| The
Suppressed Teachings of Gnosticism
An Interview with Dr. Stephan A. Hoeller
by
Robert Guffey
 |
| "By
understanding the nature of embodied life in the
universe as possessing certain difficulties, which
ensue from the flawed nature of the universe rather
than from our own sinful condition, we are liberated
from one of the great curses of Christianity and
perhaps Judaism, namely the oppressive weight
of guilt."
"The
Gnostic approach to religion always represented
a serious challenge to ecclesiastical authority
and to the domination of people by the Church.
The motivation behind the suppression of Gnosticism
was rooted in the power complex of the Christian
Church." |
|
On July 5, 2003,
I met with Dr. Stephan Hoeller in his apartment located in
the shadow of the Hollywood sign. Hoeller has lived in Hollywood
for over four decades now, working as a regular lecturer at
Manly P. Hall's The Philosophical Research Society while also
serving as the Bishop of Ecclesia Gnostica, the first Gnostic
Church in America.
Gnosticism, an
ancient form of Christianity, was considered heretical by
early Roman Catholic authorities and actively suppressed.
As a result, Gnosticism declined after the 2nd century A.D.
Recently, however, the movement has undergone something of
a revival in both popular culture and among serious scholars,
many of whom have recently published comprehensive books on
the subject.
Dr. Hoeller is
the author of numerous such books published by Quest Books
including Jung and the Lost Gospels: Insights into the
Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi Library (1989), Freedom:
Alchemy for a Voluntary Society (1992), The Gnostic
Jung and the Seven Sermons to the Dead (1994), The
Fall of Sophia (2002), and Gnosticism: New Light on
the Ancient Tradition of Inner Knowing. This last book,
his most recent, was the main impetus for our discussion.
How would you
describe Gnosticism to someone who's never heard of it before?
I think we could
describe it as a very early form of Christianity, very different
in many respects from what Christianity became later on. It
is much more individualistic. It is much more orientated toward
the personal, spiritual advancement and transformation of
the individual, regarding figures such as Jesus as being helpers
rather than sacrificial saviors. It is a form of religion
that has a much more ecumenical and universal scope in terms
of its relationship to spiritual, religious traditions other
than the Christian.
Why do you
think Gnosticism has been so suppressed over the years?
Well, the reasons
for that probably varied to some extent from one historical
period to the other. But the nature of the Gnostic approach
to religion was always such that it represented a serious
challenge to ecclesiastical authority and to the domination
of people by the Church and the rulers of the Church. So the
motivation behind the suppression of Gnosticism was primarily
political and was rooted in the power complex of the authorities
of the Christian Church.
The Gnostic
interpretation of the Creation myth in the Old Testament and
the Garden of Eden is the most intriguing I've ever heard.
Gnosticism seems to distinguish between the God of the Old
Testament and the God of the New Testament. Could you briefly
explain why that is?
The Gnostic God
concept is significantly different from the God concept of
the official mainstream, monotheistic religions - whether
they be Judaism, Christianity, or Islam - in as much as it
postulates an ultimate, transcendental deity which, though
a divine consciousness, is not engaged in the actual creating
or fabricating of the material universe. The creating of the
material universe is left to a lower entity, which is often
identified with the God of the Old Testament, and this lower
entity has neither the wisdom nor the goodness of the ultimate
God and is, in fact, a spiritual being alienated from the
wisdom of the ultimate Godhead. And therefore the way in which
creation is accomplished by this lower entity, and the manner
in which this entity manages the universe, is greatly flawed.
So we might say that the world is created in the flawed image
of a flawed creator. But beyond that creator there is a true,
wise and good and merciful divine consciousness to which the
human being can address himself, and from whence there comes
a liberating enlightenment to humans.
Now the Creation
myth of Genesis is also reinterpreted by Gnostics, as we find
in the Nag Hammadi scriptures and some of the others, where
the story of Adam and Eve in Paradise is interpreted in the
sense that Paradise is a sort of deception, a fool's paradise
into which the creator has confined the first humans, and
then guided by transcendental inspiration they find a way
whereby they can leave that confinement. Even though their
progress after that has various difficulties, they are able
to undergo spiritual development, they are able to grow up
spiritually, which they wouldn't have been able to accomplish
in this "Garden" in which the flawed and limited creator had
locked them up. So that's certainly a different, alternative
vision of the story of Genesis.
When they first
encounter it, some people think Gnosticism has a bleak view
of the universe. But you actually go out of your way in your
book to explain how that's not the case. For example, on p.
20 of your book [Gnosticism] you state that there was
no need for God's son to be sacrificed. Can you expand on
that idea?
Well, if I may,
I will first address the allegedly bleak vision. The vision
of life, as seen by the Gnostic, is not bleak but realistic.
We feel that by realistically understanding the nature of
embodied life in the universe as possessing certain difficulties
which ensue from the flawed nature of the existential condition
wherein we find ourselves - in other words, that ensue from
the flawed nature of the universe, rather than from our own
sinful condition, as most religions would allege - we are
liberated from one of the great curses of Christianity, and
perhaps Judaism also, namely the oppressive weight of guilt.
So the fact that we experience various difficulties in earthly
life is not our fault; it is the fault of the situation within
which we find ourselves, and once we accept that then really
life becomes a great deal easier without these implications
of guilt.
And because the
world did not fall as the result of human sin, there was no
need for God's son to be sacrificed in order to expiate that
sin, and the entire notion of an atonement theology, as defined
in most of Christiandom is done away with by the Gnostic version,
because there is no reason for it. And so Jesus for instance,
along with other great messengers of light, is accepted as
a hierophant, a bringer of liberating teachings and liberating
mysteries, but not as a sacrificial victim offered to his
own father in order to expiate some kind of human fault which
became the original sin and which has caused the fall of Creation
and of the human race. There's no need for that in this particular
view.
Is there a
connection between Gnosticism and Freemasonry?
I don't think
there is any direct connection, save for the fact that Freemasonry
became a gathering point of esoteric and heterodox persons,
in the eighteenth century and thereafter, who wanted to study
various points of view regarding life that were not dominated
by religious orthodoxy. So we find, for instance, the great
Masonic authority - who is really the founder of the American
Scottish Rite of Freemasonry - General Albert Pike of Charleston,
South Carolina, who was a very learned man, and very interested
in Gnosticism, did bring in a lot of Gnostic teachings for
the consideration and the study of Scottish Rite Masons. Masonry
as such is not a modern embodiment of Gnosticism, but the
more studious, the more philosophical Masons have studied
some Gnosticism and are often very sympathetic towards it.
So Albert Pike
was one of the first to connect Gnosticism and Freemasonry?
Well, I would
say he did it most extensively. There were undoubtedly others.
In French Freemasonry, for instance, Voltaire, the great philosopher,
was a very active Freemason. He felt very positively about
Gnostics, and so did a number of other people in that period.
And they were before Pike. This was before the American Revolution.
So the interest in these things was there all along. But Pike
was a scholar and did a lot of serious work on the subject.
Is there a
connection between Theosophy and Gnosticism?
Oh, yes. Modern
Theosophy, what is called Theosophy now, was really, you might
say, enunciated by Madame Blavatsky in the latter part of
the 19th century. The Theosophical Society was founded in
1875. She and her associates were very interested in Gnosticism.
In her books she wrote a great deal about it and very sympathetically.
Her close disciple, G.R.S. Mead, was one of the early, very
fine and very accurate translators of Gnostic and Hermetic
writings. So there was always a sympathetic relationship between
Gnosticism and Theosophy.
Do you think
modern Freemasonry has devolved in any way from what it was
in the past? Do you think a lot of knowledge has been lost?
There are different
kinds of Freemasonry, and certainly I think Masonry in the
Anglo-Saxon countries in Britain and America has become, over
the years, for the most part less philosophical and less interested
in unusual things. It has become greatly conventionalized.
But the symbolism is there in the Masonic rituals, and can
be found by those who look for it. I'm not an active Mason
as of now. I had Masonic initiations, the European kind, and
I'm friendly with various Masons here, but I'm not an active
Mason at the present time. But I know basically what goes
on. So every Grand Lodge, which is organized in America by
states, has what is called a research lodge. And in these
research lodges is where the study about Masonic philosophy
and Masonic symbolism goes on.
There are also
sub-organizations of the Masonic order which are more interested
in esoteric things. For instance, there is a very nice organization
that one has to be a Master Mason to belong to which is called,
well, it has a Latin name, The Societas Rosicruciana in Civitatibus
Foederatis, which means "The Rosicrucian Society in the United
States." But this is strictly a Masonic organization, and
they are really the Masons who are most actively interested
in esoteric subjects. They have their own journal and a headquarters
in Washington, D.C., they study Hermeticism and Gnosticism,
and are much more studious than the others. So there are these
things within Masonry. It's kind of a mixed bag because there
are mixed, diverse kinds of people who belong to it.
I was recently
talking to a whole group of 32nd Degree Freemasons and oddly
enough, none of them had ever heard of Manly P. Hall or C.
W. Leadbeater. They knew who Albert Pike was, but had never
really read anything of his. That kind of surprised me. I
know somebody who went from the 1st to the 2nd Degree in about
fourteen days. That seemed kind of fast to me. Was that how
it was for you?
Well, no. In the
French jurisdiction where I was initiated and raised I took
a full year between each Blue Lodge degree. That was partly
my own choice, but it was also because of the rules. For instance,
if you go to the Grand Lodge in San Francisco. I haven't been
there in many years, but when I visited there I spoke to the
librarian and various old guys there and when I mentioned
to them that I was associated with Mr. Hall they said: "Oh,
Brother Hall, oh yes, we have all his books." I understand
when Mr. Hall was still in good health, every year around
Easter Time, he used to go and speak for the Grand Lodge in
some capacity. So, again, it all depends on who you're talking
to. At the local level your ordinary Lodge Master and officers,
all they know is what they learn in the rituals. [Laughs]
Hall wrote
a lot of his books before he even became a Freemason, right?
I understand that
he wrote some before, and then it was suggested to him that
he knew so much already, why not join? Then he went through
the degrees. And maybe about five, six years or so prior to
his death - he was already quite an old gentleman - the 33rd
degree was given to him. He was an honorary Grand Inspector
General. Before that he just went up to the 32nd. I don't
know whether he also went through the York Rite.
When did you
first become aware of Hall and his work?
Oh, just about
fifty years ago, which was when I came to this country. This
year is the fiftieth anniversary of my coming to the United
States. Actually, by way of some Theosophists I was already
aware of The Philosophical Research Society. They showed me
some of Manly Hall's books, especially his great big spectacular
book with all the beautiful illustrations [The Secret Teachings
of All Ages]. I was living in the San Joaquin Valley for
a little while, and that's where I first saw them. I said,
"Oh, I've got to meet this man." And then when I came to Los
Angeles I went to the Philosophical Research Society and eventually
I met Mr. Hall and heard many of his talks.
Did you associate
with him for many years?
Well, not very
intimately. It was around 1970-71 that his Vice-President,
Dr. Henry Drake, asked me whether I would come lecture there.
So I agreed, and at that time there were very few lecturers
other than Mr. Hall. Mr. Hall spoke every Sunday and for a
number of years also once during the week. And then there
were usually one or two other regular, weekly lecturers. Of
course in addition to that I went to see him now and then,
and we would have some talks in his office. I found him an
extremely gracious and extremely kindly gentleman. I think
he was one of the most good-hearted people I've ever met in
my life. He was a wonderful man, so concerned with trying
to help people.
This is all
secondary rumor, but I was talking to somebody who'd talked
to his widow, and what he heard was that there was some question
as to Manly P. Hall being murdered. Do you know anything about
that?
Well, of course,
that became his widow's contention after a certain time. What
happened was that a few years prior to his death (he died
a few months short of 90 years old), maybe two or three years
before his death, Mrs. Hall introduced an individual into
his inner-circle, and basically forced this man onto Mr. Hall.
This man's name was Daniel Fritz. Mr. Hall was very old and
very feeble. He was still lecturing and so forth, but other
than that he didn't really have the strength to deal with
these things very forcefully, as he might have earlier. So
this man, and a couple of his associates, acquired more and
more power in the society, and basically after [Hall's] death
took over the Philosophical Research Society. It was Mrs.
Hall who brought Daniel Fritz in and championed him all that
time and basically forced him on Manly Hall, but then after
Mr. Hall's death she turned - probably felt guilty about what
happened - and then started going around spreading the rumor
that Daniel Fritz had killed Mr. Hall. Well, if you want to
hear the complete story I can tell you how it happened:
Mrs. Hall - on
a Labor Day weekend I seem to recall, or some holiday weekend
- wanted to go and visit her sister in San Luis Obispo and
she wanted to take Mr. Hall with her. Mr. Hall was feeble
and old and a very heavy man, he didn't walk very well, so
they wheeled him into a van, and with Daniel Fritz driving
they started out on the road. Well, they got as far as Santa
Barbara and Mr. Hall started feeling very ill and he said,
"You know, guys," and these were his words I understand, "I'm
not gonna make it if I go any further, I've got to get back
home." So they managed to understand that apparently, and
then Mrs. Hall took some taxi or something, some other form
of transportation from Santa Barbara to San Luis Obispo, and
Daniel Fritz drove Mr. Hall home and he put him to bed, and
by the following morning Mr. Hall passed away in bed.
There is no evidence
of anything else having happened, but Mrs. Hall claimed that
Daniel Fritz smothered him with a pillow or something. How
would she know? She was a few hundred miles away from there
to begin with. So I think that part was nonsense. Mr. Hall
was going to die anyhow. It was only a matter of time, and
not that much time after that Daniel Fritz would have come
by his power anyhow. It would have been grand foolishness
on his part to try anything else. But then she ended up suing
her husband's organization for money. She behaved in such
an insane fashion in the court that the judge ordered her
silenced and only her lawyer could speak.
While Hall was
alive she would come to the Society about two times a year,
on Christmas for the Christmas party and for Mr. Hall's birthday
party. She had an obsession with some mythology that she developed
about a tomb or a vault in Virginia somewhere near Washington,
D.C. and that in this vault were the documents of Francis
Bacon and things of that sort. She talked about it from the
1930s until the 1980s, and finally after Mr. Hall's death
(it was written up in the L.A. Times) some of her followers
broke into the vault [during an archaeological dig] and they
found nothing. [Laughs]
Right. And
Manly P. Hall was about 90 when he died, so it's logical to
assume that he died of natural causes.
Yeah, there is
no reason to think otherwise. I know this on fairly good authority,
as far as the L.A. police is concerned, the case is closed.
There is no investigation going on.
So it actually
did go to a trial?
No, but I think
Mrs. Hall and possibly some of her followers made some charges
of possible foul play with the Homicide Division. And they
looked into it and said there's no evidence.
And what happened
to Daniel Fritz?
Daniel Fritz is
now dead. First, let's say his dishonesties and financial
false dealings were unmasked by, primarily, Obadiah Harris
(who is now the head of the Society) and at that time he was
told they wouldn't file any charges against him if he left.
So he left. A few years later, I think four or five years
later, he died of cancer.
So you were
still working at PRS at this time?
Oh yes, I was
there during all of this time. I never took any active part
in anything. I just did my lectures and left. That way I managed
to survive all of these situations [laughs] by just staying
at a certain level of activity.
Right. Do you
know anything about Co-Masonry or its origins?
Oh, yes. Co-Masonry
evolved out of a branch of French Grand Orient Masonry around
the turn of the century, or the latter part of the nineteenth
century. There was a Lodge in France, I don't know in what
city, called L'Droit Humaine (the Human Rights Lodge) and
this Lodge initiated a woman. This was against the rules,
so they were basically thrown out. They became an independent
jurisdiction, and then formed their own Grand Lodge. It didn't
amount to much of anything until after World War I, when the
Theosophists became interested in Co-Masonry. And then a lot
of Theosophists joined Co-Masonry, and they in turn carried
it all over the world. Wherever there were Theosophists there
were also Co-Masons. Annie Besant and C.W. Leadbeater and
all sorts of other people were active Co-Masons.
In recent decades
there have been various schisms within co-Masonry itself,
but earlier that was not the case. But it's one of the older
sort of fringe heterodox Masonic movements. But again you've
got to understand that in Europe and in Latin America Masonry
is much more diverse. There are many different jurisdictions.
There are two major ones in France itself: the Grand Orient,
which is the biggest, and then the Grand Lodge, and then a
bunch of others in addition to that, and there are different
rites, so in a European context it's not so unusual to have
something of this sort, Masonry that would accommodate both
men and women.
I know there
was a spin-off from France that ended up in Colorado.
These are more
recent developments. I know there are several schisms. I think
there are something like three different Co-Masonic orders
and only one is connected with the Grand Lodge in France.
Do you think
that they're more connected to the original intent of Freemasonry
than some of the local mainstream Lodges?
I don't really
know that. I think some of the schisms were owing to the fact
that some people took over in France who were rather hostile
to Theosophy. And then some of the Theosophists said, "Well,
okay, if that's how you're going to treat us then we're going
to leave." But there are also other reasons. I'm not too aware
of what's going on in Co-Masonry at the present time, though
I have a lot of friends who belong to it.
I've noticed
Gnosticism popping up in popular culture more and more lately.
In The Matrix movies, in the novels of Phil Dick, and
even in a comic book called The Invisibles by Grant
Morrison. Do you think this represents a rise of interest
in Gnosticism?
Well, Gnostic
views have frequently appeared even much earlier than that
in literature, except that not too many people were aware
of it. For instance, Lawrence Durrell in The Alexandria
Quartet, and even more so in his other series of books
written later, The Avignon Quincunx, were filled with
a lot of Gnostic themes. In fact, to his death the two things
he was most interested in was Gnosticism and Tibetan Buddhism.
So there have been Gnostic themes at various times, but particularly
since the Nag Hammadi discovery and its translation after
1977-78. Then more and more people became aware of Gnosticism
and different literary people would put Gnostic themes into
their books, Doris Lessing being another one. And then certainly
Philip K. Dick with Valis, which is very much involved
with Gnosticism. So I think that there is certainly a much
greater awareness on the part of the more educated public
than there has been in a very long time, and this obviously
will show in various things, in literature, in drama, in theater,
and so forth. And probably The Matrix is the one that
is mentioned most often right now in that context.
I was surprised
to see you mention Moby Dick in your book.
Yes. One can see
that the elements are there, particularly the argumentation
with the Creator.
I heard you
give a lecture on Shakespeare.
Oh yeah!
Do you find
a trace of Gnosticism in his work?
Hermetic probably
more than Gnostic, but that's pretty very closely related.
The theory that Shakespeare was an important part of the Hermetic
renaissance in England goes back to an authority named Frances
Yates, a famous British historian. And particularly in her
book Theatre of the World she identified Shakespeare's plays
as containing a great deal of Hermetic philosophy. Shakespeare
appears to be, at the time, representative of the English
Renaissance, which was very Hermetically influenced by way
of Giordano Bruno from Italy and so forth, so that the esoteric
tradition - but mainly in the Hermetic form because at that
time they discovered the Hermetic writings - was present,
and that was fairly widely recognized by a number of scholars,
not just Yates.
Which particular
works do you think are most interested in Hermeticism?
Oh, dear. Well,
I think the Hermetic influence runs through the whole of Shakespearean
theatre, but it depends on how you look at it. To me, for
instance, The Tempest is the archetypal Hermetic myth.
And some of the other plays which are linked up with English
history, including the best known like Hamlet and Macbeth.
They all contain elements of Hermetic philosophy.
I'm interested
in what you think about people who perceive mysticism and
religion as being hostile to science. Are you familiar with
CSICOP? Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims
of the Paranormal?
Doesn't that have
something to do with that stage magician, [James] Randi?
Yeah.
I've heard of
it.
CSICOP seems
to find mysticism and science to be antithetical in some way.
Do you believe that's the case?
Well, it depends
on what kind of science. It's largely a matter of opinion.
I think you will find quite a number of fairly highly regarded
scientific figures - primarily in theoretical physics, and
also some in bio-physics, who see a possibility of a convergence
of mystical ideas and science, but it's at the very high,
and sort of rarified, esoteric level. At the lower level I
think the old kind of 19th century and early 20th century
notion wherein "mysticism" is a bad word would still hold
true. So it very much depends, I think, on who in the scientific
community you are consulting.
So the higher
you go in theoretical physics, the closer you get to mysticism?
Yes.
In your book
you quote from a lot of Gnostic texts. This is from the Mandaen
Gnostic scripture: "Thou wert not from here, and thy root
was not of this world." And this is from the Odes of Solomon:
"I seem to them like a stranger because I am from another
race." In their chief scripture, the Ginza, the Mandaeans
describe God as "the great first alien Life from the worlds
of light, the sublime one that stands above all works [created
things]." Sometimes I get the feeling that the text might
not be referring to beings of an angelic nature, but possibly
there's some hint that the Demiurge and the Archons could
be, perhaps, extraterrestrial in nature. Is that unreasonable?
Well, only in
the sense that spiritual dimensions would be considered extra-terrestrial,
but the notion of these various beings of one kind or the
other traveling to Earth physically, this is certainly not
part of Gnostic mythology. This was not talked about, this
was not envisioned. The travel, such as it may be, is spiritual
travel. It is the moving through dimensions. It is the moving
from non-physical realms to the physical realm, rather than
from one physical realm to the other. No doubt there are people
who are caught up in this space travel mythology who will
try to interpret it that way and they have, and they get a
hold of all kinds of mythologies, say of the Dogon people
of Africa and so forth, and they interpret it as space travel.
I know people who have investigated the Dogons. I have a friend
in Ghana, who's been there for a long period of time, and
he says, "Sure, it means coming from the sky, but coming spiritually
from the sky, not from a space ship."
Ultimately,
do you think that's a dead end, that line of research?
Yes, I think it
is. I think it may be a little bit of what Chogyam Trungpa,
the Tibetan teacher, used to call "spiritual materialism"
because it materializes these spiritual myths too heavily.
Now, we know that there is some space travel going on now.
It's not impossible that there have been some in the past.
But to mix up these sophisticated spiritual symbols with that
sort of thing doesn't seem to be very profitable.
Do all Gnostics
believe in reincarnation?
Well, now that's
a good question. Gnostics try not to have to believe in too
much of anything, but their hope is that they either know
something or they don't. But let's say the reincarnation element
seems to have been present, but in a rather muted sort of
fashion, in ancient Gnosticism and also later on, because
it's sort of recognized that if you don't make it in one life
time, that you would then have another opportunity to achieve
liberation, and if this were not the case it would be a terribly
unjust calamity. The Gnostic tends to look at reincarnation
more as slavery, a not terribly fortunate condition - a prolongation
of the agony, shall we say? Now, a lot of New Age and occult
people look upon it as, "Oh, it's wonderful, I can come back
again and again and again!" This sort of Shirley MacLaine
enthusiasm for reincarnation. To the Gnostic, reincarnation
is a very likely a certain condition, but not something to
be terribly happy about. [Laughs]
At one point
in your book, on page 13, you write that myths are truer than
theology and philosophy. On p. 83 you write, "while philosophy
is but a tale told, myth and ritual are reality lived and
enacted." You talk about symbolism and reality being intertwined
in a loop. And that makes me think of Carl Jung and his theory
of archetypes.
Oh yes, I've written
several books about that. I think Jung and much of psychology
and, indeed, the study of mythology and cultural anthropology,
much of it inspired by Jung, is very valuable and points in
a sort of Gnostic direction. So I think that Jung's psychology
is a psychological Gnosticism, and in fact he himself said
many things of that sort. Jungian depth psychology, I think,
is a very good entry point for a lot of people into this matrix
of thought. But, of course, one has to get eventually somewhat
past the purely psychological realm because Jung himself said
that when you go deep enough into the archetypal realm then
you are no longer within the realm of the psyche, that you
are now in the psychoid realm. So the psyche is a kind of
doorway into and out of certain realities, a very important
doorway at that, because we experience everything by way of
our own mind. How else can we explain it? Whether it's physical
reality or psychological reality or mystical reality, it is
our minds that are involved.
Did Jung consider
himself to be Gnostic?
You can find it
in my book The Gnostic Jung. You might say, after a
fashion, yes. He considered the Gnostics as being probably
the closest to his thought of any of the philosophical schools.
He felt that among them he was among old friends. But, of
course, his teachings were at least ostensibly of a psychological
or quasi-scientific kind, so he did not make any pronouncements
on what he might call the religious aspects of Gnosticism
very much - he did some, but not an awful lot.
Did you interact
with Jung?
When I was a very
young fellow going to school in Austria, I did manage to get
over to Switzerland on a couple of occasions, and went to
the Jung Institute when Jung was still there, but only on
a visit. Subsequently, after his death, when I wrote Gnostic
Jung, I sent a German translation of it to his son, Franz
Jung, who wrote to me as I mention in the book, and the letter
is right up there in that glass case [pointing at the top
of his bookshelf]. So his son had very kindly acknowledged
the accuracy of my representation of his father's position,
but I was not personally connected with Jung. It was not possible
geographically and politically and financially at that time
for me to spend much time in Switzerland. I had no passport,
I was a refugee from Hungary, I slipped over illegally to
Switzerland a couple of times. That's not easy to do with
the Swiss. [Laughs] But as long as you promised you
were going to be there at such and such an hour to come over
again, they sometimes would let you do that. The Swiss never
wanted a lot of foreigners in their country.
So you went
to school in Austria? Is that where you got your Ph.D.?
Yes.
And what did
you study?
Well, I studied
philosophy, you know. The department's a little bit different
in Europe. I studied what is called pure philosophy, but with
a minor in the philosophy of religion.
And when you
went into that, you'd already had an interest in Theosophy
and Gnosticism?
Oh, yeah.
So you applied
that to your studies.
I thought philosophy
was the closest to my interests.
Right. Did
you encounter any hostility in academia?
No, not really.
Often those things didn't come up. If so, they just considered
it a particular eccentricity. And Jung was already quite well
known in Europe at that time. A lot of the academicians were
very, very favorable to Jung. And there was a substratum of
these interests going on too: some of the existentialists,
and phenomenologists and so forth, they all had some connection
with kind of esoteric currents of some kind or the other.
When did you
develop an interest in actually practicing magic?
Ceremonial magic?
Here in the States, after I met Israel Regardie.
You interacted
with Israel Regardie?
Oh, yes. Dr. Regardie
I knew fairly well, and we used to visit, and he came to some
of our meetings and all kinds of things like that. And he
was here for a long time in Studio City, and then in the last
two or three years of his life moved to Arizona, to Sedona,
and during that time then we corresponded quite a bit. I have
a letter from him no less than about two or three days prior
to his death. He died very suddenly. So, yes, Israel Regardie
I knew very well.
I thought it
was interesting, in the lecture the other day you were talking
about how Israel Regardie said that to practice ceremonial
magic you should have some grounding in psychoanalysis. Could
you expand on that?
Well, of course,
Regardie himself was a psychotherapist, and he felt that a
lot of people are attracted to ceremonial - to the occult
in general, but particularly to ceremonial magic - sort of
for the wrong reasons, for neurotic reasons. And that unless
some of that is handled, and some of their personal neuroses
and their personal difficulties dealt with in a psychological
manner, then their career in magical activities would proceed
badly. After all, when he was very young he was quite closely
connected to Aleister Crowley. Crowley was in France at that
time, and Regardie was about 19 years old or something, and
he went over there and became his personal secretary.
Well, it only
lasted about a year or something and he felt very much abused
and badly treated by Crowley. He felt that Crowley was an
extremely brilliant magician, but that he was also frightfully
neurotic. [Laughs] How nice it would have been if he
had been less neurotic; one could have done more business
with him. Then from there Regardie went to England and that's
when he became initiated in a regular Golden Dawn temple.
But he was kind of dealing with Crowley's ghost all his life,
and so forth. So let's say the interaction of personal psychology
and magic was something he was very aware of, and he tried
to guard people from getting caught up in their neuroses.
And it's true. I've met a lot of people who are just - they
are the last people who should be involved in something like
that, but they go to it like a duck to the water. Obviously,
if you enter such a highly charged field with certain psychological
vulnerabilities, then you're going to have trouble.
Opinions on
Crowley seem to differ violently. To some people he was a
court jester, to others he was evil, to others he was a genius.
What's your opinion on Crowley?
I did not know
him, so my knowledge is all second hand, but by way of Regardie
and some other people I would say he was a learned and very
brilliant Kabbalist, and a passable poet, but that he also
- one of his vulnerabilities was, I think, that he liked to
fool people and that he mixed some of that into his magical
system, too, and therefore it's full of blinds and full of
sort of crude effects, and for this reason it's rather tricky.
If somebody who is fairly well grounded in the philosophy
and knows his way around fairly well reads Crowley, he can
learn something from him, but if a novice takes everything
at face value that Crowley wrote then he might be deceived.
He's a strange figure - a fraud, but a brilliant figure of
that particular period.
Can certain
drugs be used to heighten a religious ritual or an experience?
This is a very
tricky subject. As I think I mentioned last time in the lecture,
most rituals - magical, theurgic, religious - that are really
good, that work, are there for the purpose of altering consciousness.
In other words, they are consciousness-altering devices. They
are trying to do pretty much what some drugs try to do in
their own way. And therefore to mix the two is kind of like
heaping the same thing on top of the same thing. The Golden
Dawn tradition says, "Enflame thyself with prayer." So the
prayer is supposed to change the consciousness, and to add
consciousness-altering chemicals to that is often not particularly
productive. I have known people who have done it and I don't
think they achieved much thereby.
Now, however,
if you take the field of psychedelic substances apart from
that, then there is no doubt that if the right person takes
the right psychedelic he might have very interesting, and
at times very valuable, experiences. And many people have.
When I came here in the 1950s, and I don't mind being quoted
on it either, I had some - not very close - but some tangential
contact with the people who were here in Hollywood: among
them Aldous Huxley, who after all was practically a neighbor.
His widow Laura
still lives up the road here on the Mulholland highway, you
know. Mr. Aldous Huxley, Gerald Heard, Christopher Isherwood,
you know, a whole number of people, and they in turn knew
various doctors who were involved in psychedelic research
and so forth, and these were the early researchers in mescaline
and LSD, and that was the time when they started bringing
in LSD from Sandoz Laboratories from Switzerland through Canada.
These were all very serious people, and so hearing them talk
and being in their presence, I was convinced that this was
a highly interesting avenue to deeper things, but that it
depended very much on how it was done and on who was doing
it. And then when - largely by way of Timothy Leary and people
like that - it became a very widely distributed situation,
it became cheapened.
But I still think
that there is some very valuable potential there, and it's
a dirty shame that psychedelics have been outlawed by the
U.S. government and put in the same category as heroin and
cocaine and things like that because they are an entirely
different sort of thing. It's like saying that water and whiskey
are the same thing because they're both liquid. [Laughs] You
know, I mean it's nonsense. It's a potentially very valuable
field of research that converges both with depth psychology
and with mysticism. And this is worthy of further pursuit.
And I think the time will come when further research will
have to be opened up again because once the human race, once
human consciousness, touches a new discovery of this sort
it never goes away. It never goes away. It can't. You can
legislate all you want, you can build the biggest bureaucracy,
you can have millions of people locked up in jail, it's still
going to be there.
That is definitely
a very interesting discovery and it ought to go on, but I
am not necessarily in favor of mixing psychedelics with the
religious or the spiritual rituals and things of that sort
because the cross currents become too tangled, you might say.
A good magician can raise his consciousness by way of the
magical practice and the magical sacrament itself, in church
or elsewhere. I have had people since the'60s come to me and
say, "Why don't you let me put some LSD in the sacrament in
the Mass," and I say, "No, they are two different things.
You come to Mass first and in the afternoon go and take your
LSD and have another trip." [Laughs] "You know, be
my guest. I wish you a lot of luck! But let's not mix them
up."
I was going
to ask, how does a Gnostic Mass differ from a Catholic Mass?
Well, I would
say primarily by way of intentionality. The forms are rather
similar, although we use scriptures and readings and prayers
from Gnostic sources. Here, in the Gnostic Mass, the intention
is primarily to elevate and to transform the worshipper's
consciousness so as to attain a liberating insight - gnosis.
And it is not, therefore, primarily connected with reenacting
the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ on the cross. So that
when we say, "This is my body, and this is my blood," we feel
that this is a mystical, theurgic act which has been given
to us by the founder of the Christian religion in order to
nourish ourselves spiritually and to attain gnosis. But it
is not a repetition of the blood and sacrifice at Calvary.
Lenny Bruce
once said that if Jesus Christ had been tried and executed
in the 20th century we'd all be wearing little electric chairs
around our necks.
Well, I suppose
so - if indeed that is the mode of execution.
The symbology
there must have a different psychological effect on the people
in the Mass. Because in one situation it's kind of punitive,
and in the other that punishment isn't there in the symbology.
Oh, yes. And we
don't feel the need to go to confession. Because people can
take communion if they sincerely want to elevate their consciousness
and change their ways, and that is sufficient.
Are you familiar
with the work of Alfred Korzybski?
Count Korzybski,
the General Semanticist? Oh, yes. It was a fairly popular
intellectual movement, oh, clear back in the '50s and thereabouts,
and various people - Stuart Chase, subsequently Senator Hayakawa
and people like that - were all involved in it. I would say
it has limited merit. I think the verbal structuring of the
mind is undoubtedly a kind of another matrix. Everything can
become a matrix, and words can too. And if items within the
verbal communication are mistaken for reality, then we are
obviously making a serious mistake, and effort should be made
in that direction to discern meaning rather than verbalization
about meaning. But at the same time I feel words are truly
a great and divine gift, and that it is not intended for us
at this point to regress to pre-verbal communication, but
that we should pay attention to meaning in our verbal communication.
So I think the General Semantic movement was pointing out
some fairly important things, but, well, let's face it, it
wasn't the savior of humanity either. [Laughs]
Well, Marshall
McLuhan believed Gnosticism and Christianity grew out of the
phonetic alphabet, that one rose out of the other.
The ancients considered
language quite important and quite sacred, and so you have
a whole kind of alphabetical mysticism in Judaism that has
been embodied in the Kabbalah and the numerical values of
the letters, and the Greeks had a Pythagorean letter-mysticism,
so undoubtedly some of that was going on too.
You got your
Ph.D. in Austria?
Yes.
So did you
ever go into the world of academia, to actually teach?
Well, when I came
to this country I seriously considered becoming a University
professor, and that was of course in the '50s, and I was finishing
up some of my post-graduate work and things like that, and
I wasn't terribly turned on by what I found in American academia.
Then, of course, things started changing somewhat in the '60s,
but I wasn't very turned on by that either. So I found the
American academia very drab and very utilitarian oriented
in the '50s and excessively politicized in the '60s, and so
neither of them fit my interests, so I stayed out of it pretty
much.
And when did
the Ecclesia Gnostica Church begin?
Oh, well, I was
ordained a priest in the late '50s and I have been active
ecclesiastically ever since. I was in touch with some of the
members of the Gnostic Church in England and in France, and
they commissioned me to start work here. As far as I know,
ours was probably the first Gnostic Church in America at that
time. Since then, especially since the Nag Hammadi, there
have been others.
So you founded
the Ecclesia Gnostica here in L.A.?
Yes. There was
a little organization here already called The Gnostic Society,
which was founded by two disciples of Madame Blavatsky, James
Morgan Pryse and his brother John Pryse. James Pryse, you
still find some of his books here, was a good Greek scholar
and he did sort of esoteric Bible interpretations. His book
The Apocalypse Unsealed is still around from those
days. When I came here and started Gnostic work, I found this
little organization that was still there, and there were a
few old people who were in it. So I sort of inherited that,
and we do our activities of an educational nature, the lecture
and class work and things like that under the name of the
Gnostic Society, and then we do our activities of an ecclesiastical
nature under the name of Ecclesia Gnostica - that's the local
one. We have extensions in other places.
So that church
has been in that location for - ?
Well, our little
church has been in this location now for twenty-six years,
but we were in another location before that for a short period
of time.
Are you the
only Bishop?
I'm the only the
Bishop in this jurisdiction, but we have numerous priests
of both genders.
You mentioned
H.P. Blavatsky. When did you first come across Blavatsky's
work?
In Europe, when
I was still in my teens, I came across some of her books and
some books about her.
I've heard
similar things said about her as about Crowley. Some say she
was a fraud, other people say glowing things about her. There
was a recent book called Madame Blavatsky's Baboon
that didn't show her in the best light.
Well, I think
that the similarity with Crowley is minimal. I think she was
much more honest and much more sincere. As for her involvement
in this occult phenomenon business, it may be - and there's
no real proof for this - that now and then she sort of mixed,
perhaps, some trickery with the production of occult phenomena,
and even that is not certain. That's a very tricky field.
You know, Gurdijeff said that there are three kinds of phenomena:
tricks, semi-tricks, and genuine phenomena, and that they're
all mixed up with each other. But I think, on the whole, she
was a very decent and very honest person who tried to do what
she considered important. She just, as the Jungians would
say, received a lot of negative projections for a variety
of reasons at the time.
Are most Gnostics
also interested in practicing ceremonial magic, or is that
unique to you?
No, not necessarily.
That's sort of unique to me. They're certainly not opposed
to it. It's another avenue, but I would say it's a minority
of people involved in Gnosticism who are interested in that.
Could you briefly
describe the difference between evocation and invocation?
Well, the two
major modalities of ceremonial magic are evocation and invocation.
Evocation has to do, at least ostensibly, with the calling
up of what are sometimes called Tartarean spirits, which are
sort of non-physical entities more connected to the earth
and the subterranean regions and nature, although their origins
probably are of a different order. It's kind of a lower, heavier
nature, but still interesting and informative and easier to
do than invocation, which is essentially angel magic, and
has to do with conversing with and invoking celestial beings.
So one is sub-mundane, and the other is trans-mundane.
You were talking
about the dangers of neurotic personalities getting involved
with ceremonial magic. Is there a danger to people who are
not neurotic getting involved in this sort of magic?
Oh, I think if
they have the proper guidance and make themselves aware of
authoritative sources I would not consider it a particularly
dangerous pursuit. I think the dangers of ceremonial magic
on the whole have been exaggerated by people who don't understand
what's going on. There's an old jocular saying: "What people
are not up on, they are down on." [Laughs] People who
are not up on some of these things say, "Oh, it's dangerous!"
And that's
why Gnosticism and Freemasonry and even psychedelics are so
demonized?
The unknown, the
unexplored - what you have no way of really understanding
- is considered dangerous. And in all of those, proper experience,
guidance, good information, and proper set and setting are
very important. The greatest danger is that you are not going
to get anything out of it. That's the greatest danger - that
you will be wasting your time! [Laughs]
I often wonder
if LSD was made illegal simply to prevent people from experiencing
an unofficial reality. Perhaps that's why all of these things
are so looked down on.
Well, I think
psychologically, in terms of the deeper depth psychological
motivations behind the persecution of psychedelics, you are
quite right. I think people who are attached to the consensus
reality consider the possibility of other realties being present
a threat. They don't want that, they don't want people to
have contact with that. It throws a monkey wrench into their
reality. And it's not even necessarily anything like, "Oh,
well, the Establishment, the corporations, the military-industrial-complex!"
I mean, the military-industrial complex would have liked to
have found a good use for LSD. The CIA and so forth were experimenting
with it, but they found out it was not really conducive to
the use they were trying to put it, and then they abandoned
it. But I think that it's just a certain mindset, a mindset
that wants things the way they are.
Do you remember
The Last Temptation of Christ, Scorcese's movie? There's
a scene where Jesus is trying to tell Pilate, "Look, you know,
we want to change the world, but we want to change it with
love. I don't want to start a revolution. I don't want to
hurt anybody. I just want to change it with love." And Pilate
says, "My good man, you don't understand, we don't want it
to be changed at all. By no means, we don't want any change!"
[Laughs] So, it's a little bit that way. People involved
in the matrix, they are within the consensus reality, they
want reality to stay that way. To poke holes into that reality
by one means or the other is very disturbing to such people.
Those are the deeper psychological motivations of the dislike
for psychedelics, or for that matter for ceremonial magic
or Gnosticism, or anything that alters consciousness in any
significant way.
I think that if
a linkage had not been made in the '60s between radical politics
and LSD and the Vietnam War, and things of that sort, maybe
the psychedelic research - at least at some level - could
have continued unabated. But there were just too many things
coming in all at one time, disturbing the people who are attached
to the status quo: sexual revolution, radical politics, anti-Vietnam
War, LSD, all of this business, it was just too much. They
got scared, they really got scared.
So it would
be logical to assume that the mainstream religions are not
interested in altering consciousness at all?
That's true. Yeah,
I think so. I think so. Here and there, there always have
been some mystics, some weirdos, but they're not really part
of the fabric of the situation, you know?
Were you familiar
with Bishop Pike at the Episcopal Bishop of California?
Oh, sure. Very
nice man, God bless him. Yes, in fact I saw Bishop Pike just
a few days before he went on his final journey when he then
perished in the desert. He and his wife Diane were here in
L.A. to give a lecture and then there was a reception for
him, and actually he said at that time - there must be other
people around who remember this - that one of his principal
objectives of going to the Middle East was to find the Mandaens.
And I even said to him at that time, "Bishop, you're not going
to find the Mandaens in Israel. You may find them in Iraq
and possibly in Iran." And then he said, "Well, we hope to
go over there too." But he died before he could do it. So
it's quite possible, it seemed to me at the time, that Bishop
Pike was on the verge of moving into yet another area of spirituality
and spiritual discovery, but on the verge of it he died. Unfortunately.
Out of
journalistic curiosity I filed a FOIA request on Bishop Pike
through the FBI, and I got a sizable document back, a lot
of it blacked out. And there was one document that talked
about his resignation as Episcopal Bishop of California. It
had a report from this FBI agent saying that Bishop Pike has
decided to resign, and then at the bottom another agent had
written in ink, "Good riddance!"
Well, I suppose
there were a lot of people who didn't like him. When he resigned
he then went to this think tank in Santa Barbara, which was
a little Rockefeller-funded group. I don't know if it's still
there. In fact, I think that's where he was living up to his
death. But when I saw him he still wore the collar. He was
a Bishop in good standing, but he didn't have a diocese. He
was an inactive Bishop.
It was clear
from these documents that he was being watched to some extent,
and I guess it was because of his anti-Vietnam stance?
Yes, I think so.
He was much more conservative earlier on, but as the '60s
came in he got caught up in all of these things: attending
meetings with radicals, and anti-Vietnam, and civil rights,
and that must have been the reason.
He wrote a
really interesting book called The Other Side.
Indeed, I have
it. Yeah, toward the end of his life up here in Santa Barbara
he got a hold of some spiritualist people and they presumably
put him in touch with his dead son, and this was another big
turnaround for him. And judging from his life pattern, he
wouldn't have remained within that spiritualist interest.
He was already moving on to something other, and probably
something deeper. So I wouldn't be surprised if eventually
he wouldn't have ended up as something like a Gnostic or within
a sort of Gnostic-Theosophical matrix because he was moving
in that direction. His journey was a long one: from a lawyer
who practiced with the Supreme Court to bishop and spiritual
seeker.
And he started
out in the Navy.
Yes. And then
he was the Dean of St. John's Cathedral, I think in New York
City. He was one of the first television ministers. I remember:
"Dean Pike," before he was even a Bishop, the same time when
the Catholic Bishop Sheen had his program around the same
time.
I got a hint
of his Gnosticism from reading The Other Side.
Yes, I think he
was moving in that direction. It was a dirty shame that -
well, you know, again, one can theorize about these things.
I think he was sort of moving too fast, and that possibly
may have been involved in his death. When you are breaking
your own archetypes sometimes so rapidly then things can happen
to you. There are difficulties that arise in that course,
but that's purely speculative. In any event, he was one of
the great creative people of that period, there's no doubt
about it.
Did you know
Bishop Pike and Philip K. Dick were friends?
No, this I didn't
know.
Yeah, in fact
Phil Dick was the one who introduced him to the medium to
contact his dead son.
Oh, is that so?
Phil Dick wrote
a novel called A Maze of Death that was dedicated to
Pike. And at the beginning of The Other Side, in the
dedication, it says, "Special thanks to Phil and Nancy," which
is Phil Dick and his wife. I assume that Phil Dick probably
got a lot of his knowledge from Bishop Pike.
Could be.
In fact, in
his last novel, The Transmigration of Timothy Archer,
the main character was based on Bishop Pike. And I was going
to ask you about that. Did you read Valis? When did
you come across Valis for the first time?
I came across
Valis fairly late. I think in the - when was it published?
I think '82,
or perhaps '80.
Well, then it
wasn't that late. It was right around that time, in the early
'80s. A lady I knew gave me a copy of it and said, "You've
got to read this. This is really very Gnostic."
By the way,
there's a story called "The Deathbird" by Harlan Ellison.
And it seems very Gnostic in its interpretation of the Genesis
myth.
Well, in the sci-fi
and fantasy fiction field, that was one place where Gnostic-like
ideas have appeared over a period of time. And there have
been people who have written on that. For instance, there
was one, quite a famous one, it goes back some years, called
A Voyage to Arcturus [by David Lindsay]. Do you remember
that?
It's one of
my favorite novels! [Laughs]
Very Gnostic,
very Gnostic in nature.
I picked that
book up just by accident, and I read it, and I was actually
blown away by it. I remember reading somewhere - David Lindsay
said that he never thought his novel would be popular, but
every year one person would discover it, so I read that and
thought, "Oh, I'm the guy - "
- who discovered
it that year. Yes! [Laughs] So these ideas have been
around in certain circles for quite awhile, and some authors
have used them, but I think now it's beginning to enter the
general culture. Part of that is probably due to the fact
that so many of the sacred cows that we've been worshipping,
the golden calves, have proven to be flawed and useless? The
culture is at a point now where various ideologies and developments
from which we expected a kind of secular salvation have revealed
themselves as useless, and sometimes worse than useless. And
all of this I think has moved us toward a possible greater
appreciation of the Gnostic-like ideas.
I was going
to ask you, are you familiar with John M. Allegro?
Oh, yes, certainly.
I quoted him quite extensively in my book Jung and the
Lost Gospels.
He wrote a
book called The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross [in which
Allegro contends that the literary figure of "Jesus Christ"
was merely a metaphor invented to disguise the ritual practices
surrounding the amanita muscaria, a psychedelic mushroom
that supposedly served an integral role among the sacred rites
of the early Christians]. Do you recommend that book?
Well, it's interesting.
I would say that - you know, he was a reputable Dead Sea Scrolls
scholar, one of the great ones, but The Sacred Mushroom and
the Cross is somewhat speculative. I would say he's sort of
on the right track in terms of looking for a psychedelic component,
but whether he has got all his data right is another question,
so I would say it's an interesting early attempt in that direction,
but of course there have been many others. Recently Dan Merkur,
who is a very interesting scholar working in Canada, a University
man, has written two books on manna as the psychedelic sacrament
of the Hebrews [The Psychedelic Sacrament and The
Mystery of Manna], so, you know, various things are coming
out into the open that indicate the presence of consciousness-altering
substances in various religious traditions at one time or
the other, and that's an interesting avenue of research.
But whether Allegro's,
whether that particular book. I think he was moving in the
right direction, but how authoritative it is is a matter of
question. But he was a good Dead Sea Scrolls scholar. I had
some correspondence with him years ago, and he was the first
one that propounded the idea that some of the Dead Sea Scrolls
were not being translated and hidden away on purpose. He was
castigating his fellow scholars, and nobody paid any attention
to him, and then eventually some others got the same idea,
and they finally broke the monopoly on the Dead Sea Scrolls
a few years ago.
Yeah, they
weren't released until 1990, right?
Yeah, right around
that time.
You mentioned
in your lecture on Wednesday about conflicting theologies
in the Middle East. You were talking about Christian fundamentalists
-
Yes, and the red
heifer business, and all of that.
Right. And
funding certain Jewish groups to essentially bring about Armageddon
in the Middle East. There's this book called Prophecy and
Politics by Grace Halsell, which I read back in like '89,
and she was talking about this whole thing in there. Where
did you learn about that?
Oh, well, you
know, it's an open secret. And in the mainstream press various
things appear, and there was a gigantic long article - I just
don't know how long ago, a year or two ago - in The New Yorker
about that red heifer situation and all that. [Laughs]
It's sort of tragi-comic, all of it. I mean these curious
liaisons between fundamentalists of different orientations
do occur. And it's all very strange, and in some ways unfortunate
because I think the rise of fundamentalism in this country
is not a pleasant phenomenon. You know, I'm not afraid of
them. I don't think that Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson are
going to take over the country and become the theocratic dictators
tomorrow, but serious inroads have been made over a period
of time by these people.
I don't think
it's a good development because the United States was generally
respected - and England too - as a land of moderate discourse,
especially in political matters. Nobody was too way out. Heck,
when I came to this country fifty years ago you couldn't tell
the difference between the Republican and the Democrat. The
difference was in the name of their party more than anything
else, you know? In fact, like Eisenhower, I think he tossed
a coin as to whether he should run on the Democratic or the
Republican ticket, and ended up running on the Republican
ticket.
But extremism
has grown very greatly, and it's not a good thing. It's unjust
to blame it just on the present administration. No doubt there
is a strong influence there from evangelical fundamentalist
Christian sources. But it's been there for a long time. In
fact, I think the turning point was the Carter administration.
When Jimmy Carter got into the White House, somehow a lot
of this - shall way say redneck theology? - all of a sudden
became respectable. And that was the turning point. It was
no longer a fringe group that people looked at and said, "Oh
well, snake handlers and speakers in tongues." Now all of
a sudden it was in the White House and the president's sister
was an evangelist who saw flying saucers and spoke in tongues,
and that's really when it started coming in.
It's not that
their policies were being implemented yet, as much as it became
respectable. And now I'm sure it's occurred to you that in
the last few years whenever the name "Christian" is used in
the media, it always refers to these people. They have come
to monopolize, to co-opt the name "Christian." What about
the millions and millions of Christians who are not born again
Christians, who are not evangelicals, who are not fundamentalists?
What are they? So the mainstream has bought into their mythology,
at least in this regard. I think that it's a symptom of how
much people have bought into their thinking.
Do you think
fundamentalism is so popular because they do deal in literal,
concrete answers? "These are the answers!" Whereas Gnosticism
is symbolic and more abstract.
Well, yes. They
are peddling certitude, certainties. That's the way it is!
And there is a strong psychological need in that regard. People
like certitude. People like to have at least the feeling that
they are certain and on the right track, and that's a big
talking point. Of course, there is also a little bit of low
class mysticism going on. There is some altering of consciousness:
with the speaking in tongues, the Holy Spirit coming, this
that and the other thing. So that that also is an area of
appeal, and certainly one should not condemn these people
who have their own mysticism.
So the fundamentalists
alter your consciousness just enough to titillate you, but
not to illuminate you in any significant way?
Yeah, I think
that that's it. Giving people a sense that they are right.
Everybody wants to be right. And this gives a sort of supernatural
stamp of approval on being right, but as we can see with Islam
and elsewhere, it's not a good development. Very counter-productive.
And for it to become politicized to the degree that it has
in the last few decades is particularly bad.
Fundamentalist
types were around when I came here in the '50s. There were
big evangelicals, you know. Billy Graham was going big guns,
and at that time there were radio evangelicals. And they made
a lot of money, and all that was around, but they were not
political, not at that time. There were a few between the
two wars, before World War II. There was Father Coughlin who
was sort of fascistic-oriented. There were a few, a small
number. But that went by the wayside with the war. This politicized
fundamentalist philosophy is a very bad thing. I think Huston
Smith is one of the best interpreters of the contemporary
religious scene. He's written some very, very good things.
Of course, he has a mainstream focus and background, but his
books have a broad view; he's sort of the grand old man of
comparative religion in America. Read his book Why Religion
Matters. It's one of his more recent books.
You were mentioning
earlier the only danger of ceremonial magic is that you'll
be wasting your time.
That's the most
common danger, the biggest danger.
On the other
side, what would be the biggest benefits? What have you experienced?
Well, I think
there is a sometimes subtle and sometimes not-so-subtle altering
of your consciousness, that you do these things and you come
back different. And I think the difference is a good difference.
You are sensitized to certain spiritual influences, to certain
kinds of perceptions. You have experienced a desirable change
of consciousness. As far as, you know, objective information,
I never found that to be that spectacular. They didn't reveal
to me some new secret of the universe, or I don't know what,
[laughs] some highly marketable new industrial development.
That didn't happen.
So again, it's
symbolic.
Yes.
How large is
the membership of Ecclesia Gnostica?
Well, you know,
we don't keep formal membership records. And we never have
a great many people here locally at any one time present,
but let's say if I add up all the people who come over a year
or so, then it's certainly several hundred people. But you've
also got to remember we have outreaches in other places: in
Seattle, in Portland, in Salt Lake City, in Arizona, in Northern
California, and then we've made some impact by way of this
website, which has been quite highly regarded by many people
and has received a lot of visits.
Given the fact
that Gnosticism deals mainly in symbology and ambiguities,
do you think it will always remain a small, underground movement?
That would sort
of require the gift of prophecy, but I think the movement
is growing and we are not the only gnostic group. Also I think
it's a little different kind of movement just because of it's
nature, so you will probably have a relatively small core
group nation-wide, and probably internationally, who will
keep the tradition going, who will write the books, who will
give the lectures and do the websites and things like that.
Then there will be a much wider circle, or maybe several circles
of people, who will be quite Gnostic but privately, and who
will take advantage of some of this but in a more peripheral
way. So I think the influence on the culture is what matters.
It's not going to be a mass movement, but I think it could
have a very wide influence, which I think is beginning already.
Most of these things, movements of these sorts that we have
seen, tend to fade in about twenty years. And this hasn't
faded. Quite to the contrary, it's growing all the time. There
are more and more books, there are more and more mentions
made of this. The influence on the culture is growing.
Other than,
of course, I assume you would recommend Gnosticism
by Stephan Hoeller, but are there any other books you might
recommend to those interested in learning about Gnosticism?
Well, certainly
the writings of Elaine Pagels such as her latest one, Beyond
Belief. She was the one who wrote The Gnostic Gospels
back in the '70s and the new one deals in part with the Gospel
of Thomas. It was on the bestseller charts. So the literature
is growing. Much of it comes from scholars and so is maybe
a little bit heavy, but this one is not.
So what were
the books that interested you, that got you into this?
Well, of course,
my interest went back to an earlier time when the Nag Hammadi
wasn't present yet and so forth, but the earlier material,
the Pistis Sophia and the other early Gnostic writings
were there, Mead's translations and various commentaries,
so I was mostly working with late nineteenth and early twentieth
century texts and commentaries, but then of course came the
Nag Hammadi material in the '70s and we had a great deal more
to work with.
Do you have
a general statement you want to make about Gnosticism for
the readers?
Well, I would
say that this appears to be, as far as Gnosticism is concerned,
the time that the Greeks called the kairos, the time
when the Gods are reborn. We live in an age, I think, when
certain timeless ideas, which have been submerged and subdued
for a long time, are making their appearance once again. In
that respect we're living in very interesting times as the
Chinese would say. Interesting times, spiritually powerful
times, always cast a great shadow. There will also be great
difficulties, but I think that Gnostic traditions, along with
a number of kindred ideas, are being reborn at this time,
and will have a significant influence in the future. Those
of us who find ourselves working within that field are singularly
blessed that we can do this work at this particular time.
So I feel I'm at the right place and at the right time and
I am profoundly grateful for all of that.
Robert
Guffey is a regular contributor to Paranoia. He may
be contacted at rguffey@hotmail.com.
Dr.
Hoeller delivers lectures every Friday night at Ecclesia Gnostica
located at 4516 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90027. The
Gnostic Society's website is www.gnosis.org.
Dr. Hoeller also delivers lectures every Wednesday night at
The Philosophical Research Society located at 3910 Los Feliz
Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90027.
The
PRS website is www.prs.org.
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