Benjamin Creme
Benjamin Creme (5 December 1922 – 24 October 2016) was a Scottish artist and esotericist who claimed telepathic contact with a spiritual master from 1959 onward and asserted that Maitreya, identified as the World Teacher and prophesied return of Christ, had emerged in London in 1977 to guide humanity amid global crises.[1][2] Beginning as a self-taught modernist painter inspired by Rembrandt and influenced by esoteric philosophy through Alice Bailey's works, Creme developed into an accomplished artist whose exhibitions included galleries in London and Paris.[3][4] In 1974, he founded Transmission Meditation groups and, via Share International established in 1975, edited a magazine and authored books promoting Maitreya's impending revelation as essential for establishing equitable resource sharing and spiritual enlightenment.[5][2] Creme's public announcements, starting with a 1982 press conference declaring Maitreya's imminent worldwide television appearance, garnered media attention but subsequent predictions—reiterated through the 1990s and beyond—did not result in the anticipated public recognition or verifiable events, such as the claimed 2010 Japanese broadcast later attributed to ordinary footage by independent analysis.[6][7] Over three decades, he lectured in more than 60 countries to diverse audiences, emphasizing esoteric hierarchies of Masters of Wisdom guiding evolution, yet empirical evidence for these entities or Maitreya's interventions remained absent, with Share International attributing delays to humanity's unreadiness rather than falsification.[2][1] His efforts, while fostering a dedicated following, exemplified unverified millenarian expectations in modern esotericism, contrasting his tangible artistic legacy with the unsubstantiated supernatural assertions central to his mission.[8][4]Early Life and Background
Childhood and Family
Benjamin Creme was born on 5 December 1922 in Glasgow, Scotland, into an upper-working-class family.[1] His father, of Russian Jewish origin, worked as a ceramics importer, while his mother was Irish and Catholic.[4][1][9] As the second of three children and the only son, Creme grew up in a household shaped by his parents' diverse cultural and religious backgrounds, though specific details of family dynamics or siblings' identities remain undocumented in primary accounts.[4] From a very early age, he exhibited a precocious interest in artistic pursuits, which would later define his career path alongside esoteric studies.[4]Education and Initial Career
Creme attended school in Glasgow until age 16, when he left in 1938 to dedicate himself to painting, having begun serious artistic pursuits at 13 inspired by Rembrandt's works.[1][3] Deemed too young for full admission to the Glasgow School of Art, he participated in life drawing classes there and at Xaverian College while resisting his family's—particularly his businessman father's—disapproval of an artistic path.[10][3][11] In 1941, he relocated to London, enrolling at the Central School of Arts and Crafts and the Westminster School of Art to advance his training in modernist techniques.[3] During World War II, as a conscientious objector, Creme worked in a hospital, supplementing his early efforts to establish himself as a professional painter, a vocation he maintained lifelong despite initial familial and economic pressures.[3][1]Artistic Career
Development as a Painter
Benjamin Creme began painting at the age of 13, initially inspired by the works of Rembrandt.[3] Born in Glasgow on 5 December 1922 to an Irish mother and Russian-Jewish father, he left school at 16 in 1938 to pursue art full-time, forgoing formal higher education due to age restrictions at the Glasgow School of Art.[10] [1] Lacking parental support for extended studies, Creme was largely self-taught, supplementing his practice with life drawing classes.[10] In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Creme's early works focused on landscapes and figurative subjects, influenced by Rembrandt, Picasso, and Georges Braque.[9] He mounted his first exhibition in Glasgow in 1940, marking his entry into public display.[9] A pivotal development occurred through his association with Polish artist Jankel Adler, who had settled in Glasgow in 1941 as a refugee; Adler, personally acquainted with Picasso, mentored Creme and encouraged a shift toward modernist abstraction.[10] [12] By the 1940s, Creme produced vivid abstract paintings, drawing further inspiration from Picasso, Paul Klee, and Adler's synthesis of cubism and expressionism.[13] These works gained him recognition in Scottish art circles, with exhibitions in galleries across the UK.[12] Creme sustained his career through consistent painting and sales, exhibiting periodically in the 1940s and 1950s while refining a modernist style characterized by bold colors and geometric forms.[1] His development emphasized technical proficiency in oil and drawing, honed independently amid wartime constraints, before esoteric themes began influencing his output around 1963.[14]Style, Influences, and Notable Works
Creme's early artistic style evolved from landscapes to abstracted figurative and vivid abstract forms, particularly after studying under the Polish artist Jankel Adler in Glasgow during the 1940s. Adler's tutelage introduced Creme to modernist techniques, prompting a departure from representational work toward more expressive, semi-abstract compositions characterized by bold colors and dynamic forms. This period reflected a maturation influenced by European avant-garde traditions, with Creme exhibiting technical proficiency evident in works produced as early as age 21.[10][15][12] Key influences included Adler himself, whose own exposure to Pablo Picasso and Paul Klee during the 1920s in Düsseldorf indirectly shaped Creme's approach, emphasizing distortion, symbolism, and rhythmic patterning over literal depiction. Creme acknowledged drawing initial inspiration from Picasso and Klee, alongside Adler's mentorship, which encouraged experimentation with cubist and expressionist elements in post-war Britain. By the 1960s, Creme's style shifted dramatically toward esoteric abstraction, which he termed "modern mandalas"—geometric, meditative compositions intended to evoke spiritual energies and theosophical principles, incorporating radiant light effects, vibrant hues, and symbolic motifs representing metaphysical concepts like kundalini or cosmic forces. This later phase prioritized symbolic depth over narrative, aiming to channel "higher awareness" through visual mantras akin to Eastern yantras.[13][12][14] Notable early works include Sibylline Figure (1943), an abstracted prophetic figure demonstrating Adler's influence through cubist fragmentation and earthy tones, now held by the National Galleries of Scotland and previously exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in Edinburgh. In his esoteric period from 1964 onward, pieces such as Kundalini Rising, Solar Wind, and Antahkarana 1 exemplified the mandala style, using interlocking forms and luminous palettes to symbolize energy flows and esoteric hierarchies. Creme's paintings from both eras featured in solo shows, including Paintings and Drawings of the Forties and Fifties at Cyril Gerber Fine Art in Glasgow (2014) and group exhibitions like the Institute of Contemporary Arts' The Invisible in Art in London.[15][16][8][12]Posthumous Recognition and Art Recovery
In 2019, the Los Angeles Police Department recovered over 1,200 stolen signed lithographs reproducing Benjamin Creme's abstract paintings from the 1960s, with the prints produced in the 2000s and valued collectively at approximately $777,000 to $800,000.[17][18] The items, part of a larger cache of about 2,300 missing works, had been stored in a Los Angeles facility between November 2011 and August 2012 before their theft was reported, and were retrieved from another storage unit following a tip.[19][20] Authorities returned the lithographs to their owner, identified in reports as an associate connected to Creme's estate, highlighting the esoteric and symbolic nature of the artworks, which drew from Creme's spiritual influences during his most prolific painting phase.[21][9] The recovery garnered media coverage that briefly spotlighted Creme's artistic output beyond his esoteric writings, portraying the pieces as surrealist abstractions infused with metaphysical themes, though his paintings remained niche and tied to his Share International affiliations rather than broader art-world acclaim.[20][9] Posthumously, Creme's works from the 1940s and 1950s continued to appear in auctions and select group exhibitions, such as "The Basilisk" at Nicodim Gallery in Los Angeles in 2017, signaling modest ongoing interest among collectors of mid-20th-century Scottish abstraction, but without evidence of institutional elevation or critical reevaluation elevating him to canonical status.[22][23] Galleries like England & Co in London maintained representation of his early pieces, facilitating sales through platforms such as Bonhams, where a 1948 portrait fetched bids in late 2024 auctions.[3][24] No major posthumous retrospectives or acquisitions by prominent museums have been documented, reflecting the persistent overshadowing of Creme's visual art by his public role as an esoteric lecturer and editor, with recovery efforts underscoring preservation challenges for artists whose oeuvres intersect fringe spiritualism rather than mainstream modernism.[10]Spiritual Development
Theosophical Influences and Early Esotericism
Benjamin Creme's interest in esoteric traditions emerged during his adolescence in Glasgow, where, at the age of 14 around 1936, he encountered writings on metaphysics and the occult that sparked a lifelong engagement with spiritual philosophy.[1] Early in his life, Creme developed an attraction to theosophical literature, particularly the works of Alice A. Bailey, whose interpretations of the Ageless Wisdom teachings—building on Helena Blavatsky's foundations—shaped his understanding of hierarchical spiritual masters and human evolution.[25] Although he never formally joined the Theosophical Society, Creme viewed Blavatsky's contributions as preparatory stages in an unfolding spiritual hierarchy, while prioritizing Bailey's channeled dictations from a Tibetan Master as more directly applicable to contemporary esoteric practice.[26] In the 1950s, Creme's esotericism intersected with ufological elements through his involvement with the Aetherius Society, a group founded by George King that blended Theosophical concepts of ascended masters with extraterrestrial contacts. From 1957 to 1959, he served as vice-president of the London branch, participating in practices such as yogic disciplines and out-of-body operations aimed at channeling cosmic energies from "Space Brothers," whom he later described as advanced spiritual beings aiding humanity's transition.[1] He departed the organization amid doctrinal disagreements, including King's claims of direct Venusian transmissions, which Creme deemed incompatible with the purer Ageless Wisdom lineage.[27] Creme's early esoteric phase culminated in reported personal initiations starting in early 1959, when he claimed to receive telepathic communications from a Theosophical Master of Wisdom, marking a shift from study to direct esoteric application. This contact, which he attributed to his meditative discipline and alignment with hierarchical energies, informed his later teachings on soul infusion and planetary service, though such claims remain unverified beyond his self-reports and aligned followers. By the mid-1960s, this influence manifested in his artistic output, with esoteric paintings from 1964 onward symbolizing Theosophical themes like the etheric bodies and evolutionary hierarchies, distinct from his prior realist style.[25] [28]Contact with a Master of Wisdom
In January 1959, Benjamin Creme reported being contacted telepathically by a Master of Wisdom based in the Himalayas, marking the inception of what he described as a direct link to the Spiritual Hierarchy outlined in esoteric traditions.[29] This initial communication instructed Creme to record the Master's messages on audio tape, which he did, capturing guidance on spiritual evolution and humanity's future.[30] Over subsequent years, Creme asserted that the contact evolved into a constant, moment-to-moment telepathic rapport, enabling him to receive up-to-date information on topics such as the soul, reincarnation, meditation, and the emergence of Maitreya as the World Teacher.[31] He maintained that this ongoing interaction, distinct from the channeled dictations of earlier figures like Alice Bailey through Djwhal Khul, involved a form of overshadowing where the Master's consciousness influenced his own without full possession.[32] Creme credited this rapport with informing his lectures, writings, and the founding of organizations like Share International, emphasizing its role in disseminating the Ageless Wisdom Teachings—principles he viewed as underlying all major religions and philosophies.[33] He described the Masters as advanced human beings who guide planetary development from behind the scenes, with his contact serving as a conduit for their current directives amid global crises.[34] No independent empirical evidence corroborated these claims, which Creme substantiated through personal conviction and reported inner verification rather than external validation.[13]Founding of Share International and Propagation of Teachings
Establishment of the Organization
In 1982, Benjamin Creme co-founded Share International with a group of associates to publicize the anticipated emergence of Maitreya, whom he described as the World Teacher and a Master of Wisdom, alongside advocacy for global resource sharing to address economic disparities.[33] The organization initially launched as a monthly magazine, Share International, serving as its primary publication medium for disseminating esoteric teachings, predictions, and reports of associated phenomena.[35] Creme served as the founding editor, authoring numerous articles that outlined the hierarchical structure of spiritual evolution drawn from Theosophical traditions and his claimed telepathic contacts.[5] The establishment occurred amid Creme's preparations for public announcements regarding Maitreya's appearance, which he had been instructed to make through esoteric channels since the 1950s. Share International's foundational mission emphasized the integration of spiritual principles with practical socio-economic reforms, positioning the magazine as a platform to bridge "two major directions of contemporary thought"―esotericism and global justice.[35] By its inception, the organization operated from bases in London and Amsterdam, expanding later to include affiliates in other countries, though it remained centered on Creme's interpretive role in relaying information from purported higher authorities.[36] The group's formation reflected Creme's shift from private esoteric study to organized propagation, funded initially through personal resources and volunteer efforts, without reliance on large-scale institutional support. While self-described as non-profit and independent, its content consistently aligned with Creme's unverified claims, prioritizing metaphysical assertions over empirical validation.[33]Role as Editor and Lecturer
Creme founded and served as chief editor of Share International magazine, launched in January 1982, which disseminated teachings on esoteric spirituality, the reappearance of spiritual masters, and related global events.[5] The monthly publication reached audiences in over 70 countries and included articles, questions-and-answers sessions, and updates on claimed phenomena associated with Maitreya, with content often drawn from Creme's own writings and lectures.[37] [38] He performed this role without financial compensation, aligning with his stated commitment to unpaid dissemination of the teachings.[33] Parallel to his editorial duties, Creme conducted extensive lecture tours, starting with invitations across Europe from 1975 to 1979, followed by his inaugural U.S. tour in 1980, where he addressed large crowds in multiple major cities.[39] These speaking engagements expanded globally thereafter, encompassing public talks, conference keynotes—such as those at Transmission Meditation gatherings—and media appearances on television and radio, aimed at fostering awareness of the Ageless Wisdom tradition and the prophesied emergence of Maitreya as World Teacher.[40] [34] Topics frequently covered evolutionary shifts, self-realization, and preparation for a new age, with recorded lectures including series on "Entering the 21st Century" and "Discovering the Self."[41] His presentations emphasized telepathic contact with a Master of Wisdom and the role of meditation in planetary transformation, drawing from personal claims of esoteric insight.[8]Claims Regarding Maitreya
The Emergence Prophecy
Creme prophesied that Maitreya, identified as the World Teacher and prophesied successor to the Buddha, had physically manifested in London on July 19, 1977, residing among the Asian community in the Brick Lane area of East London.[42][43] According to Creme's telepathic communications with a Master of Wisdom, Maitreya's presence marked the beginning of a phased emergence into public awareness, culminating in a "Day of Declaration" where Maitreya would address humanity simultaneously via television networks worldwide, announcing his identity and mission to inaugurate a new era of sharing and justice.[44][45] In early 1982, Creme publicly announced this prophecy at a press conference in Los Angeles on May 14, 1982, stating that Maitreya's revelation would occur imminently, specifically before the end of the northern spring on June 21, 1982.[42][45] He described the event as a transformative moment that would awaken global consciousness, dissolve political barriers, and prompt humanity to recognize divine guidance through the Masters of Wisdom, with accompanying signs such as a radiant "star" appearing in the sky over major cities to herald the declaration.[44][46] Creme emphasized that this emergence was not a singular apocalyptic event but the initial phase of Maitreya's gradual integration into world affairs, guided by hierarchical spiritual forces to address crises like economic disparity and environmental degradation.[47] By June 1988, following the unfulfilled 1982 timeline, Creme and Share International adjusted the prophecy's criteria, linking Maitreya's open emergence to global events such as a major stock market crash, which occurred on October 19, 1987 (Black Monday), and subsequent personal appearances by Maitreya to political leaders and ordinary individuals in dreams and visions.[48][49] Creme maintained that the process remained active, with Maitreya conducting over 70 interviews on a London television program under an alias starting in 2010, though without explicit self-identification, as part of an ongoing, subtle awakening rather than the originally anticipated dramatic revelation.[50] These claims, disseminated through Creme's lectures and publications, positioned the emergence as dependent on humanity's collective readiness to accept spiritual leadership.[51]Alleged Miracles and Signs
Creme asserted that Maitreya's presence since 1977 has been accompanied by various signs and miracles, as foretold in messages channeled through him, including visions, healings, and celestial phenomena intended to prepare humanity for the World Teacher's emergence.[52] These events, purportedly manifested by Maitreya to touch hearts across faiths, were documented extensively in Share International magazine, with Creme attributing over 200 such occurrences worldwide by the early 2000s, ranging from spontaneous remissions of diseases to apparitions.[53] However, independent verification of these claims remains absent, with phenomena often explained by natural or psychological causes in skeptical analyses.[54] A prominent sign was the recurring appearances of a bright, multicolored "star" sighted globally from 2009 onward, described by Creme as Maitreya's herald visible day and night.[53] On December 9, 2009, a spiral light formation over Norway, captured in photographs and witnessed by thousands, was identified by Creme's associates as this star, not a failed missile test as reported by Norwegian authorities.[55] Similar sightings occurred in Dubai and elsewhere, with Creme stating on January 14, 2010, in London that Maitreya had recently activated the sign following hundreds of prior reports.[56] Creme's Master, via telepathic communication, confirmed these as deliberate manifestations rather than astronomical bodies like Venus.[56] Other alleged miracles included healings, such as a 2001 case in an unspecified location where a woman with breast cancer reportedly recovered after Maitreya's intervention, misinterpreted initially as divine aid.[44] In the Philippines, around 500 schoolchildren claimed a 1990s vision of the Virgin Mary and child in the sky, linked by Share International to Maitreya's energy.[52] Additional phenomena encompassed weeping religious icons and the 1995 global event of Hindu statues absorbing milk, which Creme's organization tied to Maitreya's subtle influence, though mass hysteria or capillary action provided prosaic explanations. In New Zealand, a rare white kiwi chick birth was deemed a "tohu" or sign by Maori observers, with Creme's Master affirming it as Maitreya's miracle symbolizing renewal.[57] Creme maintained these were empirical validations accessible to seekers, yet critics noted their reliance on anecdotal testimony without controlled evidence.[58]Predictions and Phenomena
1982 Announcement Prediction
In early 1982, Benjamin Creme intensified efforts to publicize his claims regarding the presence of Maitreya, whom he identified as the World Teacher and prophesied return of the Christ, asserting that Maitreya had been residing incognito in London's Asian community since 1977.[7] Creme's organization raised approximately $260,000 to fund full-page advertisements in 17 major newspapers worldwide, including declarations such as "THE CHRIST IS NOW HERE," aimed at alerting the public to Maitreya's imminent self-revelation.[6] [7] These ads, placed in outlets like The Times of London and The Independent, emphasized that Maitreya would soon declare himself openly, marking a pivotal moment in human spiritual evolution.[7] The campaign culminated in a press conference on May 14, 1982, in Los Angeles, attended by over 90 reporters, where Creme reiterated that Maitreya's manifestation was expected by the end of spring that year.[8] Creme described the anticipated "Day of Declaration" as an event in which Maitreya would mentally overshadow the minds of all humanity simultaneously, conveying a telepathic message audible in each individual's native language, urging global unity and the sharing of resources.[6] He positioned this as a response to humanity's escalating crises, guided by telepathic instructions from a "Master of Wisdom," and embarked on a promotional tour across the United States to prepare audiences for the event.[8] No such global announcement or telepathic overshadowing occurred by the predicted deadline or thereafter, leading to widespread dismissal of the prophecy as unfulfilled.[6] Creme later attributed the delay to insufficient public invitation or global readiness, maintaining that Maitreya had been prepared to appear since May 1982 but required collective human response to proceed fully.[47] Skeptics, including media observers, highlighted the absence of verifiable evidence for the predicted phenomena, viewing the episode as emblematic of unverified eschatological claims.[6] Despite the non-occurrence, Creme continued propagating adjusted timelines for Maitreya's emergence through Share International publications and lectures.[44]Crop Circles, UFOs, and Other Phenomena
Creme maintained that the majority of crop circles, excluding a small number attributable to human pranksters, were formed by UFOs operated by extraterrestrial beings he termed the "Space Brothers."[59] He estimated that approximately 96% of documented crop circles resulted from these non-human interventions, presenting them as symbolic messages or glyphs intended to awaken humanity to spiritual realities and the impending shift to the Age of Aquarius.[60] Through Share International magazine, which he edited, Creme and contributors frequently documented crop circle formations worldwide, interpreting complex geometric patterns—such as those appearing in Wiltshire, England, during the 1990s—as encoded teachings from advanced intelligences aligned with the planetary hierarchy of Masters of Wisdom.[61] Regarding UFOs, Creme described them as craft from extraterrestrial civilizations engaged in a deliberate spiritual mission to mitigate human suffering, counteract environmental destruction, and facilitate the emergence of Maitreya, the purported World Teacher.[62] He asserted that these "Space Brothers" originated from planets within our solar system or nearby systems, operating under the guidance of the spiritual hierarchy to demonstrate superior technology and ethical advancement, often leaving physical traces like landing marks or electromagnetic anomalies for scientific verification.[61] Share International published eyewitness accounts of UFO sightings, including luminous orbs and structured vehicles, framing them as harbingers of global transformation rather than random occurrences, with Creme claiming thousands of such daily observations worldwide by the early 2000s.[62] Creme linked these phenomena to broader "signs" validating his teachings, including unexplained light manifestations such as crosses of light appearing spontaneously on surfaces like windows or walls, which he attributed to blessings from Maitreya and the Master Jesus.[63] Other reported anomalies in Share International encompassed "stars" (interpreted as UFOs assuming stellar forms for observation) and subtle energy imprints, all positioned as empirical validations of esoteric principles drawn from Theosophical traditions.[34] Creme emphasized that while skeptics dismissed many instances as hoaxes or misperceptions, the persistence and complexity of these events—documented through photographs and field reports—supported their extraterrestrial or hierarchical origin, urging independent investigation over institutional debunking.[59]Subsequent Predictions and Adjustments
Following the failure of the anticipated 1982 public announcement of Maitreya's emergence, Creme explained the delay as a postponement to a more optimal period when global conditions and human receptivity would align better for the event.[8] Share International publications attributed the missed 1982 "window of opportunity" to intervening geopolitical tensions, such as the Falklands War, which disrupted the preparatory momentum.[64][65] Creme shifted emphasis from fixed timelines to conditional readiness, asserting that Maitreya would manifest openly only upon sufficient invitation from humanity or when spiritual hierarchies deemed the moment propitious.[8] In subsequent years, Creme highlighted fulfilled prophecies to bolster credibility, claiming Maitreya had foreseen major geopolitical shifts including the end of the Cold War around 1989–1991, the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991, and Nelson Mandela's release from prison on February 11, 1990.[44] He also maintained that Maitreya predicted a severe global financial crisis as early as 1988, which adherents later connected to the 2008 Lehman Brothers collapse and ensuing recession.[66] These attributions served as adjustments, reframing earlier vague pronouncements from his Master's teachings as prescient amid unfolding events. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Creme avoided new specific dates for the "Day of Declaration," instead predicting an accelerating array of signs such as increased UFO sightings, crop circles, and spontaneous healings as harbingers of Maitreya's subtle influence.[8] Share International asserted that Maitreya had conducted over 400 unrecognized television interviews worldwide since June 1982, "overshadowing" talk show hosts to disseminate teachings incognito.[47] Creme lectured globally on these phenomena, linking them to the Masters of Wisdom's preparations for the Aquarian Age, while maintaining that full emergence remained imminent pending collective human response.[8]Controversies and Criticisms
Failed Prophecies and Skeptical Responses
Creme publicly announced in early 1982 that Maitreya, whom he identified as the World Teacher and prophesied messianic figure, would emerge openly in London on June 21, 1982, declaring his presence to the world.[67] To publicize this, Creme's organization placed advertisements in more than 200 major newspapers across 65 countries, incurring costs estimated at $500,000.[68] When no such public declaration took place, Creme attributed the non-event to Maitreya's decision to delay the emergence, citing concerns over potential public hysteria or governmental interference that could hinder the message.[8] This failure led to disillusionment among some followers, with reports of defections and reduced organizational momentum in the immediate aftermath.[6] Creme maintained that Maitreya remained active behind the scenes, influencing global events such as the end of the Cold War and the release of Nelson Mandela, though these were retroactively interpreted as fulfillments rather than specific, time-bound predictions.[44] Subsequent prophecies, including expectations of widespread economic sharing and the dissolution of national debts by the early 2000s, also did not materialize as described, prompting Creme to issue revised timelines without acknowledging prior inaccuracies.[8] Skeptics, including analysts of new religious movements, viewed these unfulfilled claims through the lens of cognitive dissonance theory, as outlined in Leon Festinger's 1956 study of a UFO cult's response to disconfirmation, where believers intensified commitment post-failure to preserve the ideology.[69] Christian researchers classified Creme as a false prophet under Deuteronomy 18:22, arguing that verifiable non-fulfillment invalidated his authority, regardless of interpretive adjustments.[67] Critics further noted a pattern of vague or adjustable predictions, such as linking unrelated phenomena like crop circles to Maitreya's influence without falsifiable criteria, which allowed perpetual deferral of disproof.[8] Despite these responses, Creme dismissed skeptics as materially oriented, insisting on the spiritual veracity of his channeled insights from a purported "Master."[6]Accusations of Millenarianism and Delusion
Critics have characterized Benjamin Creme's teachings on the imminent emergence of Maitreya as a form of millenarianism, anticipating a messianic transformation into a new age of global sharing, enlightenment, and social equity that would supersede existing political and economic systems.[70] Academic examinations, including Lukas Pokorny's analysis, trace this millenarian framework to Theosophical influences, where Creme positioned Maitreya as the catalyst for a progressive spiritual hierarchy and hierarchical "Day of Declaration" event, repeatedly forecasted but deferred over decades.[48] Such expectations aligned with New Age variants of millennialism, emphasizing non-apocalyptic renewal through extraterrestrial and ascended master interventions rather than catastrophe.[71] Accusations of delusion stemmed from Creme's unwavering adherence to these prophecies amid empirical disconfirmation, such as the unfulfilled 1982 global television announcement of Maitreya's identity.[1] The Telegraph's obituary depicted Creme's persistent advocacy as operating within a "parallel universe of millenarian enthusiasm," implying a disconnection from verifiable events and rational scrutiny.[1] Skeptics and former affiliates extended this to label Share International cult-like, with cult consultant Joe Szimhart questioning the rationality of its messianic claims and their promotion of wealth redistribution under spiritual authority.[8] A former member's account described upbringing in what they called Creme's "Maitreya Cult," portraying indoctrination into unverified miracles and prophecies as psychologically isolating, fostering dependency on deferred eschatological hopes from childhood through adulthood.[72] These critiques highlighted how Creme's telepathic contacts with a purported "Master" and attributions of global phenomena to hierarchical masters sustained follower commitment despite repeated adjustments to timelines, evoking concerns over cognitive dissonance and group reinforcement of unfounded beliefs.[61]Public Misidentifications and Media Scrutiny
In early 2010, British economist and activist Raj Patel gained widespread attention when followers of Share International, inspired by Creme's prophecies describing Maitreya as a Pakistani-born figure whose name translates to "friend" and who would promote sharing, identified him as the anticipated World Teacher following his appearance on The Colbert Report.[73] [43] A viral petition urged Patel to "reveal" himself, leading to an influx of emails and media speculation linking him to Creme's claims.[74] Patel repeatedly denied any messianic role, describing himself as an "ordinary bloke" and expressing discomfort with the association.[75] Creme initially neither confirmed nor denied the identification but later met Patel in August 2010, affirming that he was not Maitreya while praising his alignment with themes of economic justice; Creme maintained that the true Maitreya, residing anonymously in London, had not been publicly asked to confirm his identity.[76] [7] This episode underscored the interpretive flexibility of Creme's vague prophecies, which allowed multiple candidates to emerge without definitive verification, contributing to perceptions of the movement as prone to unsubstantiated enthusiasm.[73] Media outlets scrutinized the incident as emblematic of fringe eschatological movements, with coverage in The Guardian, The New York Times, and The New Yorker highlighting Patel's rejections and the cult-like fervor among some adherents, while questioning Creme's decades-long unfulfilled predictions since the 1982 emergence announcement.[74] [76] [7] Earlier instances of scrutiny included 1993 reports criticizing Creme for attributing Maitreya's non-appearance to media inaction in searching London's homeless population, framing the narrative as reliant on external blame rather than empirical fulfillment.[6] Such coverage often portrayed Share International's claims as millenarian speculation lacking verifiable evidence, amplifying skepticism toward Creme's telepathic assertions and repeated timeline adjustments.[73]Later Years, Death, and Legacy
Continuing Activities Until Death
Creme sustained his promotional efforts for Share International through the 2000s and into the 2010s, delivering lectures across Europe, North America, South America, and Japan on the theme of Maitreya's emergence as World Teacher.[1] These public addresses, which he had conducted for over three decades, included events in New York City in July 2010 and a Quaker meetinghouse in London that same year, where he fielded questions on esoteric topics and current events interpreted through his framework.[7] [77] By his early nineties, Creme curtailed international travel and ceased lecturing around age 91 in 2013, shifting focus to domestic activities in London.[77] He continued editing Share International magazine, which by then circulated in 70 countries and featured his interpretations of global phenomena as signs of spiritual hierarchy involvement, alongside claimed telepathic messages from Maitreya.[1] In March 2016, just months before his death, Creme relayed a purported message from Maitreya via mental telepathy, addressing contemporary difficulties and urging preparation for hierarchical guidance.[78] Throughout this period, Creme oversaw Share International's volunteer network, which disseminated bulletins on alleged miracles, UFO sightings, and Maitreya's "hidden hand" in world affairs, maintaining the organization's millenarian outreach without personal remuneration.[1] [35] His final years also saw the establishment of the Benjamin Creme Museum of Art in Los Angeles in 2015, showcasing his esoteric paintings produced over decades, though he had lost his sight in his late eighties.[77] These endeavors reinforced Share International's narrative of an impending Aquarian transformation, despite prior unfulfilled predictions.[1]Death and Immediate Aftermath
Benjamin Creme died on 24 October 2016 at the age of 93.[1][79] He passed away peacefully at his home in London, surrounded by family members.[80][19] Creme had reportedly been unwell for an extended period prior to his death.[19] Share International, the organization Creme founded in 1975, issued an official announcement of his passing shortly thereafter, describing him as a British artist, author, and lecturer whose work centered on esoteric teachings.[80] The statement emphasized that he died at home with family present, without specifying a medical cause.[80] Creme was survived by his second wife, Phyllis (born 1942), and their children, Tara (born 1973) and Benjamin Jr.[48] Contemporary obituaries, such as one published in The Telegraph on 11 November 2016, highlighted Creme's lifelong advocacy for a "new world teacher" and his unfulfilled 1982 predictions, framing his death as the end of a career marked by persistent eschatological claims.[1] No large-scale public memorials or immediate institutional disruptions were reported, though Share International continued disseminating Creme's prior lectures and writings in the following months.[79]Ongoing Influence of Share International
Share International Foundation has sustained its mission since Benjamin Creme's death on October 24, 2016, emphasizing the presence of Maitreya as the World Teacher and advocating for global resource sharing to address poverty and injustice.[5] [19] The organization operates through a decentralized network of volunteers across multiple countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, and New Zealand, without a singular charismatic leader replacing Creme's role. The bimonthly Share International magazine remains a primary vehicle for outreach, with print and online editions published as recently as May 2025, analyzing current events—such as geopolitical tensions, corruption scandals, and calls for economic equity—through the lens of Maitreya's purported priorities for food security, sustainable agriculture, and international cooperation.[81] [82] Articles often reprint or reference Creme's earlier writings, framing ongoing "miracles" like unexplained food distributions or political shifts as evidence of hierarchical Masters' subtle guidance.[83] Transmission Meditation, a group practice promoted by Creme for channeling spiritual energies to aid humanity, continues via hundreds of regular groups worldwide, with regional chapters in the US Northeast and Mountain West regions facilitating both in-person and remote sessions amid health concerns.[84] [85] [86] Workshops, such as a planned October 2025 session in London, introduce newcomers to the technique, positioning it as a tool for personal development and planetary service independent of Creme's direct involvement.[87] Social media presence, including active Facebook pages for US and UK affiliates, sustains engagement by sharing updates on alleged signs of emergence, such as aid to the needy or environmental recoveries, though membership and event scales appear modest compared to the 1980s peak.[88] [89] Post-Creme, the group has navigated challenges like the loss of his claimed telepathic contacts, yet persists by attributing continuity to the enduring relevance of his esoteric framework amid global crises.[90]Bibliography and Publications
Creme authored 16 books, published primarily by Share International Foundation, focusing on esoteric philosophy, the anticipated emergence of Maitreya as the World Teacher, UFOs, and spiritual evolution.[91] [92] These works drew from Theosophical traditions and claimed telepathic insights from a spiritual master.[78] Key publications include:- The Reappearance of the Christ and the Masters of Wisdom (1979), outlining the return of enlightened beings to guide humanity.[93]
- Transmission: A Meditation for the New Age (1982), promoting a group meditation technique to channel spiritual energies.[94]
- Maitreya's Mission (Volume One, 1986; subsequent volumes in 1993 and 2010), detailing purported messages and priorities of Maitreya.[95] [37]
- The Gathering of the Forces of Light: UFOs and Their Spiritual Mission (1999), linking extraterrestrial phenomena to hierarchical spiritual intervention.[92]
- The Ageless Wisdom Teaching: An Introduction to Humanity's Spiritual Legacy (2006), summarizing perennial esoteric doctrines.[96]