New Age beliefs, ideology is nothing more than Old Age practices, ways, and beliefs. It’s all just rebranded. That’s all. What is considered New Age ideology is pure Paganism. Worship of the earth, pantheism, worship of the matriarchal, feminism, and almost every person under the sun referring to nature, what the weather is as “mother nature” which is speaking in Pagan. Speaking in Paganism even if done so ignorantly, which is the case in most cases I imagine.

There is no “mother nature.” It’s merely nature. And anyone thinking, writing, or saying “mother nature?” They are propagating, promoting, pushing Paganism and all that is against God. And this is done by countless professed Christians.

This paganism revival — ironic since so many are begging for a Christian revival yet some of those very same have worked diligently and effectively in bringing about the pagan revival we’re now all in — has infected, permeated, been instilled, and installed into EVERY institution in America, and in Western cultures. From government at all levels, the military in all branches, in every school, in every business and corporation, in what passes for news, for media, in every form of entertainment, and, yes, in an ever-increasing number of professed Christian denominations and churches.

It is paganism, being a heathen, that instituted and has maintained idol worship. Idol worship may not appear as it did in centuries past, but do not be deceived. There is no change, no difference. Idol worship begins with SELF. And its dark-reaching choking tentacles branch out from SELF into every other avenue and path leading to death. Eternal death. As those stumbling about in darkness on those deadly paths delude themselves they are the “enlightened ones.”

Core to pagan belief, every New Age doctrine is that there is no need for God. The God of the Christian and Jewish Bibles. Because each person is a god. And within this lie is the deadly deception that people are inherently good.

I’ve written about this more times than I can count.

But my words are feeble and of little or no consequence.

But how about the words of the Lord Jesus Christ? Do you believe the Bible? And if you answered within your mind in the affirmative, do you believe EVERY WORD within the Word of God? Because unless you believe EVERY WORD within the Word of God those you pick and choose to believe do you no good, really. Faith, obedience, being a disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ, a true child of God, an authentic true Christian? It’s an all or nothing way of living. There is no halfway. No straddling a fence. No gray areas. It’s all very clear. It’s all either black and the darkness of this world, or it’s white and the Light of God’s Word and righteousness, holiness, purity, faith and life.

Period.

And, no, no one, not one is good.

And it is this premise that has arisen mightily from the late 19th century into the early 20th century that has taken off, taken over, and consumed the hearts and minds of people. While throughout history there has been the thinking that what people may be doing was good? There never was this dominating, suffocating, constant indoctrination that people are inherently good as has occurred in the past 120, 140 years or so in all of world history.

Know the signs.

Know the Word of God. And believe it all. Every word. Otherwise, it will be of no lasting, deep effect. Either a person is truly renewed of mind and spirit, transformed, regenerated by the power of the Spirit of God and only that, or they are not. And those who are? Know and live accordingly. Knowing also they are not good but inherently evil within them. Those that remain in the utter darkness? Refusing the truth? They continue on vainly imagining themselves to be “good people,” or they foolishly believe they can WORK AT BECOMING “a good person.”

No, not one, no one is good.

But don’t take my word for it.

Here’s what truly, fully God, truly, fully Man, the Lord Jesus Christ said;

And as he was setting out on his journey, a man ran up and knelt before him and asked him, “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” And Jesus said to him, “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone.”

Mark 10:17-18 — English Standard Version

Also see:

The fool says in his heart, “There is no God.”
They are corrupt, they do abominable deeds;
there is none who does good.

The LORD looks down from heaven on the children of man,
to see if there are any who understand,
who seek after God.

They have all turned aside; together they have become corrupt;
there is none who does good,
not even one.

Psalm 14:1-3 — English Standard Version

How it was then, in times of paganism, idol worship, the vanity and evil of man. And know this, there is no new thing under the sun. Human nature has not changed one iota, not one morsel within from the beginning. Our natures are as they always have been. Since the time sin entered in through disobedience and rebellion against God to listen to ourselves, to listen to evil rather than God. And if the above is not self-worship? Idol worship? Turning from God to the words and ways of the world? Paganism? Or, as it’s known as today New Age ideologies? Then what is dear one? Do you need a 50-foot golden calf or a 100-foot statue of Baal in your front yard to finally see, finally hear, finally believe?

Still not buying it? Refusing to believe still and can’t let go of the world’s lies and delusions?

Okay, here, as well;

…as it is written:

“None is righteous, no, not one;
no one understands;
no one seeks for God.
All have turned aside; together they have become worthless;
no one does good,
not even one.
Their throat is an open grave;
they use their tongues to deceive.
The venom of asps is under their lips.
Their mouth is full of curses and bitterness.
Their feet are swift to shed blood;
in their paths are ruin and misery,
and the way of peace they have not known.
There is no fear of God before their eyes.”

Romans 3:10-18 — English Standard Version

There is no fear of God in the dead eyes, the hard hearts, of the walking dead. Walking to the perpetual beating of the pagan drumbeat. Telling them, lying to them that they are good, they don’t need God, that there is no God.

Nothing has changed since that moment in the Garden.

Except there are a lot more folks through time and around now. And our worldly knowledge has led to technological advances — yet no advances in human nature. In being sinless and righteous.

Sin can only be washed away by the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ.

By faith and obedience in Him and Him alone.

And even then? Even then we are not good people. Inherently good. We’re still sinners in need of God’s mercy, grace, love and forgiveness. We are merely being honed, walking closer to being perfected while not yet perfected.

Because while in the flesh? Anyone? Well, that isn’t being good, or good at all.

No matter what the liars and indoctrinators of this fallen, corrupted, eroding, and crumbling down around us in sin may say.

 

Ken Pullen

Friday, February 4th, 2022

ACP — A Crooked Path

 

The Popular Belief That Empties Churches

The devastating impact of the premise that people are essentially good.

 

Friday, February 4, 2022

By William Killpatrick

Reprinted from FrontPageMag

 

William Kilpatrick is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center.  His books include Christianity, Islam, and Atheism: The Struggle for the Soul of the West (Ignatius Press), What Catholics Need to Know About Islam (Sophia Press), and The Politically Incorrect Guide to Jihad.

In a recent Front Page column, Dennis Prager criticizes the idea that people are basically good.  The belief that humans are inherently good is both “foolish” and “dangerous,” writes Prager, and it leads to much suffering.  He offers several sobering examples from recent history of what happens to people who put their trust in human nature.

Prager was prompted to write his rebuttal when a respected Jewish publication published an article by an Orthodox rabbi claiming that “Judaism posits that people are basically good.”  The idea has long been prevalent among non-Orthodox rabbis but Prager was surprised that an Orthodox Jew would subscribe to an idea that is clearly rejected in the Torah.

The notion that human nature is basically good is also rejected in the rest of the Bible—and just as strongly in the New Testament as in the Old.  Which brings me to my main point.  Over the last six decades, belief in human goodness has become an article of faith for many Christians as well as for Jews. This is particularly true of many mainstream Protestants and Roman Catholics.  For the Catholic Church, the belief has served as a wrecking ball. Numerous polls have shown a massive decline in church attendance among Catholics (and other Christians), and a corresponding drop in the number who identify as Christians.

Different people give different reasons for the decline of Christian belief, but for me the obvious reason is that Christians have replaced the idea of human sinfulness with the idea of human goodness.  And when you do that, you undercut the whole rationale for Christianity—namely, that we are sinners in need of redemption.  If human beings are good the way they are, then there is no need for a Savior to free us from our sins.

The Rousseauian belief that people are born good was resisted by the Catholic Church for centuries.  Then, starting in the sixties, the idea of natural goodness suddenly became fashionable in the Church, particularly among Catholic educators, seminarians, and orders of nuns.

What happened?  What happened was the human potential movement.  It swept through Catholic institutions in the 1960s and the change was almost instantaneous. Priests began to aim for self-actualization rather than holiness, classes were conducted like encounter groups, and religious studies books were rewritten to make room for popular psychologists such as Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow and Lawrence Kohlberg.  If you’ve read some of these authors, you can understand why they appeal to Christians.  There is nothing explicitly Christian in their writings, but there is a strong Christian “feel” to them.

There were similarities between the two belief systems to be sure, but they were only surface similarities.  Both Christians and human potentialists urged us to “judge not,” but the later maintained that we should also be non-judgmental toward ourselves.  Both belief systems encouraged us to love others, but the psychologists claimed that we could not love others until we first love ourselves.  Indeed, for the psychologists, the most important form of love was self-love.

It’s easy enough to equate Christian principles with psychological ones. After all, they sound the same; yet the differences are often greater than the similarities. For example, Christ said we should become as “little children.”  Is that the same thing as getting in touch with our “inner child?”  Well, not quite.  Christ was speaking of the innocent self-forgetfulness of children, whereas getting in touch with one’s inner child sounds more like an exercise in self-absorption.

When you get right down to it, however, the main appeal that human potential psychology has for religious people is that it is itself a kind of religion.

The humanists seemed to exhibit what can only be called a profound reverence for the human person—especially the person who is actualizing his potentials, and becoming all that he can be. In the writings of both Rogers and Maslow, one finds a sense of awe at the self-fulfilled person.  There is an almost transcendent quality to their descriptions of the “fully functioning person.”

So yes, humanistic psychology is a sort of religion—although a very self-centered one.  It is with good reason that psychologist Paul Vitz titled his book about the human potential movement, Psychology as Religion:  The Cult of Self-Worship.

The pseudo religion of self-esteem quickly became popular among college-educated Catholics; however, few recognized it as a separate religion since it seemed to blend so smoothly with the spirit of Vatican II.  Rogers and Maslow along with many other “feel-good-about-yourself” psychologists became required reading in seminaries and in Catholic colleges.  Many Catholics of all ages felt that they had discovered a more enlightened and advanced form of Christianity.  It was also a much less demanding religion, because it assured everyone that they were fine just as they were.

It’s not surprising that many Catholics began to leave the Church.  They had found something better—a therapeutic religion that would allow them to develop their “infinite potentials” without the bother of going to church. In one incident, an entire order of teaching nuns disbanded after two years of encounter group sessions led by Rogers. Six hundred nuns left the Church and all but two of the 59 schools they ran were closed down. The sisters had become more interested in self-actualization than in teaching.

Meanwhile, many of those who stayed in the Church, devoted themselves to remaking it into a non-judgmental therapy center. The problem is that the new religion was only a counterfeit of Christianity.  And those who followed it were forced to discard essential elements of real Christianity or else to water them down.

One of the first casualties was the doctrine of original sin—a doctrine that is incompatible with Rogers’ and Maslow’s theories about self-actualization.  Maslow himself admitted as much.  He once observed that if the doctrine of original sin were true, then his own theories were untenable.

However, faced with a choice between Maslow’s view of human nature and the biblical view, a significant number of Catholics sided with Maslow.  Here’s how I put the matter several years ago:

Whenever a Catholic doctrine, such as human sinfulness, collided with a psychological doctrine, such as human goodness, the tendency was to sweep the offending Catholic doctrine under the rug. Catholics were given the impression that salvation was bound up with self-awareness and self-acceptance. Self-acceptance, it was believed, would automatically follow self-awareness, because the more you learned about yourself the more you would discover about the wonders of your inner self.

Moreover, as more and more Catholics learned to accept and esteem themselves, they saw less and less reason to confess their sins:

One of the things that a great many Catholics discovered almost simultaneously was that they were—to use the lingo of the day—OK. Convinced of their own self-worth, many Catholics abandoned the Sacrament of Penance. Almost overnight, the long lines at the confessional disappeared. Catholics had been so well-schooled in the gospel of self-acceptance that they couldn’t think of any sins they needed to confess.

Not every Catholic fell for the religion of human potential, and many who did, eventually came to their senses.  Moreover, under the papacies of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, the whole Church started to slowly come back to its senses.  The election of Pope Francis, however, made it possible for Catholic progressives to put the Church back on the psychological track.  Francis, who once taught psychology, was all for a more humanistic and sensitive Church.  Indeed, the catch words that Francis so frequently uses are straight out of Rogers’ non-directive therapy playbook.  Thus, Francis loves to talk about “listening,” “accompanying,” “sensitivity,” “dialogue,” “openness,” and “acceptance.”  In a recent general audience, he told parents of children with “different sexual orientations” not to condemn their children, but to “accompany” them.

As one commentator noted, this advice “could easily be interpreted as directing parents to ignore Church teaching while allowing only for the affirmation of homosexuality or transgenderism.” Indeed, on a number of occasions, Pope Francis has made “who-am-I-to-judge” type statements about behaviors that are inherently sinful according to Church teaching.

One way to get rid of the problem of sin is to declare it as no more than a simple diversity.  Increasingly, behaviors that were once considered sinful are now looked upon by Church leaders as legitimate expressions of one’s unique individuality.  Meanwhile, gender identities and sexual orientations that were once considered as contrary to God’s plan are now looked upon as normal variations.

Take a recent initiative in Germany calling for a change in Church teaching on sexuality and gender identity.  Most German bishops welcomed the initiative to revise “outdated statements of Church doctrines on sexuality.”  As Bishop Franz-Josef Bode of Osnabruck, put it, “the basic message of the Church is God’s unconditional love for all people—in their diversity and uniqueness.”

But that’s almost the opposite of what we find in the Bible.  Although God’s love for us is immense, it is not unconditional.  In the Old Testament we find that God has set commandments for us to follow.  And in the New Testament we find Jesus telling his disciples “If you love me, you will keep my commandments” (Jn: 14:15).

The idea that we should each follow our own unique path no matter where it leads may be compatible with the gospel according to Abraham Maslow, but it’s alien to the Bible.  Likewise, the concept of “unconditional love” owes more to Carl Rogers than to Church teachings.  It’s a variation on Rogers’ insistence that the first rule of non-directive therapy is “unconditional acceptance” of the client by the therapist.

Unconditional acceptance may make sense in a therapy setting, but in many social settings it makes for chaos. In his article, Prager notes that “the most important, and most difficult task of parents and society is to raise good human beings.”  Conscientious parents, he implies, will set limits and conditions on their children.  But “those who believe we are born good will not concentrate on making good people.  Why bother if we’re already good?”

Many problems of modern life can be traced to the naïve belief that all people are basically good and that human nature is trustworthy.  People who make this assumption are usually the same ones who think that we can defund the police or even abolish them without any resulting harm to society.  Such people ought to stop reading psychology books and start reading the news.

One last observation.  As I noted, both Rogers and Maslow looked upon their work as a spiritual breakthrough.  They offered therapeutic techniques designed to move the individual to higher and higher levels of awareness and acceptance.  Rogers spoke of the advent of a new kind of person who would be entirely self-fulfilled and self-contained.  And Maslow, who didn’t believe in God, did believe in “godlike possibilities” for humans.  As one Christian site observes , “Having denied the existence of God and his moral authority, it was entirely natural for Maslow to set up ‘self’ as an object of adoration.

The human potentialists claimed to have found the way to develop a more actualized and even “godlike” person.  What they actually offered, however, was nothing new.  It was simply a reiteration of the serpents promise to Adam and Eve: “You will be like God.” Catholics and other Christians would be wise to decline the offer.