377 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
377 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
Wicca: Satan's Little White Lie
|
||
by
|
||
William Schnoebelen
|
||
Copyright 1990 - Chick Pubilcations
|
||
|
||
What follows is a summary of the above book. It is a book report if you
|
||
want to call it that, and the author of this text file neither endorces nor
|
||
denounces the information presented by Mr. Schnoebelen.
|
||
|
||
Forward and Introduction
|
||
|
||
The author is a now a member of a group called Saints Alive in Jesus,
|
||
and currently councils those who have become involved in one way or another
|
||
in the occult, witchcraft, Satinism, etc. He goes on to explain that he was
|
||
involved in Wicca for 16 years, before discovering what it what really all
|
||
about.
|
||
He states that an anthropologist or sociologist of religion may find
|
||
a difference between Wicca and Satinism, but from a spiritual standpoint, the
|
||
difference is non-existant. He says that practicing Satanism is like having a
|
||
neutron bomb blow up in your face, and praticing Wicca is like having a hand
|
||
grenade blow up in your face. The difference is there and discernable, but
|
||
it's an utter disaster either way.
|
||
|
||
The author describes his history with Wicca. He was initiated into the
|
||
Alexandrian Wicca on Imbolic, February 2, 1973, and made High Priest and Magus
|
||
in September of the same year. He and his lady were promoted to High Priestly
|
||
rank in the Druidic Craft of the Wise in the summer of that year, and studied
|
||
in Milwaukee under Gavin and Yvonne Frost.
|
||
Some of the denomonations or traditions of Wicca are Alexandrian,
|
||
Gardnerian, Druidic, Welsh, Traditionalist, Georgian, Dianic, and Church
|
||
of Wicca. The author was residing over one of the largest networks in the
|
||
Midwest when he left Milwaukee in 1984.
|
||
The author states that despite the what much of the extant literature
|
||
may lead you to believe, there is no real evidence that Wicca is a survival
|
||
of the ancient pagan fertility cults, especially those of Northern Europe and
|
||
the British Isles. There is no proof or connection between Bronze Age cults
|
||
and modern witchcraft.
|
||
The Author writes that Wicca is a manufactured religion not much
|
||
older than this century.
|
||
The Oxford English Dictionary defines "Wicca" as twisted, bent, or
|
||
warped. Margot Adler admits that the word has its roots in the
|
||
Indo-European roots "wic" or "weik" meaning "to bend or turn" But Ms. Adler
|
||
supposedly tries to whitewash this definition by saying that a witch should
|
||
be skilled in the art of bending, shaping, and changing reality.
|
||
The author closes the intro by saying that witches often play these
|
||
kind of "word games" to conceal the truth.
|
||
|
||
Chapter One
|
||
|
||
A man named Gerald B. Gardner set the tone of modern day Wicca, in his
|
||
1949 novel HIGH MAGIC'S AID under the pen name "Scire" (from the Latin meaning
|
||
"to know") The author writes that Gardner engaged in ritual sex on solemn
|
||
occassions, and may have set up his cult this way becuase he came from a
|
||
family of devout nudists, and was addicted to masochism. This is suggested
|
||
by historians Francis King and Elliot Rose.
|
||
The author then goes on to descibe Wicca's sprend to America, and
|
||
mentions the names of Alex Sanders, Monique Wilson, (who was Gardner's
|
||
heiress) Raymond Buckland, Ed Bucyzinski, and of course Gavin and Yvonne
|
||
Frost, and that each one had their own style of praticing Wicca.
|
||
The author goes on for several pages describing how Satan engineered
|
||
Wicca as am "old religion for a new age." He says that the Book of Shadows is
|
||
not centuries old, as he was originally led to believe, but a collaboration
|
||
between Gerald Gardner and the notorious Satanist Aleister Crowley. Doreen
|
||
Valiente admits that a chant called "The Witches Rune" was written by her and
|
||
Gardner in the 1950's. Sizeable chunks of the Great Rite ceremony are right
|
||
out of the Crowleyan "bible" LIBER AL VEL LEGIS and his gnostic mass.
|
||
In short, the author states that most neo-pagan groups fall into the
|
||
catagory of being based on myths, fantasies, or even science fiction stories,
|
||
but that this is OK, because myths could be true, even if they are made up.
|
||
The author was attracted to Wicca, because the idea of psychic powers
|
||
and the ability to do miraculous things fasinated him, and in the begining, he
|
||
says his magick spells worked wonderfully. However when he became a high
|
||
priest, the magick somehow lost it's zing. He finally became faced with a
|
||
moral dillema, when a fellow covener says that his wife has divorced him and,
|
||
he does not want her to have custody of the children. This covener had asked
|
||
the author to cast a death spell on his wife, so that he could have the
|
||
children. This is when the author first began to question his belief in what
|
||
he was doing.
|
||
He describes that Wicca encourages the "dark" or "shadow" side of
|
||
the human psyche, not be buried deep within, but brought to the surface
|
||
recognized, yielding yourself to the darkest side of the shadow. Failure
|
||
to deal with this dark side, causes nightmares and violent psychotic
|
||
breakdowns. Dealing with the dark side is done through fantasy, therapy, or
|
||
role playing.
|
||
The Author learned that Lucifer is the true God of Wicca, and that
|
||
"Satan" is a slander on the name of Lucifer, the true God of Light. Satan
|
||
was "just a boogy-man invented by Christians."
|
||
The Author began to study the works of Aleister Crowley, and describes
|
||
reading the Satanic Bible by Anton LaVey. He then pursued priesthood in
|
||
LaVey's Church of Satan, and even became a priest of the Second level.
|
||
In closing, the author poses a question. If Wiccans are not Satanists,
|
||
why do they hold Aleister Crowley, the most notorious Satanist of this
|
||
century, to such high esteem?
|
||
The author began to have serious personal problems in his life, that
|
||
made him turn to Christianity. He says he stuggled for five years to get
|
||
away from what he had become involved in. This time period included a stint in
|
||
what he calls "that clever counterfeit of Christianity called the Morman
|
||
Church."
|
||
|
||
Chapter Two
|
||
|
||
|
||
In this chapter, the author criticizes the public relations aspect of
|
||
Wicca. The term Warlock is frowned upon in many covens, because of its
|
||
origin, meaning "traiter" or "covenant breaker" or even "devil" The Oxford
|
||
English Dictionary uses the definitions traiter, wicked or damned soul, and
|
||
devil.
|
||
The author then attacks the "Universal Law" by which witches live,
|
||
and poses the questions as to where the law comes from, and what good is a law
|
||
that comes from nowhere. He questions the source of authority for Universal
|
||
Law. This law is supposedly "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law"
|
||
but this was written by Aleister Crowley.
|
||
He attacks the notion that witches do not do evil. In doing this, he
|
||
points at a comandment, that if someone gives you something, you are to return
|
||
it to him 3-fold, and says that this is a 2-way street. In other words, if
|
||
someone gives you 5 dollars, you give him 15 in return. On the other hand, if
|
||
someone punches you in the face, you ounch them in the face 3 times. He poses
|
||
the question that if witches do not do evil, why do they have a law like this?
|
||
He then attacks the use of spells. Witches may claim that spells are
|
||
actually nothing more than a prayer, but the author says that true prayer is
|
||
based on the acknowledging the will of God, and that in Judeo/Christian
|
||
prayers, the request made in the prayer should be made according to what God
|
||
wants. Spells, on the other hand, are compared to operating a spiritual
|
||
vending machine of sorts. In doing this, witches seem to think that they're
|
||
the ones controlling the powers of the universe.
|
||
Finally, he attacks Lucifer worship, and points out that Lucifer was
|
||
kicked out of heaven and is a fallen angel. This type of worship draws its
|
||
follwers away from the true God of the Bible.
|
||
After 16 years of studying and searching, he says that the bible has
|
||
objective reality and can be tested, and is more realiable than any of the
|
||
mataphysical obscurity he had been believeing. He asks Wiccans how they can
|
||
test their "universal wisdom."
|
||
|
||
Chapter Three
|
||
|
||
This chapter starts out with some outright attacks. The author slams
|
||
the "white witches" or "good witches" saying that it's the same as saying
|
||
there is such a thing as "evil saints." The term "good witch" is actually
|
||
an oxymoron.
|
||
He speaks of an encounter he had with a man named Mike Warnke. Warnke
|
||
was a former Satanist who turned to Christ and now spoke out against Satanism
|
||
and made no attempt to distinguish between "white witches" and Satanism. The
|
||
author sent Warnke a telegram saying that he and fellow Wiccans would be at
|
||
the rally Warnke was holding, and if he said anything about Wiccans being
|
||
Satanists, he'd be facing a libel suit. At the rally, Warnke slammed Satanism.
|
||
There were maybe 50 to 100 Wiccans listening. The confrontation they were
|
||
expecting never occured, but among the Wiccans were card carrying members of
|
||
the Church of Satan.
|
||
He attacks Anton LaVey and his daughter Zeena, who claims she is a
|
||
witch. This, apparently gets many Wiccans stirred up, when a member of the
|
||
Church of Satan proclaims to be a witch, because Wiccans aren't Satan
|
||
worshipers. The author says that during his involvment with Wicca, he met
|
||
many people who just read a few books, and said they were witches, simply
|
||
because they said they were. Most Wiccans he was involved with had this
|
||
lazzez-faire attitude about it, and that it was OK. OK, that is, for everyone
|
||
except Zeena LaVey.
|
||
He goes on to attack the movie "Bell, Book, and Candle" and the T.V.
|
||
show "Bewitched" as whitewashed versions about what witchcraft and Wicca are
|
||
all about.
|
||
The author really attacks Laurie Cabot. Ms. Cabot attacked the movie
|
||
"Witches of Eastwick" as a bigoted smear on witches, and threatened to sue any
|
||
news media that called those involved in the Matamoros Mexico mass murder,
|
||
witches. He accuses Ms. Cabot of trying to re-write history, of what witches
|
||
really are.
|
||
The author talks extensively about word games that the English
|
||
language plays, saying that the words "witch" "Wicca" and "Wicked" all
|
||
come from the same root word meaning "to twist" or "to bend" He says that
|
||
mostly everone around the world will always percieve witches as being evil and
|
||
wicked, unless someone like Ms. CAbot is allowed to re-wrtie history. He also
|
||
make the comparison in word games of the English language, that "gay" no
|
||
longer means "happy"
|
||
For all of the slamming the author does in this chapter, he says the
|
||
following:
|
||
"We must be as patient, compassionate, and understanding with these
|
||
people as possible, and make them understand that we are not persecuting them
|
||
or preventing them from worshiping freely. (as long as their activities
|
||
aren't anti-social) We are simply warning them of the evil they've fallen
|
||
prey to, and we are not going to run them out of town or burn them at the
|
||
stake if they do not heed our warning."
|
||
|
||
Chapter Four
|
||
|
||
This chapter begins with the author talking about the "burning time"
|
||
when witches, or alledged witches were burned at the stake, or otherwise
|
||
persecuted during the Spanish inquisition, Salem witch trials, etc. The author
|
||
says that witches blame Christians for this in an effort to make themselves
|
||
appear as martyrs. The author then points out that true Christianity cannot be
|
||
based on any one religion or religious group, but it is more of a matter of
|
||
a personal relationship with God. The persecutors were not true Christians.
|
||
True Christianity is based on love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness,
|
||
goodness, faith, meekness, and temperance.
|
||
He goes on to say that the constant praticing of ritual, does
|
||
not bring one closer to God. He points out that ritual without reason means
|
||
nothing. He then goes on to say that modern paganism, and the Roman Catholic
|
||
church have the following in common:
|
||
|
||
1. Both teach "salvation" through ritual acts and good works.
|
||
2. Both have a god and a goddess (Mary) figure in their pantheon.
|
||
3. Both have a slain and risen god who dies and is reborn in a
|
||
seasonal cycle of ritual dramas.
|
||
4. Both have magic or thaumaturgy (Transubstantiation in the Mass)
|
||
as central elements in their theology.
|
||
5. Both make use of incense, statues, candles and cerimonial robes in
|
||
their devotions.
|
||
6. Both believe in a kind of second chance after death (Purgatory)
|
||
7. Both believe the rituals of the living can affect the dead.
|
||
8. Both believe in rituals of pain and mortification for purification.
|
||
|
||
The author says that many of the people he met while involved in Wicca
|
||
were former Catholics.
|
||
|
||
The author says that many witches attack the old Mosaic Law of Moses
|
||
with understanding the purpose of that law in the first place. This is the
|
||
part of the law that says "Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live..." among
|
||
others, and the laws dealing with animal sacrifices. The author says that God
|
||
never intended for this law to be a permamant part of the covenant with
|
||
Isreal, but was merely to confront them with their inability to be perfect
|
||
without his help. These laws were abolished and rendered null and void, with
|
||
Christ's death and resurection.
|
||
The author does point out that there are those who would like to
|
||
return to enforcing the old Mosaic Law. This is not what God wants. No one
|
||
must be forced, tortured, or otherwise coerced into becoming a Christian.
|
||
Jesus never intended people to follow him through brute force.
|
||
In closing, the author says that there is not basis for witches to
|
||
accuse Christians of persecuting them, because those doing the persecuting
|
||
may have called themselves Christians, but they were not Christians.
|
||
|
||
Chapter Five
|
||
|
||
In this chapter, the author discusses drug usage among some of the
|
||
covens. He mentions how drugs are used to achieve psycic awareness and
|
||
reach higher levels of consiousness. Many users (himself included) fell into
|
||
drug abuse and addiction.
|
||
He mentions a appearance he made on Geraldo, and reputiated Laurie
|
||
Cabot's claim that witches do not use, nor do they advocate the use of drugs
|
||
in their rituals. He said that finding a coven that does not have a drug user.
|
||
is like finding a Christian church that doesn't have a bible.
|
||
|
||
Chapter Six
|
||
|
||
The author discusses the Goddess concept and the appeal that it has.
|
||
Goddess is indentified in 3 facets, relating to the waxing and waning moon.
|
||
The Virgin Goddess (waxing moon) represented by a pubescent girl, the Mother
|
||
Goddess (Full moon) represented by a pregnant woman, and the Old Crone or Old
|
||
Hag (dark moon) represented by a post-menopausal, but wise woman.
|
||
The author says that the trap is the "many names-one goddess" belief,
|
||
and points to a Goddess whose name is Kali. Kali is a goddess who frequently
|
||
kills her lovers, and has had human sacrifices made to her down through the
|
||
centuries. Some as recently as 1985. Author poses the question, that if there
|
||
are "many names-one goddess" how can Kali be the gentle goddess of Wicca?
|
||
Author goes on to mention other goddesses whp demand human sacrifice.
|
||
Among them Lilitu or Lilith (Sumarian) Tanit (Phoenician) Artemis (Greek) and
|
||
Cerridwen (Celtic) He says that many Wiccans revere these goddesses, yet all
|
||
have a history of demanding human sacrifice, especially infants. Some Wiccans
|
||
attribute SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) to these goddesses, as
|
||
sacrifice.
|
||
The author describes (in graphic detail) about how a young male goes
|
||
through a cerimonial castration, in order to prove himself worthy of becoming
|
||
a priest and serving Goddess. (Not praticed today, but in ancient times)
|
||
The author reasserts that none of these kinds of things are practiced
|
||
today, but they do have a modern, more subtle counter-part known as abortion.
|
||
He says you'll find Wiccans at the forefront of the right-to-life movement.
|
||
He says our culture is hypocritical in accepting abortion, but not outright
|
||
infant sacrifice. To God, they are both the same thing.
|
||
|
||
Chapter Seven
|
||
|
||
The author says again that Wiccans defend their faith and say they're
|
||
not Satanists. Satanism is a "Christian heresy" that has nothing to do with
|
||
Paganism or Wicca. To say Satan is strictly a Christian idea, neglects the
|
||
hundreds of pre and post-Christian religions that have a Satan-like being.
|
||
He goes on to describe Satan, based on ancient Hebrew texts. He says
|
||
that every other religion known believes in evil spirits of some kind,
|
||
except for Wicca. Wiccans believe there is no such thing as an evil spirit.
|
||
He explains the terms Pantheism and Dualism. Pantheism is the belief
|
||
that everything is God, and that everything, including inanimate objects like
|
||
rocks, has a soul. Dualism is a belief that there is good and evil, but that
|
||
they're equal in force. He writes that this is wrong, because Christ defeated
|
||
evil, with his death and resurection.
|
||
He says that other religions such as Hindu, Buddhism, Islam, and
|
||
countless other lesser known religions, acknowledge an evil being or devil
|
||
of some kind.
|
||
He closes the chapter by saying that Wiccans have no real proof
|
||
that the bible is lying.
|
||
|
||
Chapter Eight
|
||
|
||
The author talks about reincarnation and how it made its way into
|
||
Wiccan belief, but that they believe in "progressive" reincarnation. In other
|
||
words, when you're reborn you never come back as a rat or a bug. You're
|
||
reborn again and again until you ultimately become a God.
|
||
The author talks about "karma" and how witches avoid the idea of sin,
|
||
saying there is not such thing, only "bad karma."
|
||
He says that according to what he'd been taught, what we learn in
|
||
this lifetime, will help us when we're reincarnated. If this is true, then why
|
||
don't we remember our past lives, and why do the vast majority hardly even
|
||
care if they've had past lives? How can we learn if we're never told our
|
||
mistakes?
|
||
He goes on to discuss fatalism. In other words, we shouild not
|
||
interfere with Karma. "Que sera, sera." Whatever is, is. There's we can or
|
||
should do about it. He says this is why India is such an impoverished
|
||
country, because people believe in this concept. He points out Shirley
|
||
MacClaine and her book Out on a Limb, when she witnessed a terrible bus wreck
|
||
and many school children died. Her "guru" said that it was there "karma"
|
||
that they should die, and that their "higher self" wanted to die.
|
||
The author cuts down reincarnation from scientific, (and very lengthy)
|
||
standpoint, before even pointing to the Bible. He goes on to say that the
|
||
Bible has a better track record of believeability, and answered his questions
|
||
far better than any of the metaphysical mumbo jumbo he'd been reading
|
||
He says that the resurection of Christ cannot be a myth, because
|
||
the bible says that about 500 people saw him between the time he rose, and the
|
||
time he ascended into heaven. If the Bible is no different than any other of
|
||
the religious books there are, how could 500 people conspire to lie so well?
|
||
|
||
Chapter Nine
|
||
|
||
The author talks about "Blood Sacrifices" and to what extent they're
|
||
practiced today. These types of ritual sacrifices include self-mutalation,
|
||
animal sacrifice, and even human sacrifice.
|
||
The author talks about some of the ritual sacrifices common among
|
||
some of the worlds other religions, and explains in detail some of the blood
|
||
rituals he knew of, or participated in. Although he never personally partook
|
||
in any human sacrifices, he does not deny their exsistance. He goes
|
||
on to quote some of the writings of Dr. Margaret Murray, and explains the
|
||
reasons for blood ritual. Dr. Murray is responsible, to some extent, for the
|
||
revival of Wicca in this country.
|
||
The author says that among today's society, there is a certain amount
|
||
of "blood lust" that is predominate. For example, graphic horror films that
|
||
are consistant box office hits, slowing down at the scene of an accident on
|
||
a highway, all just to satisfy our "blood lust" He describes his addiction to
|
||
graphic horror films as he moved even deeper into witchcraft.
|
||
The author closes the chapter in saying that witches believe there is
|
||
a power in blood and blood sacrifices, but that true "power in the blood" can
|
||
be found in the blood that was shed on the cross at Calvery.
|
||
|
||
Chapter Ten
|
||
|
||
In this chapter, the author talks of sex rituals. This is what witches
|
||
call the "Great Rite" or "erecting the sacred altar."
|
||
He says that Gavin and Yvonnne Frost created wuite a controversy when
|
||
they published their book, "The Witches Bible: How to Practice the Oldest
|
||
Religion." The Frosts talked abpout many things that witches had wanted kept
|
||
secret, especially sexual rites within covens. He describes in some detail
|
||
some of the sexual activity in his coven, and points out that God condemns
|
||
sexual sin, including homosexuality and sadism, regardless of what "liberal"
|
||
line churches may say.
|
||
He continues, again, to point to Aleister Crowley, and his addiction
|
||
to sex and hard-core drugs, and says Crowley is everything witches pretend
|
||
not to be. He describes in detail, some of the rituals actually invented by
|
||
Crowley, and that he left behind him a parade of insane women and suicidal
|
||
men as his disciples. The author tells that he too fell into this trap, and
|
||
sodomized as part of his initiation into 3rd level priesthood.
|
||
|
||
Conclusion
|
||
|
||
The author closes the book, by again making many comparisons between
|
||
Wicca and Satanism. He says that Satan's fingerprints are all over Wicca, and
|
||
that all pagan religions are controlled by Satan. He tells how Jesus saved him
|
||
from total destruction, and tells others involved in Wicca, how they can be
|
||
saved from the same fate that almost befell him.
|
||
|
||
************
|
||
|
||
Well, there you have it. There's a lot more in the book, that I
|
||
couldn't possibly fit into one text file. I hope that this at least presents
|
||
an idea of what one person thinks of Wicca. I think maybe I may have offended
|
||
more Wiccans out there than I realize, and that was certainly not my intent.
|
||
Books of this nature can be a two-way street. Several years ago,
|
||
there was a preacher at a church who was doing research on Satanic cults. From
|
||
what I heard, he was so fascinated by what he found in books at a Christian
|
||
book store, that he resigned his ministry, and formed his own cult, so he
|
||
could have sex with as many teenage girls as he could, after they'd been
|
||
brainwashed into thinking he was God.
|
||
My only suggestion is to get the book and judge it for yourself.
|
||
It's available at Berean Christian Bookstores.
|
||
|