Cathar Treasure’ could now take place.
That meeting linked de facto a young gnostic brotherhood, the Golden Rosycross, to the preceding brotherhood of the Middle Ages, that of the Cathars, through its old ‘patriarch’, Antonin Gadal.
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