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Dear freinds,
As many of you know, I am writing about my conversion from the Eastern path to Christ. I would like to incorporate similar testimony from those who have been on variuos "New Age" paths into some of my discussion. Does anybody know of publications along this line other than the four books I've listed below? The Beautiful Side of Evil (1982) by Johanna Michaelsen Inside the New Age Nightmare (1989) by Randall Baer The Light That Was Dark: From the New Age to Amazing Grace (1992) by Warren Smith Ransomed From Darkness: The New Age, Christian Faith, and the Battle for Souls by Moira Noonan I have yet to read all of the above, but the point of all of these authors seems to be consistent with my conclusion that there are powerful, supernatural forces that seek to seduce us away from the path of Christ. Also, if you have personally come to Christ after pursuing 'false gods' or 'false religions' and would like to share your testimony, please contact me. Your discussion would, of course, remain anonymous and I would disguise personal material where necessary to retain your anonymity. Thank you so much. much peace to you all! in Christ Jesus, shasha |
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Hi Shasha,
I read alot of books like those for a long time. My experience is working in the opposite direction. I have been more and more interested in the East for the last two years. Did coming out of the New Age movement bring more light? What, specifically, are you refering to. Shirley McLaine, chrystals, tarot, astrology, bad experiences with gurus or groups, or a combination of these? peace and caritas, mm <*))))>< |
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Hi Shasha,
I read alot of books like those for a long time. My experience is working in the opposite direction. I have been more and more interested in the East for the last two years. What was the realization that brought you to Christ? Did coming out of the New Age movement bring more light? What, specifically, are you referring to. Shirley MacLaine, crystals, tarot, astrology, channeling, experiences with gurus or groups, or a combination of these? peace and caritas, mm <*))))>< |
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Tal Brooke's Avatar of the Night recounts his time spent with Sai Baba in India.
- http://www.scp-inc.org/president/index.php There are quite of few books that bash the New Age, but the authors haven't spent much time there. Just do a search for Christianity and the New Age or Catholicism and the New Age and you'll find them. The Jesuit priest, Mitch Pacwa, has written a popular book, but I think he goes way overboard by completely discounting Jung's psychology and Matthew Fox's creation spirituality. |
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Phil, Yes, I don't think we need to throw out the baby with the bathwater. The term "new age" is a broad one. I think one can believe a lot of the "new age" beliefs without being a "new ager". Katy |
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Dear Michael,
-------------------------- What was the realization that brought you to Christ? --------------------------- Christ revealed Himself to me on a few occasions...I could see that He is Love Incarnate, the Lord of all lords, and the end of all searching for God. I define New Age as anything that aims to make us more 'spiritual' but denies the basic tenants of Christianity. ------------------------------------------- Thank you Phil and Katy for your suggestions. I don't want to do New Age bashing, but I'm after genuine accounts of folks who've been converted by a direct, mystical encounter with Christ after excursions into false religions. It is interesting to me that these people, myself included, seem to have some common experiences independent of one another: 1) we all report a period of acute, profound repentance once we see the Light of Christ and how lost we were; 2) we feel that there was actually a battle for our souls and now we are literally SAVED from some kind of destruction that would ultimately have ensued had we remained on the false path; 3) we feel profoundly, eternally grateful for God's saving Grace through Christ Jesus 4) we feel we've found HOME and the end of all seeking for peace and love is in our surrendered relationship with the God of Israel through Christ Jesus. much peace to you all, dear ones, shasha |
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| <w.c.>
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Shasha:
Here are some additional links from the one Phil posted re: Tal Brooke's account of Sai Baba. Some of these descriptions sound familiar from my experience among Hindu and Buddhists adepts: a kind of religious persona, sometimes with significant siddhis, or powers, coupled with the disciples addictive need for a mommy or daddy; these forces brought together seem to distort both the character of the seeker and the guru, even the ones that start out wanting to help in an understandably limited way, where one human being would tell another: "I can't help you like God can." The guru-disciple relationship is a culture-bound intimacy that quite literally has the seeker cleaving to the teacher as Divine, even though the teacher is fated to die like all others. In fairness, I've had a Hindu teacher that seemed quite kind, but her humanness was gradually discovered by her more intimate disciples as having this culture-bound tendency that puts the disciple in a subserviant position - not so unusual if you're from India and this resembled your authoritarian parent-child relationship. http://home.hetnet.nl/~ex-baba...ses/johnworldie.html http://home.hetnet.nl/~ex-baba...ls/articles/Paper%20'A%20Guru%20Accused'.html#Worldie |
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| <w.c.>
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"i don't see how you can live in such an insular imagined world. unless you live in the country with a bunch of red necks."
Asher: Keep this up, as you have before, and I will ban you from Shalom Place. You can appeal to Phil once that happens. |
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| <Asher>
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WC-- I erased it before you posted it here. Obviously we have different opinions that seem incommensurable. I will leave on my own will, if that makes you happy. I can't handle insular environments where people tend to pollute their politics with a mythically inflected religiousity. It must make people feel safe--to create such an imagined community. It doesn't seem ethical at all. And I won't even engage with it. You can erase my account. I'll be quite happy with that. And the red neck thing was a joke. Best, Asher |
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| <w.c.>
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You engage in it continually yourself by sniping, so don't croon your neck so self-righteously. As far as I'm concerned, don't return until you can spot the obvious in this.
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| <Asher>
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Spot the obvious in what? You'll have to elaborate. I'm not sure what you're talking about and why you can't take a joke about red necks. I come here once and in while and see your Islamaphobia. You have an insular border-line racist politics. And your religion is probably informed by it. I post general responses in hopes that others who are trolling here who may be Moslems, or can see beyond the Neo Con "rot" of Daniel Pipes will respond. That's not self-righteousness. It's responding to months of trolling here and finding your borderline racist fear mongering rhetoric. That's what I'm responding do. Let's get the facts straight. And peace and love and all that.
Inside me, there is not a trace of anger towards you, per se, but to this insularity. There is sadness--because I feel you to be a/the friend. Any way, Huuuuuuuu. Asher |
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| <w.c.>
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It has nothing to do with race, as anyone can see by honestly viewing the threads I've started over the years. However, your derogatory use of the term "red necks" has been seen before. And given your support of Hamas and Hizbollah, you're hardly in the position to critique who the "red necks" are, or aren't, or advocate honestly in the name of moderate Islam. Never mind that you've failed to post a single substantive retort to Pipe's views. As you say, you've been trolling and generalizing, all of that being, imo, a thinly-veiled agenda for appearing on this website in the first place. So off you go. I'm sure there's some leftist Islamic websites out there that would love to have you as part of their conspiratorial myth-making.
Asher is now banned from Shalom Place. Appeals to Phil for reconsideration are understood. |
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I can certainly agree with all of the above. My history includes a seeking after God in Rastafarianism, New Age Hinduism/Buddhism and Occultism. My conversion came about through what I believe was a direct intervention by God. I was immensely aware of my failings and false path. I repented and threw myself on the mercy and grace of God. I was aware that there was a battle for my soul and that I was saved by Jesus Christ for certain destruction without him. My life is lived in gratitude to God for saving me and remaining in relationship with me. My only struggle is with point 4). While I agree with the statement, my Christian walk has not been one of succesive victories. I am still confused, still concerned at times that I am in the wrong Christian tradition and struggle with my salvation. But these doubts and worries and interspersed between profound times of connection with God and the peace that it brings. Another interesting development in recent times is my reconsideration of aspects of my past and their role in my formation. In the past everything prior to my conversion was wrong, evil, deception etc. Now I am needing to sift through my past and look for God working through it all and bringing me to a greater revelation of himself in Christ Jesus. |
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Shasha,
Agree with 1-4 above, and continually recycling through the stages. "Born again," as they say, at 6, confirmed and a "true believer" at 14, "spirit-filled" at 21, "twelve-stepped" at 34, "centering-prayered" with "kundalini" at 37, and "integral" at 43. Currently, mostly "confused" ... Anyway, Happy Thanksgiving! |
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Dear w.c.,
Thanks for those links. And thanks for the clean-up job. As a matter of fact, I am a "hill-billy," close cousin with the red-necks. That's what the Albanian city-folk call us who were born in the mountains. ;') I do appreciate Asher's point that one can be grateful to other spiritual paths. Afterall, once you've experienced the counterfeit, one can more deeply appreciate the genuine. Dear Jacques, I'd love to hear more about your spiritual path and how you came to Christ. If you've written it down somewhere and want to share it, send it my way. Since coming to Christ, I've not had successive victories either! Lots of pain and suffering and dreadful choices, out-of-control behaviors... Jacques and friends, check out Brad Scott's brief testimony. He studied with a guru for seven years and was on his way to becoming his successor. Notice the elements of repentance, gratitude and faith at arriving HOME in Christ and never looking back, despite storms and challenges. I especially can relate to what he says about kundalini in comparison to the love of Christ that he experienced directly: "Not even the thundering power of the "kundalini" could match the brilliance and power of Christ's presence in my soul... The incarnate Christ, I came to discover, is the secret of the ages, the alpha and the omega: "the mystery of God . . . in whom all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge" resides (Col. 2:2-3). The risen Christ is the hidden power of all our strivings, the power of life and love that will, if we believe, remain always "at work within us" (Eph. 4:20). I no longer had to look elsewhere for meaning. I had found an abundant, endless supply of all the wisdom and love I would ever need. I stopped looking for light in all the wrong places." http://www.watchman.org/na/scotttestimony.htm Consider that people who leave Christianity to become something else don't go through repentance or any kind of deep conviction for having been spiritually deceived. They might say good-bye to a Christianity that is limited, nice moral teachings, but rule-bound and shallow. They might say, "Whew! I�m glad I�ve found some supernatural-minded folks like me, and I'm glad to leave behind those narrow-minded Christians who don't have a clue about the awesome power of kundalini and the true path to God / enlightenment!" But there is not this sense of being convicted with shame and a sense of having been severely deceived as in so many who have a profound mystical encounter with Lord Jesus. much peace to you all, dear ones, shasha |
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Dear Jacques,
I did read your story and all the responses. Thank you for sharing. Your story reminds me of a few others. Todd Bentley, whom I've mentioned to you on another thread, also reported terrible demonic attacks for months (?) following his conversion to Christ. He mixed various drugs and was into the occult...perhaps more so than you. You might be inspired by his autobiography, Journey into the Miraculous. Now God uses him mightely as an evangelist, with extraordinary miracles following. Also Randall Bear found enlightenment through his use of drugs and then was heavily into the New Age Movement for 15 years before he realized that Satan was behind his seemingly 'glorious' ride. He had actually become internationally know for his work on crystals and new age 'science.' He came under heavy demonic attack one day while sitting in meditation in his "ascension chamber." He was bed-ridden by these attacks and dismayed that none of his spirit guides whom he had chanelled for so many years were able to rescue him. It wasn't until he repeated a prayer with TV evangelist Pat Robertson that his deliverance and healing began. Very moving account, especially the way he describes his acute repentance. Drugs are clearly the work of Satan. I know a priest, Father John Corapi who was heavily into drugs, money, wild-living, the works, for 20 years before Christ saved him. He said he's never heard a confession that was worse than anything he'd done. Corapi used to hang out with drug lords who would literally chant Satantic verses over huge shipments of cocaine in order to get people hooked on it and demonically possessed. False doctrine is also clearly the work of Satan. His greatest trick is to sprinkle lies amidst a whole lot of Christ-like truths or super evolutionary consciousness truths. The marvelous, scintillating, intellectually captivating works of so many New Agers will have you nodding your head in amazement and awe...but they all feel like false prophets to me. You got some good advise on that thread. In particular, I resonated with what Stephen said to you, Jacques. You may want to re-read those responses...now that you are in a slightly different place than you were in July. Have you ever tried the age-old spiritual discipline of fasting combined with prayer? One can fast from anything, TV, talking, just one meal, etc. The point seems to be to make a sacrifice of some kind for the sake of drawing closer to God. Pray with gratitude. Pray to be open to receive all of God's blessings. Let the restlessness in your spirit come to the forefront and pray for healing. If you were able to hear Satan's voice, you will be able to hear God's voice.... much peace to you and your family, shasha |
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Dear Michael,
----------------------------------------- Currently, mostly "confused" ... ----------------------------------------- Let us pray against that spirit of confusion! and wishing you peace, s |
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s,
Transformative experiences are promised. Yours shows promise. Good to have you here. I do believe that an open gateway such as the new age movement carries a host of opportunities for deception in the very fertile ground of sensitive and somewhat vulnerable seekers. Many have had their fingers singed. I'm going to start a thread on such an individual, and perhaps you can spot a few counterfeits therein. caritas, mm <*)))))>< |
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I think, as with many paths in the spiritual, we need to read these sorts of books with care and caution.
I do not believe in the exclusivist idea that only Christianity is absolutely true, and all other religions are the creation of Satan. While I do believe the fullness of salvation is to be found by the path of Christ, a close study of other world religions shows most have profound depth and spiritual insight. However, the danger and mistake many Westerners make is we turn religion into an idol for pleasing the self. Many people profoundly misunderstand Eastern religious teachings like 'detachment' and 'egolessness' and quite often Eastern religious ideas which in their original context, having very profound meaning as a part of an integrated spiritual path, become little more than worthless mantras and excuses for all kinds of spiritual decadence. It would be as if someone took the Holy Trinity for example, and reduced it to tarot cards and crystal gazing. People forget generally, spiritual paths of enlightenment or contemplation are designed for people brought up in the faith. In Judaism for example, study of the mysteries of the Kabbalah is restricted to people who are 40 years old and over and who are in good standing both in religious law and society. Similarly in Buddhism, while enlightenment sometimes occurs very fast, other times it may take several lifetimes to reach final peace in nirvana. Similarly in Islam, one cannot become a Sufi unless one already is a good Muslim who is mature, married, and well-established in the obeyance of Islamic law (shariah). Mysticism has traditionally always been strongly tied to institutional religion, and even mystics like Meister Eckhart would have found the concept of mysticism incomprehensible detached from their Christian faith. In all healthy religion, mystical experience and practice requires healthy discernment and also a good spiritual guide, and practice according to the psychological temperament of the person. Attempting to undergo the quest entirely on one's own is risky and fraught with many pitfalls. |
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I agree with Gregory. I think people may just want the high of an experience without the grounding in a daily routine (whatever traditon thats within).
when I was in may late teens i went on a lot of retreats and found myself in places where it felt very spiritually dark. looking back I think I was searching for something authentic and non-formulaic. Having a spiritual director and/or charing my journey with others in a n honest way has been really helpful - being honest about my doubts and questions r,e christianity and other religions. But Jesus love and sacrifice are so powerful... I personally find zazen useful but I tend to recite a phrase from the bible in my head. I think so many people are longing for a non-judgemental and open christianity , but one that is grounded in love. For me Pauls wriitngs in Romans are making so much sense now here is an article about a zen christian minister. Sasha what are your thoughts on this? http://www.sotozen-net.or.jp/k...ends/zf15_1/feat.htm |
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Apologies ... I see your name is Shasha
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Gregory,
I am so sorry, but I didn't see your post until just this morning. You bring up some popular points, and I would like to respond to them right away. However, I'm super-busy at the moment, and will get to your comments as soon as I can. (Hope you're still around! ;-) Rachel, thanks for your sharing and for the post. I will come back to resond when I've got a breather! peace to all, Shasha |
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