
The most important woman in human history

The most important woman in human history
During this Lenten season, leading up to so-called “Good Friday” and Easter, I saw something truly important in a Facebook group I joined a while back, which, in the main, seems to be far more tuned in to what I call soul alchemy, what others might call soul evolution, than anything else I have found on Facebook or the Internet, or in any Christendom church I ever attended. After reading this below, I tossed in what I had learned from angels known in the Bible about the most important woman who ever lived on this planet, and her mate, and their best friend, who today is despised in Christendom, while she is maligned.
Ancient Order of the Hermetics
James William Kaler
Admin
Group expert in Ancient History
The omission and deliberate sidelining of Mary Magdalene by the early Church is not just a historical oversight—it was an intentional act of control.
Mary Magdalene was not just a follower of Christ; she was a figure of deep spiritual significance. The Gnostic texts, such as the Gospel of Mary, reveal that she was one of Jesus’ closest disciples, understanding his teachings in ways that others did not. She was the first to witness the resurrection, a role of profound importance, yet the Church systematically diminished her status, transforming her into a repentant sinner rather than acknowledging her wisdom and spiritual authority.
Why? Because Mary Magdalene represented something that threatened the early Church’s power structure: the divine feminine, direct spiritual gnosis, and the idea that enlightenment is accessible to all—not just through an institution. The Church, in consolidating its power, had no room for a woman who could be seen as an equal or even superior in understanding to the male disciples. By reducing her to a “fallen woman,†they ensured that she would not be viewed as a spiritual teacher or leader in her own right.
This was not just about Mary Magdalene—it was about controlling the entire narrative of spirituality. By removing her, they diminished the role of women in spiritual leadership and reinforced a hierarchy where divine wisdom was mediated exclusively by the Church. They shifted the focus from inner transformation (as Hermetics teaches) to external obedience.
But truth is resilient. The Magdalene legacy is being rediscovered, and many are beginning to see that she was not erased—just hidden beneath layers of distortion. As the veil continues to lift, we reclaim the wisdom that was denied, and with it, the understanding that the divine is not confined to buildings, titles, or dogma—it is within.
The old system knew this truth but feared it. That’s why they buried it. But buried truth is not dead—it only waits to be unearthed.

Sloan Bashinsky
Around 1992, I was in the 2nd year of what would be a 4-year dark night of the soul. My wife reading in bed beside me came across something about Melchizedek and asked me if I knew anything about Melchizedek? I said I recalled in the Old Testament Abraham had dealings with an eternal being in human form named Melchizedek. Did she want me to try to get more information? She said, yes. I put down the book I was reading and closed my eyes and she started lightly stroking my chest with her fingernails, which we had learned would put me into a trance and I would receive information. Except nothing happened for a while, then I told her something was coming from very far away, from someplace new, and then I received this transmission in segments:
Melchizedek…
Melchizedek is an order of angel that comes to a planet in trouble…
Melchizedek comes to prepare a planet to receive the Christ…
Christ does not come to a planet without Melchizedek…
Mary Magdalene was of the Order Melchizedek…
As time passed, I received further information about Magdalene, as follows:
She was Jesus’s mate, consider if she washed his feet with her tears and hair in public, and anointed his feet with sacred ointment she scarce could afford, what did she wash and anoint him with when they were in private?
Jesus sent her from the tomb to tell the male disciples in hiding that she had seen him and he would be with them shortly, to impress on them how important she was, and that she had not gone into hiding like they had.
She is the mysterious anonymous author of the Letter to the Hebrews, which is about the Melchizedek priest training, in which Order Jesus Christ is high priest.
She bore him a child, as reported in the book Holy Blood Holy Grail, whose bloodline now spans the globe, and people with that bloodline do not feel like they are from this planet.
She, Jesus and Judas were a team, they knew what was afoot, they met in secret to discuss what lay ahead, and Jesus picked Judas as the betrayer because only Judas would play the role, and Judas was so distraught afterward that he killed himself, and if he had not done that, then God would have done great things with him, and we may not ever have heard of St. Paul, who did not hold women in high regard, based on his letters, in which he never says he was married or had children, which all Jewish men, including Saul of Tarsus and Jesus, were duty bound to God to do, and Paul’s thorn in the flesh he never explained was he was gay, in the closet, and women around him knew it.
Magdalene became known as Rosa Mystica. Here is her poem:
Rosa Mystica
Sweet Mystery
Bride of Christ
Living water
without which
there are no rainbows
and God is dead
She knew Jesus had a near-death experience, aloe is a powerful wound healer, myrrh increases white cell production to fight infection, linen is a sterile bandage.
She understood Jesus’s baptism was in Spirit and in fire, as foretold by John the Baptist.
She understood the Holy Ghost is the feminine side of God.
She watched Jesus live that baptism and teach it to his disciples, and it had nothing to do with being baptized in water or magically being saved by believing Jesus is the son of God who died for their sins. It has to do with living as Jesus lived and taught in the Gospels, and to the extent that is done, people are saved by Jesus Christ.
She understood that Jesus planted seeds in his disciples, male and female, who were still drinking milk when he left them, and after Pentecost they were taken over by the Holy Spirit, which grew them into adults God could use.
