Is Your God a Devil?
By Richard Smoley
It is one of the most familiar and reassuring lines in
scripture: “The Lord is my shepherd.” But when you think about it, the metaphor
is a disturbing one.
It’s true that a shepherd looks after his sheep. But he also
shears them and kills them and eats them. Does the God we adore act totally
with our best interests at heart, or are we a species of livestock that he uses
for his own ends?
Voices have occasionally uttered doubt, not about the
existence of the gods, but about their beneficence. The ancient Gnostics said
that the real god of this world was the Demiurge, a second-order being who
mistook himself for the true God. The spiritual teacher G.I. Gurdjieff told a
parable about a lazy shepherd who got tired of having his sheep run off, so he
hypnotised them into thinking they were men or lions. Then they no longer ran
off but stayed around so that he could shear or kill them as he liked. (Again
we encounter a shepherd, this one more explicitly malevolent.)
Gurdjieff does not say who this shepherd is. His main point
is that man, in his state of waking sleep, is at the mercy of forces that may
well not have his best interests at heart – forces that will extract energy
from him regardless of his wishes.
This parable is from an early period of Gurdjieff’s
teaching; in his later period, epitomised in his magnum opus All and
Everything: Beelzebub’s Tales to His Grandson, he portrayed the universe in a
more beneficent light. But there are plenty of others who have cast doubts on
the motives of the spiritual powers that control our lives.
One of the weirdest is found in a book called War in Heaven
by Kyle Griffith. Originally it appeared in 1988. It has never been published
in a conventional sense; I first read it years ago when I was editor of the
esoteric journal Gnosis and there was a spiral-bound copy lying around the
office. Today it can be downloaded for free at
www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vida_alien/warinheaven/warheaven-III.htm.
Comparatively little is known about Griffith himself. From
my sources, I gather that he lived in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1980s,
the time when he put his book together. He has been featured in an Internet
interview (www.openseti.org/ForumFiles/GossensGriffithQA.html), and there is a discussion
group devoted to his ideas at http://revolutionaryspiritualism.yuku.com.
From a certain point of view, War in Heaven may look mad;
from another, it is strangely compelling. I have read it three times over the
years. While I’m not prepared to take its claims at face value, I find them
both haunting and disturbing.
Griffith’s vision allegedly derives from his telepathic
communication with some spirits who say they are associated with the Invisible
College. This was the name of a seventeenth century English coterie that was
devoted to esotericism, philosophy, and the nascent discipline of science; it
is usually seen as a precursor to the Royal Society. Unlike the scientifically
minded gentlemen of Britain, the Invisible College of Griffith’s vision consists
of disembodied spirits who claim to have inspired the Rosicrucian and
Freemasonic movements of the early modern era; more recently, they were behind
the civil-rights movement in America and the psychedelic revolution of the same
period.
All of these movements were designed with one end in mind:
to break the hold of the Theocrats.
The Theocrats, in the cosmology of War in Heaven, are
parasitic astral entities who devour the souls of the recently deceased. The
normal course of the soul’s evolution involves repeated reincarnations on
earth. But these incarnations, as we well know, can be extremely unpleasant at
times. The Theocrats have avoided this disagreeable option by maintaining a
semiperpetual existence on the astral plane, fed by the souls they eat. Their
strategy is simple. When a naïve soul has died, they greet it on the other side
by proffering illusory welcomes into a fake heaven, populated with familiar
religious figures and loved ones. When the soul has strayed into their trap, it
is devoured.
To make this vision even more disturbing, Griffith (or his
guides from the Invisible College) contends that practically all of what we
think of as religion is nothing more than a Theocratic ruse.
The stages of this religious development, as portrayed in War
in Heaven, bear some examination. The first stage was essentially shamanism.
This is a crude and primitive form of religion – from the Theocrats’ point of
view, that is, not from ours.
Shamanism, we are told, fosters individual psychic
development, and as such, it is of limited value to the predatory Theocrats,
who benefit much more from the collective trance that conventional religious
worship produces. As a result, the Theocrats had to refine and update their
methods of mind control.
Second-stage religion was a dead end. It involved
large-scale human sacrifice. And history shows that civilisations that had such
practices came to a bad end soon. Ancient Carthage, the great rival of Rome for
domination of the Mediterranean, was one example. When the Romans decisively
defeated Carthage, they razed the city and sowed the ground with salt. Salt is
traditionally a substance used for purification, and some have said the Romans
did this to cleanse the land from all the human sacrifice that had taken place
there. Aztec civilisation, which in many ways was superior to its European
contemporary, was another example: for all its might, it was destroyed by a few
hundred Spanish adventurers on horseback.
“The third stage of
Theocratic religion,” Griffith writes, “involves mass animal sacrifices.
Although they prefer human souls, Theocratic spirits can nourish themselves off
the astral souls of lower animals to some extent.”
If this were true, it would cast a weird but revealing light
on what I have characterised in the accompanying article as the religions of
the Age of Aries. They were so obsessed with animal sacrifice – which otherwise
seems to be rather a pointless activity – because the Theocrats wanted it.
“However,” Griffith
adds, “the astral tissues of animal souls aren’t very compatible with the
astral souls of the Theocrats, so they are not a good food source.” To solve
this problem, the Theocrats invented fourth-stage religion – the religions that
most of the world knows today. Here “Theocrats use religious mind control to
delude souls into deliberately putting themselves under Theocratic control
after death, thinking they are entering ‘eternal bliss in Heaven’ or ‘union
with the Godhead’.” These religions are essentially those of what in the
accompanying article I have called the Age of Pisces.
By this view, the gods people worship – whether they are
called Christ or Allah or Krishna – are nothing more than parasites on the
astral plane who keep themselves nourished by souls of the innocents they prey
on. Originally the Buddha was different; he experienced a genuine awakening and
thus showed little respect for the traditional Vedic gods of his culture. But
his later followers, who distorted his teaching into a religion based on faith
in Buddha, became subservient to the Theocrats.
Oh, and by the way: “The Theocrats want religious believers
to feel guilty every time they feel sexual desire or enjoy any ‘pleasures of
the flesh’. The guilt literally addicts them to attending church services that
subject them to religious mind control.”
There have been few more disturbing portraits of the
religious history of humanity than this.
To deliver the hapless beings of the human race from this
dire situation, certain advanced souls from other planets came to the astral
atmosphere of Earth a few centuries ago. They, along with some enlightened
human souls who have managed to avoid the Theocrats, constitute the Invisible
College. While the Theocrats have been sending telepathic suggestions to their
unsuspecting followers on this plane, saying that all you have to do is believe
in the Theocratic gods and trust them, the Invisible College has been
transmitting the opposite message: to avoid worship and above all to think for
yourself. They inspired the Rosicrucian and Masonic movements of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, as well as the accompanying impulses
toward democracy, freedom of thought, and even atheism. After all, it is better
to believe in no God at all than to open yourself up to a parasitic astral
deity.
According to Griffith, much of the 1960s counterculture was
stimulated by the Invisible College. LSD, rock concerts, and similar gatherings
were designed to create a different kind of trance – one that would
telepathically open people to the idea they should think for themselves.
But the story does not stop there. This effort has led to a
reaction by the adversary – “fifth-stage Theocracy,” which “employs electronic
mind control instead of religious mind control, and… can enslave people who
subscribe to belief systems other than those of organised religion.” Some
groups originally inspired by the Invisible College are co-opted by the
adversary. Griffith writes, “Every new rock group starts out with a few normal
protest or love songs. Then they get swallowed by a group mind controlled by
fifth-stage Theocrats, and from that point on all their songs sound as if they
were written by the same person.”
Read the full article HERE:
newdawnmagazine
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.