P1077:1, 98:0.1
The Melchizedek teachings entered Europe along many routes, but chiefly they
came by way of Egypt and were embodied in Occidental philosophy after being
thoroughly Hellenized and later Christianized. The ideals of the Western world
were basically Socratic, and its later religious
philosophy became that of Jesus as it was modified and compromised through
contact with evolving Occidental philosophy and religion, all of which culminated
in the Christian church.
P1077:2, 98:0.2
For a long time in Europe the Salem missionaries carried on their activities,
becoming gradually absorbed into many of the cults and ritual groups which
periodically arose. Among those who maintained the Salem teachings in the
purest form must be mentioned the Cynics. These preachers of faith and trust
in God were still functioning in Roman Europe in the first century after Christ,
being later incorporated into the newly forming Christian religion.
P1077:3, 98:0.3
Much of the Salem doctrine was spread in Europe by the Jewish
mercenary soldiers
who fought in so many of the Occidental military struggles. In ancient times
the Jews were
famed as much for military valor as for theologic peculiarities.
P1077:4, 98:0.4
The basic doctrines of Greek philosophy, Jewish theology, and Christian ethics
were fundamentally repercussions of the earlier Melchizedek teachings.