This Aramaic study of Yeshua’s spiritual teachings offers profound new insights into the New Testament, the Essenes and Dead Sea Scrolls, Mary Magdalene, and much more.
Lars Muhl has had a lifelong burning interest in Jesus, not only as an archetype, savior, bodhisattva , and elder brother, but also in relation to the Essenes from the Dead Sea. The Law of Light is the result of his many years spent studying Aramaic and the techniques of Yeshua (Jesus).
Yeshua spoke Aramaic. Through the Aramaic language, his teachings offer not just another interpretation of the New Testament, but the unveiling of a secret message that attempts, once and for all, to settle centuries-old conceptions of sin, and to once again connect man with the heavenly spiritual source. The core of Yeshua’s Aramaic message is intimacy, freedom, selfless awareness, unconditional love, compassion, and forgiveness. In all he says, there exists a hidden invitation to us to be present in, and dedicated to, everything with which we engage. Five minutes of total devotion is worth more than hours of hectic exertion. The aim is to set mankind free and to dismiss everything that is bound up in false notions.
Lars Muhl has a great insight into the Aramaic language. And i love to hear and read about his study. But often I get a little sad feeling inside. I feel talked down to. Lars Muhl proclaims often how bad man is, how foolish man is. For every chapter I got those “he must be very disappointed in life.” I feel im the student who want the teachers accept, but in the end i will never get it. But on the other side I love his work.
The writer has clearly Eastern philosophies and beliefs about Jesus, none of which were qualified in this book. Nothing in this book was annotated for deeper study and it felt more like the authors attempt to write his own holy book.
If I could give this book more than 5 stars, I would. It has opened my mind to so many things that I have had questions about, and has shown me many more things to take with me on my spiritual journey. This is quite possibly one of the best books that I have ever read, for me. I'll be opening the pages of this book many many more times.