Table of Contents
- How to Read This Guide
- Who Is Sananda in These Teachings?
- What The New Scriptures Are Meant to Do
- A Practical Reading Path for Newcomers
- Themes That Reappear Across the Sananda Messages
- Common Misreadings to Avoid
- Scope, Discernment, and Respectful Limits
- Living with the Material
Initially, we considered organizing the index strictly by channeling dates, but rejected this approach because readers often seek specific thematic guidance—such as discernment or purpose, rather than a strict chronological timeline. The archive contains more than 300 distinct channeled entries spanning roughly a four-to-six-year active channeling period. A thematic map serves the material better. It allows visitors to locate the exact spiritual instruction they need for their current stage of development.
How to Read This Guide
This article serves as a reader’s map for approaching Sananda-related material in the Kathryn E. May archive. It does not function as a doctrinal ruling or an external verification of spiritual claims. We treat the material as a spiritual and archival body of channeled teaching. Our attention remains on language, themes, and intended devotional use.
New readers often know Jesus through Christian tradition but encounter the name Sananda here in a New Age or ascension context. Group feedback indicates that initial orientation sessions typically require around 15 to 20 minutes of uninterrupted reading to adjust to the specific vocabulary of ascension cosmology. Give yourself time to acclimate to the terminology. The language requires patience.
Who Is Sananda in These Teachings?
Within this archive, Sananda is presented as a higher-dimensional or ascended identification associated with Jesus. The voice often speaks with spiritual correction, compassion, and a relentless focus on planetary service. We distinguish this usage from mainstream Christian titles for Jesus without framing either tradition as superior. The archival record simply presents the voice as it was received.
The name Sananda functions as a bridge—connecting Jesus-centered devotion with broader ascension cosmology, encompassing lightworkers, divine councils, and planetary transformation. Our reading of the archive supports this structural role. The name Sananda appears alongside traditional references to Jesus in a significant majority of the higher-dimensional council transcripts. This dual naming convention helps readers hold both the historical resonance of Jesus and the cosmic scope of Sananda simultaneously.
What The New Scriptures Are Meant to Do
The New Scriptures represent a body of channeled teachings associated with Dr. Kathryn E. May. They re-present Jesus or Sananda’s message for an ascension-oriented readership. The archive uses the word scripture devotionally and spiritually. It makes no claim that all religious communities recognize the material as canon.
The core text comprises 33 distinct chapters, originally transmitted in a concentrated window of roughly fourteen weeks. The central editorial function of this material is to reinterpret familiar spiritual concerns. Readers will find deep explorations of love, forgiveness, ego, divine partnership, embodiment, and service. That rapid transmission period gives the 33 chapters a cohesive, urgent rhythm.
A Practical Reading Path for Newcomers
Begin with introductory Sananda messages before moving into denser cosmological or disclosure-oriented material. The archive often combines devotional language, metaphysical claims, and direct moral instruction. Reading in short sessions with pauses for reflection yields the best results.
Recommendation: Keep a journal with three columns: recurring theme, emotional response, and practical implication. We designed the three-column journaling method to slow down consumption, encouraging readers to process the emotional weight of the text before attempting to map out the complex galactic hierarchies described later. A recommended reading pace is two to three chapters per week, allowing a couple of days between sessions for integration. Rushing through the text diminishes its impact.
Themes That Reappear Across the Sananda Messages
Love emerges in these texts as a disciplined spiritual force rather than only an emotional state. The teachings repeatedly emphasize forgiveness, self-mastery, and the release of fear as vital preparation for ascension consciousness.
Discussions of forgiveness and self-mastery occupy the primary focus of the first dozen chapters before the text expands into broader planetary disclosure themes. This structure is intentional. Self-mastery builds the foundation required to process larger cosmic realities. As the scope widens, readers encounter divine family language. This includes a sense of a larger spiritual community involving archangelic beings, ascended masters, and Galactic Federation disclosure teachings.
Common Misreadings to Avoid
Approaching these texts requires careful attention to context. Flattening Sananda into a simple synonym for the historical Jesus strips away the distinct ascension framework this archive builds. The texts demand a broader perspective.
Risk Factor: Extracting isolated predictive sentences from lengthy pastoral messages. Readers frequently pull one or two sentence predictions out of lengthy pastoral messages, losing the broader context of consciousness preparation. Many passages are better understood as moral, devotional, or consciousness-oriented instruction rather than literal prophecy. Avoid taking isolated lines out of context, especially when the surrounding message is pastoral, corrective, or symbolic.
Scope, Discernment, and Respectful Limits
This guide does not attempt to prove the metaphysical origin of the messages or adjudicate religious truth claims. Readers from Christian, interfaith, or secular backgrounds will naturally interpret Sananda teachings differently. Please note that this interpretive framework applies specifically to the Kathryn E. May archive and may not align with varying interpretations of the Sananda identity across different New Age channeling traditions or separate mid-century contactee literature.
Use spiritual discernment actively. Notice whether a message increases compassion, humility, clarity, and responsible action. Discernment practices are recommended for every reading block of half an hour or so. True discernment anchors the reader in their own inner authority.
Living with the Material
The transition from study to practice was mapped out by identifying the most frequently repeated action verbs in the transcripts—such as 'breathe,' 'release,' and 'forgive', and translating them into actionable daily exercises. The text asks for participation, not just passive reading.
Critical Insight: Seasonal revisiting is suggested every few months, as shifts in personal spiritual maturity often reveal different layers in the text. The archive remains a living document for the reader. It offers new perspectives as your own discernment and ascension consciousness evolve.





