The Maha Chohan is the representative of the Holy Spirit. The one who holds this office within the hierarchy represents the Holy Spirit from the Father-Mother God, from Alpha and Omega, to the evolutions of this earth and the elemental realm. The abode of the Maha Chohan, the Temple of Consolation is on the etheric plane with a focus in the physical on the island of Sri Lanka (formerly known as Ceylon) where the flame of the Holy Spirit and the flame of Consolation are anchored. His twin flame is Pallas Athene, the Goddess of Truth.
Maha Chohan means "Great Lord," and the Maha Chohan is the Great Lord of the seven chohans. the director of the seven chohans of the rays. Among the qualifications of this office in the hierarchy is the attainment of adeptship on all seven rays, merging in pure white light of the Holy Spirit. With the seven chohans, he consecrates our souls in preparation for receiving the nine gifts of the Holy Spirit spoken of in 1. Corinthians 12:4-11.
Since the Spirit of God fills nature and man as animating essence of the sacred fire, the representative of the Holy Spirit must be qualified to penetrate among all substance through the diffusion of his consciousness, and likewise bring forth the flame that sustains life in man and nature through the focal point of his consciousness.
The element that corresponds to the flame of the Holy Spirit is air. Without this element, neither man nor elemental life can continue their service. Therefore, the consciousness of the Maha Chohan is similar to that of the Great Central Sun Magnet. He concentrates the magnet, which produces the radiance of the sun, to the earth which is required to sustain life on earth.
In his service he is aided by the white-fire angels who tend the white flame of the Holy Spirit of Alpha and Omega that is anchored in a magnificent altar of the sacred fire in his ethereal retreat across the island of Sri Lanka. These angels draw the essence of the sacred fire from this flame to nourish pranic energy everywhere in the four lower bodies of the earth. Also serving there are angels of the pink flame who tend the focal point of the Flame of Consolation in the central altar of his abode. In an adjacent room, the white flame with pink tones and gold in its base, anchored in a crystal church surrounded by crystal doves, emits a powerful radiation of divine love. These angels carry radiations from these flames to all four corners of the earth and to the hearts of all who yearn for consolation and purity from the Father-Mother God.
The twin flames of the Holy Spirit manifested themselves as the split tongues of fire on the day of Pentecost when the disciples were filled with the Holy Spirit. When Jesus was baptized "he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and shining upon him." The dove is the symbol of the twin flame action of the Holy Spirit which may also be visualized as a "V" with wings, a focus of the male and female polarities of the Godhead and a reminder that God created twin flames to represent His androgynous nature. In the presence of the Maha Chohan and within the walls of His abode, all feel the rhythm of the Holy Spirit, the pulsation of the holy-fire breath of God that releases the flow of life from the Central Sun into the hearts of all who develop on earth.
The first three root races that fulfilled their divine plan in the given 14,000-year cycle had their own representatives of the Holy Spirit who themselves promoted to this cosmic service with their respective root races.
The one currently holding the office of Maha Chohan was the blind poet Homer, whose epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey, feature Pallas Athene as the protagonist. The Iliad recounts the final year in the Trojan War, while the Odyssey emphasizes the journey home of Odysseus - one of the heroes of the Trojan War.
Historically, little is known about Homer, but most scholars believe he wrote the poems in the ninth or eighth century BC. Even at that time, Homer tuned his consciousness to the flame of Consolation, and the radiation he maintained with the focus of his own heart flame was a great blessing to elemental life. In his final embodiment as a shepherd in India, the light he silently brought forth herded the lives of millions of streams of life. He obtained mastery by dedicating his four lower bodies as a chalice for the flame of the Holy Spirit with his consciousness as a "step-down" transformer for the radiance of Sanat Kumara, the Ancient of Days.
The Maha Chohan referred to the Holy Spirit as the great unifying coordinator who "like an ancient weaver of days weaves a seamless garment of ascended master-light and love. The shooting spool of God's attention to man propels shining rays of descending light, sparkling particles of purity and happiness, to the earth and into the hearts of His children, while the tender rising of hopes, aspirations, invocations and invocations for help pursue the Deity to His mighty abode of purity ..."
"As a tiny seed of light, the Holy Spirit enters the heart of the earth, in the density of matter, that it may expand through the cells of form and being, of thought and perception to become a gnosis and abundance in the cup of consciousness. To many who pass by, this Holy Grail of immortal substance is not recognized but by many others it is perceived shimmering behind the veil. Shedding the light of that divine knowing that transcends mortal perception, and is the renewing vitality of the morning of eternity, it refreshes every moment with Godliness that man knows through infinite perceptions that is poured like particles into the chalice of his own consciousness."
The Maha Chohan serves every person on earth as we enter and leave the world. At the moment of birth, he will be present to breathe the breath of life into the body and to ignite the triple flame that is lowered into manifestation in the secret chamber of the heart.
The Maha Chohan also attends the transition, which we call death, to withdraw the flame of life as well as the sacred breath. The flame, or divine spark, returns to the Holy Christ-Self, and the soul, clothed in an etheric body, likewise returns to the level of the Holy Christ-Self. In accordance, He serves you at every crossroads in your life, when you pause for just a moment to make your decisions, remember the Holy Spirit and then speak this mantra: "Come, Holy Spirit, enlighten me." The radiance of the Maha Chohan is carried through into the musical composition "Homing," by Arthur Salmon.