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What
exactly is Satanism? The Google dictionary defines it as, “The worship of
Satan, typically involving a travesty of Christian symbols and practices, such
as placing a cross upside down. The website wordnetweb.princeton.edu defines
it as belief in and reverence for devils (especially Satan) and thefreedictionary.com
adds that it is profound wickedness. Religious Tolerance, the Canadian website
dedicated to accurately explaining the full diversity of worldwide religious
beliefs states that, “There are probably dozens of different religious belief
systems and practices that have been called Satanism”.
Thus it becomes almost impossible to estimate just how
many Satanists there are in the world. Depending on the definition and what groups
comply with each different definition, the total number of Satanists could be
anything from several thousand, to millions or even more. In North America
estimates range from ten to twenty thousand Satanists from several different
belief systems and organisations. According to Statistic Canada, the 1991
census found only 335 Canadians identifying themselves as Satanists. It is
also almost impossible to open up dialogue with, or gather statistical evidence
from each of these groups claiming to practice some sort of Satanism.
The Church of Satan, founded by Anton LaVey in 1967,
generally regard themselves as strong Atheists, Agnostics, or Deists and
membership numbers are kept secret. However the Church of Satan is quite open
about their beliefs and practices. They describe themselves as, “The first
above-ground organization in history openly dedicated to the acceptance of Man’s
true nature—that of a carnal beast, living in a cosmos that is indifferent to
our existence. To us, Satan is the symbol of pride, liberty and individualism.”
According to David Shankbone who interviewed the Church’s
high priest Peter Gilmour,”LaVey’s teachings are based on individualism,
self-indulgence, and ‘eye for an eye’ morality, with influence from Friedrich
Nietzsche and Ayn Rand; while its rituals and magic draw heavily from
occultists such as Aleister Crowley.”
His article makes it quite clear that members of the church of Satan do not
worship, nor believe in the Devil or a Christian/ Islamic notion of Satan. Their
Satan has nothing to do with Hell, demons, pitchforks, sadistic torture, buying
people’s souls, demonic possession, performing miracles, human sacrifices,
cannibalism, and profoundly evil deeds.
One definition of Satanism states that, “Satanism is the
utter rejection of the spiritual way of theistic religions, and the honest admittance
that we are just animals who evolve as any other complex system.” On the other
hand, what about the religious Satanism that has become the stuff of nightmares
and movie plots? Does it actually exist? The church of Satan states openly
that, “Satanism respects and exalts life. Children and animals are the purest
expressions of that life force, and as such are held sacred and precious...”
Thus, as mentioned above, no human sacrifices. The majority of Satanists
simply follow a lifestyle involving the Satanic statements and rules, while
avoiding the Satanic sins.
Many authors, almost all conservative Christians, have
described alleged satanic rituals. They almost always involve desecration of
stolen religious symbols, black masses, inverted crosses or reciting prayers
backwards. This is pure fiction that can be traced back to books written
during the late Middle Ages and Renaissance periods particularly The Malleus
Maleficarum (The Witches Hammer). In the 15th and 16th
centuries the Catholic Church theorized that Satan worship existed and was a
massive threat. This gave rise to the Witch burnings that have come to be
termed the burning times or alternatively the female holocaust. Belief about
Satanism turned into an imaginary religion that was the opposite of
Christianity. These elements continue to surface today in conservative
Christian anti-Satanic and anti-Wiccan hate literature.
We have established so far that there is a religion
known as Satanism and that most, if not all of the adherents, are hedonist
atheists intent upon acting upon their most basic desires. An anonymous writer
once said that Satanism was the religion of the American boardroom but for the
most part this does not involve any weird or evil practices because most
Satanists simply practice a lifestyle that involves indulgence and
gratification. A very small number of individuals have drawn on the vast
amount of anti-Satanic literature and created their own version of Satanism
that does include anti-Christian practices.
Consequently, where does this information leave Muslims?
As believers we understand that Satan exists and is actively trying to lead
people away from God. He may or may not be involved in the Satanic religion
that claims to have no gods or to worship such a manifestation of evil. However,
Satan’s work is very obvious in a number of groups or categories of people who
do claim to worship him. These groups include psychotic murderers and serial
killers who try to use the defence of “the devil made me do it” and abusive pedophiles
who in several cases have used satanic settings in order to make the victim’s
story unbelievable to the authorities. Evidence in the United Kingdom has
uncovered at least three cases where predators pretended to be Satanists in
order to better control their victims.
Some musicians pretend to be Satanists in order to gain
fame and notoriety and there is also a group known as satanic dabblers. The
dabblers are typically rebellious, attention seeking teenagers or young adults
that have created their own form of Satanism from usually unreliable and
fictional sources. They are often responsible for graffiti, cemetery vandalism
and the ritualistic killing of small animals. Both groups may be pretending to
be something they are not but they are living life perilously close to
dangerous ground. A person who worships or tries’ to revive the worship of the
ancient Egyptian god Seti is also risking their sanity and in some cases their
lives.
Satan, the devil, Lucifer, Seti or whatever he is known
by is not a force to be trivialised. He has an agenda and in the next article
we will look at how seemingly benign practices can lead a person into
committing the most dangerous of major sins. The church of Satan may be little
more than an organised group where members can engage in otherwise frowned upon
behaviour but how many members do really “deal with the devil”? Those who use
the term Satanism to cover their innate depravity may find that Satan has been
leading them by the collar down a pathway to destruction.
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