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In the Shadow of the New Age:
Decoding the Findhorn Foundation
J. P. Greenaway
London, England:
Finderne Publishing. 385 page paperback.
Reviewed by
Frank MacHovec, Ph.D.
John Greenaway
is a British lawyer whose interest in New Age religion took him to
Scotland’s Findhorn Foundation, considered by many to be Europe’s Esalen. This
book details his spiritual journey that included “several short stays” at
Findhorn, meditation with a Carmelite monk as “spiritual director,” and
“supplementary direction from Tibetan Buddhist sources.” It is also a detailed
history of the New Age from pre-World War II. Greenaway concludes that New Age
religion is socially divisive, blocks understanding by those of differing
spiritual paths, and undermines genuine spiritual renewal.”
There is a
lengthy 12-page Preface that could have been Chapter 1. There are 22 chapters
of varying lengths from Chapter 8 at three pages and Chapter 15 at 70 pages. The
bibliography uses an unusual 4-column format, and there is a detailed 13-page
two-column index. Greenaway considers the Findhorn Foundation “a highly
distorted and commercialized version of the Ancient Wisdom” (p. 19). He
describes a major weakness in many cults and sects, absolute certainty they have
spiritual truth though it is based on very little or highly speculative data.
“Human potential practitioners make their own methods sound more unique than
they actually are” (67). Most are actually spin-offs of historical movements
such as Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, or Islam but hybrid versions
with very little originality or authentic historical concepts. Greenaway
comments that the Findhorn Foundation was “never any good at historical
scholarship” (21) but followed the dictum “we create our own reality,” a
“megalomaniac doctrine” of “New Age psychospirituality, excited hyper-theosophy”
and a “wacky package” of “California occultism” (21-25).
Chapter 1
traces Findhorn’s roots to Peter Caddy; this is useful information, but six
pages are devoted to commenting on a 70-pound cabbage claimed to have grown “by
spirit force.” There are misleading examples or errors when the book wanders off
its focus on New Age movements. Empedocles is linked to acupuncture, more
Chinese than Greek, and Pythagoras to prana, shakti, and chi mixing Hindu and
Chinese origins (13). Greek culture is said to have centered in
Alexandria, Egypt not Athens, Greece (12). Chapter 2 is a historical overview of
the New Age movement in four phases, from Blavatsky’s theosophy to humanistic
psychology then to the human potential movement in the 1960s and prosperity
consciousness since the 1980s. Chapter 3 updates the Findhorn Foundation from
the 3-year visit by David Spangler of California after Peter Caddy dropped out
in 1979. Spangler introduced channeling and group consciousness. Greenaway
feels Spangler’s work resulted in disenchantment for many members who left the
program.
In Chapter 4
history is again reported but this time in waves. The first wave began
1914-1919 with Aleister Crowley and peaked in the 1950s. The second wave was in
the 1960s energized by the “third force” of humanistic psychology. The third
wave began with Esalen’s Big Sur program and continued in the 1980s
prosperity consciousness. This material belongs in Chapter 2. There is more
history in Chapter 5 but with some subjective bias. Maslow and Rogers are
referred to as “the seminal influences” of the human potential movement. Timothy
Leary and others like him would have been better examples. He credits Rogers
with developing group therapy (68), but he was but one of many who used group
methods. He charges “Rogerian attitudes hinder maturation and development
‘growth’ workshops are supposed to be about” (68), but Rogers’ major emphasis
was on self-awareness and personal growth. Rogers takes another hit for
espousing empathy and unconditional positive regard “teetering on the edge of
the manic” (72). Does this mean the Good Samaritan was just manic? “We create
our own reality” is misattributed to Maslow. It is a basic tenet of
existentialism that preceded Maslow.
Humanistic
psychology and the human potential movement are criticized for “a curious lack
of foundation, a relative absence of historical sense and historically guided
coordination despite much pre-occupation with groundedness” (71). Not true.
They were “the third force” against the first two, psychoanalysis and
behaviorism, which denied or minimized free will and the
potential to overcome instinctive
drives and conditioning. Modern historical roots are Rousseau’s “noble savage”
against Locke’s mind as a blank slate and the Darwinian idea that we are
monkeys' uncles. Ancient roots can be seen in Socrates’ admonition “know
thyself.” It is charged they are anti-intellectual but “the
anti-intellectualism of these people, nearly always intellectual themselves
though prone to deny it, is by no means confined to the New Age, and
paradoxically has intellectual roots” (72). Translation, please?
Chapter 15 is
69 pages and the book’s longest. Eight pages describe the relationship of
Freemasons to Findhorn Foundation and how its “structure and modus operandi
imitates Masonry” (178). The author states that he is not a Mason and the only
substantiating data offered is that some of Findhorn leaders were or are Masons.
The chapter wanders through “mystery traditions” such as the “aeons” of Osiris
and Horus, Ordo Templi Orientis, star Sirius, the Order of Melchizedek, and the
Great White Lodge. Caddy, Crowley, Blavatsky, and Bailey are revisited
adding little substance, though Alice Bailey’s husband (Ahah!) was “a respected
Freemason” (195). More than half the chapter details Blavatsky’s theosophy,
which “has been a central influence in Foundation spirituality” (217) and “what
C. G. Jung calls ‘the shadow,’ i.e., archetypal material pushing up from the
unconscious” (218). The New Age is seen as “a new paradigm” for “an emerging
global religion” and “new root race” (189), a worldwide movement using
“paranormal techniques preserved from ancient times, including hypnosis, laws of
forms, ritual, and behavior control” (190). Its aim is “to restore the inner or
esoteric dynamic” that Christianity has “largely lost” (202).
Chapter 16
explores “the United Nations connection” in the Lucis Trust, originally The
Lucifer Trust, but omits the etymology that Lucifer first meant light and in
Britain, a match. Lucis “appears to have a long term advisory connection
with the U.N.” (238) and “a sympathetic parallelism” with the Findhorn
Foundation “and its leading affiliates and writers” (239). Findhorn “achieved
three U.N. affiliations.” This may be evidence of a “ramp, something between a
paradigm and a conspiracy … a kind of group consciousness that is charged and
selfish in nature” (240). This ramp is “a mingling of Alice Bailey’s theosophy
with eccentric Freemasonry and an extreme development of Star Sirius lore”
(247)." The “U.N. bureaucrats do not appear to know what is going on in the
engine room” (242). “We are looking at an international network which has
already acquired enormous power without revealing much of what it is about …”
(248).
Chapter 17
focuses on “language games” such as the “classic mind-trap” of Findhorn’s “we
create our own reality’” and “democratic sounding terms such as ‘eco, group,
community, village’” (250). There is a change in direction that describes
various Findhorn operations. Chapter 18 details ways Findhorn creates its own
reality but its “eco-village is but the ‘planetary village’ of ‘Limitless Love
and Truth’ under a toned down title and expensive workshop spirituality …
derived from New Age California and its distorted Theosophy” (263). The work of
Singer, Lifton, Clark, and Langone on mind control are described and compared to
Findhorn practices. Chapters 19, 20, and 21 describe various foundation
activities over time.
Chapter 22
summarizes the book and concludes “Findhorn Foundation is not the exploration of
Eastern religions or the Western mystery tradition” but “a type of commercial
spirituality” (356). It is “genuine up to a point when seeking public
recognition or applying for public money.” It is “trying to re-invent itself as
an international eco-center,” though it remains “a hybridization” of New Age
elements (356). The prefix “eco” is “a gift to word-spinners,” a “chameleon
word” for Findhorn “a magical compression of its totalist mission” (356).
Without data he again charges, “Freemasonry allied to the New Age is a volatile
and flaky departure from historical Masonry” and “Christian churches have been
almost mown down by the New Age phenomenon" (357). He describes New Age
religion as a “distorting prism” to “first dive into our Self” to find “pristine
innocence ignoring Man’s Fall” then to realize “we are God.” In contrast,
Christianity “stands ready with natural powers at rest before a higher Power
which lifts us up” but critical of it because its “narrow doctrinal rationalism
and legalism drives people out of existing churches by the million” (359). He
offers “two ways back to sanity,” recognizing “a significant proportion” of New
Age religions are “exploitive,” and “churches need to recover their history”
including the “healing traditions” and “energy flow” of earlier Christian and
Eastern ideas (358). He recommends “a Western Christian ashram” such as Bede
Griffith’s in India and “meditative prayer” to “discourage crazes”
(360). He considers the New Age not new at all but can be traced back to Virgil
and 12th century papal approval of meditative prayer “nurturing the
space before words” (361). He sees traditional religion as too restrictive of
individual spiritual growth and New Age versions as too unrestricted and
shallow.
Despite some
rambling, repetition, needless tangents, and a focus on relatively trivial facts
this book contains much wisdom and insight. It would have benefited greatly
from better organization and editing. Reading it is work but it is worth
reading, a labor of love for the rich material to be mined. The author’s search
for truth is clear, his observations are objective despite some factual errors,
and his judgment sound, making it a useful model for others and a detailed
account of Findhorn’s history and program.
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