Spirit Teachings: Through the Mediumship of William Stainton Moses

William Stainton Moses, an Anglican priest, authored “Spirit Teachings” in 1883, nine years before his passing. It is now considered a classic in the Spiritualist genre.

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Details

Publisher: White Crow Books

Publication Date: August 2018

Extent: 310

Size: 229 x 152 mm

ISBN: 978-1-78677-059-2

eBook ISBN: 978-1-78677-060-8

Summary

William Stainton Moses, an Anglican priest, authored Spirit Teachings in 1883, nine years before his passing. It is now considered a classic in the Spiritualist genre.

Initially, Moses was antagonistic toward spirit communication, calling the mediumship of D. D. Home “the dreariest twaddle”. However, in 1872 he attended a séance for the first time and five months later became aware he had psychic abilities which eventually manifested as automatic writing.  Later that same year, a communicator writing through his hand introduced himself as Imperator Servus Dei, claiming he was the leader of a band of 49 spirits communicating from the seventh sphere – their purpose, to work out the will of the Almighty.

Much of the communication came via a spirit named Rector, who claimed to reside in a lower sphere than Imperator’s team, one closer to our physical vibration, which enabled dialogue.

Imperator and the other communicators answered many questions Moses put to them such as the nature of reality, life after physical life, spirit influence, skepticism, Jesus, the Second Coming, prayer, disposal of the body and much more. Moses found his Christian dogma constantly challenged by what came through his hand. During one sitting, Imperator explained, “Friend, you must discriminate between God’s truths and man’s glosses”.

Stainton Moses’ writings have become essential reading for truth seekers with an interest in life and death and despite the nineteenth century vernacular, the messages of wisdom are timeless and appeal to reason. 

About the Author

Number of books: 2

William Stainton Moses aka M. A. Oxon

William Stainton Moses (1839-1892) was an Anglican priest and teacher who described his experiences with mediumship in a private circle. The phenomena were witnessed by few, as Moses gave seances only for close friends, and did not submit to scientific investigation. But the strength and variety of the phenomena, together with his reputation for complete integrity, led him to be regarded by some as one of the most significant mediums of the period.

Moses was born in Lincolnshire, England. He went to Exeter College, Oxford, in 1858, but became seriously ill before completing his undergraduate studies, and spent a year convalescing in Europe.  He returned to Oxford and gained his Master’s degree in 1863, before being ordained as a clergyman in the Church of England.  He then served as a curate first at Maughold and Douglas, Isle of Man, then at Dorsetshire and Salisbury.  Afflicted with throat problems that prevented him from preaching, he returned to London in 1870 to convalesce.  While there, he tutored Charlton Templeman Speer, the son of Dr and Mrs Stanhope Speer.  In 1871, he was appointed English tutor at University College, London, a position he held until 1889.

According to Frederic Myers, in 1875 Serjeant Cox founded a ‘Psychological Society’, with both Myers and Moses as members; however, it never got off the ground and was abandoned at Cox’s death in 1879.  When the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) was founded three years later, Moses was part of the organizing group and was made a vice-president. However, he took little interest in the purely scientific objectives of the SPR and resigned in 1886 in protest at what he considered unreasonable and inappropriate controls in the SPR’s study of the medium William Eglinton. Continued …

Source: The Psi Encyclopedia