The Kolbrin

The Kolbrin is NOT a mainstream book. You’ll be hard pressed to find out much about it even on Google.

It’s a collection of translated scrolls that its publishers claim originate from various periods of Egyptian history – dynastic and  pre-dynastic – complemented by others from the early history of the British Isles. 

The scrolls are packed full of ‘historical’ descriptions of ancient odysseys (including the saga of a group of Egyptians who fled their morally bankrupt homeland to found a new colony in neolithic – or possibly Celtic – Britain), a cyclic global catastrophe caused by some kind of celestial event (‘The Destroyer’), stolen and hidden treasure, and all those other good things you’d expect from underground ancient writings whose time has supposedly come. Primarily, though, The Kolbrin is a vehicle for a moral code – ‘The Good Religion’ – whose blossoming, the original authors claimed, was ‘buried in the womb of the future’. After barely escaping the destruction of Glastonbury Abbey during Henry VIII’s Dissolution of the Monastries,  The Kolbrin eventually found its way to New Zealand where its current custodians have decided that the message latent in the scrolls can finally be released to a world that has a chance of learning from the ancient wisdom contained within them.

Please join me on a journey through the various scrolls by clicking on the link below (more coming soon). I shall be giving a short summary of each section of The Kolbrin along with my thoughts on this most esoteric of publications.

The Book of Creation

An extract from The Great Book of the Sons of Fire

The Book of Gleanings

An extract from various old Culdee books

The Book of Scrolls

Compiled from remaining portions of The Bronzebook

The Book of Creation

The Book of Creation – Part III

The Book of Creation – Part III

Ok, so THE SOURCE has created the three spheres – source, spirit, physical – and mankind has been elevated to the status of some kind of intermediate being whose destiny it is to realise his innate divinity by actualising his spiritual potential. The point of all this is that THE SOURCE is no...

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The Book of Gleanings

The Book of Gleanings – Part III

The Book of Gleanings – Part III

In the last passage we learnt how Eloma tried to preach the teachings of her god to the rapidly degenerating tribe known as the Children of God in the hope it would halt their spiritual backwards slide into an existence akin to that of the Children of Men, who were an altogether more ‘earthy’ lot, prone to giving full rein to anger, lust, and all those other so-called ‘passions’ which ancient hierarchies were not at all keen on because they generally heralded societal dissent and disobedience. In the passage to be looked at here a much more portentous tone is adopted by the author, although the text is rather disjointed, with several sections separated by what appear to be unrelated themes. The chapter is entitled The Flood of Atuma and in it, as its name suggests, we encounter a cataclysm – a deluge or destruction by water as the ancient Greek word should correctly be interpreted – and we meet again Nanua, the Maid of the Morning, whom Eloma had been charged by her god to rescue from servility and protect. It’s an interesting passage, if only for its similarity to parallels in other accounts of the rise and fall of civilisations, and it even gives a passing mention to ‘The Destroyer’, that periodic wreaker of earthly havoc which seems to be a kind of regularly recurring celestial event – maybe a close fly-by by a large comet; or even some kind of asteroid storm. Anyway, the author starts out by addressing us – that’s you and me – as ‘the children of days yet unborn’,  and promising that if we are the generation actually reading this ancient material, then its message was intended for us. All very flattering, but somehow ominous. We are invited to hear a ‘Truth’ which,...

The Book of Scrolls

The Book of Scrolls – Parts IV-VI

The Book of Scrolls – Parts IV-VI

Welcome back to this journey through The Kolbrin. So, we are currently working our way through The Sacred Registers; and this post will, like the last one, deal with more of the relatively short chapters (this time, Chapters 4,5 & 6) that we find in this section of The Book of Scrolls (aka The Book of Books, The Lesser Book of the Sons of Fire, and The Third Book of the Bronzebook). The narrative we’re about to encounter is still a kind of commentary on the soul’s journey after death - mostly in the ancient Egyptian tradition, but containing some strange allusions to, and echoes of, what sound like Brythonic Celtic place and personal names. The inference is that we are dealing with Egyptian funerary rites that have somehow been transported (or transplanted) into the culture of late Bronze Age or, possibly, early Iron Age Britain. So, let’s begin . . . We start off with a disembodied soul which has already passed the first test of whether it has been a goodie or a baddie during its earthly existence and is now making its way through ‘Heavenland’ accompanied by a band of worthy companions. The soul is now timeless in appearance, with all vestiges of the old age it wore whilst in human form gone. In fact, the soul now exists outside of time, immune to its touch. It has passed through what the book calls the Wide Hall and the Narrow Portal to the Land of New Dawning to be greeted by those it knew on Earth who have passed this way before. The soul’s journey continues past the Place of Waiting Souls where the Kohars await the arrival of their earthly twins and the moment of reunification. It passes by the flame that keeps apart the lost souls whose transgressions on Earth...

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