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Gene Savoy

Douglas Eugene "Gene" Savoy (May 11, 1927 – September 11, 2007) was an American explorer, author, religious leader, and theologian. He served as Head Bishop of the International Community of Christ, Church of the Second Advent from 1971 until his death. Rising to prominence as one of the premier explorers of Peru in the 1960s,[1] he is best known for his claims to have discovered more than 40 lost cities in Peru and is credited with bringing to light a number of Peru’s most important archeological sites,[citation needed] including Vilcabamba, the last refuge of the Incas during the Spanish conquest, and Gran Pajaten, which he named but did not discover.[2][3]

Gene Savoy c. 2000

Early life edit

Savoy was born in Bellingham, Washington. At age 17 he enlisted in the U.S. Navy and served two years during World War II, after which he enrolled at the University of Portland to begin studies for the priesthood. Following an incident when one of his professors told him that the ideas he expressed in one of his papers were "very close to heresy," Savoy went to see the dean of men and legendary counselor, Monsignor John B. Delaunay, who told Savoy that he reminded him of Teilhard de Chardin and, recognizing that Savoy had some mission to perform, encouraged Savoy to take off a year to "follow his heart" and pursue his studies privately rather than remain in school.[4]

Initially shocked by this advice, Savoy went on to work as a journalist for the next ten years while he continued his studies of regional Indian petroglyphs and of religion.[5] During those years, he spent much of his time studying the literature, legends, and folklore of the North American Indians in the Pacific Northwest, intrigued by the possibility that there may have been early contacts between North and South America.[6] He also studied mystic Judaism and Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, the Chinese classics, and the Gnostic writings during that time under direct disciples of Khalil Gibran and Paul Brunton.[7]

In 1956 Savoy’s life changed utterly. His business collapsed and took with it his home, his belongings, and his marriage. As luck would have it, however, his documentary film of Columbia Gorge petroglyphs and carvings was picked up by a national news service, and his theories about similarities between North and South American picture drawings attracted the attention of an American archeologist who offered to take Savoy on an expedition to Peru as a photographer. Eager to fulfill his dream of becoming an explorer, Savoy accepted. In 1957 Savoy moved to Peru and a few years later began to organize his own archaeological expeditions under the auspices of the Andean Explorers Club, which he founded and which later grew into the Andean Explorers Foundation & Ocean Sailing Club.[8]

Explorer edit

Throughout the 1960s, Savoy carried out a series of well publicized expeditions in Peru, exploring and documenting various pre-Columbian archaeological sites.[9] In 1964 he identified a ruin called Espiritu Pampa as the legendary Vilcabamba, the 16th century capital of the Neo-Inca Empire and the last refuge of the Incas during the Spanish conquest.[10][11][12][13][14][15] This discovery disproved Hiram Bingham’s belief that Machu Picchu and Vilcabamba were one and the same.[16][17] In 1965 Savoy explored and brought worldwide attention to a site he named Gran Pajatén, an ornately ornamented stone city located in northeastern Peru.[18][19] His discovery of this site, as well as Vilcabamba and other sites, is disputed.[20] From 1965 to 1970 he continued his explorations into Peru’s eastern montañas.

In 1969 Savoy built and captained the Kuviqu (also known as the "Feathered Serpent I"), a totora-reed raft of ancient design, along 2,000 miles of ocean coastline from Peru to Mesoamerica in an effort to prove that Peruvians and Mexicans could have maintained contact in ancient times and that the legendary heroes Viracocha and Quetzalcoatl were one and the same.[21][22][23] Soon afterwards he captained the "Feathered Serpent II", which he sailed from the United States to the Caribbean, to Central and South America, and finally to Hawaii, to study ocean and wind currents.[24] In 1997 he sailed a 73-foot wooden catamaran from Peru to Hawaii in a dramatic effort to demonstrate that ancient Peruvians could have sailed the open seas.[25][26]

Savoy returned to the United States in the early 1970s, but continued his explorations throughout the latter half of the 20th century.

In 1984, after a 13-year absence, Savoy began journeying back into Peru. The next year he discovered Gran Vilaya[27][28] and in 1999 Gran Saposoa[29] in Chachapoyas territory. Both were grand city complexes of thousands of stone structures that solidified his theory that the eastern Peruvian jungles — in addition to the Andes and the coast — had been the location of high civilization.[30] He died in Reno, Nevada, aged 80.

Savoy’s uneasy relationship with the academic archaeologist community, who deplored his swashbuckling ways while they built on his discoveries for their own research,[31] is exemplified by the comment of archeologist Keith Muscutt, who pointed out that finding ruins "is about as hard as finding elephants in a zoo" [32] on the mountain ridges of northern Peru where Savoy made most of his discoveries, a region University of Florida archeologist Michael Moseley compared to "the Amazon jungle stretched over the Rocky Mountains."[33] Scientists have also questioned Savoy’s tendency to use his explorations to pursue uncommon theories, e.g. his claim that King Solomon acquired gold and precious stones from Peru (Ophir).[34] "Savoy's involvement in the Chachapoya saga clouds the scientific issues, attracts a lot of crackpots and scares off serious researchers who don't want to constantly have to deal with Savoy's tedious legacy of lost cities/El Dorado fantasies and other delusions," said archaeologist Keith Muscutt.[35]

The central driving idea behind all Savoy’s exploring was to show that the jungle was not on the fringes of Peruvian culture but at its center. It was this concept that led him on his obsessive search for the legendary cities of the Chachapoyas.[36] Savoy emphasized that he continually returned to historical sources in order to find clues for his searches:

No sensible man goes down into the jungle unless he's got something to follow. I see explorers as people with open minds who can scan many different sources for information, unconfined by an academic discipline, just like computers scan the internet. We've all learnt that the great thing is to follow the roads. Roads lead to ruins.[37]

The advice to 'follow the roads', meaning the Inca roads, was taken to heart by the Andean explorer Vince Lee who had some fruitful discussions with Savoy before embarking on his own Andean explorations.

Savoy's major discoveries gained him recognition as the "real Indiana Jones" by People magazine after his parallel career as religious leader and researcher became known.[38]

Spiritual researcher and religious educator edit

Over several decades, Savoy uncovered and institutionalized a modern system for spiritual self-regeneration rooted in the hidden teachings of the Essenes who, he was convinced, were the forebears of Jesus.[39][40] He called the spiritual discipline Cosolargy,[41] believing that similar esoteric systems were practiced by ancient high holy orders around the world, including those of ancient America, and were eventually lost, in whole or in part, to modern society.[42]

In 1959 he established the Cosolargy Institute (also known as the American Philosophical Institute of Cosolargy) to follow new conditions in the sun and to undertake further research into the spiritual teachings of ancient solar cultures.[43] He later formalized this research under the auspices of the American Cosmic Solar Research Center, established in 1962,[44] and the research program Project "X": The Search for the Secrets of Immortality, established in 1970,[45] all of which continue to function through the Jamilian University.

In 1959 Savoy also established the International Community of Christ, Church of the Second Advent to impart Cosolargy as the basis for a new understanding of the authentic Christian teaching and of the Essenes and Jesus as precursors to a modern messianic age.[46][47] He taught that Christ had come again as prophesied, not as a human messiah, but as a celestial mediating force available to all humankind through the manifesting Spiritual Sun spoken of in Malachi 4:1-3 and in the Essene Book of Hymns, to usher in a new epoch.[48] The church teaches that Jesus prophesied the future coming of Christ as the "Sun of Righteousness" [49] and that the cosmic phenomenon of the Messianic Sun began in 1962, as revealed by Savoy’s son, Jamil (1959–1962), a wondrous child seer [50] who lived in the Andes of Peru.[51] The notion that Savoy believed his son Jamil to be the Second Coming of Christ is a misunderstanding that arose during his first interview with a local newspaper as head bishop of the church [52] and has been repeated in newspapers ever since as a boiler plate item, appearing even in one of his obituaries.[53] Bishop Savoy addressed this misconception directly in a 1985 theological lecture:

People may say that the sun is an ordinary sun. Is it? It is to the person that sees it as an ordinary sun. People may say: "Jamil had no purpose. He was just an ordinary child. Why did God have to use The Child? Who needs him?" I have been accused of building a monument to my dead son, and people laugh at me because I speak about Jamil in the way that I do. The Child was an Image, and that Image was a vehicle for the manifestation of God’s Word. Therefore, The Child was necessary. But The Child is not a Jesus Christ. He certainly is not a "savior" in the strictest sense of the word. He is merely a conveyor of information from one world to the other for our use, much the same as was Jesus. We are not saved by any human, neither Jamil nor Jesus. We are saved by God. Therefore, God teaches us by the creation and the manifestation of the Image as a vehicle and intermediary by which the Word manifests and speaks to us. Therefore, Jamil was not ordinary nor is the sun ordinary. There is a New Sun and there is a new humankind coming into existence. Jamil was the first of that New Race.[54]

Through the years, Savoy produced a steady stream of scholarly and transcendent literature, which included more than 60 volumes on Cosolargy, the Essenes, the origins of Christianity, and comparative religion;[55] and he delivered over 400 lectures on metaphysics, philosophy and theology,[56] which form the core lectures of the Sacred College program of the Jamilian University of the Ordained. Collectively, these texts and lectures present what Savoy saw as the real teachings of Christ and communicate how the recovery of this information can assist in bringing religious enlightenment to today’s world.[57]

Books edit

Exploration
  • Antisuyo: The Search for the Lost Cities of the Amazon (Simon and Schuster, 1970)
  • On the Trail of the Feathered Serpent (Bobbs-Merrill, 1974)
  • Project X: The Search for the Secrets of Immortality (Bobbs-Merrill, 1977)
  • The Gran Vilaya Report (Andean Explorers Foundation & Ocean Sailing Club, 1996)
Religion

Publications of the International Community of Christ:

  • Cosolargy Papers, 12 volumes (1970–1975)
  • Jamil: Child of Light (1973, 2009)
  • Prophecies of Jamil, 7 volumes (1973–1982)
  • The Decoded New Testament (1974, 1983)
  • Academy Symposia, 12 volumes (1975–1980)
  • The Image and The Word, 6 volumes (1976–1981)
  • Project "X" Symposia, 8 volumes (1978–1981)
  • The Essaei Document: Secrets of an Eternal Race (1978, 1983)
  • Lost Gospel of Jesus: The Hidden Teachings of Christ (1978, 1984)
  • The Book of God’s Revelation (1983)
  • Miracle of the Second Advent: The Emerging New Christianity (1984)

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Covert, "The Explorer," p. 28
  2. ^ Covert, "The Explorer," p. 28
  3. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  4. ^ Covert, "The Explorer," p.26
  5. ^ Project X: The Explorations, 1987, pp. 6-8
  6. ^ Savoy, Antisuyo, pp. 15-17
  7. ^ Project X: The Explorations, 1987, pp. 13-19
  8. ^ Covert, "The Explorer," p.27
  9. ^ Profile of Gene Savoy, "We All Search For Something", 2009
  10. ^ Savoy, Antisuyo, pp. 73-128
  11. ^ Lee, Forgotten Vilcabamba, 2000
  12. ^ Hemming, Conquest, pp. 492-499
  13. ^ Covert, "The Explorer," pp. 27-28
  14. ^ Profile of Gene Savoy, "We All Search For Something", 2009
  15. ^ Maugh, "Science winces at adventurer's ways", 2004
  16. ^ Hemming, Conquest, p. 499
  17. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  18. ^ Savoy, Antisuyo, pp. 131-143
  19. ^ Gilbert, "Lost Cities," pp. 48-53, 83
  20. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  21. ^ Savoy,On the Trail of the Feathered Serpent, 1974
  22. ^ Heyerdahl, Early Man, pp. 42-43, 68, 381
  23. ^ Profile of Gene Savoy, "We All Search For Something", 2009
  24. ^ Profile of Gene Savoy, "We All Search For Something", 2009
  25. ^ Profile of Gene Savoy, "We All Search For Something", 2009
  26. ^ Covert, "The Explorer," pp. 30-31
  27. ^ Covert, "The Explorer," pp. 30
  28. ^ Gilbert, "Lost Cities," p. 52
  29. ^ Profile of Gene Savoy, "We All Search For Something", 2009
  30. ^ Martin, "Gene Savoy, Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins, Dies at 80", 2007
  31. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  32. ^ Martin, "Gene Savoy, Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins, Dies at 80", 2007
  33. ^ Maugh, "Science winces at adventurer's ways", 2004
  34. ^ Martin, "Gene Savoy, Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins, Dies at 80", 2007
  35. ^ Maugh, "Science winces at adventurer's ways", 2004
  36. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  37. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  38. ^ People Weekly, May 1985, pp. 30-31.
  39. ^ Savoy, Essaei Document, 1983
  40. ^ Melton, "International Community of Christ," p. 1128
  41. ^ Melton, "International Community of Christ," p. 1128
  42. ^ Savoy, "International Community of Christ", 2009
  43. ^ Melton, "International Community of Christ," p. 1128
  44. ^ Project X: The Explorations, 1987, p. 21
  45. ^ Project X: The Explorations, 1987, p. 21
  46. ^ Martin, "Gene Savoy, Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins, Dies at 80", 2007
  47. ^ Savoy, "International Community of Christ", 2009
  48. ^ Melton, "International Community of Christ," pp. 1127-1128
  49. ^ Savoy, "International Community of Christ", 2009
  50. ^ Melton, "International Community of Christ," pp. 11-27-1128
  51. ^ Savoy, "International Community of Christ", 2009
  52. ^ Haq, Reno-Gazette Journal, 1982
  53. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  54. ^ Savoy, Core Theology Series, Lecture 129, p. 12
  55. ^ Obituary, The Independent, 2007
  56. ^ Gene Savoy website
  57. ^ Melton, "International Community of Christ," p. 1128

References edit

  • Covert, Marc. "The Explorer: Gene Savoy '51," Portland, the University of Portland Magazine, Spring 1999, pp. 26–31.
  • Gene Savoy Website. [1]
  • Gilbert, Susan. "Lost Cities of the Andes," Science Digest, June 1985, pp. 46–53, 83.
  • Haq, Kathy. ""Reno-Gazette Journal"", May 2, 1982, "Small Reno church has no small plans."
  • Hemming, John. The Conquest of the Incas (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1973).
  • Heyerdahl, Thor. Early Man and the Ocean; A Search for the Beginnings of Navigation and Seaborne Civilizations (Doubleday & Company, 1979).
  • Lee, Vincent R. Forgotten Vilcabamba: Final Stronghold of the Incas (Sixpac Manco Publications, 2000).
  • Martin, Douglas. “Gene Savoy, Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins, Dies at 80” , New York Times, September 19, 2007.
  • Maugh II, Thomas H. “Science winces at adventurer's ways”, Seattle Times, December 12, 2004.
  • Maugh II, Thomas H. "Gene Savoy, 80; swashbuckling explorer found lost cities in Peru, Los Angeles Times, September 18, 2007.
  • Melton, J. Gordon. Melton’s Encyclopedia of American Religions, 8th edition (Gale, Cengage Learning, 2009), pp. 1127–1128.
  • Obituary. “Gene Savoy”, The Independent, September 21, 2007.
  • Project X: The Explorations (International Community of Christ, 1987).
  • Savoy, Sean. "International Community of Christ", Online Nevada Encyclopedia, July 7, 2009.
  • People Weekly, May 1985, pp. 30–31.
  • Profile of Gene Savoy., Your Spirit, November 2009 issue, Malaspina U website.
  • Savoy, Gene. Core Theology Series of the Second Advent Theology Program, Lecture 129, "The Sayings of The Child - Part XXIX, p. 12.
  • Savoy, Gene. Antisuyo: The Search for the Lost Cities of the Amazon (Simon and Schuster, 1970).
  • Savoy, Gene. The Essaei Document: Secrets of an Eternal Race (International Community of Christ, 1978, 1983)
  • Savoy, Gene. On the Trail of the Feathered Serpent (Bobbs-Merrill, 1974).

External links edit

  • Gene Savoy Website
  • Profile of Gene Savoy, Malaspina U website.
  • Britannica Online Encyclopedia: Gene Savoy
  • Gene Savoy Eulogy, Part 1 of 5 on YouTube
  • Gene Savoy Remembered, Part 1 of 6 on YouTube

gene, savoy, eugene, savoy, redirects, here, austrian, habsburg, military, prince, eugene, savoy, douglas, eugene, gene, savoy, 1927, september, 2007, american, explorer, author, religious, leader, theologian, served, head, bishop, international, community, ch. Eugene Savoy redirects here For Austrian Habsburg military see Prince Eugene of Savoy Douglas Eugene Gene Savoy May 11 1927 September 11 2007 was an American explorer author religious leader and theologian He served as Head Bishop of the International Community of Christ Church of the Second Advent from 1971 until his death Rising to prominence as one of the premier explorers of Peru in the 1960s 1 he is best known for his claims to have discovered more than 40 lost cities in Peru and is credited with bringing to light a number of Peru s most important archeological sites citation needed including Vilcabamba the last refuge of the Incas during the Spanish conquest and Gran Pajaten which he named but did not discover 2 3 Gene Savoy c 2000 Contents 1 Early life 2 Explorer 3 Spiritual researcher and religious educator 4 Books 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editSavoy was born in Bellingham Washington At age 17 he enlisted in the U S Navy and served two years during World War II after which he enrolled at the University of Portland to begin studies for the priesthood Following an incident when one of his professors told him that the ideas he expressed in one of his papers were very close to heresy Savoy went to see the dean of men and legendary counselor Monsignor John B Delaunay who told Savoy that he reminded him of Teilhard de Chardin and recognizing that Savoy had some mission to perform encouraged Savoy to take off a year to follow his heart and pursue his studies privately rather than remain in school 4 Initially shocked by this advice Savoy went on to work as a journalist for the next ten years while he continued his studies of regional Indian petroglyphs and of religion 5 During those years he spent much of his time studying the literature legends and folklore of the North American Indians in the Pacific Northwest intrigued by the possibility that there may have been early contacts between North and South America 6 He also studied mystic Judaism and Christianity Buddhism Hinduism Zoroastrianism the Chinese classics and the Gnostic writings during that time under direct disciples of Khalil Gibran and Paul Brunton 7 In 1956 Savoy s life changed utterly His business collapsed and took with it his home his belongings and his marriage As luck would have it however his documentary film of Columbia Gorge petroglyphs and carvings was picked up by a national news service and his theories about similarities between North and South American picture drawings attracted the attention of an American archeologist who offered to take Savoy on an expedition to Peru as a photographer Eager to fulfill his dream of becoming an explorer Savoy accepted In 1957 Savoy moved to Peru and a few years later began to organize his own archaeological expeditions under the auspices of the Andean Explorers Club which he founded and which later grew into the Andean Explorers Foundation amp Ocean Sailing Club 8 Explorer editThroughout the 1960s Savoy carried out a series of well publicized expeditions in Peru exploring and documenting various pre Columbian archaeological sites 9 In 1964 he identified a ruin called Espiritu Pampa as the legendary Vilcabamba the 16th century capital of the Neo Inca Empire and the last refuge of the Incas during the Spanish conquest 10 11 12 13 14 15 This discovery disproved Hiram Bingham s belief that Machu Picchu and Vilcabamba were one and the same 16 17 In 1965 Savoy explored and brought worldwide attention to a site he named Gran Pajaten an ornately ornamented stone city located in northeastern Peru 18 19 His discovery of this site as well as Vilcabamba and other sites is disputed 20 From 1965 to 1970 he continued his explorations into Peru s eastern montanas In 1969 Savoy built and captained the Kuviqu also known as the Feathered Serpent I a totora reed raft of ancient design along 2 000 miles of ocean coastline from Peru to Mesoamerica in an effort to prove that Peruvians and Mexicans could have maintained contact in ancient times and that the legendary heroes Viracocha and Quetzalcoatl were one and the same 21 22 23 Soon afterwards he captained the Feathered Serpent II which he sailed from the United States to the Caribbean to Central and South America and finally to Hawaii to study ocean and wind currents 24 In 1997 he sailed a 73 foot wooden catamaran from Peru to Hawaii in a dramatic effort to demonstrate that ancient Peruvians could have sailed the open seas 25 26 Savoy returned to the United States in the early 1970s but continued his explorations throughout the latter half of the 20th century In 1984 after a 13 year absence Savoy began journeying back into Peru The next year he discovered Gran Vilaya 27 28 and in 1999 Gran Saposoa 29 in Chachapoyas territory Both were grand city complexes of thousands of stone structures that solidified his theory that the eastern Peruvian jungles in addition to the Andes and the coast had been the location of high civilization 30 He died in Reno Nevada aged 80 Savoy s uneasy relationship with the academic archaeologist community who deplored his swashbuckling ways while they built on his discoveries for their own research 31 is exemplified by the comment of archeologist Keith Muscutt who pointed out that finding ruins is about as hard as finding elephants in a zoo 32 on the mountain ridges of northern Peru where Savoy made most of his discoveries a region University of Florida archeologist Michael Moseley compared to the Amazon jungle stretched over the Rocky Mountains 33 Scientists have also questioned Savoy s tendency to use his explorations to pursue uncommon theories e g his claim that King Solomon acquired gold and precious stones from Peru Ophir 34 Savoy s involvement in the Chachapoya saga clouds the scientific issues attracts a lot of crackpots and scares off serious researchers who don t want to constantly have to deal with Savoy s tedious legacy of lost cities El Dorado fantasies and other delusions said archaeologist Keith Muscutt 35 The central driving idea behind all Savoy s exploring was to show that the jungle was not on the fringes of Peruvian culture but at its center It was this concept that led him on his obsessive search for the legendary cities of the Chachapoyas 36 Savoy emphasized that he continually returned to historical sources in order to find clues for his searches No sensible man goes down into the jungle unless he s got something to follow I see explorers as people with open minds who can scan many different sources for information unconfined by an academic discipline just like computers scan the internet We ve all learnt that the great thing is to follow the roads Roads lead to ruins 37 dd The advice to follow the roads meaning the Inca roads was taken to heart by the Andean explorer Vince Lee who had some fruitful discussions with Savoy before embarking on his own Andean explorations Savoy s major discoveries gained him recognition as the real Indiana Jones by People magazine after his parallel career as religious leader and researcher became known 38 Spiritual researcher and religious educator editThis article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self published sources Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately November 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Over several decades Savoy uncovered and institutionalized a modern system for spiritual self regeneration rooted in the hidden teachings of the Essenes who he was convinced were the forebears of Jesus 39 40 He called the spiritual discipline Cosolargy 41 believing that similar esoteric systems were practiced by ancient high holy orders around the world including those of ancient America and were eventually lost in whole or in part to modern society 42 In 1959 he established the Cosolargy Institute also known as the American Philosophical Institute of Cosolargy to follow new conditions in the sun and to undertake further research into the spiritual teachings of ancient solar cultures 43 He later formalized this research under the auspices of the American Cosmic Solar Research Center established in 1962 44 and the research program Project X The Search for the Secrets of Immortality established in 1970 45 all of which continue to function through the Jamilian University In 1959 Savoy also established the International Community of Christ Church of the Second Advent to impart Cosolargy as the basis for a new understanding of the authentic Christian teaching and of the Essenes and Jesus as precursors to a modern messianic age 46 47 He taught that Christ had come again as prophesied not as a human messiah but as a celestial mediating force available to all humankind through the manifesting Spiritual Sun spoken of in Malachi 4 1 3 and in the Essene Book of Hymns to usher in a new epoch 48 The church teaches that Jesus prophesied the future coming of Christ as the Sun of Righteousness 49 and that the cosmic phenomenon of the Messianic Sun began in 1962 as revealed by Savoy s son Jamil 1959 1962 a wondrous child seer 50 who lived in the Andes of Peru 51 The notion that Savoy believed his son Jamil to be the Second Coming of Christ is a misunderstanding that arose during his first interview with a local newspaper as head bishop of the church 52 and has been repeated in newspapers ever since as a boiler plate item appearing even in one of his obituaries 53 Bishop Savoy addressed this misconception directly in a 1985 theological lecture People may say that the sun is an ordinary sun Is it It is to the person that sees it as an ordinary sun People may say Jamil had no purpose He was just an ordinary child Why did God have to use The Child Who needs him I have been accused of building a monument to my dead son and people laugh at me because I speak about Jamil in the way that I do The Child was an Image and that Image was a vehicle for the manifestation of God s Word Therefore The Child was necessary But The Child is not a Jesus Christ He certainly is not a savior in the strictest sense of the word He is merely a conveyor of information from one world to the other for our use much the same as was Jesus We are not saved by any human neither Jamil nor Jesus We are saved by God Therefore God teaches us by the creation and the manifestation of the Image as a vehicle and intermediary by which the Word manifests and speaks to us Therefore Jamil was not ordinary nor is the sun ordinary There is a New Sun and there is a new humankind coming into existence Jamil was the first of that New Race 54 Through the years Savoy produced a steady stream of scholarly and transcendent literature which included more than 60 volumes on Cosolargy the Essenes the origins of Christianity and comparative religion 55 and he delivered over 400 lectures on metaphysics philosophy and theology 56 which form the core lectures of the Sacred College program of the Jamilian University of the Ordained Collectively these texts and lectures present what Savoy saw as the real teachings of Christ and communicate how the recovery of this information can assist in bringing religious enlightenment to today s world 57 Books editExplorationAntisuyo The Search for the Lost Cities of the Amazon Simon and Schuster 1970 On the Trail of the Feathered Serpent Bobbs Merrill 1974 Project X The Search for the Secrets of Immortality Bobbs Merrill 1977 The Gran Vilaya Report Andean Explorers Foundation amp Ocean Sailing Club 1996 ReligionPublications of the International Community of Christ Cosolargy Papers 12 volumes 1970 1975 Jamil Child of Light 1973 2009 Prophecies of Jamil 7 volumes 1973 1982 The Decoded New Testament 1974 1983 Academy Symposia 12 volumes 1975 1980 The Image and The Word 6 volumes 1976 1981 Project X Symposia 8 volumes 1978 1981 The Essaei Document Secrets of an Eternal Race 1978 1983 Lost Gospel of Jesus The Hidden Teachings of Christ 1978 1984 The Book of God s Revelation 1983 Miracle of the Second Advent The Emerging New Christianity 1984 Footnotes edit Covert The Explorer p 28 Covert The Explorer p 28 Obituary The Independent 2007 Covert The Explorer p 26 Project X The Explorations 1987 pp 6 8 Savoy Antisuyo pp 15 17 Project X The Explorations 1987 pp 13 19 Covert The Explorer p 27 Profile of Gene Savoy We All Search For Something 2009 Savoy Antisuyo pp 73 128 Lee Forgotten Vilcabamba 2000 Hemming Conquest pp 492 499 Covert The Explorer pp 27 28 Profile of Gene Savoy We All Search For Something 2009 Maugh Science winces at adventurer s ways 2004 Hemming Conquest p 499 Obituary The Independent 2007 Savoy Antisuyo pp 131 143 Gilbert Lost Cities pp 48 53 83 Obituary The Independent 2007 Savoy On the Trail of the Feathered Serpent 1974 Heyerdahl Early Man pp 42 43 68 381 Profile of Gene Savoy We All Search For Something 2009 Profile of Gene Savoy We All Search For Something 2009 Profile of Gene Savoy We All Search For Something 2009 Covert The Explorer pp 30 31 Covert The Explorer pp 30 Gilbert Lost Cities p 52 Profile of Gene Savoy We All Search For Something 2009 Martin Gene Savoy Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins Dies at 80 2007 Obituary The Independent 2007 Martin Gene Savoy Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins Dies at 80 2007 Maugh Science winces at adventurer s ways 2004 Martin Gene Savoy Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins Dies at 80 2007 Maugh Science winces at adventurer s ways 2004 Obituary The Independent 2007 Obituary The Independent 2007 People Weekly May 1985 pp 30 31 Savoy Essaei Document 1983 Melton International Community of Christ p 1128 Melton International Community of Christ p 1128 Savoy International Community of Christ 2009 Melton International Community of Christ p 1128 Project X The Explorations 1987 p 21 Project X The Explorations 1987 p 21 Martin Gene Savoy Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins Dies at 80 2007 Savoy International Community of Christ 2009 Melton International Community of Christ pp 1127 1128 Savoy International Community of Christ 2009 Melton International Community of Christ pp 11 27 1128 Savoy International Community of Christ 2009 Haq Reno Gazette Journal 1982 Obituary The Independent 2007 Savoy Core Theology Series Lecture 129 p 12 Obituary The Independent 2007 Gene Savoy website Melton International Community of Christ p 1128References editCovert Marc The Explorer Gene Savoy 51 Portland the University of Portland Magazine Spring 1999 pp 26 31 Gene Savoy Website 1 Gilbert Susan Lost Cities of the Andes Science Digest June 1985 pp 46 53 83 Haq Kathy Reno Gazette Journal May 2 1982 Small Reno church has no small plans Hemming John The Conquest of the Incas Harcourt Brace Jovanovich 1973 Heyerdahl Thor Early Man and the Ocean A Search for the Beginnings of Navigation and Seaborne Civilizations Doubleday amp Company 1979 Lee Vincent R Forgotten Vilcabamba Final Stronghold of the Incas Sixpac Manco Publications 2000 Martin Douglas Gene Savoy Flamboyant Explorer of Ruins Dies at 80 New York Times September 19 2007 Maugh II Thomas H Science winces at adventurer s ways Seattle Times December 12 2004 Maugh II Thomas H Gene Savoy 80 swashbuckling explorer found lost cities in Peru Los Angeles Times September 18 2007 Melton J Gordon Melton s Encyclopedia of American Religions 8th edition Gale Cengage Learning 2009 pp 1127 1128 Obituary Gene Savoy The Independent September 21 2007 Project X The Explorations International Community of Christ 1987 Savoy Sean International Community of Christ Online Nevada Encyclopedia July 7 2009 People Weekly May 1985 pp 30 31 Profile of Gene Savoy We All Search For Something Your Spirit November 2009 issue Malaspina U website Savoy Gene Core Theology Series of the Second Advent Theology Program Lecture 129 The Sayings of The Child Part XXIX p 12 Savoy Gene Antisuyo The Search for the Lost Cities of the Amazon Simon and Schuster 1970 Savoy Gene The Essaei Document Secrets of an Eternal Race International Community of Christ 1978 1983 Savoy Gene On the Trail of the Feathered Serpent Bobbs Merrill 1974 External links editGene Savoy Website We All Search For Something Profile of Gene Savoy Malaspina U website Britannica Online Encyclopedia Gene Savoy Gene Savoy Eulogy Part 1 of 5 on YouTube Gene Savoy Remembered Part 1 of 6 on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gene Savoy amp oldid 1107043799, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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