The Sleeping Prophet and The Hall of Records

The Sleeping Prophet and the Hall of Records

Edgar Cayce was born on March 18, 1877, in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, into a modest farming family with deep roots in rural American life. From childhood, he exhibited unusual sensitivities — claiming to see and speak with deceased relatives, and reportedly able to memorize entire books simply by sleeping on them. These early gifts offered a glimpse of what would make him one of the most documented and studied psychics in American history, earning him the now-legendary title: The Sleeping Prophet.

The name itself came from Cayce’s extraordinary method of receiving information. He would lie down on a couch, close his eyes, fold his hands over his stomach, and enter a self-induced trance state. In this deeply altered condition, he could answer questions on topics ranging from medical diagnoses to ancient history — subjects about which his conscious, waking self had no formal education whatsoever. A stenographer sat nearby to record every word. Over the course of his lifetime, more than 14,000 of these sessions were transcribed and preserved, forming what is now known as the Cayce Readings — one of the most remarkable archives of psychic material ever compiled.

His medical readings brought him early fame. Ordinary people, desperate and often written off by conventional medicine, wrote to Cayce from across the country. He would enter his trance, “tune in” to the subject no matter the distance, and prescribe remedies with uncanny specificity — herbal preparations, dietary changes, osteopathic adjustments. Many reported remarkable recoveries. But it was his life readings — explorations of individuals’ past incarnations across history — that drew The Sleeping Prophet into far more controversial and captivating territory.

It was through the life readings that the Hall of Records first emerged. Cayce described a vast repository of knowledge — a physical archive, constructed by Atlantean survivors — buried in a secret chamber beneath the right paw of the Great Sphinx at Giza. This Hall of Records, according to The Sleeping Prophet, contained the complete history of Atlantis, the story of humanity’s origins, and the accumulated wisdom of a civilization whose technological and spiritual advancement far exceeded our own. He described stone tablets, metallic instruments, and written records placed there intentionally, preserved against the inevitable destruction that the Atlanteans knew was coming.

The Sleeping Prophet’s timeline for Egypt was staggering in its implications. He placed the construction of the Great Pyramid at approximately 10,500 BC — some 8,000 years before mainstream Egyptology acknowledges any such capability existed. The priest Ra-Ta, he claimed, oversaw this monumental work in collaboration with Hermes and a great leader named Araaraart. But more astonishing still was his insistence that an earlier pyramid had already been built in Egypt before this — evidence, embedded in his life readings, of a continuous cycle of advanced civilizations rising and falling across vast stretches of geological time.

The Sleeping Prophet spoke of a land once submerged for 250,000 years, of migrations from the Pyrenees into North Africa, and of a humanity far older and stranger than any textbook acknowledges. His readings describe the Sphinx not merely as a monument but as a marker — a deliberate sign, left by those Atlantean survivors, pointing directly to the hidden chamber beneath.

Remarkably, The Sleeping Prophet predicted that the Hall of Records would be discovered and opened sometime around 1998. While that precise date passed without a headline-making excavation, seismic surveys and ground-penetrating radar conducted near the Sphinx in the 1990s did reveal anomalous cavities beneath the monument — findings that the Egyptian authorities have, to this day, declined to permit further investigation of.

The legacy of The Sleeping Prophet endures precisely because his vision resists easy dismissal. In an age of satellite imaging and subsurface scanning, the question he left behind grows louder, not quieter: What lies beneath the Sphinx?

The Hall of Records

Edgar Cayce — famously known as The Sleeping Prophet — described a “Hall of Records” concealed beneath the Great Sphinx of Giza, a claim that modern archaeology is only now beginning to take seriously as evidence of pre-dynastic civilizations comes to light.

The story of the Hall of Records begins with Atlantis. As The Sleeping Prophet’s readings explain, near the final days of the Atlantean civilization: “…there came the first egress of peoples to the Pyrenees and into what later became the Egyptian dynasties.”

The readings also shed extraordinary light on the first pyramids built in Egypt. One reading — identified only by number to protect the subject’s privacy, as was standard practice in the Cayce files — describes a woman who had lived a past lifetime in Egypt during the construction of the Great Pyramid, when a priest named Ra-Ta presided over the land, circa 10,500 BC. But the readings go even deeper, describing two lifetimes before that one — one in the land of Og, and another in Egypt during the construction of an even earlier pyramid. This stunning detail suggests that pyramids existed in Egypt long before the Great Pyramid was ever raised.

The Sleeping Prophet’s readings further state that this same region had lain submerged beneath the sea for nearly a quarter of a million years before any of these civilizations arose — a timeline that shatters conventional historical understanding entirely.

SOURCE:
Mr. Mythos

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