The “I AM” Discourses by St Germain
Here are the complete discourses that St Germain delivered to Guy Ballard and others in 1932.
Who is St Germain?
The Count of St. Germain was a real and highly elusive figure in 18th-century Europe. He appeared in elite court circles, especially in France in the 1750s and 1760s, and became known for his education, polish, musical talent, and mysterious background. Historians still cannot say exactly who he was. Britannica places him at the French court around 1748 and says Louis XV employed him on confidential diplomatic business. He claimed that he could remove flaws from diamonds and transmute metals.
In the late 19th century, Helena P. Blavatsky took that already legendary court figure and placed him inside her Theosophical worldview. In The Theosophical Glossary, she called him “the greatest Oriental Adept Europe has seen during the last centuries,” treating him not as a mere adventurer but as an advanced initiate with hidden spiritual knowledge. Later Theosophical writers pushed that idea further and made Saint Germain one of the Masters guiding human evolution.
Then, in 1930, Guy Ballard claimed that Saint Germain appeared to him on Mount Shasta. That claim led to the I AM movement of the 1930s, which presented Saint Germain as an Ascended Master and source of spiritual teaching
FURTHER READING ABOUT ST GERMAIN
Encyclopedia Britannica
Encyclopedia.com
JSTOR, “The Count of St Germain” by Johan Franco
New Acropolis, The Eternal Mystery of the Count of Saint Germain by Laszlo Balizs
Comte De Saint-Germain: Last Scion of the House of Rakoczy by Jean Overton Fuller
Theosophy Encyclopedia
Unveiled Mysteries