Lotus on the Snow

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Lotus on the Snow does not take the readers’ breath away because of the magnificence of the Himalayas, but it makes the readers hold their breath because of the affection and nobility of the Himalayan people.

Lotus on the Snow does not intentionally call for the readers’ sympathies or trigger enragements with accounts of arrest, trial, torture, and crucifixion as the highest grossing The Passion of the Christ does, but the readers voluntarily yet unconditionally give it their wholehearted compassion, sincerity, trustworthiness, and admiration.  It naturally fills the readers’ heart with genuine compassion and soothes the readers’ soul with mind-blowing conversations.

Most characters in Lotus on the Snow make the readers keenly ponder about human beings and seriously wonder about life.  Most prominently, they distinctively touch the readers’ heart in an indescribable way.  The lessons drawn from this book are valuable accumulations of personal experience that neither power nor money nor fame can buy.  The actual costs of these lessons are the direct practices.

 

 

Mythology: In Greek mythology, Amaryllis was a shepherdess who loved Alteo, a shepherd with Hercules' strength and Apollo's beauty.  However, Alteo only loved flowers.  He'd often said that he would only love a girl who bought him a new flower.  So, Amaryllis dressed in maiden's white and appeared at Alteo's door for 30 nights, and each time piercing her heart with a golden arrow.  When Alteo finally opened his door, he found a Crimson flower, sprung from the blood of Amaryllis's heart.

Contemporary Meaning: The word “amaryllis” comes from the Greek word “amaryssein” that means “to sparkle”, referring to the bloom.  Today, the Amaryllis symbolizes pride, determination, and radiant beauty—the kind that emanates from an inner source and flowers outward.

 By Elizabeth Layne

 

Journey to the East by Baird T. Spalding generously offers the Western world a large number of innovative resolutions that conceptually yet conventionally transcend spiritual experiences and intellectual knowledge paradigm.

Although the majority of Westerners have refused to recognize the Eastern philosophies—causality, reincarnation, and karma—up to the nineteenth century, it has not escaped their notice that many true masters from the Far East are supporting and directing humans to their predestined destiny.  By witnessing miraculous performances, perceiving amazing phenomena, and absorbing enthralled conversations bestowed by those Eastern masters, Mr. Spalding eloquently explained and effectively launched spiritual as well as intellectual knowledge to the Western world in his Journey to the East.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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