84 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
84 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
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MB>Actually I haven't seen it, however two books I have read describe fully
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MB>that the pentagram IS part of satanic ritual, and that witchcraft is
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MB>certainly another part. One book is authored by Mike Warnke, and is
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MB>called THE SATAN SELLER. The other book I will have to grab
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MB>title/author for you later because I cannot recall it at this time.
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"The Satan Seller" is a load of Fundie hogwash that plays to the Fundie
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belief that any belief system other than their own brand of Fundamentalist
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Christianity is Satanic. Obviously you have "bought into" this world-view,
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because Wicca, or "witchcraft" as you put it, has absolutely NOTHING to do
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with Satanism.
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Wicca is a modern-day reconstruction of the Keltic Old Religion, which
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also has survived by oral transmission of the traditions from mother to
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daughter in some Irish, Scottish, and Welsh families. Most Wiccans follow
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a "reconstructed", that is, partially synthetic version of the religion,
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but there are rare "family tradition" Wiccans who may very well be
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preserving the pre-Christian religion of the British Isles.
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Wiccans believe, to varying degrees, in a Great Goddess, known by many
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historical names but usually simply referred to as The Goddess or The
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Lady. She is said to have three phases, that of the Warrior Maiden, the
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Fruitful Mother, and the Wise Crone. Many Wiccan traditions only honor
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the Goddess; these are primarily feminist traditions that limit their
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membership to women only. Zsusana Budapest, who recently appeared on
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Sally Jessy Raphael with a couple of Fundie authors and two self-
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professing "satanists" is a "Dianic" or Goddess-only High Priestess. To
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a certain degree, so is Starhawk, who is perhaps the most famous Wiccan
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author out there.
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However, most traditions acknowledge a God. This deity is known
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commonly as Herne or Cernummos, and is usually pictured as having antlers
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or (gasp!) horns. However much this smacks of the Christian concept of
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the Devil, this deity is not the equivalent of such a Christian concept.
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The antlers or horns are there as a reminder that this deity is seen as
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the Lord of the Wild Hunt, or Lord of the Game, with origins in
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hunter-gatherer societies as far back as prehistory. Legends of Jack
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'O The Green and Robin Hood also have their origins in this deity, for
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he is also considered the Lord of all Green, Growing Things. As the female
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deity of Wicca is most commonly as The Goddess or the Lady, this deity is
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known most commonly as The God or The Lord.
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Satanism, on the other hand, should really be referred to as a Christian
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heresy. The concept of Satan could not exist without the concept of the
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Christian God. There seems to be two readily identifiable strains of
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Satanism, with one very questionable third strain, that of a "world wide
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Satanist conspiracy" being talked about very much but with no conclusive
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proof existing. I will speak of the two strains that are KNOWN to exist.
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The first is "Dabbler" Satanism. Satanist "dabblers" are usually teenagers,
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with a rebellious streak and often a love of extremely loud music and
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hallucinogenic drugs like LSD and Pot. The "dabblers" are the ones who
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spray-paint upside down pentagrams and upside-down crosses (symbols which
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are not Satanic in themselves--both the right-side up and upside-down
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pentagram inside or outside a circle were symbols used by Judaism as far
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back as the beginning of this century, and the upside-down cross is known
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to the Catholic Church as the Cross of Peter, referring to the fact that
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St. Peter was crucified upside down to deny him the "privelege" of dying
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like his Lord, Jesus) and steal cats and dogs for sacrifices.
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Most "dabblers" wind up growing out of that phase of their life, but if
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such dabbling is combined with underlying mental disturbances, the
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combination can be lethal. The recently convicted "Night Stalker" Richard
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Ramirez had all the earmarks of a Satanist "dabbler", but his underlying
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mental disturbance drove him to run around killing people. There are other
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cases of such people, but then again for every "dabbler" who winds up
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killing, there are others who believe that God and/or Jesus is telling
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them to kill "evil" people.
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The other strain is Philosophical Satanism. This covers such groups as the
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Temple of Set, the Church of Satan, and others that are out there. The
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most important tenet of Philosophical Satanism is a belief that Satan is
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symbolic of human greed, lust, ambition, rebellion...in short, things that
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Christianity frowns upon, but that Philosophical Satanism celebrates. In
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fact, perhaps the greatest influence on Philosophical Satanism is not
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Christianity's concept of Satan, but the works of Romanticist philosopher
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Friedrich Nietzche. The Philosophical Satanist world view is best summed up
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by one of Nietzche's own aphorisms: "The greatest epochs of history come
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when people rebaptize their evils as their best." All of the major
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Philosophical Satanist groups very strongly forbid any sort of blood
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sacrifice, be it animal or human, in their rites.
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I welcome any further discussion on the matter. I have studied the whole
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Fundie Satanic Hysteria situation extensively, and feel I can fill you in
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on quite a bit of info your church may not be able to.
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Regards,
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Michelle Klein-Hass
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Compiler of the Christian Hate Literature Project (X-Hate)
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