Restored 2/19/22; Restored 9/26/24
ANCIENT WAYS – ANCIENT DEMONS!!! HEADS UP! BEWARE! I see more and more that our leaders and corporations and sporting organizations, even schools are demanding that we take a knee to honor the BLM. I also see that our young people who have been programmed by our education system are in their core convinced that this is a good thing to do. They believe that they are standing for truth and justice. THIS IS A LIE! The BLM is a Marxist and ANTI-CHRISTIAN organization.
BEWARE, if you take a knee to anything or anyone other than our LORD you are in danger of losing your redemption. We do not bow to idols! We do not worship demons! We do not honor demonic spirits or their doctrines.
I chose to start this post with the interview with Mario Murillo. He is a true servant of GOD. He has been serving God faithfully for many years. He has received a new directive from GOD and he very clearly lays out for us exactly what is going on in the world today. EVERY CHRISTIAN needs to hear this message. I pray that you will listen all the way through. It ties in to the rest of the post perfectly.
UPDATE: 2/19/22
You Will Never Guess Who’s in Charge of the $60 Million in Black Lives Matter Assets
“The latest filing’s addition of partisan lawyer Marc Elias confirms the group is more political than charitable,” Scott Walter, the president of the Capital Research Center, a conservative investigative nonprofit group, told the Washington Examiner. “But it also suggests that finally some left-wing heavyweights have begun to deal with the embarrassing mess made by a major activist group the institutional Left has failed to, pardon the term, police.”
Indeed, as far as the $60 million is concerned, the new leadership group changed BLM’s fiscal year so that they don’t have to report their finances until May.
The new BLM filing with New Mexico also said that Minyon Moore is a “Board Member” for BLM, and BLM’s California filing lists her as a “Board Member” too.
Hillary Clinton’s Onward Together PAC was reportedly incorporated by Elias in April 2017, and Elias is listed as a “Governor” for the Clinton PAC in a business filing for the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs. Moore was listed as the “Director/President” at Onward Together for the fiscal years of 2017, 2018, and 2019.
Clinton posted on Facebook in May 2020 that Onward Together would “partner with” Elias’s Democracy Docket to “protect Americans’ right to vote by mail.” And she posted in June 2020 that her followers should “join Onward Together and Marc Elias in the fight for voting rights by signing up for Democracy Docket.”
Minyon Moore is a long-time confidante of both Bill and Hillary. That she is serving on the BLM board while Elias is responsible for the group’s accounting should raise five fire alarms about the potential corruption that could take place.
End of Update
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These next three videos are the ones that were referenced in the video above. Starting with the one about the BLM.
The BLM Connection to Witchcraft
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The following video is the TED Talk where Robin Hanson talked about the EMs… Emulate Humans.
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF WE UPLOAD OUR BRAINS TO COMPUTERS? Robin Hanson
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This next video is the one where Elon Musk presented his PIG with the Neuralink Implant.
The following article is a second source presenting the information about the BLM tie to Witchcraft and Ancestor Worship, and calling forth the dead.
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Video: Black Lives Matter Leaders and Founders are Summoning the Dead, Promoting Ancestor Worship and Talking with the Departed “Spirits”
The founders and leaders of the Black Lives Matter movement are involved in communications with the dead. They also claim that the dead spirits possess themand collaborate with the movement. Patrisse Cullors, co-founder of Black Lives Matter, and Melina Abdullah, university professor and founder of the Los Angeles Chapter of Black Lives Matter, spoke openly about summoning dead black victims and claiming that their spirits are helping them do their job.
This is pure spiritualism. Black Lives Matter is an occult organization that actively invokes the spirits of the dead. They say they feel like the dead take possession of their bodies when they advocate for Black Lives Matter. This is divination and is common during occult rituals. In the videos, you will see them talking about ancestor worship and how they “resurrect” the spirits of dead black victims and feel deeply connected to them.
These Black Lives Matter founders also reveal that during the “Say Their Names” campaigns they are actually summoning the spirits of those who have died and that these spirits actually appear during their events. We have been warned of the working of Satan just prior to the Second Coming of Christ both in the Bible and in the Spirit of Prophecy. (See 2 Thessalonians 2:1-11). But when this demonic movement comes, what will it really be like? Well, now we are seeing a glimpse of this.
“The fallen angels who do his bidding appear as messengers from the spirit world. While professing to bring the living into communication with the dead, the prince of evil exercises his bewitching influence upon their minds. He has power to bring before men the appearance of their departed friends” (Great Controversy, p. 552).
“God has expressly forbidden all pretended communication with departed spirits. In the days of the Hebrews there was a class of people who claimed, as do the Spiritualists of today, to hold communication with the dead. But the ‘familiar spirits,’ as these visitants from other worlds were called, are declared by the Bible to be the ‘spirits of devils‘ ” (Great Controversy, p. 556).
Tragically, Roman Catholic, Protestant and Seventh-day Adventist churches have embraced the Black Lives Matter Movement. How can you reconcile this? You can’t. How do you justify working in partnership with witchcraft and demon possession? How can we disregard the clear teachings of God’s word:
“And what concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? for ye are the temple of the living God; as God hath said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.” 2 Corinthians 6:15, 16.
“Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils: ye cannot be partakers of the Lord’s table, and of the table of devils.” 1 Corinthians 10:21.
We must evaluate our relationships with the word of God, and there is absolutely no biblical justification for supporting this satanic movement. There are no words that anyone can give to say that this is OK. This is not what Jesus did. He doesn’t work in partnership with the evil one. Do black people matter? Of course they do. But we don’t need a Marxist, pro-LGBT+, pro-feminist, domestic terrorist organization that promotes demon possession to advance the gospel of Christ and the value and worth of people.
“I saw that the mysterious knocking (spiritualism) in New York and other places was the power of Satan, and that such things would be more and more common, clothed in a religious garb so as to lull the deceived.” (Early Writings p. 43).
Satan doesn’t care if he uses a religious garb, a social justice garb or a civil rights garb. He will use whatever he can to ensnare us. Of all people Seventh-day Adventists should know this. Instead of giving a warning, our leaders have remained silent as church after church, pastor after pastor, have embraced a movement that is sweeping young people into anarchy, spiritualism and destruction. Truly we have reached “over the abyss to clasp hands with spiritualism” (Last Day Event, p. 131).
“Yet none need be deceived. In the light of God’s Word it is not difficult to determine the nature of these movements. Wherever men neglect the testimony of the Bible, turning away from those plain, soul-testing truths which require self-denial and renunciation of the world, there we may be sure that God’s blessing is not bestowed” (Great Controversy, p. 646).
Sources
[1] http://adventmessenger.org/when-political-agendas-invade-the-church/
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This next article is another witness of the statements regarding BLM, it contains much more enlightening information. Be sure and review the whole article.
BLM Co-Founder Discuss Group’s Occultic Practices of ‘Invoking Spirits,’ African ‘Ancestral Worship’
(Religion News) In an interview posted to social media, Black Lives Matter (BLM) Co-Founder Patrisse Cullors, along with BLM Los Angeles Co-Founder Melina Abdullah, discussed the “spiritual” component of the movement, explaining the practices and “rituals” performed to remember and “invoke” the spirits of deceased African Americans.
Cullors outlined that she was raised Jehovah’s Witness, and “ancestral worship became really important” as she got older. She said that she felt a responsibility to honor the deceased politically and spiritually.
The site Crescent City Culture advises, “At its core, hoodoo is a practice of ancestral veneration. The honoring and even worshiping of ancestors is practiced around the world. Many African religions have a foundation in the belief that one’s ancestors play an active role in the life of the living even after death. The spirits of the dead are invited in the household so that they may influence the family and provide blessings and protection.”
“Why would we not honor the people who have been stolen from us and are asking for us to fight for them?” Cullors asked. “They want us to remember them because … they know what it takes for them to be remembered.”
Abdullah explained that whenever there is word of a African American person losing their life, likely in relation to law enforcement incidents, they go out and “pray [and] pour libation.” Libation is an act that is defined as “a ritual pouring of a liquid as an offering to a god or spirit, or in memory of those who have ‘passed on.’”
As previously reported, in 2018, Abdullah poured libation and summoned the spirits of a number of deceased African American leaders during an event at Hollywood United Methodist Church. She instructed those gathered to declare “ashe” as she made declarations and poured bottled water into…
Ashe-Power is a component of the life force breathed into each human being by God/Olodumare; it is spiritual power; it is the power to create everything – Gods, #Ancestors, spirits, humans, animals, plants, rocks, rivers and voiced words such as songs, prayers, praises, curses, or even everyday conversation. Existence, according to #Ashe. In addition to its sacred characteristics, Ashe-Power also has important social ramifications, reflected in its translation as “power, authority, command.” A person who, through training, experience, and initiation, learns how to use the essential life force of things to willfully effect change is called an Alaashe.
Rituals to invoke divine forces reflect this same concern for the autonomous Ashe –Power of particular entities. The recognition of the uniqueness and autonomy of the Ashe-Power of persons and gods is what structures society and its relationship with the other-world.
The concept of Ashe-Power influences how many of the Yoruba arts are composed. In the visual arts, a design may be segmented. Such elements can be seen in Ifa trays and bowls, veranda posts, carved doors, and Ancestral masks.
The language of Ashe-Powers is profound because the Yoruba conceive of their religious discourse as such ritual language is “Deep” and stylized, and it possesses Ashe-the capacity to invoke Powers, appropriate fundamental essences, and influence the future. Rich in metaphor and poetic devices, it expresses fundamental ideas of ritual power which are highly valued and closely guarded. Because of restrictions imposed by Deity-#language texts are of course verbal, oral-talking. They are spoken, sung, chanted, even danced in dialogue with drums. #theankhlife The Ankh Life Society
In an interview posted to social media, Black Lives Matter (BLM) Co-Founder Patrisse Cullors, along with BLM Los Angeles Co-Founder Melina Abdullah, discussed the “spiritual” component of the movement, explaining the practices and “rituals” performed to remember and “invoke” the spirits of deceased African Americans.
One by one, they stepped forward to toss offerings into the Gwynns Falls – a pineapple, four oranges, a bouquet of tulips.
And when the lead priestess of these African-American women dropped a handful of shells to the ground and scrutinized their pattern, a message came through: Their celebration of the spring equinox was blessed by the divine. (THIS IS DIVINATION FOLKS)
“[The river goddess] Osun has accepted our gifts,” said the priestess, a Mount Washington resident and longtime practitioner of Ifa, an ancient West African faith. She prefers to be called Olori, the name she is known by within the faith. She and other members of the group regard it as disrespectful to discuss their faith using what they call their “government” names.
Scholars say it’s hard to know exactly how many Americans practice Ifa or the many other African faiths that boast overlapping rituals and traditions. Many keep their involvement private, and numbers are hard to track given that membership in the faiths can be defined in a variety of ways. But anecdotal evidence suggests interest in West African religions is on the rise.
“These traditions are indeed growing in the U.S.,” says Albert Wuaku, a professor at Florida International University who specializes in African and Caribbean religions. “They have a strong appeal to groups of African-Americans who have been struggling with questions of identity, who don’t feel they fit so well within the American system. They’re especially appealing to women, who tend to hold more powerful positions within the African traditions than in Western cultures.”
Organized in Baltimore five years ago, the Dawtas have held a national gathering for African-American women interested in such religions every October since 2016. The first drew 150 people, some from as far away as Canada and California; last year’s attracted 300, and organizers are preparing for more this fall.
Olori adds that hundreds of men and women attend some of the more popular Ifa events in the Baltimore-Washington area. Wuaku says “strong bases” of West African religions have emerged in California, Florida, Michigan and other places around the country.
There have been times on this path when I’ve thought, ‘Am I crazy? … When it happens enough, you don’t argue with what you see and hear.
“The African religious traditions provide a symbol around which its followers can integrate,” he said. “That’s one reason they’re such a powerful draw.”
Ifa is a faith and divination system with its roots in Olori’s family’s ancestral homeland, Yorubaland. The region now encompasses the nations of Benin, Togo and Ghana and parts of Nigeria.
Like some other religions, Ifa includes magic, the use of traditional medicines and veneration of the dead.
Like Christianity, Judaism and Islam, Ifa is monotheistic, but its supreme creative figure, Olodumare, shares power with dozens of subsidiary deities. Each represents particular elements of life or nature – fire, rebirth, agriculture, the arts – and serves as an intercessor between humans and the creator.
It is through ritualistic practice that believers can access the deities’ wisdom and counsel.
Incantations, prayers, and divination (such as Olori’s reading of four mollusk shells) are believed to summon these deities – or the petitioners’ ancestors – who may speak to them in dreams, audible sounds, or even in conversation during what appear to be in-person visits.
The Dawtas say embracing such mystical realities can feel strange at first, but becomes a life-affirming norm.
She is certain they’re real and have her best interests at heart, whether they’re consoling, directing or rebuking her.
Their counsel, she says, has helped her learn everything from better prayer and meditation habits to improved personal accountability, all the while bolstering her health, helping her make career choices and rounding out her spiritual life.
“Ifa has taught me that God is not just something that lives in the sky; God is in all of us,” she says.
The faith, like others with African roots, has defied the odds by surviving at all, let alone making it to the United States. Historians say that when Western European nations such as Belgium and France began colonizing Africa, they viewed indigenous religions as pagan at best, demonic at worst, and responded by spreading a triumphalist form of Christianity that powerfully eroded traditional practices.
Africans who had venerated male and female deities who looked like them were now introduced to white, male religious figures, and they were told only one intercessor – Jesus – mattered.
Even when she visited West Africa in 1999 and 2000, she says, it was hard to find followers of indigenous religions outside the small Beninese village where she took part in the Ifa initiation rites that made her a priestess.
“In many places, you have to hunt far and wide for traditionalists,” she says. “You have people in Nigeria who tell you you’re going straight to hell.”
The uncounted numbers of Yorubans and other West Africans who were captured and sold during the transatlantic slave trade had to practice their faith in secret, often at night.
But the traditions survived in altered forms – as Santeria in Cuba, Vodou in Haiti, Sango Baptism in Trinidad — as followers adopted elements of the Catholic, Baptist and other faith traditions already established in those places.
Practitioners of these faiths began arriving in the New York area in the 1950s and spread in the eastern U.S., but Olori says it wasn’t until decades later that many African-Americans could afford to fly to West Africa and meet elders of the Ifa tradition face-to-face.
A U.S.-born African Vodoupriest, Baba Oserjeman Adefunmi, established a traditional Yoruban village in Beaufort County, S.C., in the 1970s, creating the first significant beachhead for Ifa and other West African religious traditions in the U.S..
Olori was in her 20s when curiosity led her to the village, a place where priests carry out rites that predate Christianity by thousands of years.
During one stay, she and a friend visited a nearby plantation, and Olori says she was alarmed to realize she had a power many priestesses possess: She could “see dead people.”
Near the servants’ quarters behind the mansion, she says, she spotted “a man leaning against a tree, an elder, an old slave. I started talking to him as if I could see him clear as day.”
Olori’s friend, who had been working on a history of the place, later told her those and other details synced up with what she had learned in her research.
Raised in a devout Christian home in northwest Baltimore, Olori says the faith simply never “resonated” with her and failed to reward her curiosity.
“I’d ask my grandmother questions: Did Adam and Eve come before the dinosaurs? Where do women come into play? Why doesn’t anyone of the people in the Bible look like us? If Jesus is real, why do we never see him?
“Nobody had answers. I’m not knocking Christianity – it works for many people – but to me, it felt very empty. I thought, ‘There has to be more than this.’”
Iyawo Orisa Efunyale Ogunsina, a 32-year-old Navy veteran from Odenton, grew up attending a Baptist church three times a week. But she says Christianity offered no explanation for the odd sensations she often experienced – smelling cigarette smoke when no one was around, for example, or hearing music others couldn’t hear.
Recently initiated as an Orisha priestess — one who has been called to serve in the faith but remains at an earlier stage of development — she now believes they were ancestors trying to connect with her. She says a deceased uncle on her mother’s side — known to have been a chain smoker — frequently visits her in dreams.
“He has a reassuring presence,” she says.
Olori says Ifa helped her make sense of the world, made the spiritual real, and “brought me back to myself” as a spiritual being, an African-American and a woman.
For the equinox celebration, that meant helping oversee things streamside.
Olori said a prayer in Yoruba, then in English, and asked whether the deity was pleased with the offerings they’d made.
On the first three tosses of shells, she said the answer came back “no.” She made adjustments, moving people and objects around.
Finally, the women dumped honey in the Gwynns Falls for sweetness, a sensation the deities are said to enjoy.
The reply came back affirmation.
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Who First Used The Hashtag?
Somethings never change. Humans have always been social creatures, relied on our environment for our daily needs, engage in the arts, and used hashtags! No, really, humans seem to do all of these things, through out time!
While humanity as we know it has been using the hashtag on social media for about 11 years now, but how long has the symbol really been used? A recent study answered today’s big question: Who first used the hashtag? Listen to this Question Your World radio report produced by the Science Museum of Virginia to find out.
The symbol we call a hashtag has been a part of our lives for way longer than 11 years of course. Sure, currently it’s popularly known as a hashtag, but it’s also been the “pound” symbol on phones and has represented the number sign for quite some time, but those four lines intersecting has recently been in the news for something dating back to ancient times! First of all this hashtag shape has a name, an Octothorpe!
“And what’s with “octothorpe”? This time the etymology traces back to Old Norse, a North Germanic language from the 14th century. In Old Norse, “thorpe” translates to “field” or “farm.” Add “octo’ or “eight” and you have “eight fields” or “octothorpe.” Source
“OCTOTHORPE (HASHTAG) Meaning:
A door to somewhere, home/farmstead , field fertility Description: this symbolises the cells of a well or a plan of wood planks on a house or farmstead thus symbolizing home, it depends on the surrounding elements and was almost always used as a complimentary piece rather than alone. The word thorpe meant field or farm in Old Norse so the todays word for it means eight fields.” SOURCE
(THE above information came from a DRUID Witchcraft source. The Hatchtag as we know it was used by the ancient DRUIDS to represent a DOOR. If you know anything about the spiritual realm you know that a door is also known as a gateway. It is a place where SPIRITS COME AND GO! If you think that the powers that be did not know this when they set you up to use the hashtag all day long… you better think again! You have been opening doors for demonic entities and you did not even know it.)
At a recent dig in the Blombos Cave in South Africa scientists stumbled upon what is now being called the oldest known human painting! (ever hear of the right of first use? Whatever was the first use of a word or term, is the root or true meaning of the word or term FOREVER!) This big discovery was not an entire wall or a series of big rocks, but instead it was a small wedge of sandstone. This small piece was flattened down and smooth surface to act as the canvas for this ancient artist. Then using ochre {ochre -an earthy pigment containing ferric (relating to iron) oxide, typically with clay, varying from light yellow to brown or red.} shaved down to a narrow point, like a crayon, this artist left for the ages what to us looks like a hashtag. Scientists are dating this discovery to about 73,000 pushing back our artistic archives by nearly 30,000 years! Prior to this discovery most scientists had pinned the earliest human painting efforts to cave paintings in Europe and Indonesia dating back about to 40,000 years. At 73,000 years old this now becomes the oldest human painting on record.
Older hominid designs in the form of etchings date back nearly 300,000 but etchings can withstand the impacts of ware and tear throughout time better than paint can. This painted octothorpe is now the oldest example of art created by a transferable medium.
More questions remain however. What did this artist mean? Why this symbol? This particular octothorpe design could have been put on the sandstone to show possession or represent ownership somehow. Perhaps it held superstitious or spiritual meanings, maybe it was trying to play ancient tic-tac-toe, or maybe they just found it to be pleasing. We don’t have anyway of knowing based on the little information we have here, but this piece certainly does tell us one thing for sure, humans love art. This discovery further cements humanity’s relationship to art and sheds a little light into understanding when we started to really leave permanent markings in the natural world around us. Humanity’s art very well could be the first thing that we did to leave permanent changes to an environment. Since then we’ve come a long way and are now even living in a time period named after our ability to impact the world around us. That’s right, we’re now living in the Anthropocene epoch. Did this ancient art piece begin humanity’s trajectory to interacting with and influencing our surroundings? Are there older examples? There’s so much work left to be done here.
“The Anthropocene defines Earth’s most recent geologic time period as being human-influenced, or anthropogenic, based on overwhelming global evidence that atmospheric, geologic, hydrologic, biospheric and other earth system processes are now altered by humans.” SOURCE
Regardless, this does show that we have apparently had art on our mind for quite some time now and of course for the science community this particular hashtag is definitely a trending topic.spacer
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The following paper should paint a very clear picture of what they are doing to us through technology. I pray that you review the entire document. It is very eyeopening. What this paper reveals should cause you major concern!
Deus Ex Machina? Witchcraft and the Techno-World Venetia RobertsonIntroduction Sociologist Bryan R. Wilson once alleged that post-modern technology and secularisation are the allied forces of rationality and disenchantment that pose an immense threat to traditional religion. However, the flexibility of pastiche Neopagan belief systems like ‘Witchcraft’ have creativity, fantasy, and innovation at their core, allowing practitioners of Witchcraft to respond in a unique way to the post-modern age by integrating technology into their perception of the sacred. The phrase Deus ex Machina, the God out of the Machine, has gained a multiplicity of meanings in this context. For progressive Witches, the machine can both possess its own numen (A spirit or divinity, especially a local or presiding god.) and act as a conduit for the spirit of the deities. It can also assist the practitioner in becoming one with the divine by enabling a transcendent and enlightening spiritual experience. Finally, in the theatrical sense, it could be argued that the concept of a magical machine is in fact the contrived dénouement (the final part of a play, movie, or narrative in which the strands of the plot are drawn together and matters are explained or resolved.) that saves the seemingly despondent situation of a so-called ‘nature religion’ like Witchcraft in the techno-centric age. This paper explores the ways two movements within Witchcraft, ‘Technopaganism’ and ‘Technomysticism’, have incorporated man-made inventions into their spiritual practice. A study of how this is related to the worldview, operation of magic, social aspect and development of self within Witchcraft, uncovers some of the issues of longevity and profundity that this religion will face in the future.Witchcraft as a Religion The categorical heading ‘Neopagan’ functions as an umbrella that covers numerous reconstructed, revived, or invented religious movements, that have taken inspiration from indigenous, archaic, and esoteric traditions. Many Neopagan strains are holistic, nature-based, and advocate magical conviction, but others deviate from this model. More often than not, Neopagan religions are based on individualism, personal experience and an acceptance of the multiplicity of truth. Douglas E. Cowan calls this phenomena “open-source” religion, which paradoxically includes appropriation and innovation, eclecticism and traditionalism, and a culture of both solitude and community. Hence, the classification ‘Neopagan’ is so widely inclusive that it is often rendered undescriptive. The Neopagan practice of Witchcraft, the focus of this paper, is commonly conflated with the Wiccan faith, although they are not one and the same. In the 1950s, Gerald Gardner, once a member of a Masonic Lodge, the Ordo Templi Orientis, and a practising Rosicrucian, began the first Wiccan coven. Gardner’s experiences with ceremonial magic in these mystery groups heavily influenced his understanding of ethereal forces, energy-working, and ritual design. However, his construction of Wicca as the ‘Old Religion’ pays homage to revisionist historian Margaret Murray, who famously propounded the theory that contemporary Witchcraft has survived from the times of ancient fertility cults. Gardnerian Wicca has established practices, a mythology, a code of ethics called the Rede, and an exclusive process of initiation. Some British Traditional Wiccan groups like Alexandrian Wicca have upheld a regimented model, while other branches like Seax, Dianic, Faerie, and Eclectic Wicca have a more free-form approach. In short, to be a Wiccan can mean so many things that it can also mean nothing specific at all. Chris Klassen has helpfully clarified the distinction between the Wiccan worldview and that of Witchcraft, by referring to the practices and beliefs of the latter as “Witchen”, a neologism that will be adopted here. For an acephalous (not having a head), antinomian (relating to the view that Christians are released by grace from the obligation of observing the moral law), and non-dogmatic group, Witchcraft is certainly not lacking in published texts, and its formidable online presence has promoted a culture of discussion, debate, and information sharing amongst practitioners. The fantasy sagas of J. R. R. Tolkein and Terry Pratchett have provided a rich history of fantastical empires and panoply of whimsical beings that have seeped into Neopagan folklore. Science-fiction cult classics such as William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer, Gene Rodenberry’s Star Trek, the film eXistenZ by David Cronenberg, and the Wachowski brother’s The Matrix, have impacted upon both the magical and the extropian signification of virtual worlds, teleporation and mainframe conciousness. Witchcraft is in a viable position to adopt the language, ideas, and spiritual nuances of these technomyths, as the epistemological bricolage that comprises the Witchen ethos is by no means constant or definitive, but fluid and necessarily mutable. This paper predominantly examines what Douglas Ezzy calls “Witchcraft as a broad social movement” or “popular Witchcraft”, using the opinions espoused by authors and professed practitioners of the craft. The more esoteric principles of Witchcraft that are discussed in the latter half conform more to the Chaos Magic paradigm as established in the 1980s by Peter J. Carroll, perhaps best summed up in the Chaotic adage “nothing is true, everything is permitted!” Nature and the Divine Witchcraft is often categorised as a “nature religion”, a phrase with several connotations. The worship of “nature” can be achieved in myriad ways, such as a belief in animism, the Mother Earth Goddess, genii loci, faeries, or simply being ‘green’. Generally, the Witchen worldview is monistic, regarding the divine as immanent and all things as holy. Nature and the divine are woven together in the symbol of the pentagram, each of its five points representing the elements air, fire, water, and earth, with the addition of spirit at the apex of the star shape. The solar, lunar, and seasonal cycles dictate the sabbats and esbats of the pagan calendar. While Eco-Feminist Witchcraft venerates the Mother Earth Goddess, Gardnerian Wicca heavily emphasises the importance of complementary masculine and feminine roles to reflect the fertility of nature. The themes of syzygy and fecundity are also present in the magical principle of polarity, common ceremonial tools like the phallic symbolism of the athame and the yonic quality of the chalice, and ritualistic sex. Though environmental awareness is fundamental in many traditions, Witchcraft is also undeniably anthropocentric, and focuses on personal development. “Thou art God” (or “Goddess”) is a salutation from Robert A. Heinlein’s 1961 science-fiction novel Stranger in a Strange Land, taken up by some Witches to acknowledge their selves as an incarnation of divinity. The deities are commonly comprehended in dual form as the Lord and Lady, the primordial creators with multifaceted personalities. They can be invoked through ancient archetypes, for example, the Maiden might be called Eostre, the Lover Aphrodite, and the Mother Isis, or the Soldier, Mithras and Father as Cernunnos. Janet Farrar and Gavin Bone summarise the theogony of “progressive Witchcraft”, saying, “although we refer to God and Goddess in a duotheistic fashion, we are by nature polytheistic, believing that the divine has many faces manifested as individual deities, be they ancestral, of nature, or of human skill”. The all-encompassing character of pantheism and a desire for balance has enabled ‘digital animism’ to become a valid Witchen belief. In celebrating man-made creations as numinous (1 : supernatural, mysterious. 2 : filled with a sense of the presence of divinity : holy. 3 : appealing to the higher emotions or to the aesthetic sense), the gap separating the sacred and the profane is bridged. In his time, Gerald Gardner professed a fear that modern science, television, and cinema were displacing his romantic brand of spirituality and leading to its extinction. In succeeding decades, other Witches have perceived mass information technology as eroding a primal connection of humanity to the natural environment. The Feraferia movement, founded in California in the 1960s by Frederick Adams and Svetlana Butyrin, banned technology from their pagan practice. Adams prophesised that if the “urbanhierarchical-militaristic culmination” continued to destroy the biosphere, the Goddess would react with apocalyptic vengeance. In a less dramatic but comparable protest, Doreen Valiente observed in 1964 that modern life had a tendency to cut off people from their kinship with nature and consequently, “their own individuality is processed away, and they begin to feel as if they are just another cog in a huge, senseless machine”. In 1997, traditionalist Reverend Andrew Siliar wrote disapprovingly of the encroaching computer revolution in the Church of All Worlds journal Green Egg:
Despite a considerable historical connection, magic and science have often been posed in opposition to one another. However, the verisimilitude of nature devotion in contemporary Witchcraft has been criticised by both Neopagans and scholars. With a foot in both of these camps, Richard Roberts posits that a true nature religion is an anachronism, questioning the purity of an “over populated, environmentally degraded world”. Ezzy convincingly argues that consumer capitalism and the egocentric trend of the spiritual marketplace have turned the focus in Witchcraft from ecological ethics to an almost selfish individualism. But as Farrar and Bone have said, the gods do not inhabit only physical nature but are also manifest in “human skill”. Hence technology is just another expression of the divine in daily life. Chas Clifton has made the pragmatic plea to Neopagans in a Gnosis article, asking them to reconcile their environmental ideology with the reality of the technological society of today. He says, to be truly paganus is to know your surroundings, and to understand how life’s offerings, be they natural or scientific, are interlinked. This latter viewpoint seems to be evidenced by the modernised practices of many Witches today.
Erik Davis, in his indispensably useful work on magic and information technology, has introduced the moniker “Technopagan” into common usage. While this term may at first glance appear to be an oxymoron, magic, and science have an extensive history of influence over one another. Ancient societies tended to regard innovation as divine inspiration, contributing discoveries such as that of the written script to their specialised Gods, be it Thoth, Enlil or Odin. Since the industrial era, many people have tried to give technology a spiritual application, from radiomancy, to taking photographs of ectoplasm, to monitoring Thetans with an E-meter. For the Witch, tools that have an affinity with nature have traditionally been employed in spell-working. However, in the opening years of the new millennium a multitude of authors popularised the notion of ‘urban paganism’ by engaging aspects of the concrete jungle with the magical discourse of Witchcraft. By embracing their modern surrounds, the Technopagan can update the ‘Old Religion’, and accept the abundance and convenience of technological inventions as both metaphors and devices for craft work.
She goes on to ascribe magical properties to the television, radio, vacuum cleaner, garbage disposal, blender, and microwave. Patricia Telesco and Sirona Knight resourcefully expand the classical tools of Witchcraft, adding that objects like calculators can represent the elements of earth and fire, and symbolise combining and patterns, while telephones stand for air and communication. Telesco and Knight’s books about web-witching detail how today’s Witch can expand her skills in an online and computer-generated capacity. Although these guides contain, inintentionally, a slightly facetious tone, they are designed as an introduction to the information superhighway for the less than tech-savvy Neopagan audience.
The praxis and the logos of rites can be done via webcam, microphone, in a chat group, typed out, using hypertext, or even netspeak and emoticons:
In the transcript of an online Ostara rite from 1997 performed by members of ‘The Grove’, participants were advised by the leader Ghost to envisage their tools, an egg, a candle, and a marker, if they did not have them present. He then led them with another member Elspeth through an imaginative journey similar to guided meditation:
Stephen O’Leary’s study of online rituals led him to conclude that actual performance and real space are unnecessary, the glyphic state of a tool is enough to ensure its efficacy. The signifier and signified, he says, are fused in the textual simulation of off-line sensory experiences. Electronic magic, particularly in a computer or online setting, is an exercise in creativity and visualisation if nothing else. The musings of Witches like Stevens, Telesco, Knight, and their kin demonstrate the constructive role of playfulness when inventing new ways to practise the craft.
The Neopagan community has often responded to their enduring cyber reality with humour. One meme that has been floating around the internet since the 1990s called ‘You may be a Technopagan if…’ jokes about keeping a Disk (rather than a Book) of Shadows with encrypted backups, having battery operated wands, and using binary code or C++ as an arcane script. Though these satires are often inoffensive, they hint at an undercurrent of disapproval of Technopaganism. For example, reviewers of Telesco and Knight’s work have called it fluffy, simplistic, tongue-in-cheek, antiquated and ridiculous, with one commenter pointing out that when “trying to update ‘Charms, Amulets, Talismans, and Fetishes’ they mention AAA batteries. Well, a techno savvy environmentally concerned geek would use rechargables”. In spite of criticism, a relationship between Witchcraft and the web has flourished because this marriage is considered convenient and forward thinking. As Adler’s survey noted, many Witches look to technology for pragmatic as well as spiritual tasks, to supply them with increased access to information and to like-minded people who can discuss and share their ideas.
Magic for profit is visible in the publication of disingenuous, populist and ‘fluffbunny’ guides to Wicca such as those written by Fiona Horne, in the copious ads for psychic hot-lines found in the back pages of women’s magazines, and the abundance of ‘Magic schools’ advertised online. The web provides the instant convenience of online shopping and hosts countless numbers of stores with a range of ritual, aesthetic, and miscellaneous paraphernalia for sale. Sites like WitchcraftSpellsNow.com’ offer “all your love spell, wiccan witchcraft and other spellcasting needs” for $US 30-90.67 However, the disclaimer in the fine print on this page makes one question the veracity of this proposal:
This issue is also exacerbated by the theoretic anonymity and invisibility afforded by the internet, which is a two-sided coin. While anonymity grants any unscrupulous or untrained person free reign to pose as a connoisseur of the craft, at the same time the unrestrained notion of cyber identity has benefits for the performative and personal aspects of the Witchen faith. This coincides with the gnostic desire to escape the flesh and form a trans-substantial union with the divine, the zenith of the Technomystical experience.
The major project of the Technopagan is to substitute their tools, expand their and perception of nature, and reach out to the Witchen community by incorporating the electrical, mechanical, and digital into their craft. The ‘Technomystic’ goes further, aiming to enhance the experiential dimension by synthesising magic with hard- and software. Technomysticism has its roots in the counter-culture of California in the 1960s and 1970s that spawned the patron saints of cybernetics, Timothy Leary, Stewart Brand, Steve Jobs, and Bill Gates. Leary, who at one point encouraged his followers to “turn on, tune in and drop out” on LSD, switched his allegiance in the 1990s, hailing the PC as the latest designer drug. Stewart Brand, Merry Prankster and founder of the Whole Earth Catalogue, wrote an article for Rolling Stone magazine in 1972 describing the out-of-body experience of gamers projecting their selves through the cathode ray tube display screen to play the rudimentary program ‘Spacewars’. While the ecological, sexual, and political concerns of Witchcraft were being nurtured by the hippie movement and the rise of feminism, concurrently the psychedelic collapsed into the cyberdelic as the computer became a landmark in the quest of the psychonaut. As Wiccan and IT expert Sara Reeder has reminisced, “Silicon Valley and the modern Wiccan revival literally took root and grew up alongside each other in the rich black clay surrounding San Francisco Bay”.
Writing in 1995, Erik Davis described the “loopy talk about computers and consciousness” emanating from the real life sprawl of San Francisco, saying “because the issues of interface design, network psychology, and virtual reality are so open-ended and novel, the people who hack this conceptual edge often sound as much like science fiction acidheads as they do sober programmers.” Within this nexus, Davis uncovered the initial Technopagan movement, the Dionysian nature worshippers who embraced the Apollonian artifice of logical machines. These Witches are the foundation for the humorous meme ‘You may be a Technopagan if…’ because they are in fact utilising C++ and encryption in their magical practice. However, using the terminology of this paper it could be argued that Davis’ subjects were in fact Technomystics, as they looked beyond the mere expediency of technology, and sought ways to surmount the body and transform the soul through digital experience.
A far more intricate exploration is detectable in the discourse of Technomystics, those self described “oddballs” that Adler encountered in her survey, who have a sophisticated understanding of the internal mathematics and logistics of computer networks. For these digital savants, implementing software algorithms, designating sigils (magical and mathematical), and participating in online RPGs can become the catalyst for a religious experience. Expectedly, evidence for such existential sorcery is elusive, not least because it is arcane in both the programming and the spiritual sense, but because it is inherently a private venture. From the few available sources it is noticeable that this practice is predominately the domain of Chaos magicians. Whereas McSherry and co. gravitate towards a Wiccan path, Chaotes derive their system from Aleister Crowley’s Thelemic magic, and the methods of Austin Osman Spare and Peter J. Carroll, founder of the association Illuminates of Thanateros and author of Liber Null & Psychonaut. In Carroll’s texts the process of metamorphosis or “transmutation of the mind” is the key to discovering the “True Will”. For Chaoist philosophy to “hurl men to the corners of the galaxy and into the very epicentre of their being”, as Carroll believed it could, a channel defined by its transience is required:
The figurative geography of cyberspace can be seen to fit neatly into this description. The seemingly infinite and obscure data capacity of the web has been conceived as a global host of our collective consciousness, or ‘Noosphere’. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin charted the theoretical existence of the Noosphere on a continuum of our spiritual evolution culminating in the “Omega Point”, the eschatalogical moment in which the sentience of all humanity converges and unifies, emerging as universal gnosis. Accordingly, some Witches have imagined the web as the sublime superhighway, and used the technology of this arena in experiments to project the self into liminal space for the purposes of ex stasis, and to harness, decipher, and re-write this mysterious plane for more powerful spell-work.
Existing in archive form today, it can only be assumed that the .GIF file mentioned contained a key to decipher the glossolalia that promises to reveal the arcane ‘Secret of Hyssop’. Tzimon reappeared amongst other Chaos magicians in the newsgroup TIAMAT, ‘Testing the Internet As Magickal/Aethyric Tool’. Chaotes listed in this group discussed the prospects of conducting magic via internet relay chat, bots, code, silicon souls, and MUDs. Some years later, Anton Channing, under the name Frater M 1232, wrote a program called Cybermorph Hardware and Operating System-Human Interface Exchange. CHAOSHEX (Chaos Hex) for short, was designed under the pretence
A year later, ‘The Doctor’ added:
Hence, the shortage of obvious signs that the Chaotic community is still testing the bounds of internet magic does not necessarily mean that this is not still happening in confidential correspondences or in the private practice of individuals. Perhaps in another ten years time, the outmoded archives of today’s Technomystical organisations will float to the top of Google searches. |
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