Edgar Cayce on the Life of Jesus Christ
Audiobook & Ebook

Edgar Cayce on the Life of Jesus Christ by Vincent Ortegon | Free Audiobook

Part of Edgar Cayce's Readings on Atlantis, Astrology, and Jesus Christ #1

By Vincent Ortegon

Narrated by Virtual Voice

🎧 1 hour and 37 minutes 📘 Independently Published 📅 December 10, 2025 🌐 English
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About This Audiobook

Known as the Sleeping Prophet, Edgar Cayce gave thousands of psychic readings on subjects ranging from healthcare, therapies, remedies, meditation and mind power. Within his archive of 14,306 unconscious readings, this publication puts together the handful of readings he gave of Jesus Christ.

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Quick Take

  • Narration: Virtual Voice narration delivers the text clearly but lacks the warmth and interpretive depth a human reader would bring to material this contemplative – functional, not immersive.
  • Themes: Mystical Christianity, psychic revelation, esoteric biography
  • Mood: Quiet and meditative, with occasional flashes of genuine wonder
  • Verdict: A compact, sincere gathering of Cayce’s most spiritually provocative readings on Jesus, worth the brief listen for anyone already drawn to metaphysical Christianity.

I came to this one on a quiet Tuesday evening, the kind of night where the air feels heavy and you want something that gestures toward meaning without demanding too much of you. At just under an hour and forty minutes, Edgar Cayce on the Life of Jesus Christ is barely a full listen by audiobook standards, but Vincent Ortegon has assembled something genuinely unusual out of the archive of 14,306 unconscious readings that Cayce produced over his lifetime.

What this book offers is focused: Ortegon pulls specifically the handful of readings Cayce gave concerning Jesus Christ, weaving them into a coherent presentation that attempts to show how Cayce understood the life and spiritual significance of Jesus from within his distinctive trance-state cosmology. For listeners already familiar with Cayce’s broader work on Atlantis, reincarnation, or holistic medicine, this short volume adds a devotional dimension that those other readings only hint at.

Our Take on Edgar Cayce on the Life of Jesus Christ

What strikes me most about this book is how sincerely it honors the liminal space between Christian faith and metaphysical inquiry. Cayce was not a theologian in any traditional sense, and Ortegon does not try to dress him up as one. The readings themselves carry that particular quality of channeled material: sometimes elliptical, sometimes arrestingly specific, always delivered from some place adjacent to conventional religious reasoning. One reviewer placed this alongside Michael Singer’s The Surrender Experiment and Yogananda’s Autobiography of a Yogi, and that comparison is instructive, even if the execution here is considerably more modest in scope. This is not a magnum opus. It is a curated excerpt.

The synthesis Ortegon provides helps contextualize why Cayce returned to Jesus at all, given how much of his psychic work centered on physical healing and past-life regression. The answer, as it emerges across the readings gathered here, is that Cayce viewed Jesus less as a doctrinal figure and more as the most fully realized soul in human history, someone who perfected across many lifetimes what most of us are still stumbling toward. For readers raised in orthodox Christianity that framing will feel either revelatory or troubling. For those already comfortable in the Cayce universe, it provides a welcome concentration of material that is otherwise scattered across his enormous archive.

Why Listen to Edgar Cayce on the Life of Jesus Christ

The value here is specifically archival and synthetic. Ortegon has done the work of pulling together readings that a general Cayce reader might spend weeks tracking down independently. That curatorial labor is real and worth something. Reviewers note the book helps reveal a fuller picture of Cayce’s inner spiritual framework, particularly how his readings seemed to position Jesus not as a figure separate from human spiritual evolution but as its most advanced expression. One reader found the comparative exercise between Cayce’s readings and mainstream Christian belief illuminating in terms of understanding how far modern Christianity may have drifted from what the earliest tradition intended. That is a substantial claim, and the book gestures at it without fully developing it, but even the gesture is interesting.

Running under two hours, this is an audiobook that invites replay rather than extended listening. The material is dense with implication even when it is spare on narrative detail, and the AI-generated Virtual Voice narration, while clean, does strip some of the contemplative texture that a thoughtful human reader would bring to a text this concerned with inner experience.

What to Watch For in Edgar Cayce on the Life of Jesus Christ

Listeners should understand that Cayce’s readings operate from a cosmological framework that is not universally accepted, even among spiritual seekers. The concept of soul progression across lifetimes, the idea that Jesus lived many incarnations before the Nazarene life, and the general metaphysical architecture of Cayce’s worldview are presented here as given rather than debated. If you come to this book expecting historical criticism of the gospel accounts or a scholarly engagement with early Christian texts, you will be disappointed. This is source material filtered through a sympathetic interpreter, not an academic analysis.

The brevity is both the book’s charm and its limitation. Some reviewers have noted they will read it again, which suggests the content rewards revisiting, but it also means this cannot serve as a comprehensive introduction to Cayce’s thought. Think of it as a concentrated extract rather than a full portrait.

Who Should Listen to Edgar Cayce on the Life of Jesus Christ

This is an ideal listen for people already inside the Cayce tradition who want a focused look at how his readings addressed the figure of Jesus. It also works well for readers curious about how New Age and metaphysical frameworks engage with Christian narrative. Those looking for a mainstream biography of Jesus or a conventional Christian devotional will find the approach too unorthodox. The Virtual Voice narration is not a dealbreaker for a text this short, but if you are sensitive to AI-generated audio, approach with tempered expectations. At its free Audible price point, the investment is purely one of time, and under two hours is a reasonable ask for a genuinely distinctive perspective.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this audiobook based on Edgar Cayce’s original transcribed readings or is it a secondary interpretation?

It is a secondary synthesis. Author Vincent Ortegon compiled and organized the relevant readings from Cayce’s archive of over 14,000 recorded transcriptions. The underlying source material is Cayce’s own readings, but the framing and structure are Ortegon’s.

How does Cayce’s portrayal of Jesus differ from mainstream Christian theology?

Cayce’s readings present Jesus as a soul who evolved through multiple reincarnations to become the fully realized Christ consciousness, a concept rooted in the metaphysical tradition rather than orthodox Christian doctrine. The readings emphasize spiritual progression rather than singular divine incarnation.

Does the Virtual Voice narration affect the meditative quality of the material?

It does somewhat. The AI narration is clear and intelligible, but the reflective, contemplative nature of Cayce’s readings benefits from a narrator who can modulate pace and tone with genuine feeling. The short duration makes this manageable, but human narration would serve the content better.

Is this book part of a series, and does it stand alone?

It is listed as book one in a series covering Cayce’s readings on Atlantis, Astrology, and Jesus Christ. It stands alone perfectly well as a self-contained presentation of the Jesus-related readings, with no prior knowledge of the other volumes required.

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What Listeners Are Saying

★★★★★

Great book! Thank you Vincent.

I have studied metaphysics for many years and this book succinctly and logically gives the reader an insight into how Edgar Cayce came to be the Master he was.Super interesting insights and revelations regarding Jesus' early life.

– Amazon Customer
★★★★★

What an amazing awe inspiring read

This has to be one of thee best books I've read ranking with Michael Singer's The Surrender Experiment and The Untethered Soul as well as Paramahansa Yogananda's Autobiography of a Yogi. Thank you so much for this book Vincent, it truly is an amazing read. What a wonder the Lord…

– Kindle Customer
★★★★☆

Well known psychic

All of his readings are fascinating to me. He was called the sleeping prophet.

– Lynn T. Gunnoe
★★★★★

Very enlightening book.

Like all the information tied about what Cayce said about the Bible and Jesus. Maybe a little better understanding comes from comparing these… because of the multitude of documentation on Cayce readings it has helped me see the differences between what today's Christian beliefs has been diverted to from it's…

– Ron Haslam
★★★★★

Interesting book

This book wasn’t very long, but it was interesting and had helpful information in it. I will probably read it again.

– Mary S

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Alexandra Reed

Written by Alexandra Reed

Founder & Literary Critic