VERITAS
"Engaging the New Age"
By Craig Branch
July - August 2006
In 1969 I was still
taking the scenic route through college at an urban university
in Richmond, Virginia.
The university was known for its radical hippie population.
The Fifth Dimension had just released its award-winning gold
record, “Age of Aquarius.” Its popularity was
due to more than the upbeat melodic voices. The chorus, “This
is the dawning of the Age of Aquarius” symbolized part
of a growing movement in the culture which rebelled against
cultural traditions (which was termed “the establishment”).
Since the culture’s establishment religion was Christianity,
this growing segment saw alternative forms of “spirituality” as
not only acceptable but preferable. This movement came to
be known as the New Age Movement (NAM).
Many
in the NAM used meditation or psychedelic drugs to achieve
mystical states of consciousness.
There was a revival
of transcendentalism and attempts to become one with nature.
John Denver promoted his new age message in songs like “Rocky
Mountain High.” The star power of the Beatles contributed
to NAM’s acceptability with their allegiance to Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi and transcendental meditation. Beatle George
Harrison even endorsed the Hindu cult, Hare Krishna, in his
song “My Sweet Lord.”
Even
though I was not a Christian and didn’t understand
worldviews, I instinctively recognized the NAM’s conflict
with traditional values, and the irrationality of these new “spiritualities.” Yet,
with the vacuum created by the retreat of the Church from
theology, apologetics and engagement with culture, the New
Age Movement in all its manifestations seduced millions.
After becoming a Christian, evangelism and apologetics became
an important part of my life. And because of the permeating
effect of the NAM, I began to encounter people holding these
views, and I noticed that they were seeking acceptance for
their philosophies and practices in our cultural institutions
(e.g., education, business, medicine, psychology, art, entertainment,
politics, sports, and even into churches).
And
it was not just non-Christians who bought into these flawed
and reprobate beliefs. Too
often Christians are seduced
by some of the more subtle and disguised expressions of the
NAM. Scripture warns us to “see to it that no one takes
you captive through philosophy and empty deception, according
to the traditions of men, according to the elementary principles
of the world rather than according to Christ” (Col.
2:8). Too many Christians are vulnerable to deception because
of their neglect of Bible study, sound doctrine, apologetics
and worldview knowledge. As the writer of Hebrews admonishes
us, one problem is that many Christians have not been weaned
from the milk of their infancy to digest the solid food that “is
for the mature, who because of practice have their senses
trained to discern good and evil” (read Heb. 5:12-14).
This is why we are addressing the NAM in this issue of Areopagus
Journal—to equip our readers to redemptively engage
people and movements in our culture, and to give discernment
for the protection of the Body of Christ.
What Is the New Age
Movement? “ New Age Movement” is a general term for a rather large
and diverse body of spiritual philosophies and practices,
though it is important to know that many in the movement
no longer prefer or use the term “New Age” because
of its well deserved negative image. Instead one hears
terms like “Eastern Mysticism,” “Higher
Consciousness Movement,” “Neo-paganism,” and
even the “Human
Potential Movement.” By whatever name, it is a synthesis
in varying degrees of Hinduism, Buddhism, Gnosticism, the
occult, Western materialism and narcissism. More simply,
one could say that it is a marriage of Western materialism
and hedonism with Eastern mysticism.
It is alien and hostile to the Judeo-Christian worldview.
At its core, it is a non-Christian way of understanding the
nature of man, the material and immaterial universe, God,
reality, and human living, in all their intrinsic relationships.
The
basic postulate of the New Age Movement is that reality
consists of ultimately only
one essence (monism). This essence
or being has various names, depending on which group one
asks: God, god consciousness (pantheism), Higher Self, Enlightenment,
Brahman (Hinduism), Nirvana (Buddhism), and even “Christ
Consciousness.” This being tends to be defined as an
impersonal energy or force. Distinctions between matter and
spirit, God and man, male and female, creator and creation,
good and evil, finite and infinite, are all illusions (maya).
For the New Ager, spiritual progress is achieved by gaining
access to the hidden knowledge (Gnosticism) that we are God,
and that we create our own reality, our own truth.
The
origin of the particular expression, “New Age
Movement,” is derived from concepts within astrology.
Astrologers believe there are twelve astrological ages based
on certain alignments of the Earth’s “vernal
equinox” as it moves through constellations (clusters
of stars with imagined shapes). These are the signs of the
zodiac. It is believed that these astrological ages have
an evolutionary effect on mankind. As the Earth’s moon
affects gravity and the tides, so does the cosmic energy
of the constellations’ alignment supposedly affect
man’s nature, personality, choices, and actions. Astrologers
(and many new agers believe in astrology) believe we are
moving out of the Age of Pisces and are at the dawn of the
Age of Aquarius. They believe this new age will bring in
universal harmony, a oneness of the divine with creation.
There
are hundreds of variations and dimensions of this movement.
Astrology, Goddess worship,
Eastern Mysticism,
Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Hare Krishna, Transcendental
Mediation, Contemplative (Centering) Prayer, Qi Gong, Yoga,
Tai Chi, Feng Shui, Wicca, Christian Science, Unity School
of Christianity, Kabala, and many more. Some key leaders/gurus
include DeePak Chopra, Shirley MacLaine, Oprah Winfrey, Jack
Canfield (Chicken Soup book series), M. Scott Peck, Joseph
Campbell, John Edwards, Neale Donald Walsch, Madeline L’Engle,
James Van Praagh, Suze Orman, Jean Houston Marianne Williamson,
and others.
Moreover,
there is the extremely popular field of “alternative” or “complementary” medicine.
This includes “energy medicine,” therapeutic
touch, reiki, homeopathy, acupuncture, some herbology, reflexology,
applied kinesiology, iridology, aroma therapy, color therapy,
and more. These alternative medical practices are having
such an impact in our culture that we are devoting our entire
next issue to it.
Cultural
Impact of the New Age Movement
There
was a time in Western culture when belief or practice
in these kinds of things was relegated to a lunatic fringe.
But with the cultural retreat of the Church and the resulting
growth of postmodern relativism, a greenhouse for new
age thinking has arisen. According to Barna and Harris
Poll
research, today some 35% of Americans believe we can
communicate with
the dead. 20% believe in a new age concept of God. 21%
believe in reincarnation (25% more are “not sure”).
Only 57% don’t believe astrology is scientific. Celebrity
worship, the influence of the media, man’s basic
narcissist, hedonistic nature, and the dominance of relativism
in our
culture have all contributed to the growth of new age
spirituality.
In fact, the NAM has infiltrated many aspects of Western
culture. I will survey a few examples in what follows.
New Age
in Public Schools
In 1979 the U.S. Third District Court
of Appeals, affirmed an earlier decision by the district
court that declared
that Transcendental Meditation was religious in nature
and therefore was prohibited from use in public schools.
It is a violation of the Establishment Clause of the
First Amendment of the Constitution (Separation of Church
and
State). Many forms of new age thought and practice were
being used in public schools. Courses were utilizing
meditation techniques, centering, progressive relaxation,
guided imagery,
visualization, and contacting spirit guides (often called
the child’s “higher self”). Proponents
of these new age techniques and philosophy often attempted
to sidestep the identification of being a “religion” and
identify with “spirituality” to escape resistance
from dogmatism or legal instructions. In the judge’s
opinion, he wrote of the clear need for the courts to
broaden the traditional theistic definitions of religion.
For example,
to say that yoga is not religious is like proponents
of prayer in public schools saying that prayer should
be offered
in public schools because it is not a religion.
Despite
the court’s decision, today there are still
many popular school programs using new age assumptions
and techniques such as Pumsy, D.U.S.O, Quest, Growing
Healthy,
Tactics for Thinking, and many more. They are especially
employed in guidance counseling curricula, gifted programs,
physical education (to reduce stress), and creative
writing, all under the banner of “self-esteem.” Even
the very popular drug prevention program, D.A.R.E.,
contains some of these faulty new age approaches. Today,
yoga
is the
latest craze and Transcendental Meditation is attempting
a comeback. Again, all of these and more are illegal,
but Christian parents must be educated if we are to
win the
winnable legal battles. (1)
New Age
in Business
Business Week ran a cover story in late 1999
titled “Religion
in the Workplace” and wrote, “Today a spiritual
revival is sweeping across corporate America as executives
of all stripes are mixing mysticism into their management.” (2)
The
quest for the competitive edge in many businesses is thought
by some to be connected
to increasing employees’ “human
potential.” So businesses have been quite a mission
field for new age programs and leaders. They connect human
potential and achievement to new age philosophy and practice.
Programs like Landmark/Forum, Heart Math, MSIA, Tony Robbins,
and others are offered to employees. Often, participation
in these programs is mandatory.
At
least in government jobs, employees have a right to challenge
these types of programs.
In 1988, the EEOC issued a policy
governing “training programs conflicting with employees
religious beliefs.” The policy noted that employers
are increasingly making use of “training programs designed
to improve employee motivation, cooperation, or productivity
through the use of various so-called ‘new age’ techniques.”
The
problematic techniques mentioned in the policy were “meditation,
guided visualization, yoga, walking in fire, focus on changing
employees attitudes and self concepts by promoting increased
self-esteem, assertiveness, independence and creativity
in order to improve over-all productivity.” The
policy rightly warns that these techniques are intrinsically
religious
and cannot be required of employees whose own views are
incompatible with them. (3)
Some
of the figures in the business world who are conducting “new
age” training include Tony Robbins, star of infomercials,
and business and human potential seminars. Robbins strategically
calls himself “the coach of success.” Defined
by Robbins, success is “to live your life in a way
that causes you to feel tons of pleasure and very little
pain.”
Robbins
employs a controversial new age, humanistic methodology
called neuro-linguistic
programming (NLP) which promises
that, by modeling and the power of positive thinking, human
potential is unlimited for everyone. Robbins dramatically “proves” his
point with fire-walking exercises in which seminar participants
demonstrate the power of overcoming fear and mind-over-matter
by walking barefoot over a bed of hot coals.
Robbins’ approach is problematic on a number of levels.
His promises are more new age than biblical (in his books
he often twists Scripture to support his beliefs), the NLP
can be very manipulative and unethical (mind control) and
even “fire walking” is deceptive since there
is nothing supernatural about it. Hot coals are slow enough
conductors of heat that anyone can walk quickly across them
without being burned. Notice Robbins doesn’t stand
on the coals for more than a few seconds.
Another
leading light is Stephen Covey. Covey is a Mormon who also
uses a number of new
age perspectives in his human
potential programs and books. All truth being God’s
truth, Covey does apply some biblical principles, but he
mingles them with Mormon and new age ones. Because Mormonism
teaches that we can become Gods (like their once-human God
did), there is an affinity with the NAM. Covey promotes numerous
New Age techniques in his works, the most famous of which
is Seven Habits of Highly Effective People.
New Age
in Medicine
As mentioned earlier, one of the most prolific
areas of new age permeation is in the field of alternative “medicine” (sometimes
called holistic or complimentary medicine). Americans
are preoccupied with health and personal fitness. And some
are unsatisfied with conventional medicine, especially
with the rising cost of health care. New age therapies
or products offer low cost, noninvasive (except acupuncture), “natural,” approaches
to health rather than the conventional route of drugs
or surgery. And since many “illnesses” are
psychosomatic, the anecdotal success of new age therapies
gains them some
credibility. Again, this issue is so serious and complex
that ARC is devoting our next issue of Areopagus Journal
to it.
New Age
in the Media
Oprah Winfrey was ranked by a Gallup poll a
few years ago as the #4 most influential woman in history.
Oprah’s
positive self-esteem and sensitive, relevant style, taps
into the psyche of many woman and some men in America.
She
was raised in a black Baptist Church in Mississippi,
a deacon’s daughter, was sexually abused by male relatives,
became a promiscuous teenager, and gave birth to a baby boy
out of wedlock who died in infancy. But then “repenting” returned
to the church in Nashville and began to speak frequently
in Nashville Churches with a special emphasis on practical
spirituality.
When
her television career began taking off, Oprah frequently
featured a spiritual dimension
(calling her show “my
ministry”). She gradually began to promote more and
more new age guests, and the viewer could see her own changing
understanding of Christianity. For example, she frequently
has New Age guests such as Marianne Williamson, Deepak Chopra,
Betty Eadie, Dannion Brinkley, M. Scott Peck, Sophie Burnham,
Marilyn Ferguson, Shirley MacLaine, Kevin Ryerson, Sara Breathnach,
James Van Praagh, Gary Zukar, and Iyania Vanzant.
Oprah
has spoken forth her own universalistic new age convictions.
For example, she related
how she heard, as a Baptist, that
God was a jealous God and now responds, “Come on—lets
get over it—a jealous God is an insecure God...I believe
in a FORCE—whatever that force is I call God.” Another
direct quote: “I am just trying to open a door so the
people can see themselves more clearly and perhaps get them
to God, whatever they may call that.”
Shirley
MacLaine publicly stated on her show that she seeks God’s guidance by going inside her own true
Self and waits for an answer, then “Boom, the answer
would come.” Oprah responded, “That’s
just what the Bible says, ‘Ask and it shall be
given, seek and you will find.’” Oprah went
further by proclaiming, “As I read more of Shirley
MacLaine, crystals, and Marilyn Fergusons’s The
Aquarian Conspiracy, it seems to me to say exactly
what the Bible has said for
years. It is just that many of us were brought up with
a more restricted limited vision of what the Bible
said.”
Because
of the popular respect for Oprah, her endorsements
of new age guests make a cultural
difference. For example,
when she announced she had purchased 1,000 copies of her
Marianne Williamson’s book, Return to Love (a new age
version of the Bible), the publisher received over 200,000
orders by the end of the day. Deepak Chopra’s book
sold 130,000 copies the day Oprah promoted it on her show.
Another
revealing example of the penetration and seductive influence
of the NAM is the
success of the Chicken Soup book
series by Jack Canfield & Mark Victor Hansen. Canfield
has a long history as a leader in the infiltration of new
age teaching programs in public schools. He too conducts
self-esteem seminars.
Canfield and Hansen are only editors of the series and have
only had a few of their own new age stories in the books.
However, their choice of contributors is telling. The original
feel-good book contained articles by at least 25 new agers,
one Mormon, and seven self-esteem gurus. This trend continued
on the subsequent volumes.
Unfortunately,
marketing and profit again takes the lead over discernment
and responsibility
in Christian media. Spring
Arbor, the major Christian book distributor, has continued
to carry these books for years. Canfield, a good marketer,
even produced a Chicken Soup for the Christian Soul where
a number of Christian authors naively or irresponsibly contributed
stories—lending credibility to the whole series.
So, after reading these the few examples, you can begin
to understand that the NAM is diverse and diffused. In a
culture that is becoming more and more pluralistic, frivolous
and narcissistic, it becomes a greenhouse for the growth
of these new age philosophies. And, because of the lack of
doctrinal knowledge, apologetics and worldview training,
the lines of truth are tragically blurred and discernment
weakened even in the Body of Christ.
One
doesn’t have to look far for the signs. Barna’s
recent research update (May 1, 2006) that “Harry Potter’s
Influence Goes Unchallenged in Most Homes & Churches,” points
out that 78% of church-going teens have read and seen the
movie/book series, but only 4% have experienced any teaching
or discussion in church about the occult spiritual themes
embedded in this attractive medium.
Contemplative
Prayer
When Paul warns the Church to be aware and beware
of Satan’s
deceptions, he goes as far as to say that Satan “disguises
himself as an angel of light” and “his servants
also disguise themselves as servants of righteousness” (2
Cor. 11:3, 14-15). Satan often will take some truth, a
somewhat healthy teaching or practice, and mix his poison
in it. Then
it becomes more dangerous because of its attractiveness.
We
live in a culture of busyness, consumerism, superficiality,
distractions, and an insatiable
quest for more to make us
happy. And too often the prayer or devotional life of Christians
become mostly a perfunctory, formalistic, rationalistic exercise.
This creates a context for the growing popularity of practices
like “Centering” of the Contemplative Prayer
Movement and praying through the Labyrinth. These approaches,
developed and popularized by Roman Catholic monks, Thomas
Merton, Thomas Keating and Basil Pennington incorporate eastern
meditation and a new age universalism in their “contemplative” approach.
Segments of the controversial “Emerging Church Movement,” literal
churches, and even conservative but controversial churches
like the International House of Prayer in Kansas City, MO
promote these techniques.
Conclusion
As
you will learn, there is nothing “new” about
this movement. It has its roots in the original fall of
man in Genesis 3. Satan tempted man with the lie that if
he stepped
out to access the secret knowledge or wisdom (Gnosticism),
his eyes would be opened (enlightenment) and he wouldn’t
need to submit to the sovereign God anymore for he will
be as God himself (Gen. 3:1-5).
One result of the Fall is that man, not being able to escape
being made in the image of God, invents counterfeit spiritualities.
Thus, early on God explicitly condemned some of the current
practices of the NAM (Deut. 18:9-14; Lev. 19:26, 31; Jer.
27:9-11).
As Christianity
began to spread in the West, the culture began to reflect
in varying degrees Judeo-Christian concepts
of reality, and ancient Gnosticism was no match. But
in recent times the Church has, by and large, lost
its moorings
and its primary calling to be contagious and not innocuous.
The result is a cultural return towards man’s basic
sinful natural state of rebellion toward God’s
authority and a bankrupt philosophy of relativism and
pluralism.
Read
and study through the articles in this issue of Areopagus
Journal. Go farther by ordering
the books we recommend. Order
information packets on specific topics you need in order
to have more in-depth knowledge. Also, go back and read our
past journals that cover some aspects the NAM not found here
such as our issue on yoga, or the issue, “Who Do Men
Say That I Am?” which contains an article about the
New Age Jesus. Additionally, our journal, “They Became
Fools,” significantly clarifies the underlying nature
of cults and other religions. And make sure you have “Do
We Have the Right Books?” our issue on biblical canonicity,
which responds to the lost Gnostic books made popular by
Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code.
“See to it that no one takes you captive through philosophy
and empty deception…rather than according to Christ” and “Always
be ready to give a defense to anyone who asks, yet with gentleness
and respect” (Colossians 2:8; 1 Peter 3:15). Craig
Branch is the Director of the Apologetics Resource
Center, Birmingham, Alabama.
NOTES
1. Order our book, Public
Schools: The Sorcerer’s New Apprentice which exposes the widespread
strategies and programs of New Age activists, and provides
a systematic, proven way to eliminate it from your schools
http://www.arcapologetics.org/articles
2. “Religion in the Workplace,” Business Week (Nov. 1999): 52.
3. See “Main programs conflicting with employees Religious Beliefs” (EEOC
regulation under the Civil rights Act of 1964-Title VII).
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