When you think
satanism, images of pierced, black-clad youths gathering at night, listening to
hardcore death metal music and sacrificing animals may come to mind.
But you might be
surprised to learn that many satanists are a lot more interested in community
activism and individual freedoms than heavy metal or performing bizarre rites.
Here are a few things
you might not know about satanism:
Most satanists aren't devil worshipers
Surprisingly, most
card-carrying satanists do not worship Satan or any other form of the devil --
they are actually atheists. The Church of Satan, founded in the mid-1960s, explains it this way on its website:
"Satan to us is a symbol of pride, liberty and individualism, and it
serves as an external metaphorical projection of our highest personal
potential. We do not believe in Satan as a being or person."
The Church of Satan
puts the individual at the center of the universe, what high priest Peter
Gilmore describes as going from an "a-theist" to an
"I-theist."
The
Satanic Temple, which formed in recent years to fight a perceived
intrusion of Christian values on American politics, says, "we do not
promote a belief in a personal Satan. To embrace the name Satan is to embrace
rational inquiry removed from supernaturalism and archaic tradition-based
superstitions."
They are OK with celebrating Christmas
Why would satanists be
OK with celebrating the birth of Jesus? Because, the Church of Satan claims, "Christians
stole this holiday from the pagans -- Santa Claus has come to signify
indulgence, and he is a combination of Dionysos and Silenus from Roman and
Greek myths."
"So for the Yule
holiday season we enjoy the richness of life and the company of people whom we
cherish, as we will often be the only ones who know where the traditions really
came from!"
Michael Mars, a
Detroit artist and member of the Satanic Temple, says he celebrates Christmas,
but not as a day to commemorate Jesus' birth.
"I personally
just view it as more of a time to be with my family," he told CNN's Lisa
Ling. He, like other members of the Satanic Temple, has no problem with other
religions' holidays.
"I feel like
everyone should have the right to celebrate their religion," Mars said,
"but every voice has to be heard."
Satanist: 'Every voice has to be heard' 01:30
You won't find a satanic church in your community
The Church of Satan
doesn't have actual church buildings, because "that would be against our
individualist approach to living," its website says. For a short time, its founder Anton LaVey used
his San Francisco home as the church's headquarters, where he performed
rituals. Now, the church is based in New York, and its headquarters is not open
to visitors.
The Church of Satan
once had "grottos," or local chapters, but it disbanded those after
deeming them "unnecessary."
"When we have
events, they are private and at times discussed later, such as the conclave in Washington, D.C.,
that marked the beginning of celebrations for our 50th year of existence,"
Gilmore explains.
The Satanic Temple has
chapters in at least a dozen locations in the United States, as well as Finland
and Italy, but it also does not have permanent physical temples.
The temple had
difficulty finding a temporary location for the unveiling of its massive Baphomet statue in Detroit
this summer: Threats and protests caused the owners of several
locations to back out. It finally found a venue, but it had to keep the
location secret -- even from those attending -- until the night of the event,
because of security concerns.
There was a "satanic panic" in the 1980s and '90s
In the 1980s and
1990s, American talk shows and news programs linked reports of animal sacrifice
and ritualistic killing to satanic worship. Slate.com, which explored the
"satanic ritual abuse panic," reported in January 2014 that
it all began with allegations of bizarre rites and molestation at a California
preschool -- a story that took on a life of its own with the advent of the
24-hour news cycle:
• As televangelists
prayed for deliverance from Satan's scourge, talk show "experts"
claimed that every imaginable form of abuse was happening on a massive scale in
America and that networks of Satanists had infiltrated schools, the police, and
local government. Geraldo Rivera claimed in a televised 1987 special report
that more than a million satanists were plying their evil trade in America
right at the very moment. (He has since apologized.) In 1989, Oprah Winfrey
interviewed Michelle Smith and another woman who claimed to have recovered
memories of being abused by a satanic cult; Sally Jesse Raphael, not to be
outdone, ran two shows on the subject.
The California
preschool trial ended with no convictions and an FBI report concluding that the
satanic ritual abuse allegations were not credible. But, as Slate.com pointed
out, that didn't put an end to the concerns: "A Redbook magazine survey
conducted in 1994 found that fully 70 percent of Americans believed that
satanic ritual abuse was real."
It probably didn't
help that at the time, many American teens were listening to heavy metal bands
that intertwined their rebellious music with satanic imagery and songs about
the devil.
This demonic-looking mascot appears on album
covers for the heavy metal band Dio, popular in the '80s and '90s.
Symbolism and art are important
While satanism may
eschew holy sites, gods and other tenets that are sacred to most religions, it
places a high value on symbolism and art.
The Satanic Temple has
used symbols of Satan to draw attention to what it sees as the hypocrisy of
Christian symbols on government property. For years, it petitioned to have a
massive Baphomet statue -- a goat-headed symbol of Satan -- in the Oklahoma
state Capitol, which was home to a Ten Commandments statue.
This summer, Oklahoma's state Supreme Court ruled that
the Ten Commandments statue had to be removed, and the Satanic
Temple took its statue to Detroit. Now, the temple is petitioning to
have Baphomet on display next to a planned Ten Commandments monument in
Little Rock, Arkansas.
After learning of
plans to display a nativity scene to commemorate Christmas at Michigan's state
Capitol last year, the Satanic Temple placed what
it called a "snaketivity scene" on the Capitol grounds.
The 3-foot-tall sculpture featured a snake wrapped around a cross with the
message, "The Greatest Gift is Knowledge."
"There's nothing
wrong with (having a nativity scene on government property) ... if other
religions can be accepted as well," said Michael Mars, who helped create
the satanic display. "There can't be one dominating voice to all the
voices."
The display got a lot
of news coverage and, Mars said, "a lot of people threatened to destroy
it. But for the most part, I felt like it was met with acceptance and
curiosity."
The Church of Satan
also incorporates art into its practice, although for very different reasons
than the more community activist-driven Satanic Temple.
"Symbols are
essentially natural human constructs," explains Gilmore, the Church of
Satan high priest, who recently curated an exhibit and book called
"The Devils Reign," featuring satanic-themed art.
"Satanists feel
that we should proudly admire this most precious human capacity without the
need to use mythological figures as distancing intermediaries."
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