Catholic Church On New Age
Catholic Church On New Age
Catholic Church On New Age
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).
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 labelled “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.
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 distorsions.
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 whichNew 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, panentheistic. 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”.
2.4. “Inhabitants of myth rather than history”(43)?: 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 Ageto 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 acquiringwisdom, 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
life-styles 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 labelled “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 practise 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.
6 POINTS TO NOTE
6.1. Guidance and sound formation are needed
Christ or Aquarius? New Age is almost always linked with “alternatives”,
either an alternative vision of reality or an alternative way of improving
one's current situation (magic).(88) Alternatives offer people not two
possibilities, but only the possibility of choosing one thing in preference to
another: in terms of religion, New Age offers an alternative to the Judaeo-
Christian heritage. The Age of Aquarius is conceived as one which will
replace the predominantly Christian Age of Pisces. New Age thinkers are
acutely aware of this; some of them are convinced that the coming change
is inevitable, while others are actively committed to assisting its arrival.
People who wonder if it is possible to believe in both Christ and Aquarius
can only benefit from knowing that this is very much an “either-or”
situation. “No servant can be the slave of two masters: he will either hate
the first and love the second, or treat the first with respect and the second
with scorn” (Lk 16.13). Christians have only to think of the difference
between the wise men from the East and King Herod to recognise the
powerful effects of choice for or against Christ. It must never be forgotten
that many of the movements which have fed the New Age are explicitly
anti-Christian. Their stance towards Christianity is not neutral, but
neutralising: despite what is often said about openness to all religious
standpoints, traditional Christianity is not sincerely regarded as an
acceptable alternative. In fact, it is occasionally made abundantly clear that
“there is no tolerable place for true Christianity”, and there are even
arguments justifying anti-Christian behaviour.(89) This opposition initially
was confined to the rarefied realms of those who go beyond a superficial
attachment to New Age, but has begun more recently to permeate all levels
of the “alternative” culture which has an extraordinarily powerful appeal,
above all in sophisticated Western societies.
Fusion or confusion? New Age traditions consciously and deliberately blur
real differences: between creator and creation, between humanity and
nature, between religion and psychology, between subjective and objective
reality. The idealistic intention is always to overcome the scandal of
division, but in New Age theory it is a question of the systematicfusion of
elements which have generally been clearly distinguished in Western
culture. Is it, perhaps, fair to call it “confusion”? It is not playing with words
to say that New Age thrives on confusion. The Christian tradition has
always valued the role of reason in justifying faith and in understanding
God, the world and the human person.(90) New Age has caught the mood of
many in rejecting cold, calculating, inhuman reason. While this is a
positive insight, recalling the need for a balance involving all our faculties,
it does not justify sidelining a faculty which is essential for a fully human
life. Rationality has the advantage of universality: it is freely available to
everyone, quite unlike the mysterious and fascinating character of esoteric
or gnostic “mystical” religion. Anything which promotes conceptual
confusion or secrecy needs to be very carefully scrutinised. It hides rather
than reveals the ultimate nature of reality. It corresponds to the post-modern
loss of confidence in the bold certainties of former times, which often
involves taking refuge in irrationality. The challenge is to show how a
healthy partnership between faith and reason enhances human life and
encourages respect for creation.
Create your own reality. The widespread New Age conviction that one
creates one's own reality is appealing, but illusory. It is crystallised in Jung's
theory that the human being is a gateway from the outer world into an inner
world of infinite dimensions, where each person is Abraxas, who gives birth
to his own world or devours it. The star that shines in this infinite inner
world is man's God and goal. The most poignant and problematic
consequence of the acceptance of the idea that people create their own
reality is the question of suffering and death: people with severe handicaps
or incurable diseases feel cheated and demeaned when confronted by the
suggestion that they have brought their misfortune upon themselves, or that
their inability to change things points to a weakness in their approach to
life. This is far from being a purely academic issue: it has profound
implications in the Church's pastoral approach to the difficult existential
questions everyone faces. Our limitations are a fact of life, and part of being
a creature. Death and bereavement present a challenge and an opportunity,
because the temptation to take refuge in a westernised reworking of the
notion of reincarnation is clear proof of people's fear of death and their
desire to live forever. Do we make the most of our opportunities to recall
what is promised by God in the resurrection of Jesus Christ? How real is the
faith in the resurrection of the body, which Christians proclaim every
Sunday in the creed? The New Age idea that we are in some sense also
gods is one which is very much in question here. The whole question
depends, of course, on one's definition of reality. A sound approach to
epistemology and psychology needs to be reinforced – in the appropriate
way – at every level of Catholic education, formation and preaching. It is
important constantly to focus on effective ways of speaking of
transcendence. The fundamental difficulty of all New Age thought is that
this transcendence is strictly a self-transcendeence to be achieved within a
closed universe.
Pastoral resources. In Chapter 8 an indication is given regarding the
principal documents of the Catholic Church in which can be found an
evaluation of the ideas of New Age. In the first place comes the address of
Pope John Paul II which was quoted in the Foreword. The Pope recognizes
in this cultural trend some positive aspects, such as “the search for new
meaning in life, a new ecological sensivity and the desire to go beyond a
cold, rationalistic religiosity”. But he also calls the attention of the faithful to
certain ambiguous elements which are incompatible with the Christian
faith: these movements “pay little heed to Revelation”, “they tend to
relativize religious doctrine in favor of a vague worldview”, “they often
propose a pantheistic concept of God”, “they replace personal
responsibility to God for our actions with a sense of duty to the cosmos,
thus overturning the true concept of sin and the need for redemption
through Christ”.(91)
7 APPENDIX
7.1. Some brief formulations of New Age ideas
William Bloom's 1992 formulation of New Age quoted in Heelas, p. 225f.:
*All life – all existence – is the manifestation of Spirit, of the Unknowable, of
that supreme consciousness known by many different names in many
different cultures.
*The purpose and dynamic of all existence is to bring Love, Wisdom,
Enlightenment... into full manifestation.
*All religions are the expression of this same inner reality.
*All life, as we perceive it with the five human senses or with scientific
instruments, is only the outer veil of an invisible, inner and causal reality.
*Similarly, human beings are twofold creatures – with: (i) an outer
temporary personality; and (ii) a multi-dimensional inner being (soul or
higher self).
*The outer personality is limited and tends towards love.
*The purpose of the incarnation of the inner being is to bring the vibrations
of the outer personality into a resonance of love.
*All souls in incarnation are free to choose their own spiritual path.
*Our spiritual teachers are those whose souls are liberated from the need to
incarnate and who express unconditional love, wisdom and enlightenment.
Some of these great beings are well- known and have inspired the world
religions. Some are unknown and work invisibly.
*All life, in its different forms and states, is interconnected energy – and this
includes our deeds, feelings and thoughts. We, therefore, work with Spirit
and these energies in co-creating our reality.
*Although held in the dynamic of cosmic love, we are jointly responsible for
the state of our selves, of our environment and of all life.
*During this period of time, the evolution of the planet and of humanity has
reached a point when we are undergoing a fundamental spiritual change in
our individual and mass consciousness. This is why we talk of a New
Age. This new consciousness is the result of the increasingly successful
incarnation of what some people call the energies of cosmic love. This new
consciousness demonstrates itself in an instinctive understanding of the
sacredness and, in particular, the interconnectedness of all existence.
*This new consciousness and this new understanding of the dynamic
interdependence of all life mean that we are currently in the process of
volving a completely new planetary culture.
Heelas (p. 226) Jeremy Tarcher's “complementary formulation”.
1. The world, including the human race, constitutes an expression of a
higher, more comprehensive divine nature.
2. Hidden within each human being is a higher divine self, which is a
manifestation of the higher, more comprehensive divine nature.
3. This higher nature can be awakened and can become the center of the
individual's everyday life.
4. This awakening is the reason for the existence of each individual life.
David Spangler is quoted in Actualité des religions nº 8, septembre 1999, p.
43, on the principal characteristics of the New Age vision, which is:
*holistic (globalising, because there is one single reality-energy);
*planetary (people must be at one and the same time anchored in their own
culture and open to a universal dimension, capable of promoting love,
compassion, peace and even the establishment of world government).
8 RESOURCES
Documents of the Catholic Church's magisterium
John Paul II, Address to the United States Bishops of Iowa, Kansas, Missouri
and Nebraska on their “Ad Limina” visit, 28 May 1993.
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter to Bishops on Certain
Aspects of Christian Meditation (Orationis Formas), Vatican City (Vatican
Polyglot Press) 1989.
International Theological Commission, Some Current Questions Concerning
Eschatology,1992, Nos. 9-10 (on reincarnation).
International Theological Commission, Some Questions on the Theology of
Redemption, 1995, I/29 and II/35-36.
Argentine Bishops' Conference Committee for Culture, Frente a una Nueva
Era. Desafio a la pastoral en el horizonte de la Nueva
Evangelización, 1993.
Irish Theological Commission, A New Age of the Spirit? A Catholic
Response to the New Age Phenomenon, Dublin 1994.
Godfried Danneels, Au-delà de la mort: réincarnation et
resurrection, Pastoral Letter, Easter 1991.
Godfried Danneels, Christ or Aquarius? Pastoral Letter, Christmas 1990
(Veritas, Dublin).
Carlo Maccari, “La 'mistica cosmica' del New Age”, in Religioni e Sette nel
Mondo 1996/2.
Carlo Maccari, La New Age di fronte alla fede cristiana, Turin (LDC) 1994.
Edward Anthony McCarthy, The New Age Movement, Pastoral Instruction,
1992.
Paul Poupard, Felicità e fede cristiana, Casale Monferrato (Ed. Piemme)
1992.
Joseph Ratzinger, La fede e la teologia ai nostri giorni, Guadalajara, May
1996, inL'Osservatore Romano 27 October 1996.
Norberto Rivera Carrera, Instrucción Pastoral sobre el New Age, 7 January
1996.
Christoph von Schönborn, Risurrezione e reincarnazione, (Italian
translation) Casale Monferrato (Piemme) 1990.
J. Francis Stafford, Il movimento “New Age”, in L'Osservatore Romano, 30
October 1992.
Working Group on New Religious Movements (ed.), Vatican City, Sects and
New Religious Movements. An Anthology of Texts From the Catholic
Church, Washington (USCC) 1995.
Christian studies
Raúl Berzosa Martinez, Nueva Era y Cristianismo. Entre el diálogo y la
ruptura, Madrid (BAC) 1995.
André Fortin, Les Galeries du Nouvel Age: un chrétien s'y promène, Ottawa
(Novalis) 1993.
Claude Labrecque, Une religion américaine. Pistes de discernement
chrétien sur les courants populaires du “Nouvel Age”, Montréal
(Médiaspaul) 1994.
The Methodist Faith and Order Committee, The New Age Movement
Report to Conference 1994.
Aidan Nichols, “The New Age Movement”, in The Month, March 1992, pp.
84-89.
Alessandro Olivieri Pennesi, Il Cristo del New Age. Indagine critica, Vatican
City (Libreria Editrice Vaticana) 1999.
Ökumenische Arbeitsgruppe “Neue Religiöse Bewegungen in der
Schweiz”, New Age – aus christlicher Sicht, Freiburg (Paulusverlag) 1987.
Mitch Pacwa s.j., Catholics and the New Age. How Good People are being
drawn into Jungian Psychology, the Enneagram and the New Age of
Aquarius, Ann Arbor MI (Servant) 1992.
John Saliba, Christian Responses to the New Age Movement. A Critical
Assessment, London (Chapman) 1999.
Josef Südbrack, SJ, Neue Religiosität - Herausforderung für die Christen,
Mainz (Matthias-Grünewald-Verlag) 1987 = La nuova religiosità: una sfida
per i cristiani, Brescia (Queriniana) 1988.
“Theologie für Laien” secretariat, Faszination Esoterik, Zürich (Theologie für
Laien) 1996.
David Toolan, Facing West from California's Shores. A Jesuit's Journey into
New Age Consciousness, New York (Crossroad) 1987.
Juan Carlos Urrea Viera, “New Age”. Visión Histórico-Doctrinal y
Principales Desafíos, Santafé de Bogotá (CELAM) 1996.
Jean Vernette, “L'avventura spirituale dei figli dell'Acquario”, in Religioni e
Sette nel Mondo1996/2.
Jean Vernette, Jésus dans la nouvelle religiosité, Paris (Desclée) 1987.
Jean Vernette, Le New Age, Paris (P.U.F.) 1992.
9 GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
9.1. Some New Age books
William Bloom, The New Age. An Anthology of Essential Writings, London
(Rider) 1991.
Fritjof Capra, The Tao of Physics: An Exploration of the Parallels between
Modern Physics and Eastern Mysticism, Berkeley (Shambhala) 1975.
Fritjof Capra, The Turning Point: Science, Society and the Rising Culture,
Toronto (Bantam) 1983.
Benjamin Creme, The Reappearance of Christ and the Masters of Wisdom,
London (Tara Press) 1979.
Marilyn Ferguson, The Aquarian Conspiracy. Personal and Social
Transformation in Our Time, Los Angeles (Tarcher) 1980.
Chris Griscom, Ecstasy is a New Frequency: Teachings of the Light
Institute, New York (Simon & Schuster) 1987.
Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Chicago (University
of Chicago Press) 1970.
David Spangler, The New Age Vision, Forres (Findhorn Publications) 1980.
David Spangler, Revelation: The Birth of a New Age, San Francisco
(Rainbow Bridge) 1976.
David Spangler, Towards a Planetary Vision, Forres (Findhorn Publications)
1977.
David Spangler, The New Age, Issaquah (The Morningtown Press) 1988.
David Spangler, The Rebirth of the Sacred, London (Gateway Books) 1988.
NOTES
(1)
Paul Heelas, The New Age Movement. The Celebration of the Self and the
Sacralization of Modernity, Oxford (Blackwell) 1996, p. 137.
(2)
Cf. P. Heelas, op. cit., p. 164f.
(3)
Cf. P. Heelas, op. cit., p. 173.
(4)
Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Dominum et vivificantem (18 May
1986), 53.
(5)
Cf. Gilbert Markus o.p., “Celtic Schmeltic”, (1) in Spirituality, vol. 4,
November-December 1998, No 21, pp. 379-383 and (2) in Spirituality, vol.
5, January-February 1999, No. 22, pp. 57-61.
(6)
John Paul II, Crossing the Threshold of Hope, (Knopf) 1994, 90.
(7)
Cf. particularly Massimo Introvigne, New Age & Next Age, Casale
Monferrato (Piemme) 2000.
(8)
M. Introvigne, op. cit., p. 267.
(9)
Cf. Michel Lacroix, L'Ideologia della New Age, Milano (il Saggiatore)
1998, p. 86. The word “sect” is used here not in any pejorative sense, but
rather to denote a sociological phenomenon.
(10)
Cf. Wouter J. Hanegraaff, New Age Religion and Western Culture.
Esotericism in the Mirror of Secular Thought, Leiden-New York-Köln (Brill)
1996, p. 377 and elsewhere.
(11)
Cf. Rodney Stark and William Sims Bainbridge, The Future of Religion.
Secularisation, Revival and Cult Formation, Berkeley (University of
California Press) 1985.
(12)
Cf. M. Lacroix, op. cit., p. 8.
(13)
The Swiss “Theologie für Laien” course entitled Faszination Esoterik puts
this clearly. Cf. “Kursmappe 1 – New Age und Esoterik”, text to accompany
slides, p. 9.
(14)
The term was already in use in the title of The New Age Magazine, which
was being published by the Ancient Accepted Scottish Masonic Rite in the
southern jurisdiction of the United States of America as early as 1900 Cf. M.
York, “The New Age Movement in Great Britain”, in Syzygy. Journal of
Alternative Religion and Culture, 1: 2-3 (1992), Stanford CA, p. 156, note 6.
The exact timing and nature of the change to the New Age are interpreted
variously by different authors; estimates of timing range from 1967 to
2376.
(15)
In late 1977, Marilyn Ferguson sent a questionnaire to 210 “persons
engaged in social transformation”, whom she also calls “Aquarian
Conspirators”. The following is interesting: “When respondents were asked
to name individuals whose ideas had influenced them, either through
personal contact or through their writings, those most often named, in order
of frequency, were Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, C.G. Jung, Abraham
Maslow, Carl Rogers, Aldous Huxley, Robert Assagioli, and J. Krishnamurti.
“Others frequently mentioned: Paul Tillich, Hermann Hesse, Alfred North
Whitehead, Martin Buber, Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, Gregory Bateson,
Tarthang Tulku, Alan Watts, Sri Aurobindo, Swami Muktananda, D.T.
Suzuki, Thomas Merton, Willis Harman, Kenneth Boulding, Elise Boulding,
Erich Fromm, Marshall McLuhan, Buckminster Fuller, Frederic Spiegelberg,
Alfred Korzybski, Heinz von Foerster, John Lilly, Werner Erhard, Oscar
Ichazo, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Joseph Chilton Pearce, Karl Pribram,
Gardner Murphy, and Albert Einstein”: The Aquarian Conspiracy. Personal
and Social Transformation in Our Time, Los Angeles (Tarcher) 1980, p. 50
(note 1) and p. 434.
(16)
W.J. Hanegraaff, op. cit., p. 520.
(17)
Irish Theological Commission, A New Age of the Spirit? A Catholic
Response to the New Age Phenomenon, Dublin 1994, chapter 3.
(18)
Cf. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Chicago (University of
Chicago Press), 1970, p. 175.
(19)
Cf. Alessandro Olivieri Pennesi, Il Cristo del New Age. Indagine
critica, Vatican City (Libreria Editrice Vaticana) 1999, passim, but especially
pp. 11-34. See Also section 4 below.
(20)
It is worth recalling the lyrics of this song, which quickly imprinted
themselves on to the minds of a whole generation in North America and
Western Europe: “When the Moon is in the Seventh House, and Jupiter
aligns with Mars, then Peace will guide the Planets, and Love will steer the
Stars. This is the dawning of the Age of Aquarius... Harmony and
understanding, ympathy and trust abounding; no more falsehoods or
derision - golden living, dreams of visions, mystic crystal revelation, and the
mind's true liberation. Aquarius...”.
(21)
P. Heelas, op. cit., p. 1f. The August 1978 journal of the Berkeley
Christian Coalition puts it this way: “Just ten years ago the funky drug-based
spirituality of the hippies and the mysticism of the Western yogi were
restricted to the counterculture. Today, both have found their way into the
mainstream of our cultural mentality. Science, the health professions, and
the arts, not to mention psychology and religion, are all engaged in a
fundamental reconstruction of their basic premises”. Quoted in Marilyn
Ferguson, op. cit., p. 370f.
(22)
Cf. Chris Griscom, Ecstasy is a New Frequency: Teachings of the Light
Institute, New York (Simon & Schuster) 1987, p. 82.
(23)
See the Glossary of New Age terms, §7.2 above.
(24)
Cf. W.J. Hanegraaff, op. cit., chapter 15 (“The Mirror of Secular
Thought”). The system of correspondences is clearly inherited from
traditional esotericism, but it has a new meaning for those who (consciously
or not) follow Swedenborg. While every natural element in traditional
esoteric doctrine had the divine life within it, for Swedenborg nature is a
dead reflection of the living spiritual world. This idea is very much at the
heart of the post-modern vision of a disenchanted world and various
attempts to “re-enchant” it. Blavatsky rejected correspondences, and Jung
emphatically relativised causality in favour of the esoteric world-view of
correspondences.
(25)
W.J. Hanegraaff, op. cit., pp. 54-55.
(26)
Cf. Reinhard Hümmel, “Reinkarnation”, in Hans Gasper, Joachim Müller,
Friederike Valentin (eds.), Lexikon der Sekten, Sondergruppen und
Weltanschauungen. Fakten, Hintergründe, Klärungen, Freiburg-Basel-Wien
(Herder) 2000, 886-893.
(27)
Michael Fuss, “New Age and Europe – A Challenge for Theology”,
in Mission Studies Vol. VIII-2, 16, 1991, p. 192.
(28)
Ibid., loc. cit.
(29)
Ibid.,p. 193.
(30)
Ibid.,p. 199.
(31)
Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on Some Aspects of Christian Meditation (Orationis
Formas), 1989, 14.
Cf. Gaudium et Spes, 19; Fides et Ratio, 22.
(32)
W.J. Hanegraaff, op. cit., p. 448f. The objectives are quoted from the
final (1896) version, earlier versions of which stressed the irrationality of
“bigotry” and the urgency of promoting non-sectarian education.
Hanegraaff quotes J. Gordon Melton's description of New Age religion as
rooted in the “occult-metaphysical” tradition (ibid., p. 455).
(33)
W.J. Hanegraaff, op. cit., p. 513.
(34)
Thomas M. King s.j., “Jung and Catholic Spirituality”, in America, 3 April
1999, p. 14. The author points out that New Age devotees “quote passages
dealing with the I Ching, astrology and Zen, while Catholics quote passages
dealing with Christian mystics, the liturgy and the psychological value of
the sacrament of reconciliation” (p. 12). He also lists Catholic personalities
and spiritual institutions clearly inspired and guided by Jung's psychology.
(35)
Cf. W.J. Hanegraaff, op. cit., p. 501f.
(36)
Carl Gustav Jung, Wandlungen und Symbole der Libido, quoted in
Hanegraaff, op. cit., p. 503.
(37)
On this point cf. Michel Schooyans, L'Évangile face au désordre
mondial, with a preface by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Paris (Fayard) 1997.
(38)
Quoted in the Maranatha Community's The True and the False New Age.
Introductory Ecumenical Notes, Manchester (Maranatha) 1993, 8.10 – the
original page numbering is not specified.
(39)
Michel Lacroix, L'Ideologia della New Age, Milano (il Saggiatore) 1998,
p. 84f.
(40)
Cf. the section on David Spangler's ideas in Actualité des religions nº 8,
septembre 1999, p. 43.
(41)
M. Ferguson, op. cit., p. 407.
(42)
Ibid.,p. 411.
(43)
“To be an American... is precisely to imagine a destiny rather than inherit
one. We have always been inhabitants of myth rather than history”: Leslie
Fiedler, quoted in M. Ferguson,op. cit., p. 142.
(44)
Cf. P. Heelas, op. cit., p. 173f.
(45)
David Spangler, The New Age, Issaquah (Mornington Press) 1988, p. 14.
(46)
P. Heelas, op. cit., p. 168.
(47)
See the Preface to Michel Schooyans, L'Évangile face au désordre
mondial,
op. cit. This quotation is translated from the Italian, Il nuovo disordine
mondiale, Cinisello Balsamo (San Paolo) 2000, p. 6.
(48)
Cf. Our Creative Diversity. Report of the World Commission on Culture
and Development, Paris (UNESCO) 1995, which illustrates the importance
given to celebrating and promoting diversity.
(49)
Cf. Christoph Bochinger, “New Age” und moderne Religion:
Religionswissenschaftliche Untersuchungen, Gütersloh (Kaiser) 1994,
especially chapter 3.
(50)
The shortcomings of techniques which are not yet prayer are discussed
below in § 3.4, “Christian mysticism and New Age mysticism”.
(51)
Cf. Carlo Maccari, “La 'mistica cosmica' del New Age”, in Religioni e
Sette nel Mondo1996/2.
(52)
Jean Vernette, “L'avventura spirituale dei figli dell'Acquario”, in Religioni
e Sette nel Mondo 1996/2, p. 42f.
(53)
J. Vernette, loc. cit.
(54)
Cf. J. Gordon Melton, New Age Encyclopedia, Detroit (Gale Research)
1990, pp. xiii-xiv.
(55)
David Spangler, The Rebirth of the Sacred, London (Gateway Books)
1984, p. 78f.
(56)
David Spangler, The New Age, op. cit., p. 13f.
(57)
John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente (10 November
1994), 9.
(58)
Matthew Fox, The Coming of the Cosmic Christ. The Healing of Mother
Earth and the Birth of a Global Renaissance, San Francisco (Harper & Row)
1988, p. 135.
(59)
Cf. the document issued by the Argentine Bishops' Conference
Committee for Culture:Frente a una Nueva Era. Desafío a la pastoral en el
horizonte de la Nueva Evangelización, 1993.
(60)
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Orationis Formas, 23.
(61)
Ibid.,3. See the sections on meditation and contemplative prayer in
the Catechism of the Catholic Church, §§. 2705-2719.
(62)
Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Orationis Formas, 13.
(63)
Cf. Brendan Pelphrey, “I said, You are Gods. Orthodox
Christian Theosis and Deification in the New Religious Movements”
in Spirituality East and West, Easter 2000 (No. 13).
(64)
Adrian Smith, God and the Aquarian Age. The new era of the
Kingdom, Great Wakering (McCrimmons) 1990, p. 49.
(65)
Cf. Benjamin Creme, The Reappearance of Christ and the Masters of
Wisdom, London (Tara Press) 1979, p. 116.
(66)
Cf. Jean Vernette, Le New Age, Paris (P.U.F.) 1992 (Collection
Encyclopédique Que sais-je?), p. 14.
(67)
Catechism of the Catholic Church, 52.
(68)
Cf. Alessandro Olivieri Pennesi, Il Cristo del New Age. Indagine
Critica, Vatican City (Libreria Editrice Vaticana) 1999, especially pages 13-
34. The list of common points is on p. 33.
(69)
The Nicene Creed.
(70)
Michel Lacroix, L'Ideologia della New Age, Milano (Il Saggiatore) 1998,
p. 74.
(71)
Ibid., p. 68.
(72)
Edwin Schur, The Awareness Trap. Self-Absorption instead of Social
Change, New York (McGraw Hill) 1977, p. 68.
(73)
Cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §§ 355-383.
(74)
Cf. Paul Heelas, The New Age Movement. The Celebration of the Self
and the Sacralization of Modernity, Oxford (Blackwell) 1996, p. 161.
(75)
A Catholic Response to the New Age Phenomenon, Irish Theological
Commission 1994, chapter 3.
(76)
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Orationis Formas, 3.
(77)
Ibid.,7.
(78)
William Bloom, The New Age. An Anthology of Essential
Writings, London (Rider) 1991, p. xvi.
(79)
Catechism of the Catholic Church, § 387.
(80)
Ibid., § 1849.
(81)
Ibid., § 1850.
(82)
John Paul II, Apostolic Letter on human suffering “Salvifici doloris” (11
February 1984), 19.
(83)
Cf. David Spangler, The New Age, op. cit., p. 28.
(84)
Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio (7 December 1990),
6, 28, and the Declaration Dominus Jesus (6 August 2000) by the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, 12.
(85)
Cf. R. Rhodes, The Counterfeit Christ of the New Age Movement, Grand
Rapids (Baker) 1990, p. 129.
(86)
Helen Bergin o.p., “Living One's Truth”, in The Furrow, January 2000, p.
12.
(87)
Ibid.,p. 15.
(88)
Cf. P. Heelas, op. cit., p. 138.
(89)
Elliot Miller, A Crash Course in the New Age, Eastbourne (Monarch)
1989, p. 122. For documentation on the vehemently anti-Christian stance
of spiritualism, cf. R. Laurence Moore, “Spiritualism”, in Edwin S. Gaustad
(ed.), The Rise of Adventism: Religion and Society in Mid-Nineteenth-
Century America, New York 1974, pp. 79-103, and also R. Laurence
Moore, In Search of White Crows: Spiritualism, Parapsychology, and
American Culture, New York (Oxford University Press) 1977.
(90)
Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical letter Fides et Ratio (14 September 1998), 36-
48.
(91)
Cf. John Paul II, Address to the United States Bishops of Iowa, Kansas,
Missouri and Nebraska on their “Ad Limina” visit, 28 May 1993.
(92)
Cf. John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Africa (14
September 1995), 103. The Pontifical Council for Culture has published a
handbook listing these centres throughout the world: Catholic Cultural
Centres (3rd edition, Vatican City, 2001).
(93)
Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Orationis Formas, and § 3
above.
(94)
This is one area where lack of information can allow those responsible
for education to be misled by groups whose real agenda is inimical to the
Gospel message. It is particularly the case in schools, where a captive
curious young audience is an ideal target for ideological merchandising. Cf.
the caveat in Massimo Introvigne, New Age & Next Age, Casale Monferrato
(Piemme) 2000, p. 277f.
(95)
Cf. J. Badewien, Antroposofia, in H. Waldenfels (ed.) Nuovo Dizionario
delle Religioni, Cinisello Balsamo (San Paolo) 1993, 41.
(96)
Cf. Raúl Berzosa Martinez, Nueva Era y Cristianismo, Madrid (BAC)
1995, 214.
(97)
Helen Palmer, The Enneagram, New York (Harper-Row) 1989.
(98)
Cf. document of the Argentine Episcopal Committee for Culture, op. cit.
(99)
J. Gernet, in J.-P. Vernant et al., Divination et Rationalité, Paris (Seuil)
1974, p. 55.
(100)
Cf. Susan Greenwood, “Gender and Power in Magical Practices”, in
Steven Sutcliffe and Marion Bowman (eds.), Beyond New Age. Exploring
Alternative Spirituality, Edinburgh (Edinburgh University Press) 2000, p.
139.
(101)
Cf. M. Fuss, op. cit., 198-199.
(102)
For a brief but clear treatment of the Human Potential Movement, see
Elizabeth Puttick, “Personal Development: the Spiritualisation and
Secularisation of the Human Potential Movement”, in: Steven Sutcliffe and
Marion Bowman (eds.), Beyond New Age. Exploring Alternative
Spirituality, Edinburgh (Edinburgh University Press) 2000, pp. 201-219.
(103)
Cf. C. Maccari, La “New Age” di fronte alla fede cristiana, Leumann-
Torino (LDC) 1994, 168.
(104)
Cf. W.J. Hanegraaff, op. cit., 283-290.
(105)
On this last, very delicate, point, see Eckhard Türk's article
“Neonazismus” in Hans Gasper, Joachim Müller, Friederike Valentin
(eds.), Lexikon der Sekten, Sondergruppen und Weltanschauungen. Fakten,
Hintergründe, Klärungen, Freiburg- Basel-Wien (Herder) 2000, p. 726.
(106)
Cf. John Saliba, Christian Responses to the New Age Movement. A
Critical Assessment, London, (Geoffrey Chapman) 1999, p.1.
(107)
Cf. M. Fuss, op. cit., 195-196.