What Christians Need to Know about Scientology (page 3)
by Margery Wakefield (1991)
The Satanic Roots of Scientology
Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather
expose them.
Ephesians 5:11
It is a well documented fact that the religion of Hubbard was Satanism.
Hubbard's mentor was, in fact, the infamous English black magician Aleister
Crowley. Hubbard reportedly discovered Crowley's works as a teenager on a
trip to the Library of Congress with his mother.
Thereafter, he was fascinated by Crowley's "Magick," and Crowley became
Hubbard's mentor, a relationship that would last until Crowley's death in
1947. In one of his later lectures, Hubbard would refer to Crowley as "my
good friend." [Miller, p. 135]
Crowley's most famous work was called The Book of the Law in which he
expressed his philosophy of life: "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of
the Law." It is a philosophy Hubbard was to live by throughout his life.
Crowley wrote, in The Book of the Law:
We have nothing with the outcast and the unfit; let them die in their
misery
Compassion is the vice of Kings; stamp down the wretched and the weak; this
is the law of the strong; this is our law and the joy of the world.
I am of the snake that giveth Knowledge and Delight, and stir the hearts
of
men with drunkenness. To worship me take wine and strange drugs.... They
shall not harm ye at all. It is a lie, this folly against self.... Be strong
Oh man! Lust, enjoy all things of sense and rapture ... the kings of the
earth shall be kings forever; the slaves shall serve.
Them that seek to entrap thee, to overthrow thee, them attack without
pity
or quarter, and destroy them utterly.
I am unique and conqueror. I am not of the slaves that perish. Be they
damned and dead! Amen. [Corydon, p. 49]
Many of Crowley's beliefs have been incorporated into Scientology,
especially in the secret upper levels of Scientology, called the "OT levels.
Following in Crowley's footsteps, Hubbard adopted some of the practices
of
the black magician, including the use of drugs and the use of affirmations.
According to Hubbard's son, his father regularly used illegal drugs
including amphetamines, barbiturates and hallucinogens including cocaine,
peyote and mescaline. [Corydon, p. 53]
Among the many affirmations that Hubbard was known to have used was the
following:
All men shall be my slaves! All women shall succumb to my charms! All
mankind shall grovel at my feet and not know why! [Corydon, p. 53]
After being discharged from the Navy in December of 1945, Hubbard did not
head for home, where his wife and two small children were living in
Bremerton, Washington. He instead headed directly for a house in Pasadena,
California, where an eclectic assortment of people lived including one Jack
Parsons, the leader of a satanic organization called the Ordo Templis
Orientis. That was the U.S. name for the organization headed in England by
Crowley.
Parsons wrote to Crowley about Hubbard:
About three months ago I met Ron ... a writer and explorer of whom I had
known for some time. He is a gentleman; he has red hair, green eyes, is
honest and intelligent, and we have become great friends.
Although Ron has no formal training in magick, he has an extraordinary
amount of experience and understanding in the field. From some of his
experiences I deduce that he is in direct touch with some higher
intelligence, possibly his guardian angel.
Ron appears to have some sort of highly developed astral vision. He
described his angel as a beautiful winged woman with red hair, whom he calls
the Empress, and who has guided him through his life, and saved him many
times.
We are pooling our resources in a partnership which will act as a limited
company to control our business ventures.
I need a magical partner. I have many experiments in mind.... [Corydon,
p.
255]
Hubbard and Parsons struck up an occult partnership, the result of which
was
a series of rituals they carried out with the objective of producing a
moonchild," an incarnation of "Babylon" in an unborn child. A woman in the
house was chosen to be the mother of this satanic child.
In order to obtain a woman prepared to bear this magical child, Parsons
and
Hubbard engaged in eleven days of rituals.
All this seemed to achieve its desired result and, on January 18th,
Parsons
found the girl who was prepared to become the mother of Babalon, and to go
through the required incantation rituals. During these rituals, which took
place on the first three days of March 1946, Parsons was High Priest and had
sexual intercourse with the girl, while Hubbard who was present acted as
skryer, seer, or clairvoyant and described what was supposed to be happening
on the astral plane. [Corydon, p. 256]
Parsons wrote to Crowley:
I am under command of extreme secrecy. I have had the most devastating
experience of my life between February second and March fourth. I believe it
was the result of the ninth degree working with the girl.... I have been in
direct touch with the One who is most Holy and Beautiful as mentioned in the
Book of the Law. First instructions were received direct through Ron, the
Seer. I have followed them to the letter. There was a desire for incarnation
I am to act as instructor guardian guide for nine months, then it will be
loosed upon the world. That's all I can say for now.... [Corydon, p. 257]
Crowley remained unimpressed. He wrote to one of his associates:
Apparently Parsons and Hubbard or somebody is producing a moonchild. I
get
fairly frantic when I contemplate the idiocy of these louts. [Corydon, p.
257]
Later, Hubbard was to reveal some of his occult beliefs to his son in a
conversation documented by L. Ron Hubbard, Jr.:
We were in Philadelphia. It was November 1952.
Every night in the hotel, in preparation for the next day's lecture, he'd
pace the floor, exhilarated by this or that passage from Aleister Crowley's
writings.
Just a month before, he had been in London, where he had finally been
able
to quench his thirst; to fill his cup with the true, raw, naked power of the
magick. The lust of centuries at his very fingertips.
To stroke and taste the environs of the Great Beast, to fondle Crowley's
books, papers, and memorabilia had filled him with pure ecstasy!
In London he had acquired, at last, the final keys; enabling him to take
his
place upon the "Throne of the Beast," to which he firmly believed himself to
be the rightful heir.
"The books and contents to be kept forever secret," he says. "To reveal
them
will cause you instant insanity; rip your mind apart; destroy you," he says.
"Secrets, techniques and powers I alone have conquered and harnessed. I
alone have refined, improved on, applied my engineering principles to.
Science and logic. The keys! My keys to the doorway of the Magick, my
magick! The power!"
"I've made the Magick really work," he says. "No more foolish rituals.
I've
stripped the Magick to basics -- access without liability."
"Sex by will," he says. "Love by will -- no caring and no sharing -- no
feelings. None," he says. "Love reversed," he says. "Love isn't sex. Love is
no good; puts you at effect. Sex is the route to power," he says. "Scarlet
women! They are the secret to the doorway. Use and consume. Feast. Drink the
power through them. Waste and discard them."
"Scarlet?" I ask.
"Yes Scarlet: the blood of their bodies, the blood of their souls," he
says.
"Release your will from bondage. Bend their bodies; bend their minds;
bend
their wills; beat back the past. The present is all there is. No
consequences and no guilt. Nothing is wrong in the present. The will is free
-- totally free; no feelings; no effort; pure thought -- separated. The Will
postulating the Will," he says.
"Will, Sex, Love, Blood, Door, Power, Will. Logical," he says.
"The doorway of Plenty. The Great Door of the Great Beast." [Corydon, p.
307]
It is possible that Hubbard not only believed in Satan -- he believed he
was
Satan!
According to Ron (Hubbard) Jr., his father considered himself to be the
one
who came after"; that he was Crowley's successor; that he had taken on the
mantle of the "Great Beast." He told him that Scientology actually began on
December the 1st, 1947. This was the day Aleister Crowley died. [Corydon, p.
50]
This is the foundation of Scientology, the "Road to Total Freedom"!
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