Lectorium Rosicrucianum

   History

J. van
Rijckenborgh

Catharose de
Petri

The Lectorium Rosicrucianum, or International School of the Golden Rosycross, began in Haarlem, the Netherlands, where its headquarters are now situated. Its origins can be traced to the year 1924, when the brothers Z W Leene (1892-1938) and J Leene (1896-1968) joined the Dutch division of The Rosicrucian Fellowship, a society founded in 1909 by Max Heindel in Oceanside, California, USA. The two brothers quickly became highly active members of the society and in 1929 were asked to lead the Dutch division. In 1930 the Leene brothers were joined by Mrs H Stok-Huizer (1902-1990) and together they undertook a spiritual quest as a result of which, in 1935, they found it necessary to form an independent Rosicrucian movement. Z W Leene passed away in 1938, but J Leene and H Stok-Huizer continued the work that had been begun. They wrote a number of books which are still in print, published under their pen-names, Jan van Rijckenborgh and Catharose de Petri.
The Second
World War
The activities of the society were forbidden by the occupying forces during the Second World War, but afterwards, as soon as it was possible to resume activities openly, the two spiritual leaders adopted a new approach in which, increasingly, the central focus was the concept 'gnosis'. The word 'gnosis' literally means 'knowledge', in the christocentric sense of direct knowledge of the divine which is received as a result of a spiritual development referred to in the Bible as the 'birth out of water and spirit' (John 3:5). What happens in this process is symbolised by the 'alchemical wedding of Christian Rosycross'.



Christian
Rosycross
The name Christian Rosycross is a term used by the classical Rosicrucians of the 17th century to refer to the prototype of the new human being, reborn in Christ, who devotes himself heart and soul to the realization of genuine spiritual renewal in all human beings.
The Gnosis In a broad sense the term 'gnosis' refers to the universal touch of the Christ and His Brotherhood and its timeless work of salvation which has been going on throughout history (including the pre-Christian era).
Gnostic
Spiritual
School
In 1945 the society adopted the name Lectorium Rosicrucianum and emerged as a 'gnostic Spiritual School'. The activities of the society rapidly spread beyond the Dutch borders and at present the Lectorium Rosicrucianum has pupils not only in many European countries, but also in South America, North America, Africa, Australia and New Zealand. Since the deaths of Jan van Rijckenborgh and Catharose de Petri the Lectorium Rosicrucianum has been led by an International Spiritual Directorate, supported by national directorates and various working parties.

© 1996-2001 Lectorium Rosicrucianum