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Wiccan Work it Out
I still marvel at the fact that just over a year ago, I had no interest in Jesus Christ, the Catholic Church, Scripture or the future of my soul. You see, I was an "enlightened" member of the neo-pagan religious community. I was chairman for the self-proclaimed Chicago Pagan Leadership Conference, I was assistant forum leader for Religions and Ethics, and I was forum manager for the pagan area on America Online, where I wrote rituals and liturgy for the glory of false gods. I flirted with Wicca and ceremonial magick for a bit, before finally focusing on trying to recreate the Irish pagan religions. In short, I was pro-choice, pro-pagan and anti-God. Today I look back on that part of my life as almost a dream. I sometimes
can't recognize the person who was involved in all that because I've
changed so much. Sometimes I look back in anguish over my past sins,
knowing they've been forgiven, but also knowing I put the souls of my
family and others in danger as part of my rebellion against God. I was also involved in the Youth Choir at the church. I remember getting
in trouble there for sneaking alcohol aboard the tour bus. But again, we
were all just given a slap on the wrist and not told about the danger we
were putting our souls into. If I had been told, I probably wouldn't
have listened anyway. I simply didn't have any grounding in the faith I
was being raised in, to help me really understand what these actions
were doing to my soul. When I was finally out of the house and at college, I removed the church
obstacle from my life. Simply put, it wasn't cool to go to church when
you were at college. Besides, I was usually too hungover to get to
church. Eventually, I dragged myself into AA and got sober and straight. I wish I could say God was the center of my life at this point, but He wasn't. A few months later, my college career came to a screeching halt when the house of cards I had built came crashing down. I had been lying to my parents about my classes. I would drop classes during the year, then retake them in the summer months. Finally, I failed the Student Use of English test and was held back from graduating. But God didn't forget about me. Seven days before my last drink, God threw me what was to become my lifeline back to Him. But it would take a lot more storms and rebellion before He would pull me into His Church. The lifeline was Susan -- the woman who would become my wife. A week
before my last drink, I flew up to Chicago to help marry off my best
friend, Greg (the same Greg who had smuggled the beer into church camp).
There, I met Susan. When I boarded my plane back to Texas, I had her
number and address. We started corresponding, and I began flying up to
spend major holidays with her. Eventually I proposed, and she accepted. At that time, I was working in a computer store and she was studying for her CPA. We were attending (every so often) the Methodist church that we were married in, but we moved to Riverside, Illinois, and she decided to go back to the Church. When she went to confession, the priest told her she was a fornicator and that our children would be illegitimate, since we hadn't been married in the Church. I know the priest's intentions were good, but I give him an A for effort, and an F in form. The incident drove a wedge between us and the Church, a wedge that would keep us away for another eight years. The next few years were uneventful. We moved to Westmont, Illinois, and started attending the Methodist church there. We also attended the Young Adults group, but once again, the group was more of a social group than anything else. Finally I started to get more heavily into the occult and pagan stuff. My wife and I dropped out of the Young Adults group, and I started meeting with other pagans on America Online. We would meet in an online room called "White Magick." It was then that things started getting strange. I had heard about Wicca and Ceremonial Magick and was interested in them. While in the White Magick room, I asked if anyone knew of anyone in Chicago that could help me learn. Five seconds later, a person popped into the room and typed, "Hi! From Chicago." That's how I met Alan. Alan was a member of a group in Chicago who were into various beliefs.
They claimed to be based on the Hermetic Order (a Ceremonial Magick group),
but also incorporated many different beliefs into their system. They
claimed to be working with the Kaballa, based on Jewish mysticism,
Wicca, Ceremonial Magick, Gnostic Christianity and Celtic beliefs. It was also at this time that I was hired by the forum leader of America Online to be his assistant forum leader. I remember him asking at the time he hired me why I had turned away from Christ, and I remember telling him that I felt it wasn't my path. We had a good relationship and we worked well together, but when I was hired on to the forum, I brought my agenda with me and I started working on it. My agenda was to build a forum on America Online for pagan religions, and I can tell you right now, I succeeded. If you have access to America Online, you can type in a certain keyword,
and you'll see my shrine to my rejection of Christ. Over a period of
four years, I nurtured the pagan area from a single folder in
"Other Religions" to a section with many message boards,
several libraries and a chat room. How? By micro-managing the boards so
they looked busier than they really were. In most online areas, people will pop in to see if there's a topic they're interested in. If there isn't, they'll create a topic. The problem is that many people are lazy, and they won't look completely through a message board to see if the topic they want is there. If the topic isn't found within the first ten to fifteen topics, they'll usually use the "create topic" command to create a topic on the board. Since the housecleaning routines don't go into effect until after 3:00
a.m., there was time for me to go onto the board and make sure that
topics were consolidated into one, and messages were moved to folders
that had higher numbers of messages. Another way I micro-managed the board was to check out the dates of the last post. This is how the system would determine which topic folder it would delete. The topic folder with the oldest last post was the one that usually got axed by the system. If I had a topic which had a high message count but hadn't been posted to in the last 15 days, I would post a message to the topic and that would not only save the topic, but also put it on the "New Messages" list so others would see it, too. By managing the topics in such a fashion, I was able to make sure my areas had high posting numbers. I would then use that information to beg and plead for more message boards because I was "running out of room." Under my tenure as Pagan Forum Leader, I was able to boast that my area had close to 15,000 posts over seven message boards. This strategy was also used in the file areas. By tapping into my resources on the Internet, I would upload files under my name or several throwaway names. This would fill my libraries and get us a reputation for being a good pagan-friendly area. The more members I got, the more files I would have. By tapping those I knew had good connections for files, I was able to get more done with less and fill up the libraries. By uploading large collections of files zipped together, AOL saw a higher percentage of time used in my libraries and was inclined to give me more resources. Finally we started working on getting a better front end for the area
and to get a chat room. Up until this point, the area's online was just
made up of lists that you'd access by clicking on one icon to go to the
libraries, and another icon to go to the message boards. I started
working with the forum leader to get a better looking face on the area,
along with our own keyword. Finally AOL agreed, and the area as you now
see it was created and put online. On the chat front, I really didn't have to do that much. Our boards and
file libraries were so large that we were pulling lots of pagans online.
The chats would start out with 20 people, would grow to 45, then hover
around 35 to 40. During the last three years of my pagan career, I had been focusing on
the Celtic religions. I was convinced I was being called by the
"old gods" to recreate these religions and bring them back
into the world. I was working with other Celtic pagans, reading the
myths and trying to put together as many pieces of the puzzle that I
could. But many things started cropping up. Another reason I was convinced the neo-pagan communities had their stance on abortion wrong was because many of them believed in reincarnation. The ancient Celts believed in transmigration of souls, which taught that when you died, your soul would go to the other world. However, the Celts also believed that the souls of your ancestors were born down your family line. That meant that if you allowed abortion, you were condoning the murder of your great-grandmother or great-grandfather or any other member of your family that had died. My argument was that the gods choose to send back souls when they wanted them back, so to abort a baby meant you would not only be committing murder, but you would also be upsetting the plans of your gods. Many times I was told that the old gods really didn't care about us here on earth. However, in ancient times, the people would sacrifice to the gods for continued fertility of the fields, and for a successful hunt. That hardly suggests that the ancient peoples had a belief that the gods really didn't care about what was happening to them. If that was the attitude of your god, then why go to the trouble of sacrificing? The issue of abortion was one of the first major chinks in my armor, but I really didn't know it at the time. What many people don't realize is that neo-paganism isn't just one religion, but a set of religions. Wiccans are by far the most abundant type of neo-pagans around. Wicca is usually a religion with a dual deity, the Horned God and the Lady. Most Wiccans will say that all gods and goddesses are aspects of these two gods. Wicca has eight major holidays: Imbolg, Beltain, Lugh's feast, Samhain or the fire festivals, and the cross quarter days which are the solstices and the equinox. One of the most important ceremonies in Wicca is called the Great Rite. In some groups, the high priest dips a dagger into a chalice of wine. There are also minor monthly celebrations on the new moon and full moons. There are usually two types of Wiccans, those who say Wicca is millions of years old and is the basis of all the ancient pagan religions, and those who say Wicca began around 50 years ago or so. The first group can be dealt with on the basis of history. History will not bear out the millions of years theory of Wicca. Many Wiccans will point to the cave paintings that show people with horns. Many idealistic Wiccans have written that this is proof that the early ancient peoples believed in "the horned god." However, careful study shows that we cannot know what these early beliefs were. There seems to be this wanting of an ancient religion, and it usually has to be older than Christianity. It's often a sticking point with neo-pagans. There's a strong need to identify their religion as older than the one they've left. Another point is the dual deity aspect of Wicca. Most ancient pagan
religions were polytheistic, that is, they promoted worship of more than
two deities. Take, for example, the Celtic beliefs that there were more
than 15 major deities, with local tribes having additional local
deities. One major Celtic scholar has put out a book which lists the
gods of the Celtic belief systems, and the list is over 500. The ritual
of the Great Rite has been linked by many writers in the neo-pagan
religions to the ancient mystery religions of Babylon. In reality, Wicca
has about as much resemblance to the ancient mystery religions of
Babylon as it does to Islam. You can usually overcome Wicca's claims of
validity simply by studying history. I resigned my position with the Pagan Leadership Conference, and was
writing a book on pagan liturgy for those interested in worshipping the
Celtic gods. It's strange and embarrassing to admit that many of the
pagan rituals I concocted can still be found strewn around the Internet
on various pagan Web sites (please don't go looking for them). I started
working with a Seattle-based group, whose purpose was to form a national
pagan association. But that dream was interrupted when in September, my
wife dropped the bomb. I got down on my knees next to my computer. With tears in my eyes, I
prayed for the first time, asking God to forgive all the sins of my
life. After a time of quiet repentance and prayer, I walked out to my
wife and told her I was going to enter the Catholic Church with her. "Just so, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one
sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no
repentance" (Luke 15:7). The next day we attended Mass at another parish, and decided on that parish as our home. I called the rectory, and talked to the pastor. He said he was going out of town for a couple of weeks, but that his assistant Fr. Andy was conducting inquirer's classes. My wife and I attended, and she approached Fr. Andy about returning to the sacraments. I prayed Fr. Andy would not be like the priest of eight years ago. Fr. Andy told my wife she would simply have to go to the sacrament of reconciliation, and that our marriage would have to be sacramentally blessed by the Church, and until such time, she and I would have to live as brother and sister. I agreed, and in January of 1996, our marriage was made sacramental. My mother-in-law and my father-in-law, my RCIA sponsor, and some of the members of the RCIA group were in attendance. During Lent, I made my first confession. I wonder how many priests get to hear the sin of idolatry? And on Easter Vigil, I was confirmed and received the Blessed Sacrament for the first time. It was with tears in my eyes that I received the Body and Blood of Christ, my Lord and Savior. Even today, I can get teary-eyed at the moment of consecration. Because I know He loved me enough to die for me, but He also loved me enough to pull me out of my life of sin. The man I was 24 months ago is no longer here. In his place is a devout
Catholic, one who loves the Holy Father and the Catholic Church, one
whose will bends to the Church's and who doesn't seek to change the
Church to his views. I'm not perfect. I try to go to confession weekly, I pray every day.
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