This version: February 1996. Incomplete and Preliminary.
Suggestions, corrections, contributions welcome.
Contributions regarding the reading list and existing satanic
organizations, largely from Lupo's Usenet alt.satanism FAQ
Feel free to quote -but not change- provided acknowledgment
of the author is made.
by Margot Terrell
Introduction.
The purpose of this FAQ is to inform newcomers to satanism or
the Undernet IRC channel #satan, about what we consider to be
our version of satanic principles. Experience shows that
newcomers to #satan besically keep asking the same questions so
reading of this document might be useful. If you still have
questions, feel free to ask the channel operators in #satan or
contact the author at [email protected].
It is well known that satanism does not come in a single compact
version and major (or less major) differences do exist among
practitioners. In #satan, we do not identify with a particular
group (such as the Church of Satan, the Temple of Set etc) and
in fact we do have a dislike for many existing satanic
organizations. This is mainly why I wrote this FAQ: Our views on
satanism tend to be different from those of CoS or ToS and we do
advocate a more occult approach to satanism which we view as a
branch of the occult rather than as an attempt to take political
power trips, talk nonsense in social philosophy etc.
0. What is #satan?
#
satan is an Undernet IRC channel whose purpose is to host
serious discussions about satanism, religions and the occult in
general. The channel was founded by the author in October 1995.
An undernet IRC server is irc.misha.net. Keep in mind that we
cannot be found in EFNET or DALNET -although we do plan to see
what we can do with the latter in the (hopefully) near future.
All discussions and contributions are welcome in #satan as long
as proper behavior is maintained and these contributions are
intellectual in nature. The author's IRC nick is "margot"
-almost all the time.
1. What is satanism
There is no unique set of beliefs that define satanism and as a
result practitioners are expected to formulate beliefs for
themselves rather than follow blindly and uncritically another
person's or order's belief systems. Moreover there are no
historical records of satanism and most records are made up by
satanism's major enemy, i.e the christian church. Although no
unique set of beliefs that defines satanism exists, a few
general remarks can be made to define the boundaries:
The average satanist disagrees with much of Christianity, believes
in no absolute moral code, and places emphasis on the individual
and personal rights. Satanism is definitely NOT a religion and
the average satanist thinks low of all religions and the concept
of religion itself. Satanism is a philosophy and lifestyle, and
certaiinly a branch of the occult -as can be seen in detail in
what follows.
2. Is satanism blind devil worship?
Satanism is most definitely not devil worship, and satanism is
not bases on the biblical figure of satan, the horned god of
evil that christians chose to represent god's major enemy and
install fear in society in order to accomplish their own goals.
Since satanism is not a religion satanists do NOT worship gods
(as there is no god superior than human beings) and as a result
they do not worship Satan. For a satanist, the highest ideal is
his Self and s/he knows that all gods and daemons are we.
A satanist strives to live life to its full potential and as a
result s/he refuses to have a rigid moral code: Living life
fully means that one should have a full experience and this is
simply impossible if one adopts the view that certain things are
sinful or "bad". Good and evil are simply theological
conventions or conventions imposed by society in order to
control the individual. A satanist does recognize the fact that
insticts exist, and as a result they must be explored fully
instead of overemphasizing denying their importance by labelling
them as "good" or "bad". For a satanist everything is permitted and
there is no law or rule beyond do what thou wilt.
3. What is satan?
Satan is not considered to be a god in satanism. Instead Satan is an archetype of power and Self. Satan stands for what religions consider to be "sin", all moral barriers that religions have imposed upon mankind during thousands of years of history. The use and significance of archetypes should be clear: Archetypes are used to identify with, in order to accomplish a purpose -the purpose being to realize better one's self, live life to its full potential and achieve balance between the various forces that one encounters in life. From another perspective, Satan is a powerful force of nature, a well of "energy" that one hopes to find, identify with and draw from. Clearly there is no point in "worshipping" this force or archetype. Instead much of a satanist's work is based on identifying with the archetype.
Satan does represent the self as different forces that must be
balanced out in order to live a full life: love/hate, good/evil
etc constitute the forces that one must explore fully and
eventually balance out via a personal formula -a formula that
explores the insticts and signifies the "right way" for a person
to know thy self and live life.
4. What does a satanist do?
The average satanist is expected to identify with the satanic
archetypes or forces, these powerful wells of "energy" in order
to understand the Self better and live life more fully. The way
this is expected is usually through the use of magick. Magick is
the art of inducing change in accordance with Will, one's
"inner" or "real" Self to which the ancient proverb "know thy
self" refers to. Magick typically consists of acts known as
rituals: Rituals are are acts whose purpose is -typically- to
invoke personifications of various forces or powers (knows as
deities). The magician's purpose is to personally identify with
these deities in order to understand better an aspect of reality
or his/her self. Magick's purpose is definitely not to gain
matterial wealth, harm or help another person etc. This is
simply idiotic and impossible. Magick's purpose resembles a lot
the art of acting. The magician invokes a deity that represents
various forces, powers or characteristics via a "script" (rite)
which is considered to incorporate elements that must be
favorable to the particular "deity'.
The magician's purpose is to literally identify with the deity, become one at the highest point of the ritual, understand the deity (personification of powers) and evolve a step beyond. A ritual is simply acting out the magician's will to invoke this deity and the various means used -which often appear strange or weird to the uniniated- serve only one purpose: Excite the mind and emotion of the emotion and induce passage to special mental states where identification with the deity becomes possible. From another point of view, rites are simply approapriate triggers of the right psychological points, triggers that can induce these special mental states that the magician is after.
Magick does not deal with reality as we normally know it -if
that would be the case, it would mean that the magician can
alter physical reality via the use of rites, which is simply not
true and (at best) food for people's idiocy. Magick is simply an
induced journey into the sub-conscious, a series of steps taken
methodically and carefully in order to explore this terrain,
build a personal reality (where these deities might manifest)
and understand better this terrain, which is nothing but the
real Self, the place where insticts and other powerful forces
reside, waiting to manifest themselves and be explored.
5. How is a ritual conducted?
Like it has been said before, a rite is simply supposed to
excite the emotion and induce certain mental states that can
help in identifying with the particular force invoked. One
typically needs a physical area where the rite is to take place
-an altar for example. One is supposed to know what the
particular deity invoked is all about, what is favorable to the
deity for example. The altar should therefore be "devoted" to
the deity using symbols that are favorable to the deity.
Symbols, colors or the whole script of rite should be
constructed using whatever is favorable to the deity. The
magician is expected to live symbolically the life of the deity
-mythology usually is of great value provided one thinks that a
given mythological entity is well suited to represent the forces
and archetypes that must be represented- and at some point
"identify", become one with him/her.
This illustrates a major
difference between magickal rites and the rites that one
encounters in the christian church or various light-hearted
pagan circles: A rite is not simply a theatrical act where the
participant is a simple watcher; the participant is expected
indeed to personify the highest force involked (deity) and
thereofore his/her role is indeed active. Ideally one should
conduct his/her own rites and experiment with what works and
what doesn't. At the starting phases this is not always possible
and standard rites -conducted by others previously- should most
likely be used.
A good introduction to ritual and magick theory is A. Crowley,
"Magick in Theory and Practice", where a set of standard rituals
and liturgies may also be found. Various serious or less serious
rituals are available in the internet but I would recommend
against them, as any child can come up with similar ones. It is
IMPORTANT to keep in mind that the ritual per se is NOT
important. There is NO single way to invoke Bacchus for example;
Bacchus is not a real being with a given but secret phone number
(rite) which one must know in order to invoke him.
Bacchus is a
set of given forces and powers that reside in our sub-conscious
and a rite is expected to be something that MUST excite a GIVEN
person's emotion in order for the personification of Bacchus to
be successful. From that point of view, one should study the
life and death and resurrection of Bacchus carefully (from
available mythological sources), understand how Bacchus is
represented in ancient Greek tragedies, understand what symbols
and powers pertain to him and use them, realize what the god is
all about, and at the end invoke him, talk with him and identify
with him at the most exalted point of the rite.
Although this is a personal work -and most certainly not an easy
one- various standard rites are available that should be able to
help the beginner. For example banishing techniques are used
widely -in almost every rite- and standard banishings are
available in A. Crowley's work mentioned above. Some banishing
rituals are also available in the WWW. The interested person
should do a search at http://www.yahoo.com for "magick" in case
more information on this subject matter is required.
Specific satanic rituals include the Black Mass -a rite of
breaking away from christianity and established beliefs at the
individual level, by expressing the individual's anger and
determination to do so- and invocations or rites devoted to
particular deities such as Baphomet, or deities that have to
do with balance/duality or specifically the dark side.
6. Do satanists commit murder in in their rituals?
Some misleading reports exist about Satanists: they are
organized into nationwide cults; they commit ritual murders on a
grand scale; they raise their children with psychological
disorders; they kidnap people for blood sacrifice; they organize
day-care centers and abuse the children placed in their care. A
whole class of books exists detailing the exploits of these
Satanic groups. The problem with all these works is that they
are fictional rather than truthful accounts.
Much is claimed
based on scanty evidence that would be better explained by
another scenario. Claims of involvement with Satanism are made
by patients under hypnosis (hypnotized subjects are notorious
for their suggestibility and tendency to produce fictions).
Other "former Satanists" distort the truth in search of
attention and money. These sensationalists never go to the
police regarding the criminal activities they allegedly took
part in, which calls the veracity of their claims and the
sincerity of their remorse into question.
Evidence does not exist to support what is said to occur. If
the number of murders said to be committed by Satanists was
accurate, some bodies should have been found by now. While
means have been suggested by which bodies could be concealed, it
stretches the imagination to believe that every body has been
successfully hidden thus. Evidence in other areas is similarly
lacking.
Individuals investigating suspected Satanic crimes misinterpret
what they find to fit their expectations. The "Necronomicon",
published by Avon Books, is used as an authoritative guide to
Satanic practices. Yet few Satanists take the book seriously in
any way, and none follow it to the letter. This and other
things lead some non-Satanists to see what simply is not there.
The observant reader may note that there have been a few crimes
linked to Satanism. In all cases the criminal(s) worked alone
with no connections to other groups. Some cases have been
publicized by the media as being related to Satanism when in
fact they involve another religion, as in the Matamoros case,
which involved some elements of Palo Mayombe (an African
religion), and some rituals taken from popular motion pictures.
The lesson to be learned is that although a book may appear in the
Non-fiction" section of a bookstore, that doesn't make it so.
There is a copy of an FBI report on "occult crime" archived
at ftp.lysator.liu.se pub/religion/satanism/Crime/satanic"crime
which shows what the FBI thinks of the claims of fundamentalists.
There is also a good file on the subject at the same site
pub/religion/satanism/General/general
The most definitive book to date on the topic of rumors of Satanic
cults involved in ritual murder/abuse is
"Satanic Panic; the Creation of a Contemporary Legend" by Jeffrey
S. Victor. Open Court Press, 1992
7. How do I learn more about magick?
Some good introductory and intermediate works on magick are:
* A. Crowley,"Magick in theory and practice" --available online.
Definitive work on magick for beginners.
* A. Crowley, "Magick without tears" --available online. A
series of letters to a prospective magick student. Well written,
it does deal with important questions.
* P. Carroll, "Liber KKK" --available online. Useful
introduction to practical chaos magick.
* P. Carroll, "Liber Null and Psychonaut", Weiser Co. Practical
introduction to chaos magick, highly recommended.
* S. Michaelsen, Portable darkness, Harmont Co., a very good
introduction to Crowley's work, basically a collection of
important parts from his writings, including "Eight lectures on
yoga" and "Liber AL".
* A.O. Spare, "The book of pleasure" --available online. Very
good introduction to what magick exactly is.
Crowley was an occult genius -by any standard- and his works are
to be recommended without hesitation. Much of his work is
contained in the 10 volume set known as the "Equinox of the
Gods", a periodical published in England at the turn of the
present century. The "Equinox" is also available online from
http://www.winternet.com/~robin. Many other works by Crowley are
available in this homepage.
Carroll is a leading author in the field known as "chaos
magick". Chaos magick is basically ceremonial magick with the
ceremonies kept to a minimum and based on the belief that there
should be no pre-set rules in magick but practitioners should be
able to discover things for themselves.
I am sorry to say that most satanists do not appreciate these
authors as much as they should but instead they focus their
attention on politics, social philosophy and pseudo-occultism.
8. How do I learn more about satanism?
There is extensive bibliography written by satanists about
satanism. Of course common beliefs typically do not exist but
beginners may find the following books and web sites of
interest:
http://www.marshall.edu/~allen12/index.html
(Hell- the online guide to Satanism. Contains resources from many
groups.)
TOKUS FAQ;
ftp.portal.com /pub/ss/usenet/FAQs/FAQ.tokustn.9052
(Interesting & relevant theoretical document)
Recommended Reading:
(technical stuff on satanism)
* The Satanic Bible, by Anton Szander LaVey, Avon Books,
1969. Presents the Satanic views and doctrines of the Church of
Satan, along with an introduction to its rituals.
* The Compleat Witch" (the new edition is called "The
Satanic Witch), by Anton LaVey, Lancer Books, 1971.
* The Satanic Rituals, by Anton LaVey, University Books,
1972. More books discussing LaVey's brand of Satanism.
* The Black Arts, by Richard Cavendish, Perigee Books
(Putnam), 1967. An objective introduction to magic, demonology,
and classical views of Satanism.
* The Necronomicon [by the Mad Arab], Avon Books, 1977.
Purported ritual book of great efficacy. Generally regarded as
fiction interspersed with translations of Mesopotamian texts.
Mileage may vary, depending on how seriously you take
babble. This is included mainly because of its availability and
popularity; I actually strongly recommend that you do "not"buy
this. Much information on books of this name is
available in the Necronomicon FAQ written by Kendrick Chua,
allegedly chived at io.com & alt.horror.cthulhu.
* The Necronomicon, edited by George Hay 1978. This is a
more "Lovecraftian" Necronomicon which closely follows what
Lovecraft said was contained in the famous book of the Mad Arab.
It is, of course, fiction, but much more fun than the Avon book
in that it does not take itself so seriously. Scoob publishing
is supposed to have a R'lyeh text in the works as a sequel to
this.
(Satanic history)
* The Secret Life of a Satanist by Blanche Barton, Mondo
Press. The authorized biography of Anton LaVey, and a basic
guide to Satanic philosophy. This book has been largely
discredited as a serious biography by an article in
the 9/5/91 issue of "Rolling Stone" "The Church of Satan" by
Blanche Barton The CoS authorized book on the topic.
* The Second Coming, by Arthur Lyons, 1970 [out of print]
A history of Satanism through the Middle Ages and the modern
era.
* Do What You Will by Geoffry Ashe A history of
philosophers & groups who use this thelemic motto. Especially
nice history of the "Hellfire Clubs"
* The Prince of Darkness by Jeffrey Burton Russell, Cornell
University Press, 1988. Historians work on the history of Satan
from earliest history through the twentieth century. A summary
of a four-book series (The Devil, Satan, Lucifer, and
Mephistopheles, by the same author) which may be too much
reading for casual interest.
* The Old Enemy, by Neil Forsyth, Princeton University
Press, 1987. Another history of Satan focusing on the Middle
East and early Christianity.
* Satan Wants You, by Arthur Lyons, Mysterious Press
(Warner), 1988. Presents an overview of Satanism and the
history of Satan, plus an in-depth look at popular
misconceptions.
* The Occult by Colin Wilson An excellent objective
introduction to the history of the subject.
* The History of the Church of Satan, by Michael Aquino
Probably the definative work on the topic; it is unavailable to
the general public due to various copyright laws. It may be
available to historians and scholars through the Temple of Set.
* The Devil in Legend and Literature" by Maximillian
Rudwin. Open Court Press, Chicago 1931. (on and pertaining to
Xtian fictions of Satanism)
* Satanic Panic; the Creation of a Contemporary Legend" by
Jeffrey S. Victor. Open Court Press, 1992. This book is an
excellent debunking of the many "evil satanist" rumors and
legends that abound in rural and mainstream America. It shows
the similarities between these rumors, and those of the
inquisition, European anti-semetism, and the McCarthy
red-scares.
* The Satan Seller, Mike Warnke's imagination, Logos
International, 1972. A Christian presents his alleged
experiences in a Satanic cult before his conversion to
Christianity. Has been exposed by fundamentalist journalists as
a fraud.
* Cornerstone, Volume 21, number 98, "Selling Satan," Jon
Trott & Mike Hertenstein, 1992. This gets *highest*
recommendation. From a Christian magazine which does a great
job of discrediting Mike Warnke's accounts mentioned in "The
Satan Seller" and elsewhere.
* Satanism: The Seduction of America's Youth", Bob Larson,
Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1989. The facts on the *conspiracy*
now coming to a lonely town near you!!! (You're reading the FAQ,
so it's already here!)
Following are a number of works recommended dealing with
Satanism's links with crime, multiple personality disorder, etc.
* The Satanism Scare, ed. James T. Richardson, Joel Best,
and David G. Bromley (NY: Aldine, 1991): 145-172.
* Battle for the Mind, by William Sargent, Harper & Row, 1957.
* In Pursuit Of Satan, by Robert D. Hicks (Prometheus
Books)
* Satanism In America, issued by the Committee for the
Scientific Examination of Religion.
"Occult Crime: A Law Enforcement Primer" [To obtain a copy
of this report, write to
California Office of Criminal Justice Planning
1130 K Street, Suite 300 Sacramento, CA 95814
(Phone: (916) 324-9100). Request the "Research
Update, Special Edition, Winter 1989-1990, Volume 1, Number 6"
issue. No mention is made of a donation, but it may be useful
to inquire beforehand.]
* Snapping; America's Epidemic of Sudden Personality
Change, by Flo Conway & Jim Siegelman. An interesting work
utilizing information theory in the study of sudden personality
change as occurs in religious cults, and the "Born-Again"
phenomenon.
(Satan in art and Philosophy)
* Paradise Lost by John Milton. An epic poem telling the
tale of Lucifer from when he is thrown out of heaven, to the
Fall of Adam and Eve. It makes Lucifer into a heroic figure,
whilst God is made out to be a little vague and weak.
* The Divine Comedy by Dante. Another epic poem in three
parts (Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradisio) covering the author's
pilgrimage through them.
* La-Bas (Down There), by J. K. Huysmans (1891?) translated
by Keene Wallace. Semi-fictional novel of the occult and the
black mass in late nineteenth century Paris.
H. P. Lovecraft, collected works. Classic horror fiction
that has served as inspiration for many Satanists.
Frederick Nietzsche, various works Nietzschean philosophies
form the core of Satanism. Much of the "Satanic Bible" owes its
philosophical and literary roots to works such as "Thus Spoke
Zarastrutha" and "The Anti-Christ" by Nietzsche.
* Man and Technics by Oswald Spengler An extension of
Nietzsches philosophy to the modern age; Spenglers philosophy is
condensed into this small book; a must read. (Study of the
voluminous "The Decline of Western Civilization" may prove
useful to those interested in theories of history and politics)
(Biblical debunking)
* Who Wrote the Bible?, by Richard Elliott Friedman, Harper
& Row, 1987. A biblical scholar attempts to answer the question
of the title, and in the process comes up with some interesting
reasons for events in "The Bible" (why does Moses have horns?
Why the scene with the golden calf?). An interesting read, and
possibly amusing for the cynic.
* The Dead Sea Scrolls There are many good books on this
subject for those who need to debunk Christianity historically
as well as philosophically. Among them:
* Dead Sea Scrolls & the Bible, by Roland E. Murphy (a
Roman Catholic at that) 1968
* A Crack in the Jar; What ancient Jewish Documents tell
us about the New Testament" by Niel Fujita (also a Christian
scholar) 1986
* The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Christian Myth" by John
Allegro (one of the original Dead Sea Scholars) 1984
Note than all of the above scholars are of the old
school of scroll study. While all do a good job of debunking
Christianity, the latest generation of scholarly works is
even more damning.
* Testament" by John Romer (Henry Holt, NY 1988)
Considered an excellent and well balanced work on Biblical
history -also a PBS mini-series available on video cassette.
9. What is "The Satanic Bible"?
"The Satanic Bible" is a book describing the philosophy of Anton
LaVey, founder of the Church of Satan. This organization holds
the view that there is no higher god than oneself, and that one
should worship accordingly. Life is the Great Indulgence and
Death is the Great Abstinence, as there is no afterlife. The
basic ideas of "The Satanic Bible" are laid out in the Nine
Satanic Statements:
1. Satan represents indulgence, instead of abstinence!
2. Satan represents vital existence, instead of spiritual pipe dreams!
3. Satan represents undefiled wisdom, instead of
hypocritical self-deceit!
4. Satan represents kindness to those who deserve it,
instead of love wasted on ingrates!
5. Satan represents vengeance, instead of turning the
other cheek!
6. Satan represents responsibility to the responsible,
instead of concern for psychic vampires!
7. Satan represents man as just another animal,
sometimes better than, more often worse than those that
walk on all fours, who, because of his "divine
spiritual and intellectual development," has become the
most vicious animal of all!
8. Satan represents all of the so-called sins, as they
all lead to physical, mental, or emotional
gratification!
9. Satan has been the best friend the church has ever
had, as he has kept it in business all these years!
"The Satanic Bible" can be found (in America) in most chain
bookstores in the New Age, Philosophy, or Religion sections.
Members of a certain group have noticed that much of the Satanic
Bible is plagiarized from various sources; the above-quoted
"Nine Satanic Statements" are condensed from a passage in Ayn
Rands "Atlas Shrugged" and the "Book of Satan" is PLAGIARIZED
from Ragnar Redbeards "Might is Right".
10. Satanic Organizations?
Some may be interested in joining some kind of organization of
like minded individuals. Most Satanists will agree that
organizations are best when least intrusive on the individual,
and would recommend caution in joining or associating with any
group, including (and perhaps especially) those mentioned in the
FAQ. Some useful "common sense" cautions for the potential
neophyte Satanist; Don't let anyone tell you what to believe, or
what to do.
Advice or recommendations are one thing; orders or commands
quite another. Remember that you are a free being, not a pawn in
someones power fantasy. Trust your feelings; if you feel you may
be the victim of a working of Con Artistry (oft referred to as
Lesser Magick), you probably are, at least in some sense.
It is important to realize that all organizations, Satanic and
otherwise, are "dangerous"; by their very nature they have more
available physical, economic and psychological resources than
the individual who would interact with them, hence one should
exercise caution in ones dealings with any organization or one
could find oneself with less freedom, a destroyed reputation,
legal troubles, or worse.
With this in mind; several of the more populous Satanic
organizations:
3.1 The Church of Satan
The Church of Satan can be contacted at:
Church of Satan
P.O. Box 210082
San Francisco, CA 94121
$100 will get you a lifetime membership.
Some people question whether the term "Satanism" is
appropriate for the Church's beliefs, due to its atheistic
stance. Since the Church has been in existence for over 20
years its definition is probably here to stay, although it isn't
the only definition.
The ideas and philosophy of the Church of Satan may be best
discerned by reading "The Satanic Bible" by Anton Szandor LaVey
(Avon Books, New York, NY).
(From Peggy Nadramia:)
In modern parlance, the Church of Satan may be called a
user-driven organization. Members are involved and advanced
exactly as their own desires, abilities and accomplishments
dictate. There are no set activities, meetings or contacts. The
new member comes to the organization, ideally, with his own
goals and plans for achieving them; he presents them to us and
is directed in the way that would be most mutually beneficial.
The CoS is not looking for people who join and want us to "put
on a show," taking them by the hand, introducing them to their
new friends, telling them what time to show up for the weekly
get-together and what to wear. Satanists are not put in contact
automatically, or by geographical proximity; this has been tried
and found a failure. True elitists are by their nature very
individualistic and neighboring members won't necessarily have
anything in common; "just being Satanists together" isn't
enough. When we observe members making advances on their own in
their chosen fields of endeavor, we will put them in contact
with other members running on the same track; we've watched this
happen many times and we're pleased and proud to say the results
are magical. There are also members who are satisfied simply to
join and be counted among the adherents to a philosophy that
best embodies their own true nature.
An excellent introduction to the philosophies of the Church
of Satan is available at ftp.lysator.liu.se in
pub/satanism/General/what"is
[email protected] is the CoS online representative.
3.2 The Ordo Sinistra Vivendi
The Ordo Sinistra Vivendi (OSV), formerly the Order of
the Left Hand Path (OLHP), is a non-sectarian, non-dogmatic
forum of philosophers and occultists. It was started in New
Zealand a number of years ago by Faustus Scorpius. Recently many
changes have occured within the Order, giving it new direction,
under the new Magister: Jovis Draco.
The purpose of the OSV, as per the Order's constitution, is as follows:
1. The OSV is an elitist Satanic Order existing to: (a)
Develop and actualize the full potential and inner qualities of
each indiviual initiate; (b) Herald the dawn of human
Self-godhood, within the context of a Faustian Civilization.
The official magazine of the OSV is "Suspire" and is
published twice yearly. It is available from the main OSV
address. Another magazine affiliated to the OSV is the "The
Heretic", published quarterly by Realist Publications. It's
predecessor "The Watcher" is archived at various places on the
net. Realist Publications publishes a wide variety of literature
and various other items. For a complete catalogue, send a I.R.C.
to P.O. Box 38-262, Petone, Wellington, New Zealand.
A great deal of emphasis is placed on the Nietzschean
concept of 'Self-Overcoming' as the basis of individual
self-realization. The OSV welcomes all sincere seekers after
wisdom undefiled and students of those hidden depths of the
human psyche and cosmos which may properly be called 'occult'.
For all enquiries write to:
Ordo Sinistra Vivendi
P.O. Box 83
Paekakariki Wellington New Zealand
Or send netmail to: [email protected]
[
Note: The OSV has archived material at ftp.lysator.liu.se
pub/religion/satanism/OLHP and earthlight.co.nz
pub/users/graemew/*]
3.3 The Order of Nine Angles
The Order of Nine Angles (ONA), based in England, are
probably the most controversial Satanic group that is around at
present. Their aims and intents, and indeed their teachings,
seem to be misunderstood and perhaps feared by many people,
including some other Satanic groups. The ONA claim the title of
'traditional Satanists' and claim to have been around for well
over one hundred years. The system they advocate is knownas the
Septenary tradition, 'the seven-fold Way'.
'Physis' is divided
into seven stages, which represent the varying degrees of
insight attained; the stages representing Initiation, Second
Degree Initiation, External Adept, Internal Adept,
Master/Mistress (or High Priest/Priestess), Magus, and Immortal.
Much of the work is very practical. A great and refreshing
aspect to ONA is 'The Star Game' which has three main functions:
(1) Development of higher levels of consciousness. (2) A new
form of magickal working for the 21st Century and beyond. (3)
Development of certain 'magickal' skills, aiding mindfullness,
concentration and visualization.
Whatever rumours are told about the ONA one should check them
out for themselves. Whether you agree with them or not, they
certainly live up to the name 'Satanists'.
Anyone interested in the above should contact:
Order of Nine Angles
PO Box 228, York
Y01 2GZ
England
[Note: the ftp site ftp.lysator.liu.se has two files written by the ONA;
pub/religion/satanism/General/introduction and ~/t21sp, these & other ONA
files are also archived in earthlight.co.nz /pub/users/graemew/ona/]
3.4 The Fraternity of the Jarls of Balder
Balder's goals and aims may be basically summed up as follows:
1) "Western Magick and the Way of the Warrior";
2) "Reviving and
understanding Europe's ancient heritage and regions".
Although at present Balder is a male fraternity, it has
encouraged the feminine principle in its work by recruiting as
members "Earth Matrons": ladies of occult renown from various
countries. Also Earth Sisters: sisters, wives, girlfriends,
mothers, etc of Balder members.
"Balder was founded on the Autumn Equinox of 1990 to answer the
historical need of pan-Europe for re-discovering of the lore,
traditions and magick of our Great Family of Nations. ". . .
"Our Order does not conflict with or restrict an Individual's
personal beliefs, status, occupation/lifestyle or
religious/political preference or sexual orientation, or indeed
it has no axe to grind with other groups."
Some things Balder has to offer are:
* 12 Issues of the Journal (36 pages, post-free, bi-monthly, free to members)
* Membership to The European Library
* Correspondence, study and contact facility
* Grade degree studies
* Possibility of contact with individuals worldwide
* Special Course on magick, history, esoterica, training, etc.
* International network of Sportsmen, Musicians and Artists
* The Balder Emporium
* Prisoner Sponsorship Scheme
* Fraternatis Loki (a dark and sinister section for the dedicated...)
The European Library
A non-profit educational initiative (like Balder itself) aimed at
providing a modern equivalent to the Great Library of Alexandria. Over
45 publishers donate copies of all their published books etc to
the library, including Llewellyn, Weiser, Ashgrove, Airlift,
Gateway, New Falcon, Nicholas Hays, Kramer, Phanes, Spring,
factor, Parabola, Bear & Co. + small publishers & secret
societies.
New Spartans Sports Club
An international sports and friendship society dedicated to male
identities, ethos, bonding, sports friendship and warriorship.
Members are not necessarily members of Balder, but Balder
members get free membership.
3.5 Others...
There are several other groups with online resources;
The Luciferian "Order of the Morning Star" may be contacted at
[email protected] or http://www.usa.net/oktober/infernal.html
There are several CoS sub-groups and little known Satanic groups represented
at http://www.marshall.edu/~allen12/index.html
11. Is the "Satanic Bible" the definitive satanism work?
The answer is emphatically negative. The "Satanic Bible" is
simply a book written by LaVey in order to promote his own
version of satanism. We consider LaVey's satanism to be the next
best thing to Hollywood satanism. As a matter of fact, LaVey's
work is NOT original at all (as mentioned before) and LaVey was
just a successful businessman, not a reputable occultist or
magician. Although LaVey did bring about a separation of
satanism from its media-created inverse christianity image, his
work lacks depth and essence. We believe that satanism should
be based on a rigorous occult and magickal basis, not a set of
behavioral rules -as those described in the satanic bible- or
political preaching of dubious quality -as in the Church's
"pentagonal revisionism" for example. From that point of view, a
thorough study of magick and mythology (especially the
balanced/dual or dark gods/goddesses) is to be recommended.
12. What about politics and social philosophies and all that?
Many satanists seem to adhere to elitist cosmo-theories and
social darwinism which basically preaches the law of the jungle
and survival of the fittest. Although we do respect Nietzsche's
work we fail to see why politics and social philosophies become
relevant in a branch of the occult, such as satanism. One
explanation may of course be that certain leading satanists such
as LaVey are on a political power trip.
Satanism is above all and foremost, an occult philosophy and a
lifestyle for the individual, and has ideally nothing to do with
how society should be organized or what people should or
shouldn't do at the aggregate social level. This is simply not
relevant. If individual satanists want to adhere to a specific
social philosophy, they're certainly free to do so. At this
point we are still waiting for rigorous and serious treatments
on a social philosophy from a satanic viewpoint: The fact that
we haven't seen it yet, is a proof of the fact that satanism is
above all INDIVIDUALISTIC and cannot fit in the limited
boundaries of sociology or politics; satanism simply has nothing
to do with these boundaries. Of course nonsense and naivete
abound, as can be seen from various "contributions" in the
field.
13. What are the various branches of satanists that exist out there?
1. The Dabblers: adopt Satanic trappings for a brief period
of time, usually for entertainment rather than serious
purposes. Many modern youths fall in to this category.
2. Churches of Satan: are patterned after the teachings of
Anton LaVey. These groups believe in individualism,
gratification of the ego, self-reliance and the ideal of the
Nietzchean Superman. These groups use Magick as a tool for
earthly power. They see Satan as the driving force behind
achievment in mankind.
3. Gnostics: can be divided into two major categories:
3a. Promethian Gnostics: Believe in a literal "Satan", but
believe that the creator of the world (Jehovah) is the evil
deity. Satan is seen as the "bringer of light"; a beneficient
god. This is an old "heresy" seen in groups such as the Yezidis
or the Ophites.
3b. Dark Gnostics: Worship the dark force in nature. These
groups follow the whims of a capricious god, which most
westerners would see as being "evil." There are a few
historical christian heresies which would fall into this
category. Kali worshippers could also be categorized here.
4. Secondary Satanists: follow a faith outside the Christian
mainstream. Most would not consider themselves as being
"Satanic" and strictly speaking should not be defined as
satanists (as per se with some of the Gnostic groups), but the
ignorant often categorize them as Satanists. Voodoun and
Santiera could be grouped here, as could medeaval witchcraft (if
it actually existed). Certain forms of Tantric Buddism could
also be placed in this category.
5. Hellfire Clubs: Were a phenomenon of the 18th century. The
first of these was founded by the Duke of Wharton in the early
1700's. Most infamous was sir Francis Dashwood's Medmenham club
(Often incorrectly called the hellfire club). Dashwood was a
close freind of Benjamin Franklin, who may have been a member of
this group. Franklin's description of the Medmeham club's secret
chambers is one of the few we have, so his membership seems
likely. In any case, Dashwood and Franklin co-authored the
"Franklin Prayer Book" (often called the Book of Common Prayer)
which is commonly used in America. Another famous member of the
Medmanham club was the Earl of Sandwich, inventor of (guess
what) the Sandwich. Hellfire clubs were exclusive groups
dedicated to much political intrigue, partying, and some
occasional occult activities.
6. Romantic/Promethean Satanists Literary/historical "Satanists"
-William Blake, Charles Baudelaire, Maupertin, Lautremont and
Gabriele D'Annunzio.
7. Left-Hand Path Pagans: There are several European groups,
most of them consisting of small "covens" of several people,
that are or could be considered Satanists. Two of the larger of
these groups are The Fraternity of Baelder and the Order of Nine
Angles (ONA). These groups allegedly have longer traditions, and
"more authentic" origins (whatever that might mean). ONA is
especially fond of calling itself the "traditional Satanists."
These groups tend to have more "extreme" views than the others
mentioned, and have little, if any authoritarian structure.