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NEW
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Warnings from Occult Practitioners -
Part 1
by Dr.
John Ankerberg, Dr. John Weldon |
Who are the casualties in
warfare? The disobedient, the unarmed, the weak, the undisciplined,
and those with illusions about the war being somewhere else. So too
are the casualties in spiritual warfare. —Michael Green, I Believe
in Satan’s Downfall
A widespread myth in our
society is that psychic practices are something good. Perhaps they are
controversial or questioned as to their legitimacy, but they are
certainly not considered harmful. In the following material we will
prove this perspective is indefensible and offer specific documentation
from a variety of sources and categories.
We will begin by examining
the concerns of occult practitioners themselves, who, as we found, are
very aware of the pitfalls of psychic practice. Unfortunately, such
persons often order their thinking along the lines of a "careful versus
careless" approach to the occult, and it is primarily the latter which
they warn about. This view is itself problematic because it is not how
one approaches occult practice that determines safety. All occult
practice should be avoided on the basis of God’s warnings and the fact
that psychic exploration easily links one to a demonic realm that is,
put simply, beyond human capacity to master. For example, in his astute
study of human evil, People of the Lie, M. Scott Peck points out
that, among humans, evil people are far more prevalent than most suspect
and that "these who are evil are masters of disguise; they are not apt
to wittingly disclose their true colors—either to others or to
themselves."1 If this is true among men, how much more must
it be true among those spirits who are even yet more cunning and more
evil?
For example, no rational
person goes swimming in shark-infested waters. The only people who do
either don’t believe in sharks, don’t know sharks are present, or are
just plain foolhardy. Of course, there are those who might enter the
water because they have been assured the fins they see are the fins of
playful dolphins. But in a moment of terror they will discover too late
that a horrible mistake was made.
Nevertheless, those who
practice the occult today believe in the safety of their activities for
a variety of reasons.
Psychics are convinced their
psychic gifts are from God (hence "godly"), or that they constitute
benevolent higher powers of the mind available to anyone. What could be
wrong with seeking God? What could be dangerous about developing
human potential?
Occultists who engage in more
serious rituals, but are carefully trained by adepts, believe they have
the personal wisdom to conduct their practices safely. One Satanist told
us that because he was united to the powers of darkness he had no
reason to fear them.
Parapsychologists believe
they retain the safeguards of science in their research into occult
phenomena.
Followers of Eastern paths
accept the promises of their guru that he will protect them from
possible harm. But in every case, these people are pursuing a path of
potential danger.
Unfortunately, even when
confronted with the hazards, most of those involved seem to feel that
the dangers don’t apply to them personally and that somehow they are
beyond the level of susceptibility. Such people may trust the
"assurances" of their spirit guides, or feel that they have advanced to
"higher levels of consciousness" and are "in control," or that they are
simply neutral scientific investigators, who won’t be affected by some
silly superstition of occult dangers or "curses."
But who has ever explored the
psychic realm and claimed they have understood its true nature? If our
ignorance of the physical universe is still galactic, how much more of
the unseen universe? Is not humankind’s perpetual inability to ever know
what really goes on in that world, and the dangers that might exist,
sufficient reason at least for caution?
Why would a loving God warn
against occult activity to begin with if such activity were harmless—or
helpful (Deuteronomy 18:9-12)?
When the American
spiritualist movement began with the Fox sisters in 1848, the first
messages from the spirits were typically warm and loving: "Dear
Friends... you must proclaim these wonderful truths to the world. This
is the dawning of a new era. God is with you and good spirits will
protect you in this vital endeavor."2 But after a lifetime of
proselytization for spiritism—and a life of misery, including being led
into alcoholism and immorality—Margaret Fox herself confessed the
following publicly in 1888: "I am here tonight, as one of the founders
of spiritualism, to denounce it as absolute falsehood... the most wicked
blasphemy the world has ever known."3
Former witch Audrey Harper
initially thought witchcraft a good thing. But it took 17 years of
psychiatric care to undo the damage it did to her.4
If real dangers exist in the
physical world, can we logically expect the spiritual world to be full
of goodness? If a race of more powerful beings inhabits that world, if
their hatred for man is proven, if experimentation can mean deception
with eternal consequences, who in their right mind would risk
everything? Isn’t it possible that the fact of man’s historic belief in
demons and devils tells us something about learning a lesson the hard
way? Is it not just possible that malevolent entities, far
greater in power (2 Peter 2:11), would seek to deceive men in such a way
as to ensure their spiritual death? Are there not thousands of personal
testimonies to these very facts: that deceptive and evil spirits exist,
and that their purpose is man’s spiritual and other destruction? Then
one can but wonder how psychic practitioners think themselves immune
from all dangers.
In considering the warnings
given by occultists, we must reemphasize they simply don’t go far enough
because, biblically speaking, they are dealing in a realm "which they do
not understand" (Jude 8,10). Indeed, usually they are openly
promotional. They believe in "safe" and "mature" mediumism, in the
"responsible" development of psychic abilities, in the "scientific"
investigation of the occult—in the prevalent error that with the right
wisdom or information man in his own power apart from God is able to
distinguish spiritual good from spiritual evil.
For example, one prominent
psychic researcher stated his belief that greater personal development
of mediumism and knowledge of its ways is the best safeguard against its
dangers.
Mediumship is necessary!
Without it there would be no means of knowledge, no instruments
through which to study the psychic plane; but mediumship, in exact
proportion to the magnetic powers it confers, becomes a greater and
ever greater source of danger, the further its development is carried,
unless the control of those powers can be handled with a firm hand and
understood in all its aspects. Knowledge is the best safeguard, and
knowledge will be best obtained by those who can study all the
conditions of psychic development.5
Expertise is certainly
necessary for something like handling explosives, but occult knowledge
per se would seem to be useless when confronting lying spirits whose
primary goal is deception and entrapment. This was the conclusion of no
less an authority than the famous eighteenth-century medium Emanuel
Swedenborg:
When spirits begin to speak
with a man, he ought to beware that he believes nothing whatever from
them; for they say almost anything. Things are fabricated by them, and
they lie.... They would tell so many lies and indeed with solemn
affirmation that a man would be astonished.... If a man listens and
believes they press on, and deceive, and seduce in [many] ways.... Let
men beware therefore [and not believe them].6
Psychical researcher J. D.
Pearce-Higgins, vice chairman of the Churches Fellowship for Psychical
and Spiritual Studies (Great Britain) writes of the hazards of Ouija
board use and automatic writing in his "Dangers of Automatism." He
points out that people who endorse such methods have little
understanding of the disastrous possibilities:
I am a little surprised to
find that some parapyschologists tend to take a rather optimistic view
of the possible dangers. But those who write in this way have had
little experience of the disastrous psychological effects that can be
produced; it is precisely unstable individuals who resort to this form
of experiment. Inevitably, the personalities of young people who try
this method are still in a formative and therefore unstable period.
Such disturbances are difficult to cure, and there seems little
reference to them in the literature of psychiatry.7
While advocating allegedly
safe mediumism, he still warns:
These apparently simple
methods of attempting contact with the dead are extremely dangerous.
All the experienced mediums I know say the same—don’t do it!—and they
know, because they so often have people brought to them who are
obsessed or possessed by some mischievous or damaging spirit who has
got control of them and won’t let go. They find they are compelled to
go on with automatic writing—at all hours of day and night, they may
begin to hear hallucinatory voices telling them to do stupid and
filthy things; they are no longer master in the house of their own
minds and souls. It is often a difficult matter to cure them, and
there aren’t many mediums who can do it.8
He concludes with a somewhat
unique warning for a parapsychologist, at least in the realm of
automatism:
So it would seem that it is
not merely the unstable who should avoid this sort of practice but we
can guarantee no protection to ordinary balanced people, and the only
safe procedure is to stop all automatism, once and for all.9
(to be continued)
Notes:
1
M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie (New York: Simon & Schuster,
1983), p. 104.
2
Cf. Raphael Gasson, The Challenging Counterfeit (South
Plainfield, NJ: Bridge Publishing, 1966), p., 48.
3
Ibid.
4
Russ Parker, Battling the Occult (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity, 1990), p. 82.
5
Hereward Carrington, Your Psychic Powers and How to Develop Them
(Van Nuys, CA: Newcastle, 1975 rpt.), p. 203.
6
Samuel M. Warren, A Compendium of the Theological Writings of
Emanuel Swedenborg (New York: Swedenborg Foundation, 1977), p.
618; cf. Slater Brown, The Heyday of Spiritualism (New York:
Pocket, 1972), p. 63.
7
J. D. Pearce-Higgins, "Dangers of Automatism," Spiritual Frontiers,
Autumn 1970, p. 217.
8
Ibid., p. 221.
9
Ibid., p. 223.
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ANKERBERG SHOW |
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Copyright 2006, Ankerberg Theological Research Institute
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