Baird T. Spalding

Baird T Spalding
Born (1872-10-03)October 3, 1872
Cohocton, New York, United States
Died March 18, 1953(1953-03-18) (aged 80)
Tempe, Arizona, US
Occupation Writer, miner
Genre Religion

Baird Thomas Spalding (1872–1953) was an American writer, author of the spiritual book series: Life and Teaching of the Masters of the Far East.

Biography

Although Spalding's books claimed he was born in England in 1857, Spalding was born in North Cohocton, New York in 1872.[1] He spent much of his life as a mining engineer in the American West. Research on his life and the purported eleven person research expeditions to the Far East beginning in 1894 to study the "Masters" has turned up no evidence (names, sponsors, travel or research records, etc.) they ever took place. Instead, they determined Spalding did not visit the Far East until his 1935-36 trip to India at the bequest of his publisher, DeVorss, and, further, that his books are works of fiction. [2][3] Anecdotal biographical detail was widely promulgated even during his lifetime. At his death in 1953 in Arizona, obituaries conflictingly cited his age as 95 or 107. His date of birth is given as "1872-1873" in the 1880 US census The same date is given in a 1911 California marriage certificate, but his place of birth is now given as England.[4]

Spalding does appear to have briefly visited India in 1935/6, as there is a US passport application dated 1935, and a Seattle immigration record on his return from India, dated 1936. A biography of Spalding, Baird T Spalding As I Knew Him was published by fellow mystic and DeVorss author David Burton in 1954. About Spalding's claims regarding his birthplace, Burton wrote:

"On two different occasions I asked him where he was born. The first time he told me in 'upstate New York;' the second, 'Spalding, England.' During one of his last public lectures a member of the audience asked where he was born and he answered, 'In India.' He spoke with equal affection for the 'old family home' in upstate New York, in Spalding, England and in Coconada, Madras Province, India"

Works

In 1935, Spalding published the first volume of Life and Teaching of the Masters of the Far East. It describes the travels to India and Tibet of a research party of eleven scientists in 1894. During their trip they claim to have made contact with "the Great Masters of the Himalayas", immortal beings with whom they lived and studied, gaining insight into their lives and spiritual message. This close contact enabled them to witness many of the spiritual principles evinced by these Great Masters translated into their everyday lives, which could be described as 'miracles'. Such examples are walking on water, or manifesting bread to feed the hungry party. However, despite most of the action taking place in India, the Great Masters make it clear that the greatest embodiment of the Enlightened state is that of the Christ (as personified by Jesus): "The Masters accept that Buddha represents the Way to Enlightenment, but they clearly set forth that Christ IS Enlightenment, or a state of consciousness for which we are all seeking – the Christ light of every individual; therefore, the light of every child born into the world." (From the foreword, Volume I, Life and Teaching of the Masters of the Far East, DeVorss & Co.)

Spalding published three additional volumes before his death in 1953. Volumes 5 and 6 were published by DeVorss & Co posthumously from various articles that Spalding had written.


Spalding's books have remained in print since his death and his stories have helped to popularize the concept of Ascended Masters which became a common meme in New Age and alternative religious movements during the later twentieth century.

During the 1920s, Spalding was a personal acquaintance of Guy Ballard, also a mining engineer and founder of the I AM activity. Similar themes to Spalding can be seen in Ascended Master groups such as the Church Universal and Triumphant and the writings of Elizabeth Clare Prophet. Spalding is named as an influence in the writings of New Age figures such as JZ Knight, Paul Baumann of the Methernitha sect and Father Divine.

The growth of the New Age movement during the 1970s resulted in a renewal of interest in Spalding, and several New Age figures have claimed tenuous connections to him after his death. American mystic Thane of Hawaii, founder of the Prosperos group, claimed in 1974 to have ghost-written several of Spalding's later books and accompanied him on his 1935 India tour.

There is a Vietnamese book, apparently first published in 1975, called Hành Trình Về Phương Đông by one Nguyên Phong. It purports to be the translation of a book written by Spalding in India in 1924. The book has gained some popularity in Vietnam, and an English translation was published in 2009, as Journey to the East. In the story, Spalding is joined in India by a group of prestigious mystics and academics, including Paul Brunton and Stanford Professor Walter Evans-Wentz.[5]

References

  1. Melton, J. Gordon (1984). Biographical Dictionary of American Cult and Sect Leaders. p. 273.
  2. http://www.bairdtspalding.org/frequently-asked-questions-about-baird-t-spalding/
  3. http://www.devorss.com/spalding.htm
  4. When and where was Baird T Spalding born? part 1, part 2 (2009)
  5. Hanh Trinh Ve Phuong Dong – A Vietnamese prelude to Spalding’s Life and Teachings? "there is a Vietnamese book that claims to be a previously unknown prelude to Spalding’s Life and Teaching of the Masters of the Far East [... purportedly] translated in[to] Vietnamese in 1975 from a 1924 Indian book titled Journey to the East. The first publication date shown online is 1987, with Spalding listed as author and Nguyên Phong as the translator into Vietnamese. According to Google Books, Nguyên Phong has translated similar books in the mystic and occult genre, including works by Lobsang Rampa, Myodo Satomi and Mika Waltari. Most of this book is available online, and despite the imperfect translation of Google Translate it is quite fascinating. All of the facts point to this book being a derivative fictional work written by Phong, rather than a translation of Spalding."

External links

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