The MAGIC of Religion in only 6 easy steps

by Terry 16 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • Terry
    Terry

    At the earliest stages of human history there were priests, shaman and magi (from which we get the word "magic") who were skilled performers. They gained special status from their level of mastery in duping and thrilling the human mind with its pact of desiring the Transcendent Experience. (Make me believe the impossible!)

    All throughout mankind's journey through time these magicians were variously called Prophets, Miracle Workers and Demi-gods. Yet, they used the selfsame 6 elements with skill to achieve their effects and rely on the pact to work their magic.

    1.Disappearance

    2.Production (something out of nothing)

    3. Transformation (one thing becomes another thing.)

    4. Motive Power (objects with the ability to move on their own.)

    5. Natural Law Violation (levitation, going through a wall, etc.)

    6.Transposition (two objects change places)

    The rest of humanity relied on the STORIES told about these exploits for their vicarious thrills. STORIES exaggerated the exploits into momentous achievements at the hands of a superpowerful God instead magic.

    Magic was divided into Good and Evil magic. God was behind the Good and Satan was the cause of the Evil.

    Every religious sect begins with elements of the six.

    Muhammed is said to have been ILLITERATE and yet he produced perfect Arabic verses. The concealment is in the misdirection of the presentation. Was Muhammed in fact illiterate? How would any of us know this for certain? Should we merely accept this premise?

    Joseph Smith had plates of gold which he translated using a seer stone. (Yes, a rock with a hole in it!) By sticking the stone in a hat and burying his face in it! He "translated" from behind a curtain, no less! We are told that a great many witnesses actually "saw" these gold plates. Should we accept all this as given? The remaining examples of the original words of Joseph Smith are in awful rural english with grammatical errors and run-on sentences, yet; the modern Book of Mormon scriptures have been...ummm..."adjusted" so that you'd never know that at all!

    Moses went up on a mountain and nobody was allowed to come near. He returned with tablets of stone actually written by the finger of God himself! Oh--the tablets were broken, naturally(by Moses) and Moses had to replace them by carving some himself! This isn't suspicious behavior, is it?

    Charles Taze Russell was specially chosen by God to be his mouthpiece by allowing Russell to interpret scripture and Pyramid measurements to know in advance when Jesus would return. There are millions of people today who subscribe to the religion Russell started because they believe this! Or, do they? The story has changed many times and the trick goes on.

    Remember the pact? The magician helps the audience achieve a transcendant experience by showing them a seeming miracle.

    The audience wishes to be fooled.

    Their brains are rewarded each time they participate! The enormous pleasure of witnessing a miracle creates an enormous sense of well-being.

    If I were a magician who told how easily his trick was done, my audience would be let down and the excitement of transcendance would become commonplace.

    That is my reveal! Every element of religious belief is rewarded when you allow yourself to be fooled! But, when you see through the trick, you can only feel cynical.

    1975 was my last "reward". By overcoming that reveal I and millions of others got the largest reward of a lifetime.

    Fool me once; shame on you.

    Fool me twice; shame on me.

  • blueviceroy
    blueviceroy

    Terry, I think I know what the "listeners" were missing , perhaps if they had read this after 1975 they may have ceased , meh , maybe not. Anyway some of this would help some folks now anyway , and I think it kinda ties with what your putting forth, enjoy.

    http://deoxy.org/rst.htm (yes, I crawl the web looking for obscure essays)

  • LtCmd.Lore
    LtCmd.Lore

    Their brains are rewarded each time they participate! The enormous pleasure of witnessing a miracle creates an enormous sense of well-being.

    If I were a magician who told how easily his trick was done, my audience would be let down and the excitement of transcendance would become commonplace.

    That is my reveal! Every element of religious belief is rewarded when you allow yourself to be fooled! But, when you see through the trick, you can only feel cynical.

    Mostly agreed.

    Having it explained only takes away from the experience.

    But when I figure it out on my own, I enjoy that even more than the actual trick.

    I think that is what seperates the skeptics from the believers. If you enjoy figuring it out, then you'll eventually figure it out. If you enjoy not knowing, then you'll never know.

    Lore - W.W.S.D?

  • Magick
    Magick

    Let me stir this magic-al pot a little more by adding a pinch of "illuminati" and a dash of "satanism."

    Let us take for instance Joseph Smith & Charles Russell (if we must).

    Both have been linked to Illuminati bloodlines & free masonry.

    Both were 33rd degree Freemasons. Both were said to be Satanists. Both have links to the B'nai Brith. Both religions were funded into existence by the Rothschilds. Both promoted Zionism. Both practiced magic. Both claimed to have extra revelation (or secret information) from God beyond the Bible. Both claimed to be God's chosen. Both had to "re-translate" the Bible. Both were White men. Both predicted the "end of the world" Both got their "secret information" from "Angels."

    I'm sure I could continue. There is reference to Enochian ceremonial magic, Pyramidology, winged sun disk, Egyptian gods, Luciferianism. A person who has studied the history of the Occult can see it's influence throughout the beginnings of both religions. A person not "studied" would do well to research.

  • justhuman
    justhuman

    actually is one: LIE

  • Magick
    Magick
    The magician helps the audience achieve a transcendant experience by showing them a seeming miracle.

    your definition of magic & magic(k) [of late] seems to be based on "The exercise of sleight of hand for entertainment." However, a child's game of trickery cannot be confused with magic or magic(k) as the primordial essence of universal communion of atoms & electrical impulses. That being said, I must jump in to this hasty generalization based on biased evidence and say, that our "founding father" Charles T. was a practitioner of the "sleight" kind. His success at mass social "duping" & his interest in deeper magic(k) is an enlightening subject.

  • VM44
    VM44

    I would be interested in people's comments about this performance of Kuda Bux, "The Man with the X-Ray Eyes". It is a 10 minute video hosted at Youtube.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6x_zO0IIsE

    Kuda is very entertaining to watch, very polished.

    I think everyone that watches this video knows that no supernatural abilities are involved.

    --VM44

  • Guest with Questions
    Guest with Questions

    I just woke up, but does this sound a lot like another theory?

    Change disappearance to Nothing, Something out of nothing, One thing becomes another thing

    Fool me once; shame on you.

    Fool me twice; shame on me.

    Fool me thrice; shame on ____?

    Too timid to fill in the blank.

    Those who hold to this theory: Their brains are rewarded each time they participate! The enormous pleasure of insulting believers with their superior knowledge gives them an enormous sense of well-being.

    Just kidding with you Terry, couldn’t help it, but I wonder who will respond about my ignorance? I guess I’m just asking for it.

    Terry: Some believers are accused of not thinking for themselves, yet the same can be said about non-believers. They automatically assume that what they read and what someone tells them is true. Even though I disagree with you, I do like the way you try to figure it out for yourself in your own mind.

  • nvrgnbk
    nvrgnbk

    Umm. Magick, why ya hatin' on the Magick?

  • nvrgnbk
    nvrgnbk

    Here is an excerpt from Life of Wonder...

    Human beings are special in another way. Namely, it is by our choices that we bring intangible qualities such as morality, purpose, meaning and value into the world - we are the very reason that such things exist at all. Without us, there would still be seasons, the planets would still orbit the sun, and other living beings would be born, grow and die, but there would be no one to take notice of these facts, no one to assign value to them. Our existence adds an entirely new dimension to reality which it would not possess without us, and this is something which is absolutely unique to humans among all things we know of. In this subjective sense, then, in addition to our objective uniqueness, human beings are undeniably special. Whether a deity exists or not does not change this in the slightest.

    Consider now the second misguided theist argument - the fallacy of mystery, the claim that understanding how a thing works can only diminish its specialness and our appreciation for it. This belief is perhaps best exemplified by John Keats' lament in his 1819 poem, Lamia:

    "Do not all charms fly
    At the mere touch of cold philosophy?
    There was an awful rainbow once in heaven:
    We know her woof, her texture; she is given
    In the dull catalogue of common things.
    Philosophy will clip an angel's wings,
    Conquer all mysteries by rule and line,
    Empty the haunted air, and gnomed mine -
    Unweave a rainbow...."
    The last line quoted above, which inspired biologist Richard Dawkins' book Unweaving the Rainbow, is worth studying for its relation to the fallacy of mystery. We now know that the rainbow is an optical illusion created by the refraction of sunlight through water droplets suspended in the air. The properties of the visible light spectrum that produces it, as well as the biochemical basis for color vision, are well-established facts, and science has long since moved on to study other natural phenomena. But does any of this make the misty colors of a rainbow in the clearing sky after a storm any less beautiful? On the contrary, understanding the true causes of things only allows us to appreciate them more; it adds more and deeper levels to our appreciation. A person acquainted with some basic principles of physics can admire a rainbow not just for its visual beauty, but also for the precision and elegance of the underlying natural laws that interact to produce it.
    The same holds true in other branches of science. A person knowing nothing of geophysics or plate tectonics can admire the snowcapped beauty of a distant range of mountain peaks, but a person who does know something of these fields can admire them for this while simultaneously appreciating them as buckled continental crust, upthrust during the slow, multimillion-year collisions of continental plates borne on the drifting fire of the mantle, sculpted by the patient scouring of erosion as forests advance and recede and civilizations rise and fall around them. A person entirely ignorant of astrophysics can be awed by the immensity of the night sky and its countless twinkling stars; a person educated in that area can do this while holding in mind the possibly even more awe-inspiring knowledge that each of those twinkling pinpricks is a mighty sun like our own, though incomprehensibly far away, and that the light we now see from them has traveled across the interstellar void for thousands or millions of years to reach us. And while a person unschooled in biology can still listen with pleasure to the music of a songbird, watch with awe as a pod of whales crests the surface of the ocean in an explosion of glittering spray, or reverently caress the bark of an ancient and massive redwood tree, a person who comprehends the central insight of the theory of evolution can view these organisms not just as isolated phenomena, impressive in themselves, but as aspects of a vast underlying unity we catch only in glimpses, links in a tremendous and subtle web of interconnection that reaches billions of years back into the past and encompasses even ourselves, binding us all in unbreakable ties of heredity and kinship to each other, to our fellow species and to that very first life from which we all descend. In each case, to understand a phenomenon is not to diminish, but to immeasurably enhance it, adding to its beauty and our deserved awe and admiration.

    http://www.ebonmusings.org/atheism/lifeofwonder.html

    To admire and to feel a sense of wonder is not unique to those with belief in the supernatural.

    The natural, as it truly is, not as we would have it be, is overwhelmingly awe-inspiring.

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