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Rosicrucianism

★1764★

Ancient and Mystical Order of the Rosae Crucis


San Jose, CA 95191
[It should be noted that the Ancient and Mystical Order of the Rosae Crucis does not consider itself
a religion and points out that its membership includes persons of every religion and creed. It is in
this encyclopedia for two reasons. First, it is a major disseminator of the ancient wisdom teachings,
the subject of this chapter, which are a significant element of what has, over the last century,
become a new religious tradition in the West. Second, the order accepts as its own the same history
(detailed in the introductory section of this volume) as the other Rosicrucian groups. Its inclusion
has seemed necessary in order to present a full picture of the Rosicrucian presence in North
America. The order is the largest of the several Rosicrucian bodies, and throughout its history it has
been forced to interact with other organizations that have taken the Rosicrucian name.]
The Ancient and Mystical Order of the Rosae Crucis (AMORC) was founded in 1915 by H.
Spencer Lewis (1883-1939) in New York City, as an esoteric fraternal order. Lewis was a young
occultist who had been associated with the various British occult orders and who met Aleister
Crowley. Active attempts to establish the Rosicrucian Order began in 1909. In that year, Lewis
states he met French members of the International Rosicrucian Council in Toulouse. He was
initiated, returned to America, and began holding meetings. In 1915, the order was firmly
established, and the massive publicity campaign, which has made this branch of the Rosicrucian the
best known to the general public, was begun.
Lewis early affiliations with various occult groups, especially the Ordo Templi Orientis (O.T.O),
headed by Crowley for many years, is clearly reflected in his frequent inclusions of material from
them in the teachings and symbolism of the AMORC. For example, the Rose Cross emblem was
taken from the Equinox III (Crowley's periodical), and other emblems were borrowed from other
issues. (Lewis was not above pure plagiarism; whole chapters of his Mystic Life of Jesus were taken
from the Aquarian Gospel of Jesus by Levi Dowling.) In 1916, after the German O.T.O. split with
Crowley over The Book of the Law, it gave its recognition to the AMORC in a document Lewis
proudly displayed (in spite of O.T.O.'s association with the practice of sex magic, which AMORC
has never advocated).
Rapid growth led to conflict with the other Rosicrucian bodies. In 1928, shortly after the move of
the AMORC to San Jose, the older Fraternitas Rosae Crucis launched an attack on Lewis,
challenging the Order's right to the designation "Rosicrucian." Lewis accused R. Swinburne
Clymer, a lifelong advocate of alternative healing practices, of receiving an M.D. from a diploma
mill and fraudulent behavior. An intense polemic, which at times has involved the Rosicrucian
Fraternity in Oceanside, California, has continued to the present.
The teachings of the Rosicrucians center on God's purpose for life. Rosicrucians believe God
created the universe according to his immutable laws. Man's success is through mastership, the
ability to bring into material expression one's mental imaging. The techniques taught to students
lead to mastery. For example, students are taught to "image" or imagine such things as health,
wealth, and happiness, and thereby draw those things to themselves. Progress in the teaching and
knowledge of the accompanying practices comes through a series of correspondence lessons mailed
regularly to members. Completion of a set of lessons admits students to a higher degree in the work
and makes available the next, more advanced, set of lessons. Members may also attend local centers
(designated lodges, chapters, or pronaoi, depending upon their strength) for group activities.
The AMORC sees itself as a continuation of the ancient mystery schools of Amenhotep IV and
Solomon; listed among famous Rosicrucians are Isaac Newton, Rene Descartes, Benjamin Franklin,
and Francis Bacon. The Fraternity works on 180-year cycles, first acting in silence and secrecy and
then in public. A new public cycle began in 1909. Head of the order is the Grand Imperator, a post
held by Ralph M. Lewis (1904-1987), Spencer Lewis' son, from 1939 to 1987. Following the death
of Ralph M. Lewis, Gary L. Stewart was chosen as the new Grand Imperator. However, three years
later he was removed from office by vote of the Order's board and stands accused of embezzling
$3.5 million which he had transferred from a bank account in California to one in the small
European country of Andorra. Stewart was succeeded by Christian Bernard who currently serves as
the Grand Imperator.
Internationally the AMORC is headed by the Supreme Grand Lodge headquartered in San Jose,
California. Its directors include the Grand masters of each of the twelve grand lodges which have
been established to serve various geographical regions and language groups. Grand Lodges serve
Portuguese, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese Dutch, and the Nordic Languages. Two
England-language Grand Lodges serve the Americas and Europe/Africa respectively and two
Spanish-language Grand Lodges serve the Americas and Europe/Africa/Australasia respectively.
Lewis was interested in Egypt, and, through the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose, which
he founded, made many significant contributions to Egyptology. The museum is located in
Rosicrucian Park, a square block in San Jose that houses the other departments of the order and
which has become a major tourist stop in California. The museum celebrated its 65th anniversary in
1992.
Membership: Not reported, but in 1990 the order claimed over 250,000 members worldwide. In
1995 the Order listed 98 chartered lodges, chapters, and pronaoi in the United States, including
Puerto Rico. There were 36 groups in Canada, and more than 1,200 worldwide. Members were
reported in 86 countries around the world. In 1991 the Rosicrucian Digest circulated over 40,000
copies per issue. The members only Rosicrucian Forum circulates approximately 10,700 copies.
Educational Facilities: Rose-Croix University, San Jose, California.
Periodicals: Rosicrucian Digest. Send orders to Rosicrucian Park, San Jose, CA 95191. •
Rosicrucian Forum (available to members only).

Sources:
Bernard, Raymond. Messages from the Celestial Sanctum. San Jose, CA: Supreme Grand Lodge of
AMORC, 1980.
Lewis, H. Spencer. Cosmic Mission Fulfilled. San Jose, CA: Supreme Grand Lodge of AMORC,
1973.
——. The Mystical Life of Jesus. San Jose, CA: Supreme Grand Lodge of AMORC, 1929.
——. Rosicrucian Manual. San Jose, CA: Rosicrucian Press, 1941.
——. Rosicrucian Questions and Answers. San Jose, CA: Supreme Grand Lodge of AMORC, 1969.
——. Yesterday Has Much to Tell. San Jose, CA: Supreme Grand Lodge of AMORCS, 1973.
★1765★

Ancient Rosae Crucis (ARC)


PO Box 4764
Dallas, TX 75208
In 1990, the Ancient and Mystical Order of the Rosae Crucis (AMORC) underwent a
reorganization, when the board withdrew the authority of then Grand Imperator Gary L. Stewart and
reorganized under a new Grand Imperator, Christian Bernard, previously head of its French
division. The Ancient Rosae Crucis (ARC) was formed that year as a vehicle to continued the
Rosicrucian teachings and support Stewart. However, during the ensuing years, ARC's formal
leadership, including Paul Walden and Ashley McFadden, also separated from Stewart and have
continued separately.
ARC continues the concern expressed by Stewart that numerous revisions to the texts of AMORC's
founder H. Spencer Lewis (1883-1939) and his son Ralph M. Lewis (1904-1987) and the original
teachings of the order had been changed. ARC began to issue a set of original AMORC monographs
retyped from series owned by McFadden and edited by him.
Members receive ARC's teachings through the monographs that guide them in a systematic
sequence of study that present the Rosicrucian perspective on natural and cosmic laws and that
facilitate among other things the awakening of the individual's intuitive and psychic abilities. The
studies are divided into degrees, each degree building upon the previous one. The teachings are
available only to members.
Membership: Not reported.

Sources:
Ancient Rosae Crucis. http://www.arcgl.org/. 7 May 2002.
★1766★

Ausar Auset Society


℅ Kamit Publications
140 Buckingham Rd.
Brooklyn, NY 11226
The Ausar Auset Society is a Rosicrucian body serving the black community of the United States. It
was founded in the mid-1970s by R. A. Straughn, also known by the name Ra Un Nefer Amen,
formerly head of the Rosicrucian Anthroposophical League in New York City. He is the author of
several occult texts in spiritual science, each offering methods drawn from the Kabbalah and eastern
religions to facilitate the orderly transition to the enlightened state.
The Society has directed its program to blacks and Metu Neter (formerly The Oracle of Thoth)
regularly features, alongside of its occult articles, items of general interest and concern to black
people. The Society advocates the appropriation of the positive accomplishments of African
ancestors by the contemporary black community. The Society offers free public classes in a variety
of occult topics. Currently such classes are being held in New York City, Brooklyn, Chicago,
Philadelphia, New Haven, Washington, DC, and Norfolk, VA.
Membership: Not reported.
Periodicals: Metu Neter.

Sources:
Ra Un Nefer Amer [R.A. Staughn] Metu Neter. Vol. 1. Bronx, NY: Khamit Publishing Co., 1990.
Straughn, R. A. Black Woman's, Black Man's Guide to a Spiritual Union. Bronx, NY: Oracle of
Thoth, 1981.
——. Meditation Techniques of the Kabalists, Vedantins and Taoists. Bronx, NY: Maat Publishing
Company, 1976.
——. The Oracle of Thoth: The Kabalistical Tarot. Bronx, NY: Oracle of Thoth Publishing
Company, 1977.
——. The Realization of Neter Nu. Brooklyn, NY: Maat Publishing Company, 1975.
★1767★

Confraternity of the Rose Cross


PO Box 471
Carnegie, PA 15106-4071
In 1987, Gary L. Stewart was installed as the third Grand Imperator of the Ancient and Mystical
Order of the Rosae Crucis. However, three years later, he was removed from office by the board
who accused him of embezzling some three million dollars that had been transferred to a bank
account in Andorra. In the period of adjudication that followed, AMORC reorganized and appointed
Christian Bernard, a French citizen, its new Grand Imperator. In 1993, Stewart was found innocent
of any wrongdoing in the charges that had been leveled against him, but remained alienated from
the AMORC. He subsequently founded the Confraternity of the Rose Cross.
Stewart claims that the confraternity continues the teachings of AMORC as they existed in the days
of its founder H. Spencer Lewis (1883-1939) and Ralph M. Lewis (1904-1987). However, he claims
that during the last years of Ralph Lewis's leadership, due primarily to his failing health, the editing
of Order material was removed from the Imperator's supervision. During this time, the teachings
were substantially changed, in part due to an attempt to "modernize" them. Further, Stewart
charged, the French Grand Master, Christian Bernard, and the German Grand Master, Wilhelm
Raab, made additional changes in the 1980s, which resulted in different teachings being
disseminated in different languages. According to Stewart, he was attempting to deal with these
issues when the board revolted against him.
The confraternity continued the pre-revisionist AMORC teachings. In this regard, Stewart has
suggested that much of these teachings were based on a document called The Nordin Manuscript.
The first part of the document has been published in the lesson material available to AMORC
members. The other part exists as a single copy, which was passed from one Grand Imperator to
another. At present, Stewart has the only copy. Those Rosicrucians studying with AMORC's revised
teachings are without the original teachings derived from The Nodin Manuscript.
Stewart assures the members of the confraternity that all monographs (monthly lessons) are
prepared by himself alone and reflect the original writings of H. Spencer Lewis and "written at a
time when no outside revisions or influence found their way into the teachings." Stewart adds
insights to the monograph material, but such additions are clearly noted as such.
Membership: Not reported.

Sources:
Confraternity of the Rose Cross. www.crcsite.org/rosicrucianismcrc.htm. 7 May 2002.
Stewart, Gary L. Awakened Attitude. Pittsburgh, PA: Order of the Militia Crucifera Evangelica, n.d.
★1768★

Fraternitas Rosae Crucis


Beverly Hall
Quakertown, PA 18951
This, the oldest of the several existing Rosicrucian bodies, dates to 1858 when it was founded by
Paascal Beverly Randolph (1825-1875). The first lodge was established in San Francisco three
years later. On three occasions, the grand lodge was closed and reestablished: first in Boston (1871),
then in San Francisco (1874), and finally in Philadelphia (1895). Randolph was succeeded by
Freeman B. Dowd who in turn was succeeded by Edward H. Brown(1907) and R. Swinburne
Clymer (1922). Clymer was recently succeeded by his son, Emerson M. Clymer. Randolph, a
physician, had for many years lectured upon issues of sexuality. The inner teachings of the order he
established included a system of occult sexuality, which he termed Eulistic, a word derived from the
Greek Eleusinian mysteries, which Randolph believed to be mysteries of sex. In 1874 he
established a Provisional Grand Lodge of Eulis in Tennessee, but he had to dissolve it because of
internal problems among the membership. Translations of Randolph's writings, disseminated
through his European followers, became a source for the sex magick system developed by the Ordo
Templi Orientis. As presented in the English-speaking world by Aleister Crowley, the O.T.O.'s sex
magic stood in contradiction to Randolph's teachings at several points, particularly on the moral
level. Randolph had advocated the practice of his teachings only by married couples. Twentieth-
century followers of Randolph have denounced the O.T.O. teachings as black magick.
In the Fraternitas Rosae Crucis, the member begins his work and is taught the basic ideas of the
"secret schools," which include reincarnation and karma, and the Law of Justice and the non-
interference with the rights of others. He begins to learn the process of transmutation (of the base
self into the finest gold) and the acquisition of health and strength by casting out thoughts of
weakness and age. He is also taught to contact the hierarchies of the heavenly realm. Members
believe in the fatherhood of God and the ultimate brotherhood of man. The inner circle of the
fraternity is the Aeth Priesthood, in which is taught "the highest occultism known to man."
Associated with the fraternity is the Church of Illumination, an outer court group, which means it
interacts with the public and from which a select few may be chosen to join the inner group. The
church emphasizes the establishment of the "Manistic" Age, which began in the late nineteenth
century and follows the previous Egyptian and Christian ages. Manisism is the recognition of the
equality of man and woman. It is also the name of the new world leader who teaches the divine law
with its five fundamentals: As ye sow so shall ye reap; talents as gift and responsibility; the golden
rule; honesty; and the new birth as the awakening of the Christos or divine spark within.
"Many are called but few are chosen" is a watchword with the Fraternitas Rosae Crucis, which does
not advertise in the manner associated with the Ancient and Mystical Order of the Rosae Crucis
(AMORC). Numerous books by R. Swinburne Clymer, who revived the all but moribund fraternity
in the early twentieth century, have attracted members. Authority of the fraternity rests with the
Council of Three. The highest office is held by the Hierarch of Eulis. The Beverly Hall Corporation
in Quakertown, Pennsylvania, handles the distribution of literature. Continuing the lifelong health
concerns of R. Swinburne Clymer, like Randolph, a physician, are the Humanitarian Society and the
Clymer Health Clinic, both located at the fraternity's headquarters complex in Quakertown.
Membership: Not reported.

Sources:
Clymer, R. Swinburne. The Age of Treason. Quakertown, PA: Humanitarian Society, 1959.
——. The Rose Cross Order. Allentown, PA: Philosophical Publishing Co., 1916.
——. The Rosicrucian Fraternity in America. 2 vols. Quakertown, PA: Rosicrucian Foundation,
1935.
——. The Rosy Cross, Its Teachings. Quakertown, PA: Beverly Hall Corporation, 1965.
Randolph, Paschal Beverly. Eulis, Affectional Alchemy. Quakertown, PA: Confederation of Initiates,
1930.
★1769★

Holy Rosicrucian Church


(Defunct)
The Holy Rosicrucian Church was a small shortlived Rosicrucian body known primarily through a
single literary remain, a booklet, Rosikrucianism, published in 1915. The Church, and its associated
orders were founded by a person known only as Sergius Rosenkruz and headquartered in Los
Angeles. The Church and Brotherhood taught a method of liberation, the awakening to the
knowledge of unity with the One. The Church advocated a series of preparatory methods which
included study, twice daily baths, the practice of charitable works, the avoidance of frivolous
activities, and the adoption of a variety of occult meditative techniques. The associated Order of the
Knights of the Golden Circle which through rites and ceremonies prepared members for either a
favorable reincarnation, or safety in the beyond.

Sources:
Rosenkruz, Sergius. Rosikrucianism. Los Angeles: The Author, 1915.
★1770★

Lectorium Rosicrucianum
Western North American Headquarters
Box 9246
Bakersfield, CA 93389
Alternate Address: International headquarters: Bakenessergracht 11-15, 2011JS Haarlem, The
Netherlands; Eastern North American Headquarters: Box 334, Chatham, NY 12037.
The Lectorium Rosicrucianum was founded in Holland in 1924 by a small group of people most of
whom formerly had been members of the Rosicrucian Fellowship. The spiritual leaders of the group
wrote under the pen names Jan Van Rijckenborgh and Catherose de Petri. The organization
remained small until 1940, when it was forced to shut down until after the war. Since its reopening
it has become a worldwide organization. It came to the United States in the early-1970s, and
headquarters were established in Bakersfield, California.
The Lectorium Rosicrucianum describes itself as a gnostic, transfiguristic spiritual school. By
gnostic is meant, "coming from the Logos," i.e., from God the source of all things. Transfiguration
is the name of the path of return to the gnosis (knowledge or divine wisdom) for humans who are
seen as fallen from a divine state and now in need of reawakening and unfolding of the spirit-spark
atom, the rose of the heart, located in the center of ones microcosmic self. People are aided in this
process by the Universal Brotherhood, the divine spiritual hierarchy. The Universal Brotherhood
consists of those of the human life wave who either never fell from the original immortal nature
order or who have returned through a process of building a New Soul Body, through the process of
Transfiguration. The Light of the Universal Brotherhood is transmitted through a transfiguristic
spiritual schools power field into a usable source of energy thus making it possible for individuals
to break the wheel of birth and death (reincarnation after reincarnation). Thereby one can return to
humanity's original sphere, the Sixth Cosmic Region.
The Lectorianum Rosicrucianum is differentiated from other groups using the name Rosicrucian by
its concept of the two Nature Orders. Their philosophy explains that humans are born into this
Nature Order, the Seventh Cosmic Region, the world of nature that individuals perceive and
experience as mortal beings. But humans also carry a remnant of the original nature order, the Sixth
Cosmic Region, as a human immortal seed, the Christ principle in the center of the microcosm.
Thus, the purpose of an individuals life in this nature order is to cooperate with the blossoming of
the rose of the heart, the Christ within, through the process of Transfiguration, in order to return to
the immortal nature order to which s/he originally belonged.
The Lectorium Rosicrucianum has initiated a broad publication program that includes not only the
publication of over forty of the schools books, but their translation into various languages. The
spiritual school's journal, Pentagram, appears in Dutch, English, German French, Portuguese, and
Swedish editions.
Membership: In 2002 the group reported four centers in the United States and two in Canada.
There were 17,000 members worldwide.
Periodicals: Pentagram.

Sources:
Van Rijckenborgh, Jan. The Coming New Man. Haarlem, Neths.: Rozekruis-Pers, 1957.
——. Elementary Philosophy of the Modern Rosecross. Harlem, Neths: Rozekruis-Pers, 1961.
The Way of the Rosecross in Our Times. Haarlem, Neths.: Rozekruis-Pers, 1978.
★1771★

New Age Bible and Philosophy Center


1139 Lincoln Blvd.
Santa Monica, CA 90403
The New Age Bible and Philosophy Center was founded by Mary Elizabeth Shaw in May 1931. It
consisted of a school dedicated to basic Christian spiritual teachings of the Ancient Wisdom. It
included classes in Theosophy and the Rosicrucian teachings. The center, now in its 71st year, was
always closely associated with the works of Max Heindel and Corinne Heline. Its two main courses
are aligned to Corinne Heline's seven volumes of the New Age Bible Interpretation and Max
Heindel's Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception.
Heline was born in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1875 as Corinne S. Dunklee. Following the death of her
mother in 1891, Heline moved to California where she met and became the close student of Max
Heindel (1865-1919), founder of the Rosicrucian Fellowship. After Heindel's death, she remained
for many years a leading member. In 1922, she received an "inner Commission" to begin work on
interpreting the Bible in the Light of the Esoteric tradition. The project would consume the
remainder of her life. Her early efforts were published in the fellowship periodical, The Rosicrucian
Magazine. During this period she met and married Theodore Heline (d. 1971). Both the Helines
were prodigious authors who published books and booklets which have a broad circulation around
the world.
Mary Elizabeth Shaw was succeeded by Rev. Gene Sande, who had served at the center since its
beginning. She was the head of the center for more than 50 years. The present head of the center is
Rev. Patricia Talis, assisted by Rev. Patricia Tinker.
Besides Sunday services, there are monthly Full Moon Services and various classes offered weekly.
A bookstore and library are open daily Wednesday through Friday. The correspondence courses in
the Bible and Philosophy are mailed to students who request them. The New Age Bible and
Philosophy Center publishes the Corinne and Theodore Heline books.
Membership: There is one center with 100 people affiliated and an unknown number of class
attendants and correspondence students.
Periodicals: Quarterly Bulletin.

Sources:
Heline, Corinne. Mysteries of the Holy Grail. Los Angeles: New Age Press, 1977.
——. The Mystery of the Christos. Los Angeles: New Age Press, 1961.
——. New Age Bible Interpretation. 7 vols. Los Angeles: New Age Press, 1938-54.
Heline, Theodore. As in the Days of Noah. Los Angeles: New Age Press, 1946.
——. The Redemptive Feminine. Los Angeles: New Age Press, n.d.
★1772★

Rosicrucian Anthroposophical League


Current address not obtained for this edition.
The Rosicrucian Anthroposophical Society was formed in 1932 by Samuel Richard Parchment
(b.1881), a former leader in the San Francisco Center of the Rosicrucian Fellowship. Parchment,
continuing the astrological emphasis of the Fellowship, wrote a classic textbook, Astrology,
Mundane and Spiritual, and even before leaving the Fraternity began writing the books which were
to guide the League: The Just Law of Compensation, The Middle Path, the Safest, Ancient
Operative Masonry, and Steps to Self-Mastery. Early centers were in California and New York. (In
the late 1970s the surviving New York City center broke away to become the Ausar Auset Society.)
The principles of the League commit it to an investigation of occult laws, the brotherhood of man,
the dissemination of spiritual truth, and the attainment of self-conscious immortality. Recent contact
with the League has not been made and its present status is uncertain.
Membership: Not reported.

Sources:
Parchment, S. R. Ancient Operative Masonry. San Francisco: San Francisco Center-Rosicrucian
Fellowship, 1930.
——. Astrology, Mundane and Spiritual. San Francisco: Anthroposophical Rosicrucian League,
1933.
——. The Just Law of Compensation. San Francisco: San Francisco Center-Rosicrucian Fellowship,
1932.
——. Steps to Self-Mastery. Oceanside, CA: Fellowship Press, 1927.
★1773★

Rosicrucian Fellowship
2222 Mission Ave.
Oceanside, CA 92054
The Rosicrucian Fellowship was founded as a Christian organization in 1909 by Carl Louis von
Grasshoff, better known under his pen-name as Max Heindel (1865-1919). Born in Denmark,
Heindel eventually moved to the United States and, in 1903, settled in Los Angeles, California. He
became active in that city's branch of the Theosophical Society serving as its vice-president for
three years.
According to Heindel, while in Germany (1907-1908), he encountered a being later identified as an
Elder Brother of the Rosicrucian Order, who appeared in his room. After submitting Heindel to a
test to determine his integrity and fitness for being a messenger of the Western Wisdom Teachings,
the being promised to reveal to him the esoteric knowledge he sought. Heindel was given directions
to the Temple of the Rose Cross, near the German-Bohemian border, where he was given the
material to be used in his first book, The Rosicrucian CosmoConception, the basic textbook of the
fellowship.
Returning to the United States, he proceeded to rewrite the book, as the Elder Brother had told him
he would, and publish it. Soon he became a popular speaker, lecturing in Columbus, Ohio; Seattle,
and North Yakima, Washington; Portland, Oregon; and Los Angeles, California, which led to the
formation of centers and study groups in these and many other locations. Subsequently, the
teachings of this book spread internationally.
The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception puts forth a view of the cosmos from an esoteric Christian
standpoint and advocates the adoption of Jesus Christ as the aspirant's ideal. Heindel also advocates
the intelligent use of spiritual astrology as a tool for self-knowledge and moral development. He
also introduced new formats for temple, healing, marriage, and memorial services, now published in
the fellowship's Manual of Forms.
In 1911, the fellowship's international headquarters were established at Mount Ecclesia in
Oceanside, California, for the purpose of best implementing its two principal goals of healing the
sick and disseminating esoteric Christian teachings. A chapel, administrative offices, residents
quarters, vegetarian cafeteria, and a healing temple were erected on the grounds. An abundance of
literature in the form of correspondence courses, books, pamphlets, and monthly mailings issue
from Mount Ecclesia. The fellowship became a major force in the spread of astrology in the
twentieth century, and many astrologers not connected with the organization use the single-year,
decade and 100-year ephemerides and the Table of Houses, most of which are published on site.
Membership is open to all, provided they are not professional astrologers, mediums, hypnotists, or
palmists. After a two-year term of being a regular student of the fellowship, a person who abstains
from all flesh food, tobacco, mind-altering drugs, and alcohol may apply for Probationership in the
fellowship. Upon his death in 1919, Heindel was succeeded in leadership by his wife, Augusta Foss
Heindel (d. 1949), an accomplished occultist in her own right. Mount Ecclesia remains the
headquarters of the fellowship; the work is carried on there in the same tradition established by the
founders. The Rosicrucian doctrine is preserved in its pristine purity and the service rendered to
humanity throughout all departments retains its original quality of faithful, anonymous dedication.
Membership: In 2002 the fellowship reported 8,000 members worldwide, 700 of which are in the
United States. Members are found on every continent.
Periodicals: Rays from the Rose Cross.

Sources:
Heindel, Max. Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception. Oceanside, CA: Rosicrucian Fellowship, 1937.
——. Rosicrucian Philosophy in Questions and Answers. Oceanside, CA: Rosicrucian Fellowship,
1922
——. Simplified Scientific Astrology. Oceanside, CA: Rosicrucian fellowship, 1928.
Heindel, Mrs. Max [Augusta Foss]. The Birth of the Rosicrucian fellowship. Oceanside, CA:
Rosicrucian Fellowship, n.d.
★1774★

Societas Rosicruciana in America


PO Box 1316
Bayonne, NJ 07002-6316
Sylvester Gould was an early member of the Societas Rosicruciana in Civitatibus Foederatis, the
masonic Rosicrucian society. He was admitted into the Boston College in 1885. However, it was his
desire to create a Rosicrucian organization that would admit non-Masons. In 1907, with the
assistance of George Winslow Plummer (1876-1944) he created the Societas Rosicruciana in
America (S.R.I.A.) adapting the masonic materials for general use. He also began The Rosicrucian
Brotherhood, a periodical. Gould died in 1909. Plummer succeeded to the leadership role, a position
he held until his death.
Plummer incorported the S.R.I.A. in 1912 and four years later founded the Mercury Publishing
Company and Mercury, a quarterly magazine for the society. During the decade six colleges were
chartered in the United States and one in Sierre Leone. In 1921 two more were added. Plummer
authored the lessons and other material distributed by the society. His interests in Christian
mysticism and ritual also led him to create a Seminary of Biblical Research (through which he
wrote and published a series of lessons on Christian mysticism) and to found two churches: the
Anglican Universal Church and the Holy Orthodox Church in America, treated elsewhere in this
encyclopedia. These organizations were intimately intertwined with the S.R.I.A. Colleges, and
church congregations were frequently located in the same cities with the church's members being
drawn primarily from society adherents.
The booklet, Principles and Practices of the Rosicrucians, by Plummer details the affirmations and
duties of members. The group affirms the existence of one infinite intelligence, the incarnation of
Spirit in matter, the continuousness of all life in evolution, the possibility of the mental attaining
knowledge of the spiritual while yet incarnate, and reincarnation. Each student is expected to
experiment and to demonstrate knowledge of concentration, meditation, contemplation, prayer,
dietetics, exercise, rest, rituality, sexual faculties, healing, cheerfulness, fasting, and individual
development; vegetarianism is not demanded, but alcohol is forbidden. New members in the
Societas Rosicruciana in America are called postulants. After a year, they become fraters (brothers)
or sorores (sisters). Progress is through ten degrees.
Following Plummer's death, the society and the Holy Orthodox Church in America were headed by
Stanislaus Witowski (de Witow), who married Plummer's widow, Gladys Plummer. Gladys
Plummer de Witow, also known as Mother Serena, became head of the society and the church after
her second husband's death. Mother Serena died in 1989 and was succeeded by Sister Lucia Grosch.
In 2001, Maria Babuahsingh suceeded Grosch and the society went to Bayonne, New Jersey.
Membership: Not reported.
Periodicals: Mercury.

Sources:
Plummer, George Winslow. The Art of Rosicrucian Healing. New York: Society of Rosicrucians,
1947.
——. Esoteric Masonry. Kingston, NY: Society of Rosicrucians, 1988.
——. Principles and Practice for Rosicrucians. New York: Society of Rosicrucians, Inc., 1947.
——. Rosicrucian Healing. Kingston, NY: Society of Rosicrucians, 1988.
Serena. Lettergrams. New York: Society of Rosicrucians, Inc., 1976.
Serena, Mother. Victorinus Teaches. Kingston, NY: Society of Rosicrucians, 1988.
★1775★

Societas Rosicruciana in Civitatibus Foederatis


Current address not obtained for this edition.
The Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia was formed in England in 1865 by Robert Wentworth Little. It
seems to have been based on eighteenth-century Rosicrucian texts. Among its members were
Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie, William Wynn Westcott and W. R. Woodmen, who were among the
founders of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, the group most credited with initiating the
revival of magic in the twentieth century. Members of the Societas were required to be masons prior
to beginning their work. During the late nineteenth century, colleges were opened in London(1867),
Bristol (1869), Manchester (1871), Cambridge (1876), Sheffield (1877), Middlesex (1877), and
Newcastle (1890). In 1873 the East of Scotland College was inagurated in Edinburgh.
News of the formation of the Rosicrucian organization spread through masonry to the American
lodges. In 1878 a group led by Charles E. Meyer (1839-1908) of Pennsylvania traveled to England
and were initiated at Sheffield. They applied for a charter, but getting no response, turned to
Scotland and received a charter from the college in Edinburgh in 1879. A second charter was
granted for a college in New York and in 1880 the two colleges formed the Society Rosicruciana
Republicae Americae. A Boston and a Baltimore college were chartered later that year. The
organization's name was changed to the Societas Rosicruciana in the United States of America, also
known as the Societas Rosicruciana in Civitatibus Foederatis. Later charters were granted for
Duluth, Minnesota (1911), Texas (1918), New Jersey (1931), North Carolina (1932), Virginia
(1933), Illinois (1934), Colorado (1935), Long Island, New York (1935), Nova Scotia, Canada
(1936), and Ontario, Canada (1937). Membership from the 1930s to the 1950s remained steady at
between 200 and 300 members. Membership has remained small and, like the British and Scottish
counterparts, it is limited to masons. From 1951 to 1973, the society issued a biannual report, The
Rosicrucian Fama. Recent information on the society has not been available.
Membership: Not reported. In 1973 the society reported 31 members.

Sources:
Voorhis, Harold V. B. Masonic Rosicrucian Societies. New York: Press of Henry Emmerson, 1958.

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