It's notable that he was charged with anything at all. When a wave of mass iconoclasm swept the United States in 2020, with hundreds of monuments honoring civil and religious figures from Thomas Jefferson to St. Junípero Serra destroyed by mobs of "social justice" activists, many of whom filmed themselves in the act, few incidents were investigated, let alone prosecuted. In the rare instances in which someone has since been charged — for instance, the case of Maeve Nota, a trans-identifying man who vandalized a church with anti-Catholic graffiti, attacked a statue of the Virgin Mary, and assaulted a church employee — the Department of Justice has intervened to offer sweetheart plea agreements with no jail time. No such leniency has been granted in Cassidy's case.
This discrepancy should not surprise us; it is a sign of the times. As John Daniel Davidson compellingly argues in Pagan America, the nature of the American state has fundamentally changed. After decades of decline and retreat, Christianity is no longer a dominant force in American society but the faith of an increasingly marginalized minority. The civilizational consequences of crossing this momentous but largely unrecognized tipping point have only just begun to materialize.
Even as adherence to orthodox Christian belief waned and a secular liberal culture became the default mode of life in the West, religious moral assumptions long continued to be considered axiomatic. Some even regarded them as universally inherent to humanity, a framework on which a progressively more atheistic culture would construct an ever more peaceful, just, and enlightened society. But this is not what happened. Instead, like Wile E. Coyote, we made it past the edge of the cliff only to witness the return of moral gravity. Instead of a humanistic atheism, Davidson argues, something different — something ancient — filled the void left by Christianity. Paganism has made a comeback.
This doesn't mean that kids have started making sacrifices to Zeus and Thor (though interest in Wicca and other modern forms of playacting at witchcraft has surged, especially among young women). Rather, as Louise Perry has explained in these pages ("We Are Repaganizing," October 2023), paganism is better thought of as mankind's default outlook on the world. The pagan worships the immanent, including worldly gods and worldly things, and so what he ultimately comes to worship above all else is power: power in the world and over it. In Perry's words:
"To put it crudely, most cultures look at the powerful and the wealthy and assume that they must be doing something right to have attained such might. The poor are poor because of some failing of their own, whether in this life or the last."It was Christianity's "topsy-turvy attitude toward weakness and strength" that made it so revolutionary — and so anthropologically odd. So now, as societies revert to the pagan mean, moral beliefs we mistakenly thought were unshakably foundational, such as that every person possesses inherent human dignity, or that unwanted babies shouldn't be abandoned to die, are being upended in favor of the old ways. Thus we end up with growing public support in the West for policies such as state-facilitated euthanasia.
Davidson's most important contribution in Pagan America is to explain how repaganization can be expected to change the character of the American state, alongside society more broadly. Until now, America has been governed largely by the tenets of political liberalism. But as Davidson points out, liberalism always relied on "a source of vitality that does not originate from it and that it cannot replenish": the Christian faith. And as the nation repaganizes, "we will revert to an older form of civilization, one in which power alone matters and the weak and the vulnerable count for nothing" — neither in spirit nor in law. "As Christianity fades in America," Davidson warns, "so too will our system of government, our civil society, and all our rights and freedoms." The state will no longer allow the principle of individual rights or conscience to override its desires, and it will not hesitate to use force to get its way, even if that means violating previously sacred norms by, say, threatening to break up the families of those who refuse to submit.
The pagan state, on this view, will not pretend to maintain any sort of liberal neutrality. Instead, Davidson argues, "We will have a public or state morality, just as Rome had, which will be quite separate from whatever religion one happens to profess." What will this state morality consist of? Davidson believes we can already see it being instantiated everywhere: a solipsistic focus on self-expression, self-empowerment, and pride; a radical emphasis of unabridged individual autonomy and liberation from all customs, taboos, and constraints, including all duties and relational ties; an extreme aversion to boundaries and limits on desire, and the self-creation not only of all aspects of personal identity, but of the body, nature, and reality itself; and ultimately an undiluted worship of the self and the will to power, hidden behind a mask of empathy, tolerance, and the language of the therapeutic. Under this regime the strictest of commandments will be that it is forbidden to forbid anything.
Davidson observes that this state-enforced morality reflects the occultist Aleister Crowley's old dictum, "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law." As Mary Harrington has put it elsewhere, it is becoming hard to resist "the startling conclusion that post-Christian America is an increasingly Satanist regime."
Davidson predicts that life under this regime will be characterized by oppression and coercive violence, and that this "violence will be official — carried out by government bureaucrats, police, health care workers, NGOs, public schools, and Big Tech." Those who refuse to render the expected moral sacrifices to Caesar are likely to come under intense pressure to conform, hounded not only by the state but by all the aligned institutions of American society. They can expect life to become very difficult: their bank accounts closed, their ability to travel restricted, their access to education and employment limited. The threat of arrest and prosecution for "extremism" and other vague crimes will loom constantly. Such an environment of totalitarian coercion should be expected because, in addition to delineating loyalty, the doctrines of official ideologies always serve as a means of coordination and mobilization across the disparate elements of a regime. By permeating every level of the many institutions of the American managerial apparatus and determining the thoughts and behavior of their members, from journalists to judges, the new pagan public morality will become integral to the function of the system as a whole. In other words, we will live under a pagan integralist state.
Davidson, for his part, does not shy away from accepting the inevitability of this future. "America as we know it will come to an end," he writes. "Instead of free citizens in a republic, we will be slaves in a pagan empire." Only the wealthy and powerful will do what they will, while the rest suffer what they must. "What awaits us on the other side of Christendom," he declares, "is a pagan dark age." And "in the second decade of the twenty-first century," he writes, "we can say with some confidence that this dark age has begun."
It is for me always a bit of an odd experience to read someone who is even more pessimistic than I am. I get an eerie tingling sensation, an unwelcome and unsettling suspicion that things aren't as bad as all that. In this case something nagged at me as I reread Davidson's thesis. Something seemed not quite right . . . Ah, there it was: "Nothing is true, everything is permitted." This is the slogan he repeats many times throughout the book to encapsulate the core proposition of paganism, ancient and modern.
This, it strikes me, is wrong. The pagan of the ancient world may have held a moral worldview alien to ours, but he was no nihilist. Quite the opposite. For the pagan, immanence was indeed his lived reality. And that meant that everything around him — every tree, every blade of grass, every gust of wind — was suffused with spirit and enchanted with meaning and symbol. Everything had soul. The divine was alive and present all around him, for good or ill. Every swooping hawk and every moving star could be an omen of fear or favor, a story revealing a glimpse into the workings of fate and the drama of the gods. Everything might be true, anything was possible.
But not everything was permitted. The world for the pagan — as it remains for many tribal peoples today — was rife with taboos and solemn duties. Guests must be protected and treated with complete sanctity under a strict code of propriety, lest one attract the wrath of the gods. Sacred ground must be maintained in absolute purity. The best sacrifices must be offered to honor and placate the ancestral dead, or to ensure the continued right working of the universe. The flame of the sacred hearth must be tended at all times, the proper rites continuously performed. A Roman wife must be carried across the threshold of her new household with great care that she never touch the boundary, for her transit was not only between families but across divine realms.
Our dim and pallid modernist world could not be more different from the pagan's. Here all has been reduced to mere matter, moved about by the collision of atoms. There is no meaning in the wind. There are no spirits in the trees nor stories in the stars. We can no longer see them. Nor for most of us does God seem, as the early Christians felt deeply, to permeate each breath and every stone of creation with his energy, present at once in all things and beyond all things. Ours is a profane, mechanistic world — a dead world, in which the vast majority of us have, perhaps literally, lost the ability to perceive that it is still alive. Instead, in our drab materialism, most of us live in a kind of self-imposed virtual reality, obsessed with predictability and technocratic control.
Only in such a meaningless world can the proposition "nothing is true, everything is permitted" make any sense to its inhabitants. It is not, then, the slogan of paganism, but something else entirely: the worldview of materialist modernity, produced by the centuries of metaphysical drift that first pushed God out of the world and then pushed the Western mind deeper and deeper into cold rationalism — and from thence into the great disenchantment of the Enlightenment, then on to the unprecedented murderousness of the twentieth century's utopian revolutionary theories, then the bleak relativistic nihilism of the present. Though Davidson does include a chapter on the rise of materialism, overall his book glosses over this nearly thousand-year devolution. Instead the narrative largely reverts to a simple binary: There was a pagan world; Christianity triumphed over it but never dealt it a mortal blow; now we are sliding from Christendom back into paganism.
Is this really what is happening? C. S. Lewis, for one, was always skeptical of such claims. He wrote that he found it "hard to have patience with those . . . who warn us that we are 'relapsing into Paganism.'" The whole notion relied, he said, on the "false idea" that secularized former Christians could return "by the same door" through which they'd entered the present. In reality, this is impossible because to a post-Christian materialist the pagan world of symbol and spirit remains wholly unintelligible. "A post-Christian man is not a Pagan; you might as well think that a married woman recovers her virginity by divorce. The post-Christian is cut off from the Christian past and therefore doubly from the Pagan past." In fact, he pointed out, "Christians and Pagans had much more in common with each other than either has with a post-Christian. The gap between those who worship different gods is not so wide as that between those who worship and those who do not."
So who is right? Are we repaganizing or not? Perhaps both are right, in a way. Lewis is probably correct that what we've seen so far can't quite be described as a straightforward return to paganism. But something is now happening: Amid our broader civilizational turmoil, the zeitgeist does seem to be shifting dramatically, shaking off the remnants of tepid, Christian-influenced secular liberalism in favor of something new, inchoate, and potentially very dark. So far it is not Christian. But — and this is I believe by far the more important point — neither is it the soulless materialism that Lewis feared had already conquered the world, severing us from the past and from the divine.
What we seem to be seeing is a broad and accelerating reaction against and rejection of the materialist framework of Enlightenment modernity. It is now observable throughout Western culture and politics. The young would-be feminists flocking to "WitchTok" for advice on how to conjure love and manifest success are hardly atheists. Neither are the young men of the right who, if not crowding back into traditionalist churches, grope for a spirituality of strength, vitality, and meaning among the aesthetic ruins of ancient warrior cults. These are people searching for the sacred, even if they don't know where to look. In fact, sometime during the last decade, the atheist movement seems to have quietly died off as a cultural force.
What is happening? Citing a recent wave of religious conversions by formerly atheistic public intellectuals, Jordan Peterson has argued that we are experiencing the beginning of a "Counter-Enlightenment." The centuries-old Enlightenment consensus, including the idea that the materialist-rationalists' "dead facts" could serve as a guide to existence, has, he believes, turned out to be badly wrong, and now an epochal reckoning is building. (As for his own contribution, Peterson said he's now writing a book that aims — he remarks offhandedly — to "demolish the atheistic argument permanently.") I think he is right: The whole edifice of modernity is in crisis. But this should be a cause for Christian hope, not panic. In fact, it seems possible that our time may witness a transition not into Davidson's new "pagan dark age," but out of what Lewis called the true dark age of modern materialism.
More than a hundred years before Peterson, the German historian Oswald Spengler predicted that, beginning sometime in the twenty-first century, "a last spiritual crisis" would shake a declining West and lead to a resurgence of religiosity, a long era of renewed piety that he dubbed a "Second Religiousness." Spengler based this prediction on his reading of the life cycles of many major civilizations, all of which had, in his telling, been brought low by an "age of theory," in which a hubris of materialist rationalism crystallized into self-induced mechanistic madness, decadence, and civilizational decay. In time, however, this epoch always came to an end, as "the possibilities of physics as a critical mode of world-understanding are exhausted, and the hunger for metaphysics presents itself afresh."
"For us, too," writes Spengler, "let there be no mistake about it — the age of theory is drawing to its end. . . . In its place is developing even now the seed of a new resigned piety, sprung from tortured conscience and spiritual hunger." But first civilization would be swept, as in every historical case, by a temporary period of bizarre superstitions and syncretic cults:
Everywhere it is just a toying with myths that no one really believes, a tasting of cults that it is hoped might fill the inner void. The real belief is always the belief in atoms and numbers, but it requires this highbrow hocus-pocus to make it bearable in the long run. Materialism is shallow and honest, mock-religion shallow and dishonest. But the fact that the latter is possible at all foreshadows a new and genuine spirit of seeking that declares itself, first quietly, but soon emphatically and openly, in the civilized waking-consciousness.In the end, what "starts with Rationalism's fading out in helplessness" concludes "as if a mist cleared off the land and revealed the old forms" of that "first, genuine, young religiousness" that once drove the civilization to cultural greatness. Spengler was predicting a sweeping re-Christianization of the West.
Could this really happen? I do not know. What I am confident of is that, before Christianity could ever flourish again, the iron cage of materialism would indeed need to be broken and the world re-enchanted, filled again with an immanence of spirit. It is the materialist worldview — not pagan foes — that has for centuries smothered and subverted Christian faith and passion.
But with the veil of materialism lifted, could we expect that paganism, too, might have a chance to flourish again, as Davidson predicts? That the West might face a "dark enchantment" as much as a return to the light? Yes, I think so. The deadening effect of materialism has undermined paganism no less than Christianity. Freed from its grip, we may all be off to the races.
In that case I'd say: Do not be afraid. This situation would be familiar terrain for the Church. After all, it was precisely in the pagan world, amid its simultaneous suffering and enchantment, that the Christian faith spread like wildfire. There is no reason it should not do so again. Even in the worst case, if Christianity finds itself badly persecuted, as in Davidson's pagan America, persecution may ultimately give it new strength — as it so often has.
So perhaps the rise of a little paganism is a necessary development for renewal — a cause for hope, not despair. It may end up merely preparing the way, as it did before. At least I find a wry poetry in the idea that, should we face a great relapse into paganism, the Enemy may have inadvertently planted the seeds of a greater Christian triumph. God does seem to have a strange habit of winning that way.
Reader Comments
How many insane quotes you want me to provide straight out of the bible?
If you want to know your true self and true power, study ancient eastern teachings, ignore the new age diluted stuff though.
Some of us also don’t confuse Christianity and all the different denominations with the teachings of Yeshuah.
Those violent dark ages have nothing to do with the teachings of Yeshuah that was something altogether different.
Love thy neighbor for they are thyself.
Have a wonder full day.
Christianity was an absurd aberration - a mutated Judaism - itself a primitive iron-age tribal superstition, spread by the crazy Roman Empire, which collected religions like sea-shells. Good riddance to it.
There is no “Christian triumph” or loss.
Only One God. One Message. One Religion.
At least the author recognizes that most people despise The Most High (SubhanAllahiwabihamdihi), and blame Him for their own shortcomings and left choices. Astaghfirullah. SubhanaantaAllah.
Salaam/Peace/Shalom
It seems to parallel the arguments (in another era) that "all is lost, bring on the Dark Age."
On a different tack, I too cannot help but see/feel the signs and portents of the coming End Times... but I also cannot convince myself that the String-Pullers, who read Orwell as an instruction manual, have also read the many Apocalyptic literatures as a "play-book". If the masses fear "famine, plague, war, & death" as divine retribution, it seems the "ruling" psychopaths will happily oblige that expectation. Fear & Misunderstanding are some of their most effective tools.
What made the United States different, is the Declaration of Independence statement of humanity: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."
It appears the current time is ruled by deception, corruption and power. These have arisen through the deception and manipulation of humanity: education, government, consumerism, nihilism, the strong survive the weak die, Darwinism, scientific materialism, no God, no compassion, child sexual abuse and sacrifice, etc. This evil has awakened humanity.
We will see a return to a deeper spirituality than attending church or temple or mosque. As the protagonist in Dune said, "The sleeper awakes." The empire falls.
Every person is inherently divine (unfortunately). Every atom is in-formed with purpose. Christians and pagans think alike in these respects.
The difference between a good Christian/pagan and an evil Christian/pagan is that the latter are secretive about their real beliefs. Most satanists are atheists or have a 'dark' taste in art, or they may take original sin and pride too literally and consider the devil as always being in them. Being ignorant or mistaken is not being secretive. The true satanists paint themselves as Christians.
HEALTH does not equate absense of dis ease or disease.
HEALTH is the core of NATURE herself.
No.
Haha well said. Lol
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Baphomet is a representation of man and points to the higher and lower nature as I see it ugly as the depiction may be it points to our dualistic nature as our soul is constrained by the material world and the natural law thereof. At our worst it is natural instincts (the desires of flesh) run riot. At it’s best it is conquering that and leaving the material world (illusion/maya) behind in self realization by gaining spiritual sight (eyes) connection with the One.
Human history is taught like the history an amnesiac child which forgets each year as it passes - at the age of 64, it wonders why it never bought a smart phone and went to the gym at the age of 3. We cannot understand ancient consciousness by 'looking back'.
The spiritual root of paganism is 'to pay'... that is, give thanks, offerings, be grateful, because none of us would live a minute more if we did not receive another breath of air, given to us 'free' by life... Though maybe life does expect something from us in return, because to take and take and take without giving back something is to create imbalance... Paganism was a 'primitive religion' which sought to bring life back to balance, by paying, offering, giving thanks.
Epochs of poly-theism open up ages of mono-theism... and fanatical monotheism also breeds polytheism. Funny how Davidson mistakes Christianity for monotheism... Catholicism is polytheistic, in that it raises Jesus, Mary, the apostles and the saints up to the divine level. What new age pagans call 'gods' were probably perceived more like 'older brothers and sisters' by our ancestors... For modern pagans to squint and whine at Christianity, to say 'the Church replaced our gods', that is the biggest goof-up, in the same way that a would-be nature enthusiast that never went outside accepted plastic flowers as the real deal: before making Jesus and Mary and the saintly gang into 'gods', the earlier pagans probably did not even perceive these beings as 'gods' at all, just fellow-beings co-inhabiting the cosmos alongside humanity.
It is not the threat of America falling into paganism which is the problem: it is the belief that oneself is god... Do what you will, create your own sex, all is permitted, give yourself over to pure unrestrained sensual indulgence... It's technically not 'a-theism' ("no god") but rather "me-theism" ("I am God"). Such a delusion is demonic, because when lower-world entities come into the human realm, when such infernal beings feel the physical freedom of human life, they believe the human experience to be god-like... Hence, they say "I am God... We are all God"... We are not God, we are just human, and barely that, most people today are animals and beasts, or perhaps whores who pimp out their minds and emotions to mass social movements, or maybe even some consider themselves 'prophets' for science or equality or new-ageism... These are all pitfalls that we need to be aware of, because as the prophets said millennia ago, the darkest hour is before the dawn, the world will be run by the beast (the animal ego) which will deify itself and throw the world into chaos... This is where we are at, the ego is now king... The darkest hour is before the dawn... But, there is a dawn.
Christ comes after pestillence and plagues, diseases and disasters... hobnob The root of illness is a mystery: the vitality of youth drowns us in delusions, but as we get older, we often realise that we have run out of credit... Youth ends, the vitality stops, an illness comes, and because we never applied the pagan principle of 'paying' thanks and offerings for that vitality loaned to us by life, we are surprised that an illness has taken shape in our supposed immortal bodies. One imbalance, after years of living, can later on create an avalanche of little problems later on... One cannot 'think' one's way out of it, one has to feel grateful in order to feel healthy (even if one is ill). Loki managed to get Balder the Nordic Christ trapped in Hela (hell)... Loki achieved this by parading as Gratitude, only to deny its service. Some problems and trials are given to us by the devils... other problems and trials are handed to us by 'the gods'... Hence, it is always better to surrender to the One God, the Almighty, the Creator.
Steiner makes a great observation when he points out that all physical illness can be overcome consciously (though not necessarily physically) by the ill person tapping into his vital body. Such a vital body is to the human body what the clouds and blue skies are to the physical planet... Hence, Christ returns in the clouds, in the etheric, or we achieve healing by tapping into our etheric body. Christ is crucified between the good and bad thieves... Our dis-ease is a break in equilibrium, and just like the Christ, we need to find the good in any sickness... Someone may lose their prostate: maybe it is spiritually better for society and such a person to lose that magnetic organ. 40 onwards, organs start to change: just as the personality is formed at 7 years of age, so is the body 'solidified' by 42 years of age... But such solidification is a mechanical law, and with consciousness one can continue to keep the organs supple: the prostate specifically gets 'hard' at 40 years, and one can exercise it to keep it supple. As children, health is usually given to us for free... As we grow older, health is something that must be earned and fought for. Plants give to the body what the body is unable to produce for itself... but the spirits of the plants are an extension of our own consciousness. The person with a bad back is often never healed, but he learns to live continuously conscious of his weakness, and hence he lives a normal life, because he owns his illness, his illness does not own him.
Apologies for the long message... The article was a huge can of worms.
Minding one's speech is a sign of maturity.
HEALTH IS SIMPLE!! All it takes is minimum ESTEEM of SELF.
I took a break and cleared up. There was something almost two months ago of a mundane nature that caused some of my problems. So nothing terrible.
ciao
Intellectual untruth, suppossitioning rhetoric 🙈 word salad.
Daily SK clears up the 🐒mind
HEALTH IS SIMPLE!! All it takes is minimum ESTEEM of SELF.
Christianity could have had its own religious book to itself, with the apocryphal writings that were excluded by the eucumenical councils. Sadly, such councils decided on behalf of all humanity that it would be JUDEO-Christianity, because the Jews have always had the role of being 'the Jew of the Kings' since the times of Joseph the son of Jacob in Ancient Egypt (the Quran explains this in great detail, if one were to read it with an open mind).
Islam is hardly "a cheap religion" : praying fives times a day, fasting one month a year, pilgrimaging once a lifetime, it is one of the most disciplined religions. If one has never personally experienced these disciplines for oneself, then one does not qualify to speak about these things, except in ignorance.
The World religions serve humanity to help awakened the Higher Mind... The Higher Mind is the mind beyond the human mind, beyond the senses, where one knows without knowing how one knows (knowledge "a priori", as the philosopher Kant called it), where one receives revelations directly from the cosmos, without reasoning and logic. Art is also a means to wake up the higher mind (hence Revelations, the Psalms, and the Quranic Arabic poetry). There is a very easy way to wake up the Higher Mind : read any sacred text, from start to finish (the Bible or the Quran, for example), without reading or watching anything else (ie, other books, films, newspapers, or TikTok videos)... Read with an open mind, without trying to translate or interpret anything, and see what happens. Until then, the cynics and atheists will remain just that: they BELIEVE that religions don't work because they are (according to the cynical) "belief systems"... It's a case of the kettle calling the pan black.
Instead of dismissing religions without understanding them, it would be better to experience them for oneself. Christianity is the weakest religion, since it has little to no discipline, but it does preach one important aspect of The Religion (all religions are offshoots of one religion): help others to see the light.
TIME is up for 'talk' unless you haven't figured that one out for yourself VC, 😴 the mess we are in is not because WE (freewill) ACT INTELLIGENTLY in other words.
LIFE is about the W.A.L.K.... the extra mile is only for the novices.... so... keep reading pretty word salads keep 🐒supposing all is truth, keep your illusions safe, keep taking things personally but don't think that one person can't make the difference.
THE FOUR AGREEMENTS, to be integrated, not 'read'.
Nothing new under the Sun. The 🌎 rotates, why don't we?
Pretty interesting stuff.
Pretty interesting stuff.
It is interesting that the diagram he uses to show the 3-6-9 is the enneagram of Gurdjieff. The other 6 positions on the circle plus 1 within the circle are the 7 body types.
A quote from In Search of the Miraculous, "G. returned to the enneagram many times and in various connections. "Each completed whole, each cosmos, each organism, each plant, is an enneagram," he said. "But not each of these enneagrams has an inner triangle. The inner triangle stands for the presence of higher elements , according to the scale of 'hydrogens,' in a given organism. This inner triangle is possessed by such plants, for example, as hemp, poppy, hops, tea, coffee, tobacco, and many other plants which play a definite role in the life of man."
Death is the ultimate equaliser (=), a bridge which takes one to the ultimate reality where one is left with nothing else but... values.
It is a deep symbol, as it expresses the law of 3 and the law of octaves which express creation. Gurdjieff said the understanding of the symbol distinguishes levels of being.