Very interesting stuff, Thanks for sharing. What I'm trying to wrap my head around is why does he think that China would become the "Cradle of Christianity" despite the population being mostly Atheistic. There's some well-known Catholic and Christian figureheads that praised China's actions as promoting Christian values, so maybe its not about what God they worship, but the values they practice?
Exactly, I wouldn't take the term "Christianity" too literally, if you read further down, the author suggested its the values of Christianity thats implied:
"those who are more knowledgeable about the Cayce readings knows that the brand of “Christianity” which Cayce affirmed to be the highest form of Christianity, is neither modern nor traditional Christianity (neither Orthodox nor Protestant), but rather Christian Gnosticism. Christian Gnosticism is not only an esoteric version of Christianity, it has many similarities to the Chinese folk religion (Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism) because of common beliefs such as bodily resurrection (reincarnation), God’s law (karma), God within human beings (Buddhahood), the problem of evil (the problem of suffering), the need for liberation from the flesh (the need for enlightenment), etc"