The first part of this document is from an essay written by Margery Wakefield
in the year 1991. I have trimmed the document here on this page, but it is
available in full via this link. The extract
included here is Ms. Wakefield's section titled "The Satanic Roots of
Scientology®." While Satanists have the right to worship as they
please as long as they harm no one, Christians and other theists who for
any reason object to Satanism and / or Black Magick should know the facts
behind Scientology®'s occult history--- it is wrong to deceive Christians
into supporting Scientology® by lying to them with the claim that
Scientology® and Christianity are "compatible."
The second part of this page is an extract from an interview Hubbard's son gave
to the magazine "Penthouse." The entire interview may be read using
this link.
The Satanic Roots of Scientology®
Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but
rather expose them. --- Ephesians 5:11
It is a well documented fact that the religion of Hubbard was
Satanism. Hubbard's mentor was, in fact, the infamous English
black magician Aleister Crowley. Hubbard reportedly discovered
Crowley's works as a teenager on a trip to the Library of
Congress with his mother.
Thereafter, he was fascinated by Crowley's "Magick," and Crowley
became Hubbard's mentor, a relationship that would last until
Crowley's death in 1947. In one of his later lectures, Hubbard
would refer to Crowley as "my good friend." [Miller, p. 135]
Crowley's most famous work was called The Book of the Law in
which he expressed his philosophy of life: "Do what thou wilt
shall be the whole of the Law." It is a philosophy Hubbard was
to live by throughout his life.
Crowley wrote, in The Book of the Law:
We have nothing with the outcast and the unfit; let them die in
their misery. Compassion is the vice of Kings; stamp down the
wretched and the weak; this is the law of the strong; this is
our law and the joy of the world.
I am of the snake that giveth Knowledge and Delight, and stir
the hearts of men with drunkenness. To worship me take wine and
strange drugs.... They shall not harm ye at all. It is a lie,
this folly against self.... Be strong, Oh man! Lust, enjoy all
things of sense and rapture ... the kings of the earth shall be
kings forever; the slaves shall serve.
Them that seek to entrap thee, to overthrow thee, them attack
without pity or quarter, and destroy them utterly.
I am unique and conqueror. I am not of the slaves that perish.
Be they damned and dead! Amen. [Corydon, p. 49]
Many of Crowley's beliefs have been incorporated into
Scientology®, especially in the secret upper levels of
Scientology®, called the "OT levels."
Following in Crowley's footsteps, Hubbard adopted some of the
practices of the black magician, including the use of drugs and
the use of affirmations.
According to Hubbard's son, his father regularly used illegal
drugs including amphetamines, barbiturates and hallucinogens
including cocaine, peyote and mescaline. [Corydon, p. 53]
Among the many affirmations that Hubbard was known to have used
was the following:
All men shall be my slaves! All women shall succumb to my
charms! All mankind shall grovel at my feet and not know why!
[Corydon, p. 53]
After being discharged from the Navy in December of 1945,
Hubbard did not head for home, where his wife and two small
children were living in Bremerton, Washington. He instead headed
directly for a house in Pasadena, California, where an eclectic
assortment of people lived including one Jack Parsons, the
leader of a satanic organization called the Ordo Templis
Orientis. That was the U.S. name for the organization headed in
England by Crowley.
Parsons wrote to Crowley about Hubbard:
About three months ago I met Ron ... a writer and explorer of
whom I had known for some time. He is a gentleman; he has red
hair, green eyes, is honest and intelligent, and we have become
great friends.
Although Ron has no formal training in magick, he has an
extraordinary amount of experience and understanding in the
field. From some of his experiences I deduce that he is in
direct touch with some higher intelligence, possibly his
guardian angel.
Ron appears to have some sort of highly developed astral vision.
He described his angel as a beautiful winged woman with red
hair, whom he calls the Empress, and who has guided him through
his life, and saved him many times.
We are pooling our resources in a partnership which will act as
a limited company to control our business ventures.
I need a magical partner. I have many experiments in mind....
[Corydon, p. 255]
Hubbard and Parsons struck up an occult partnership, the result
of which was a series of rituals they carried out with the
objective of producing a "moonchild," an incarnation of
"Babylon" in an unborn child. A woman in the house was chosen to
be the mother of this satanic child.
In order to obtain a woman prepared to bear this magical child,
Parsons and Hubbard engaged in eleven days of rituals.
All this seemed to achieve its desired result and, on January
18th, Parsons found the girl who was prepared to become the
mother of Babalon, and to go through the required incantation
rituals. During these rituals, which took place on the first
three days of March 1946, Parsons was High Priest and had sexual
intercourse with the girl, while Hubbard who was present acted
as skryer, seer, or clairvoyant and described what was supposed
to be happening on the astral plane. [Corydon, p. 256]
Parsons wrote to Crowley:
I am under command of extreme secrecy. I have had the most
devastating experience of my life between February second and
March fourth. I believe it was the result of the ninth degree
working with the girl.... I have been in direct touch with the
One who is most Holy and Beautiful as mentioned in the Book of
the Law. First instructions were received direct through Ron,
the Seer. I have followed them to the letter. There was a desire
for incarnation. I am to act as instructor guardian guide for
nine months, then it will be loosed upon the world. That's all I
can say for now.... [Corydon, p. 257]
Crowley remained unimpressed. He wrote to one of his associates:
Apparently Parsons and Hubbard or somebody is producing a
moonchild. I get fairly frantic when I contemplate the idiocy of
these louts. [Corydon, p. 257]
Later, Hubbard was to reveal some of his occult beliefs to his
son in a conversation documented by L. Ron Hubbard, Jr.:
We were in Philadelphia. It was November 1952.
Every night in the hotel, in preparation for the next day's
lecture, he'd pace the floor, exhilarated by this or that
passage from Aleister Crowley's writings.
Just a month before, he had been in London, where he had finally
been able to quench his thirst; to fill his cup with the true,
raw, naked power of the magick. The lust of centuries at his
very fingertips.
To stroke and taste the environs of the Great Beast, to fondle
Crowley's books, papers, and memorabilia had filled him with
pure ecstasy!
In London he had acquired, at last, the final keys; enabling him
to take his place upon the "Throne of the Beast," to which he
firmly believed himself to be the rightful heir.
"The books and contents to be kept forever secret," he says. "To
reveal them will cause you instant insanity; rip your mind
apart; destroy you," he says.
"Secrets, techniques and powers I alone have conquered and
harnessed. I alone have refined, improved on, applied my
engineering principles to. Science and logic. The keys! My keys
to the doorway of the Magick, my magick! The power!"
"I've made the Magick really work," he says. "No more foolish
rituals. I've stripped the Magick to basics -- access without
liability."
"Sex by will," he says. "Love by will -- no caring and no
sharing -- no feelings. None," he says. "Love reversed," he
says. "Love isn't sex. Love is no good; puts you at effect. Sex
is the route to power," he says. "Scarlet women! They are the
secret to the doorway. Use and consume. Feast. Drink the power
through them. Waste and discard them."
"Scarlet?" I ask.
"Yes Scarlet: the blood of their bodies, the blood of their
souls," he says.
"Release your will from bondage. Bend their bodies; bend their
minds; bend their wills; beat back the past. The present is all
there is. No consequences and no guilt. Nothing is wrong in the
present. The will is free -- totally free; no feelings; no
effort; pure thought -- separated. The Will postulating the
Will," he says.
"Will, Sex, Love, Blood, Door, Power, Will. Logical," he says.
"The doorway of Plenty. The Great Door of the Great Beast."
[Corydon, p. 307]
It is possible that Hubbard not only believed in Satan -- he
believed he was Satan!
According to Ron (Hubbard) Jr., his father considered himself to
be the one "who came after"; that he was Crowley's successor;
that he had taken on the mantle of the "Great Beast." He told
him that Scientology® actually began on December the 1st, 1947.
This was the day Aleister Crowley died. [Corydon, p. 50]
This is the foundation of Scientology®, the "Road to Total Freedom"!
[....]
Corydon, Bent. 1987. "L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah or Madman."
Secaucus, New Jersey: Lyle Stuart.
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PENTHOUSE
June 1983?
[....]
Penthouse: Did [L. Ron Hubbard Sr.] write the book off the top of his head? Did he do any real
research?
Hubbard: No research at all. When he has answered that question over the
years, his answer has changed according to which biography he was writing.
Sometimes he used to write a new biography every week. He usually said that
he had put thirty years of research into the book. But no, he did not.
What he did, reaily, was take bits and pieces from other people and put them
together in a blender and stir them all up --- and out came Dianetics®! All the
examples in the book --- some 200 "real-life experiences" --- were just the
result of his obsessions with abortions and unconscious states... In fact,
the vast majority of those incidents were invented off the top of his head.
The rest stem from his own secret life, which was deeply involved in the
occult and black-magic.
That involvement goes back to when he was sixteen,
living in Washington. D.C. He got hold of the book by Alistair Crowley
called The Book of Law. He was very interested in several things that were
the creation of what some people call the Moon Child. It was basically an
attempt to create an immaculate conception --- except by Satan rather than by
God. Another important idea was the creation of what they call embryo
implants --of getting a satanic or demonic spirit to inhabit the body of a
fetus. This would come about as a result of black-magic rituals, which
included the use of hypnosis, drugs, and other dangerous and destructive
practices. One of the important things was to destroy the evidence if you
failed at this immaculate conception. That's how my father became obsessed
with abortions. I have a memory of this that goes back to when I was six
years old. It is certainly a problem for my father and for Scientology® that
I rememoer this. It was around 1939, 1940, that I watched my father doing
something to my mother. She was lying on the bed and he was sitting on her,
facing her feet. He had a coat hanger in his hand. There was blood all over
the place. I remember my father shouting at me. "Go back to bed!" A little
while later a doctor came and took her off to the hospital. She didn't talk
about it for quite a number of years. Neither did my father.
Penthouse: He was trying to perform an abortion?
Hubbard: According to him and my mother, he tried to do it with me. I was
born at six and a half months and weighed two pounds, two ounces. I mean, I
wasn't born: this is what came out as a result of their attempt to abort me.
It happened during a night of partying --he got involved in trying to do a
black-magic number. Also, I've got to complete this by saying that he
thought of himself as the Beast 666 incarnate.
Penthouse: The devil?
Hubbard: Yes. The Antichrist. Alestair Crowley thought of himself as such.
And when Crowley died in 1947, my father then decided that he should wear
the cloak of the beast and become the most powerful being in the universe.
Penthouse: You were sixteen years old at that time. What did you believe in?
Hubbard: I believed in Satanism. There was no other religion in the house!
Scientology® and black magic. What a lot of people don't realize is that
Scientology® is black magic that is just spread out over a long time period.
To perform black magic generally takes a few hours or, at most, a few weeks.
But in Scientology it's stretched out over a lifetime, and so you don't see
it. Black magic is the inner core of Scientology® --- and it is probably the
only part of Scientology® that really works.
Also, you've got to realize that my father did not worship Satan. He thought
he was Satan. He was one with Satan. He had a direct pipeline of
communication and power with him. My father wouldn't have worshiped
anything. I mean, when you think you're the most powerful being in the
universe, you have no respect for anything, let alone worship.
[....]
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http://home.kvalito.no/~xenu/archive/media_vault/Nochrist.ra
"Anyway, Everyman is then shown to have been crucified so don't
think that it's an accident that this crucifixion, they found out
that this applied. Somebody somewhere on this planet, back about 600
BC, found some pieces of R6, and I don't know how they found it,
either by watching madmen or something, but since that time they
have used it and it became what is known as Christianity. The man on
the Cross. There was no Christ. But the man on the cross is shown as
Everyman. So of course each person seeing a crucified man, has an
immediate feeling of sympathy for this man. Therefore you get many
PCs who says they are Christ. Now, there's two reasons for that, one
is the Roman Empire was prone to crucify people, so a person can
have been crucified, but in R6 he is shown as crucified." - L. Ron
Hubbard
Scientology® and Christianity are fundamentally at odds with each
other. Scientology® scriptures state that Christ was a tool used by
evil alien psychiatrists from outer space that is being used to keep
us enslaved and emprisioned here on Earth. Christianity teaches that
Christ came to Earth to liberate us and reunite us with the devine.
FUNDAMENTALLY opposite.
Christianity teaches that when an enemy hits one cheek, a Christian
is to offer the other cheek for assaulting as well. Scientology
teaches punishment and harassment for imaginary slights.
Christianity teaches that Heaven is a place where one will live and
bask in the glory of God the All-mighty. Scientology® scripture
states that Heaven was a movie prop built on Mars by evil alien
psychiatrists from outer space that was used to deceive souls into
believing in Christianity. See:
ROUTINE 3 - HEAVEN
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
HCO BULLETIN OF MAY 11, AD13
Central Orgs,
Franchise
ROUTINE 3
HEAVEN
And finally, Christians who know about Scientology® scripture insist
that Scientology® is not compatible with Christianity. How in the
Hell (pardon the pun) could it be?! As Honorary Kid has pointed out,
"compatibility" implies "both ways." The Church of
Scientology® can claim it is "compatible" with Christianity, but
Christianity says otherwise.
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"The second that you can convince somebody of the fact that the
universe belongs to somebody else, particularly some unreachable,
untouchable, undementable being that he can never come into contest
with - and it all belongs to this other being, whether his name is
God or Yahweh or Christ or Seven-Come-Eleven (it doesn't matter what
this character's name is); whether it belongs to General Motors, or any
other item - the second that you've got him really convinced, you've got
him gone; he's a slave." --- L.R. Hubbard, "RESTIMULATION OF
ENGRAMS, EXPERIENCES" - 26 October 1953
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