New Age vs. Christian Environmental Justice
Why New Age Is a Challenge for Christianity

VATICAN CITY, JUNE 30, 2004 (Zenit.org).-
The spread of New Age and its use and abuse of Christian elements make of the
movement a challenge for the baptized, says a specialist at the Lateran
University. Father Alessandro Olivieri Pennesi, a professor at the Mater
Ecclesiae Higher Institute of Religious Sciences of the Lateran, gave that
warning in an interview with ZENIT. An international consultation on New
Age, held by the Holy See from June 14-16, emphasized the need to know this
phenomenon better in order to provide more appropriate Christian answers.
Q: Why does the spread of New Age represent a
challenge for Christians?
Father Olivieri Pennesi: New Age constitutes a great challenge for Christianity.
Not only because it is spreading on a global level, but especially because it
incorporates elements of Christianity, altering its original meaning. For
example, Jesus Christ is no longer recognized as Son of God and only savior of
the world.
Photo: People worshipping the Earth Charter.
There is the loss of the concept of truth; we are living in an age of pure subjectivism. God has a thousand facets: cosmic energy, extra-cosmic energy, a Mind, the All, we ourselves are God, etc.
If Jesus Christ is no longer the savior, people go in search of
other salvations which become "self-oriented salvation" through methods,
meditations, different practices, including magic. The eschatological
expectation is devoid of meaning, insofar as salvation is attainable after some
or many reincarnations.
Perhaps the greatest obstacle that must be addressed is, undoubtedly, the loss
of awareness of truth, which vitiates every attempt to use the paradigms of
reason.
Q: Is it true that "weak thought" and a
particularly emotional approach to New Age spirituality are quite widespread
phenomena in the Catholic world?
Father Olivieri Pennesi: Some have said that New Age is "a phenomenon that
is typical of the postmodern culture, based on weak reasoning, ethical
relativism, and consumerism." I cannot but agree with this statement.
New
Age philosophy is spread in many forms and by many ways in a subtle and almost
imperceptible manner, says the Secretariat for Ecumenism and Dialogue of the
Italian bishops, and it is presented by highlighting its features of universal
love and defense of nature.
This proposal can lead to deceit insofar as it presents some objectives on which
it is easy to agree: harmony between man and nature, awareness and
commitment to improve the world, mobilization of all the forces for good for a
new unitary plan of life.
New Age empties the salvific event of Christ from its truth, singularity, and
fullness. In fact, according to this line of thought, man can make himself
capable, through specific techniques, of experiencing the divine without the aid
of divine grace, effecting by his own strength his salvation, on which universal
harmony depends.
The 1989 document of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a letter to
the bishops of the Catholic Church on certain aspects of Christian meditation,
is a reference text on the attention that must be given to updating the ancient
Gnosis, in which salvation takes place through the conscience, [and is]
esoteric, for the few.
In regard to New Age -- or Gnostic, which is to say more or less the same thing
-- practices, there are at the basic level, numerous examples. To mention
one: the last Vatican text on New Age refers to the use -- expanding
alarmingly -- of the enneagram: a symbol originally of an initiation character
developed in an esoteric context, syncretist, which has subsequently been
transformed to a system of classification of the personality of nine
psychological types, which serves for the search for self-fulfillment by an
esoteric or magical way.
This is pure Gnosis. In Anglo-American Christian environments, such a
method gains ground in the area of spiritual direction and guidance, so the U.S.
bishops have created an appropriate commission to discern this phenomenon.
Q: What are the conceptual characteristics
that describe New Age? And what are the main differences that characterize
Christian doctrine?
Father Olivieri Pennesi: Douglas R. Groothuis, an American author, has
identified six characteristics of New Age thought: Everything is one;
everything is God; humanity is God; we must transform our conscience;
all religions are one; optimism in regard to cosmic evolution.
We can summarize in the following points what those of New Age generally affirm:
One, there is no source of external authority -- only that of the interior --
"the god within us." Truth as objective reality does not exist, says one
of the best-known spokespersons of New Age: actress Shirley MacLaine.
Two, the Creator is confused with his creation, believing that God is part of
creation and is not separated from the latter. They adopt the belief in
monism from the Eastern religions -- that "everything is One" -- only one
essence of the universe, everyone and everything forms part of this essence.
Three, Christ, more than an individual, is a type of energy. This idea of
"Christ-like awareness" states that Jesus was not the only Christ, but that he
was predisposed to receive the "awareness of Christ," as were Buddha, Krishna,
and Mohammed. This is a well-known teaching of Gnostic occultism which has
its roots in the Babylonian mystery religions.
Four, insofar as sin is concerned, while reference to Adam's sin is silenced, it
is affirmed, as "A Course in Miracles" states, that man's principal problem is
his ignorance of his divinity. Every perceptible fault that man thinks he
has is more an absence of knowledge; with this is eliminated the need for
salvation and for a savior.
Five, the New Age follower considers his good where he finds it. His
morality is in his criteria, trusting in what he feels is good.
Six, the traditional way of seeing the personification of evil as the devil or
Satan is clearly absent from New Age literature. In regard to history and
Lucifer's task, Benjamin Creme, a known speaker of the movement, states that
"Lucifer came from the planet Venus 18.5 million years ago. He is the
director of the evolution of our planet, he is the sacrificial lamb and the
prodigal son. Lucifer made an incredible sacrifice, a supreme sacrifice
for our planet."
Seven, New Agers take up again the old doctrine of the Eastern religions on
reincarnation, modifying it substantially in order to attain a perfection
through innumerable cycles of death and rebirth. Together with this is the
practice of so-called channeling through which disincarnated entities will
direct humanity's spiritual evolution.
Eight, in the
document written by the Pontifical Councils for Culture and for
Interreligious Dialogue -- "Jesus Christ, Bearer of Living Water. A Christian
Reflection on the New Age" -- one reads: "New Age has a marked preference
for the Eastern and pre-Christian religions, which are reckoned to be
uncontaminated by Judeo-Christian distortions. Hence great respect is
given to ancient agricultural rites and to fertility cults." Somewhat
later "Gaia," Mother Earth, is criticized.
I think a denunciation is obvious of certain animalistic and environmental
ideologies which tend to re-propose a modern form of neo-pagan pantheism.
Q: What is your opinion?
Father Olivieri Pennesi: The divinization of nature, also known as "Gaia
hypothesis," in homage to Greek mythology, is the result of the move from a
correct safeguarding of the environment to forms of protection which I believe
remind one of the sacred cows of the Hindus.
The latter marks the influence of New Age ideas in the ecological movement
beginning with the first Earth Day in 1970, when the planet was recognized as a
living being, worthy of adoration. The incompatibility of this veneration
with Christian teachings is obvious and is stressed by those who favor Gaia.
Many esoteric publications see biblical teachings as the cause of great
ecological problems. In an issue of Time magazine relating to
environmental problems, the Bible, and in particular the Book of Genesis --
where man is given dominion over the earth and its inhabitants -- is mentioned
as one of the reasons for the mistreatment of nature by man. According to
some environmentalists, the spread of Christianity led to a negative development
of a technology that would damage the earth.
In line with this attribution of guilt, the worship of Mother Earth and the
environmental ideology are also accompanied by the devaluation of the human
being, placed at the same level as the other "species" and even accused of
excessive and harmful fecundity.
It is symptomatic, in fact, that none of the many environmental organizations
present in the world equate the defense of nature and the defense of human life;
[hence they are not] pronouncing themselves against abortion. [Editor's note:
the Catholic Conservation Center is pro-life!]
Q: Cardinal Georges Cottier has said that New
Age is "incompatible with Catholic doctrine." What are the reasons for such an
explicit condemnation?
Father Olivieri Pennesi: It's true. The cardinal says that "the main
theses of New Age are incompatible with Christianity, what is more, they are
antithetical."
According to the Vatican document "Jesus Christ, Bearer of Living Water. A
Christian Reflection on the New Age," "It is difficult to separate the
individual elements of New Age religiosity -– innocent though they may appear -–
from the overarching framework which permeates the whole thought-world on the
New Age movement. The Gnostic nature of this movement calls us to judge it
in its entirety. From the point of view of Christian faith, it is not
possible to isolate some elements of New Age religiosity as acceptable to
Christians, while rejecting others. Since the New Age movement makes much of a
communication with nature, of cosmic knowledge of a universal good -– thereby
negating the revealed contents of Christian faith -– it cannot be viewed as
positive or innocuous."
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For more about the Church and New Age, read:
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JESUS CHRIST, THE BEARER OF THE WATER OF LIFE: A Christian reflection on the “New Age” |
Read about the New Age manifesto, the Earth Charter, at our Earth Charter page.
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