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Rogério Coelho |
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How the
Devil
was born
The
Devil
was
killed
and
buried
by the
Spiritist
knowledge
Part 1
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"(...)
To believe
that
God
created
a being
forever
doomed
to
evil,
a
stubborn
saboteur
of
His
work,
is
naïve
and it
almost
reaches
the most
sordid
blasphemy”.
François
C.
Liran
Satan,
Demo,
Beelzebub,
Bad
Thing,
Lucifer,
the Bug,
foot-Cracked,
Demon,
Belphegor
such
are the
names
that
famously
designate
the
Devil,
being
the last
one (Belphegor)
created
by Jean
Weier.
The
shortsighted
Church
authorities
allowed
these
names to
spread
within
the Catholic
circles
to name
the
antipodes
holders
of
Well,
giving
them
(amazingly!)
the
"status"
of
God’s
rivals!
Even
Goethe,
for
his
Faust,
increased
the
already
abundant
denominations
to
designate
the Dark
Lord,
calling
him
Mephistopheles,
Lord of
the
vandals
and the
perverse…
This
fearful
being is
created
by ill
minds
and
soaked
by
inferior
interests;
a living
legend
and the
true
anti-hero,
whose
image
still
today is
preserved
in the
Christian
imagination;
such
an evil
creature
has
been an
excellent
aid
to the
medieval
and
contemporary
religions
that
need
this
kind of
terrorism
to
still
their
naive
sheep
in the
narrow
and
barren
folds
of
dogmatism.
Such
terrorism
acquires
dramatic
contours
when
extrapolating
the
boundaries
of the
physical
world,
invading
the
Spiritual
World,
in
which,
through
idioplasty
makes
the
disembodied
creatures
with
mental
cliches
and
nurtured
by
themselves
end up
getting
face to
face
with
this
demonic
Entity,
which is
actually
the
fantasy
of
some
evil
Spirit
that in
this
manner
terrorizes
his
helpless
and
gullible
victim.
(1)
The same
ecclesiastical
institutions
that had
Spiritist
books
burnt,
approved
(coherently)
the book
of
Collin
Plancy,
which
contains
detailed
description
of
various
demons.
MENTAL
CLICHES
Silas
explains
that the
macabre
ideas of
demeaning
magic,
namely
those
regarding
witchcraft
and
demonism
that the
so
called
Christian
churches
spreads
on the
pretext
of
fighting
them,
keeping
beliefs
and
superstitions,
with
spellcasting
and
exorcisms,
generate
demonic
mental
cliches
affecting
the weak
brains
of the
unprepared
disembodied,
who
believe
in such
absurdities,
establishing
hallucinatory
epidemics
of fear.
On the
other
hand,
the
disembodied
intelligences,
inclined
to evil,
use
these
frames
supported
and
spread
on Earth
by
fetishist
literature
and
preaching
lacking
vigilance,
and give
them a
temporary
vitality,
in the
same
manner
as the
pencil
of an
artist
takes
advantage
of the
fantasies
of a
child,
and
draws
images
to
impress
the
child's
mind.
It is
therefore
clear
and easy
to
"recognize
that
every
heart
builds
the
hell
that
imprisons
it,
according
to
its own
works.
Thus, we
have
with us,
the
demons
we want,
according
to the
chosen
costume
or
modeled
by
ourselves",
concludes
Silas.
But if
God
is the
Infinite
Goodness
-
and
that
we
cannot
doubt -
how
could a
Being,
who
was
His
antithesis,
originate
from
Him, the
Supreme
God?
Such
was the
controversy
that
arose
within
the
Catholic
Church
in the
early
Middle-Ages.
But
St.
Augustine
(now
redeemed
by the
Spiritist
knowledge)
presented,
at that
time,
a
solution
that
satisfied
the
"lucid"
medieval
minds:
free
will.
According
to this
Father
of the
Church,
the
closer
a
creature
is to
God,
the
greater
is
his
intelligence
and
freedom
of
choice.
And
in
the use
of such
freedom
even
the
Avatars
of the
highest
rank,
the most
perfect
creations
of the
Almighty,
may
freely
choose
between
right
and
wrong.
LUCIFER
Thus,
the
Devil is
none
other
than the
Angel of
Light
(Lucifer),
who made
the
wrong
choice
(!?),
taking
with him
a whole
cohort
of
courtiers
and
acolytes.
Such
Augustinian
theory
does not
prevail
these
days
when
Spiritism
explains
that the
Spirit
does not
retrograde.
St.
Augustine's
imagination
(the
Holy
Incarnate
Augustine
in the
Middle-Ages,
at that
time,
was not
yet
enlightened
by
Spiritism)
goes
further:
with his
philosophical
concept
of LIGHT
(the
biblical
"Fiat
Lux")
he
considers
the
initial
moment
of the
divine
action
like the
daylight.
By
contrast,
the
demoniac
hours
are the
darkness
of the
night,
the
period
when
evil
acts
with all
its
power,
thus
originating
the
expression
“Spirit
of
Darkness”.
This
Devilish
mythological
figure,
preserved
in the
bland
salt of
the
dogmas
generated
in the
sterile
womb of
the
Church,
experienced
the
height
of its
fame and
glory
with St.
Thomas
Aquinas,
who put
him on a
pedestal
of such
striking
importance
that his
presence
in
religion
competed
and
often
overcame
God’s
presence
thus
establishing
a wave
of
terror.
In a
preaching
of less
than
twenty
minutes,
certain
religious
leaders
(blind
leading
the
blind)
mention
the word
"Devil"
more
than a
few
dozen
times,
and the
images
of God
and
Jesus
are then
dimmed
or
completely
null.
It is
necessary
to go
back
some
centuries
to be
able to
watch
the
birth of
the
Devil,
because
already
at the
time of
Jesus,
according
to a
record
by Mark,
The
Gentle
Rabbi
was
accused
of
partnering
with him:
"(...)
through
the
prince
of
demons
expels
the
demons".
The
Devil is
the
anti-hero
created
in order
to
frighten
and
submit
the
ignorant
people
to the
absurd
dogmas
and
maintain
the "status"
of the
priestly
caste
with its
ancestral
parasitism.
THE
DAIMON
OF
SOCRATES
The word
demon,
from “daemon",
originated
in
ancient
Greece,
did not
mean
then
genius
of
darkness.
The
Master
of Leon
reminds
us that
this
word did
not have
the evil
meaning
in
ancient
times as
it has
today,
because
it did
not
exclusively
designate
evil
beings,
but all
Spirits
in
general,
among
which
were the
High
Spirits
called
gods,
and the
less
enlightened,
or
demons,
who
communicated
directly
with
men.
Socrates
claimed
to be
intimate
with a "daemon"
with who
he
learned
high
philosophical
concepts,
and
stated
that
after
death,
the
daemon
(here a
Protecting
Spirit),
who
stood by
us
during
our
life,
leads us
to a
place
where
all
those
that
have to
be
conducted
to Hades
were
gathered,
to be
judged.
The
Master
of Lyons
studied
this
subject
at
length
in
Chapters
IX and X
of the
basic
book, "Heaven
and Hell",
where
with his
usual
forceful
and
undeniable
logic
concludes
that to
believe
in the
existence
of such
a being
would
result
in the
following
tragic
and
unacceptable
corollary:
God made
a
mistake,
thus, we
arrive
to the
absurd
conclusion:
God is
not
infallible
(!?).
THE GOOD
AND EVIL
With the
scope
of his
lucid
reasoning,
Allan
Kardec
takes us
to the
root of
the
Devil
when he
approaches
the old
issue of
Good and
Evil. He
says:
“Being
it
proven
and
patent
the
struggle
between
Good
and
Evil,
the
latter
often
triumphing,
and not
being
able to
rationally
accept
that
Evil
originated
from a
Good
power,
we
conclude
that
there
are two
rival
powers
governing
the
world.
Hence
the
doctrine
of the
two
principles
was
born,
incidentally
logic
at a
time
when
man
was
still
unable,
by
reasoning,
to
understand
the
essence
of the
Supreme
Being.
How
could he
then
understand
that
Evil is
merely a
transitory
state
from
which
Good
can
emanate,
leading
him
to
happiness
through
suffering
and
helping
him
progress?
The
limits
of man’s
moral
horizon,
nothing
allowing
him to
see
beyond
his
present,
in the
past as
in the
future,
also did
not
allow
him to
realize
that he
had
already
progressed,
that he
would
progress
even
individually,
let
alone
that the
vicissitudes
of life
resulted
from the
imperfections
of the
Spiritual
being,
residing
in him,
which
pre-exists
and
survives
the body
in
several
cleansing
lives
until he
reaches
perfection.
To
understand
how Good
can
result
from
Evil, it
is
necessary
to
consider
not one
but many
lives;
it is
necessary
to grasp
the
whole of
which -
and only
which –
clearly
results
in
causes
and
their
effects.
Both the
principles
of Good
and Evil
were,
for many
centuries
and
under
various
names,
the
basis of
all
religious
beliefs.
We see
it so
synthesized
in
Oromase
and
Ahriman
among
the
Persians,
and in
Jehovah
and
Satan
among
the
Hebrews.
However,
as every
sovereign
has
ministers,
religions
generally
admitted
secondary
powers,
the Good
and Evil
geniuses.
The
pagans
made of
them
individualities
with the
generic
name of
gods and
gave
them
special
powers
for good
and for
evil,
for
vices
and
virtues.
Christians
and
Muslims
have
inherited
angles
and
demons
from the
Hebrew.
We
easily
conclude,
therefore,
that the
doctrine
of
demons
comes
from the
ancient
belief
of two
principles:
good and
evil".
The fact
that
allowed
the
genesis
of the
doctrine
of the
demons
was the
total
medieval
ignorance
that
then
existed
about
the true
attributes
of God:
One,
Eternal,
Immutable,
Immaterial,
Omnipotent,
Supremely
Just and
Good,
Infinite
in all
perfections.
Such is
the axis
around
which -
necessarily
- every
philosophical
or
doctrinal
concept
has to
turn to,
if it
wants to
align
itself
with the
truth
and with
logic.
THE
HEBREW
GOD
In a
tour in
the
History
of
Ancient
Civilizations
accompanied
by the
to the
historian
Carlos
Roberto
F.
Nogueira,
based on
his book
"The
Devil in
the
Christian
Imaginary",
EDUSC,
and in
Savio
Laterce’s
company
too,
Master
in
Philosophy
from the
IFCS-UFRJ,
in his
excellent
article
published
in the
Jornal
do
Brazil,
edition
of
06.30.2001,
we can
see the
eternal
and
endless
fight of
Evil
against
Good,
with
their
respective
armies
and
weapons
of
combat,
as well
as the
distinct
amphibological
characteristic
of the
gods,
since
among
the
ancients
Eastern
peoples,
certain
gods
already
incorporated
destructive,
negative
powers,
and -
invariably
-
carried
a
specific
typical
logic of
the
myth,
which
already
marked
them:
the
ambiguity.
Baal was
at the
same
time the
Mesopotamian
god of
the
storm
and of
fertility.
Hades
represented
the
Greek
deity
that
protected
the
thieves
and also
guarded
flocks.
Apollo,
the
Greek
god of
beauty,
music
and
balance,
had his
obscure
facet
linked
to
divination
rituals,
to the
lack of
clarity
in the
words
and to
summary
punishments.
Even the
Hebrew
God of
the Old
Testament
follows
the same
line:
it's
good,
but only
to those
who are
good and
friendly
to Him,
and is
strongly
jealous
and
vengeful.
The
reason
for such
dichotomy
is not
difficult
to
foresee:
the
reports
on the
origin
of the
Universe
in
different
cultures
reveal
that it
is
necessary
to unite
constructive
and
organizing
forces,
with
creative
spurts
in
several
directions
to
perform
the
task.
The
Hebrew
culture,
which
left its
inheritance
to the
Christian
religion
bathed
in the
rich
cultural
broth of
primitive
and
ancestral
cults.
"The
Jewish
people,"
-
explains
Laterce
-
"connected
by roots
to
Mesopotamia
and to
polytheism,
set,
around
the
sixth
century
BC,
Yahweh
as the
only God
and the
most
perfect
one of
the gods
of other
cultures.
Permanently
harassed
by
Persians,
Babylonians
and
Mesopotamians,
the
foreign
and
unknown
is to
the
Hebrews
a
threat.
The
stranger
turns
the
place of
second
order
deities
and also
the
territory
of the
enemy,
which in
Hebrew
means
Satan.
But
along
with the
promise
of the
hereafter
and the
dualistic
idea of
two
worlds -
influences
of
Persian
and
Chaldeans,
come the
concepts
of
Heaven
and
Hell,
the most
marked
division
between
good and
evil and
also
some
myths
that
narrate
the
journey
to a
higher
world,
celestial...
God is
one, but
Evil is
dispersed
in a
grouping
of
Entities.
(Continued
in the
next
issue.)
- KARDEC, Allan. The Book of Spirits. 88th ed. Rio [de Janeiro]: FEB, 2006, question 118.
- KARDEC, Allan. The Gospel According to Spiritism. 129th ed. Rio [de Janeiro]: FEB, 2009, – Introduction.
- KARDEC, Allan. Heaven and Hell. 51st ed. Rio [de Janeiro]: FEB, 2003, IX, items 4 to 6.
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