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Bewitched
Paganism has gone mainstream. But here's how to keep you and your loved ones from being ensnared by it.

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BUMPER STICKERS appear on cars around my small town: "Born-again Pagan"; "Witches Heal"; "Life is a witch (lavender broomstick inserted) and then you fly."

Do I live in an odd little enclave of weirdos and eccentrics? No, I live in a major metropolitan area. But I live in the midst of a pagan revival—and so do you.

Of course, you could say it's that season. During Halloween, interest in the occult seems overt. Yet catalogs hawking ready-to-worship statues of Egyptian gods and goddesses come uninvited through my mailbox any time of year. Books on spellcasting and pagan ritual can be found in my local library and bookstores. Television and magazine ads trumpet the services of psychic counselors.

What's going on?

In a word, witchcraft.

Like many Christians, I knew little about the neo-pagan movement until five years ago, when I discovered that the name of a Seattle abortion clinic, "Aradia," named after a "goddess of healing arts," also was cited in witchcraft literature as the daughter of the moon goddess Diana and the sun god Lucifer sent to earth to establish witchcraft.

Witchcraft, or Wicca, is a vital part of the growing neo-pagan movement and is considered to be one of the fastest-growing religions in America. While estimates vary, several sources say there are between 100,000 and 200,000 practicing Wiccans in the U.S. today. If one includes other neo-pagans and New Agers, who share many similarities, that figure likely would be higher.

The Quest for Control
A Wiccan high priestess named Shaune Ralph once wrote in Mademoiselle magazine that she cast her first spell because she was unhappy in her job. She made a talisman, or charm, out of a few objects, "charged" it with energy, and waited. A short time later she was hired as a laboratory administrator for a biotechnology company. Witchcraft, she found to her delight, got results.

Experienced church leaders say that to deny the reality of demonic supernatural power in witchcraft is to be misinformed.

"It's real. It works," says Dr. F. Douglas Pennoyer, a cultural anthropologist and senior pastor of Snohomish Free Methodist Church near Seattle. The son of Christian missionaries, Pennoyer has seen the efficacy of demonic powers in other cultures, and agrees there is a strong pagan revival happening here. But he says the "power" demonstrated by witches and other pagans, which at first seems positive or productive, is doled out by Satan for a purpose: to trap the practitioner. Pennoyer likens occultic powers to the euphoria of illicit drug use: It feels good for a season—but by the time you realize it's hurting you, it may be too late.

Personal Peril
One who's also felt the negative effects of witchcraft is Gene Aven. Aven studied under a California witch in the late '60s and eventually was ordained a high priest in witchcraft. His mentor said the occultic skills he was learning, such as astral projection, would give him power and control, but as he proceeded in "the Craft," Aven felt increasingly out of control—that he was being controlled. Finally, he left California and wound up in a Washington county jail on burglary charges; while there, a local pastor led him to Christ. "Fear brought me out of the occult," Aven said. "Constant, abiding fear."

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Family, Occult, Paganism, parenting, Supernatural, Warfare, Spiritual, Wicca, Witchcraft

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 25 comments.See all comments
Getting really tired Posted: November 08, 2007 8:00 AM
I'm getting so tired of defending Christians. By their reckoning, I am not one. I am much more pagan. I do agree with the point on the abortion clinic being named Aradia. That is a disrespect to the Goddess. Abortion is not healing, no matter if it were necessary. The mental and spiritual scar's would last a life time. About being Pagan, someone that truly follows the path, is not that far from what Jesus taught. The church was making a political move against us. The early church was corrupt as hell! The last pope we had was everything they wished they were. Take care of your brother as you would yourself. The modern church (and these "fuzzy bunny" newagers) are leaving the truths behind in the search of greed fulfillment. POWER! I know pagans that are as bad as christians as far as doing this "prosperity church" crap. Jesus and the money changers anyone? Don't be seeing enemies where there are none. We've a common foe in the Saracens. NO safety under their rule!

Katra7 Posted: November 02, 2007 9:57 PM
I agree with Amy...this is a growing issue that will not go away by sticking our heads in the sand. Young people these days are looking for real power, and we as Christians hold the key...Jesus! He is the true power, if we will accept His Holy Spirit and open our hearts to the authority and power we have in Jesus Christ. My brother in law has been approached by Wiccans attempting to "convert" him, so to say that they do not proselytize is a mistake. My sister, who grew up in the Assemblies of God church, had to stake the claim that "As for me and my house we will serve the Lord", and amazingly, they disappeared from their life! The authority of Jesus overrules all that is from satan if we as Christians will pick it up. It's time to get off the fence and choose whether we will serve Jesus or satan...there is no other option! I've read the Book, one side wins this war, and only one. I choose to be on His side.

RadWitch Posted: November 17, 2007 6:50 AM
I was Pagan since my teenage years, tried to become a Christian in my 20s, and was very disappointed in the Christian God and Christians themselves. Perhaps instead of spending so much time and energy judging other religions, Christians should try to improve their own. As for myself, I am happily back in the arms of the Goddess. Articles like this are unlikely to scare anyone away from Wicca or Paganism... the writing is laughable at best, sadly deluded at worst.

 




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