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FOREWORD
The present study is concerned
with the complex phenomenon of New Age which is
influencing many aspects of contemporary
culture.
The study is a provisional report. It is the fruit of
the common reflection of the Working Group on New Religious
Movements, composed of staff members of different
dicasteries of the Holy See: the Pontifical Councils for
Culture and for Interreligious Dialogue (which are the
principal redactors for this project), the Congregation for
the Evangelization of Peoples and the Pontifical Council for
Promoting Christian Unity.
These reflections are offered primarily to those
engaged in pastoral work so that they might be able to
explain how the New Age movement differs from the Christian
faith. This study invites readers to take account of the way
that New Age religiosity addresses the spiritual hunger of
contemporary men and women. It should be recognized that the
attraction that New Age religiosity has for some Christians
may be due in part to the lack of serious attention in their
own communities for themes which are actually part of the
Catholic synthesis such as the importance of man' spiritual
dimension and its integration with the whole of life, the
search for life's meaning, the link between human beings and
the rest of creation, the desire for personal and social
transformation, and the rejection of a rationalistic and
materialistic view of humanity.
The present publication calls attention to the need
to know and understand New Age as a cultural current, as
well as the need for Catholics to have an understanding of
authentic Catholic doctrine and spirituality in order to
properly assess New Age themes. The first two chapters
present New Age as a multifaceted cultural tendency,
proposing an analysis of the basic foundations of the
thought conveyed in this context. From Chapter Three onwards
some indications are offered for an investigation of New Age
in comparison with the Christian message. Some suggestions
of a pastoral nature are also made.
Those who wish to go deeper into the study of New Age
will find useful references in the appendices. It is hoped
that this work will in fact provide a stimulus for further
studies adapted to different cultural contexts. Its purpose
is also to encourage discernment by those who are looking
for sound reference points for a life of greater fulness. It
is indeed our conviction that through many of our
contemporaries who are searching, we can discover a true
thirst for God. As Pope John Paul II said to a group of
bishops from the United States: Pastors must honestly
ask whether they have paid sufficient attention to the
thirst of the human heart for the true 'living water' which
only Christ our Redeemer can give (cf. Jn 4:7-13).
Like him, we want to rely on the perennial freshness
of the Gospel message and its capacity to transform and
renew those who accept it (AAS 86/4, 330).
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1.
WHAT SORT OF REFLECTION?
The following reflections are
meant as a guide for Catholics involved in preaching the
Gospel and teaching the faith at any level within the
Church.
This document does not aim at providing a set of
complete answers to the many questions raised by the New Age
or other contemporary signs of the perennial human search
for happiness, meaning and salvation. It is an invitation to
understand the New Age and to engage in a genuine dialogue
with those who are influenced by New Age thought. The
document guides those involved in pastoral work in their
understanding and response to New Age spirituality, both
illustrating the points where this spirituality contrasts
with the Catholic faith and refuting the positions espoused
by New Age thinkers in opposition to Christian faith. What
is indeed required of Christians is, first and foremost, a
solid grounding in their faith. On this sound base, they can
build a life which responds positively to the invitation in
the first letter of Saint Peter: always have your
answer ready for people who ask you the reason for the hope
that you all have. But give it with courtesy and respect and
a clear conscience (1 P 3, 15 f.).
1.1.
Why now?
The beginning
of the Third Millennium comes not only two thousand years
after the birth of Christ, but also at a time when
astrologers believe that the Age of Pisces known to
them as the Christian age is drawing to a close.
These reflections are about the New Age, which takes its
name from the imminent astrological Age of Aquarius. The New
Age is one of many explanations of the significance of this
moment in history which are bombarding contemporary
(particularly western) culture, and it is hard to see
clearly what is and what is not consistent with the
Christian message. So this seems to be the right moment to
offer a Christian assessment of New Age thinking and the New
Age movement as a whole.
It
has been said, quite correctly, that many people hover
between certainty and uncertainty these days, particularly
in questions relating to their identity.1 Some say that the
Christian religion is patriarchal and authoritarian, that
political institutions are unable to improve the world, and
that formal (allopathic) medicine simply fails to heal
people effectively. The fact that what were once central
elements in society are now perceived as untrustworthy or
lacking in genuine authority has created a climate where
people look inwards, into themselves, for meaning and
strength. There is also a search for alternative
institutions, which people hope will respond to their
deepest needs. The unstructured or chaotic life of
alternative communities of the 1970s has given way to a
search for discipline and structures, which are clearly key
elements in the immensely popular mystical
movements. New Age is attractive mainly because so much of
what it offers meets hungers often left unsatisfied by the
established institutions.
While much of New Age is a reaction to contemporary
culture, there are many ways in which it is that culture's
child. The Renaissance and the Reformation have shaped the
modern western individual, who is not weighed down by
external burdens like merely extrinsic authority and
tradition; people feel the need to belong to
institutions less and less (and yet loneliness is very much
a scourge of modern life), and are not inclined to rank
official judgements above their own. With this
cult of humanity, religion is internalised in a way which
prepares the ground for a celebration of the sacredness of
the self. This is why New Age shares many of the values
espoused by enterprise culture and the prosperity
Gospel (of which more will be said later: section
2.4), and also by the consumer culture, whose influence is
clear from the rapidly-growing numbers of people who claim
that it is possible to blend Christianity and New Age, by
taking what strikes them as the best of both.2 It is worth
remembering that deviations within Christianity have also
gone beyond traditional theism in accepting a unilateral
turn to self, and this would encourage such a blending of
approaches. The important thing to note is that God is
reduced in certain New Age practices so as furthering the
advancement of the individual.
New Age appeals to people imbued with the values of
modern culture. Freedom, authenticity, self-reliance and the
like are all held to be sacred. It appeals to those who have
problems with patriarchy. It does not demand any more
faith or belief than going to the cinema,3 and yet it
claims to satisfy people's spiritual appetites. But here is
a central question: just what is meant by spirituality in a
New Age context? The answer is the key to unlocking some of
the differences between the Christian tradition and much of
what can be called New Age. Some versions of New Age harness
the powers of nature and seek to communicate with another
world to discover the fate of individuals, to help
individuals tune in to the right frequency to make the most
of themselves and their circumstances. In most cases, it is
completely fatalistic. Christianity, on the other hand, is
an invitation to look outwards and beyond, to the new
Advent of the God
who calls us to live the dialogue of love.4
1.2.
Communications
The
technological revolution in communications over the last few
years has brought about a completely new situation. The ease
and speed with which people can now communicate is one of
the reasons why New Age has come to the attention of people
of all ages and backgrounds, and many who follow Christ are
not sure what it is all about. The Internet, in particular,
has become enormously influential, especially with younger
people, who find it a congenial and fascinating way of
acquiring information. But it is a volatile vehicle of
misinformation on so many aspects of religion: not all that
is labeled Christian or Catholic can
be trusted to reflect the teachings of the Catholic Church
and, at the same time, there is a remarkable expansion of
New Age sources ranging from the serious to the ridiculous.
People need, and have a right to, reliable information on
the differences between Christianity and New Age.
1.3.
Cultural background
When one
examines many New Age traditions, it soon becomes clear that
there is, in fact, little in the New Age that is new. The
name seems to have gained currency through Rosicrucianism
and Freemasonry, at the time of the French and American
Revolutions, but the reality it denotes is a contemporary
variant of Western esotericism. This dates back to Gnostic
groups which grew up in the early days of Christianity, and
gained momentum at the time of the Reformation in Europe. It
has grown in parallel with scientific world-views, and
acquired a rational justification through the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries. It has involved a progressive
rejection of a personal God and a focus on other entities
which would often figure as intermediaries between God and
humanity in traditional Christianity, with more and more
original adaptations of these or additional ones. A powerful
trend in modern Western culture which has given space to New
Age ideas is the general acceptance of Darwinist
evolutionary theory; this, alongside a focus on hidden
spiritual powers or forces in nature, has been the backbone
of much of what is now recognised as New Age theory.
Basically, New Age has found a remarkable level of
acceptance because the world-view on which it was based was
already widely accepted. The ground was well prepared by the
growth and spread of relativism, along with an antipathy or
indifference towards the Christian faith.
Furthermore, there has been a lively discussion about
whether and in what sense New Age can be described as a
postmodern phenomenon. The existence and fervor of New Age
thinking and practice bear witness to the unquenchable
longing of the human spirit for transcendence and religious
meaning, which is not only a contemporary cultural
phenomenon, but was evident in the ancient world, both
Christian and pagan.
1.4.
The New Age and Catholic Faith
Even if it
can be admitted that New Age religiosity in some way
responds to the legitimate spiritual longing of human
nature, it must be acknowledged that its attempts to do so
run counter to Christian revelation. In Western culture in
particular, the appeal of alternative approaches
to spirituality is very strong. On the one hand, new forms
of psychological affirmation of the individual have become
very popular among Catholics, even in retreat-houses,
seminaries and institutes of formation for religious. At the
same time there is increasing nostalgia and curiosity for
the wisdom and ritual of long ago, which is one of the
reasons for the remarkable growth in the popularity of
esotericism and gnosticism. Many people are particularly
attracted to what is known correctly or otherwise
as Celtic spirituality,5 or to the
religions of ancient peoples. Books and courses on
spirituality and ancient or Eastern religions are a booming
business, and they are frequently labeled New
Age for commercial purposes. But the links with those
religions are not always clear. In fact, they are often
denied.
An adequate Christian discernment of New Age thought
and practice cannot fail to recognize that, like second and
third century gnosticism, it represents something of a
compendium of positions that the Church has identified as
heterodox. John Paul II warns with regard to the
return of ancient gnostic ideas under the guise of the
so-called New Age: We cannot delude ourselves that this will
lead toward a renewal of religion. It is only a new way of
practicing gnosticism that attitude of the spirit
that, in the name of a profound knowledge of God, results in
distorting His Word and replacing it with purely human
words. Gnosticism never completely abandoned the realm of
Christianity. Instead, it has always existed side by side
with Christianity, sometimes taking the shape of a
philosophical movement, but more often assuming the
characteristics of a religion or a para-religion in
distinct, if not declared, conflict with all that is
essentially Christian.6
An example of this can be seen in the enneagram, the
nine-type tool for character analysis, which when used as a
means of spiritual growth introduces an ambiguity in the
doctrine and the life of the Christian faith.
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1.5.
A positive challenge
The appeal of
New Age religiosity cannot be underestimated. When the
understanding of the content of Christian faith is weak,
some mistakenly hold that the Christian religion does not
inspire a profound spirituality and so they seek elsewhere.
As a matter of fact, some say the New Age is already passing
us by, and refer to the next age.7 They speak of
a crisis that began to manifest itself in the United States
of America in the early 1990s, but admit that, especially
beyond the English-speaking world, such a crisis
may come later. But bookshops and radio stations, and the
plethora of self-help groups in so many Western towns and
cities, all seem to tell a different story. It seems that,
at least for the moment, the New Age is still very much
alive and part of the current cultural scene.
The success of New Age offers the Church a challenge.
People feel the Christian religion no longer offers them
or perhaps never gave them something they
really need. The search which often leads people to the New
Age is a genuine yearning: for a deeper spirituality, for
something which will touch their hearts, and for a way of
making sense of a confusing and often alienating world.
There is a positive tone in New Age criticisms of the
materialism of daily life, of philosophy and even of
medicine and psychiatry; reductionism, which refuses to take
into consideration religious and supernatural experiences;
the industrial culture of unrestrained individualism, which
teaches egoism and pays no attention to other people, the
future and the environment.8
Any problems there are with New Age are to be found
in what it proposes as alternative answers to life's
questions. If the Church is not to be accused of being deaf
to people's longings, her members need to do two things: to
root themselves ever more firmly in the fundamentals of
their faith, and to understand the often-silent cry in
people's hearts, which leads them elsewhere if they are not
satisfied by the Church. There is also a call in all of this
to come closer to Jesus Christ and to be ready to follow
Him, since He is the real way to happiness, the truth about
God and the fulness of life for every man and woman who is
prepared to respond to his love.
2.
NEW AGE SPIRITUALITY: AN
OVERVIEW
Christians in many
Western societies, and increasingly also in other parts of
the world, frequently come into contact with different
aspects of the phenomenon known as New Age. Many of them
feel the need to understand how they can best approach
something which is at once so alluring, complex, elusive
and, at times, disturbing. These reflections are an attempt
to help Christians do two things:
to identify elements of the developing New Age
tradition;
to indicate those elements which are inconsistent
with the Christian revelation.
This is a pastoral response to a current challenge,
which does not even attempt to provide an exhaustive list of
New Age phenomena, since that would result in a very bulky
tome, and such information is readily available elsewhere.
It is essential to try to understand New Age correctly, in
order to evaluate it fairly, and avoid creating a
caricature. It would be unwise and untrue to say that
everything connected with the New Age movement is good, or
that everything about it is bad. Nevertheless, given the
underlying vision of New Age religiosity, it is on the whole
difficult to reconcile it with Christian doctrine and
spirituality.
New
Age is not a movement in the sense normally intended in the
term New Religious Movement, and it is not what
is normally meant by the terms cult and
sect. Because it is spread across cultures, in
phenomena as varied as music, films, seminars, workshops,
retreats, therapies, and many more activities and events, it
is much more diffuse and informal, though some religious or
para-religious groups consciously incorporate New Age
elements, and it has been suggested that New Age has been a
source of ideas for various religious and para-religious
sects.9
New Age is not a single, uniform movement, but rather
a loose network of practitioners whose approach is to think
globally but act locally. People who are part of the network
do not necessarily know each other and rarely, if ever,
meet. In an attempt to avoid the confusion which can arise
from using the term movement, some refer to New
Age as a milieu,10 or an audience
cult.11 However, it has also been pointed out that
it is a very coherent current of thought,12 a
deliberate challenge to modern culture. It is a syncretistic
structure incorporating many diverse elements, allowing
people to share interests or connections to very different
degrees and on varying levels of commitment. Many trends,
practices and attitudes which are in some way part of New
Age are, indeed, part of a broad and readily identifiable
reaction to mainstream culture, so the word
movement is not entirely out of place. It can be
applied to New Age in the same sense as it is to other broad
social movements, like the Civil Rights movement or the
Peace Movement; like them, it includes a bewildering array
of people linked to the movement's main aims, but very
diverse in the way they are involved and in their
understanding of particular issues.
The expression New Age religion is more
controversial, so it seems best to avoid it, although New
Age is often a response to people's religious questions and
needs, and its appeal is to people who are trying to
discover or rediscover a spiritual dimension in their life.
Avoidance of the term New Age religion is not
meant in any way to question the genuine character of
people's search for meaning and sense in life; it respects
the fact that many within the New Age Movement themselves
distinguish carefully between religion and
spirituality. Many have rejected organised
religion, because in their judgement it has failed to answer
their needs, and for precisely this reason they have looked
elsewhere to find spirituality. Furthermore, at
the heart of New Age is the belief that the time for
particular religions is over, so to refer to it as a
religion would run counter to its own self-understanding.
However, it is quite accurate to place New Age in the
broader context of esoteric religiousness, whose appeal
continues to grow.13
There is a problem built into the current text. It is
an attempt to understand and evaluate something which is
basically an exaltation of the richness of human experience.
It is bound to draw the criticism that it can never do
justice to a cultural movement whose essence is precisely to
break out of what are seen as the constricting limits of
rational discourse. But it is meant as an invitation to
Christians to take the New Age seriously, and as such asks
its readers to enter into a critical dialogue with people
approaching the same world from very different
perspectives.
The pastoral effectiveness of the Church in the Third
Millennium depends to a great extent on the preparation of
effective communicators of the Gospel message. What follows
is a response to the difficulties expressed by many in
dealing with the very complex and elusive phenomenon known
as New Age. It is an attempt to understand what New Age is
and to recognise the questions to which it claims to offer
answers and solutions. There are some excellent books and
other resources which survey the whole phenomenon or explain
particular aspects in great detail, and reference will be
made to some of these in the appendix. However they do not
always undertake the necessary discernment in the light of
Christian faith. The purpose of this contribution is to help
Catholics find a key to understanding the basic principles
behind New Age thinking, so that they can then make a
Christian evaluation of the elements of New Age they
encounter. It is worth saying that many people dislike the
term New Age, and some suggest that alternative
spirituality may be more correct and less limiting. It
is also true that many of the phenomena mentioned in this
document will probably not bear any particular label, but it
is presumed, for the sake of brevity, that readers will
recognise a phenomenon or set of phenomena that can
justifiably at least be linked with the general cultural
movement that is often known as New Age.
2.1.
What is new about New Age?
For many
people, the term New Age clearly refers to a momentous
turning-point in history. According to astrologers, we live
in the Age of Pisces, which has been dominated by
Christianity. But the current age of Pisces is due to be
replaced by the New Age of Aquarius early in the third
Millennium.14 The Age of Aquarius has such a high profile in
the New Age movement largely because of the influence of
theosophy, spiritualism and anthroposophy, and their
esoteric antecedents. People who stress the imminent change
in the world are often expressing a wish for such a change,
not so much in the world itself as in our culture, in the
way we relate to the world; this is particularly clear in
those who stress the idea of a New Paradigm for living. It
is an attractive approach since, in some of its expressions,
people do not watch passively, but have an active role in
changing culture and bringing about a new spiritual
awareness. In other expressions, more power is ascribed to
the inevitable progression of natural cycles. In any case,
the Age of Aquarius is a vision, not a theory. But New Age
is a broad tradition, which incorporates many ideas which
have no explicit link with the change from the Age of Pisces
to the Age of Aquarius.
There are moderate, but quite generalised, visions of
a future where there will be a planetary spirituality
alongside separate religions, similar planetary political
institutions to complement more local ones, global economic
entities which are more participatory and democratic,
greater emphasis on communication and education, a mixed
approach to health combining professional medicine and
self-healing, a more androgynous self-understanding and ways
of integrating science, mysticism, technology and ecology.
Again, this is evidence of a deep desire for a fulfilling
and healthy existence for the human race and for the planet.
Some of the traditions which flow into New Age are: ancient
Egyptian occult practices, Cabbalism, early Christian
gnosticism, Sufism, the lore of the Druids, Celtic
Christianity, mediaeval alchemy, Renaissance hermeticism,
Zen Buddhism, Yoga
and so on.15
Here is what is new about New Age. It is
a syncretism of esoteric and secular elements.16
They link into a widely-held perception that the time is
ripe for a fundamental change in individuals, in society and
in the world. There are various expressions of the need for
a shift:
from Newtonian mechanistic physics to quantum
physics;
from modernity's exaltation of reason to an
appreciation of feeling, emotion and experience (often
described as a switch from 'left brain' rational thinking to
'right brain' intuitive thinking);
from a dominance of masculinity and patriarchy to a
celebration of femininity, in individuals and in
society.
In these contexts the term paradigm shift
is often used. In some cases it is clearly supposed that
this shift is not simply desirable, but inevitable. The
rejection of modernity underlying this desire for change is
not new, but can be described as a modern revival of
pagan religions with a mixture of influences from both
eastern religions and also from modern psychology,
philosophy, science, and the counterculture that developed
in the 1950s and 1960s.17 New Age is a witness to
nothing less than a cultural revolution, a complex reaction
to the dominant ideas and values in western culture, and yet
its idealistic criticism is itself ironically typical of the
culture it criticizes.
A word needs to be said on the notion of paradigm
shift. It was made popular by Thomas Kuhn, an American
historian of science, who saw a paradigm as the entire
constellation of beliefs, values, techniques and so on
shared by the members of a given community.18 When
there is a shift from one paradigm to another, it is a
question of wholesale transformation of perspective rather
than one of gradual development. It really is a revolution,
and Kuhn emphasised that competing paradigms are
incommensurable and cannot coexist. So the idea that a
paradigm shift in the area of religion and spirituality is
simply a new way of stating traditional beliefs misses the
point. What is actually going on is a radical change in
world- view, which puts into question not only the content
but also the fundamental interpretation of the former
vision. Perhaps the clearest example of this, in terms of
the relationship between New Age and Christianity, is the
total recasting of the life and significance of Jesus
Christ. It is impossible to reconcile these two
visions.19
Science and technology have clearly failed to deliver
all they once seemed to promise, so in their search for
meaning and liberation people have turned to the spiritual
realm. New Age as we now know it came from a search for
something more humane and beautiful than the oppressive,
alienating experience of life in Western society. Its early
exponents were prepared to look far afield in their search,
so it has become a very eclectic approach. It may well be
one of the signs of a return to religion, but it
is most certainly not a return to orthodox Christian
doctrines and creeds. The first symbols of this
movement to penetrate Western culture were the
remarkable festival at Woodstock in New York State in 1969
and the musical Hair, which set forth the main themes of New
Age in the emblematic song Aquarius.20 But these
were merely the tip of an iceberg whose dimensions have
become clearer only relatively recently.
The idealism of the 1960s and 1970s still survives in
some quarters; but now, it is no longer predominantly
adolescents who are involved. Links with left-wing political
ideology have faded, and psychedelic drugs are by no means
as prominent as they once were. So much has happened since
then that all this no longer seems revolutionary;
spiritual and mystical tendencies
formerly restricted to the counterculture are now an
established part of mainstream culture, affecting such
diverse facets of life as medicine, science, art and
religion. Western culture is now imbued with a more general
political and ecological awareness, and this whole cultural
shift has had an enormous impact on people's lifestyles. It
is suggested by some that the New Age movement
is precisely this major change to what is reckoned to be
a significantly better way of life.21
2.2.
What does
the New Age claim to offer?
2.2.1.
Enchantment: There Must be an Angel
One of the
most common elements in New Age spirituality is
a fascination with extraordinary manifestations, and in
particular with paranormal entities. People recognised as
mediums claim that their personality is taken
over by another entity during trances in a New Age
phenomenon known as channeling, during which the
medium may lose control over his or her body and faculties.
Some people who have witnessed these events would willingly
acknowledge that the manifestations are indeed spiritual,
but are not from God, despite the language of love and light
which is almost always used.... It is probably more correct
to refer to this as a contemporary form of spiritualism,
rather than spirituality in a strict sense. Other friends
and counsellors from the spirit world are angels (which have
become the centre of a new industry of books and
paintings).
Those who refer to angels in the New Age do so in an
unsystematic way; in fact, distinctions in this area are
sometimes described as unhelpful if they are too precise,
since there are many levels of guides, entities,
energies, and beings in every octave of the universe... They
are all there to pick and choose from in relation to your
own attraction/repulsion mechanisms.22
These spiritual entities are often invoked
'non-religiously' to help in relaxation aimed at better
decision-making and control of one's life and career. Fusion
with some spirits who teach through particular people is
another New Age experience claimed by people who refer to
themselves as 'mystics'. Some nature spirits are described
as powerful energies existing in the natural world and also
on the inner planes: i.e. those which are
accessible by the use of rituals, drugs and other techniques
for reaching altered states of consciousness. It is clear
that, in theory at least, the New Age often recognizes no
spiritual authority higher than personal inner
experience.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------*Article:
Blaze Magazine Online
- Angels
& The Good News
by Catholic Evangelist, Eddie Russell FMI gives a Catholic
view of the realm of the Angelic from a Bible
perspective.
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2.2.2. Harmony
and Understanding: Good Vibrations
Phenomena as
diverse as the Findhorn garden and Feng Shui 23 represent a
variety of ways which illustrate the importance of being in
tune with nature or the cosmos. In New Age there is no
distinction between good and evil. Human actions are the
fruit of either illumination or ignorance. Hence we cannot
condemn anyone, and nobody needs forgiveness. Believing in
the existence of evil can create only negativity and fear.
The answer to negativity is love. But it is not the sort
which has to be translated into deeds; it is more a question
of attitudes of mind. Love is energy, a high-frequency
vibration, and the secret to happiness and health and
success is being able to tune in, to find one's place in the
great chain of being. New Age teachers and therapies claim
to offer the key to finding the correspondences between all
the elements of the universe, so that people may modulate
the tone of their lives and be in absolute harmony with each
other and with everything around them, although there are
different theoretical backgrounds.24
2.2.3.
Health: Golden living
Formal
(allopathic) medicine today tends to limit itself to curing
particular, isolated ailments, and fails to look at the
broader picture of a person's health: this has given rise to
a fair amount of understandable dissatisfaction. Alternative
therapies have gained enormously in popularity because they
claim to look at the whole person and are about healing
rather than curing. Holistic health, as it is known,
concentrates on the important role that the mind plays in
physical healing. The connection between the spiritual and
the physical aspects of the person is said to be in the
immune system or the Indian chakra system. In a New Age
perspective, illness and suffering come from working against
nature; when one is in tune with nature, one can expect a
much healthier life, and even material prosperity; for some
New Age healers, there should actually be no need for us to
die. Developing our human potential will put us in touch
with our inner divinity, and with those parts of our selves
which have been alienated and suppressed. This is revealed
above all in Altered States of Consciousness (ASCs), which
are induced either by drugs or by various mind-expanding
techniques, particularly in the context of
transpersonal psychology. The shaman is often
seen as the specialist of altered states of consciousness,
one who is able to mediate between the transpersonal realms
of spirits and gods and the world of humans.
There is a remarkable variety of approaches for
promoting holistic health, some derived from ancient
cultural traditions, whether religious or esoteric, others
connected with the psychological theories developed in
Esalen during the years 1960-1970. Advertising connected
with New Age covers a wide range of practices as
acupuncture, biofeedback, chiropractic, kinesiology,
homeopathy, iridology, massage and various kinds of
bodywork (such as orgonomy, Feldenkrais,
reflexology, Rolfing, polarity massage, therapeutic touch
etc.), meditation and visualisation, nutritional therapies,
psychic healing, various kinds of herbal medicine, healing
by crystals, metals, music or colours, reincarnation
therapies and, finally, twelve-step programmes and self-help
groups.25 The source of healing is said to be within
ourselves, something we reach when we are in touch with our
inner energy or cosmic energy.
Inasmuch
as health includes a prolongation of life, New Age offers an
Eastern formula in Western terms. Originally, reincarnation
was a part of Hindu cyclical thought, based on the atman or
divine kernel of personality (later the concept of jiva),
which moved from body to body in a cycle of suffering
(samsara), determined by the law of karma, linked to
behaviour in past lives. Hope lies in the possibility of
being born into a better state, or ultimately in liberation
from the need to be reborn. What is different in most
Buddhist traditions is that what wanders from body to body
is not a soul, but a continuum of consciousness. Present
life is embedded in a potentially endless cosmic process
which includes even the gods. In the West, since the time of
Lessing, reincarnation has been understood far more
optimistically as a process of learning and progressive
individual fulfillment. Spiritualism, theosophy,
anthroposophy and New Age all see reincarnation as
participation in cosmic evolution.
This post-Christian approach to eschatology is said
to answer the unresolved questions of theodicy and dispenses
with the notion of hell. When the soul is separated from the
body individuals can look back on their whole life up to
that point, and when the soul is united to its new body
there is a preview of its coming phase of life. People have
access to their former lives through dreams and meditation
techniques.26
2.2.4.
Wholeness: A Magical Mystery Tour
One of the
central concerns of the New Age movement is the search for
wholeness. There is encouragement to overcome
all forms of dualism, as such divisions are an
unhealthy product of a less enlightened past. Divisions
which New Age proponents claim need to be overcome include
the real difference between Creator and creation, the real
distinction between man and nature, or spirit and matter,
which are all considered wrongly as forms of dualism. These
dualistic tendencies are often assumed to be ultimately
based on the Judaeo-Christian roots of western civilisation,
while it would be more accurate to link them to gnosticism,
in particular to Manichaeism. The scientific revolution and
the spirit of modern rationalism are blamed particularly for
the tendency to fragmentation, which treats organic wholes
as mechanisms that can be reduced to their smallest
components and then explained in terms of the latter, and
the tendency to reduce spirit to matter, so that spiritual
reality including the soul becomes merely a
contingent epiphenomenon of essentially material
processes. In all of these areas, the New Age alternatives
are called holistic. Holism pervades the New Age
movement, from its concern with holistic health to its quest
for unitive consciousness, and from ecological awareness to
the idea of global networking.
2.3.
The fundamental principles of New Age thinking
2.3.1.
A global response in a time of crisis
Both
the Christian tradition and the secular faith in an
unlimited process of science had to face a severe break
first manifested in the student revolutions around the year
1968.27 The wisdom of older generations was suddenly
robbed of significance and respect, while the omnipotence of
science evaporated, so that the Church now has to face
a serious breakdown in the transmission of her faith to the
younger generation.28
A general loss of faith in these former pillars of
consciousness and social cohesion has been accompanied by
the unexpected return of cosmic religiosity, rituals and
beliefs which many believed to have been supplanted by
Christianity; but this perennial esoteric undercurrent never
really went away. The surge in popularity of Asian religion
at this point was something new in the Western context,
established late in the nineteenth century in the
theosophical movement, and it reflects the growing
awareness of a global spirituality, incorporating all
existing religious traditions.29
The perennial philosophical question of the one and
the many has its modern and contemporary form in the
temptation to overcome not only undue division, but even
real difference and distinction, and the most common
expression of this is holism, an essential ingredient in New
Age and one of the principal signs of the times in the last
quarter of the twentieth century. An extraordinary amount of
energy has gone into the effort to overcome the division
into compartments characteristic of mechanistic ideology,
but this has led to the sense of obligation to submit to a
global network which assumes quasi-transcendental authority.
Its clearest implications are a process of conscious
transformation and the development of ecology.30
The new vision which is the goal of conscious
transformation has taken time to formulate, and its
enactment is resisted by older forms of thought judged to be
entrenched in the status quo. What has been successful is
the generalisation of ecology as a fascination with nature
and resacralisation of the earth, Mother Earth or Gaia, with
the missionary zeal characteristic of Green politics.
The Earth's executive agent is the human race as a
whole, and the harmony and understanding required for
responsible governance is increasingly understood to be a
global government, with a global ethical framework. The
warmth of Mother Earth, whose divinity pervades the whole of
creation, is held to bridge the gap between creation and the
transcendent Father-God of Judaism and Christianity, and
removes the prospect of being judged by such a Being.
In such a vision of a closed universe that contains
God and other spiritual beings along with
ourselves, we recognize here an implicit pantheism. This is
a fundamental point which pervades all New Age thought and
practice, and conditions in advance any otherwise positive
assessment where we might be in favor of one or another
aspect of its spirituality. As Christians, we believe on the
contrary that man is essentially a creature and
remains so for all eternity, so that an absorption of the
human I in the divine I will never be possible.31
2.3.2.
The essential matrix of New Age thinking
The essential
matrix of New Age thinking is to be found in the
esoteric-theosophical tradition which was fairly widely
accepted in European intellectual circles in the 18th and
19th centuries. It was particularly strong in freemasonry,
spiritualism, occultism and theosophy, which shared a kind
of esoteric culture. In this world-view, the visible and
invisible universes are linked by a series of
correspondences, analogies and influences between microcosm
and macrocosm, between metals and planets, between planets
and the various parts of the human body, between the visible
cosmos and the invisible realms of reality. Nature is a
living being, shot through with networks of sympathy and
antipathy, animated by a light and a secret fire which human
beings seek to control. People can contact the upper or
lower worlds by means of their imagination (an organ of the
soul or spirit), or by using mediators (angels, spirits,
devils) or rituals.
People can be initiated into the mysteries of the
cosmos, God and the self by means of a spiritual itinerary
of transformation. The eventual goal is gnosis, the highest
form of knowledge, the equivalent of salvation. It involves
a search for the oldest and highest tradition in philosophy
(what is inappropriately called philosophia perennis) and
religion (primordial theology), a secret (esoteric) doctrine
which is the key to all the exoteric traditions
which are accessible to everyone. Esoteric teachings are
handed down from master to disciple in a gradual program of
initiation.
19th century esotericism is seen by some as
completely secularised. Alchemy, magic, astrology and other
elements of traditional esotericism had been thoroughly
integrated with aspects of modern culture, including the
search for causal laws, evolutionism, psychology and the
study of religions. It reached its clearest form in the
ideas of Helena Blavatsky, a Russian medium who founded the
Theosophical Society with Henry Olcott in New York in 1875.
The Society aimed to fuse elements of Eastern and Western
traditions in an evolutionary type of spiritualism. It had
three main aims:
1. To form a nucleus of the Universal Brotherhood of
Humanity, without distinction of race, creed, caste or
colour.
2. To encourage the study of comparative religion,
philosophy and science.
3. To investigate unexplained laws of Nature and the
powers latent in man.
The significance of these objectives... should
be clear. The first objective implicitly rejects the
'irrational bigotry' and 'sectarianism' of traditional
Christianity as perceived by spiritualists and
theosophists... It is not immediately obvious from the
objectives themselves that, for theosophists, 'science'
meant the occult sciences and philosophy the occulta
philosophia, that the laws of nature were of an occult or
psychic nature, and that comparative religion was expected
to unveil a 'primordial tradition' ultimately modeled on a
Hermeticist philosophia perennis.32
A prominent component of Mrs. Blavatsky's writings
was the emancipation of women, which involved an attack on
the male God of Judaism, of Christianity and of
Islam. She urged people to return to the mother-goddess of
Hinduism and to the practice of feminine virtues. This
continued under the guidance of Annie Besant, who was in the
vanguard of the feminist movement. Wicca and women's
spirituality carry on this struggle against
patriarchal Christianity today.
Marilyn Ferguson devoted a chapter of The Aquarian
Conspiracy to the precursors of the Age of Aquarius, those
who had woven the threads of a transforming vision based on
the expansion of consciousness and the experience of
self-transcendence. Two of those she mentioned were the
American psychologist William James and the Swiss
psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung. James defined religion as
experience, not dogma, and he taught that human beings can
change their mental attitudes in such a way that they are
able to become architects of their own destiny. Jung
emphasized the transcendent character of consciousness and
introduced the idea of the collective unconscious, a kind of
store for symbols and memories shared with people from
various different ages and cultures.
According to Wouter Hanegraaff, both of these men
contributed to a sacralisation of psychology,
something that has become an important element of New Age
thought and practice. Jung, indeed, not only
psychologized esotericism but he also sacralized psychology,
by filling it with the contents of esoteric speculation. The
result was a body of theories which enabled people to talk
about God while really meaning their own psyche, and about
their own psyche while really meaning the divine. If the
psyche is 'mind', and God is 'mind' as well, then to discuss
one must mean to discuss the other.33 His response to
the accusation that he had psychologised
Christianity was that psychology is the modern myth
and only in terms of the current myth can we understand the
faith.34 It is certainly true that Jung's psychology
sheds light on many aspects of the Christian faith,
particularly on the need to face the reality of evil, but
his religious convictions are so different at different
stages of his life that one is left with a confused image of
God.
A central element in his thought is the cult of the
sun, where God is the vital energy (libido) within a
person.35 As he himself said, this comparison is no
mere play of words.36 This is the god
within to which Jung refers, the essential divinity he
believed to be in every human being. The path to the inner
universe is through the unconscious. The inner world's
correspondence to the outer one is in the collective
unconscious.
The tendency to interchange psychology and
spirituality was firmly embedded in the Human Potential
Movement as it developed towards the end of the 1960s at the
Esalen Institute in California. Transpersonal psychology,
strongly influenced by Eastern religions and by Jung, offers
a contemplative journey where science meets mysticism. The
stress laid on bodiliness, the search for ways of expanding
consciousness and the cultivation of the myths of the
collective unconscious were all encouragements to search for
the God within oneself. To realise one's
potential, one had to go beyond one's ego in order to become
the god that one is, deep down. This could be done by
choosing the appropriate therapy meditation,
parapsychological experiences, the use of hallucinogenic
drugs. These were all ways of achieving peak
experiences, mystical experiences of
fusion with God and with the cosmos.
The symbol of Aquarius was borrowed from astrological
mythology, but later came to signify the desire for a
radically new world. The two centres which were the initial
power-houses of the New Age, and to a certain extent still
are, were the Garden community at Findhorn in North-East
Scotland, and the Centre for the development of human
potential at Esalen in Big Sur, California, in the United
States of America. What feeds New Age consistently is a
growing global consciousness and increasing awareness of a
looming ecological crisis.
2.3.3.
Central themes of the New Age
New Age is
not, properly speaking, a religion, but it is interested in
what is called divine. The essence of New Age is
the loose association of the various activities, ideas and
people who might validly attract the term. So there is no
single articulation of anything like the doctrines of
mainstream religions. Despite this, and despite the immense
variety within New Age, there are some common points:
the cosmos is seen as an organic whole
it is animated by an Energy, which is also identified
as the divine Soul or Spirit
much credence is given to the mediation of various
spiritual entities
humans are capable of ascending to invisible higher
spheres, and of controlling their own lives beyond death
there is held to be a perennial knowledge
which pre-dates and is superior to all religions and
cultures
people follow enlightened masters...
2.3.4.
What does New Age say
about...
2.3.4.1.
...the human person?
New Age
involves a fundamental belief in the perfectibility of the
human person by means of a wide variety of techniques and
therapies (as opposed to the Christian view of cooperation
with divine grace). There is a general accord with
Nietzsche's idea that Christianity has prevented the full
manifestation of genuine humanity. Perfection, in this
context, means achieving self-fulfillment, according to an
order of values which we ourselves create and which we
achieve by our own strength: hence one can speak of a
self-creating self. On this view, there is more difference
between humans as they now are and as they will be when they
have fully realised their potential, than there is between
humans and anthropoids.
It is useful to distinguish between esotericism, a
search for knowledge, and magic, or the occult: the latter
is a means of obtaining power. Some groups are both esoteric
and occult. At the centre of occultism is a will to power
based on the dream of becoming divine.
Mind-expanding techniques are meant to reveal to
people their divine power; by using this power, people
prepare the way for the Age of Enlightenment. This
exaltation of humanity overturns the correct relationship
between Creator and creature, and one of its extreme forms
is Satanism. Satan becomes the symbol of a rebellion against
conventions and rules, a symbol that often takes aggressive,
selfish and violent forms. Some evangelical groups have
expressed concern at the subliminal presence of what they
claim is Satanic symbolism in some varieties of rock music,
which have a powerful influence on young people. This is all
far removed from the message of peace and harmony which is
to be found in the New Testament; it is often one of the
consequences of the exaltation of humanity when that
involves the negation of a transcendent God.
But it is not only something which affects young
people; the basic themes of esoteric culture are also
present in the realms of politics, education and
legislation.37 It is especially the case with ecology. Deep
ecology's emphasis on bio-centrism denies the
anthropological vision of the Bible, in which human beings
are at the centre of the world, since they are considered to
be qualitatively superior to other natural forms. It is very
prominent in legislation and education today, despite the
fact that it underrates humanity in this way.. The same
esoteric cultural matrix can be found in the ideological
theory underlying population control policies and
experiments in genetic engineering, which seem to express a
dream human beings have of creating themselves afresh. How
do people hope to do this? By deciphering the genetic code,
altering the natural rules of sexuality, defying the limits
of death.
In what might be termed a classical New Age account,
people are born with a divine spark, in a sense which is
reminiscent of ancient gnosticism; this links them into the
unity of the Whole. So they are seen as essentially divine,
although they participate in this cosmic divinity at
different levels of consciousness. We are co-creators, and
we create our own reality. Many New Age authors maintain
that we choose the circumstances of our lives (even our own
illness and health), in a vision where every individual is
considered the creative source of the universe. But we need
to make a journey in order fully to understand where we fit
into the unity of the cosmos. The journey is psychotherapy,
and the recognition of universal consciousness is salvation.
There is no sin; there is only imperfect knowledge. The
identity of every human being is diluted in the universal
being and in the process of successive incarnations. People
are subject to the determining influences of the stars, but
can be opened to the divinity which lives within them, in
their continual search (by means of appropriate techniques)
for an ever greater harmony between the self and divine
cosmic energy. There is no need for Revelation or Salvation
which would come to people from outside themselves, but
simply a need to experience the salvation hidden within
themselves (self-salvation), by mastering psycho-physical
techniques which lead to definitive enlightenment.
Some stages on the way to self-redemption are
preparatory (meditation, body harmony, releasing
self-healing energies). They are the starting-point for
processes of spiritualisation, perfection and enlightenment
which help people to acquire further self-control and
psychic concentration on transformation of the
individual self into cosmic consciousness. The
destiny of the human person is a series of successive
reincarnations of the soul in different bodies. This is
understood not as the cycle of samsara, in the sense of
purification as punishment, but as a gradual ascent towards
the perfect development of one's potential.
Psychology is used to explain mind expansion as
mystical experiences. Yoga, zen, transcendental
meditation and tantric exercises lead to an experience of
self-fulfilment or enlightenment. Peak-experiences (reliving
one's birth, travelling to the gates of death, biofeedback,
dance and even drugs anything which can provoke an
altered state of consciousness) are believed to lead to
unity and enlightenment. Since there is only one Mind, some
people can be channels for higher beings. Every part of this
single universal being has contact with every other part.
The classic approach in New Age is transpersonal psychology,
whose main concepts are the Universal Mind, the Higher Self,
the collective and personal unconscious and the individual
ego. The Higher Self is our real identity, a bridge between
God as divine Mind and humanity. Spiritual development is
contact with the Higher Self, which overcomes all forms of
dualism between subject and object, life and death, psyche
and soma, the self and the fragmentary aspects of the self.
Our limited personality is like a shadow or a dream created
by the real self. The Higher Self contains the memories of
earlier (re-)incarnations.
2.3.4.2.
...God?
New Age has a
marked preference for Eastern or pre-Christian religions,
which are reckoned to be uncontaminated by Judaeo-Christian
distortions. Hence great respect is given to ancient
agricultural rites and to fertility cults. Gaia,
Mother Earth, is offered as an alternative to God the
Father, whose image is seen to be linked to a patriarchal
conception of male domination of women. There is talk of
God, but it is not a personal God; the God of which New Age
speaks is neither personal nor transcendent. Nor is it the
Creator and sustainer of the universe, but an
impersonal energy immanent in the world, with
which it forms a cosmic unity: All is
one. This unity is monistic, pantheistic or, more
precisely, pantheistic. God is the
life-principle, the spirit or soul of the
world, the sum total of consciousness existing in the
world. In a sense, everything is God. God's presence is
clearest in the spiritual aspects of reality, so every
mind/spirit is, in some sense, God.
When it is consciously received by men and women,
divine energy is often described as
Christic energy. There is also talk of Christ,
but this does not mean Jesus of Nazareth. Christ
is a title applied to someone who has arrived at a state of
consciousness where he or she perceives him - or herself to
be divine and can thus claim to be a universal
Master. Jesus of Nazareth was not the Christ, but
simply one among many historical figures in whom this
Christic nature is revealed, as is the case with
Buddha and others. Every historical realisation of the
Christ shows clearly that all human beings are heavenly and
divine, and leads them towards this realisation.
The innermost and most personal (psychic)
level on which this divine cosmic energy is
heard by human beings is also called Holy
Spirit.
2.3.4.3.
...the world?
The move from
a mechanistic model of classical physics to the
holistic one of modern atomic and sub-atomic
physics, based on the concept of matter as waves or energy
rather than particles, is central to much New Age thinking.
The universe is an ocean of energy, which is a single whole
or a network of links. The energy animating the single
organism which is the universe is spirit. There
is no alterity between God and the world. The world itself
is divine and it undergoes an evolutionary process which
leads from inert matter to higher and perfect
consciousness. The world is uncreated, eternal and
self-sufficient The future of the world is based on an inner
dynamism which is necessarily positive and leads to the
reconciled (divine) unity of all that exists. God and the
world, soul and body, intelligence and feeling, heaven and
earth are one immense vibration of energy.
James Lovelock's book on the Gaia Hypothesis claims
that the entire range of living matter on earth, from
whales to viruses, and from oaks to algae, could be regarded
as constituting a single living entity, capable of
manipulating the Earth's atmosphere to suit its overall
needs and endowed with faculties and powers far beyond those
of its constituent parts.38 To some, the Gaia
hypothesis is a strange synthesis of individualism and
collectivism. It all happens as if New Age, having plucked
people out of fragmentary politics, cannot wait to throw
them into the great cauldron of the global mind. The
global brain needs institutions with which to rule, in other
words, a world government. To deal with today's
problems New Age dreams of a spiritual aristocracy in the
style of Plato's Republic, run by secret
societies....39 This may be an exaggerated way of
stating the case, but there is much evidence that gnostic
élitism and global governance coincide on many issues
in international politics.
Everything in the universe is interelated; in fact
every part is in itself an image of the totality; the whole
is in every thing and every thing is in the whole. In the
great chain of being, all beings are intimately
linked and form one family with different grades of
evolution. Every human person is a hologram, an image of the
whole of creation, in which every thing vibrates on its own
frequency. Every human being is a neurone in earth's central
nervous system, and all individual entities are in a
relationship of complementarity with others. In fact, there
is an inner complementarity or androgyny in the whole of
creation.40
One of the recurring themes in New Age writings and
thought is the new paradigm which contemporary
science has opened up. Science has given us insights
into wholes and systems, stress and transformation. We are
learning to read tendencies, to recognise the early signs of
another, more promising, paradigm. We create alternative
scenarios of the future. We communicate about the failures
of old systems, forcing new frameworks for problem-solving
in every area.41 Thus far, the paradigm
shift is a radical change of perspective, but nothing
more. The question is whether thought and real change are
commensurate, and how effective in the external world an
inner transformation can be proved to be. One is forced to
ask, even without expressing a negative judgement, how
scientific a thought-process can be when it involves
affirmations like this: War is unthinkable in a
society of autonomous people who have discovered the
connectedness of all humanity, who are unafraid of alien
ideas and alien cultures, who know that all revolutions
begin within and that you cannot impose your brand of
enlightenment on anyone else.42
It is illogical to conclude from the fact that
something is unthinkable that it cannot happen. Such
reasoning is really gnostic, in the sense of giving too much
power to knowledge and consciousness. This is not to deny
the fundamental and crucial role of developing consciousness
in scientific discovery and creative development, but simply
to caution against imposing upon external reality what is as
yet still only in the mind.
2.4.
Inhabitants of myth rather than history43?: New
Age and culture
Basically,
the appeal of the New Age has to do with the culturally
stimulated interest in the self, its value, capacities and
problems. Whereas traditionalised religiosity, with its
hierarchical organization, is well-suited for the community,
detraditionalized spirituality is well-suited for the
individual. The New Age is 'of' the self in that it
facilitates celebration of what it is to be and to become;
and 'for' the self in that by differing from much of the
mainstream, it is positioned to handle identity problems
generated by conventional forms of life.44
The rejection of tradition in the form of
patriarchal, hierarchical social or ecclesial organisation
implies the search for an alternative form of society, one
that is clearly inspired by the modern notion of the self.
Many New Age writings argue that one can do nothing
(directly) to change the world, but everything to change
oneself; changing individual consciousness is understood to
be the (indirect) way to change the world. The most
important instrument for social change is personal example.
Worldwide recognition of these personal examples will
steadily lead to the transformation of the collective mind
and such a transformation will be the major achievement of
our time.
This is clearly part of the holistic paradigm, and a
re-statement of the classical philosophical question of the
one and the many. It is also linked to Jung's espousal of
the theory of correspondence and his rejection of causality.
Individuals are fragmentary representations of the planetary
hologram; by looking within one not only knows the universe,
but also changes it. But the more one looks within, the
smaller the political arena becomes. Does this really fit in
with the rhetoric of democratic participation in a new
planetary order, or is it an unconscious and subtle
disempowerment of people, which could leave them open to
manipulation? Does the current preoccupation with planetary
problems (ecological issues, depletion of resources,
over-population, the economic gap between north and south,
the huge nuclear arsenal and political instability) enable
or disable engagement in other, equally real, political and
social questions?
The old adage that charity begins at home
can give a healthy balance to one's approach to these
issues. Some observers of New Age detect a sinister
authoritarianism behind apparent indifference to politics.
David Spangler himself points out that one of the shadows of
the New Age is a subtle surrender to powerlessness and
irresponsibility in the name of waiting for the New Age to
come rather than being an active creator of wholeness in
one's own life.45
Even though it would hardly be correct to suggest
that quietism is universal in New Age attitudes, one of the
chief criticisms of the New Age Movement is that its
privatistic quest for self-fulfilment may actually work
against the possibility of a sound religious culture. Three
points bring this into focus:
it is questionable whether New Age demonstrates the
intellectual cogency to provide a complete picture of the
cosmos in a world view which claims to integrate nature and
spiritual reality. The Western universe is seen as a divided
one based on monotheism, transcendence, alterity and
separateness. A fundamental dualism is detected in such
divisions as those between real and ideal, relative and
absolute, finite and infinite, human and divine, sacred and
profane, past and present, all redolent of Hegel's
unhappy consciousness. This is portrayed as
something tragic. The response from New Age is unity through
fusion: it claims to reconcile soul and body, female and
male, spirit and matter, human and divine, earth and cosmos,
transcendent and immanent, religion and science, differences
between religions, Yin and Yang. There is, thus, no more
alterity; what is left in human terms is transpersonality.
The New Age world is unproblematic: there is nothing left to
achieve. But the metaphysical question of the one and the
many remains unanswered, perhaps even unasked, in that there
is a great deal of regret at the effects of disunity and
division, but the response is a description of how things
would appear in another vision.
New Age imports Eastern religious practices piecemeal
and re-interprets them to suit Westerners; this involves a
rejection of the language of sin and salvation, replacing it
with the morally neutral language of addiction and recovery.
References to extra-European influences are sometimes merely
a pseudo-Orientalisation of Western culture.
Furthermore, it is hardly a genuine dialogue; in a context
where Graeco-Roman and Judaeo-Christian influences are
suspect, oriental influences are used precisely because they
are alternatives to Western culture. Traditional science and
medicine are felt to be inferior to holistic approaches, as
are patriarchal and particular structures in politics and
religion. All of these will be obstacles to the coming of
the Age of Aquarius; once again, it is clear that what is
implied when people opt for New Age alternatives is a
complete break with the tradition that formed them. Is this
as mature and liberated as it is often thought or presumed
to be?
Authentic religious traditions encourage discipline
with the eventual goal of acquiring wisdom, equanimity and
compassion. New Age echoes society's deep, ineradicable
yearning for an integral religious culture, and for
something more generic and enlightened than what politicians
generally offer, but it is not clear whether the benefits of
a vision based on the ever-expanding self are for
individuals or for societies. New Age training courses (what
used to be known as Erhard seminar trainings
[EST] etc.) marry counter-cultural values with the
mainstream need to succeed, inner satisfaction with outer
success; Findhorn's Spirit of Business retreat
transforms the experience of work while increasing
productivity; some New Age devotees are involved not only to
become more authentic and spontaneous, but also in order to
become more prosperous (through magic etc.). What
makes things even more appealing to the enterprise-minded
businessperson is that New Age trainings also resonate with
somewhat more humanistic ideas abroad in the world of
business. The ideas have to do with the workplace as a
'learning environment', 'bringing life back to work',
'humanizing work', 'fulfilling the manager', 'people come
first' or 'unlocking potential'. Presented by New Age
trainers, they are likely to appeal to those businesspeople
who have already been involved with more (secular)
humanistic trainings and who want to take things further: at
one and the same time for the sake of personal growth,
happiness and enthusiasm, as well as for commercial
productivity.46
So it is clear that people involved do seek wisdom
and equanimity for their own benefit, but how much do the
activities in which they are involved enable them to work
for the common good? Apart from the question of motivation,
all of these phenomena need to be judged by their fruits,
and the question to ask is whether they promote self or
solidarity, not only with whales, trees or like-minded
people, but with the whole of creation including the
whole of humanity. The most pernicious consequences of any
philosophy of egoism which is embraced by institutions or by
large numbers of people are identified by Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger as a set of strategies to reduce the number
of those who will eat at humanity's table.47 This is a
key standard by which to evaluate the impact of any
philosophy or theory. Christianity always seeks to measure
human endeavours by their openness to the Creator and to all
other creatures, a respect based firmly on love.
2.5.
Why has New Age grown so rapidly and spread so
effectively?
Whatever
questions and criticisms it may attract, New Age is an
attempt by people who experience the world as harsh and
heartless to bring warmth to that world. As a reaction to
modernity, it operates more often than not on the level of
feelings, instincts and emotions. Anxiety about an
apocalyptic future of economic instability, political
uncertainty and climatic change plays a large part in
causing people to look for an alternative, resolutely
optimistic relationship to the cosmos. There is a search for
wholeness and happiness, often on an explicitly spiritual
level. But it is significant that New Age has enjoyed
enormous success in an era which can be characterised by the
almost universal exaltation of diversity. Western culture
has taken a step beyond tolerance in the sense of
grudging acceptance or putting up with the idiosyncrasies of
a person or a minority group to a conscious erosion
of respect for normality. Normality is presented as a
morally loaded concept, linked necessarily with absolute
norms. For a growing number of people, absolute beliefs or
norms indicate nothing but an inability to tolerate other
people's views and convictions. In this atmosphere
alternative lifestyles and theories have really taken off:
it is not only acceptable but positively good to be
diverse.48
It is essential to bear in mind that people are
involved with New Age in very different ways and on many
levels. In most cases it is not really a question of
belonging to a group or movement; nor is there
much conscious awareness of the principles on which New Age
is built. It seems that, for the most part, people are
attracted to particular therapies or practices, without
going into their background, and others are simply
occasional consumers of products which are labeled New
Age. People who use aromatherapy or listen to
New Age music, for example, are usually
interested in the effect they have on their health or
well-being; it is only a minority who go further into the
subject, and try to understand its theoretical (or
mystical) significance. This fits perfectly into
the patterns of consumption in societies where amusement and
leisure play such an important part. The
movement has adapted well to the laws of the
market, and it is partly because it is such an attractive
economic proposition that New Age has become so widespread.
New Age has been seen, in some cultures at least, as the
label for a product created by the application of marketing
principles to a religious phenomenon.49
There is always going to be a way of profiting from
people's perceived spiritual needs. Like many other things
in contemporary economics, New Age is a global phenomenon
held together and fed with information by the mass media. It
is arguable that this global community was created by means
of the mass media, and it is quite clear that popular
literature and mass communications ensure that the common
notions held by believers and sympathisers
spread almost everywhere very rapidly. However, there is no
way of proving that such a rapid spread of ideas is either
by chance or by design, since this is a very loose form of
community. Like the cybercommunities created by
the Internet, it is a domain where relationships between
people can be either very impersonal or interpersonal in
only a very selective sense.
New Age has become immensely popular as a loose set
of beliefs, therapies and practices, which are often
selected and combined at will, irrespective of the
incompatibilities and inconsistencies this may imply. But
this is obviously to be expected in a world-view
self-consciously based on right-brain intuitive
thinking. And that is precisely why it is important to
discover and recognise the fundamental characteristics of
New Age ideas. What is offered is often described as simply
spiritual, rather than belonging to any
religion, but there are much closer links to particular
Eastern religions than many consumers realise.
This is obviously important in prayer-groups to
which people choose to belong, but it is also a real
question for management in a growing number of companies,
whose employees are required to practice meditation and
adopt mind-expanding techniques as part of their life at
work.50
It is worth saying a brief word about concerted
promotion of New Age as an ideology, but this is a very
complex issue. Some groups have reacted to New Age with
sweeping accusations about conspiracies, but the answer
would generally be that we are witnessing a spontaneous
cultural change whose course is fairly determined by
influences beyond human control. However, it is enough to
point out that New Age shares with a number of
internationally influential groups the goal of superseding
or transcending particular religions in order to create
space for a universal religion which could unite humanity.
Closely related to this is a very concerted effort on the
part of many institutions to invent a Global Ethic, an
ethical framework which would reflect the global nature of
contemporary culture, economics and politics. Further, the
politicisation of ecological questions certainly colours the
whole question of the Gaia hypothesis or worship of mother
earth.
3
New Age and Christian
Spirituality
3.1.
New Age as spirituality
New Age is
often referred to by those who promote it as a new
spirituality. It seems ironic to call it
new when so many of its ideas have been taken
from ancient religions and cultures. But what really is new
is that New Age is a conscious search for an alternative to
Western culture and its Judaeo-Christian religious roots.
Spirituality in this way refers to the inner
experience of harmony and unity with the whole of reality,
which heals each human person's feelings of imperfection and
finiteness. People discover their profound connectedness
with the sacred universal force or energy which is the
nucleus of all life. When they have made this discovery, men
and women can set out on a path to perfection, which will
enable them to sort out their personal lives and their
relationship to the world, and to take their place in the
universal process of becoming and in the New Genesis of a
world in constant evolution. The result is a cosmic
mysticism 51 based on people's awareness of a universe
burgeoning with dynamic energies. Thus cosmic energy,
vibration, light, God, love even the supreme Self
all refer to one and the same reality, the primal
source present in every being.
This spirituality consists of two distinct elements,
one metaphysical, the other psychological. The metaphysical
component comes from New Age's esoteric and theosophical
roots, and is basically a new form of gnosis. Access to the
divine is by knowledge of hidden mysteries, in each
individual's search for the real behind what is only
apparent, the origin beyond time, the transcendent beyond
what is merely fleeting, the primordial tradition behind
merely ephemeral tradition, the other behind the self, the
cosmic divinity beyond the incarnate individual.
Esoteric spirituality is an investigation of Being
beyond the separateness of beings, a sort of nostalgia for
lost unity.52
Here one can see the gnostic matrix of esoteric
spirituality. It is evident when the children of Aquarius
search for the Transcendent Unity of religions. They tend to
pick out of the historical religions only the esoteric
nucleus, whose guardians they claim to be. They somehow deny
history and will not accept that spirituality can be rooted
in time or in any institution. Jesus of Nazareth is not God,
but one of the many historical manifestations of the cosmic
and universal Christ.53
The psychological component of this kind of
spirituality comes from the encounter between esoteric
culture and psychology (cf. 2.32). New Age thus becomes an
experience of personal psycho-spiritual transformation, seen
as analogous to religious experience. For some people this
transformation takes the form of a deep mystical experience,
after a personal crisis or a lengthy spiritual search. For
others it comes from the use of meditation or some sort of
therapy, or from paranormal experiences which alter states
of consciousness and provide insight into the unity of
reality.54
3.2.
Spiritual narcissism?
Several
authors see New Age spirituality as a kind of spiritual
narcissism or pseudo-mysticism. It is interesting to note
that this criticism was put forward even by an important
exponent of New Age, David Spangler, who, in his later
works, distanced himself from the more esoteric aspects of
this current of thought.
He wrote that, in the more popular forms of New Age,
individuals and groups are living out their own
fantasies of adventure and power, usually of an occult or
millenarian form.... The principal characteristic of this
level is attachment to a private world of ego-fulfilment and
a consequent (though not always apparent) withdrawal from
the world. On this level, the New Age has become populated
with strange and exotic beings, masters, adepts,
extraterrestrials; it is a place of psychic powers and
occult mysteries, of conspiracies and hidden
teachings.55
In a later work, David Spangler lists what he sees as
the negative elements or shadows of the New Age:
alienation from the past in the name of the future;
attachment to novelty for its own sake...;
indiscriminateness and lack of discernment in the name of
wholeness and communion, hence the failure to understand or
respect the role of boundaries...; confusion of psychic
phenomena with wisdom, of channeling with spirituality, of
the New Age perspective with ultimate truth.56 But, in
the end, Spangler is convinced that selfish, irrational
narcissism is limited to just a few new-agers. The positive
aspects he stresses are the function of New Age as an image
of change and as an incarnation of the sacred, a movement in
which most people are very serious seekers after
truth, working in the interest of life and inner
growth.
The commercial aspect of many products and therapies
which bear the New Age label is brought out by David Toolan,
an American Jesuit who spent several years in the New Age
milieu. He observes that new-agers have discovered the inner
life and are fascinated by the prospect of being responsible
for the world, but that they are also easily overcome by a
tendency to individualism and to viewing everything as an
object of consumption. In this sense, while it is not
Christian, New Age spirituality is not Buddhist either,
inasmuch as it does not involve self-denial. The dream of
mystical union seems to lead, in practice, to a merely
virtual union, which, in the end, leaves people more alone
and unsatisfied.
3.3.
The Cosmic Christ
In the early
days of Christianity, believers in Jesus Christ were forced
to face up to the gnostic religions. They did not ignore
them, but took the challenge positively and applied the
terms used of cosmic deities to Christ himself. The clearest
example of this is in the famous hymn to Christ in Saint
Paul's letter to the Christians at Colossae:
He is the image of the unseen God and the first-born
of all creation, for in
him were created all things in heaven and on earth:
everything visible and
everything invisible, Thrones,
Dominations, Sovereignties, Powers
all things were created through
him and for him. Before
anything was created, he existed, and he holds all things in
unity. Now the Church is
his body, he is its head. As
he is the Beginning, he was first to be born from the
dead, so that he should
be first in every way; because
God wanted all perfection to be found in him
and all things to be reconciled
through him and for him, everything
in heaven and everything on earth,
when he made peace by his death
on the cross (Col 1: 15-20).
For these early Christians, there was no new cosmic
age to come; what they were celebrating with this hymn was
the Fulfilment of all things which had begun in Christ.
Time is indeed fulfilled by the very fact that God, in
the Incarnation, came down into human history. Eternity
entered into time: what 'fulfilment' could be greater than
this? What other 'fulfilment' would be possible? 57
Gnostic belief in cosmic powers and some obscure kind of
destiny withdraws the possibility of a relationship to a
personal God revealed in Christ. For Christians, the real
cosmic Christ is the one who is present actively in the
various members of his body, which is the Church. They do
not look to impersonal cosmic powers, but to the loving care
of a personal God; for them cosmic bio-centrism has to be
transposed into a set of social relationships (in the
Church); and they are not locked into a cyclical pattern of
cosmic events, but focus on the historical Jesus, in
particular on his crucifixion and resurrection. We find in
the Letter to the Colossians and in the New Testament a
doctrine of God different from that implicit in New Age
thought: the Christian conception of God is one of a Trinity
of Persons who has created the human race out of a desire to
share the communion of Trinitarian life with creaturely
persons. Properly understood, this means that authentic
spirituality is not so much our search for God but God's
search for us.
Another, completely different, view of the cosmic
significance of Christ has become current in New Age
circles. The Cosmic Christ is the divine pattern that
connects in the person of Jesus Christ (but by no means is
limited to that person). The divine pattern of connectivity
was made flesh and set up its tent among us (John 1:14)....
The Cosmic Christ... leads a new exodus from the bondage and
pessimistic views of a Newtonian, mechanistic universe so
ripe with competition, winners and losers, dualisms,
anthropocentrism, and the boredom that comes when our
exciting universe is pictured as a machine bereft of mystery
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