A
THEOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE NEW AGE MOVEMENT
____________
A Thesis
Presented to
the Faculty of the Department of Systematic Theology
In Partial fulfillment
of the Requirements for the Degree
Master of Theology
____________
by
Jobe Ralph Martin
April 1985
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION
Need for This Thesis
Purpose
Scope
II. THE HISTORICAL ROOTS OF THE NEW AGE MOVEMENT
The Garden of Eden
The Rebellion at
Ancient Babylon
Gnosticism:
Seedbed for New Age Theology
III. THE DOCTRINES OF THE NEW AGE MOVEMENT
Yahweh Elohim of the
Old Testament
The Divinity of Man
Reincarnation and the
Law of Karma
Christology:
Jesus and the Christ
New Age Prayer:
Meditation and Invocation
IV. CURRENT TRENDS
The Utopian New Age
Future
The Occultic Bent of
the New Age Future
Centering and Holy
Mantras
Peace: The Global Enticement
The United Nations:
Establishing a Global Spirituality
One International
Order: Freemasonry
The Plan Exposed
V. THE PLAN OF GENESIS 3 IN THE CONTEMPORARY SETTING
Going Out on a Limb
Indeed, Has God Said?
You Surely Shall Not
Die!
Your Eyes Will Be
Opened
Ye Shall Be as Gods
VI. CONCLUSION and BIBLIOGRAPHY
A Theological Analysis of the New Age Movement
CHAPTER
I
INTRODUCTION
Need for This Thesis
The Bible envisions a period of increasing apostasy during the
Church Age which will reach its fullness in the Great Tribulation. Included in this apostasy is the intensification of
spiritual deception (the “Mystery of Iniquity” of 2 Thess. 2:7), culminating
in the recognition and reign of the son of Perdition, the Antichrist.
In the parable
of the wheat and tares (Matt. 13:24-30), Jesus taught that evil would exist and
grow, intermingling with the good until the time of the “harvest” (Matt.
13:30). Samuel Andrews quotes
Archbishop Trench regarding this parable:
We learn that evil is not as so many dream, gradually to wane and
disappear
before good, but is ever to develop itself more fully, even as on the
other side
good is to unfold itself more and more mightily also.
Thus it will go on until at
last they stand face to face, each in its highest manifestation in the
persona of
Christ and Antichrist. . . Both are to grow, evil and good, till they
come to a head,
till they are ripe, one for destruction, and the other for full
salvation.[1]
Since the
first century inception of the church, this spirit of antichrist has been at
work
(1 John 4: 1-6) and spiritual warfare has been increasing.
The last quarter of the twentieth century is unveiling what may be one of
the final chapters in this battle between the forces of evil and God and His
people. A worldwide movement to
unify all religious and politico-economic systems is developing.
New Age author Marilyn Ferguson writes:
Something remarkable is underway.
It is moving with almost dizzying
speed, but it has no name and eludes description . . . . Within recent
history “it”
has infected
medicine, education, social science, hard science, even government
with its implications. It is
characterized by fluid organizations reluctant to create
hierarchical structures, averse to dogma.
It operates on the principle that change
can only be facilitated, not decreed.
It is short on manifestos. It
seems to speak
to something very old. And
perhaps, in integrating magic and science, art and
technology, it will succeed where all the king’s horses and all the
king’s men failed.[2]
It is imperative that the true Christian community be
alerted to the goals, strategies and theology of this global movement.
The spiritual deception of the New Age philosophies is having disastrous
spiritual effects even within the Church. Biblical
Christianity must be awakened to the threat of the new Age Movement. And yet the words of C.S. Lewis must be remembered:
“There are two equal and opposite errors into which our race can fall
about devils. One is to disbelieve
in their existence, the other is to believe and then feel an excessive and
unhealthy interest in them.”[3]
Purpose
The purpose of this thesis is to alert Christians that spiritual warfare is intensifying and can be seen especially in the occultic core of the New Age Movement. To this end the major theological concepts and goals of the movement will be documented.
Scope
The study opens with a discussion of the
historical roots of the movement, moves to its doctrines, adherents and status
in the last quarter of the twentieth century, and concludes with a comparison of
Satan’s strategies of Genesis 3
and the deceptive promises of the New Age Movement.
CHAPTER
II
THE HISTORICAL ROOTS OF THE NEW AGE MOVEMENT
The
Garden of Eden
The first
and second chapters of the book of Genesis record the creation of the heavens,
the earth and its inhabitants. In
the beginning all was well between God and his creation, “And God saw all that
He had made, and behold, it was very good” (Gen. 1:31a).
But a rebellion against God took place when the most beautiful of His
angelic creatures, Lucifer, said in his heart:
I will ascend to heaven;
I will raise my throne above the stars of God,
And I will sit on
the mount of assembly
In the recesses of the north.
I will ascend above the heights of the clouds;
I will make myself like the Most High (Isa. 14:13b-14).
With his desire to become like God, Lucifer introduced evil into the heavenly
realm of God’s righteous system. This
evil seed sprouted on earth when the serpent in the Garden of Eden subtly
convinced Eve, the first woman, that she could not trust God and His Word—that
she would not die as a result of eating the forbidden fruit, but that “. . .in
the day you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God,
knowing good and evil.” (Gen. 3:5b). Eve
had been deceived, but Adam knowingly rebelled against his Lord God.
Satan’s plan to become the god of this world, and his desire to secure
the worship of men was realized.
By the time of
Noah, Satan and his allies had deceived all of mankind (Gen. 6:12) except Noah
and his family. The near-absolute
reign of evil caused God to use a global flood to destroy all mankind, saving
only Noah and his family. For the
second time mankind was given the opportunity to fill the earth with godly seed,
but evil succeeded and reigned, this time taking root through Noah’s son, Ham.
The forces of evil continued to deceive men, soon to climax in the Tower
of Babel incident.
The Rebellion at Ancient Babylon
The rebellion at
Babel was significant. Not many
years after the Flood of Noah evil again had ripened among men. Mankind proclaimed with his “tower” that he controlled
his own destiny apart from God. With
man’s inclination toward evil and the advantage of a common language, God saw
that nothing which man imagined and purposed to do would be impossible for him
(Gen. 11:6), so God scattered mankind over the face of the earth and instituted
the different languages.
A movement to
restore unity and purpose among men, apart from God, was begun.
Alluded to only sparingly in the bible, this anti-god development was
directed by Nimrod, the son of Cush and great grandson of Noah.
Alexander Hislop reports:
As Diodorus makes Ninus “the most ancient
of the Assyrian kings”, and
represents him as beginning those wars which raised his power to an
extraordinary
height by bringing the people
of Babylonia under subjection to him, while as yet
the city of Babylon was not in existence, this shows that he
occupied the very
position of Nimrod, of whom the Scriptural account is, that he first
“began to be
mighty on the earth,” and that the beginning of his kingdom was
Babylon. As
the Babel builders, when their speech was confounded, were scattered
abroad on
the face of the earth, and therefore deserted both the city and the tower
which they
had commenced to build, Babylon as a city, could not properly be
said to exist till
Nimrod, by establishing his power there, made it the foundation and
starting point
of his greatness.[4]
The
greatness of Nimrod in battle stimulated the worship of his people toward him,
and eventually he was considered to be deity—a man who became “God”.
The practice of deifying men can be accurately traced back to Nimrod as
can most of the pagan religious systems and gods of mythology (see Hislop pp.
1-90). Nimrod caused man to realize
that he can worship himself as God, thus making Nimrod the most prominent early
humanist. Surrounding Nimrod, a
system of secret rites and initiations was set up.
A person had to experience these secret rites and initiations in order to
“know” (Gk: gnosis) the secrets of the gods and of the universe.
This desire to “know” paved the way for the Gnostic philosophy of
early Christianity.
Gnosticism: Seedbed for New Age
Theology
In order to understand the theology of the New Age Movement it
is necessary to have a basic understanding of Gnosticism.
In all ages of which we have any literary records we find the tradition
of a recondite
knowledge which could not be disclosed to any save those who had
undergone the
severest tests as to their worthiness to receive it.
This knowledge was very generally
known under the term of the Mysteries, and it was concerned with
the deepest facts
of Man’s origin, nature, and connection with supersensual worlds and
beings, as well
as with the “natural” laws of the physical world.
It was no mere speculation; it was real
knowledge, Gnosis, knowledge of “the things that are,”
knowledge of Reality; a
knowledge which gave to its possessor powers which . . . have been
regarded as pertain-
ing only to the gods, and which are, indeed, widely denied today as
possibilities of
human achievement.
The basis of this knowledge, the fundamental principle on which all the
teachings
rested, was the essential inherent divine nature of man, and the
consequent possibility
of becoming by self-knowledge a god-like being.
The final goal, the final objective of
all the Mysteries, was the full realization by the Initiate of his
divine nature in its one-
ness with the Supreme Being—by whatever name called—who is the
Universe in all its
phases and in its wholeness and completeness.[5]
Early in the history of Christianity (probably within the lifetimes of John and
Paul) a heresy on the above tradition, called Gnosticism, infiltrated the
Church. The Gnostics were dualists,
believing that matter was evil and spirit was good.
Salvation is to be achieved mainly by ascetic acts to deny the desires of
the material
and evil body (Col. 2:14-17, 20-23) and by a special gnosis or knowledge
accessible
only to the elite among Christians. Faith is relegated to a subordinate position in this
system that panders to human pride.[6]
The Gnostic yearns for
redemption that will free him from the world and imprisonment in his body.
The key-note is knowledge (Gk: gnosis), a possession of ancient
secrets which would ultimately facilitate the soul’s union with God.
The goal of this knowledge was salvation.
In the Gnostic thought there was no resurrection.
Evil material bodies were not saved, only the soul or spirit could
inherit salvation. The
Christ-Spirit had given special gnosis to an elite while resting upon the man,
Jesus. This gnosis was necessary
for the process of salvation, but “only the pneumatic Gnostics, those
possessing the esoteric gnosis, and the psychic group, those having faith but no
access to the gnosis, would get to heaven.”[7]
Until the beginning of the twentieth century, Gnosticism was
seen as a Christian heresy. Within
this century evidence has been gathered (as in the Egyptian Nag Hammadi
documents) to show that Gnosticism may have existed as an independent pagan
religion that did not come out of, but penetrated into, Christianity.
Some early Christians with their Judaistic or pagan backgrounds fell
easily into Gnosticism. The pagan converts had a propensity toward accommodation and
syncretism. The Jewish converts had
a history of accepting pagan religious customs with their idols and godlets.
This Jewish history was established prior to their exodus from Egypt and
was amplified during the Babylonian captivity by the heirs of Nimrod.
Before the birth
of the Lord Jesus Christ Oriental mysticism, asceticism and astrology had
permeated the Greco-Roman world—a world quite troubled by the fear of death.
One source suggests that Gnostic religious thought emerged from Greek and
Oriental elements under the influence of dispersion Judaism.[8]
Since many early Christian congregations were heirs of the Jewish
synagogues of the Dispersion, it is possible that Gnostic thought entered
Christianity in this manner. The seeds of Gnosticism, then, can be traced to a pool of
thought before the time of Christ that emphasized an added light, or a secret
knowledge necessary for fulfillment and salvation.
This way of thinking is quite similar to the Nimrod worship of ancient
Babylon and to the thought of the occultic core of the New Age Movement.
According the Cairns, “Gnosticism sprang from the natural
human desire to create a theodicy an explanation for the origin of evil.”[9]
Since matter was evil and God was righteous, He could not have created
matter. Therefore the Gnostics
developed the concept of a “demiurge.”
The demiurge was
“ one of a series of emanations from the high god of Gnosticism.
These emanations
were beings with less of spirit and increasingly more of matter.
The demiurge, as one
of these emanations, had enough of spirit in him to have creative power
and enough of
matter to create the evil material world.
This demiurge the Gnostics identified with the
Jehovah of the Old Testament, whom they heartily disliked.[10]
The Christology of the Gnostics is also significant.
Since matter was evil and distinctly separated from God and His
righteousness, Jesus was but a man in whom “the Christ” resided for the time
between His baptism and early suffering on the cross.
The “Christ spirit” (or power or consciousness) left the body of the
man Jesus while on the cross. The
other Gnostic view held Jesus to be a phantom with only the appearance of a
physical body (Docetism).
Abingdon Bible Handbook summarizes Gnosticism with
these words:
. . . Gnosticism was spreading through the Mediterranean world.
It offered people
secret, saving
knowledge of the universe: of the
supreme, pure-spirit God, untouched
by “evil” matter; of the many divine beings (aeons) thought to
connect him with the
evil world, which had been created by the lowest aeon;
of man’s nature as sprit
enmeshed in an evil body; of the releasing of man’s spirit from evil
flesh for its ascent
to its proper heavenly abode through enlightenment brought by a divine
savior and
through secret, sacramental rites and mystical experiences; of practices
permitted and
forbidden those who have achieved freedom of spirit; of the coming
liberation of the
soul from the body at death, as the seal and consummation of a
resurrection already
achieved in mystical experience.[11]
The most influential group of Gnostics, called Valentinians,
was established in Rome around A.D. 140.[12]
Other Gnostic groups were the Sethites (worshipped Seth), the Ophites or
Naasenes (worshipped the serpent), the Barbelo Gnostics (who stressed the role
of their hero Barbelo in Valentinian Gnosticism), the Marcionites (followers of
Marcion of about A.D. 145) and other closely related groups such as the
Cerenthians, the Encratites, the Hermetics, and the Docetists.
Although
it is not the purpose of this thesis to document the history and theology of
Gnosticism, a look into the aforementioned Hermetics supplies some interesting
insights regarding the derivation of their name.
Alexander Hislop states:
. . .Who was the
historical Bel? He must have been Cush; for “Cush begat Nimrod”
(Gen. 10:8); and Cush is generally represented as having been a ring
leader in the great
apostasy (see Gregorius Turonensis, De rerun Franc., lib. i, apud,
Bryant, vol. II. pp.
403,404. Gregory attributes
to Cush what was said more generally to have befallen
his son; but his statement shows the belief in his day, which is amply
confirmed from
other sources, that Gush had a pre-eminent share in leading mankind away
from the
true worship of God.). But
again Cush as the son of Ham was Her-mes or Mercury;
for Hermes is just an Egyptian synonym for the “son of Ham”.
Now Hermes was the
great original prophet of idolatry; for he was recognized by the pagans
as the author
of their religious rites, and the interpreter of the Gods.
The distinguished Gesenius
identifies him with the Babylonian Nebo, as the prophetic god; and a
statement of
Hyginus shows that he was known as the grand agent in that movement which
produced the division of tongues.[13]
So according to
this line of thought, Cush was Mercury and Mercury is fabled to have acted as
the interpreter between the men whose tongues had been divided at Babel.
Hence an interpreter is called a Hermeneute after Mercury or Hermes, the
interpreter of the gods. The Gnostics had their hermetic sect which, in name, recalled
the family of Nimrod, and today there is the field of Hermeneutics.
Identified with
Hermes is the Egyptian God, Thoth, also called Hermes Trismegistus. Hermes Trismegistus is the reputed founder of
“. . .alchemy and other occult sciences. . . .”[14]
To this Hermes “. . .was attributed the authorship of all the strictly
sacred books generally called by Greek authors Hermetic.[15]
The name of Hermes was placed at the head of many ancient syncretistic
writings. These writings were
. . .partly of an Oriental tendency, partly an offshoot of popular Greek
philosophy,
partly Stoic. They are all
more or less mystical and Gnostic in tone, but represent no
single dogmatic system. . . . A
number of these pieces were put together into what is
called the Corpus
Hermeticum, which still survives.[16]
The seed
of evil and deception which was planted in the Garden of Eden and revitalized
after the flood of Noah, through the line of Cush and Nimrod, survives to this
day. Hislop records that the Greek
god Dionysus was Bacchus who was ultimately the “Branch of Cush” worshipped
in Babylon as El-Bar or God-the-Son and these all refer back to Cush, Nimrod and
their heirs.[17]
Annie Besant verifies and expands this lineage:
Erigena teaches the restitution of all things under the form of the
Dionysian adunatio
or deificatio. These
are the permanent outlines of what may be called the philosophy of
mysticism in Christian times, and it is remarkable with how little
variation they are
repeated from age to age.
In the eleventh century Bernard of Clairvaux. . .and Hugo of S. Victor carry on the mystic tradition, with Richard of S. Victor in the following century, and S. Bonaventura the Seraphic Doctor, and the great S. Thomas Aquinas. . .in the thirteenth. Thomas Aquinas dominates the Europe of the Middle Ages, by his force of character no less than by his learning and piety. He asserts “revelation” as one source of knowledge, Scripture and tradition being the two channels in which it runs, and the influence, seen in his writings, of the Pseudo-Dionysus links him to the Neo-Platonists. The second source is Reason, and here the channels are the Platonic philosophy and the methods of Aristotle— the latter an alliance that did Christianity no good, for Aristotle became an obstacle to the advance of the higher thought, as was made manifest in the struggles of Giordano Bruno, the Pythagorean. Thomas Aquinas. . .remains as a type of the union of theology and philosophy—the aim of his life. These belong to the great Church of western Europe, vindicating her claim to be regarded as the transmitter of the holy torch of mystic learning. . . . In this century also S. Elizabeth of Hungary shines out. . .while Eckhart. . .proves himself a worthy inheritor of the Alexandrian schools. . . .
Eckhart is followed in the fourteenth century by John Tauler, and Nicolas of Basel. . . From these sprang up the Society of the Friends of God, true mystics and followers of the old tradition. . . . So linked together are the followers of the wisdom in all ages. . . . Thomas a. Kempis. . . . Cardinal Nicolas of Cusa. . .Giordano Bruno. . .Paracelsus, who drew his knowledge directly from the original eastern fountain, instead of through Greek channels. . . .
Jacob Bohme. . .S. Teresa. . .S. John of the Cross. . .S. Francois de Sales. . . .Mme. de Guyon. . .Miguel de Molinos. . . .
Henry More (A.D. 1614-1687). . .Thomas Vaughan, and Robert Fludd the Rosicrucian. . .the Philadelphian Society. . .William Law. . .S. Martin. . .
Nor should we omit Christian Rosenkreutz. . .whose mystic Society of the Rosy Cross, appearing in 1614, held true knowledge, and whose spirit was reborn in the “Comte de S. Germain,”. . .Mother Juliana of Norwich. . .
Eliphas Levi, has put rather well the loss of the Mysteries, and the need for their re-institution. “A great misfortune befell Christianity. The betrayal of the Mysteries by the false Gnostics—for the Gnostics, that is, those who know, were Initiates of primitive Christianity—caused the Gnosis to be rejected, and alienated the Church from the supreme truths of the Kabbala, which contain all the secrets of transcendental theology. . .recognize only those who know as teachers of those who believe.”[18]
This ancient heritage is obvious in the doctrines of the New Age movement whose initiated adherents claim to possess all of the ancient occult secrets.
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[1] Samuel Andrews, Christianity and Anti-Christianity in Their Final Conflict, p. vii.
[2] Marilyn Ferguson, The Aquarian Conspiracy, p. 18.
[3] C.S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters, p.3.
[4] Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons, p. 23
[5] William Kingsland, The Gnosis or Ancient Wisdom in the Christian Scriptures, p. 93
[6] Earle E. Cairns, Christianity Through the Centuries, p. 68.
[7] Ibid., p. 99.
[8] The New Bible Dictionary, 1962 ed., s.v. “Gnosticism,” by A.F. Wells, p. 473.
[9] Cairns, p. 78.
[10] Ibid., p. 98.
[11] Edward P. Blair, The Abingdon Bible Handbook, p. 305.
[12] The Wycliffe Bible encyclopedia, 1975 ed., s.v. “Gnosticism,” by A.K. Helmbold, 1:688.
[13] Hislop, pp. 25,26.
[14] Webster’s New Twentieth Century dictionary of the English Language, 1977 ed., s.v. “Hermes Trismegistus,” p. 852.
[15] Encyclopedia Britannica, s.v. “Hermes Trismegistus,” 11:505.
[16] Ibid.
[17] Hislop, pp.71-73.
[18] Annie Besant, Esoteric Christianity, pp. 110-117.