Introduction


Robert Earl Burton founded The Fellowship of Friends in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1970. Burton modeled his own group after that of Alex Horn, loosely borrowing from the Fourth Way teachings of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky. In recent years, the Fellowship has cast its net more broadly, embracing any spiritual tradition that includes (or can be interpreted to include) the notion of "presence."

The Fellowship of Friends exhibits the hallmarks of a "doomsday religious cult," wherein Burton exercises absolute authority, and demands loyalty and obedience. He warns that his is the only path to consciousness and eternal life. Invoking his gift of prophecy, he has over the years prepared his flock for great calamities (e.g. a depression in 1984, the fall of California in 1998, nuclear holocaust in 2006, and most recently the October 2018 "Fall of California Redux.")

According to Burton, Armageddon still looms in our future and when it finally arrives, non-believers shall perish while, through the direct intervention and guidance from 44 angels (recently expanded to 81 angels, including himself and his divine father, Leonardo da Vinci), Burton and his followers shall be spared, founding a new and more perfect civilization. Read more about the blog.

Presented in a reverse chronology, the Fellowship's history may be navigated via the "Blog Archive" located in the sidebar below.

Wednesday, August 14, 1974

Fellowship of Friends use permit for 24-unit trailer park approved

[ed. - The Appeal-Democrat article "More Dredging in Goldfields" reports the Yuba County Planning Commission has approved a use permit requested by the Fellowship of Friends to "set up a 24-unit trailer park as guest quarters on their land north of the intersection of Rice's Crossing Road and Dixon Hill Road." (The permit still requires approval of the Board of Supervisors.) (By this time, the Fellowship had unlawfully closed to the public the portion of Dixon Hill Road that runs through their property.)]


"Jomo Piñata" wrote on the Fellowship of Friends Discussion blog, September 26, 2011:
Let’s not forget Burton told us that Dixon Hill Road was named after Jeane Dixon. (Anybody out there remember her?)

[ed. - For those who don't know of Jeane Dixon, her horoscope column happens to appear at the lower left.]