The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus Christ is an account of the life of Jesus, especially of “the ‘lost’ eighteen years so strangely silent in the New Testament,” (according to the back cover,) written by Levi H. Dowling, who claimed to have transcribed it from the Akashic Records. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ is the tale of Jesus Christ, from his birth to his death, as written by Levi H. Dowling during the late nienteenth century. ... Jesus (8-2 BC/BCEâ 29-36 AD/CE),[1] also known as Jesus of Nazareth, is the central figure of Christianity. ... See New Covenant for the concept translated as New Testament in the KJV. The New Testament (Îαινή Îιαθήκη), sometimes called the Greek Testament or Greek Scriptures, and sometimes also New Covenant, is the name given to the part of the Christian Bible that was written by various authors c. ... The Akashic Records (Akasha is a Sanskrit word meaning sky, space or aether) are said to be a collection of mystical knowledge that is stored in the aether; i. ...
The AquarianGospel of Christ resonates so strongly with the teachings of The Reluctant Messenger that it is presented here for those ready to receive its message.
Note: The AquarianGospel of Christ is very consistent with The Lost Years of Jesus: The Life of Saint Issa.
That is, the revelations contained within the AquarianGospel are indeed sweet and beautiful, but as these Truths digest, we realize how much our Father-God requires of us, and the sweetness turns to bitterness; and, as this bitterness sets in, we are tempted to resent our Father.
To some believers of the [Christian] faith the AquarianGospel is thought to be a book of great antiquity that verifies that Jesus journeyed to India in his youth.
In the AquarianGospel where it is mentioned that Jesus went to Puri [in India] it also says that Jesus criticized the Deity of Lord Jagannath.
In any case the AquarianGospel casts Jesus in the role not as one who came to India to learn or to worship God in the temples but to criticize Vedic theology and tradition.