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{{short description|Ascended master teachings religious movement}}
The '''"I AM" Activity''' is a ] founded in the early 1930s by ] and his wife Edna in ].<ref name="partridge">{{cite book ||editor= Partride, Christopher|title= New Religions: A Guide: New Religious Movements, Sects and Alternative Spiritualities|year= 2004|publisher= ]|location= New York, NY|pages= 330-332}}</ref> It is an offshoot of ] and a major predecessor of ] religions, especially the ].<ref name="partridge" />
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2013}}
]
The '''I AM Movement''', also referred to as the '''I AM Temple''',<ref>{{Cite web |last=Pacheco |first=Ana |date=2022-02-18 |title=A New Religion Comes to Santa Fe |url=https://historyinsantafe.com/santa-fe-i-am-american-born-religion/ |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=History in Santa Fe}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-04-27 |title=Loop place of worship broken into, ransacked; suspect injured, CPD says |url=https://abc7chicago.com/i-am-temple-vandalized-washington-street-loop-chicago-police/13190203/ |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=ABC7 Chicago}}</ref> is the original ] teachings ] ] founded in the early 1930s by ] (1878&ndash;1939) and his wife ] (1886–1971) in Chicago, Illinois.<ref>{{cite book |last=Jones |first=Lindsay |author-link= |date=2005 |title=Encyclopedia of religion (vol. 6) |publisher= Detroit : Macmillan Reference USA |edition=second |pages=4245–4247 |chapter=I Am |url= https://archive.org/details/ed.-l.-jones-encyclopedia-of-religion-15-volume-set-2004 |isbn=0-02-865739-X }}</ref><ref name="history">Saint Germain Foundation. ''The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation''. Saint Germain Press 2003 {{ISBN|1-878891-99-5}}</ref> It is an offshoot of ] and a major precursor of several ] religions including the ].<ref name="partridge">{{cite book|editor= Partride, Christopher|title= New Religions: A Guide: New Religious Movements, Sects and Alternative Spiritualities|year= 2004|publisher= ]|location= New York, NY|pages= 330&ndash;332}}</ref>


The movement had up to a million followers in 1938<ref name="barrett" /> and is still active today on a smaller scale. Upon Ballard's death, several members founded their own splinter groups, adding their own beliefs and teachings to those of the original movement.<ref name=CCAA/>
The movement believes in the existence of a group called the ], a hierarchy of supernatural beings that includes ], ], ], ], ], and thousands more. These are believed to be humans who have lived in physical bodies, became immortal and left the cycles of "re-embodiment" and karma, and attained their "Ascension". The Ascended Masters are believed to communicate to humanity through certain humans, including Guy and Edna Ballard.<ref name="partridge" /><ref name="history">Saint Germain Foundation. ''The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation''. Saint Germain Press 2003 ISBN 1-878891-99-5</ref> The movement has been called a cult by the ]; the same article stated that he described himself as the reincarnation of ], an Egyptian priest, and a noted French musician.<ref name="lamag" />


According to the official website of the parent organization, the ], its worldwide headquarters is located in ], and there are{{When|date=July 2020}} approximately 300 local groups worldwide under several variations of the names "I AM" Sanctuary, "I AM" Temple, and other similar titles.<ref name="scotus"/> As of 2007, the organization states that its purpose is "spiritual, educational and practical", and that no admission fee is charged for their activities.<ref name="SGF-homepage">{{cite web|url=http://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/ |title=Saint Germain Foundation official website |access-date=December 17, 2007 |publisher=Saint Germain Foundation |quote=The "I AM" Activity is spiritual, educational and practical. There are no financial schemes behind it; no admission is ever charged. It takes no political stance in any nation. The parent organization is Saint Germain Foundation, with worldwide headquarters located in ], a suburb of ]. It is represented throughout the world by 300 local groups termed "I AM" Sanctuary, "I AM" Temple, "I AM" Study Groups, or "I AM" Reading Room. Saint Germain Foundation and its local activities are not affiliated with any other organization or persons. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071213053152/http://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/ |archive-date=December 13, 2007 |url-status=live |df=mdy }}</ref>
Ballard died in 1939. In 1942 his wife and son were initially convicted of fraud, later overturned, after a government audit allegedly found that they had received $3,000,000 from donations and an alleged retail racket "by false statements of their religious experiences which had not in fact occurred," based on their claims of "miraculous communication with the spirit world and supernatural power to heal the sick."<ref name="scotus"></ref><ref name="lamag">{{cite news |first= Joshua|last= Thompkins|title= The mighty I Am: Cult led by Guy Ballard|publisher= ]|date= ]|accessdate=2007-12-11 }}</ref> A landmark ] decision overturned the conviction, ruling that the question of whether the Ballards believed their religious claims should not have been submitted to a jury.<ref name="scotus" /> Subsequent legal battles over the fraud charges and tax-exempt status followed.


The term "I AM" is a reference to the ancient Sanskrit mantra '']'' and the divine biblical name "]".<ref name="UnivVirginia">{{cite web |url=http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/nrms/iam.html |title="I AM" Religious Activity |access-date=December 17, 2007 |author=Hadden, Jeffrey K. |work=Religious Movements Homepage at the University of Virginia |publisher=University of Virginia |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071123184055/http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/nrms/iam.html |archive-date=November 23, 2007 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref>
== History ==
=== Founding ===
]


==Overview==
The "I AM" Activity was founded by ] (pseudonym Godfre Ray King) in the early 1930s. Ballard was well-read in theosophy and its offshoots, and while hiking on ] looking for a supposed Esoteric Brotherhood, he said that he had encountered a man who introduced himself as ], a historical 18th century alchemist and a regular component of theosophical religions.<ref name="barrett">{{cite book |title= Sects, 'Cults', and Alternative Religions: A World Survey and Sourcebook|last= Barrett|first= David|year= 1996|publisher= Blandford|location= London|isbn= 0-7137-2567-2}}</ref> Saint Germain told Ballard that he belonged to a supernatural hierarchy called the Ascended Masters, and that he had been searching Europe for centuries looking for someone worthy of being told the "Great Laws of Life". Finding no one, Saint Germain looked in the United States, and found Ballard.<ref name="barrett" />
The "I AM" Activity was influenced by the teachings of Helena Blavatsky and ]. Ballard was always guided and inspired by the writings of William Quan Judge (1851–1896), who used the pseudonym David Lloyd due to the persecution of his enemies in the ]. The movement also adopted elements of ]. To these spiritual movements, Ballard added a strong nationalistic flavor, claiming a new golden age would emerge in the United States.<ref name=CCAA>{{Cite journal |last1=Celestini |first1=Carmen |last2=Amarasingam |first2=Amarnath |date=6 December 2023 |title=Reviving the Violet Flame: The New Age conspiratorial journey of Canada's Queen Romana Didulo |journal=Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses |volume=53 |issue=3 |pages=366–389 |doi=10.1177/00084298231209700 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


The Ballards also borrowed from ]'s spiritual writings, with Edna allegedly attending several classes offered by Pelley. While there are no indications that Pelley was a member of I AM, Ballard early on recruited several members of his fascist organization, the ]. <ref name=CCAA/><ref>{{Cite web |last=Deveney |first=Pat |title=New Liberator |url=http://iapsop.com/archive/materials/new_liberator/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230601050750/http://iapsop.com/archive/materials/new_liberator/ |archive-date=1 June 2023 |access-date=16 December 2023 |website=The International Association for the Preservation of Spiritualist and Occult Periodicals}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bryan |first=Gerald B. |url=http://www.orgonelab.org/PsychDict.pdf |title=Psychic Dictatorship in America |publisher=Truth Research Publications |year=1940 |location=Los Angeles, California |pages=24–25 }}</ref>
The Ballards said they began talking to the Ascended Masters regularly. They founded a publishing house to publish their books and began training people to spread their messages across the United States. These training sessions were limited to members only after hecklers began disrupting their open meetings.<ref name="barrett" /><ref name="partridge" /> Over their lifetimes, the Ballards recorded over 3,000 messages which they said were from the Ascended Masters. Guy Ballard, his wife Edna, and later his son Donald became the sole "Accredited Messengers" of the Ascended Masters.<ref name="barrett" />


The movement believes in the existence of a group called the "ascended masters", a hierarchy of supernatural beings that includes the original theosophical masters such as ], ], ], and in addition several dozen more beyond the original 20 ] of the original theosophists as described by ].
===Popularity===


These ascended masters are believed to be humans who have lived in a succession of ] in physical bodies or cosmic beings (beings originated from the great central sun of light in the beginning of all times). Over time, those who have passed through various "embodiments" became highly advanced souls, are able to move beyond the cycles of "re-embodiments" and ], and attained their "ascension", becoming immortal. Ascended masters are believed to communicate to humanity through certain ] per Blavatsky, including Guy and ].<ref name="history"/><ref name="partridge" /> Because Jesus is believed to be one of the ascended masters, making the "Christ Light" available to seekers who wish to move out of darkness, many of the members of the "I AM" Activity consider it to be a Christian religion.<ref name="UnivVirginia"/> According to the '']'', Ballard said he was the re-embodiment of ], an Egyptian priest, and a noted French musician.<ref name="lamag" />
The Ballards' popularity spread, including up to a million followers in 1938.<ref name="barrett" /> They began collecting donations (called "love offerings") from their followers across the country. The LA Times Magazine article alleged that these donations left many followers deeply in debt.<ref name="latimes2" /> The Ballards became wealthy.<ref name="barrett" />


Ballard died in 1939. In 1942, his wife and son were convicted of fraud,<ref name="scotus">{{Cite web |url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/322/78/ |title=United States v. Ballard, 322 U.S. 78 (1944) |website=Justia Law}}</ref><ref name="lamag">{{cite news |first= Joshua |last=Thompkins |title=The mighty I Am: Cult led by Guy Ballard |publisher=] |date= April 1, 1997}}</ref> a conviction which was overturned in a landmark ] decision ('']''), ruling that the question of whether the Ballards believed their religious claims should not have been submitted to a jury.<ref name="scotus" />
According to the same LA Times Magazine article, in August 1935, the Ballards produced a gathering at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles that drew a crowd of 6,000, to inaugurate their "I AM" movement. Guy Ballard spoke under the pseudonym he used in authoring his books, Godfre Ray King, and his wife used the pseudonym Lotus. The meeting included teachings they described as being received directly from the Ascended Masters. They led the audience in prayers or chants that they referred to as decrees, some of which were religious in character and some of which were prayers for individual prosperity.<ref name="lamag" />


== History ==
=== Guy Ballard's death ===
=== Founding ===
The "I AM" Activity was founded by ] (pseudonym Godfré Ray King) in the early 1930s. Ballard was well-read in theosophy and its offshoots, and he claimed to have met and been instructed by a man who introduced himself as "Saint Germain" while hiking on ] looking for a rumored branch of the ] known as "The Brotherhood of Mount Shasta".<ref>{{cite book |last=King |first=Godfré Ray |year=1935 |orig-year=1934 |title=Unveiled Mysteries |chapter-url=https://archive.org/stream/02TheMagicPresenceByGodfrRayKing1935FirstEdition/%2301%20-%20Unveiled%20Mysteries%2C%20by%20Godfr%C3%A9%20Ray%20King%20-%201935%20-Second%20Edition#page/n1 |publisher=Saint Germain Press |location=Chicago, Illinois |edition=Second |chapter=1: Meeting the Master |pages=1–32 |via=]}}</ref> Saint Germain is regular component of theosophical religions as an ascended master, based on the historical ], an 18th-century adventurer.<ref name="barrett">{{cite book |title= Sects, 'Cults', and Alternative Religions: A World Survey and Sourcebook |last= Barrett |first= David |year= 1996 |publisher= Blandford |location= London |isbn= 0-7137-2567-2 |url-access= registration |url= https://archive.org/details/sectscultsaltern00barr}}</ref>


The Ballards said they began talking to the ascended masters regularly. They founded a publishing house, ''Saint Germain Press'', to publish their books and began training people to spread their messages across the United States. These training sessions and "conclaves" were held throughout the United States, open to the general public and free of charge.<ref>''The Voice of the "I AM"'' Number 1, March 1936. Chicago, Illinois: Saint Germain Press. page 27</ref> A front-page story in a 1938 edition of the ''Chicago Herald and Examiner'' noted that the Ballards "do not take up collections or ask for funds".<ref name="Herald">''Chicago Herald and Examiner'' October 8, 1938</ref> Meetings became limited to members only after hecklers began disrupting their open meetings.<ref name="partridge" /><ref name="barrett" /> Over their lifetimes, the Ballards recorded nearly 4000 live dictations, which they said were from the ascended masters.<ref name="history" /> Guy Ballard, his wife Edna, and later their son Donald, became the sole "accredited messengers" of the ascended masters.<ref name="barrett"/> In 1942, they began the I AM Sanctuary at a former Presbyterian missionary school.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SmxBCwAAQBAJ&q=%22guy%20ballard%22%20%22presbyterian%22|isbn = 9781625856401|title = A History of Spirituality in Santa Fe: The City of Holy Faith|date = February 22, 2016|publisher = Arcadia}}</ref>
In December 1939 and at the height of his popularity, Guy Ballard died of heart failure in his ] mansion. "Edna had the body cremated immediately and assured I Am-ers that Guy had 'ascended' – perhaps in the "Atomic Accelerator," a golden chair one could supposedly ride to the heavens."<ref name="lamag" /> His death was a blow to the movement; Ballard previously said he had mastery over death, leaving many members feeling cheated, according to author David Barrett. <ref name="barrett" />


=== Court cases === === Popularity ===
The Ballards' popularity spread, including up to a million followers in 1938.<ref name="barrett" /> Donations were not formally required, but it was made clear that they were necessary in order to receive blessings from the masters.<ref name="Herald" /><ref name=CCAA/>


The first of many "conclaves" held in scores of cities in their national tours was Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 10–19, 1934.<ref name="history"/> According to a ''Los Angeles Magazine'' article, in August 1935, the Ballards hosted a gathering at the ] in Los Angeles that drew a crowd of 6,000.<ref name="lamag"/> Guy Ballard spoke under the pseudonym he used in authoring his books, Godfre Ray King, and his wife used the pseudonym Lotus. The meeting included teachings they described as being received directly from the ascended masters. They led the audience in prayers and affirmations that they called decrees, including adorations to God and invocations for abundance of every good thing, including love, money, peace, and happiness.<ref name="history" />
After Guy Ballard's death, his wife and son were indicted of fraud, accused of collecting over $3 million from their followers on the basis of religious claims the Ballards knew were false. Their followers protested outside the courthouse. The court case included unusual arguments, such as claims that mysterious metaphysical intervention had helped the USA with the war effort resulting from Ballard's communications with the Ascended Masters, according to the LA Times Magazine, that also reported that Edna Ballard's son said as a trial witness "Whatever my mother wants, that's what St. Germain says."<ref name="lamag" />


=== Guy Ballard's death and splintering ===
The jury was instructed to convict if they found that the Ballards did not have a good faith belief in their religious claims. The Ballards were convicted.<ref name="latimes2">{{cite news |first= Cecilia|last= Rasmussen|title= L.A. Then and Now|publisher= Los Angeles Times|date= ]|accessdate=2007-12-11 }}</ref>
At the height of his popularity, Guy Ballard died from ] at 5:00 A.M. on December 29, 1939, in Los Angeles, in the home of his son Donald. On December 31 his body was cremated. On New Year's Day during the annual ''Christmas Class'', Edna Ballard stated that Guy had completed his Ascension at midnight December 31, 1939, from the "Royal Teton Retreat".<ref name="history" />


Ballard's death deeply affected the movement, which saw several splinter groups emerge.
The ] overturned the conviction and the state appealed to the ]. In ], the Supreme Court in a 5-4 landmark decision, ] the fraud conviction, ruling that the question of whether the Ballards believed their religious claims should not have been submitted to the jury. Interpreting this decision, the Ninth Circuit later found that the Court did not go so far as to hold that "the validity or veracity of a religious doctrine cannot be inquired into by a Federal Court."<ref>Cohen v. United States, 297 F.2d 760 (1962)</ref>
*I AM former member ] (writing under the name Thomas Printz) quickly founded an offshoot of the movement, targeting the Spanish-speaking community.<ref name=CCAA/>
*Francis Ekey, another member, founded Lighthouse of Freedom to offer classes allegedly disseminating the teachings of ancient masters.<ref name=CCAA/>
*One of Ekey's collaborators, Mark Prophet, founded the Keepers of the Summit Lighthouse in 1958. To I AM's teachings, Prophet added a proclivity for conspiracy thinking, ] and a staunch opposition to ]. His wife ] would eventually share leadership and succeed him, rebranding the organization as the ].<ref name=CCAA/>
*Important elements of Ballard's theology, symbolism and nationalism can also be found in ]'s movement in the 2020s. These include the use of decrees, the purple flame and the mythological ascended masters.<ref name=CCAA/>


=== Copyright infringement civil action ===
The Ballards were subsequently convicted of fraud in a new trial that withheld from the jury all questions as to whether the Ballards believed their religious claims. The Supreme Court vacated the second judgment also, on the grounds that women were improperly excluded from the jury panel.<ref></ref> No standing convictions resulted from the series of trials.
In 1941, the Ballards were sued for copyright infringement by the family and estate of Frederick Spencer Oliver (1866–1899), "amenuensis" of the novel '']'', first published in 1905. The suit was dismissed for failure to state cause of action. District Judge Dawkins quoted the original foreword to Oliver's book in its entirety, wherein Oliver emphasized that he was not the author but had ] the book from the spirit of a previously deceased person with the intent of preserving and conveying the story and teachings of that person's world; and the book had been copyrighted with Oliver as a proprietor, not as the author. Judge Dawkins pointed out that the Ballards had stated they were using similar methods to write their books and that this in itself wasn't enough to uphold the action in court.<ref>''''.</ref>


=== Relocation to Santa Fe === === Fraud trial of Edna and Donald Ballard ===
Based on statements made in books sent via the mail, Edna Ballard and her son Donald were charged with eighteen counts of mail fraud in 1942. The presiding judge instructed the jury not to consider the truth or falsity of the religious beliefs, but only whether the Ballards sincerely believed the claims or did not, and the jury found them guilty.<ref name="scotus"/><ref name="lamag"/> The ] overturned the conviction on the grounds that the judge improperly excluded the credibility of their religious beliefs from consideration, and the government appealed to the ]. In '']'', the Supreme Court in a 5–4 landmark decision held that the question of whether Ballards believed their religious claims should not have been submitted to the jury, and remanded the case back to the Ninth Circuit, which affirmed the fraud conviction. Interpreting this decision, the Ninth Circuit later found that the Court did not go so far as to hold that "the validity or veracity of a religious doctrine cannot be inquired into by a Federal Court."<ref>''Cohen v. United States'', 297 F.2d 760 (1962)</ref>


On a second appeal, the Supreme Court in 1946 vacated the fraud conviction, on the grounds that women were improperly excluded from the jury panel.<ref name="supreme.justia.com">{{Cite web|url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/329/187/|title=Ballard v. United States, 329 U.S. 187 (1946)|website=Justia Law}}</ref>
In March 1942, Edna Ballard moved the western branch of the ''Saint Germain Press'' and her residence to ], where she recorded thousands more messages that she said were from the Ascended Masters.<ref name="history" />


=== Relocation to Santa Fe and Edna Ballard's death ===
Other legal battles continued: the IRS did not recognize the movement as "a religion", thereby giving it tax-exempt status, until a court ruling in 1957.<ref name="partridge" />
In March 1942, Edna Ballard moved the western branch of the ''Saint Germain Press'' and her residence to ], where she recorded live before an audience thousands more dictations she said were from the Ascended Masters.<ref name="history" />


Despite the ultimate dismissal of the court cases, it was not until 1954 that the organization's right to use the mail was restored. The ] revoked their tax-exempt status in 1941, stating it did not recognize the movement as "a religion". A court ruling in 1957 overturned the ruling of the IRS and re-established the group's tax-exempt status.<ref name="partridge" /><ref name="Albanese">{{cite book |author=Catherine L. Albanese |title=] |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-300-11089-0 |page=470}}</ref>
As years past, the popularity of the movement dwindled.<ref name="latimes2" /> Daniel Ballard, Guy's son, left the movement.<ref name="barrett" /> In 1971, Edna Ballard died, and a board of directors took over the leadership.<ref name="partridge" /> As of 1998, "a tiny remnant of the sect lingers in the shadow of Shasta, their own holy mountain."<ref name="latimes2" />


Edna Ballard's death following "a brief illness" was reported as having occurred in her Chicago home on February 10, 1971.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/64580694/june-1971-report-of-death-of-edna/|title=June 1971 Report of death of Edna Ballard who passed on Feb 10, 1971.|newspaper=The Sacramento Bee|date=June 3, 1971|pages=15|via=newspapers.com}}</ref>
== Beliefs ==


=== Recent history and present day ===
The doctrine of the "I AM" movement has its roots in ]. It's teachings were not new, but the publicity the Ballards achieved spread their teachings into the developing New Age movements in the United States. Many New Age movements now involve the Ascended Masters in their teachings.<ref name="barrett" />
As of 2007, Saint Germain Foundation maintains a reading room in ], California, and its headquarters in Schaumburg, Illinois. Several annual conclaves are held at their 12-story "I AM Temple" at 176 West Washington Street in downtown Chicago.<ref name="history" /> The Saint Germain Press, a subsidiary of the Saint Germain Foundation, estimates they printed and put into circulation over one million books.<ref name="history" />


The Saint Germain Foundation presents an annual pageant every August at Mount Shasta since 1950, a tradition only interrupted by the ].<ref name="SGF-Pageant">{{cite web |url= http://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/pageant.htm |title=Saint Germain Foundation ''"I AM" COME!'' Pageant webpage|access-date=December 17, 2007 |publisher=Saint Germain Foundation |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071217190219/http://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/pageant.htm |archive-date= December 17, 2007<!--Added by DASHBot-->}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last1=Shelton |first1=Kelsey |last2=Kinkade |first2=Skye |date=13 August 2020 |title=Mount Shasta's 'I AM' Come! pageant called off in 2020 |url=https://www.mtshastanews.com/story/news/2020/08/13/mount-shastas-i-am-come-pageant-called-off-in-2020/113158248/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211016031020/https://www.mtshastanews.com/story/news/2020/08/13/mount-shastas-i-am-come-pageant-called-off-in-2020/113158248/ |archive-date=16 October 2021 |access-date=16 December 2023 |website=MtSashta News}}</ref>
The Ascended Masters are religious figures who have left the cycle of reincarnation and now benevolently guide mankind through their human spokespeople, of whom Guy, Edna, and Donald Ballard are the only Accredited Messengers. The "I AM" movement calls itself Christian, because ] is one of the Ascended Masters.

== Teachings ==
According to the group's teachings, ascended masters are believed to be individuals who have left the ] cycle of re-embodiment. The "I AM" Activity calls itself Christian; Jesus is considered one of the more important ascended masters.<ref>Folkloric accounts collected in Raymond Bernard's ''Great Secret Count St Germain'' (Mokelumne Hill Press, 1993)</ref>

Ballard's teachings included significant ] and ] elements. According to Ballard's teachings, the faithful's rituals would allow the United States to lead the world into a new golden age of civilization, and St. Germain inspired the American ]. In addition, through the use of prayers and rituals, the ‘lightbearers’ in the USA would reverse the bad karma that had accumulated and was holding humanity back from attaining its godly existence <ref name=CCAA/>


<blockquote> <blockquote>
The movement teaches that the omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent creator God ('I AM' – Exodus 3:14) is in all of us as a spark from the Divine Flame, and that we can experience this presence, love, power and light – the power of teh Violent Consuming Flame of Divine Love – through quiet contemplation and by repeating 'affirmations' and 'decrees'. By 'affirming' something one desires, one can cause it to happen.<ref name="barrett" /> The movement teaches that the ], ] and ] ] ('I AM' – ]) is in all of us as a spark from the Divine Flame, and that we can experience this presence, love, power and light – and its power of the Violet Consuming Flame of Divine Love – through quiet contemplation and by repeating 'affirmations' and 'decrees'. By affirming something one desires, one may cause it to happen.<ref name="barrett" />
</blockquote> </blockquote>


The group teaches that the "Mighty I AM Presence" is God existing in and as each person's ], and that a light known as the "violet flame" is generated by the "I AM Presence." That "flame" may surround each person who calls forth the action of the ] for expressions of mercy or forgiveness. The group believes that, by tapping into these internalized powers in accordance with the teachings of the ascended masters, one can use one's relationship to the "presence" to amplify the expressions of virtue such as justice, peace, harmony, and love; to displace or abate the expression of evil (i.e., the relative absence of good) in the world; and to minimize personal difficulties in one's life.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/SGF_01_MightyIAM.html |title=The "Beloved Mighty I am Presence" |access-date=January 6, 2014 |archive-date=March 13, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190313051934/http://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/SGF_01_MightyIAM.html |url-status=dead }}</ref>
These "positive thinking" beliefs overlap with several other New Age movements, such as the ].<ref name="barrett" />

The spiritual goal of the teachings is that, by a process of self-purification through the symbol of the "Violet Consuming Flame", the believer may attain the perfected condition of the ] or become an ascended master when leaving their body (in contrast to common concepts of ordinary death). The practice of "decrees" (repeated prayers given aloud with conviction), served at times as commands from the masters or as a request from the faithful, adds to practitioners' likelihood of reaching self-purification.<ref name="UnivVirginia"/><ref name=CCAA/>

The group also emphasizes personal freedom as essential to spiritual development.<ref name="UnivVirginia"/>

These "positive thinking" beliefs overlap with several movements, such as ], the so-called ], and the ].<ref name="barrett" />

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


== References == == References ==
{{reflist}} {{Reflist}}


==Partial bibliography==
* Saint Germain Foundation. ''The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation''. Saint Germain Press 2003 ISBN 1-878891-99-5
* King, Godfre Ray. ''Unveiled Mysteries''. Saint Germain Press. ISBN 1-878891-00-6 * Saint Germain Foundation. ''The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation''. Saint Germain Press 2003 {{ISBN|1-878891-99-5}}
* King, Godfre Ray. ''The Magic Presence''. Saint Germain Press. ISBN 1-878891-06-5 * King, Godfre Ray. ''Unveiled Mysteries''. Saint Germain Press. {{ISBN|1-878891-00-6}}
* Saint Germain. ''I AM Discourses''. Saint Germain Press. ISBN 1-878891-48-0 * King, Godfre Ray. ''The Magic Presence''. Saint Germain Press. {{ISBN|1-878891-06-5}}
* Saint Germain. ''I AM Discourses''. Saint Germain Press. {{ISBN|1-878891-48-0}}
* J. Gordon Melton, ''An Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America'' (1992)
* Peter Mt. Shasta. "Lady Master Pearl, My Teacher." Church of the Seven Rays. {{ISBN|978-0692356661}}
* Charles S. Braden, ''These Also Believe'' (1949)
* Robert S. Ellwood, "Making New Religions: The Story of the Mighty 'I AM,' " ''History Today'' 38 (June, 1988)


== External links == == External links ==
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210126030136/https://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/new-teachings |date=January 26, 2021 }}, original publisher of Ascended Master Teachings beginning in 1934.
* , full text of Guy Ballard's first book, available online at no cost
* , a collection of a series of monographs or chapters by a former member, Gerald Bryan.
* , a Document with all published pages of this case.
* , a Document with all published pages of this case.
* , a Document with all published pages of this case.


* , Original publisher of Ascended Master Teachings beginning in 1934.
* , Guy Ballard's first book


{{Ascended Master Teachings}}
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Latest revision as of 14:47, 16 December 2024

Ascended master teachings religious movement

Guy and Edna Ballard

The I AM Movement, also referred to as the I AM Temple, is the original ascended master teachings neo-Theosophical religious movement founded in the early 1930s by Guy Ballard (1878–1939) and his wife Edna Anne Wheeler Ballard (1886–1971) in Chicago, Illinois. It is an offshoot of theosophy and a major precursor of several New Age religions including the Church Universal and Triumphant.

The movement had up to a million followers in 1938 and is still active today on a smaller scale. Upon Ballard's death, several members founded their own splinter groups, adding their own beliefs and teachings to those of the original movement.

According to the official website of the parent organization, the Saint Germain Foundation, its worldwide headquarters is located in Schaumburg, Illinois, and there are approximately 300 local groups worldwide under several variations of the names "I AM" Sanctuary, "I AM" Temple, and other similar titles. As of 2007, the organization states that its purpose is "spiritual, educational and practical", and that no admission fee is charged for their activities.

The term "I AM" is a reference to the ancient Sanskrit mantra So Ham and the divine biblical name "I Am that I Am".

Overview

The "I AM" Activity was influenced by the teachings of Helena Blavatsky and William Quan Judge. Ballard was always guided and inspired by the writings of William Quan Judge (1851–1896), who used the pseudonym David Lloyd due to the persecution of his enemies in the Theosophical Society. The movement also adopted elements of New Thought. To these spiritual movements, Ballard added a strong nationalistic flavor, claiming a new golden age would emerge in the United States.

The Ballards also borrowed from William Dudley Pelley's spiritual writings, with Edna allegedly attending several classes offered by Pelley. While there are no indications that Pelley was a member of I AM, Ballard early on recruited several members of his fascist organization, the Silver Legion of America.

The movement believes in the existence of a group called the "ascended masters", a hierarchy of supernatural beings that includes the original theosophical masters such as Jesus Christ, El Morya Khan, Maitreya, and in addition several dozen more beyond the original 20 Masters of the Ancient Wisdom of the original theosophists as described by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky.

These ascended masters are believed to be humans who have lived in a succession of reincarnations in physical bodies or cosmic beings (beings originated from the great central sun of light in the beginning of all times). Over time, those who have passed through various "embodiments" became highly advanced souls, are able to move beyond the cycles of "re-embodiments" and karma, and attained their "ascension", becoming immortal. Ascended masters are believed to communicate to humanity through certain trained messengers per Blavatsky, including Guy and Edna Ballard. Because Jesus is believed to be one of the ascended masters, making the "Christ Light" available to seekers who wish to move out of darkness, many of the members of the "I AM" Activity consider it to be a Christian religion. According to the Los Angeles Magazine, Ballard said he was the re-embodiment of George Washington, an Egyptian priest, and a noted French musician.

Ballard died in 1939. In 1942, his wife and son were convicted of fraud, a conviction which was overturned in a landmark Supreme Court decision (United States v. Ballard), ruling that the question of whether the Ballards believed their religious claims should not have been submitted to a jury.

History

Founding

The "I AM" Activity was founded by Guy Ballard (pseudonym Godfré Ray King) in the early 1930s. Ballard was well-read in theosophy and its offshoots, and he claimed to have met and been instructed by a man who introduced himself as "Saint Germain" while hiking on Mount Shasta looking for a rumored branch of the Great White Brotherhood known as "The Brotherhood of Mount Shasta". Saint Germain is regular component of theosophical religions as an ascended master, based on the historical Comte de Saint-Germain, an 18th-century adventurer.

The Ballards said they began talking to the ascended masters regularly. They founded a publishing house, Saint Germain Press, to publish their books and began training people to spread their messages across the United States. These training sessions and "conclaves" were held throughout the United States, open to the general public and free of charge. A front-page story in a 1938 edition of the Chicago Herald and Examiner noted that the Ballards "do not take up collections or ask for funds". Meetings became limited to members only after hecklers began disrupting their open meetings. Over their lifetimes, the Ballards recorded nearly 4000 live dictations, which they said were from the ascended masters. Guy Ballard, his wife Edna, and later their son Donald, became the sole "accredited messengers" of the ascended masters. In 1942, they began the I AM Sanctuary at a former Presbyterian missionary school.

Popularity

The Ballards' popularity spread, including up to a million followers in 1938. Donations were not formally required, but it was made clear that they were necessary in order to receive blessings from the masters.

The first of many "conclaves" held in scores of cities in their national tours was Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 10–19, 1934. According to a Los Angeles Magazine article, in August 1935, the Ballards hosted a gathering at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles that drew a crowd of 6,000. Guy Ballard spoke under the pseudonym he used in authoring his books, Godfre Ray King, and his wife used the pseudonym Lotus. The meeting included teachings they described as being received directly from the ascended masters. They led the audience in prayers and affirmations that they called decrees, including adorations to God and invocations for abundance of every good thing, including love, money, peace, and happiness.

Guy Ballard's death and splintering

At the height of his popularity, Guy Ballard died from arteriosclerosis at 5:00 A.M. on December 29, 1939, in Los Angeles, in the home of his son Donald. On December 31 his body was cremated. On New Year's Day during the annual Christmas Class, Edna Ballard stated that Guy had completed his Ascension at midnight December 31, 1939, from the "Royal Teton Retreat".

Ballard's death deeply affected the movement, which saw several splinter groups emerge.

  • I AM former member Geraldine Innocente (writing under the name Thomas Printz) quickly founded an offshoot of the movement, targeting the Spanish-speaking community.
  • Francis Ekey, another member, founded Lighthouse of Freedom to offer classes allegedly disseminating the teachings of ancient masters.
  • One of Ekey's collaborators, Mark Prophet, founded the Keepers of the Summit Lighthouse in 1958. To I AM's teachings, Prophet added a proclivity for conspiracy thinking, UFOs and a staunch opposition to communism. His wife Elizabeth Clare Wulf would eventually share leadership and succeed him, rebranding the organization as the Church Universal and Triumphant.
  • Important elements of Ballard's theology, symbolism and nationalism can also be found in Romana Didulo's movement in the 2020s. These include the use of decrees, the purple flame and the mythological ascended masters.

Copyright infringement civil action

In 1941, the Ballards were sued for copyright infringement by the family and estate of Frederick Spencer Oliver (1866–1899), "amenuensis" of the novel A Dweller on Two Planets, first published in 1905. The suit was dismissed for failure to state cause of action. District Judge Dawkins quoted the original foreword to Oliver's book in its entirety, wherein Oliver emphasized that he was not the author but had channeled the book from the spirit of a previously deceased person with the intent of preserving and conveying the story and teachings of that person's world; and the book had been copyrighted with Oliver as a proprietor, not as the author. Judge Dawkins pointed out that the Ballards had stated they were using similar methods to write their books and that this in itself wasn't enough to uphold the action in court.

Fraud trial of Edna and Donald Ballard

Based on statements made in books sent via the mail, Edna Ballard and her son Donald were charged with eighteen counts of mail fraud in 1942. The presiding judge instructed the jury not to consider the truth or falsity of the religious beliefs, but only whether the Ballards sincerely believed the claims or did not, and the jury found them guilty. The Ninth Circuit overturned the conviction on the grounds that the judge improperly excluded the credibility of their religious beliefs from consideration, and the government appealed to the Supreme Court. In United States v. Ballard, the Supreme Court in a 5–4 landmark decision held that the question of whether Ballards believed their religious claims should not have been submitted to the jury, and remanded the case back to the Ninth Circuit, which affirmed the fraud conviction. Interpreting this decision, the Ninth Circuit later found that the Court did not go so far as to hold that "the validity or veracity of a religious doctrine cannot be inquired into by a Federal Court."

On a second appeal, the Supreme Court in 1946 vacated the fraud conviction, on the grounds that women were improperly excluded from the jury panel.

Relocation to Santa Fe and Edna Ballard's death

In March 1942, Edna Ballard moved the western branch of the Saint Germain Press and her residence to Santa Fe, where she recorded live before an audience thousands more dictations she said were from the Ascended Masters.

Despite the ultimate dismissal of the court cases, it was not until 1954 that the organization's right to use the mail was restored. The Internal Revenue Service revoked their tax-exempt status in 1941, stating it did not recognize the movement as "a religion". A court ruling in 1957 overturned the ruling of the IRS and re-established the group's tax-exempt status.

Edna Ballard's death following "a brief illness" was reported as having occurred in her Chicago home on February 10, 1971.

Recent history and present day

As of 2007, Saint Germain Foundation maintains a reading room in Mount Shasta, California, and its headquarters in Schaumburg, Illinois. Several annual conclaves are held at their 12-story "I AM Temple" at 176 West Washington Street in downtown Chicago. The Saint Germain Press, a subsidiary of the Saint Germain Foundation, estimates they printed and put into circulation over one million books.

The Saint Germain Foundation presents an annual pageant every August at Mount Shasta since 1950, a tradition only interrupted by the COVID pandemic.

Teachings

According to the group's teachings, ascended masters are believed to be individuals who have left the reincarnation cycle of re-embodiment. The "I AM" Activity calls itself Christian; Jesus is considered one of the more important ascended masters.

Ballard's teachings included significant nationalistic and patriotic elements. According to Ballard's teachings, the faithful's rituals would allow the United States to lead the world into a new golden age of civilization, and St. Germain inspired the American Declaration of Independence. In addition, through the use of prayers and rituals, the ‘lightbearers’ in the USA would reverse the bad karma that had accumulated and was holding humanity back from attaining its godly existence

The movement teaches that the omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent creator God ('I AM' – Exodus 3:14) is in all of us as a spark from the Divine Flame, and that we can experience this presence, love, power and light – and its power of the Violet Consuming Flame of Divine Love – through quiet contemplation and by repeating 'affirmations' and 'decrees'. By affirming something one desires, one may cause it to happen.

The group teaches that the "Mighty I AM Presence" is God existing in and as each person's higher self, and that a light known as the "violet flame" is generated by the "I AM Presence." That "flame" may surround each person who calls forth the action of the Holy Spirit for expressions of mercy or forgiveness. The group believes that, by tapping into these internalized powers in accordance with the teachings of the ascended masters, one can use one's relationship to the "presence" to amplify the expressions of virtue such as justice, peace, harmony, and love; to displace or abate the expression of evil (i.e., the relative absence of good) in the world; and to minimize personal difficulties in one's life.

The spiritual goal of the teachings is that, by a process of self-purification through the symbol of the "Violet Consuming Flame", the believer may attain the perfected condition of the saints or become an ascended master when leaving their body (in contrast to common concepts of ordinary death). The practice of "decrees" (repeated prayers given aloud with conviction), served at times as commands from the masters or as a request from the faithful, adds to practitioners' likelihood of reaching self-purification.

The group also emphasizes personal freedom as essential to spiritual development.

These "positive thinking" beliefs overlap with several movements, such as New Thought, the so-called New Age movement, and the Human Potential Movement.

See also

References

  1. Pacheco, Ana (February 18, 2022). "A New Religion Comes to Santa Fe". History in Santa Fe. Retrieved June 7, 2024.
  2. "Loop place of worship broken into, ransacked; suspect injured, CPD says". ABC7 Chicago. April 27, 2023. Retrieved June 7, 2024.
  3. Jones, Lindsay (2005). "I Am". Encyclopedia of religion (vol. 6) (second ed.). Detroit : Macmillan Reference USA. pp. 4245–4247. ISBN 0-02-865739-X.
  4. ^ Saint Germain Foundation. The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation. Saint Germain Press 2003 ISBN 1-878891-99-5
  5. ^ Partride, Christopher, ed. (2004). New Religions: A Guide: New Religious Movements, Sects and Alternative Spiritualities. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 330–332.
  6. ^ Barrett, David (1996). Sects, 'Cults', and Alternative Religions: A World Survey and Sourcebook. London: Blandford. ISBN 0-7137-2567-2.
  7. ^ Celestini, Carmen; Amarasingam, Amarnath (December 6, 2023). "Reviving the Violet Flame: The New Age conspiratorial journey of Canada's Queen Romana Didulo". Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses. 53 (3): 366–389. doi:10.1177/00084298231209700.
  8. ^ "United States v. Ballard, 322 U.S. 78 (1944)". Justia Law.
  9. "Saint Germain Foundation official website". Saint Germain Foundation. Archived from the original on December 13, 2007. Retrieved December 17, 2007. The "I AM" Activity is spiritual, educational and practical. There are no financial schemes behind it; no admission is ever charged. It takes no political stance in any nation. The parent organization is Saint Germain Foundation, with worldwide headquarters located in Schaumburg, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. It is represented throughout the world by 300 local groups termed "I AM" Sanctuary, "I AM" Temple, "I AM" Study Groups, or "I AM" Reading Room. Saint Germain Foundation and its local activities are not affiliated with any other organization or persons.
  10. ^ Hadden, Jeffrey K. ""I AM" Religious Activity". Religious Movements Homepage at the University of Virginia. University of Virginia. Archived from the original on November 23, 2007. Retrieved December 17, 2007.
  11. Deveney, Pat. "New Liberator". The International Association for the Preservation of Spiritualist and Occult Periodicals. Archived from the original on June 1, 2023. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
  12. Bryan, Gerald B. (1940). Psychic Dictatorship in America (PDF). Los Angeles, California: Truth Research Publications. pp. 24–25.
  13. ^ Thompkins, Joshua (April 1, 1997). "The mighty I Am: Cult led by Guy Ballard". Los Angeles Magazine.
  14. King, Godfré Ray (1935) . "1: Meeting the Master". Unveiled Mysteries (Second ed.). Chicago, Illinois: Saint Germain Press. pp. 1–32 – via Internet Archive.
  15. The Voice of the "I AM" Number 1, March 1936. Chicago, Illinois: Saint Germain Press. page 27
  16. ^ Chicago Herald and Examiner October 8, 1938
  17. A History of Spirituality in Santa Fe: The City of Holy Faith. Arcadia. February 22, 2016. ISBN 9781625856401.
  18. Oliver v. Saint Germain Foundation, 41 F. Supp. 296 (S.D. Cal. 1941).
  19. Cohen v. United States, 297 F.2d 760 (1962)
  20. "Ballard v. United States, 329 U.S. 187 (1946)". Justia Law.
  21. Catherine L. Albanese (2007). A Republic of Mind and Spirit: A Cultural History of American Metaphysical Religion. Yale University Press. p. 470. ISBN 978-0-300-11089-0.
  22. "June 1971 Report of death of Edna Ballard who passed on Feb 10, 1971". The Sacramento Bee. June 3, 1971. p. 15 – via newspapers.com.
  23. "Saint Germain Foundation "I AM" COME! Pageant webpage". Saint Germain Foundation. Archived from the original on December 17, 2007. Retrieved December 17, 2007.
  24. Shelton, Kelsey; Kinkade, Skye (August 13, 2020). "Mount Shasta's 'I AM' Come! pageant called off in 2020". MtSashta News. Archived from the original on October 16, 2021. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
  25. Folkloric accounts collected in Raymond Bernard's Great Secret Count St Germain (Mokelumne Hill Press, 1993)
  26. "The "Beloved Mighty I am Presence"". Archived from the original on March 13, 2019. Retrieved January 6, 2014.

Partial bibliography

  • Saint Germain Foundation. The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation. Saint Germain Press 2003 ISBN 1-878891-99-5
  • King, Godfre Ray. Unveiled Mysteries. Saint Germain Press. ISBN 1-878891-00-6
  • King, Godfre Ray. The Magic Presence. Saint Germain Press. ISBN 1-878891-06-5
  • Saint Germain. I AM Discourses. Saint Germain Press. ISBN 1-878891-48-0
  • Peter Mt. Shasta. "Lady Master Pearl, My Teacher." Church of the Seven Rays. ISBN 978-0692356661

External links


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