One
of the surest and most acceptable paths leading into the occult is
today’s back-to-nature movement in the name of ecological
preservation of our planet. Earth has suffered much harmful damage
due to mankind’s carelessness and greed. While the industrial
nations must bear their share of the blame, some of the worst
pollution and destruction has occurred in Communist lands and also
in developing countries of the Third World. Furthermore, pollution
(such as that caused by volcanic eruptions) and destruction (such as
blight and insects, forest fires started by lightning, or plagues)
are an integral part of nature itself.
Nevertheless, the popular delusion
has gained unchallenged acceptance that anything "natural"
must be beneficial. It seems to be overlooked that nothing is more
natural than disease, suffering, death, and natural disasters (e.g.
hurricanes, earthquakes, and floods). In fact it is against such
destruction regularly wrought by nature that humanity has
desperately struggled to protect itself and in so doing has arrived
at the present degree of civilization.
It seems more than ironic that after
mankind has fought for centuries against the often antagonistic and
sometimes deadly forces of nature, there should now be a popular and
growing movement calling for partnership with these same forces.
Such ideas sound appealing, but would have afforded no comfort to
the Donner Party starving in the impossibly deep snow in the Sierra
Nevada mountains. To them (and to other victims of wind, ice, and
storm) nature could not have been more cruel, vicious, and
unmerciful!
A Call to Reason
It was the unnatural act of reason
opposing the natural processes of nature that brought under control
a host of formerly fatal diseases, that lowered the death rate in
infants, and that has extended the average life expectancy. The
repeated unnatural act of taking out an appendix or transplanting a
kidney or removing a tumor has saved countless lives. Such realities
ought not to be forgotten in the rush to worship a mythological
Earth Mother.
Only a relentless battle against nature
has achieved the many comforts and benefits unknown in earlier times
and taken for granted today. None is a product of nature.
There is nothing natural about computers, television, space
travel, dams, bridges, books, or even such basic necessities of
human life as weaving, food processing, plowing, planting, weeding,
or cooking. Then why the cry to "get back to nature"?
Moreover, it was Western science that
brought these benefits to mankind. These blessings would never have
resulted from Hinduism’s pantheistic philosophy or Eastern
mysticism. Nor would medical science ever have blossomed from the
beliefs of the North American Indians, which the West is now
embracing in its pursuit of "oneness with nature." What
irony, that indigenous peoples who still find themselves appealing
to unheeding spirits against the diseases which ravage them in
nature’s own undeveloped territory (diseases which modern medicine
has cured) are now being exalted as examples for universal
emulation!
This is not to deny that some plants
and roots with healing qualities have been discovered by native
peoples or that they have something to teach us. Nor is it to deny
that ecological destruction has been unnecessarily wrought by the
human folly and avarice of "civilized" peoples. At the
same time, however, charges against science and technology must be
made on reasonable grounds. It is a quantum leap from respecting and
protecting our environment (which we should do) to deifying
"Mother Earth."
A Selective Favoritism
Nor should we overlook, much less
condone, today’s rampant prejudice against Christianity. Biblical
faith has become taboo in American society while anything else,
including witchcraft and voodoo, is accepted without question. A
great hue and cry is being raised across the country to prohibit any
public display of crosses or manger scenes. At the same time, totem
poles are immune from comparable criticism or objections. Even the
United Nation’s World Health Organization (WHO) has given its
approval to a revival of witchcraft under the popular euphemism of
"traditional medicine" or "native cures."
Whatever is native or
"indigenous" is indiscriminately praised, and woe to those
who have the temerity to point out any flaws in native cultures or
religions. We must all emulate what the natives of Africa or of a
Pacific island or our own native American Indians believe and
practice! Such is the propaganda line which is promoted in the media
and goes virtually unchallenged.
On Sunday, November 17, 1996, the
popular A&E channel aired "America’s Mysterious
Places." It presented witchcraft in Salem and early New England
along with voodoo in New Orleans as benign. Spokespersons for voodoo
said, "We are descendants of those slaves carried here from
Africa who brought voodoo with them." The purpose of voodoo was
explained as simply serving the spirits and worshiping the gods and
goddesses. Not a word about the curses which terrify the populace
where voodoo is practiced. The program showed favorable depictions
of the serpent god. A voodoo priestess explained that she was the
equivalent of a Catholic priest or a Jewish rabbi. Such erroneous
statements left viewers misinformed—duped, in fact.
Pagan religions are even being
introduced into public schools in the United States in spite of the
prohibition on school prayer or any favorable reference to
Christianity. Of course these religions are classified as
"culture," which is simply a deceit. The same is true in
community programs. Consider, for example, Carolee Nishi, "the
creator and volunteer director of a unique after-school program
sponsored by the YMCA of Honolulu that teaches Hawaiian Studies to
children ages 4-14." The word religion is not to be
found in the full-page promotional piece about Nishi in United
Airlines’ Hemispheres magazine. Instead, it is said that
she teaches "hula dancing... Hawaiian history and
culture." Occultism escapes mention.
Even the United States government
promotes native American spirituality in spite of the
"separation of church and state" which is enforced so
strictly against anything Christian. The National Park Service has
promoted Indian animist/spiritist religion—including the worship
of nature spirits—while blaming the Bible for the destruction of
the West! For example, Gary Hathaway, Acting Superintendent of Lava
Beds National Monument, in an official newsletter which was handed
out to park visitors in 1993, stated:
Native Americans had a spiritual
tie to their land…. [White men] used the resources for their own
commercial gain, and the timeless spirituality of the land was
disrupted.... Their spiritual viewpoint, recorded in Genesis,
called for them to dominate the land and subdue it... vast areas
of the West were destroyed.
Today the spirituality of the land
at Lava Beds is undergoing an awakening... throughout the monument
the presence of spirits can be felt... you can [even] see
them when they choose to appear in their visible forms….
Enter the medicine circle
reverently, as you would enter your own church. Let the spirits of
the winds, the rocks, and the animals speak to you.…1
1. Ruth Montgomery with Joanne
Garland, Ruth Montgomery: Herald of the New Age (Fawcett
Crest, 1986), pp. 71-111.