Showing posts with label Witch Way Jago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Witch Way Jago. Show all posts

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Spirituality vs. Faith

More evidence that once people stop believing in the revealed deposit of faith entrusted to the Church, they'll believe anything.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Abortion Art and Moloch

(Content warning: graphic language)
Some have been following this story about Yale University senior art major Aliza Shvarts, and her repeated self-induced miscarriages.

Here we see what other ages would call witchcraft; others would deem paganism. Both are accurate. Her own words show one who thinks that the individual consciousness is the highest authority in defining and setting the terms of discourse:

Just as it is a myth that women are .meant. to be feminine and men masculine, that penises and vaginas are .meant. for penetrative heterosexual sex (or that mouths, anuses, breasts, feet or leather, silicone, vinyl, rubber, or metal implements are not .meant. for sex at all), it is a myth that ovaries and a uterus are .meant. to birth a child.

When considering my own bodily form, I recognize its potential as extending beyond its ability to participate in a normative function. While my organs are capable of engaging with the narrative of reproduction . the time-based linkage of discrete events from conception to birth . the realm of capability extends beyond the bounds of that specific narrative chain. These organs can do other things, can have other purposes, and it is the prerogative of every individual to acknowledge and explore this wide realm of capability.

Her statement is indicative of the manner in which mimetic theory predicts accurately that the human default attitude and behavior is sacrificial paganism; what René Girard coined as "the primitive Sacred." We feel ourselves in utter freedom, yet we return to the "high places" of the fertility cults, Mount Cythaeron of the Bacchae, the Astarte sacred poles, and the flames of Moloch. (More curiously, a major self-proclaimed monotheist religion claims no paganism, yet practices human sacrifice as a virtue in its most fervently "devout" followers in the name of "Allah".)

And so, we see that paganism in its multifarious forms is a huge and real presence is the opening years of the twenty-first century, whether in the shape of a Scimitar, or in performance "art". Those who fall away from the grace of God do so in high predictable gradients of various "fruits of the flesh," as Saint Paul called them in the Letter to the Galatians, leading finally to the place of sacrifice (Gr. thumos).

But those who cringe, calling Ms. Shvarts "sick" should ask: what is the qualitative difference between her self-conscious "art" and the abortion industry that carries out the same weird alchemical machinations day in and day out?

Thursday, February 14, 2008

10,000 Religious Police - 1 Witch - 0

A Saudi court has sentenced a witch to death. Boy, do I feel safer now that an illiterate woman of Jordanian extraction is off the streets of decent, sharia abiding people. Don't you?

The primitive Sacred of the Saudi Wahhabist courts needs duly sanctioned victim fodder to feed its sacrificial mechanism just as certainly as Moloch needed children to pass through fire.

By the way, where does your gasoline come from?

Monday, December 17, 2007

Witches vs. Baby Jesus

Stephen Vincent Benet gave us "The Devil and Daniel Webster." Bob Lonsberry gives us what I'll call "The Pentacle Debacle":
See, Baby Jesus ticks off witchcraft people. They're all about tolerance for themselves, but are pretty darned intolerant of others. That's how this whole diversity thing goes. Acceptance is demanded for everything — except the values, opinions, faith and culture of the majority. Multiculturalism is about the sanitizing of culture, about the eradication of the mainstream culture.
So, like I said, the witchcraft people got ticked off. Though there might just have been one of them. At any rate, figuring that actually walking up and urinating on the Baby Jesus would stir up the locals, it looks like folks decided to go for the next best thing. That's how the 10-foot by 10-foot Wicca symbol got built in the shadow of the stable. It was a big square, with a dark blue background and a white circle. Inside the white circle was a white five-pointed star against a light-blue background. That's a pentacle.
And the Wicca lady — who looks nothing like Elvira or Elizabeth Montgomery — said it had to go up now because the winter solstice is some sort of witchcraft holiday or something. Read all … [HT: Spirit Daily]