Camp Gagnon - The Prophet Who Accessed The Akashic Records | Edgar Cayce
Episode Date: November 13, 2025Who was Edgar Cayce, and what knowledge did he have? Today, we take a closer look at the stories behind one of the most famous prophets. We’ll talk about the origins of Edgar Cayce, accessing a spir...itual database, becoming famous overnight, exploring the Akashic Records, Jesus Christ’s past lives, and other intriguing topics... Welcome to CAMP! 🏕️Shoutout to our sponsors:Brunt, Morgan & MorganGet $10 off at BRUNT with code "CAMP" at http://bruntworkwear.com/CAMP👕🧢 GET YOUR CAMP DRIP HERE: http://camp-rd.com🎟️ 🎫 Comedy Tour Tickets Here: https://markgagnonlive.com🎩👽 Daily Dose Of History Here: https://www.dailytodayinhistory.comTimestamps:0:00 Becoming The Sleeping Prophet4:39 Diagnosing Medical Issues Under Hypnosis9:33 Accessing a Spiritual Database11:45 Becoming Famous Overnight13:28 Past Life Regression + Accessing Akashic Records17:15 Visions of Atlantis + Hall of Records Under The Shynx20:44 Discovery of Bimini Road21:54 Jesus Christ’s Past Lives24:01 The Lost Years of Jesus’s Childhood26:23 Predicting Great Depression & WW228:10 Climate Change Predictions + Chinese Jesus29:53 The Death of Edgar Cayce33:58 The Scholarly Thoughts#podcast #mystery #foryou #history #knowledge
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Have you ever imagined laying your head on a book, falling asleep in class,
and then suddenly memorizing every single chapter?
Seems crazy, right?
We'll meet Edgar Case, aka the sleeping prophet.
Edgar claims that from a young age he had a special ability,
one that allowed him to tap into a cosmic archive that contained the past,
the present, and the future of every soul.
He called it the Akashik Records.
From here, he spoke of Atlantis, predicted world wars,
diagnosed illnesses, doctors couldn't solve,
and even revealed the past lives of not only his patience,
but of Jesus Christ himself.
And he did it all while sleeping.
To some people, he was a miracle worker, to others he was a fraud.
But no one could ignore the accuracy of some of his predictions.
This wasn't a cult leader.
This was a quiet man from Kentucky who closed his eyes
and claimed to see an entire universe.
So if you were interested in paranormal predictions and the occult,
this is the episode for you.
So sit back, relax.
and welcome to camp.
What's up, people, and welcome back to camp.
My name is Mark Gagnon.
I thank you for joining me in my tent
where every single week
we explore the most interesting, fascinating,
controversial stories from around the world
from all time forever.
Yes, this is my attempt
to figure out all the stuff going on in the world.
As always, I'm not alone.
I'm here with my good friend, Christos.
Calamara, Christos.
Can I sped up, Mark?
See, here you go, correct to me again.
All right, I'm trying my best to speak your dumb freaking language,
and here you go, just chiming in, cut me off.
Was the first language, but...
That's your first language.
Everyone's first language.
Oh, that's a bar.
I like that.
Dude, the Greeks, the Greeks think they invented everything, dude.
Anyway, guys, today we're not talking about a Greek guy.
We're talking about a young man from Hopkinsville, Kentucky.
This is a man by the name of Edgar Case.
Now, let me just say, I don't believe all of Edgar Case's claims, okay?
But as an independent research or journalist extraordinaire, okay?
And also just a guy that likes weird stuff.
I'm always fascinated by the stories of people that claim to have extraordinary abilities.
And I like to suss it out.
I like to go through all the stuff and be like, is there something we're going on or is this guy just kind of out to lunch?
And I want you to do the same, all right?
So I'm going into this with a little bit of skepticism.
Okay, so just roll with me here.
All right.
Edgar Case was born March 18, 1877 in Hopkinsville, Kentucky to kind of just like a standard issue.
Kentucky family in the 1800s, right?
They're conservative, rural Christian.
And he was one of six children and he grew up on a farm.
From a young age, he had something about him that people would say was special.
And he wasn't able to, like, play violin or, like, read good.
He claimed to be able to see and communicate with his dead grandpa.
Yeah.
And he would regularly play with what he called his imaginary friends,
but claimed that they weren't friends that were, like, even imaginary,
that they were actually spirits from, quote, the other side.
And he also, by all accounts, had a pretty photographic memory,
specifically when it came to the Bible.
And according to the legend from people that knew him,
If you needed to memorize something, he would literally fall asleep on the book.
Like the thing we would talk about in class, like you'd be like, oh man, I wish I could sleep
on this and just learn everything.
He would claim that he could literally do that.
And he would claim that the information would then soak in overnight.
And he got this nickname as the sleeping prophet.
Now, the first time this happened, Edgar was struggling with a difficult spelling lesson
when he was just a boy.
And after hours of failed attempts to memorize all the words, his father, Leslie had grown
frustrated with Edgar's poor performance and like pushed him out of his chair.
And as he was laying there, he claimed to hear a female voice telling him to simply lay his head on the book and take a nap.
When he woke up 20 minutes later, he could suddenly spell everywhere perfectly.
Not just the ones he had been studying, but every word in the entire book.
He could even describe the illustrations on pages that he hadn't looked at and recite passages from chapters that his teacher hadn't even assigned him.
Now again, it sounds crazy, but this is what he and the people around him claimed.
It was as if, like, just everything from the book had just gotten,
into his head while he was sleeping. Now, Edgar discovered that this worked with any book or any
written material, and he would simply place his head on it, put under his pillow, fall asleep,
even after a light nap, and wake up with a recollection of all the contents. He even described
the experience as feeling like it was literally soaking in to his head, that he was remembering
the actual information, but not really remembering the process of absorbing it. And when word of
this weird little study method spread around a small school, Edgar went from being one of the
were students to the smartest, and his teachers were even amazed by his transformation.
They were like, how was this possible? Like, they thought that maybe he was, like, cheating.
And even some of his classmates saw him with, like, some suspicion and that added to his
reputation as, like, the weirdo kid that was able to, like, see spirits and stuff.
And Edgar himself didn't try to explain how it worked. All he knew is that if you need to learn
something, he would sleep on it, literally, and it was better than actually studying the book.
Now, his mom, Carrie was, by all accounts, pretty supportive of this.
you know his father was not less you know he was much less stoked on it right this is like a traditional
like religious christian family and he was like oh this is a little bit weird right like their household
growing up was extremely religious so as a result he would spend hours alone reading the scripture
and this ultimately would shape his worldview so at 13 while reading the bible in the woods he claimed
to have had a vision of a winged woman probably similar to the other woman that he claims that told him
to sleep on the books and this winged woman in the woods told him
Your prayers have been heard. What you desire will be given to you, work with the sick and the afflicted.
And he saw this as some type of divine mission, though he didn't fully understand why at the time.
He told very few people about it because he thought that he would get made fun of even further or mocked or they just wouldn't believe him.
So as he grew older, his family couldn't afford higher education.
So when he began the ninth grade, he left school and just began working odd jobs, mostly on his family farm.
And then later as like, you know, a bookstore clerk.
But eventually he learned about this new science that was coming out called photography.
And this became his new passion, and it was his main source of income.
So at this point in his life, he had no indication that he would be anything other than just like a humble
small town photographer doing portraits for rich families, right?
He was engaged to Gertrude Evans, who was his childhood sweetheart.
He worked a regular job and seemed destined for just kind of like a regular sort of life.
And then everything changes.
When he's in his early 20s, he develops a severe case of laryngitis that last
lasted for basically like a year. His voice became like really raspy and then it just eventually
disappeared and he was no longer able to speak. And he saw multiple doctors, but none of them
could help. Medically, his condition was diagnosed as post-diptheric laryngitis, believed to have
been triggered by an earlier bout of diphtheria and then aggravated by stress. Now, this was
devastating for young Edgar because his job as a photographer would require some communication.
He'd have to tell people what to do, even just to sell his services. He'd have to talk to people.
and now he can't really work properly.
But the loss of his voice wasn't just like a job setback.
It was emotionally crushing.
You see, Edgar had just gotten engaged.
His fiancé Gertrude stood by him.
But the uncertainty of whether he would be able to speak again or even work again was weighing really heavily on him.
And he tried every remedy.
He would do throat sprays and tonics and rescuers and electrical treatments, anything that he could do and nothing was working.
So he communicated through like writing and then like faint whistening.
spurs when his throat was feeling good enough. And, you know, he was doing whatever he could,
but his chance at, like, any type of normal life was kind of just slipping away. And his family
was really worried that he would just be, like, permanently disabled, and he'd be mute for the
rest of his life and unable to support a wife or kids or anything like that. And then he had a
breakthrough. In 1901, there was a traveling hypnotist named Hart who visited Hopkinsville and
offered to hypnotize case as, like, a part of a stage act, like, just like a fun show for people.
under hypnosis, Case spoke normally for the first time ever, like since he actually was diagnosed
with this laryngitis. So in over a year, he hadn't spoken, and now he's able to speak perfectly fine.
He tried to basically repeat the treatment privately, but Case's voice always vanished whenever he woke up.
Later, a local hypnotist and osteopath named Al Lane proposed a, like a more controlled version of this
experiment. He put Case under hypnosis and asked him to describe what was wrong with his throat.
And while he was in like this trance, Case actually diagnosed himself, saying that the cause was a psychological paralysis of his vocal cords due to poor blood circulation.
And then he gave instructions for how to fix it.
Basically, if you're dealing with poor circulation, your vocal cords, you need blood flow and you need to increase the circulation through suggestion.
So Lane followed his instructions during the trance.
And with a few sessions, Case's voice returned completely.
a recovery that doctors couldn't explain.
And what's crazy is that case, while unconscious,
was using medical terminology that he had never studied.
He was never a trained doctor.
I mean, there's like a farm kid that never finished high school.
He described the physiological mechanisms of his condition
with precision that baffled the hypnotist
and even was more surprising to the doctors
that knew what he was actually talking about.
But the crazy part is that when Case woke up,
according to the reports, he had no memory of what he had said.
This was the moment Case realized that,
that in a trance, he could basically access information
that he didn't consciously know.
And he called this just his subconscious mind.
And at times he would even call it his universal mind.
Basically, the question is, is this coming from inside of him
on a subconscious level?
Maybe you heard these words from people talking at the doctor
when he was a kid.
Or is this coming from outside of him?
Maybe he's channeling the universe
in some type of cosmic, you know, like esoteric way
that's giving him this information.
And initially, he only used this gift basically as like,
a thing that he would do for his family and friends.
And, you know, he saw this, you know, as something that he could do to try to help people.
But he didn't take it much farther.
And Lane himself was the first patient, the hypnotist.
He suffered from a chronic stomach issue that medicine couldn't help.
And under hypnosis, case diagnosed the problem and prescribed a treatment plan.
Lane followed it and he improved dramatically.
So imagine that.
You go into a hypnotist because you're having an issue with your throat.
You cure yourself.
And then the hypnotist is like,
let me hypnotize you again and tell me what's wrong with me.
And then he cures the hypnotist.
Word then began to spread around and people were now really conflicted about whether this was like
a gift from God or a weird medical anomaly or a hoax or maybe even something more sinister.
And so by 1910, things got a lot more mystical, if you will.
Case began giving medical readings for strangers using only their name and their location.
So Lane would basically hypnotize them and, Edgar case, while in this trance would describe
the person's body as if it was directly in front of him. And it was almost like a remote viewing,
if you're familiar with that term. And the process was basically the same thing. He would lie down,
fold his hands across his chest, close his eyes, and enter this, you know, induced trance.
And then Lane or later his wife Gertrude would give him the person's name and location,
sometimes hundreds of miles away. And within moments, he would then begin speaking in this calm,
almost like detached kind of voice and describing internal organs and treatments and conditions.
for people he had never met before.
And the readings were then recorded by a stenographer,
and it kind of created this permanent record
that then could be verified later.
He emphasized this quote.
He says,
We are guided by the subconscious mind,
which is in touch with all other subconscious minds,
or by the universal mind of God.
So his readings often recommended
some type of natural homeopathic remedy.
So like castor oil for inflammation,
spinal adjustments, you know,
dietary regiments, like stop eating,
know, starches and proteins together, you know, fried foods, drinking water, stuff like that.
And what's that case apart from, you know, the traditional, like, traveling faith healer,
you know, like con man is that he didn't give vague advice or, like, universal panaceas, you know.
He gave specific instructions, like, which vertebrae needed to be adjusted, or, like,
which temperature the castor oil pack should be or how many days to continue a treatment.
And many of his recommendations involved therapies that were considered, like, sort of
fringe at the time, but I've like since been validated in the modern era. So things like
gut health or like mind-body connections, things that people kind of talk about now that at
the time were seen as like weird, holistic, you know, kind of bunk science stuff. Another thing
that set him apart from other, you know, fraudulent con men that would come through is that
case never charged expensive fees. His readings were basically free or just donation-based.
He would send the readings, be like, hey, you know, you can pay me if this works. And by March of
1910, the New York Times published a front page article titled,
Illiterate Man becomes a Doctor when hypnotized.
And this literally thrust him into like the national spotlight overnight.
And in an instant, he went from this like local curiosity, you know, like dude in your town that was doing this like crazy little trick to a national phenomenon.
And as a result, letters were pouring in from desperate people begging for these types of, you know, prescriptions or a reading or anything.
anything. Doctors began traveling to Kentucky to just watch him while he was working. And some of them
were really impressed and others claimed that he was playing tricks with, you know, the subconscious
mind. All at the same time, Case himself was overwhelmed. During this period, he stayed firmly
focused on health and really tried to, you know, avoid any type of spiritual or like a cult
woo-woo topic because he felt like maybe it would discredit him. And he continued working as a photographer
to just support his family and gave readings in the spare time while he, you know, could just, like,
fit them in. And he was also struggling with the attention. Remember, he is a devout Christian. He's still
worried about whether this ability is coming from God or from the devil or like what is going on.
And this is something that a lot of people don't know is that he often prayed before each reading,
asking God to allow him to be a channel for the good. And so by the 1920s, Case had given
thousands of readings, and mostly all of them have been recorded and verified in some way by
physicians at the time, and it proved some authenticity that what he was doing was, you know,
at least, you know, verifiable that he was actually giving treatments to these people. But still,
he remained really humble and kind of conflicted, never fully comfortable with the spotlight
that these abilities were bringing to him. And then this changed in 1923, when a reading
unexpectedly referenced a patient's past life. Now, Case was giving advice to a man suffering
from chronic digestive problems when in the middle of the trance his language shifted. Instead of
talking about diet or spinal adjustments or whatever else he would prescribe, he began describing the
man's life as a colonial settler in America in the 1700s. He claimed that the man was working
as like a landowner, maybe like a farmer that was struggling with like food scarcity and, you know,
improper food preservation, which supposedly created like digestive weakness that he claims
carried over into his current life.
Now, this sounds crazy, I know, but to case, he was also freaked out.
This is the first time this had happened to him, and he was terrified.
I mean, he was like now as a Christian dealing with this idea of reincarnation.
He was like, what is going on?
And this was a concept associated with, obviously, like, Eastern religions and Hinduism
and often in a lot of, like, occult circles, ideas that his Christian community and his Christian values did not align with.
It said that after he consulted with ministers and theologians, and he was kind of wrestling with whether or not he should continue,
He ultimately did.
But instead of a, you know, medical diagnostic, he began giving like life readings that
described past incarnations in like, you know, ancient civilizations and karmic debts and soul
groups, basically people reincarnating together to work through some type of shared spiritual
lesson.
And these life readings were different from the medical ones, obviously, right?
They focused on the soul's journey rather than the body's physical ailments in, you know,
this world.
And Case would then describe how a person's fears or their talents or their talents or their
struggles stemmed from unresolved experiences in their past life.
So, for example, someone with an unexplained fear of water may have drowned in their past life.
Someone with a gift for music may have been a musician in ancient Greece, stuff like that.
So as a result, he's now explaining that he accessed these records through something that he called the Akashik records.
This is a concept that was derived partly from theosophy, from the school of Madame Blavatsky in Russia,
but it was really popularized in the West in some way because of Edgar Case.
You can think of the Akashik record as sort of like a cosmic memory field, I guess.
Like, this is like a spiritual record of all thoughts and events and actions that could be accessed by, like, really, you know, expert psychics.
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This term Akashik record comes from Sanskrit, where Akasha means sky,
like the ether and in Hindu philosophy Akasha is considered like the fifth element this is
this subtle all-pervading substance that forms like the background of the material world like it is
you know basically the information of the world that is all around us in every little thing so
case didn't claim to understand how he was able to access this only that when he entered this trance
and focused on this person he was able to see their spiritual history and the information
would just flow from him naturally as if he was like reading from a book or something
Now, this period also saw the beginning of an organized effort to preserve his work. The people around him start to start to feel that he was doing something really special and that this was beyond just like, you know, a sideshow trick or, you know, even like some guy that read a bunch of medical books that was like, you know, hoaxing people. He had ardent supporters that started making study groups that would later be known as the A.R.E. This is the Association for Research and Enlightenment. And the ARE was officially founded in 1931 with the mission of studying and preserving all of his reading.
for future generations. And then in 1925, Edgar Case moved to Virginia Beach, claiming to basically get a
fresh start away from any type of controversy or attention that he was getting in Kentucky. And he also
claimed that there was something like spiritually significant in the land that made the perfect
place for this type of spiritual work. But in Virginia, he wasn't just seeing individual past
lives anymore. He was now tapping into the history of entire civilizations that a lot of
people in mainstream science said never existed. And this is where we get Edgar Case going to Atlantis.
Yes, he began describing the lost civilization that he claimed to be Atlantis. He said that Atlantis
was a real thing that was located in the Atlantic and its center was near what's now like the Bahamas.
And the civilization had advanced crystal technology that he called firestones or like two-eye stones.
And it was capable of like powering cities and destroying them. And it existed in different periods.
Again, this is just what Edgar Case claims.
He says that the last period ended around 10,000 BC, which kind of aligns with Plato's timeline,
if you're familiar with like Plato's initial sort of telling of the Atlanta story.
And he also claimed that Atlantean refugees migrated to Egypt and then to the Yucatan and then gave those cultures this knowledge of civilization, so to speak,
and, you know, taught them how to, you know, build pyramids, you know, ostensibly, things like that.
But Case's Atlantis wasn't the mystical utopia that people.
talk about today. Much like Plato, it was a cautionary tale. According to his readings that people
wrote down, Atlantis was technologically superior to modern civilization, but it was morally corrupt.
And the Atlanteans had harnessed the power of these crystals to then create energy and heal
disease and communicate over distances. And these stones were described as being housed in
like central power stations where they amplified the earth's natural energy. However,
as the civilization grew more powerful, there was then two factions that emerged.
one was the son of the law of one who used technology for spiritual advancement, and then there were the sons of Belial who exploited it for selfish gain and control.
And according to Edgar Case and his records, that there was a conflict between these two groups that led to a catastrophic misuse of these stones, which ultimately triggered volcanic eruptions and earthquakes and eventually sinking the entire continent into three major cataclysms.
The final destruction occurred right around this 10,000 BC time, and it scattered all the survivors across the globe.
Case then claimed that many souls alive today had incarnated during Atlantis and carried these subconscious memories.
Now, I know, it sounds pretty crazy.
But again, Case suggested that this explained humanity's dual nature, our capacity for innovation, but then also destruction.
You can think of like nuclear power being able to be this efficient way to create energy, but also this way to create the most dangerous bomb that we have.
known to mankind. So, one of the most famous claims was the existence of this Hall of Records,
which is buried beneath the Sphinx's Paw in Egypt. According to case, the Hall of Records was like
a time capsule created by the Atlantean survivors who fled to Egypt around the time that Atlantis was
allegedly destroyed. And it supposedly contained a bunch of records about technology and spiritual
teachings and the history of human civilization dating back like hundreds of thousands of years. He also
had a specific location for it. It was beneath the right paw of the sphinx and it was accessible through a
hidden chamber connected by underground passageways to the Great Pyramid. I know. This is a lot. But again,
this is Edgar Case and what he claimed to have seen. He said that the records were preserved in
this like indestructible material and would only be discovered when humanity was ready to use
the knowledge responsibly and when humans reached a spiritually mature stage. But Case also believed
that parts of Atlantis would be discovered near a place called Bimony between
between 1968 and 1969.
While giving you a reading, he claimed that Poseidia will be among the first portions of Atlantis
to rise again expected in 68, 69, not so far away.
Now, here's what's interesting.
In 1968, researchers discovered the underwater Bimini Road formation.
If you're familiar with Graham Hancock or his Netflix show, this is something that he's discussed.
And this is basically submerged stones, basically off the coast of Bimini in the Bahamas, that
look like a road formation. Like it looks like you have these like cut up like giant stones that are
forming like this road thing. And it looks like maybe like a road or like a wall. And the formation
consists of like these giant limestone blocks that are arranged in this like linear pattern
extending for roughly half of a mile. And geologists debate whether it's a natural formation or
if it's manmade. But for cases followers, the timing was too perfect to just be a coincidence. And
you can actually see a picture of the stones here. I mean, it looks pretty remarkable. And maybe
it's naturally occurring, but I mean, it's pretty wild, right? But Case isn't finished with his
controversial claims. While he was describing lost civilizations and ancient technologies, he was
also diving deep into religious territory that would disturb even his most devoted Christian followers.
His readings about Atlantis were pretty crazy, specifically for the time. But what he said about
Jesus Christ, the centerpiece of his own faith, of the entire Christian faith, would prove even more
disturbing. And yet, in Case's mind, these weren't contradictions to Christianity. To him, they were
just, you know, hidden truth basically getting revealed. So this is basically what he said in the
1930s about Jesus and Jesus' past lives. Case's readings during this time went deep. He claimed that
the soul that incarnated Jesus had been reincarnated multiple times before. And these are the people.
Adam, who fell from grace, obviously in the Garden of Eden. Enoch from the book of Enoch, as you know,
who walked with God.
Malkisadek, the mysterious priest king, Joshua, who led the Israelites,
and then finally, Jesus of Nazareth, the perfected soul.
Now, this was maybe his most controversial idea.
He wasn't claiming that Jesus was just another human or just another human soul.
He maintained that Jesus was unique, but it was the only soul to achieve perfect unity with God.
Now, according to the reading, that perfection came through this long journey of incarnations.
each one bringing the soul closer to a, you know, completed, like spiritual fulfillment.
He claimed that the soul that would ultimately become Jesus had volunteered at the beginning
of human history to be the Savior and put aside his own wants and needs, incarnating repeatedly
to guide humanity back to God. Now, Case described this journey in detail. Adam represented
the soul's first experience with free will and the consequences of choosing separation from God.
Enoch achieved so much spiritual purity that he transcended physical death.
Malkisadek appeared as a priest king without a father or a mother, which represented a higher
dimensional manifestation. Joshua led God's people towards the promised land, which then,
obviously, symbolizes spiritual leadership, and each incarnation built on the previous one
until the soul was ready for its final mission as Jesus of Nazareth.
He also gives details about Jesus' lost years. If you're familiar with the Gospels,
there's not really much that's known about Jesus in his childhood, or really any time
up until he's about like 30 years old when, you know, his ministry actually starts.
That's more or less when the gospel starts.
So, you know, there's one story of Jesus as a kid at the temple, but from the ages of like 12 to 30,
we don't really know anything.
But according to Case, Jesus didn't simply disappear from the biblical record during those 18 years.
He was preparing for his ministry by studying the world's spiritual traditions.
Now, Case's readings described Jesus traveled to India, where he studied with masters.
He learned meditation and healing, the nature of consciousness.
He then spent time in Egypt at the ancient Egyptian mystery schools, understanding the esoteric
teachings preserved from the Atlantean times.
And he even studied in Persia and learned from the Zoroastrian tradition, the first truly
like monotheistic religion.
This wasn't to suggest that Jesus needed to learn spiritual truth elsewhere.
Rather, Case kind of reconciled this by saying that it was Jesus understanding the universal
spiritual principles that all of these traditions were pointing towards, so that he
he could basically communicate with a diverse amount of people when his ministry began.
Unlike other occultists during, you know, times such as like Alastair Crowley or Alistair Crowley,
sorry, or Jack Parsons, which, by the way, definitely you should check out our episodes on both of them.
Case remained overtly Christian.
And he saw these readings as completing the Christian story, not rejecting it.
Instead, he interpreted it as like a forgotten part of early Christian teaching.
So to support this, he pointed to biblical passages that he believed.
hinted at reincarnation. And this is Jesus identifying John the Baptist as Elijah returned in Matthew
11, verse 14. Jesus asking his disciples, who do people say that I am? And their answers referencing
past figures. And the disciples asking Jesus about the man born blind saying this, who sinned this man
or his parents that he was born blind? Which, you know, was found in the book of John. And it implies
a belief that a man could have sinned before birth.
Who sinned?
This man or his parents that he was born blind.
So from Case's perspective, these were traces of reincarnation and, you know, kind of biblical
doctrine that the early Christians had abandoned or just missed and that his readings were
actually restoring this lost knowledge.
So as time went on, Case's readings began shifting from looking backwards in ancient history
to actually looking forward into the future.
And the world that he was looking into was changing rapidly.
I mean, economic collapse, the rise of the rise of.
fascism tensions building across Europe and Asia. People started asking him not just about their
health, their past lives, they wanted to know what was coming next. And what came through those readings
was both really specific but unsettling. So in 1928, Case made a bold prediction. He warned that the
stock market was dangerously inflated and that a major correction was going to happen. And he advised
people to be cautious with investments and to prepare for financial hardship. And just a few months
later, October 1929, the Great Depression hits. And those people who had followed his advice were
actually somewhat protected. And this prediction gave case a ton of credibility as someone who could
foresee not just medical conditions or spiritual stuff, but actually world events. And, you know,
maybe he just got lucky. Maybe he had a couple friends in finance that were like, hey, this thing is,
you know, this thing is destined to go at any point. But to predict it a few months later, it's like,
oh, it's pretty good. And then just a few years later, in 1935, he warned that unless there was, quote,
brotherly love, a global conflict would engulf the world, starting with Austria, Germany, and Japan.
Now, this was years before World War II officially began. Obviously, Hitler was on the rise in Germany,
but, you know, the war hadn't officially started, and it'd be, you know, maybe six years before America
actually got involved in the war. So this is a time when a lot of people were focusing on recovering
from the Great Depression. Now, his readings described the rise of totalitarian regimes and warned
that humanity's failure to embrace unity and compassion would lead to unprecedented destruction.
The wild thing is that he specifically mentions the role of Austria and Germany.
And just three years after that, Hitler annexed Austria, Germany invaded Poland, and Japan expanded aggressively into the Pacific, all aligning with cases warnings.
Now, he also made some major geological predictions and geological shifts in the latter half of the 20th century.
He predicted that between 58 and 1998, the Earth would experience dramatic physical change.
He claimed that portions of the East Coast would, you know, break apart.
that California would slide into the ocean land would appear in the Atlantic in the Pacific,
and that climate would shift dramatically due to pole reversal. He described these changes as both
literal geological events and metaphors for spiritual transformation. Some followers claim that the
increased seismic activity in climate change and coastal erosion proves that this prophecy is
actually coming to light, but others acknowledge that the catastrophic change that he described
hasn't occurred, or at least hasn't occurred just yet.
He also said that there would be a spiritual awakening toward the end of the 20th century, with China becoming the cradle of Christianity.
Now, this was one of his strangest prophecies, given that in the 30s and 40s, China showed no signs of Christian conversion at all.
However, Kaye suggested that China would embrace a form of Christianity blended with its own spiritual traditions, creating like a new religious movement that's like kind of hybridized.
And some interpret this as referring to China's growing underground Christian population, while others see it as just like unfulfilled.
or maybe symbolic of like a broader spiritual shift in eastern consciousness.
Now, what's interesting is that there's actually a whole sect of Chinese Christians that
believe Jesus traveled and died in China.
They even have a tomb dedicated to him.
Another fun fact about some of these Chinese Christians is that some of them claim that
there is an emperor named Hong Ji Kuan, who claimed to be the younger brother of Jesus.
Case is basically given these wild predictions about the future of the planet.
His own future was actually coming to an end because the work that
had defined his life, was now taking a toll on his health. So by the early 40s, despite his
worsening health, he was giving up to eight readings a day. And doctors were telling him like,
hey, you got to rest, you got to chill out. But he believed that his work was like divinely mandated.
Remember the woman with wings that told him to, you know, care for the sick and the afflicted?
So during World War II, thousands of families were writing to him begging for readings about their
sons or their husbands fighting overseas. Were they going to survive the war? Should they send them
care packages, like all this stuff. And Case was deeply compassionate and unable to turn his back on
these people. So he basically pushed himself far beyond his limits. And he had always said that he
should do not more than two readings per day to avoid depleting his energy, but the flood of these
desperate requests from, you know, these destitute mothers or wives made him just ignore his own
advice. And as a result, his health deteriorated rapidly. He developed these severe headaches and
exhaustion and insomnia. His blood pressure was spiking.
family and friends were just telling him, like, hey, just stop.
Like, you don't have to do this, but he felt morally obligated to do it.
So, you know, he would even say, how can I refuse when people are suffering?
Then in the summer of 1944, he gave himself a reading and heard his own conscious voice,
warn him that unless he rested immediately that he would die.
And he tried to slow down, but at that point, the damage was done.
After this reading, he helped formally establish the ARE,
ensuring that his readings would be archived in over 14,000 documents.
readings are still in existence today and they cover health, reincarnation, Atlantis, biblical
history, future prophecies, everything. Each reading had been carefully transcribed by a stenographer,
creating a, I mean, one of the most extensive records of like psychic phenomena in history,
if that's what you want to call it. Case's wife Gertrude and his secretary Gladys Davis
worked tirelessly to actually preserve these documents and, you know, try to show what
was written down because they knew that it would be valuable for researchers in the future.
And then in September, 1944, Case suffered a stroke and became partially paralyzed.
His final reading instructed him to take a long rest, and he died four months later on January 3rd, 1945, at the age of 67.
When Case died, his wife Gertrude was devastated, and she passed away just four months later on Easter Sunday.
Many people believe that she couldn't just, she simply was just heartbroken and died of, you know, being separated from him.
But just as Case himself had taught, death is not the end of the story.
And although he was gone, his readings remained intact.
And in the decades that followed, those readings would take on a life of their own.
And they would influence movements and shape beliefs of people around the world that Case never would have lived to have seen.
So, for example, his Hall of Records predictions, the giant sort of time capsule under the Sphinx,
inspired real searches under the Sphinx in the 1990s.
Teams of researchers were using ground penetrating radar and seismic equipment to basically scan beneath the Sphinx.
and some even claimed that they found evidence of some type of chamber,
but the Egyptian authorities restricted access
and no definitive proof has actually been presented to the public.
His Akashik records teaching became a cornerstone of New Age spirituality,
and today countless books and courses and workshops
teach people how to access the Akashic records for themselves,
building directly on cases framework.
And even his health remedies are still practiced in some alternative, like, health circles.
So castor oil packs, dietary recommendations, holistic approaches to wellness are all things that Case was really bringing to a brand new audience.
And his prophecies continue to influence Dune's Day predictions and spiritual movements to this day.
I mean, a lot of geological events, political shifts, cultural changes are examined by Case's followers and basically scrutinized to see if they are fulfillments of his prophecies.
I mean, he's one of the most studied psychics ever, and his legacy continues to inspire and confuse people even decades after his death.
death. And that, my friends, is the life legacy and the insane predictions of one of the most
studied psychics in history, Mr. Edgar Case. I don't know, man. I mean, it's pretty, uh, it's pretty
interesting. I would love to, like, go through all of his, all of his, like, predictions, all of his
readings. Like, I would love to know what the, uh, like, what, like, skeptics would say about it.
I mean, he had some other predictions that we actually didn't bring up just yet. I mean,
one that's really interesting is that he made multiple readings.
171 readings about a group called the Essians who basically hid their ancient records.
And he described the Essians as a brotherhood of men and women who preserved records and lived in a certain way.
And he didn't document the exact date or full contents of what was in these records.
He had this theme of ancient records from the Essians.
And then a few years later, they discovered the Dead Sea Scrolls,
which were hidden by the Essian Jews that were then found.
like, I think like five or six years later after he predicted it.
They were actually found after his death.
So he said, like, oh, yeah, there's these people that hid this ancient knowledge
and it's going to be discovered.
And then it was discovered.
And then one of his readings, he said that man should live longer than he had been
ordinarily given and will, according to human lifespan and advances in health.
And today we are seeing increased, you know, human lifespans and, you know, emphasis on preventative
health. Another thing that he talked about was some readings attributed to him
discuss how varied channels of communication working in a more cooperative and structured
manner. And some people are like, oh, this is interconnected global communication, stuff like that.
Some critics would say that like, oh, he had many predictions that didn't come true, like,
you know, California going off into the ocean, or, you know, he would talk about like great
disturbances or like vague, like some things will change, which are kind of like,
not very accurate.
I mean, he made thousands of readings,
and some people say, like, okay,
he made 14,000 documented readings.
Some of them are going to be true.
But even some of these, I'm like,
the Dead Sea Scrolls is like, that's pretty crazy.
Like, he, like, talked about the SE and Jews.
Like, who's talking about the SE and Jews in, like, the 40s?
And, like, the Dead Sea Scrolls, the way that was discovered was, like,
I think a dude just, like, threw a rock into a cave
and then heard a glass break.
And then went in there and was like,
what is this?
It's not like people were, like,
searching for the Essene scrolls. It's like they accidentally just discovered these Dead Sea Scrolls.
Pretty wild. I mean, I don't know. I don't really know what to make of it. I would like,
I'm curious what, like, occultists or even Christians say about this guy. Because, like, I knew vaguely
of him just from, like, doing my own weirdo research, but, like, I didn't know all the details
about his predictions. And he seems like a pretty well-meaning dude. You know what I mean? Like,
I don't know if he's like, I don't, he doesn't seem like a bad, like, evil guy. He doesn't
seem like a grifter necessarily, or at least he wasn't trying to be. Maybe the people around him
were, like, making him grift and being like, hey, just do this. But, like, it doesn't seem like he,
personally was trying to, like, get super rich off these readings, considering that he wasn't charging
for them, you know? I don't know. It's all, it's all very strange to me. I mean, I kind of read,
I hope someone has a good book on him because now I want to, like, dive into the whole book.
So some people point to some of his inaccurate predictions, uh, according to Wikipedia, he said
in the 30s that he predicted that North America would experience existential chaos.
Well, technically is right.
Los Angeles, San Francisco will be among those that will be destroyed before New York.
And he also predicted the second coming of Christ would happen in 1998.
Well, who knows?
Maybe the second coming of Christ was born in 1998.
And he's just turning 20, you know, pretty recently.
I know.
What's 33 years after 1990?
Oh, that's good.
2031.
2031 oh I mean I was born 96 so I just missed it
I know I just I just missed but I have some friends born 98 I gotta think it's not
Sanchez for sure not him I don't think he's the only thing he's coming is some
random girls back trying to think yeah I don't know I mean yeah he missed a couple of
these for sure. But, I mean, some of these were actually, I mean, that's kind of a big miss.
But still, I mean, the Dead Sea Scrolls thing is pretty solid. Stock market crash, pretty
solid. Maybe you could have seen that. World War II, you know, who knows? Maybe he got lucky,
but I want to know some of the people that actually cured. I wonder if, like, the stuff was just,
like, kind of fringe, holistic stuff at the time that everyone's like, oh, yeah, you should drink water
and exercise. Like, I got to look at some of his specific, detailed ones. Like, I need to, like,
actually like check the you know specific specifics of all of his records i'm going to read all 14
000 he also allegedly predicted death of two u.s presidents while they're in office
fdr and jfk and the fall of the soviet union do you have what his prediction on the presidents was
yeah it's a little cryptic go ahead you are to have turmoil you are to have strife between capital
and labor you are to have a division in your own land before you have the
second of the presidents that next will not live through his office, a mob rule.
Oh, the second of the presidents.
I mean, it's kind of ominous.
But also, there's been more than two presidents that have died in office, right?
Well, during his lifetime?
I guess in his lifetime, there had already been some that had died.
But, yeah, I mean, FDR was like, what, late 40s?
And then, you know, JFK was 63.
Three. Yeah.
So yeah, I mean, look, maybe I'll give it to him.
And then he said the Soviet Union would fall.
I mean, that's kind of wild.
Specifically said communism wouldn't be the way.
And then...
I mean, maybe he's just a base capitalist.
Maybe he's just like super base.
He's just like, yo, communism, whack, dude.
That shit is going to...
There's no way.
I mean, he could read books just by falling asleep on them.
That's a good point, bro.
So maybe he's able...
Maybe he just has a crazy photographic memory,
is able to read all the shit.
It was just like a smart dude.
and then in order to gain some motion,
he was able to, you know,
he said that it was clairvoyant.
I don't know, man.
I got to read more about this guy.
Maybe we do another follow-up episode
and some of his other predictions.
I mean, what do you guys think?
Do you think Evercase was channeling something?
Do you think he was just a smart dude
that had some good intuitions?
Do you think he just got lucky
and said a bunch of stuff
and some of it was true,
like the rule of the law of large numbers or whatever?
I'm curious to know what you guys think.
Drop a comment.
I read all of them on YouTube and Spotify.
I appreciate you guys for tuning
into another episode of Camp.
And as always, you can see me on the road, Mark Agon Live.
You can also check out the merch over at Camp R&D.
And, yeah, I can't wait to see you guys next time in my beautiful tent.
Thank you so much.
Appreciate it.
Cressos, any final words?
Love you guys.
All right, all, we got to wrap up.
Love you all so much.
Appreciate you and talk soon.
Peace.
