HISTORY (OCCult 60's (67-8) [_The Black Arts_, by Richard Cavendish, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1967; pp. 309-18; this work is the first scholarly treatment of Satanism and Satan from the books and papers culled from my library; especially from a modern occult perspective, as compared to the scrawlings of various Inquisitory compilations, Murray- derivations, or fevered Christimaginings.] The name Satan comes from a Hebrew word meaning 'adversary'. In the older books of the Old Testament, written before the Jews were carried away into exile in Babylon in the sixth century B.C., a satan is merely an opponent. The angel of God 'stood in the way for an adversary (satan)' against Balaam. A satan was not necessarily supernatural. The Philistines refused to accept David, because they were afraid he would turn his coat in battle and become their satan or adversary. In two later passages, written after the exile, 'the satan' appears. He is an angel and a member of God's court who acts as an accuser of men before God. In the book of Zechariah, possibly dating from the late sixth century B.C., the prophet sees Joshua the high priest standing before God to be judged. The satan stands at Joshua's right hand 'to resist him' or argue the case against him. There is already a suggestion that the satan is excessively zealous as a prosecutor, because God rebukes him for accusing a righteous man. The first two chapters of Job, perhaps written a hundred years after Zechariah, the satan is still the accuser of men and he now seems definitively malignant. The sons of God present themselves before Jehovah and the satan is with them. In words which were probably intended to have an ominous ring, the satan says he has come 'from going to and fro in the earth and from walking up and down in it'. Jehovah praises Job as a righteous man, but the satan argues that it is easy for Job to be faithful to God, because he is happy and prosperous.... In this story the satan is determined to destroy Job's credit with God and he is the direct instrument of Job's punishment. But he acts only under God's instructions and he is felt to be performing a useful function. He tries to bring to the surface the wickedness inherent in men. Later, it was thought that the satan's malicious zeal must make him as repulsive to God as he was to man. In 1 *Enoch*, a Jewish book which is not included in the Old Testament but influenced early Christians, there is a group of satans who by this time are not welcome in heaven at all. Enoch hears the voice of the archangel Phanuel 'fending off the satans and forbidding them to come before the Lord of Spirits to accuse them who dwell on the earth'.... These passages were probably written in the first century B.C. It was from this notion of an implacable angel who accuses men and punishes them that the Devil of medieval and modern Christendom eventually grew. When the Old Testament was first turned into Greek, 'the satan' was translated as *diabolos*, meaning 'an accuser', with the implication of a false accuser, a slanderer, and this is the word from which our 'Devil' comes. Later Jewish writers tended to separate good and evil, and to see Jehovah as entirely good. They found the actions of Jehovah in some biblical stories distinctly unedifying and so they put them down to an evil angel. When the story of David numbering Israel and God's vengeance for this crime was first told -- in 2 Samuel, which may date from the early eighth century B.C. -- Jehovah puts the idea of taking the census into David's mind. But when the same story is retold in 1 Chronicles, possibly written in the fourth century B.C., it is Satan who is responsible. 'And Satan stood up against Israel, and provoked David to number Israel.' This is the only use of Satan as a proper name in the Old Testament. In the later Jewish writings and in Christian theory the figure of Satan becomes clearer and his powers are magnified until he is beyond God's control. It was natural for people to wonder how the satan, originally a valued if unpleasant official of God's court, had fallen from grace to become God's enemy. One explanation was found in the story of the Watchers, the germ of which appears in Genesis. When the race of men began to increase in numbers, 'the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose'. In those days 'there were giants in the earth' and the daughters of men bore children by the angels which 'became mighty men which were of old, men of renown'. The story may have been meant to account for the supposed existence of giants and heroes in early times, but, intentionally or unintentionally, the next verse connected it with the coming of evil to the earth. 'And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.' It was because of this that God decided to destroy mankind in the Flood. There are several possible references to this story in other Old Testament books, but the first full versoin of it in its later form is given in 1 *Enoch*, in passages probably written in the second century B.C. 'And it came to pass when then children of men had multiplied that in those days were born unto them beautiful and comely daughters. And the angels, the children of heaven, saw and lusted after them, and said to one another: Come, let us choose wives from among the children of men and beget us children.' These angels were of the order of the Watchers, the sleepless ones. Their leader was Semjaza -- or in other passages, Azazel. Two hundred of them descended to earth on Mount Hermon. They took wives 'and they began to go in unto them and to defile themselves with them'. They taught their wives charms and enchantments, botany and the cutting of roots. Azazel taught men to make the weapons of war, swords, knives and shields. He also introduced the evil art of cosmetics.... ...God explains to the angels that because they are immortal and need no descendants they have not been given wives and children. But to later ages the point of the story was that evil and bloodshed and forbidden arts came to earth through an appalling crime against Nature, the physical union of the angelic and divine with the mortal, which produced monstro- sities -- the giants. It seems likely that the medieval insistence on, and horrified fascination with, the sexual relations of witches with the Devil owes something to the legend of the Watchers. The story is the diabolical counter- part of a revered mystery of the Christian faith -- the descent of the Divine to a mortal woman and the birth of the Saviour. Some of the early Christian Fathers, including St. Augustine, rejected the legend of the Watchers and found the origin of evil in a revolt against God by a great archangel who rebelled through pride. Their scriptural authority was the famous passage in Isaiah which foretells the the approaching doom of the King of Babylon. How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How art thou cut down to the ground which didst weaken the nations! For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also in the mount of the congregation upon the sides of the north: I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the most High. Yet thou shalt be brought down to hell, to the sides of the pit. This was the foundation of the Christian doctrine of the Devil's attempt to make himself equal of God and his expulsion from heaven in punishment. As an explanation of the satan's fall from grace it had the advantage of fitting the tendency of later Jewish and Christian writers to exalt Satan's status to almost the position of an independent god. Lucifer, it was said, had been the archangel's name in heaven and Satan was his name after his fall. The passage in Isaiah may refer to a legend of the beautiful morning star who walked in Eden, blazing in jewels and light, and in his insane pride attempted to rival God. 'Lucifer, son of the morning' is in Hebrew Helel ben Shahar, 'day-star, son of the dawn'. The Jews, Arabs, Greeks and Romans identified the morning star (the planet Venus) as male. In Greek it was called *phosphoros* and in Latin *lucifer*, both words meaning 'Light-bearer'. It has been suggested that the story of Lucifer may have been based on the observation that the morning star is the last proud star to defy the sunrise, and the belief that it must have been punished for its defiance. The legends of Lucifer and the Watchers both find the origin of evil in the fall of divine beings, driven to sin by pride or by lust and condemned to hell in punishment. It was natural for them to be combined, with the Watchers becoming Lucifer's followers. There are already hints of this in 1 *Enoch*.... By the first century A.D. Lucifer and Satan and the Watchers had all been connected together and the serpent of Eden had been added to the story. A book called 2 *Enoch* says that the archangel Satannail tried to make himself the equal of God and seduced the Watchers to rebel with him. They were all banished from heaven and to revenge himself for his fall Satanail tempted Eve in Eden. According to *Vita Adae et Evae*, Satan was expelled from his glory among the angels because he refused to worship Adam, which the angels were ordered to do by God. Michael told him that God would be angry, but Satan said, 'if he be wroth with me, I will set my seat above the stars of heaven and will be like the Highest.' Then God hurled Satan and his followers down to earth and Satan tempted Eve in revenge. Here the Devil's rebellion from pride is combined with the idea of angelic jealousy of man. There is no suggestion in Genesis that the serpent who tempted Eve was the Devil, but Christian writers generally accepted that the serpent was either the Devil's agent or the Devil himself in disguise. On this basis St. Paul constructed the central doctrine of Christianity, that Adam's crime plunged all subsequent generations into the power of the Devil and the toils of sin and death, from which God sent his Son to release them. As Adam's disobedience brought death to men, so Christ's willing submission to death brought men to eternal life. 'For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.' [much skipped, including the addition of 'Leviathan' and the dragons of the Book of Revelations to the mix] It ws the Christians who gave the Devil almost the position of a god. Convinced of the stainless goodness of God, they sensed and feared the presence of a great supernatural Enemy, the quintessence of all evil. That the Devil sinned through pride became and remains the orthodox Catholic belief. In the Middle Ages and the early modern world the Devil was a familiar reality. He figured in popular tales, stage plays, mumming dances; he ws preached from pulpits; he leered or frowned from the walls and windows of churches. He and his legions were everywhere, subtle, knowing, malicious and formidable.... People who worship the Devil do not regard him as evil. To the Satanist the supernatural being who is the Enemy of Christendom is a good and benevolent god. But the word 'good', applied to the Devil by his followers, dows not carry its Christian or conventional meanings. Satanists believe that what Christians call good is really evil, and vice versa, though there is an ambivalence of attitude in Satanism, as in black magic, a perverse pleasure in doing things which are felt to be evil combined with a conviction that doing these things is really virtuous. Worship of the Devil as a good god natually involves the belief that the Christian God the Father, the God of the Old Testament, was and remains an evil god, hostile to man and the enemy of morality and truth. In full-blown Satanism, Jesus Christ is also condemned as an evil being, though sects accused of devil-worship in the past have frequently not believed this.... The followers of the Devil are intensely excited by and preoccupied with sensual pleasure and worldly achievement. They admire pride, strength and force. They revel in self- assertion and dominance, lust, dirt, violence, cruelty and all passionate sensations. Christian piety, with its virues of otherworldliness, self-denial, humility, cleanliness of heart and mind, they condemn as spineless, colourless, dead. They whole-heartedly echo Swinburne's accusing line -- 'Thou has conquered, O pale Galilean, and the world has grown gray from thy breath.' As in black magic generally, actions which are conventionally condemned as evil are valued for their psychological and mystical effects. Devil-worshippers usually believe that the attainment of perfection and the experience of the divine come through an ecstasy achieved in sensual orgy, which is likely to involve perverse sexual practices, homosexuality and flagellation, sometimes cannibalism. Because the Christian churches, especially the Roman Catholic, are regarded as abominable institutions devoted to the worship of an evil god, their ceremonies are parodied and degraded. Doing this is not merely to make a gesture in the Devil's cause; it captures and twists to Satanic uses the power which is believed to be inherent in the Christian rituals. Preoccupied with this world and this life, his worshippers believe that the Devil rules the world and that the immediate rewards of his service are pleasure and power. After death, they expect to be reborn on earth, or, in some cases, they hope to go rejoicing to hell which is not an infernal torture- chamber but a place where all pleaures are intensified and the capacity to experience them greatly increased. They believe that the Devil will eventually vanquish and overthrow the God of the Christians and return in triumph to the heaven from which the Christian God wrongfully ejected him. In that day Satan's faithful flock will reap their reward of eternal power and eternal bliss. Holding one or more of the beliefs which make up this pattern of Satanist theory has frequently been enough to bring down an accusation of devil-worship. Many sects and groups have been accused of it, but genuine Satanists have probably always been rare, as they are today. The accused sects cloaked themselves in secrecy, to avoid persecution, and it is often impossible to tell whether they were consciously devoted to adoration of the Christian Devil or not. Even the true character of witchcraft in Europe is sill violently disputed, in spite of great quantities of evidence. But there is a common factor in the accusations made, justly or unjustly, against suspected devil-worshippers -- the reversal of Christian values. [much more concerning Gnostic sects and history omitted; the general idea is formulated here very succinctly, even while the Church of Satan was established (May 1966) and well on its way to creating its own ideologies concerning the Dark Lord] ------------------------------------------------------------ [_Witchcraft: it's Power in the World Today_, by William Seabrook, Lancer Books, Inc., (1940) 1968; p. 14.] If extra-sensory power does exist and anyone possesses it, it is certain that those who have proclaimed themselves specially possessors of it and frequently made lasting spots in the world's history for good and evil for close to ten thousand years, including spiritualists, *illumines*, and faith healers, but also including Satanists and "faith killers," have been using it since the dawn of time, and must know more about it intuitively and pragmatically than has yet been learned by honest scientists in laboritories. ----------------------------------------------------------------- [_The Black rt_, by Rollo Ahmed, Paperback Library, (1938 copyright; 1966) 1968; 166-7; this is a wonderful book! full of the legends of evils told from the puritanical perspective of the Church, though not sparing on *any* anthropological details, even when embarrasing to said Church; a wonderful resource, though it does take the popular perspective of the time and equate witches, sorcerers and mages of past ages within its language; makes little real mention of 'Satanists', though does talk about 'Devil-worship':] Sorcery and witchcraft, being in themselves evil, naturally seized upon the sexual instinct and passions to pervert them to their own ends. While, since the object of Satanic worship or demonism, was to swamp the personality in evil, no better means could be found than by first arousing lust and then giving it free play. In Europe the Witches' Sabbaths were the outstanding examle of sexual depravity in connection with sorcery. Participants divested themselves of their clothing, and yielded themselve to every conceivable lustful impulse, this condition being further induced by the drug-like properties of the ointments and oils which were first smeared on the body. From the end of the fifteenth century onwards small coteries, practising spells and enchantments and indulging in performances of the black mass, found an ugly fascination in lewd indulgences and a taking part in rituals entailed entire nakedness or partial exposure. Many of the so-called rites of these secret societies were so patently ridiculous, that it is quite obvious that they were merely an excuse for men and women to indulge in sex-play and lustful gratification, frequently of an abnormal kind. We can imagine how the fashionable women of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, already robust to the point of crudity in their love affairs, welcomed opportunities of greater coarseness, with the added thrill of flirting with the Devil. -----------------------------------------------------------------