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Scientology and Judaism
"..as a practical matter Scientologists are expected to and do become fully devoted to Scientology to the exclusion of other faiths", Exemption of CST Under Section 501(c)(3) As a Church on October 1, 1993. (CST is Scientology's parent corporation.)No other Gods before Me
Scientology, through auditing, seeks to unburden man from his reactive mind, allowing him to attain God-like powers. This end is not compatible with Judaism, both in tradition and in Law. It is probably not by coincidence that the first commandment given to Moses (Exodus 20:1) is "I am the LORD your God who brought you out of bondage in Egypt. You shall have no other gods before me." Thus, the worship of self by making oneself into a god ala Scientology is forbidden by the Law.The history of the Israelites, from Exodus to Kings, contains many examples of false gods, and the consequences of worshipping them. The Golden Calf. The utter destruction of the false gods of Jericho and Canaan. The temptations of the false gods of Babylon. The desecration of the Temple by Antiochus Epiphanes during the Maccabean period. Throughout history, the Israelites differentiated themselves as a culture from the Gentiles through steadfast worship of one God.
Scientology has been criticized for its emphasis on money. Internally, Scientology uses money as a statistic for many measures of success - gross income, donations by IAS members, the size of the "war chest", the size of Sea Org reserves, etc. HCO PL 9 Mar 1972 contains the instructions: "MAKE MONEY.... MAKE MORE MONEY.... GET OTHERS TO MAKE MONEY. Scientology's worship of money and possessions (graven images of heaven, earth or sea) is idolatry and a direct violation of the Law in Exodus 20.
While Scientology officially denies it, L. Ron Hubbard is venerated to near-diety status. Even though Hubbard is dead, every Org has an office for him, just in case he returns. There is a picture of him in every Scientology Org. Shouts of "hip hip hooray" (the closest Scientology ever comes to "worship") are directed at it. To advance in Scientology, one must study Hubbard's words (and there are a lot of them compared to the Torah), which competes for the Scientologist's time sometimes to the exclusion of all other study.
Knowledge is only from God
Scientology is a systematic revealing (or gnosis) of mystical knowledge whereby the thetan's powers are unlocked. Jewish tradition teaches that knowledge, especially spiritual knowledge, comes from the LORD alone. The prophets, both major and minor, are shown as having knowledge from God, and not of themselves. For example, the Book of Daniel contains examples in nearly every chapter that the power and knowledge of God, as revealed through Daniel, is superior to the false gods of the Chaldeans and Babylonians. The Chaldeans and magicians are repeatedly unable to interpret dreams, solve riddles, or prophesy like Daniel who speaks the word of the LORD.Hubbard dabbled in Middle Eastern magic with the OTO and Golden Dawn, and some of the conepts were incorporated into Dianetics: the Modern Science of Mental Health. Bits and pieces of Chaldean magic as recorded in Daniel creates a background of mysticism in Scientology. (More on the OTO and Golden Dawn in the Christianity section).
Creation
If the Jewish creation account is contrasted with that of Scientology (Incident 1), the Operating Thetan levels can be seen as an attempt to undo the effects of mankind's progressive downward spiral and re-establish the thetan's latent powers over MEST. In Jewish terms, the Scientologist seeks to be God of Creation. Genesis 3:4-6 records Mankind's first sin - the sin of wanting to be gods:-
4 And the serpent said to the woman, you surely shall
not die: 5 For God knows that the day you eat of the tree, your eyes
shall be opened, and you shall be as gods, knowing good and evil. 6 And
when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was
pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she
took of the fruit of the tree and ate, and gave it also to her husband
with her; and he ate.
The Sabbath
Scientology does not recognize a Sabbath for its staff. Again, the emphasis is on "production" and money. This is a direct violation of the Law of Moses.Reincarnation
While Scientology teaches that people have been reincarnated billions of times, there is no such tradition in the Torah.
Hubbard Maligns Judaism
Hubbard on the Creator
-
"I imagine when we finally manage to communicate with
beetle under rocks and free them, we'll no doubt find the Creator of
Heaven who 43 + Trillion years ago designed and built the Pearly Gates
and entrapped us all.
- The Pearly Gates refer to the Helatrobus Implants. See "Hubbard on Heaven". According to Hubbard, heaven is a false memory given to us by an evil "Creator of Heaven".
- Apparently, the Helatrobus Implants are present in a wide variety of life forms, including insects.
- Hubbard expects to find the Creator of Heaven under a rock.
- While Hubbard may have meant his reference to communicating with beetles to have been amusing, one of the final steps for the old OT VII contains instructions to:
"Good Lord, I'd hate to be guilty of that overt. But never mind - you aren't either. That guy is GONE (I hope!)", HCO BULLETIN OF MAY 11, AD13
Commentary:
OT7-48 1. Find some plants, trees, etc., and communicate to them individually until you know they received your communication. 2. Go to a zoo or a place with many types of life and communicate with each of them until you know the communication is received and, if possible, returned.
Hubbard on Hebrew Prophesy
-
" Old therapies include the 2000 yr ago plus or minus
Aoscuplepian drug treatment (hillabore) which produced a conclusion and
coma, and in which the nut practitioner made up as a God and "visited"
the patient in a "dream". This outfit was all over the ancient world. "
- L. Ron Hubbard, Resistive Cases, Former Therapy, HCOB 23 Sep
1968.
- Former Therapy discusses drug-induced events on the Whole Track which may prevent progression in Scientology. The Whole Track is Scientology's dogma concerning eternal life.
- Hubbard shows disrespect for other religions which may use psychoactive elements in their worship. For example, several Native American tribes of the southwestern United States use peyote buttons.
- Hubbard may be referring to ancient Jewish prophets ("all over the ancient world"). One of the mechanisms by which the Hebrew prophets received messages from God was in a dream. e.g. Jer 23:28 "The prophet that hath a dream, let him tell a dream; and he that hath my word, let him speak my word faithfully."
- A summary of statements made by Hubbard describe dreams as being reactive (psychotic) rather than a pathway for messages from God.
Commentary:
Hubbard on Leadership
-
"When you move off a point of power, pay all your
obligations on the nail, empower all your friends completely and move
off with your pockets full of artillery, potential blackmail on every
erstwhile rival, unlimited funds in your private account and the
addresses of experienced assassins and go live in Bulgravia and bribe
the police." - L. Ron Hubbard, The Responsibility of Leaders,
HCO PL 12 Feb 1967.
- "A point of power" is Hubbardese for "a position of power".
- Somewhere in this rambling sentence, Hubbard moves from lawful to the unlawful.
- "Pockets full of artillery" is meant to be threat to others.
- "Unlimited funds in your private account" probably got there through stealing, which is proscribed in the Ten Commandments.
- "Assassins" is murder or conspiracy to commit murder, again proscribed in the Ten Commandments.
- "Bribe" is a form of false witness, again proscribed by the Ten Commandments.
- "For the Lord your God is the God of gods and the Lord of lords, the great, the mighty, and the awesome God . . . who does not show partiality, nor take a bribe." - Deuteronomy 10:17
Commentary:
Hubbard on Following the Law
-
"Use the rules until they prevent you from doing your
job. But if these stop you, then to *hell* with the rules! Get the show
on the road." - L. Ron Hubbard, HCOPL 19 March 1968
Scientology and Christianity
Scientology Doctrine, Christian Heresies
Gnosticism
Scientology, as told by Scientologists, means "knowing how to know". (More correctly, it means "the study of knowing", but Hubbard never felt a need for pedantic accuracy.) Thus, Scientology is a gnostic [gnosis: to know] system in every sense of the word[1]. Through training and auditing, the Scientologist is unburdened of his Reactive Mind, and attains the Godlike state of Clear and Operating Thetan, and has the power to transform matter, energy, space, and time. Attainment of Godhood through special revelation is a hallmark of Gnostic belief systems[2]Perhaps most objectionable is Hubbard's corrupt selling of spiritual salvation at steep prices. Scientology progressively demands money from the adherent for each gnosis. The adherent is given the option of either paying for the next "service" or face an existence of appalling spiritual degradation. In effect, Scientologists are spiritually held hostage by their "Church" until large sums of money have been paid.
Hubbard set up Scientology as circles within circles; a spiritual treadmill without end. If the adherent does not exhibit their new-found abilities, it is the adherent's fault (the "technology" and Hubbard are infallible) and they must re-take their courses and auditing. Of course, since it was the adherent's fault, they must again pay the "fixed donation" for the "services". Since the end product (God-like control over matter, energy, space, and time) is unattainable, the system serves to transfer sizeable sums into the Scientology organization.
- Scientology Criticized 1700 Years Ago, Peik Stromsholm, 1995. A comparison of Scientology doctrine to Tertullian's (207 A.D.) treatise "Against the Valentinians", an early Christian work describing why Gnosticism is foreign to Christianity.
- Bible Review, Steven Davies, review of Gnosticism and the New Testament by Pheme Perkins.
-
Hubbard's Ladder, Tom Joyce,
Gnosis No. 12, Summer 1989
Reincarnation
The basis of Scientology vs Dianetics lies in the concept of the "Whole Track" (See Metamorphosis to Religion), which at its basis implies a belief in "Past Lives" or reincarnation. This belief is openly presented to new adherents. Scientology claims [1] that reincarnation was at one time a Christian belief, but was removed from the Bible by a conspiracy of bishops in 553 AD. This claim is apparently common in occult texts and is patently false [2][3].
Magic and the Occult
Hubbard was active in black magic[k] prior to writing Dianetics. Corydon's cronology [1] is supported by letters from Aleister Crowley of the Ordo Templo Orientis, a magician's sect organized in Europe in the early 20th century. Atack [2] goes further by suggesting that Dianetics (and by extension, Scientology) is an extension of Hubbard's black magik "research" of that time. Gerry Armstrong [3 ], Hubbard's biographer, also confirms Hubbard's black magick rituals, as does L. Ron Hubbard, Jr.[4]. Hubbard himself confirms his links to Crowley in The Philadelphia Doctorate Course, which was written after Hubbard visited Crowley's estate and assumed the mantle of "The Beast":-
"Now, he could simply say, "I have action." A magician
- the magic cults of the eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth
centuries in the Middle East were fascinating. The only modern work
that has anything to do with them is a trifle wild in spots, but it's
fascinating work in itself, and that's work written by Aleister
Crowley, the late Aleister Crowley, my very good friend. And
he did himself a splendid piece of aesthetics built around those
magic cults. It's very interesting reading to get hold of a copy of a
book, quite rare, but it can be obtained. the Master Therion,
T-h-e-r-i-o-n, The Master Therion by Aleister Crowley. He signs
himself "The Beast"; "The Mark of the Beast, 666." Very, very
something or other, but anyway the ... Crowley exhumed a lot of the
data from these old magic cults.", The Philadelphia Doctorate
Course, L. Ron. Hubbard, Tape #18, Dec 5, 1952.
Real Audio (USA) [296K]
Real Audio (UK) [296K]
Commentary:
Although Hubbard was a devout follower of Crowley, Crowley appears to have spurned Hubbard's and Parson's "research". In a letter to another OTO member, Crowley wrote "I get fairly frantic when I contemplate the idiocy of these louts".[1]. In this "research" of the OTO 9th degree, Hubbard and Jack Parsons attempted to conjure the Anti-Christ through the "Whore of Babalon" in a sex-magick ritual at the Pasadena OTO.
Crowley/OTO supporters [5] point out that what Hubbard was doing and what he became do not represent OTO teaching. The OTO website outwardly represents the OTO as being a gnostic magician's sect. The word "Babalon" may make Jews and Christians uneasy, but it is quite possible that the OTO is decended from the traditions of the Chaldean sorcerers that are described by the Jewish prophets Daniel and Jeremiah during the Babylonian exile period ca. 600 BCE. Crowley also studied Egyptian magick and Egyptian sorcerers are mentioned in Exodus.
"The Whore of Babylon" is a reference to the Christian Book of Revelations, and is associated with the coming of the Anti-Christ, Satan's representative on Earth during The Apocalypse (end of the world) in which Satan is finally defeated. The Hebrews' Babylonian Exile period, as recorded in the prophets Daniel and Jeremiah, is associated with worldy temptations leading away from God (a goal of Satan). In the Book of Daniel, the word of God is victorious over the Chaldean sorcerers and magicians. ...and sorcery and magic bring us full-circle back to the OTO, Aleister Crowley, Hubbard, and Scientology. Sorcery and magic are specifically proscribed in both Jewish and Christian law. The Jewish Law explains that magic does not originate from God, therefore it is Man creating an idolatrous system (Deuteronomy 12(?), also Daniel 1,2). Christianity follows Judaism's lead for the same reason with references to "sorcery" in Acts and Revelations.
Whether Crowley (and by extension Hubbard) were "Satanists" is a contentious issue[6]. "Satanic" is an ambiguous term. From the Christian, Jewish, and Islamic perspective, Satan leads people away from God. In fact, Crowley and Hubbard did not worship Satan as an entity - they worshipped themselves and the power they could wield through their magick. In essence, their magick was about getting power over others and becoming God. While Crowley and Hubbard did not overtly worship Satan, they certainly forwarded Satan's agenda of leading people away from God.
Hubbard adapted Crowley's exhortation "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.", then created Scientology. Today, the Church of Scientology International, in the guise of the Religious Technology Center, controls Scientology, Orgs, and Scientologists through copyrights. If the Scientologist does not obey CSI/RTC and pay steep license fees, use of the copyrights is revoked and access is denied to the "scriptures". "Religious freedom" comes for the price of total obedience to Hubbard's organization.
Scientology doctrine contains many references to controlling or being controlled. Atack [2] lists one of Hubbard's magic self-affirmations to be "You can be merciless whenever your will is crossed and you have every right to be merciless." Hubbard directed the lives of his followers in minute detail, and exiled anyone who crossed his will to the Rehabilitation Project Force (RPF). [RPF has been variously described as either a gulag by critics or a boot camp by the "Church".]
References
-
Hubbard and the Occult, Jon Atack.
Bare Faced Messiah, Bent Corydon.
- Court record, Scientology vs. Gerry Armstrong, California.
- L. Ron Hubbard, Jr. talks about his father's Satanic rituals . alt.relgion.scientology post, Crowley ...... OTO ..... Scientology, "September Virgin" alt.relgion.scientology post, Crowley and satanism, Nick Zymaris.
Neo-Paganism
"We tend to forget that the so-called "cult" phenomenon, like the New Age movement itself, is hardly anything new: It's essentially an attempt at a "revival" of sorts of ancient pre-Christian paganism in all its forms, but merely wearing modern "clothes" --e.g., pseudo-scientific terminology, allegedly "innovative" or "new" philosophies, and the like.", sloopjohne@aol.com in a theological discussion with inducto@aol.com of Scientology in its neo-pagan context and its relationship to Christianity.
The Scientology Cross
|
|
|
| Cross from Scientology website | Crowley's Cross (Messiah or Madman?, Corydon) |
"Crowley's Cross" is found on the reverse side of the Thoth Deck [Tarot Cards] and (apparently) used in OTO magic[k] rituals. The artwork for the Thoth Deck is by Frieda Harris. The cross bears some similarities to the Golden Dawn cross, another magic[k] group which the young Crowley joined. Paul Hume, 4th degree OTO, has kindly summarized the relationships between the Golden Dawn, OTO, Crowley, and the Thoth Deck.
- Geoff Lane asks a question about the cross found on the Scientology website (above left), noting that it could be confused with Christianity.
- "Modemac" observes the similarity between Aleister Crowley's cross (above right) and the Scientology cross (above left).
- Dean Benjamin expands on Modemac.
- Ashraf Ghebranious links the cross to R6 and Hubbard's intent to use it as a mind control device.
Hubbard Maligns Christianity
Note: since Christianity accepts the Jewish Torah as Canon, see also Hubbard Maligns Judaism.Hubbard on the Origins of Christianity
-
"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. (draws on a
cigarette) 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." The Class VIII [Auditor's] Course, Lecture 10:
"Krakatoa and Beyond", Oct 3, 1968, aboard the Apollo.
Hear it in Hubbard's own words! [
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Commentary:
Hubbard on the Basis of Christianity
-
"The whole Christian movement is based on the victim.
Compulsion of the overt-motivator sequence. They won by appealing to
victims. We can win by converting victims. Christianity succeeded by
making people into victims. We can succeed by making victims into
people.", HCOB 18 July, 1959, under "Historical Note".
- According to Hubbard, victims are
at effect, which is antithetical to the objectives of Scientology
("making the able more able").
- The overt-motivator sequence
is Scientology
jargon . According to Hubbard, thinking bad thoughts about
someone is a "motivator" to commit an overt act against that person.
Since Christ was crucifed (an overt), there must be a bad thought
preceding it. Perhaps Hubbard is saying people compulsively join
Christianity because they are sorry for their overt against Christ
because their bad thoughts (sin) caused his crucifixion.
- While Christ was certainly a victim,
Hubbard misses the point of Christianity - that God came to us to
offer reconciliation, and that Christ's death satisfied the Jewish
laws regarding atonement for sins (See Paul's letter to the Hebrews).
Hubbard mocks Christ's "victimhood" as being powerlessness (again
entirely missing the point).
- Christianity does not teach
Christians to be victims, as Hubbard implies. However, scripture is
full of repressed peoples, hoping for God's deliverance (e.g. the
Hebrews in Egypt, Babylon, the Maccabees, the Jews under Roman
domination, etc.)
Commentary:
Hubbard on the Roman Catholic Church
-
"The Roman Catholic Church, through watching the
dramatizations of people picked up some little fragments of R6."
The Class VIII [Auditor's] Course, Lecture 10: "Krakatoa and Beyond",
Oct 3, 1968, aboard the Apollo.
- "Dramatizations" are the actions that
people perform in response to their engrams or false memories.
Hubbard's theory of R6 includes the command "to forget" and Hubbard
is claiming that parts of R6 occasionally surface. The Roman Catholic
Church apparently saw these and invented Christianity. Note that
Hubbard's time line is incorrect; Christianity preceeded the Church
of Rome. Of course, the Churches in Greece and other parts of Asia
Minor also escape Hubbard's attention. Choosing the Church of Rome as
the progenitor of Christianity is like saying clams were the
progenitors of human beings (which Hubbard also happened to claim in
History of Man).
- This reference is quite close to the
previous reference and could be another interpretation of the same
passage. However, the mention of the Roman Catholic Church by name
makes this sentence appear to be unique and therefore genuine.
Commentary:
Hubbard on the Leaders of the Christian Church
-
" Also the Christian Church used (and uses) implanting
(with a squirrel version of the "7s"). These gangsters were the
Nicomidians from lower Egypt who were chased out for criminal
practices (implanting officials). They took over the Niocene Creed
before the year zero, invented Christ (who comes from the crucifixion
in R6 75m years ago) and implanted their way to "power". The original
Nicomidians date about 600 BC and people who were Christ date at 75m
years ago. " - L. Ron Hubbard, Resistive Cases, Former Therapy,
HCOB 23 Sep 1968.
- Not known for his technical accuracy,
Hubbard surpasses himself in this passage. Hubbard's knowledge of
Christianity was quite limited, and it shows in this and other
writings on the subject.
- The Niocene[sic] Creed was ratified
at the First Ecumenical Council in 325 A.D. in the Constantinople
suburb of Nicea, thus the name Nicene. Hubbard misstates both the
time and place.
- Hubbard has the chain of events
perfectly backward in an attempt to invalidate Christianity. In
fact, Christianity existed first, then met at Nicea, and created
the Creed.
- Nicea and Constantinople (today
Iznik and Istanbul) are in Turkey, which is of course in Asia Minor
and not in lower Egypt. Nicomidia[sic] is really "Nicomedia" and
was located next to Nicea.
- The Nicene Creed is a statement of
belief that is common to all Christian churches. It cannot be
"taken over" any more than the Gospel of Matthew can be "taken
over".
- The Nicene Creed expresses the
Christian belief in God as a Trinity (Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit). This belief is unique to Christianity. The Christian
Church could not "take over" the Nicene Creed because the Creed
could not exist before Christianity.
- There were no Christ ca 1 A.D,
therefore there were no Christians in Byzantium, therefore there
was no Creed to be "taken" by the Nicomedians that were not in
lower Egypt.
- There is no year zero; January 1, 1
A.D. follows December 31, 1 B.C. (of course the contemporary
calendar of the time was the Roman "ab urbe condita" calendar, as
modified by Julius Caesar in the 40's B.C., and the B.C./A.D.
system was only superimposed on these dates later).
- The Niocene[sic] Creed was ratified
at the First Ecumenical Council in 325 A.D. in the Constantinople
suburb of Nicea, thus the name Nicene. Hubbard misstates both the
time and place.
- The reference to Egypt may stem from
Hubbard's mentor, Aleister Crowley, who studied Egyptian magick
cults. Hubbard studied these same cults prior to writing Dianetics.
One of the bishops at the Council of Nicea was from Egypt, which
could also explain Hubbard's misperception.
- Consistent with other Advanced
Technology passages, Hubbard asserts that Christ never existed
and is part of R6, the bad movies that were shown to everyone
on Earth 75 million years ago. Thus, according to Hubbard, the real
Crucifixion occurred 75 million years ago and is only an implant
(false memory).
- Hubbard's "proof" of R6 is based on
auditing engrams. However,
"An Experimental Investigation of Hubbard's Engram Hypothesis
(Dianetics)", showed that Hubbard could not retrieve an engram,
therefore his R6 hypothesis is baseless. There is no physical
evidence in the fossil record from 75 mya for R6's hydrogen bombs.
- The 7s refers to a Scientology
auditing process.
- squirrel refers to altered
Scientology technology. Hubbard and Scientology does not allow
religious dissent; standing orders are to "smash the squirrels" -
persecute non-orthodox splinter groups into bankruptcy.
- "implanted their way to 'power'"
deserves some translation from Hubbardese. "implanted" refers to the
coerced insertion of false memories into someone to achieve control.
Thus, Hubbard implies that the Christian Church exerts mind control
over its followers. It is untrue that the Christian Church in general
and as a matter of doctrine uses mind control. Indeed, the reverse
may be true; Bob Penny, former Scientology member, wrote an essay on
Social Control in Scientology, which is found in the FACTNet
archive.
- "power" is the highest condition in
Hubbard's Ethics system. To be in power means to be at cause over
others.
Commentary:
Hubbard on Heaven
-
"For a long while, some people have been cross with me
for my lack of co-operation in believing in a Christian Heaven, God
and Christ. I have never said I didn't disbelieve in a Big Thetan but
there was certainly something very corny about Heaven et al. Now I
have to apologize. There was a Heaven. Not too unlike, in cruel
betrayal, the heaven of the Assassins in the 12th Century who, like
everyone else, dramatized the whole track implants - if a bit more
so. The symbol of the crucified Christ is very apt indeed. It's the
symbol of a thetan betrayed.", - L. Ron Hubbard, HCOB 11 May, 1963
- Apparently, Hubbard had been denying
God and Christ for quite some time, upsetting Scientologists who were
Christian.
- Hubbard employs a triple negative
("never said I didn't disbelieve"). While this might be expected in a
lecture, HCOBs are written on paper and are presumably proofread by
Hubbard. Hubbard may be slyly saying that he does not believe in God
while making it sound like he might.
- Hubbard says the Christian believe in
the wrong kind of Heaven, that Heaven is a betrayal. In
HCOB 11 May, 1963 [at end of post], Hubbard talks about Heaven as
a series of implants, the earlier version looking beautiful, but a
later version looking shabby and unkempt. Note that Hubbard says
"there was [emphasis added] a heaven", implying it no longer
exists.
Commentary:
Hubbard Again on Heaven
-
"Further, we have our hands on an appalling bit of
technology where the world is concerned. With rapidity and a Meter it
can be shown that Heaven is a false dream and that the old religion
was based on very painful lie, cynical betrayal." - L. Ron Hubbard,
HCOB 11 May, 1963
-
HCOB 11 May, 1963 [at end of post] describes an implant
[false memory] that Hubbard claims to have "discovered". Hubbard says
this implant lies at the root of religion's "appearance of insanity".
Heaven is vividly described in the implant, which at first appears
like Bush Gardens in Pasadena. Hubbard then describes a "shabby" form
of Heaven, which has been transformed by "one trillion years" of
betrayal. Hubbard finishes with the above quote.
- Like many of Hubbard's works, HCOB 11
May, 1963 contains gratuitous insults to other religions. Hubbard
(and by extension Scientology) maligns other religions in their
upper-level courses while publicly claiming to be "tolerant" of other
religions.
Commentary:
Hubbard on the Cross and Christ
-
"Religion does much to keep the assumption in
restimulation, being basically a control mechanism used by those who
have sent the preclear into a body. You will find the cross as a
symbol all over the universe, and the Christ legend as implant
in preclears a million years ago.", Professional Auditors
Bulletins, vol. 2, p. 26 , copyright 1954.
- Here, Hubbard claims that the cross
is a common symbol. Taken with Hubbard's teaching of Past Lives,
the implication is that the cross is just part of the baggage we
carry around in our Reactive Mind. Thus, it's appearance in
Christianity is spurious. This is at odds with the historical record;
this form of execution is documented outside of Christianity.
- Again Hubbard asserts that Christ is
a myth, a false memory.
Commentary:
Hubbard on the "Chaos" caused by Christ
-
"A few operating thetans - scarcity - could lead to
trouble. Witness the chaos resulting from the activities and
other-determinism technology of one operating thetan 2,000 years
ago." - PAB 31, Duplication
- The Professional Auditor's
Bulletins are a primary source of information for Scientology
Auditors or spiritual counsellors.
- Tom Voltz, ex-Scientologist who
helped compile the PABs, comments on other
anti-Christian writings in the PABs.
Commentary:
Hubbard on Christ's Spiritual Authority
-
"Neither Lord Buddha nor Jesus Christ were OTs
according to evidence. They were just a shade above clear".
Certainty magazine, Vol 5 #10.
- OTs are Scientology's highest
spiritual level, and Clears are at the next lower rung. Scientology
"technology" transforms people into Clears by the tens of thousands,
all of whom are spiritual equals to Jesus Christ, whom Christians
hold to be God incarnate on Earth. Thus, Scientology claims to be
able to create God.
- While I must admit a lack of
understanding with respect to Buddhism, the implication that
Scientology produces hundreds of Buddha every year is extraordinary.
If there are Buddhists who would like to explain Hubbard's statement
on Buddha in the context of their religion, I'd be happy to put it
here.
Commentary:
Hubbard on Love
-
"Love, if you have ever noticed, does not much care
where it sites on the tone-scale as we find a young man deeply in
love starving himself to death (a characteristic of apathy) and a
young girl in love in dreamy enthusiasm which makes her bloom. We
find love used in Christianity about twelve feet below 0.0 [death]
and in New York precisely at 2.5 on the tone scale." Professional
Auditor's Bulletin No. 8, "Viewpoint Processing, p. 50 in _PABs_
Book 1, May 1953 to April 1954.
-
See the Scientology Tone Scale
- Hubbard states that Christian love is
lower-toned than death. On the Tone Scale, death is below other
emotions such as antagonism, hostility, anger, and hate. In effect,
Hubbard says that hate and anger are preferable to Christian love.
- For those that missed it inside
Hubbard's ramblings, Hubbard says that Christian love is
significantly lower-toned (more evil) than the love of New Yorkers. I
am not sure who should be more offended, Christians or New Yorkers.
Commentary:
Hubbard on the Soul
-
"Now we say this thing called a thetan is capable of
producing all sorts of things, and we say this is THE person. So
therefore, we differ enormously from the Christian statements on the
subject. They say, 'you, son, must save your soul.' The fellow says,
'I don't have one!' So therefore, the christian religion cannot
possibly be true...and they lose all kinds of converts this way.
Somebody saving his soul is doing something very interesting. He
evidently has something set up over here, that has probably, mass,
that he says is his soul! And then he goes about saving it and it
turns out to be a demon circuit called "Mama," or something. Now he
expects THIS to go to heaven. (laughs)", Clearing Congress Lecture
(videotape), L. Ron Hubbard, 1958. [113KB
streaming Real Audio] [113KB
Real Audio]
- Scientology doctrine states that
concept of the soul is a demon circuit. This is incompatible with
Christianity.
- "mama" is a reference to Freud about
which he was speaking earlier in the lecture.
Commentary:
Hubbard on the "Christ Game"
-
"You'll find, by the way, another man at this stage,
and his preclears will shift the identities and borrow facsimilies.
Like men, there's what they call 'The ChristGame' and that game has
been played and played and played and play..., honest to Pete, these
cards are just so thin, they've been laid down amongst the coffee
cups, and so forth, of the whole universe. You'll find out thousands
of years before the year 1 AD, Earth, you will have facsimilies and
dolls made up like Christ. Fact one: a million years ago is
occasionally rigged with Christ and the devil and an angel. It's a
fascinating thing, it's an old game. Here on Earth, there was
undoubtably a Christ. One of the reasons he was ... he swept in so
suddenly ah, and he, he would go forward so hard, is he had a good
assist back of him in terms of an implant.", Philadelphia
Doctorate Course, Tape #24, L. Ron Hubbard, 1952. [Real
Audio]
- Hubbard claims that Jesus Christ was real, but
that Christianity was established not because of merit, but because
Christ triggered an implant [false memory]. This is similar to his
"Man on the cross, there was no Christ" statement.
- A facsimile is a "mental image
picture", or false memory. "shift the identities and borrow
facsimiles" refers to Hubbard's concept which is similar to Multiple
Personality Disorder or schizophrenia.
- Here, Hubbard states that it is
common for people think they are Christ since the Whole Track (a
person's history of reincarnation) has events of this type. These
events have occurred to a great many people a great number of times
to the point that Hubbard calls The Crucifixion "a game".
- Hubbard's cosmology includes periods
trillions of years ago in which spirits, having no bodies of their
own, inhabited doll bodies. Recall that Hubbard was a science fiction
writer.
- In the PDC and elsewhere, Hubbard
mentions "Christ and the devil and an angel" combination.
Commentary:
Refuting Scientology's Compatibility Claims
Controversy on alt.religion.scientology: Is Scientology Compatible with Christianity?
- Andrew Milne forwards the claim that Scientology is compatible with Christianity. Mr. Milne is a paid public relations person for the "Church" of Scientology, an editor and contributor to Scientology's Freedom magazine.
- The "Church" of Scientology rebuts Mr. Milne in their statement to the IRS.
- Rogue Agent rebuts Mr. Milne
- Rogue Agent rebuts again.
- Jeff Jacobsen rebuts Milne.
- Dennis Erlich adds this insight. Note: Dennis Erlich, OT7, is a defrocked minister whose credentials include overseeing the remedial training ("cramming") of auditors at Flag, Scientology's premier training facility. Dennis' house was raided and personal possessions seized by Scientology for alleged copyright violations. His vitriol toward the Church and its paid agents is understandable in this context.
- Steve Whitlach' personal story.
- Steve Fishman suggests that Scientology audits out belief in God.
- Keith Cochran finds that Scientologists are ethically bound to reject Christianity after certification.
- Hakan Jarva summarizes anti-Christian and anti-God passages from Ability, HCOBs, The Philadelphia Doctorate Course, and the Professional Auditor's Bulletin.
- Dennis Erlich finds an LRH rant in Scientology 8-8008
- Rebecca Hartong contrasts the teachings of Scientology and the Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church .
After attaining OT VIII, the Scientologist has come to accept that God not only does not exist, but also believes that God is just another implant that must be audited out like any other false memory. In this manner, Scientology binds the minds of its believers, then warehouses their spirits for the remainder of their life. From the Christian point of view, Hubbard's system is evil to the extreme; Scientology is a system of spiritual treadmills away from God.
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