💾 Archived View for gemini.spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › occult › WICCA › satwic.rep captured on 2022-06-12 at 16:59:03.
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MB>Actually I haven't seen it, however two books I have read describe fully MB>that the pentagram IS part of satanic ritual, and that witchcraft is MB>certainly another part. One book is authored by Mike Warnke, and is MB>called THE SATAN SELLER. The other book I will have to grab MB>title/author for you later because I cannot recall it at this time. "The Satan Seller" is a load of Fundie hogwash that plays to the Fundie belief that any belief system other than their own brand of Fundamentalist Christianity is Satanic. Obviously you have "bought into" this world-view, because Wicca, or "witchcraft" as you put it, has absolutely NOTHING to do with Satanism. Wicca is a modern-day reconstruction of the Keltic Old Religion, which also has survived by oral transmission of the traditions from mother to daughter in some Irish, Scottish, and Welsh families. Most Wiccans follow a "reconstructed", that is, partially synthetic version of the religion, but there are rare "family tradition" Wiccans who may very well be preserving the pre-Christian religion of the British Isles. Wiccans believe, to varying degrees, in a Great Goddess, known by many historical names but usually simply referred to as The Goddess or The Lady. She is said to have three phases, that of the Warrior Maiden, the Fruitful Mother, and the Wise Crone. Many Wiccan traditions only honor the Goddess; these are primarily feminist traditions that limit their membership to women only. Zsusana Budapest, who recently appeared on Sally Jessy Raphael with a couple of Fundie authors and two self- professing "satanists" is a "Dianic" or Goddess-only High Priestess. To a certain degree, so is Starhawk, who is perhaps the most famous Wiccan author out there. However, most traditions acknowledge a God. This deity is known commonly as Herne or Cernummos, and is usually pictured as having antlers or (gasp!) horns. However much this smacks of the Christian concept of the Devil, this deity is not the equivalent of such a Christian concept. The antlers or horns are there as a reminder that this deity is seen as the Lord of the Wild Hunt, or Lord of the Game, with origins in hunter-gatherer societies as far back as prehistory. Legends of Jack 'O The Green and Robin Hood also have their origins in this deity, for he is also considered the Lord of all Green, Growing Things. As the female deity of Wicca is most commonly as The Goddess or the Lady, this deity is known most commonly as The God or The Lord. Satanism, on the other hand, should really be referred to as a Christian heresy. The concept of Satan could not exist without the concept of the Christian God. There seems to be two readily identifiable strains of Satanism, with one very questionable third strain, that of a "world wide Satanist conspiracy" being talked about very much but with no conclusive proof existing. I will speak of the two strains that are KNOWN to exist. The first is "Dabbler" Satanism. Satanist "dabblers" are usually teenagers, with a rebellious streak and often a love of extremely loud music and hallucinogenic drugs like LSD and Pot. The "dabblers" are the ones who spray-paint upside down pentagrams and upside-down crosses (symbols which are not Satanic in themselves--both the right-side up and upside-down pentagram inside or outside a circle were symbols used by Judaism as far back as the beginning of this century, and the upside-down cross is known to the Catholic Church as the Cross of Peter, referring to the fact that St. Peter was crucified upside down to deny him the "privelege" of dying like his Lord, Jesus) and steal cats and dogs for sacrifices. Most "dabblers" wind up growing out of that phase of their life, but if such dabbling is combined with underlying mental disturbances, the combination can be lethal. The recently convicted "Night Stalker" Richard Ramirez had all the earmarks of a Satanist "dabbler", but his underlying mental disturbance drove him to run around killing people. There are other cases of such people, but then again for every "dabbler" who winds up killing, there are others who believe that God and/or Jesus is telling them to kill "evil" people. The other strain is Philosophical Satanism. This covers such groups as the Temple of Set, the Church of Satan, and others that are out there. The most important tenet of Philosophical Satanism is a belief that Satan is symbolic of human greed, lust, ambition, rebellion...in short, things that Christianity frowns upon, but that Philosophical Satanism celebrates. In fact, perhaps the greatest influence on Philosophical Satanism is not Christianity's concept of Satan, but the works of Romanticist philosopher Friedrich Nietzche. The Philosophical Satanist world view is best summed up by one of Nietzche's own aphorisms: "The greatest epochs of history come when people rebaptize their evils as their best." All of the major Philosophical Satanist groups very strongly forbid any sort of blood sacrifice, be it animal or human, in their rites. I welcome any further discussion on the matter. I have studied the whole Fundie Satanic Hysteria situation extensively, and feel I can fill you in on quite a bit of info your church may not be able to. Regards, Michelle Klein-Hass Compiler of the Christian Hate Literature Project (X-Hate)