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astrologer Charles Strohmer remarks that "for most adherents of
astrology, it is enough that it ‘works.’ There is a fascination
with the power, without a suspicion as to the nature of that
power."1
We will now show that astrology works
through spiritistic power. The importance of this issue is obvious.
If spirits are the real power behind legitimate astrological
disclosures, then the acceptance of astrology in society is opening
the doors for millions of people to be influenced by the spirit
world. According to the Word of God, this means people are
contacting the world of demons, lying spirits whose primary goal is
spiritual deception and destruction.2
What evidence supports the claim that
astrology and spiritism are closely linked? In addition to evidence
we have already supplied, we offer the following four points which
were greatly expanded upon in our book Astrology: Do the Heavens
Rule Our Destiny?. 3
Pagan Religion
Historically, astrology is tied to
pagan gods and the spirit world. Astrology has always been connected
to spirits through its acceptance of and contact with supernatural
spirit beings who were held to be "gods".4 In every
civilization, the acceptance of polytheism and the contacting and
worship of the "gods" has been a fundamentally spiritistic
phenomenon.5 (cf. 1 Corinthians 10:20).
Spiritistic Endorsement
The spirit world actively promotes
astrology. That the spirits are interested in promoting astrology
can be seen by the following three facts. First, many spirits have
channeled books on astrology through their human mediums. Edgar
Cayce’s occult "readings" were saturated with
astrology.6 Channeled astrological literature includes Alice
Bailey’s Esoteric Astrology;7 Cynthia Bohannon’s The
North and South Nodes;8 Roman Catholic Irene Diamond’s works,
e.g., A New Look at the Twelve Houses, and Astrology in
the Holy Bible; Ted George and Barbara Parkers’ Sinister
Ladies of Mystery: The Dark Asteroids of Earth, and many
others.9 (A related fact is that a large number of professional
astrologers actively promote spiritism; we gave several examples in
our book on astrology.10
Second, many spiritistic societies
actively promote astrology, e.g., The White Eagle Lodge, Rosicrucian
Fellowship, Theosophical Society, Sabian Assembly, The Church of
Light.11 Virtually none forbid it. Third, some people who first come
in contact with the spirit world testify that they were told by the
spirits to pursue the study of astrology (e.g., astrologer Irene
Diamond12).
Astrologers’ Confessions
Former astrologers also concede their power was
spiritistic. We think it is significant that many former astrologers
have now concluded that the power behind astrology did not come from
the stars, but from the power of demons.
Karen Winterburn was a professional
astrologer for 12 years, schooled in humanistic astrology. In 1988,
she took part in the debate with two professional astrologers on
"The John Ankerberg Show." But even as an astrologer she
admitted, "I was convinced it [the astrological information]
wasn’t coming from me.…"13 In a prepared statement for our
book (signed October 11, 1988) she stated:
The twelve years I spent in the
occult involved a logical progression from humanistic astrology to
spirit channeling to occult involvement. Astrology as a divination
tool was the perfect entrance. It appeared to be secular,
technical, and humanistic, a "neutral" tool. In
addition, its occult presuppositions were not immediately
apparent. When it began to "work" for me, I became
hooked. I became driven to find out the "hows" and the
"whys."
This led me right into channeling,
a sanitized term for spirit mediumship. In 12 years of serious
astrological study and professional practice, I never met a really
successful astrologer—even the most "scientific"
one—who did not admit among their professional peers that
spiritism was the power behind the craft. "Spirit
guide," "higher self," "ancient god,"
"cosmic archetype," whatever name is used—the
definition points to the same reality: a discarnate, personal
intelligence claiming to be a god-in-progress. Such intelligences
have access to information and power that many people covet and
they have a desire to be trusted and to influence human beings.
Once the astrologer becomes
dependent upon one or more of them, these spirit intelligences
(the biblical demons) lead the astrologer into forms of spiritual
commitment and worship. This is the worst kind of bondage.
Seasoned astrologers who have experienced fairly consistent and
dramatic successes in character reading and prognostication
invariably become involved in some form of worship of these
demons.
I have seen this occur in myriad
forms—from the full-blown revival of ancient religions (Egyptian
and Chaldean) to the ritualization of Jungian psychotherapy. The
bottom line reality is always the worship of the spirits (demons)
the astrologer has come to rely on.14
Another former professional
astrologer (seven years) is Charles Strohmer. In his critique of
astrology, What Your Horoscope Doesn’t Tell You, he
also discusses the fundamentally spiritistic nature and power of
astrology. "As we look honestly at astrology, we begin to see
that adherents of this system—without knowing it—are banging on
the door through which communication is established with
knowledgeable but yet deceptive spirit beings.... In much the same
way that the palm of the hand or the crystal [ball] is ‘contact
material’ for the fortune-teller—the horoscopic chart is
used by the astrologer.... It is the mediumistic point of
interaction.... Without contact with spirit beings, there would be
no astrological self-disclosures."15
Dr. Atlas Laster received his Ph.D.
from the University of Pittsburgh for his work on astrology. He was
an active astrologer for 15 years. He observed that as an
astrologer, "I did not feel that astrology was an occult
art."16 Yet after he renounced astrology, he came to realize
"there are certain rituals and knowledge associated with
astrology which may attract spirits of divination."17
Spirit Interpretation
Chart interpretation is often
accomplished through spiritistic inspiration. The spirit world can
often be the source of astrologers’ interpretations of their
charts. Some openly admit that they are assisted in their chart
interpretations by spirit guides. By this they mean that their
spirit guides speak to them directly in their minds and help them
interpret a chart. But usually the influence is indirect and less
obvious. For example, astrologers may report feeling somehow
"directed" to certain chart symbols or factors, or that
something in a chart will suddenly "jump out" at them.18
In New Age practice, distinguishing spiritistic assistance from
normal human intuition is not always easy. That these two sources
can be blurred presents a dilemma for the astrologer. How is it
possible for them to know that their "intuition" is truly
human, and not from the spiritistic source?
In Astrology: Do the Heavens Rule
Our Destiny? we presented four interrelated lines of evidence
showing that the spirit world can indeed be active in helping
astrologers to interpret their charts.19
1. Like a kind of mandala, the chart can become
a means to altered states of consciousness, the allegedly
"higher" consciousness that is so often promoted by the
occult for spirit contact
2. The chart can become a "living"
power (a focusing agent) for spirits to work through. Like a
living being, the chart "speaks" to the astrologer
through images in the mind, being directed to certain aspects of
the chart, and other psychic impressions.
3. Psychic or spiritistic inspiration
is often necessary for "proper" chart interpretation (in
our book this was documented with five sub-points) and is admitted
by many astrologers, e.g., American Federation of Astrologers
president Doris Chase Doane agrees that "it is almost
impossible" to accurately read a chart without psychic guidance
and, as noted, many astrologers of past and present have declared
their belief that astrology works by the power of spirits. 20
4. Because all forms of divination sooner or later
contact spirits, it is logical to assume divination by means of
astrology charts is also spiritistic.
The above information reveals why astrology
can sometimes work. However, astrologers and their clients must also
ask the question, "At what cost"?
Notes:
1. Charles Strohmer, What Your Horoscope
Doesn’t Tell You, Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1988,
p. 42.
2. This is extensively documented in Encyclopedia
of New Age Beliefs.
3. John Ankerberg, John Weldon, Astrology: Do
the Heavens Rule Our Destiny? Eugene, OR: Harvest House
Publishers, 1989, pp. 201-55.
4. Franz Cumont, Astrology and Religion Among
the Greeks and Romans, New York: Dover, 1960; K. C. Tunnicliffe,
Aztec Astrology, Essex, Great Britain: L. N. Fowler &
Co., Ltd., 1979; Firmicus Maternus, Ancient Astrology Theory and
Practice [original title: Matheseos Libri VIII, 334 A.
D.], trans. Jean Rhys Bram, Parkridge, NJ: Noyes Press, 1975; Roy A.
Gallant, Astrology Sense or Nonsense? Garden City, NY:
Doubleday, 1974.
5. For documentation see Encyclopedia of New Age
Beliefs.
6. Margaret H. Gammon, Astrology and the Edgar
Cayce Readings, Virginia Beach, VA: ARE Press, 1987.
7. Alice A. Bailey, Esoteric Astrology, New
York: Lucis Publishing, 1975.
8. Cynthia Bohannon, The North and South Nodes:
The Guideposts of the Spirit: A Comprehensive Interpretation of the
Nodal Placements, Jacksonville, FL: Arthur Publications, 1987.
9. Ankerberg and Weldon, Astrology, pp.
210-12.
10. Ibid., pp. 219-20.
11. Ibid., pp. 212-19; Sri Chinmoy Astrology: The
Supernatural and Beyond, Jamaica, NY: Agni Press, 1973; Elman
Bacher, Studies in Astrology, (9 vols.), Oceanside, CA: The
Rosicrucian Fellowship, 1968; Marc Edmund Jones, The Sabian
Manual: A Ritual for Living, Boulder, CO: Sabian/ Shambhala
Publications, rev., 1976.
12. Mae R. Wilson-Ludlam, Interpret Your Rays
Using Astrology, Tempe, AZ: American Federation of Astrologers,
1986.
13. Former astrologer Karen Winterburn, personal
phone conversation, August 1988.
14. Personal correspondence, emphasis added.
15. Strohmer, Horoscope, pp. 51,54.
16. Letter from Dr. Atlas Laster, Jr., September
23, 1988, containing a copy of a letter by astrology Harry Darling
M.D., approving his Ph.D. dissertation on astrology submitted to the
University of Pittsburgh ("On the Psychology of Astrology: The
Use of Genethliacal Astrology in Psychological Counseling,"
1976), p. 4.
17. Ibid.
18. Strohmer, Horoscope, p. 53; Tracy
Marks, The Art of Chart Interpretation, Sebastopol, CAL CRCS
Publications, 1986, pp. 86-87.
19. Ankerberg, Weldon, Astrology, pp.
225-55.
20. Ibid., pp. 211-20; other documentation found
in Encyclopedia of New Age Beliefs.
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