HISTORY (NEOpagan, 1980s; '86) [_Drawing Down the Moon_, by Margot Adler, Beacon Press, 1986; p. 69] [P.E.I.Bonewits] regards contemporary Satanism as neogothic witchcraft because it descends from the gothic witchcraft created by Christianity. Most modern Satanists pattern themselves on the ideas created by the Church and proceed from there. (I would amend this to say that a few modern Satanists seem to be misplaced Neo-Pagans who have not been able to get beyond the Christian terminology and symbolism.) ------------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, p. 99] *Who Defines the Wicca?* ... Carl Weschcke, publisher of Llewellyn, wrote in 'Touchstone' [Council of American Witches newsletter] that many Witches felt that a common definition was necessary as a "self-policing" mechanism "to protect ourselves from misunderstanding brought about by those whose personal power trips have exposed us to ridicule and injury." It was also felt that a common statement would help dispel the sensationalist image pushed in the media, which continued to link Wicca with Satanism.... -------------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, pp. 366-9] One of the most important books to chart the rise of new religious movements in the United States is the 1974 Princeton University study *Religious Movements in Contemporary America*. Among the most unusual articles in this large volume is anthropologist Edward Moody's study of Satanism, "Magical Therapy: An Anthropological Investigation of Contemporary Satanism." {NOTE: *Drawing Down the Moon* does not include a study of Satanism because it is not primarily a Neo-Pagan phenomenon. Satanists (Bonewits' "Neogothic Witches") take their myths from Judeo-Christianity. Most worship Satan as a symbolic figure of rebellion against Christianity. Moody's article is relevant here because it answers a broader question: Why are occult and magical groups so appealing?} Moody spent two years as a participant-observer at the Church of the Trapezoid, a banch of Anton LaVey's Church of Satan. Moody set out to answer the question, "Why do people become Satanists?" After two years he concluded that Satanists find that something they call "magic" works for them, that they accomplish many of the goals they set out to achieve. But *how* this magic works proved to be very complex. From the start, Moody found himself beset by difficulties. He could not find any "traditional sociological pigeonhole" into which the Satanist could be placed. He found members who were "successful" in life and those who were "failures." He found rich members and poor ones, representatives of all clases and political persuasions. The only characteristic common to all the members he observed was a behavioral trait that placed them outside the cultural "norm." Many of them displayed a lack of knowledge of the "rules of the social game" and often felt unable to "make the system respond." Moody observed that magic training for the new Satanist recruit was a combination of many practical skills designed to build up the ego and lessen feelings of guilt and anxiety. The techniques and rituals were a combination of psychodrama, tips on social manners, advice on how to make oneself more attractive, and techniques to strengthen confidence. Moody observed a sample subject, "Billy G.," over a period of many months. He watched this young man change from a person whose level of anxiety was so great that he could not even speak to a member of the opposite sex into a more "normal" young man who could interact with men and women, both inside and outside the church. Billy G. slowly worked through various rituals, many of which were composed of behaviorist techniques to lessen anxiety. In one example Moody gives a new twist to that fact of contemporary Satanism most played up by the press: the nude woman who acts as the altar. In the beginning Billy G. finds this setting so disturbing that he stands at the back of the room. In succeeding weeks he moves closer. Finally, Billy G., the son of fundamentalist missionaries, is able to stand next to this woman, to talk to her, to hand her a goblet or in some other way participate in the ritual without feeling ill at ease. He is given encouragement; he is told that his sexual feelings are natural and not to be denied, as his previous education had taught him. Eventually, he is able to meet women and to go out with them. He becomes socially successful. The magic works. Ironically, Moody shows that the Church of Satan, certainly one of the less "acceptable" occult groups, actually functions as a normalizing force, a sociali- zing force within the larger society. It functions much like therapy and it apparently succeeds. Moody comments on Billy G.: If he attributes this new-found power and success to magic rather than to the insights of sociology, anthropology, or psychology, it is because such an interpretation is more in accordance with his world view and the categories of understanding which he uses to give structure and meaning to his world. In fact, it is sometimes difficult to argue against his interpretations. If psychology explains personal interactions in terms of hypothesized "forces" at work, forces which are known and measured only through the perception of their effects, then how is that different, the Satanist asks, from magic? Satanists say, with some justifica- tion, "When magic becomes scientific fact we refer to it as medicine or astronomy." (LaVey, 1969 [Cf Arthur C. Clarke -- nocT]). Moody ends his paper by encouraging the growth of the Church of the Trapezoid and arguing that such institutions socialize individuals for whom traditional therapy has failed and, paradoxically, serve to bring people closer to cultural norms. Why is there a growth of magical groups today, Moody asks. He says that it is "an attempt by various people to regain a sense of control over their environment and their lives." It is important to note what Moody is *not* saying. He is not employing the standard cliche that people become occultists to gain power over others, although, of course, some may join for that reason. He is not saying that such people want to retreat from the world. Instead, he is saying that they join these groups in order to gain a sense of self-mastery, to be in control of their own lives *in the world*. Moody concludes: This seems to be a time when many of the gods of the Western world, like the old traditional gods of the urbanizing African, are being challenged. God is dead, but that means not just the Judeo-Christian god but also the gods of progress, science and technology. We put our faith in "him," but now the god of progress is discovered to be a two-faced Janus about to extract a terrible price for our progress and comfort; the god of science has failed us and has not created the paradise we were led to expect, free from disease and ignorance and death. Instead he threatens us with destruc- tion with either the apocalypse of atomic confligration or a slow death by chemical pollution. The god of technology reveals his "true" face and our streams die, our lakes atrophy, and the very air is turned into a subtle poison.... In such time the people look to new gods or try to refurbish old ones..... Now that the external sources of truth, the experts and scientists, have failed us, many people have begun to look within themselves for their source of wisdom and security. Some have begun to reassert the necessity of finding personal solutions. In a certain sense witchcraft {NOTE: Moody does not distinguish between Witchcraft and Satanism, a flaw in this otherwise excellent essay.} is a product of these needs. If the world of the Satanist is a criterion, the Satanist is training himself to be assertive and powerful *as a individual* [sic]. Although he draws a sense of securiy from his associa- tion with powerful forces, he is finding inner sources of strength. He is casting off the need for powerful gods to protect and care for him, insisting that he is strong enough to care for himself. He commands the gods and does not beseech them. He is turning from an ethereal and other-worldly orientation to a somewhat more realistic assessment and concern with the mundane and real world. Moody's point that the occult functions as a rationalizing force is made in another article, "Urban Witches," in which he argues that much that is called magic is actually a learning process of social behavior and interpersonal games. Magic, he writes, allows its practitioners to cope better "with the everyday problems of life, with the here and now." ----------------------------------------------------