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Satanism

Satanism is a group of ideological and philosophical beliefs based on Satan. Contemporary religious practice of Satanism began with the founding of the atheistic Church of Satan by Anton LaVey in the United States in 1966, although a few historical precedents exist. Prior to the public practice, Satanism existed primarily as an accusation by various Christian groups toward perceived ideological opponents, rather than a self-identity or valid religious belief. Satanism, and the concept of Satan, has also been used by artists and entertainers for symbolic expression.

The inverted pentagram circumscribed by a circle (also known as a pentacle) is often used to represent Satanism.

Accusations that various groups have been practicing Satanism (in a ‘Devil-worship’ interpretation) have been made throughout much of Christian history. During the Middle Ages, the Inquisition attached to the Catholic Church alleged that various heretical Christian sects and groups, such as the Knights Templar and the Cathars, performed secret Satanic rituals. In the subsequent Early Modern period, belief in a widespread Satanic conspiracy of witches resulted in mass trials of alleged witches across Europe and the North American colonies. Accusations that Satanic conspiracies were active, and behind events such as Protestantism (and conversely, the Protestant claim that the Pope was the Antichrist) and the French Revolution continued to be made in Christendom during the eighteenth to the twentieth century. The idea of a vast Satanic conspiracy reached new heights with the influential Taxil hoax of France in the 1890s, which claimed that Freemasonry worshipped Satan, Lucifer, and Baphomet in their rituals. In the 1980s and 1990s, the Satanic ritual abuse hysteria spread through the United States and the United Kingdom, amid fears that groups of Satanists were regularly sexually abusing and murdering children in their rites. In most of these cases, there is no corroborating evidence that any of those accused of Satanism were actually practitioners of a Satanic religion or guilty of the allegations leveled at them.

Since the 19th century, various small religious groups have emerged that identify as Satanists or use Satanic iconography. The Satanist groups that appeared after the 1960s are widely diverse, though can be divided into theistic Satanism and atheistic Satanism.[1] Those venerating Satan as a supernatural deity view him not as omnipotent but rather as a patriarch. Atheistic Satanists regard Satan as a symbol of certain human traits.[2] Since its founding in 2012, The Satanic Temple has attracted hundreds of thousands of nontheistic members worldwide.[3]

Contemporary religious Satanism is predominantly an American phenomenon, the ideas spreading elsewhere with the effects of globalization and the Internet.[4] The Internet spreads awareness of other Satanists, and is also the main battleground for Satanist disputes.[4] Satanism started to reach Central and Eastern Europe in the 1990s, in time with the fall of the Communist Bloc, and most noticeably in Poland and Lithuania, predominantly Roman Catholic countries.[5][6]

Definition

 
Saint Wolfgang and the Devil, by Michael Pacher

In their study of Satanism, the religious studies scholars Asbjørn Dyrendal, James R. Lewis, and Jesper Aa. Petersen stated that the term Satanism "has a history of being a designation made by people against those whom they dislike; it is a term used for 'othering'".[7] The concept of Satanism is an invention of Christianity, for it relies upon the figure of Satan, a character deriving from Christian mythology.[8]

Elsewhere, Petersen noted that "Satanism as something others do is very different from Satanism as a self-designation".[9] Eugene Gallagher noted that, as commonly used, Satanism was usually "a polemical, not a descriptive term".[10]

In 1994, the Italian sociologist Massimo Introvigne suggested defining Satanism with the simultaneous presence of "1) the worship of the character identified with the name of Satan or Lucifer in the Bible, 2) by organized groups with at least a minimal organization and hierarchy, 3) through ritual or liturgical practices [...] it does not matter how each Satanist group perceives Satan, as personal or impersonal, real or symbolical".[11]

Etymology

The word "Satan" was not originally a proper name, but rather an ordinary noun that means "adversary". In this context, it appears at several points in the Old Testament.[12] For instance, in the Book of Samuel, David is presented as the satan ("adversary") of the Philistines, while in the Book of Numbers, the term appears as a verb, when Jehovah sent an angel to satan ("to oppose") Balaam.[13] Prior to the composition of the New Testament, the idea developed within Jewish communities that Satan was the name of an angel who had rebelled against Jehovah and had been cast out of Heaven along with his followers; this account would be incorporated into contemporary texts like the Book of Enoch.[14] This Satan was then featured in parts of the New Testament, where he was presented as a figure who tempted humans to commit sin; in the Book of Matthew and the Book of Luke, he attempted to tempt Jesus of Nazareth as the latter fasted in the wilderness.[15]

The word "Satanism" was adopted into English from the French satanisme.[16] The terms "Satanism" and "Satanist" are first recorded as appearing in the English and French languages during the sixteenth century, when they were used by Christian groups to attack other, rival Christian groups.[17] In a Roman Catholic tract of 1565, the author condemns the "heresies, blasphemies, and sathanismes [sic]" of the Protestants.[16] In an Anglican work of 1559, Anabaptists and other Protestant sects are condemned as "swarmes of Satanistes [sic]".[16] As used in this manner, the term "Satanism" was not used to claim that people literally worshipped Satan, but rather, it claimed that the accused was deviating from true Christianity, and thus serving the will of Satan. [18] During the nineteenth century, the term "Satanism" began to be used to describe those considered to lead a broadly immoral lifestyle,[18] and it was only in the late nineteenth century that it came to be applied in English to individuals who were believed to consciously and deliberately venerate Satan.[18] This latter meaning had appeared earlier in the Swedish language; the Lutheran Bishop Laurentius Paulinus Gothus had described devil-worshipping sorcerers as Sathanister in his Ethica Christiana, produced between 1615 and 1630.[19]

History

Historical and anthropological research suggests that nearly all societies have developed the idea of a sinister and anti-human force that can hide itself within society.[20] This commonly involves a belief in witches, a group of individuals who invert the norms of their society and seek to harm their community, for instance by engaging in incest, murder, and cannibalism.[21] Allegations of witchcraft may have different causes and serve different functions within a society.[22] For instance, they may serve to uphold social norms,[23] to heighten the tension in existing conflicts between individuals,[23] or to scapegoat certain individuals for various social problems.[22]

Another contributing factor to the idea of Satanism is the concept that there is an agent of misfortune and evil who operates on a cosmic scale,[24] something usually associated with a strong form of ethical dualism that divides the world clearly into forces of good and forces of evil.[25] The earliest such entity known is Angra Mainyu, a figure that appears in the Persian religion of Zoroastrianism.[24][26] This concept was also embraced by Judaism and early Christianity, and although it was soon marginalized within Jewish thought, it gained increasing importance within early Christian understandings of the cosmos.[27] While the early Christian idea of the Devil was not well developed, it gradually adapted and expanded through the creation of folklore, art, theological treatises, and morality tales, thus providing the character with a range of extra-Biblical associations.[28]

Medieval and Early Modern Christendom

 
Title illustration of Johannes Praetorius (writer) Blocksbergs Verrichtung (1668) showing many traditional features of the medieval Witches' Sabbath

As Christianity expanded throughout the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe, it came into contact with a variety of other religions, which it regarded as "pagan". Christian theologians claimed that the gods and goddesses venerated by these "pagans" were not genuine divinities, but were actually demons.[29] However, they did not believe that "pagans" were deliberately devil-worshippers, instead claiming that they were simply misguided.[30] In Christian iconography, the Devil and demons were given the physical traits of figures from classical mythology, such as the god Pan, fauns, and satyrs.[30]

Those Christian groups regarded as heretics by the Roman Catholic Church were treated differently, with theologians arguing that they were deliberately worshipping the Devil.[31] This was accompanied by claims that such individuals engaged in incestuous sexual orgies, murdered infants, and committed acts of cannibalism, all stock accusations that had previously been leveled at Christians themselves in the Roman Empire.[32]

The first recorded example of such an accusation being made within Western Christianity took place in Toulouse in 1022, when two clerics were tried for allegedly venerating a demon.[33] Throughout the Middle Ages, this accusation would be applied to a wide range of Christian heretical groups, including the Paulicians, Bogomils, Cathars, Waldensians, and the Hussites.[34] The Knights Templar were accused of worshipping an idol known as Baphomet, with Lucifer having appeared at their meetings in the form of a cat.[35] As well as these Christian groups, these claims were also made about Europe's Jewish community.[36] In the thirteenth century, there were also references made to a group of "Luciferians" led by a woman named Lucardis which hoped to see Satan rule in Heaven. References to this group continued into the fourteenth century, although historians studying the allegations concur that these Luciferians were likely a fictitious invention.[37]

Within Christian thought, the idea developed that certain individuals could make a pact with Satan.[38] This may have emerged after observing that pacts with gods and goddesses played a role in various pre-Christian belief systems, or that such pacts were also made as part of the Christian cult of saints.[39] Another possibility is that it derives from a misunderstanding of Augustine of Hippo's condemnation of augury in his On the Christian Doctrine, written in the late fourth century. Here, he stated that people who consulted augurs were entering "quasi pacts" (covenants) with demons.[40] The idea of the diabolical pact made with demons was popularized across Europe in the story of Faust, likely based in part on the real life Johann Georg Faust.[41]

 
The Obscene Kiss, an illustration of witches kissing the Devil's anus from Francesco Maria Guazzo's Compendium Maleficarum (1608)

As the late medieval gave way to the early modern period, European Christendom experienced a schism between the established Roman Catholic Church and the breakaway Protestant movement. In the ensuing Reformation and Counter-Reformation, both Catholics and Protestants accused each other of deliberately being in league with Satan.[42] It was in this context that the terms "Satanist" and "Satanism" emerged.[17]

The early modern period also saw fear of Satanists reach its "historical apogee" in the form of the witch trials of the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries.[43] This came about as the accusations which had been leveled at medieval heretics, among them that of devil-worship, were applied to the pre-existing idea of the witch, or practitioner of malevolent magic.[44] The idea of a conspiracy of Satanic witches was developed by educated elites, although the concept of malevolent witchcraft was a widespread part of popular belief and folkloric ideas about the night witch, the wild hunt, and the dance of the fairies were incorporated into it.[45] The earliest trials took place in Northern Italy and France, before spreading it out to other areas of Europe and to Britain's North American colonies, being carried out by the legal authorities in both Catholic and Protestant regions.[43] Between 30,000 and 50,000 individuals were executed as accused Satanic witches.[43] Most historians agree that the majority of those persecuted in these witch trials were innocent of any involvement in Devil worship.[46] However, in their summary of the evidence for the trials, the historians Geoffrey Scarre and John Callow thought it "without doubt" that some of those accused in the trials had been guilty of employing magic in an attempt to harm their enemies, and were thus genuinely guilty of witchcraft.[47]

In seventeenth-century Sweden, a number of highway robbers and other outlaws living in the forests informed judges that they venerated Satan because he provided more practical assistance than Jehovah.[48] Introvigne regarded these practices as "folkloric Satanism".[19]

18th- to 20th-century Christendom

 
Stanislas de Guaita drew the original goat pentagram, which first appeared in the book La Clef de la Magie Noire in 1897. This symbol would later become synonymous with Baphomet, and is commonly referred to as the Sabbatic Goat.

During the eighteenth century, gentleman's social clubs became increasingly prominent in Britain and Ireland, among the most secretive of which were the Hellfire Clubs, which were first reported in the 1720s.[49] The most famous of these groups was the Order of the Knights of Saint Francis, which was founded circa 1750 by the aristocrat Sir Francis Dashwood and which assembled first at his estate at West Wycombe and later in Medmenham Abbey.[50] A number of contemporary press sources portrayed these as gatherings of atheist rakes where Christianity was mocked and toasts were made to the Devil.[51] Beyond these sensationalist accounts, which may not be accurate portrayals of actual events, little is known about the activities of the Hellfire Clubs.[51] Introvigne suggested that they may have engaged in a form of "playful Satanism" in which Satan was invoked "to show a daring contempt for conventional morality" by individuals who neither believed in his literal existence nor wanted to pay homage to him.[52]

The French Revolution of 1789 dealt a blow to the hegemony of the Roman Catholic Church in parts of Europe, and soon a number of Catholic authors began making claims that it had been masterminded by a conspiratorial group of Satanists.[53] Among the first to do so was French Catholic priest Jean-Baptiste Fiard, who publicly claimed that a wide range of individuals, from the Jacobins to tarot card readers, were part of a Satanic conspiracy.[54] Fiard's ideas were furthered by Alexis-Vincent-Charles Berbiguier, who devoted a lengthy book to this conspiracy theory; he claimed that Satanists had supernatural powers allowing them to curse people and to shapeshift into both cats and fleas.[55] Although most of his contemporaries regarded Berbiguier as mad,[56] his ideas gained credence among many occultists, including Stanislas de Guaita, a Cabalist who used them for the basis of his book, The Temple of Satan.[57]

In the early 20th century, the British novelist Dennis Wheatley produced a range of influential novels in which his protagonists battled Satanic groups.[58] At the same time, non-fiction authors like Montague Summers and Rollo Ahmed published books claiming that Satanic groups practicing black magic were still active across the world, although they provided no evidence that this was the case.[59] During the 1950s, various British tabloid newspapers repeated such claims, largely basing their accounts on the allegations of one woman, Sarah Jackson, who claimed to have been a member of such a group.[60] In 1973, the British Christian Doreen Irvine published From Witchcraft to Christ, in which she claimed to have been a member of a Satanic group that gave her supernatural powers, such as the ability to levitate, before she escaped and embraced Christianity.[61]

In the United States during the 1960s and 1970s, various Christian preachers—the most famous being Mike Warnke in his 1972 book The Satan-Seller—claimed that they had been members of Satanic groups who carried out sex rituals and animal sacrifices before discovering Christianity.[62] According to Gareth Medway in his historical examination of Satanism, these stories were "a series of inventions by insecure people and hack writers, each one based on a previous story, exaggerated a little more each time".[63]

Other publications made allegations of Satanism against historical figures. The 1970s saw the publication of the Romanian Protestant preacher Richard Wurmbrand's book in which he argued—without corroborating evidence—that the socio-political theorist Karl Marx had been a Satanist.[64]

Modern Satanism

 
The Sabbatic Goat, also known as the Goat of Mendes or Baphomet, as illustrated by Éliphas Lévi, has become one of the most common symbols of Satanism.[65]

The figure of "Lucifer" was taken up by the French ceremonial magician Éliphas Lévi, who has been described as a "Romantic Satanist".[66] During his younger days, Lévi used "Lucifer" in the same positive symbolic manner as the literary Romantics.[67] As he moved toward political conservatism in later life, he retained the use of the term, but instead applied it to what he believed was a morally neutral facet of "the absolute".[66][67]

Lévi was not the only occultist who used the term "Lucifer" without adopting the term "Satan" in a similar way.[67] The early Theosophical Society believed that "Lucifer" was a force that aided humanity's awakening to its own spiritual nature.[68] In keeping with this belief, the Society began production of the journal Lucifer in 1887.[69]

Some historians have claimed English writers Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley to be among the first Satanists[70][71] but others believe they simply portrayed him positively without actually venerating him.[72] The first person to promote an explicitly "Satanic" philosophy was the Polish writer Stanisław Przybyszewski, who based his ideology on Social Darwinism of the 1890s.[73]

"Lucifer" also figured within the esoteric system propounded by the Danish occultist Carl William Hansen, who used the pen name "Ben Kadosh".[69] Hansen was involved in a variety of esoteric groups, including Martinism, Freemasonry, and the Ordo Templi Orientis, drawing on their ideas to establish his own philosophy.[69] He provided a Luciferian interpretation of Freemasonry in a 1906 pamphlet,[74] though his work had little influence outside of Denmark.[74][75]

 
Aleister Crowley was not a Satanist, but used rhetoric and imagery considered satanic.

Both during his life and after it, the British occultist Aleister Crowley has been widely described as a Satanist, usually by detractors. Crowley stated he did not consider himself a Satanist, nor did he worship Satan, as he did not accept the Christian world view in which Satan was believed to exist.[76] He nevertheless used imagery considered satanic, for instance by describing himself as "the Beast 666" and referring to the Whore of Babylon in his work, while in later life he sent "Antichristmas cards" to his friends.[77] Dyrendel, Lewis, and Petersen noted that despite the fact that Crowley was not a Satanist, he "in many ways embodies the pre-Satanist esoteric discourse on Satan and Satanism through his lifestyle and his philosophy", with his "image and thought" becoming an "important influence" on the later development of religious Satanism.[74]

In 1928, the Fraternitas Saturni (FS) was established in Germany; its founder, Eugen Grosche, published Satanische Magie ("Satanic Magic") that same year.[78] The group connected Satan to Saturn, claiming that the planet related to the Sun in the same manner that Lucifer relates to the human world.[78]

In 1932, an esoteric group known as the Brotherhood of the Golden Arrow was established in Paris, France, by Maria de Naglowska, a Russian occultist who had fled to France following the Russian Revolution.[79][80] She promoted a theology centered on what she called the Third Term of the Trinity consisting of Father, Son, and Sex, the latter of which she deemed to be most important.[79] Her early disciples, who underwent what she called "Satanic Initiations", included models and art students recruited from bohemian circles.[79] The Golden Arrow disbanded after Naglowska abandoned it in 1936.[81] According to Introvigne, hers was "a quite complicated Satanism, built on a complex philosophical vision of the world, of which little would survive its initiator".[82]

In 1969, a Satanic group based in Toledo, Ohio, part of the United States, came to public attention. Called the Our Lady of Endor Coven, it was led by a man named Herbert Sloane, who described his Satanic tradition as the Ophite Cultus Sathanas and alleged that it had been established in the 1940s.[83][84] The group had a Gnostic doctrine about the world, in which the Judeo-Christian creator god is regarded as evil, and the Biblical serpent is presented as a force for good, who had delivered salvation to humanity in the Garden of Eden.[83][85] Sloane's claims that his group had a 1940s origin remain unproven; it may be that he falsely claimed older origins for his group to make it appear older than Anton LaVey's Church of Satan, which had been established in 1966.[86][84]

None of these groups had any real impact on the emergence of the later Satanic milieu in the 1960s.[87]

Ritual abuse hysteria

At the end of the twentieth century, a moral panic arose from claims that a Devil-worshipping cult was committing sexual abuse, murder, and cannibalism in its rituals, and including children among the victims of its rites.[88] Initially, the alleged perpetrators of such crimes were labeled "witches", although the term "Satanist" was soon adopted as a favored alternative,[88] and the phenomenon itself came to be called "the Satanism Scare".[89] Promoters of the claims alleged that there was a conspiracy of organized Satanists who occupied prominent positions throughout society, from the police to politicians, and that they had been powerful enough to cover up their crimes.[90]

Preceded by some significant but isolated episodes in the 1970s, a great Satanism scare exploded in the 1980s in the United States and Canada and was subsequently exported towards England, Australia, and other countries. It was unprecedented in history. It surpassed even the results of Taxil's propaganda, and has been compared with the most virulent periods of witch hunting. The scare started in 1980 and declined slowly between 1990... and 1994, when official British and American reports denied the real existence of ritual satanic crimes. Particularly outside the U.S. and U.K., however, its consequences are still felt today.

Sociologist of religion Massimo Introvigne, 2016[91]

One of the primary sources for the scare was Michelle Remembers, a 1980 book by the Canadian psychiatrist Lawrence Pazder in which he detailed what he claimed were the repressed memories of his patient (and wife) Michelle Smith. Smith had claimed that as a child she had been abused by her family in Satanic rituals in which babies were sacrificed and Satan himself appeared.[92][93] In 1983, allegations were made that the McMartin family—owners of a preschool in California—were guilty of sexually abusing the children in their care during Satanic rituals. The allegations resulted in a lengthy and expensive trial, in which all of the accused would eventually be cleared.[94][95] The publicity generated by the case resulted in similar allegations being made in various other parts of the United States.[96]

A prominent aspect of the Satanic Scare was the claim by those in the developing "anti-Satanism" movement that any child's claim about Satanic ritual abuse must be true, because children would not lie.[97] Although some involved in the anti-Satanism movement were from Jewish and secular backgrounds,[98] a central part was played by fundamentalist and evangelical forms of Christianity, in particular Pentecostalism, with Christian groups holding conferences and producing books and videotapes to promote belief in the conspiracy.[89] Various figures in law enforcement also came to be promoters of the conspiracy theory, with such "cult cops" holding various conferences to promote it.[99] The scare was later imported to the United Kingdom through visiting evangelicals and became popular among some of the country's social workers,[100] resulting in a range of accusations and trials across Britain.[101]

The Satanic ritual abuse hysteria died down between 1990 and 1994.[91] In the late 1980s, the Satanic Scare had lost its impetus following increasing skepticism about such allegations,[102] and a number of those who had been convicted of perpetrating Satanic ritual abuse saw their convictions overturned.[103] In 1990, an agent of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Ken Lanning, revealed that he had investigated 300 allegations of Satanic ritual abuse and found no evidence for Satanism or ritualistic activity in any of them.[103] In the UK, the Department of Health commissioned the anthropologist Jean La Fontaine to examine the allegations of SRA.[104] She noted that while approximately half did reveal evidence of genuine sexual abuse of children, none revealed any evidence that Satanist groups had been involved or that any murders had taken place.[105] She noted three examples in which lone individuals engaged in child molestation had created a ritual performance to facilitate their sexual acts, with the intent of frightening their victims and justifying their actions, but that none of these child molesters were involved in wider Satanist groups.[106] By the 21st century, hysteria about Satanism has waned in most Western countries, although allegations of Satanic ritual abuse continued to surface in parts of continental Europe and Latin America.[107]

Atheistic Satanism

Church of Satan

 
The Sigil of Baphomet, the official insignia of the Church of Satan and LaVeyan Satanism

Anton LaVey, who has been referred to as "The Father of Satanism",[108] synthesized his religion through the establishment of the Church of Satan in 1966 and the publication of The Satanic Bible in 1969. LaVey's teachings promoted "indulgence", "vital existence", "undefiled wisdom", "kindness to those who deserve it", "responsibility to the responsible", and an "eye for an eye" code of ethics, while shunning "abstinence" based on guilt, "spirituality", "unconditional love", "pacifism", "equality", "herd mentality", and "scapegoating". LaVey envisioned a Satanist as a carnal, physical, and pragmatic being. The core values of LaVey Satanism are the enjoyment of physical existence, and undiluted naturalism that sees mankind as animals that exist in an amoral universe.

LaVey believed that the ideal Satanist should be individualistic and non-conformist, rejecting what he called the "colorless existence" that mainstream society sought to impose on those living within it.[109] He praised the human ego for encouraging an individual's pride, self-respect, and self-realization and accordingly believed in satisfying the ego's desires.[110] He stated that self-indulgence was a desirable trait,[111] and that hate and aggression were not wrong or undesirable emotions but that they were necessary and advantageous for survival.[112] Accordingly, he praised the seven deadly sins as virtues which were beneficial for the individual.[113] The anthropologist Jean La Fontaine highlighted an article that appeared in The Black Flame, in which one writer described "a true Satanic society" as one in which the population consists of "free-spirited, well-armed, fully-conscious, self-disciplined individuals, who will neither need nor tolerate any external entity 'protecting' them or telling them what they can and cannot do."[114]

The sociologist James R. Lewis noted that "LaVey was directly responsible for the genesis of Satanism as a serious religious (as opposed to a purely literary) movement".[115] Scholars agree that there is no reliably documented case of Satanic continuity prior to the founding of the Church of Satan.[116] It was the first organized church in modern times to be devoted to the figure of Satan,[117] and according to Faxneld and Petersen, the Church represented "the first public, highly visible, and long-lasting organization which propounded a coherent satanic discourse".[118] LaVey's book, The Satanic Bible, has been described as the most important document to influence contemporary Satanism.[119] The book contains the core principles of Satanism, and is considered the foundation of its philosophy and dogma.[120] Petersen noted that it is "in many ways the central text of the Satanic milieu",[121] with Lap similarly testifying to its dominant position within the wider Satanic movement.[122] David G. Bromley calls it "iconoclastic" and "the best-known and most influential statement of Satanic theology."[123] Eugene V. Gallagher says that Satanists use LaVey's writings "as lenses through which they view themselves, their group, and the cosmos." He also states: "With a clear-eyed appreciation of true human nature, a love of ritual and pageantry, and a flair for mockery, LaVey's Satanic Bible promulgated a gospel of self-indulgence that, he argued, anyone who dispassionately considered the facts would embrace."[124]

A number of religious studies scholars have described LaVey's Satanism as a form of "self-religion" or "self-spirituality",[125] with religious studies scholar Amina Olander Lap arguing that it should be seen as being both part of the "prosperity wing" of the self-spirituality New Age movement and a form of the Human Potential Movement.[126] The anthropologist Jean La Fontaine described it as having "both elitist and anarchist elements", also citing one occult bookshop owner who referred to the Church's approach as "anarchistic hedonism".[127] In The Invention of Satanism, Dyrendal and Petersen theorized that LaVey viewed his religion as "an antinomian self-religion for productive misfits, with a cynically carnivalesque take on life, and no supernaturalism".[128] The sociologist of religion James R. Lewis even described LaVeyan Satanism as "a blend of Epicureanism and Ayn Rand's philosophy, flavored with a pinch of ritual magic."[129] The historian of religion Mattias Gardell described LaVey's as "a rational ideology of egoistic hedonism and self-preservation",[130] while Nevill Drury characterized LaVeyan Satanism as "a religion of self-indulgence".[131] It has also been described as an "institutionalism of Machiavellian self-interest".[132]

Prominent Church leader Blanche Barton described Satanism as "an alignment, a lifestyle".[133] LaVey and the Church stated that "Satanists are born, not made";[134] that they are outsiders by their nature, living as they see fit,[109] who are self-realized in a religion which appeals to the would-be Satanist's nature, leading them to realize they are Satanists through finding a belief system that is in line with their own perspective and lifestyle.[135] Adherents to the philosophy have described Satanism as a non-spiritual religion of the flesh, or "...the world's first carnal religion".[136] LaVey used Christianity as a negative mirror for his new faith,[137] with LaVeyan Satanism rejecting the basic principles and theology of Christian belief.[127] It views Christianity – alongside other major religions, and philosophies such as humanism and liberal democracy – as a largely negative force on humanity; LaVeyan Satanists perceive Christianity as a lie which promotes idealism, self-denigration, herd behavior, and irrationality.[138] LaVeyans view their religion as a force for redressing this balance by encouraging materialism, egoism, stratification, carnality, atheism, and social Darwinism.[138] LaVey's Satanism was particularly critical of what it understands as Christianity's denial of humanity's animal nature, and it instead calls for the celebration of, and indulgence in, these desires.[127] In doing so, it places an emphasis on the carnal rather than the spiritual.[139]

Practitioners do not believe that Satan literally exists and do not worship him.[1] Instead, Satan is viewed as a positive archetype embracing the Hebrew root of the word "Satan" as "adversary", who represents pride, carnality, and enlightenment, and of a cosmos which Satanists perceive to be motivated by a "dark evolutionary force of entropy that permeates all of nature and provides the drive for survival and propagation inherent in all living things".[140] The Devil is embraced as a symbol of defiance against the Abrahamic faiths which LaVey criticized for what he saw as the suppression of humanity's natural instincts. Moreover, Satan also serves as a metaphorical external projection of the individual's godhood. LaVey stated that "god" is a creation of man, rather than man being a creation of "god". In his book, The Satanic Bible, the Satanist's concept of a god is described as the Satanist's true "self"— a projection of his or her own personality, not an external deity.[141] Satan is used as a representation of personal liberty and individualism.[142]

LaVey explained that the gods worshipped by other religions are also projections of man's true self. He argues that man's unwillingness to accept his own ego has caused him to externalize these gods so as to avoid the feeling of narcissism that would accompany self-worship.[143] The current high priest of the Church of Satan, Peter H. Gilmore, further expounds that "...Satan is a symbol of Man living as his prideful, carnal nature dictates [...] Satan is not a conscious entity to be worshipped, rather a reservoir of power inside each human to be tapped at will.[144] The Church of Satan has chosen Satan as its primary symbol because in Hebrew it means adversary, opposer, one to accuse or question. We see ourselves as being these Satans; the adversaries, opposers and accusers of all spiritual belief systems that would try to hamper enjoyment of our life as a human being."[145] The term "theistic Satanism" has been described as "oxymoronic" by the church and its High Priest.[146] The Church of Satan rejects the legitimacy of any other organizations who claim to be Satanists, dubbing them reverse-Christians, pseudo-Satanists or Devil worshipers, atheistic or otherwise,[147] and maintains a purist approach to Satanism as expounded by LaVey.[117]

First Satanic Church

After LaVey's death in 1997, the Church of Satan was taken over by a new administration and its headquarters were moved to New York. LaVey's daughter, the High Priestess Karla LaVey, felt this to be a disservice to her father's legacy. The First Satanic Church was re-founded on October 31, 1999 by Karla LaVey to carry on the legacy of her father. She continues to run it out of San Francisco, California.

The Satanic Temple

 
The Satanic Temple alternative logo, featuring a modern rendition and inspiration of the Sigil of Baphomet

The Satanic Temple is an American religious and political activist organization based in Salem, Massachusetts. The organization actively participates in public affairs that have manifested in several public political actions[148][149] and efforts at lobbying,[150] with a focus on the separation of church and state and using satire against Christian groups that it believes interfere with personal freedom.[150] According to Dyrendal, Lewis, and Petersen, the group were "rationalist, political pranksters".[151] Their pranks are designed to highlight religious hypocrisy and advance the cause of secularism.[152] In one of their actions, they performed a "Pink Mass" over the grave of the mother of the evangelical Christian and prominent anti-LGBT preacher Fred Phelps; the Temple claimed that the mass converted the spirit of Phelps' mother into a lesbian.[151]

The Satanic Temple does not believe in a supernatural Satan, as they believe that this encourages superstition that would keep them from being "malleable to the best current scientific understandings of the material world". The Temple uses the literary Satan as metaphor to construct a cultural narrative which promotes pragmatic skepticism, rational reciprocity, personal autonomy, and curiosity.[153] Satan is thus used as a symbol representing "the eternal rebel" against arbitrary authority and social norms.[154][155]


Theistic Satanism

Religious Satanism does not exist in a single form, as there are multiple different religious Satanisms, each with different ideas about what being a Satanist entails.[156] A minority of Satanists are far-right.[157] The historian of religion Ruben van Luijk used a "working definition" in which Satanism was regarded as "the intentional, religiously motivated veneration of Satan".[18]

Dyrendal, Lewis, and Petersen believed that it was not a single movement, but rather a milieu.[158] They and others have nevertheless referred to it as a new religious movement.[159] They believed that there was a family resemblance that united all of the varying groups in this milieu,[7] and that most of them were self religions.[158] They argued that there were a set of features that were common to the groups in this Satanic milieu: these were the positive use of the term "Satanist" as a designation, an emphasis on individualism, a genealogy that connects them to other Satanic groups, a transgressive and antinomian stance, a self-perception as an elite, and an embrace of values such as pride, self-reliance, and productive non-conformity.[160]

Dyrendal, Lewis, and Petersen argued that the groups within the Satanic milieu could be divided into three groups: reactive Satanists, rationalist Satanists, and esoteric Satanists.[161] They saw reactive Satanism as encompassing "popular Satanism, inverted Christianity, and symbolic rebellion" and noted that it situates itself in opposition to society while at the same time conforming to society's perspective of evil.[161] Rationalist Satanism is used to describe the trend in the Satanic milieu which is atheistic, skeptical, materialistic, and epicurean.[162] Esoteric Satanism instead applied to those forms which are theistic and draw upon ideas from other forms of Western esotericism, Modern Paganism, Buddhism, and Hinduism.[162]

Theistic Satanism (also known as traditional Satanism, Spiritual Satanism or Devil worship) is a form of Satanism with the primary belief that Satan is an actual deity or force to revere or worship.[1][163] Other characteristics of theistic Satanism may include a belief in magic, which is manipulated through ritual, although that is not a defining criterion, and theistic Satanists may focus solely on devotion.

Luciferianism

 
A version of the symbol of Lucifer, used by some modern Satanists

Luciferianism is a belief system that venerates the characteristics that are attributed to Lucifer. Luciferians usually revere Lucifer not as the devil, but as a destroyer, guardian, liberator,[164] light bringer, and/or guiding spirit to darkness,[165] or even as the true god, as opposed to Jehovah.[164] One group of Luciferians- those of the Neo-Luciferian Church, are influenced by Gnosticism.

Order of Nine Angles

 
One of the principal symbols of the ONA

According to the group's own claims, the Order of Nine Angles was established in Shropshire, England, during the late 1960s, when a Grand Mistress united a number of ancient pagan groups active in the area.[166] This account states that when the Order's Grand Mistress migrated to Australia, a man known as "Anton Long" took over as the new Grand Master.[166] From 1976 onward, he authored an array of texts for the tradition, codifying and extending its teachings, mythos, and structure.[167] Various academics have argued that Long is the pseudonym of British National Socialist Movement activist David Myatt,[168] an allegation that Myatt has denied.[169] The ONA arose to public attention in the early 1980s,[170] spreading its message through magazine articles over the following two decades.[171] In 2000, it established a presence on the internet,[171] later adopting social media to promote its message.[172]

The ONA is a secretive organization,[173] and lacks any central administration, instead operating as a network of allied Satanic practitioners, which it terms the "kollective".[174] It consists largely of autonomous cells known as "nexions".[174] The majority of these are located in Britain, Ireland, and Germany, although others are located elsewhere in Europe, and in Russia, Egypt, South Africa, Brazil, Australia, and the United States.[174]

The ONA describe their occultism as "Traditional Satanism".[175] The ONA's writings encourage human sacrifice,[176] referring to their victims as opfers.[177] According to the Order's teachings, such opfers must demonstrate character faults that mark them out as being worthy of death.[178][179] No ONA cell has admitted to carrying out a sacrifice in a ritualized manner, but rather, Order members have joined the police and military in order to carry out such killings.[180] Faxneld described the Order as "a dangerous and extreme form of Satanism",[181] while religious studies scholar Graham Harvey wrote that the ONA fit the stereotype of the Satanist "better than other groups" by embracing "deeply shocking" and illegal acts.[182] The ONA is connected to multiple killings, rapes, and cases of child abuse and right-wing terrorism. Several British politicians, including the Labour Party's Yvette Cooper, chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee,[183] have pushed for the group to be banned as a terror organization, and according to the BBC News, "the authorities are concerned by the number of paedophiles associated with the ONA". Additionally, there are various followers of the O9A paradigm who are (or were) also members of banned militant national-socialist groups, namely the Atomwaffen Division, Combat 18, and Nordic Resistance Movement, the first of which even aims to make terror attacks.[184][185][186]

Temple of Set

The Temple of Set is an initiatory occult society that claims to be the world's leading left-hand path religious organization. It was established in 1975 by Michael A. Aquino and certain members of the priesthood of the Church of Satan,[187] who left the CoS because of administrative and philosophical disagreements. ToS deliberately self-differentiates from CoS in several ways, most significantly in theology and sociology.[188] The philosophy of the Temple of Set may be summed up as "enlightened individualism"— enhancement and improvement of oneself by personal education, experiment, and initiation. This process is necessarily different and distinctive for each individual. The members do not agree on whether Set is real or symbolic, and they're not expected to.[188]

Michael Aquino believed that the name Satan was originally a corruption of the name Set.[189] The Temple teaches that Set is a real entity,[190] and the only real god in existence, with all other gods being created by the human imagination.[191] Set is described as having given humanity —through the means of non-natural evolution— the "Black Flame" or the "Gift of Set", which is a questioning intellect that sets humans apart from other animals.[192] While Setians are expected to revere Set, they do not worship him.[193] Central to Setian philosophy is the human individual,[137] with self-deification presented as the ultimate goal.[194]

In 2005, Petersen noted that academic estimates for the Temple's membership varied from between 300 and 500,[195] and Granholm suggested that in 2007, the Temple contained circa 200 members.[196]

Joy of Satan

Joy of Satan is a website and esoteric occult group that was founded in the early 2000s by Maxine Dietrich (pseudonym of Andrea Maxine Dietrich),[197][198][199] wife of the American National Socialist Movement's co-founder and former leader Clifford Herrington.[200] With its inception, spiritual Satanism was born – a current that until recently was regarded only as "theist", but then defined into "spiritual Satanism" by Theistic Satanists who concluded that the term "spiritual" in Satanism represented the best answer to the world,[201] considering it a "moral slap" toward the earlier carnal and materialistic LaVeyan Satanism, and instead focusing its attention upon spiritual evolution.[201] Joy of Satan presents a unique synthesis of theistic Satanism, National Socialism, Gnostic Paganism, Western esotericism, UFO conspiracy theories, and extraterrestrial hypotheses similar to those popularized by Zecharia Sitchin and David Icke.[198][199]

Members of Joy of Satan are generally polytheists, believing that Satan is one of many deities.[198][202][203] While Satan and demons are considered deities within JoS, the deities themselves are understood to be highly evolved, un-aging, sentient, and powerful humanoid extraterrestrial beings.[198][202][200][204][205] Satan and many demons are equated with gods from ancient cultures, some of which include the Sumerian god Enki, and the Yazidi angel Melek Taus being seen as Satan, borrowing their theistic Satanist interpretations of Enki from the writings of Zecharia Sitchin, and Melek Taus partially deriving from the writings of Anton LaVey.[200] Satan is seen not only as an important deity but a powerful and sentient being responsible for the creation of humanity.[202][200] Satan is also revered by JoS as “the true father and creator god of humanity”,[203] the bringer of knowledge, and whose desire is for his creations, humans, to elevate themselves through knowledge and understanding.[202][203]

In their beliefs, Yazidism is in juxtaposition with Satanism as they consider the two share similar elements, such as Yazidi devotees being defined by Muslims as "devotees to Shaytan" and regarded as Satanists.[201] It is also believed that the figure of Melek Ta'Us, the peacock angel, may derive from much older pagan deities, such as Saraswati, the Hindu goddess of wisdom who rides a peacock, or even the god Indra, who transforms into a peacock.[201] The story of Melek Ta'Us itself is also considered by JoS to have many satanic elements, such as being described as the angel who rebelled against the Abrahamic god.[201] The sacred text of the Yazidis, the Al-Jilwah, is claimed by the JoS as the word of Satan.[201]

While maintaining some popularity as a Theistic Satanist sect, the group has been widely criticized for its association with the National Socialist Movement and its racial anti-Jewish, anti-Judaic, and anti-Christian sentiment, as well as its anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.[204][206] Much of their beliefs on aliens, meditation, and telepathic contacts with demons have become popular in a larger milieu within the currents of recent non-LaVeyan theistic Satanism.[198][200] According to Petersen's survey (2014), Joy of Satan's angelfire network has a surprising prominence among theistic Satanist websites on the internet.[207] In addition, James R. Lewis's "Satan census"(2009) also revealed a presence of respondents to Joy of Satan.[208]

Personal Satanism

 
The American serial killer Richard Ramirez self-identified as a Satanist.

In contrast to the organized and doctrinal Satanist groups is the personal Satanism of individuals, who identify as Satanists due to their affinity for the general idea of Satan, including such characteristics as viciousness and/or subversion.

Dyrendal, Lewis, and Petersen used the term "reactive Satanism" to describe one form of modern Satanism. They described this as an adolescent and anti-social means of rebelling in a Christian society, by which an individual transgresses cultural boundaries.[161] They believed that there were two tendencies within reactive Satanism: one, "Satanic tourism", was characterized by the brief period of time in which an individual was involved, while the other, the "Satanic quest", was typified by a longer and deeper involvement.[162]

The researcher Gareth Medway noted that in 1995 he encountered a British woman who stated that she had been a practicing Satanist during her teenage years. She had grown up in a small mining village, and had come to believe that she had psychic powers. After hearing about Satanism in some library books, she declared herself a Satanist and formulated a belief that Satan was the true god. After her teenage years she abandoned Satanism and became a chaos magickian.[209]

Some personal Satanists are teenagers or mentally disturbed individuals who have engaged in criminal activities.[210] During the 1980s and 1990s, several groups of teenagers were apprehended after sacrificing animals and vandalizing both churches and graveyards with Satanic imagery.[211] Introvigne stated that these incidents were "more a product of juvenile deviance and marginalization than Satanism".[211] In a few cases, the crimes of these personal Satanists have included murder. In 1970, two separate groups of teenagers— one led by Stanley Baker in Big Sur, and the other by Steven Hurd in Los Angeles, killed a total of three people and consumed parts of their corpses in what they later claimed were sacrifices devoted to Satan.[212] The American serial killer Richard Ramirez for instance claimed that he was a (theistic) Satanist; during his 1980s killing spree he left an inverted pentagram at the scene of each murder and at his trial called out "Hail Satan!"[213] In 1984 on Long Island, a group allegedly called the Knights of the Black Circle killed one of its own members, Gary Lauwers, over a disagreement regarding the group's illegal drug dealing; group members later related that Lauwers' death was a sacrifice to Satan.[212] In particular, self-declared Satanist and alleged member of the Knights of the Black Circle, Ricky "the Acid King" Kasso, became notorious for torturing and murdering Lauwers while attempting to force Lauwers to declare "I love Satan" during the murder.[214] On November 21, 1998, Jarno Elg, a Finnish Satanist, was sentenced to life in prison for murdering a 23-year-old man in Hyvinkää, Finland, eating some of the body parts and instigating others to participate in a ritual that included torturing the victim.[215]

Demographics

A survey in the Encyclopedia of Satanism found that people became involved with Satanism in many diverse ways and were found in many countries. The survey found that more Satanists were raised as Protestant Christians than Catholic.[216]

Beginning in the late 1960s, organized Satanism emerged out of the occult subculture with the formation of the Church of Satan. It was not long, however, before Satanism had expanded well beyond the Church of Satan. The decentralization of the Satanist movement was considerably accelerated when LaVey disbanded the grotto system in the mid-1970s. At present, religious Satanism exists primarily as a decentralized subculture [...] Unlike traditional religions, and even unlike the early Satanist bodies such as the Church of Satan and the Temple of Set, contemporary Satanism is, for the most part, a decentralized movement. In the past, this movement has been propagated through the medium of certain popular books, especially Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible. In more recent years, the internet has come to play a significant role in reaching potential "converts," particularly among disaffected young people.

— Religion scholar and researcher of new religious movements James R. Lewis[217]

Dyrendal, Lewis, and Petersen observed that from surveys of Satanists conducted in the early 21st century, it was clear that the Satanic milieu was "heavily dominated by young males".[218] They nevertheless noted that census data from New Zealand suggested that there may be a growing proportion of women becoming Satanists.[218] In comprising more men than women, Satanism differs from most other religious communities, including most new religious communities.[219] Most Satanists came to their religion through reading, either online or books, rather than through being introduced to it through personal contacts.[220] Many practitioners do not claim that they converted to Satanism, but rather state that they were born that way, and only later in life confirmed that Satanism served as an appropriate label for their pre-existing worldviews.[221] Others have stated that they had experiences with supernatural phenomena that led them to embracing Satanism.[222] A number of Satanists reported anger toward some practicing Christians, and said that the monotheistic gods of Christianity and other religions are unethical, citing issues such as the problem of evil.[223] For some practitioners, Satanism gave a sense of hope, even for those who had been physically and sexually abused.[224]

The surveys revealed that atheistic Satanists appeared to be in the majority, although the numbers of theistic Satanists appeared to grow over time.[217][225][226] Beliefs in the afterlife varied, although the most common beliefs about the afterlife were reincarnation and the idea that consciousness survives bodily death.[227] The surveys also demonstrated that most recorded Satanists practiced magic,[228] although there were differing opinions as to whether magical acts operated according to etheric laws or whether the effect of magic was purely psychological.[229] A number of Satanists described performing cursing, in most cases as a form of vigilante justice.[230] Most practitioners conduct their religious observances in a solitary manner, and never or rarely meet fellow Satanists for rituals.[231] Rather, the primary interaction that takes place between Satanists is online, on websites or via email.[232] From their survey data, Dyrendal, Lewis, and Petersen noted that the average length of involvement in the Satanic milieu was seven years.[233] A Satanist's involvement in the movement tends to peak in the early twenties and drops off sharply in their thirties.[234] A small proportion retain their allegiance to the religion into their elder years.[235] When asked about their ideology, the largest proportion of Satanists identified as apolitical or non-aligned, while only a small percentage identified as conservative.[236] A small minority of Satanists expressed support for National Socialism; conversely, over two-thirds expressed opposition or strong opposition to it.[222]

2021 Canadian census

The 2021 Canadian census states that 5,890 Canadians identify as Satanist, representing 0.02% of the population.[237]

Compared to the general population, Satanists are more likely to be male, aged in their 20s or 30s, and not a member of any recognized minority group, although the Japanese are an exception (with the Japanese comprising 0.3% of both Satanists and the population as a whole).

Comparison of Satanists in Canada against the general population[237]
General population Satanists
Total population 36,328,480 5,890
Gender Male 17,937,165 (49.4%) 3,430 (58.2%)
Female 18,391,315 (50.6%) 2,460 (41.8%)
Age 0 to 14 5,992,555 (16.5%) 175 (3%)
15 to 19 2,003,200 (5.5%) 210 (3.6%)
20 to 24 2,177,860 (6%) 810 (13.8%)
25 to 34 4,898,625 (13.5%) 2,755 (46.8%)
35 to 44 4,872,425 (13.4%) 1,250 (21.2%)
45 to 54 4,634,850 (12.8%) 470 (8%)
55 to 64 5,162,365 (14.2%) 165 (2.8%)
65 and over 6,586,600 (18.1%) 60 (1%)
Minority status Non-minority 26,689,275 (73.5%) 5,480 (93%)
South Asian 2,571,400 (7%) 40 (0.7%)
Chinese 1,715,770 (4.7%) 50 (0.9%)
Black 1,547,870 (4.3%) 100 (1.7%)
Filipino 957,355 (2.6%) 35 (0.6%)
Arab 694,015 (1.9%) 25 (0.4%)
Latin American 580,235 (1.6%) 55 (0.9%)
Southeast Asian 390,340 (1.1%) 20 (0.3%)
West Asian 360,495 (1%) 0 (0%)
Korean 218,140 (0.6%) 0 (0%)
Japanese 98,890 (0.3%) 15 (0.3%)
Visible minority, n.i.e. 172,885 (0.5%) 20 (0.3%)
Multiple visible minorities 331,805 (0.9%) 50 (0.8%)

Legal recognition

In 2004, it was claimed that Satanism was allowed in the Royal Navy of the British Armed Forces, despite opposition from Christians.[238][239][240] In 2016, under a Freedom of Information request, the Navy Command Headquarters stated that "we do not recognise satanism as a formal religion, and will not grant facilities or make specific time available for individual 'worship'."[241]

In 2005, the Supreme Court of the United States debated in the case of Cutter v. Wilkinson over protecting minority religious rights of prison inmates after a lawsuit challenging the issue was filed to them.[242][243] The court ruled that facilities that accept federal funds cannot deny prisoners accommodations that are necessary to engage in activities for the practice of their own religious beliefs.[244][245]

In 2019, The Satanic Temple was granted religious IRS 501(c)(3) status.[246]

Art

Literature

 
Satan in Paradise Lost, as illustrated by Gustave Doré

From the late 1600s through to the 1800s, the character of Satan was increasingly rendered unimportant in western philosophy, and ignored in Christian theology, while in folklore he came to be seen as a foolish rather than a menacing figure.[247] The development of new values in the Age of Enlightenment (in particular, those of reason and individualism) contributed to a shift in many Europeans' concept of Satan.[247] In this context, a number of individuals took Satan out of the traditional Christian narrative and reread and reinterpreted him in light of their own time and their own interests, in turn generating new and different portraits of Satan.[248]

The shifting concept of Satan owes many of its origins to John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost (1667), in which Satan features as the protagonist.[249] Milton was a Puritan, and had never intended for his depiction of Satan to be a sympathetic one.[250] However, in portraying Satan as a victim of his own pride who rebelled against the Judeo-Christian god, Milton humanized him and also allowed him to be interpreted as a rebel against tyranny.[251] This was how Milton's Satan was understood by John Dryden[252] and later readers like the publisher Joseph Johnson,[253] and the anarchist philosopher William Godwin, who reflected it in his 1793 book Enquiry Concerning Political Justice.[251] Paradise Lost gained a wide readership in the eighteenth century, both in Britain and in continental Europe, where it had been translated into French by Voltaire.[254] Milton thus became "a central character in rewriting Satanism" and would be viewed by many later religious Satanists as a "de facto Satanist".[248]

The nineteenth century saw the emergence of what has been termed "literary Satanism" or "romantic Satanism".[255] According to Ruben van Luijk, this cannot be seen as a "coherent movement with a single voice, but rather as a post factum identified group of sometimes widely divergent authors among whom a similar theme is found".[256] For the literary Satanists, Satan was depicted as a benevolent and sometimes heroic figure,[257] with these more sympathetic portrayals proliferating in the art and poetry of many romanticist and decadent figures.[248] For these individuals, Satanism was not a religious belief or ritual activity, but rather a "strategic use of a symbol and a character as part of artistic and political expression".[258]

Among the romanticist poets to adopt this concept of Satan was the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, who had been influenced by Milton.[259] In his poem Laon and Cythna, Shelley praised the "serpent", a reference to Satan, as a force for good in the universe.[260] Another was Shelley's fellow British poet Lord Byron, who included Satanic themes in his 1821 play Cain, which was a dramatization of the Biblical story of Cain and Abel.[255] These more positive portrayals also developed in France; one example was the 1823 work Eloa by Alfred de Vigny.[261] Satan was also adopted by the French poet Victor Hugo, who made the character's fall from Heaven a central aspect of his La Fin de Satan, in which he outlined his own cosmogony.[262] Although the likes of Shelley and Byron promoted a positive image of Satan in their work, there is no evidence that any of them performed religious rites to venerate him, and thus they cannot be considered to be religious Satanists.[256]

Radical left-wing political ideas had been spread by the American Revolution of 1775–83 and the French Revolution of 1789–99. The figure of Satan, who was seen as having rebelled against the tyranny imposed by Jehovah, was appealing to many of the radical leftists of the period.[263] For them, Satan was "a symbol for the struggle against tyranny, injustice, and oppression... a mythical figure of rebellion for an age of revolutions, a larger-than-life individual for an age of individualism, a free thinker in an age struggling for free thought".[258] The French anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, who was a staunch critic of Christianity, embraced Satan as a symbol of liberty in several of his writings.[264] Another prominent 19th century anarchist, the Russian Mikhail Bakunin, similarly described the figure of Satan as "the eternal rebel, the first freethinker and the emancipator of worlds" in his book God and the State.[265] These ideas likely inspired the American feminist activist Moses Harman to name his anarchist periodical Lucifer the Lightbearer.[266] The idea of this "Leftist Satan" declined during the twentieth century,[266] although it was used on occasion by authorities within the Soviet Union, who portrayed Satan as a symbol of freedom and equality.[267]

Metal and rock music

 
Heavy metal singer King Diamond is a member of the Church of Satan.

During the 1960s and 1970s, several rock bands— namely the American band Coven and the British band Black Widow, employed the imagery of Satanism and witchcraft in their work.[268] References to Satan also appeared in the work of those rock bands which were pioneering the heavy metal genre in Britain during the 1970s.[269] For example, the band Black Sabbath made mention of Satan in their lyrics, although some of the band's members were practicing Christians, and other lyrics affirmed the power of the Christian god over Satan.[270] In the 1980s, greater use of Satanic imagery was made by heavy metal bands like Slayer, Kreator, Sodom, and Destruction.[271] Bands active in the subgenre of death metal— among them Deicide, Morbid Angel, and Entombed, also adopted Satanic imagery, combining it with other morbid and dark imagery, such as that of zombies and serial killers.[272]

Satanism would come to be more closely associated with the subgenre of black metal,[269] in which it was foregrounded over the other themes that had been used in death metal.[273] A number of black metal performers incorporated self-injury into their act, framing this as a manifestation of Satanic devotion.[273] The first black metal band, Venom, proclaimed themselves to be Satanists, although this was more an act of provocation than an expression of genuine devotion to the Devil.[274] Satanic themes were also used by the black metal bands Bathory and Hellhammer.[275] However, the first black metal act to more seriously adopt Satanism was Mercyful Fate, whose vocalist, King Diamond, joined the Church of Satan.[276] More often than not musicians associating themselves with black metal say they do not believe in legitimate Satanic ideology and often profess to being atheists, agnostics, or religious skeptics.[277]

In contrast to King Diamond, various black metal Satanists sought to distance themselves from LaVeyan Satanism, for instance by referring to their beliefs as "devil worship".[278] These individuals regarded Satan as a literal entity,[279] and in contrast to Anton LaVey, they associated Satanism with criminality, suicide, and terror.[278] For them, Christianity was regarded as a plague which required eradication.[280] Many of these individuals, most prominently Varg Vikernes and Euronymous, were involved in the early Norwegian black metal scene.[281][282] Between 1992 and 1996, such people destroyed around fifty Norwegian churches in arson attacks.[283] Within the black metal scene, a number of musicians later replaced Satanic themes with those deriving from Heathenry, a form of modern Paganism.[284]

See also

References

Footnotes

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  61. ^ Medway 2001, pp. 159–161.
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  65. ^ Petersen 2005, pp. 444–446.
  66. ^ a b Introvigne 2016, p. 107.
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Sources

Further reading

  • Holt, Cimminnee; Petersen, Jesper Aagaard (2016) [2008]. "Modern Religious Satanism: A Negotiation of Tensions". In Lewis, James R.; Tøllefsen, Inga (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements, Volume 2 (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 441–452. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190466176.013.33. ISBN 978-0-19-046617-6.

External links

satanism, satanist, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, satanist, disambiguation, confused, with, sethianism, group, ideological, philosophical, beliefs, based, satan, contemporary, religious, practice, began, with, founding, atheistic, church, satan. Satanist redirects here For other uses see Satanism disambiguation and Satanist disambiguation Not to be confused with Sethianism Satanism is a group of ideological and philosophical beliefs based on Satan Contemporary religious practice of Satanism began with the founding of the atheistic Church of Satan by Anton LaVey in the United States in 1966 although a few historical precedents exist Prior to the public practice Satanism existed primarily as an accusation by various Christian groups toward perceived ideological opponents rather than a self identity or valid religious belief Satanism and the concept of Satan has also been used by artists and entertainers for symbolic expression The inverted pentagram circumscribed by a circle also known as a pentacle is often used to represent Satanism Accusations that various groups have been practicing Satanism in a Devil worship interpretation have been made throughout much of Christian history During the Middle Ages the Inquisition attached to the Catholic Church alleged that various heretical Christian sects and groups such as the Knights Templar and the Cathars performed secret Satanic rituals In the subsequent Early Modern period belief in a widespread Satanic conspiracy of witches resulted in mass trials of alleged witches across Europe and the North American colonies Accusations that Satanic conspiracies were active and behind events such as Protestantism and conversely the Protestant claim that the Pope was the Antichrist and the French Revolution continued to be made in Christendom during the eighteenth to the twentieth century The idea of a vast Satanic conspiracy reached new heights with the influential Taxil hoax of France in the 1890s which claimed that Freemasonry worshipped Satan Lucifer and Baphomet in their rituals In the 1980s and 1990s the Satanic ritual abuse hysteria spread through the United States and the United Kingdom amid fears that groups of Satanists were regularly sexually abusing and murdering children in their rites In most of these cases there is no corroborating evidence that any of those accused of Satanism were actually practitioners of a Satanic religion or guilty of the allegations leveled at them Since the 19th century various small religious groups have emerged that identify as Satanists or use Satanic iconography The Satanist groups that appeared after the 1960s are widely diverse though can be divided into theistic Satanism and atheistic Satanism 1 Those venerating Satan as a supernatural deity view him not as omnipotent but rather as a patriarch Atheistic Satanists regard Satan as a symbol of certain human traits 2 Since its founding in 2012 The Satanic Temple has attracted hundreds of thousands of nontheistic members worldwide 3 Contemporary religious Satanism is predominantly an American phenomenon the ideas spreading elsewhere with the effects of globalization and the Internet 4 The Internet spreads awareness of other Satanists and is also the main battleground for Satanist disputes 4 Satanism started to reach Central and Eastern Europe in the 1990s in time with the fall of the Communist Bloc and most noticeably in Poland and Lithuania predominantly Roman Catholic countries 5 6 Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Medieval and Early Modern Christendom 2 2 18th to 20th century Christendom 2 3 Modern Satanism 2 4 Ritual abuse hysteria 3 Atheistic Satanism 3 1 Church of Satan 3 2 First Satanic Church 3 3 The Satanic Temple 4 Theistic Satanism 4 1 Luciferianism 4 2 Order of Nine Angles 4 3 Temple of Set 4 4 Joy of Satan 5 Personal Satanism 6 Demographics 6 1 2021 Canadian census 7 Legal recognition 8 Art 8 1 Literature 8 2 Metal and rock music 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Footnotes 10 2 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksDefinition Saint Wolfgang and the Devil by Michael Pacher In their study of Satanism the religious studies scholars Asbjorn Dyrendal James R Lewis and Jesper Aa Petersen stated that the term Satanism has a history of being a designation made by people against those whom they dislike it is a term used for othering 7 The concept of Satanism is an invention of Christianity for it relies upon the figure of Satan a character deriving from Christian mythology 8 Elsewhere Petersen noted that Satanism as something others do is very different from Satanism as a self designation 9 Eugene Gallagher noted that as commonly used Satanism was usually a polemical not a descriptive term 10 In 1994 the Italian sociologist Massimo Introvigne suggested defining Satanism with the simultaneous presence of 1 the worship of the character identified with the name of Satan or Lucifer in the Bible 2 by organized groups with at least a minimal organization and hierarchy 3 through ritual or liturgical practices it does not matter how each Satanist group perceives Satan as personal or impersonal real or symbolical 11 Etymology The word Satan was not originally a proper name but rather an ordinary noun that means adversary In this context it appears at several points in the Old Testament 12 For instance in the Book of Samuel David is presented as the satan adversary of the Philistines while in the Book of Numbers the term appears as a verb when Jehovah sent an angel to satan to oppose Balaam 13 Prior to the composition of the New Testament the idea developed within Jewish communities that Satan was the name of an angel who had rebelled against Jehovah and had been cast out of Heaven along with his followers this account would be incorporated into contemporary texts like the Book of Enoch 14 This Satan was then featured in parts of the New Testament where he was presented as a figure who tempted humans to commit sin in the Book of Matthew and the Book of Luke he attempted to tempt Jesus of Nazareth as the latter fasted in the wilderness 15 The word Satanism was adopted into English from the French satanisme 16 The terms Satanism and Satanist are first recorded as appearing in the English and French languages during the sixteenth century when they were used by Christian groups to attack other rival Christian groups 17 In a Roman Catholic tract of 1565 the author condemns the heresies blasphemies and sathanismes sic of the Protestants 16 In an Anglican work of 1559 Anabaptists and other Protestant sects are condemned as swarmes of Satanistes sic 16 As used in this manner the term Satanism was not used to claim that people literally worshipped Satan but rather it claimed that the accused was deviating from true Christianity and thus serving the will of Satan 18 During the nineteenth century the term Satanism began to be used to describe those considered to lead a broadly immoral lifestyle 18 and it was only in the late nineteenth century that it came to be applied in English to individuals who were believed to consciously and deliberately venerate Satan 18 This latter meaning had appeared earlier in the Swedish language the Lutheran Bishop Laurentius Paulinus Gothus had described devil worshipping sorcerers as Sathanister in his Ethica Christiana produced between 1615 and 1630 19 HistoryHistorical and anthropological research suggests that nearly all societies have developed the idea of a sinister and anti human force that can hide itself within society 20 This commonly involves a belief in witches a group of individuals who invert the norms of their society and seek to harm their community for instance by engaging in incest murder and cannibalism 21 Allegations of witchcraft may have different causes and serve different functions within a society 22 For instance they may serve to uphold social norms 23 to heighten the tension in existing conflicts between individuals 23 or to scapegoat certain individuals for various social problems 22 Another contributing factor to the idea of Satanism is the concept that there is an agent of misfortune and evil who operates on a cosmic scale 24 something usually associated with a strong form of ethical dualism that divides the world clearly into forces of good and forces of evil 25 The earliest such entity known is Angra Mainyu a figure that appears in the Persian religion of Zoroastrianism 24 26 This concept was also embraced by Judaism and early Christianity and although it was soon marginalized within Jewish thought it gained increasing importance within early Christian understandings of the cosmos 27 While the early Christian idea of the Devil was not well developed it gradually adapted and expanded through the creation of folklore art theological treatises and morality tales thus providing the character with a range of extra Biblical associations 28 Medieval and Early Modern Christendom Title illustration of Johannes Praetorius writer Blocksbergs Verrichtung 1668 showing many traditional features of the medieval Witches Sabbath See also European witchcraft Maleficium sorcery and Witch cult hypothesis As Christianity expanded throughout the Middle East North Africa and Europe it came into contact with a variety of other religions which it regarded as pagan Christian theologians claimed that the gods and goddesses venerated by these pagans were not genuine divinities but were actually demons 29 However they did not believe that pagans were deliberately devil worshippers instead claiming that they were simply misguided 30 In Christian iconography the Devil and demons were given the physical traits of figures from classical mythology such as the god Pan fauns and satyrs 30 Those Christian groups regarded as heretics by the Roman Catholic Church were treated differently with theologians arguing that they were deliberately worshipping the Devil 31 This was accompanied by claims that such individuals engaged in incestuous sexual orgies murdered infants and committed acts of cannibalism all stock accusations that had previously been leveled at Christians themselves in the Roman Empire 32 The first recorded example of such an accusation being made within Western Christianity took place in Toulouse in 1022 when two clerics were tried for allegedly venerating a demon 33 Throughout the Middle Ages this accusation would be applied to a wide range of Christian heretical groups including the Paulicians Bogomils Cathars Waldensians and the Hussites 34 The Knights Templar were accused of worshipping an idol known as Baphomet with Lucifer having appeared at their meetings in the form of a cat 35 As well as these Christian groups these claims were also made about Europe s Jewish community 36 In the thirteenth century there were also references made to a group of Luciferians led by a woman named Lucardis which hoped to see Satan rule in Heaven References to this group continued into the fourteenth century although historians studying the allegations concur that these Luciferians were likely a fictitious invention 37 Within Christian thought the idea developed that certain individuals could make a pact with Satan 38 This may have emerged after observing that pacts with gods and goddesses played a role in various pre Christian belief systems or that such pacts were also made as part of the Christian cult of saints 39 Another possibility is that it derives from a misunderstanding of Augustine of Hippo s condemnation of augury in his On the Christian Doctrine written in the late fourth century Here he stated that people who consulted augurs were entering quasi pacts covenants with demons 40 The idea of the diabolical pact made with demons was popularized across Europe in the story of Faust likely based in part on the real life Johann Georg Faust 41 The Obscene Kiss an illustration of witches kissing the Devil s anus from Francesco Maria Guazzo s Compendium Maleficarum 1608 As the late medieval gave way to the early modern period European Christendom experienced a schism between the established Roman Catholic Church and the breakaway Protestant movement In the ensuing Reformation and Counter Reformation both Catholics and Protestants accused each other of deliberately being in league with Satan 42 It was in this context that the terms Satanist and Satanism emerged 17 The early modern period also saw fear of Satanists reach its historical apogee in the form of the witch trials of the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries 43 This came about as the accusations which had been leveled at medieval heretics among them that of devil worship were applied to the pre existing idea of the witch or practitioner of malevolent magic 44 The idea of a conspiracy of Satanic witches was developed by educated elites although the concept of malevolent witchcraft was a widespread part of popular belief and folkloric ideas about the night witch the wild hunt and the dance of the fairies were incorporated into it 45 The earliest trials took place in Northern Italy and France before spreading it out to other areas of Europe and to Britain s North American colonies being carried out by the legal authorities in both Catholic and Protestant regions 43 Between 30 000 and 50 000 individuals were executed as accused Satanic witches 43 Most historians agree that the majority of those persecuted in these witch trials were innocent of any involvement in Devil worship 46 However in their summary of the evidence for the trials the historians Geoffrey Scarre and John Callow thought it without doubt that some of those accused in the trials had been guilty of employing magic in an attempt to harm their enemies and were thus genuinely guilty of witchcraft 47 In seventeenth century Sweden a number of highway robbers and other outlaws living in the forests informed judges that they venerated Satan because he provided more practical assistance than Jehovah 48 Introvigne regarded these practices as folkloric Satanism 19 18th to 20th century Christendom Stanislas de Guaita drew the original goat pentagram which first appeared in the book La Clef de la Magie Noire in 1897 This symbol would later become synonymous with Baphomet and is commonly referred to as the Sabbatic Goat During the eighteenth century gentleman s social clubs became increasingly prominent in Britain and Ireland among the most secretive of which were the Hellfire Clubs which were first reported in the 1720s 49 The most famous of these groups was the Order of the Knights of Saint Francis which was founded circa 1750 by the aristocrat Sir Francis Dashwood and which assembled first at his estate at West Wycombe and later in Medmenham Abbey 50 A number of contemporary press sources portrayed these as gatherings of atheist rakes where Christianity was mocked and toasts were made to the Devil 51 Beyond these sensationalist accounts which may not be accurate portrayals of actual events little is known about the activities of the Hellfire Clubs 51 Introvigne suggested that they may have engaged in a form of playful Satanism in which Satan was invoked to show a daring contempt for conventional morality by individuals who neither believed in his literal existence nor wanted to pay homage to him 52 The French Revolution of 1789 dealt a blow to the hegemony of the Roman Catholic Church in parts of Europe and soon a number of Catholic authors began making claims that it had been masterminded by a conspiratorial group of Satanists 53 Among the first to do so was French Catholic priest Jean Baptiste Fiard who publicly claimed that a wide range of individuals from the Jacobins to tarot card readers were part of a Satanic conspiracy 54 Fiard s ideas were furthered by Alexis Vincent Charles Berbiguier who devoted a lengthy book to this conspiracy theory he claimed that Satanists had supernatural powers allowing them to curse people and to shapeshift into both cats and fleas 55 Although most of his contemporaries regarded Berbiguier as mad 56 his ideas gained credence among many occultists including Stanislas de Guaita a Cabalist who used them for the basis of his book The Temple of Satan 57 In the early 20th century the British novelist Dennis Wheatley produced a range of influential novels in which his protagonists battled Satanic groups 58 At the same time non fiction authors like Montague Summers and Rollo Ahmed published books claiming that Satanic groups practicing black magic were still active across the world although they provided no evidence that this was the case 59 During the 1950s various British tabloid newspapers repeated such claims largely basing their accounts on the allegations of one woman Sarah Jackson who claimed to have been a member of such a group 60 In 1973 the British Christian Doreen Irvine published From Witchcraft to Christ in which she claimed to have been a member of a Satanic group that gave her supernatural powers such as the ability to levitate before she escaped and embraced Christianity 61 In the United States during the 1960s and 1970s various Christian preachers the most famous being Mike Warnke in his 1972 book The Satan Seller claimed that they had been members of Satanic groups who carried out sex rituals and animal sacrifices before discovering Christianity 62 According to Gareth Medway in his historical examination of Satanism these stories were a series of inventions by insecure people and hack writers each one based on a previous story exaggerated a little more each time 63 Other publications made allegations of Satanism against historical figures The 1970s saw the publication of the Romanian Protestant preacher Richard Wurmbrand s book in which he argued without corroborating evidence that the socio political theorist Karl Marx had been a Satanist 64 Modern Satanism The Sabbatic Goat also known as the Goat of Mendes or Baphomet as illustrated by Eliphas Levi has become one of the most common symbols of Satanism 65 The figure of Lucifer was taken up by the French ceremonial magician Eliphas Levi who has been described as a Romantic Satanist 66 During his younger days Levi used Lucifer in the same positive symbolic manner as the literary Romantics 67 As he moved toward political conservatism in later life he retained the use of the term but instead applied it to what he believed was a morally neutral facet of the absolute 66 67 Levi was not the only occultist who used the term Lucifer without adopting the term Satan in a similar way 67 The early Theosophical Society believed that Lucifer was a force that aided humanity s awakening to its own spiritual nature 68 In keeping with this belief the Society began production of the journal Lucifer in 1887 69 Some historians have claimed English writers Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley to be among the first Satanists 70 71 but others believe they simply portrayed him positively without actually venerating him 72 The first person to promote an explicitly Satanic philosophy was the Polish writer Stanislaw Przybyszewski who based his ideology on Social Darwinism of the 1890s 73 Lucifer also figured within the esoteric system propounded by the Danish occultist Carl William Hansen who used the pen name Ben Kadosh 69 Hansen was involved in a variety of esoteric groups including Martinism Freemasonry and the Ordo Templi Orientis drawing on their ideas to establish his own philosophy 69 He provided a Luciferian interpretation of Freemasonry in a 1906 pamphlet 74 though his work had little influence outside of Denmark 74 75 Aleister Crowley was not a Satanist but used rhetoric and imagery considered satanic Both during his life and after it the British occultist Aleister Crowley has been widely described as a Satanist usually by detractors Crowley stated he did not consider himself a Satanist nor did he worship Satan as he did not accept the Christian world view in which Satan was believed to exist 76 He nevertheless used imagery considered satanic for instance by describing himself as the Beast 666 and referring to the Whore of Babylon in his work while in later life he sent Antichristmas cards to his friends 77 Dyrendel Lewis and Petersen noted that despite the fact that Crowley was not a Satanist he in many ways embodies the pre Satanist esoteric discourse on Satan and Satanism through his lifestyle and his philosophy with his image and thought becoming an important influence on the later development of religious Satanism 74 In 1928 the Fraternitas Saturni FS was established in Germany its founder Eugen Grosche published Satanische Magie Satanic Magic that same year 78 The group connected Satan to Saturn claiming that the planet related to the Sun in the same manner that Lucifer relates to the human world 78 In 1932 an esoteric group known as the Brotherhood of the Golden Arrow was established in Paris France by Maria de Naglowska a Russian occultist who had fled to France following the Russian Revolution 79 80 She promoted a theology centered on what she called the Third Term of the Trinity consisting of Father Son and Sex the latter of which she deemed to be most important 79 Her early disciples who underwent what she called Satanic Initiations included models and art students recruited from bohemian circles 79 The Golden Arrow disbanded after Naglowska abandoned it in 1936 81 According to Introvigne hers was a quite complicated Satanism built on a complex philosophical vision of the world of which little would survive its initiator 82 In 1969 a Satanic group based in Toledo Ohio part of the United States came to public attention Called the Our Lady of Endor Coven it was led by a man named Herbert Sloane who described his Satanic tradition as the Ophite Cultus Sathanas and alleged that it had been established in the 1940s 83 84 The group had a Gnostic doctrine about the world in which the Judeo Christian creator god is regarded as evil and the Biblical serpent is presented as a force for good who had delivered salvation to humanity in the Garden of Eden 83 85 Sloane s claims that his group had a 1940s origin remain unproven it may be that he falsely claimed older origins for his group to make it appear older than Anton LaVey s Church of Satan which had been established in 1966 86 84 None of these groups had any real impact on the emergence of the later Satanic milieu in the 1960s 87 Ritual abuse hysteria Main article Satanic ritual abuse At the end of the twentieth century a moral panic arose from claims that a Devil worshipping cult was committing sexual abuse murder and cannibalism in its rituals and including children among the victims of its rites 88 Initially the alleged perpetrators of such crimes were labeled witches although the term Satanist was soon adopted as a favored alternative 88 and the phenomenon itself came to be called the Satanism Scare 89 Promoters of the claims alleged that there was a conspiracy of organized Satanists who occupied prominent positions throughout society from the police to politicians and that they had been powerful enough to cover up their crimes 90 Preceded by some significant but isolated episodes in the 1970s a great Satanism scare exploded in the 1980s in the United States and Canada and was subsequently exported towards England Australia and other countries It was unprecedented in history It surpassed even the results of Taxil s propaganda and has been compared with the most virulent periods of witch hunting The scare started in 1980 and declined slowly between 1990 and 1994 when official British and American reports denied the real existence of ritual satanic crimes Particularly outside the U S and U K however its consequences are still felt today Sociologist of religion Massimo Introvigne 2016 91 One of the primary sources for the scare was Michelle Remembers a 1980 book by the Canadian psychiatrist Lawrence Pazder in which he detailed what he claimed were the repressed memories of his patient and wife Michelle Smith Smith had claimed that as a child she had been abused by her family in Satanic rituals in which babies were sacrificed and Satan himself appeared 92 93 In 1983 allegations were made that the McMartin family owners of a preschool in California were guilty of sexually abusing the children in their care during Satanic rituals The allegations resulted in a lengthy and expensive trial in which all of the accused would eventually be cleared 94 95 The publicity generated by the case resulted in similar allegations being made in various other parts of the United States 96 A prominent aspect of the Satanic Scare was the claim by those in the developing anti Satanism movement that any child s claim about Satanic ritual abuse must be true because children would not lie 97 Although some involved in the anti Satanism movement were from Jewish and secular backgrounds 98 a central part was played by fundamentalist and evangelical forms of Christianity in particular Pentecostalism with Christian groups holding conferences and producing books and videotapes to promote belief in the conspiracy 89 Various figures in law enforcement also came to be promoters of the conspiracy theory with such cult cops holding various conferences to promote it 99 The scare was later imported to the United Kingdom through visiting evangelicals and became popular among some of the country s social workers 100 resulting in a range of accusations and trials across Britain 101 The Satanic ritual abuse hysteria died down between 1990 and 1994 91 In the late 1980s the Satanic Scare had lost its impetus following increasing skepticism about such allegations 102 and a number of those who had been convicted of perpetrating Satanic ritual abuse saw their convictions overturned 103 In 1990 an agent of the U S Federal Bureau of Investigation Ken Lanning revealed that he had investigated 300 allegations of Satanic ritual abuse and found no evidence for Satanism or ritualistic activity in any of them 103 In the UK the Department of Health commissioned the anthropologist Jean La Fontaine to examine the allegations of SRA 104 She noted that while approximately half did reveal evidence of genuine sexual abuse of children none revealed any evidence that Satanist groups had been involved or that any murders had taken place 105 She noted three examples in which lone individuals engaged in child molestation had created a ritual performance to facilitate their sexual acts with the intent of frightening their victims and justifying their actions but that none of these child molesters were involved in wider Satanist groups 106 By the 21st century hysteria about Satanism has waned in most Western countries although allegations of Satanic ritual abuse continued to surface in parts of continental Europe and Latin America 107 Atheistic SatanismChurch of Satan Main articles LaVeyan Satanism and Church of Satan The Sigil of Baphomet the official insignia of the Church of Satan and LaVeyan Satanism Anton LaVey who has been referred to as The Father of Satanism 108 synthesized his religion through the establishment of the Church of Satan in 1966 and the publication of The Satanic Bible in 1969 LaVey s teachings promoted indulgence vital existence undefiled wisdom kindness to those who deserve it responsibility to the responsible and an eye for an eye code of ethics while shunning abstinence based on guilt spirituality unconditional love pacifism equality herd mentality and scapegoating LaVey envisioned a Satanist as a carnal physical and pragmatic being The core values of LaVey Satanism are the enjoyment of physical existence and undiluted naturalism that sees mankind as animals that exist in an amoral universe LaVey believed that the ideal Satanist should be individualistic and non conformist rejecting what he called the colorless existence that mainstream society sought to impose on those living within it 109 He praised the human ego for encouraging an individual s pride self respect and self realization and accordingly believed in satisfying the ego s desires 110 He stated that self indulgence was a desirable trait 111 and that hate and aggression were not wrong or undesirable emotions but that they were necessary and advantageous for survival 112 Accordingly he praised the seven deadly sins as virtues which were beneficial for the individual 113 The anthropologist Jean La Fontaine highlighted an article that appeared in The Black Flame in which one writer described a true Satanic society as one in which the population consists of free spirited well armed fully conscious self disciplined individuals who will neither need nor tolerate any external entity protecting them or telling them what they can and cannot do 114 The sociologist James R Lewis noted that LaVey was directly responsible for the genesis of Satanism as a serious religious as opposed to a purely literary movement 115 Scholars agree that there is no reliably documented case of Satanic continuity prior to the founding of the Church of Satan 116 It was the first organized church in modern times to be devoted to the figure of Satan 117 and according to Faxneld and Petersen the Church represented the first public highly visible and long lasting organization which propounded a coherent satanic discourse 118 LaVey s book The Satanic Bible has been described as the most important document to influence contemporary Satanism 119 The book contains the core principles of Satanism and is considered the foundation of its philosophy and dogma 120 Petersen noted that it is in many ways the central text of the Satanic milieu 121 with Lap similarly testifying to its dominant position within the wider Satanic movement 122 David G Bromley calls it iconoclastic and the best known and most influential statement of Satanic theology 123 Eugene V Gallagher says that Satanists use LaVey s writings as lenses through which they view themselves their group and the cosmos He also states With a clear eyed appreciation of true human nature a love of ritual and pageantry and a flair for mockery LaVey s Satanic Bible promulgated a gospel of self indulgence that he argued anyone who dispassionately considered the facts would embrace 124 A number of religious studies scholars have described LaVey s Satanism as a form of self religion or self spirituality 125 with religious studies scholar Amina Olander Lap arguing that it should be seen as being both part of the prosperity wing of the self spirituality New Age movement and a form of the Human Potential Movement 126 The anthropologist Jean La Fontaine described it as having both elitist and anarchist elements also citing one occult bookshop owner who referred to the Church s approach as anarchistic hedonism 127 In The Invention of Satanism Dyrendal and Petersen theorized that LaVey viewed his religion as an antinomian self religion for productive misfits with a cynically carnivalesque take on life and no supernaturalism 128 The sociologist of religion James R Lewis even described LaVeyan Satanism as a blend of Epicureanism and Ayn Rand s philosophy flavored with a pinch of ritual magic 129 The historian of religion Mattias Gardell described LaVey s as a rational ideology of egoistic hedonism and self preservation 130 while Nevill Drury characterized LaVeyan Satanism as a religion of self indulgence 131 It has also been described as an institutionalism of Machiavellian self interest 132 Prominent Church leader Blanche Barton described Satanism as an alignment a lifestyle 133 LaVey and the Church stated that Satanists are born not made 134 that they are outsiders by their nature living as they see fit 109 who are self realized in a religion which appeals to the would be Satanist s nature leading them to realize they are Satanists through finding a belief system that is in line with their own perspective and lifestyle 135 Adherents to the philosophy have described Satanism as a non spiritual religion of the flesh or the world s first carnal religion 136 LaVey used Christianity as a negative mirror for his new faith 137 with LaVeyan Satanism rejecting the basic principles and theology of Christian belief 127 It views Christianity alongside other major religions and philosophies such as humanism and liberal democracy as a largely negative force on humanity LaVeyan Satanists perceive Christianity as a lie which promotes idealism self denigration herd behavior and irrationality 138 LaVeyans view their religion as a force for redressing this balance by encouraging materialism egoism stratification carnality atheism and social Darwinism 138 LaVey s Satanism was particularly critical of what it understands as Christianity s denial of humanity s animal nature and it instead calls for the celebration of and indulgence in these desires 127 In doing so it places an emphasis on the carnal rather than the spiritual 139 Practitioners do not believe that Satan literally exists and do not worship him 1 Instead Satan is viewed as a positive archetype embracing the Hebrew root of the word Satan as adversary who represents pride carnality and enlightenment and of a cosmos which Satanists perceive to be motivated by a dark evolutionary force of entropy that permeates all of nature and provides the drive for survival and propagation inherent in all living things 140 The Devil is embraced as a symbol of defiance against the Abrahamic faiths which LaVey criticized for what he saw as the suppression of humanity s natural instincts Moreover Satan also serves as a metaphorical external projection of the individual s godhood LaVey stated that god is a creation of man rather than man being a creation of god In his book The Satanic Bible the Satanist s concept of a god is described as the Satanist s true self a projection of his or her own personality not an external deity 141 Satan is used as a representation of personal liberty and individualism 142 LaVey explained that the gods worshipped by other religions are also projections of man s true self He argues that man s unwillingness to accept his own ego has caused him to externalize these gods so as to avoid the feeling of narcissism that would accompany self worship 143 The current high priest of the Church of Satan Peter H Gilmore further expounds that Satan is a symbol of Man living as his prideful carnal nature dictates Satan is not a conscious entity to be worshipped rather a reservoir of power inside each human to be tapped at will 144 The Church of Satan has chosen Satan as its primary symbol because in Hebrew it means adversary opposer one to accuse or question We see ourselves as being these Satans the adversaries opposers and accusers of all spiritual belief systems that would try to hamper enjoyment of our life as a human being 145 The term theistic Satanism has been described as oxymoronic by the church and its High Priest 146 The Church of Satan rejects the legitimacy of any other organizations who claim to be Satanists dubbing them reverse Christians pseudo Satanists or Devil worshipers atheistic or otherwise 147 and maintains a purist approach to Satanism as expounded by LaVey 117 First Satanic Church Main article First Satanic Church After LaVey s death in 1997 the Church of Satan was taken over by a new administration and its headquarters were moved to New York LaVey s daughter the High Priestess Karla LaVey felt this to be a disservice to her father s legacy The First Satanic Church was re founded on October 31 1999 by Karla LaVey to carry on the legacy of her father She continues to run it out of San Francisco California The Satanic Temple Main article The Satanic Temple The Satanic Temple alternative logo featuring a modern rendition and inspiration of the Sigil of Baphomet The Satanic Temple is an American religious and political activist organization based in Salem Massachusetts The organization actively participates in public affairs that have manifested in several public political actions 148 149 and efforts at lobbying 150 with a focus on the separation of church and state and using satire against Christian groups that it believes interfere with personal freedom 150 According to Dyrendal Lewis and Petersen the group were rationalist political pranksters 151 Their pranks are designed to highlight religious hypocrisy and advance the cause of secularism 152 In one of their actions they performed a Pink Mass over the grave of the mother of the evangelical Christian and prominent anti LGBT preacher Fred Phelps the Temple claimed that the mass converted the spirit of Phelps mother into a lesbian 151 The Satanic Temple does not believe in a supernatural Satan as they believe that this encourages superstition that would keep them from being malleable to the best current scientific understandings of the material world The Temple uses the literary Satan as metaphor to construct a cultural narrative which promotes pragmatic skepticism rational reciprocity personal autonomy and curiosity 153 Satan is thus used as a symbol representing the eternal rebel against arbitrary authority and social norms 154 155 Theistic SatanismReligious Satanism does not exist in a single form as there are multiple different religious Satanisms each with different ideas about what being a Satanist entails 156 A minority of Satanists are far right 157 The historian of religion Ruben van Luijk used a working definition in which Satanism was regarded as the intentional religiously motivated veneration of Satan 18 Dyrendal Lewis and Petersen believed that it was not a single movement but rather a milieu 158 They and others have nevertheless referred to it as a new religious movement 159 They believed that there was a family resemblance that united all of the varying groups in this milieu 7 and that most of them were self religions 158 They argued that there were a set of features that were common to the groups in this Satanic milieu these were the positive use of the term Satanist as a designation an emphasis on individualism a genealogy that connects them to other Satanic groups a transgressive and antinomian stance a self perception as an elite and an embrace of values such as pride self reliance and productive non conformity 160 Dyrendal Lewis and Petersen argued that the groups within the Satanic milieu could be divided into three groups reactive Satanists rationalist Satanists and esoteric Satanists 161 They saw reactive Satanism as encompassing popular Satanism inverted Christianity and symbolic rebellion and noted that it situates itself in opposition to society while at the same time conforming to society s perspective of evil 161 Rationalist Satanism is used to describe the trend in the Satanic milieu which is atheistic skeptical materialistic and epicurean 162 Esoteric Satanism instead applied to those forms which are theistic and draw upon ideas from other forms of Western esotericism Modern Paganism Buddhism and Hinduism 162 Theistic Satanism also known as traditional Satanism Spiritual Satanism or Devil worship is a form of Satanism with the primary belief that Satan is an actual deity or force to revere or worship 1 163 Other characteristics of theistic Satanism may include a belief in magic which is manipulated through ritual although that is not a defining criterion and theistic Satanists may focus solely on devotion Luciferianism A version of the symbol of Lucifer used by some modern Satanists Main article Luciferianism Luciferianism is a belief system that venerates the characteristics that are attributed to Lucifer Luciferians usually revere Lucifer not as the devil but as a destroyer guardian liberator 164 light bringer and or guiding spirit to darkness 165 or even as the true god as opposed to Jehovah 164 One group of Luciferians those of the Neo Luciferian Church are influenced by Gnosticism Order of Nine Angles Main article Order of Nine Angles One of the principal symbols of the ONA According to the group s own claims the Order of Nine Angles was established in Shropshire England during the late 1960s when a Grand Mistress united a number of ancient pagan groups active in the area 166 This account states that when the Order s Grand Mistress migrated to Australia a man known as Anton Long took over as the new Grand Master 166 From 1976 onward he authored an array of texts for the tradition codifying and extending its teachings mythos and structure 167 Various academics have argued that Long is the pseudonym of British National Socialist Movement activist David Myatt 168 an allegation that Myatt has denied 169 The ONA arose to public attention in the early 1980s 170 spreading its message through magazine articles over the following two decades 171 In 2000 it established a presence on the internet 171 later adopting social media to promote its message 172 The ONA is a secretive organization 173 and lacks any central administration instead operating as a network of allied Satanic practitioners which it terms the kollective 174 It consists largely of autonomous cells known as nexions 174 The majority of these are located in Britain Ireland and Germany although others are located elsewhere in Europe and in Russia Egypt South Africa Brazil Australia and the United States 174 The ONA describe their occultism as Traditional Satanism 175 The ONA s writings encourage human sacrifice 176 referring to their victims as opfers 177 According to the Order s teachings such opfers must demonstrate character faults that mark them out as being worthy of death 178 179 No ONA cell has admitted to carrying out a sacrifice in a ritualized manner but rather Order members have joined the police and military in order to carry out such killings 180 Faxneld described the Order as a dangerous and extreme form of Satanism 181 while religious studies scholar Graham Harvey wrote that the ONA fit the stereotype of the Satanist better than other groups by embracing deeply shocking and illegal acts 182 The ONA is connected to multiple killings rapes and cases of child abuse and right wing terrorism Several British politicians including the Labour Party s Yvette Cooper chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee 183 have pushed for the group to be banned as a terror organization and according to the BBC News the authorities are concerned by the number of paedophiles associated with the ONA Additionally there are various followers of the O9A paradigm who are or were also members of banned militant national socialist groups namely the Atomwaffen Division Combat 18 and Nordic Resistance Movement the first of which even aims to make terror attacks 184 185 186 Temple of Set Main article Temple of Set The Temple of Set is an initiatory occult society that claims to be the world s leading left hand path religious organization It was established in 1975 by Michael A Aquino and certain members of the priesthood of the Church of Satan 187 who left the CoS because of administrative and philosophical disagreements ToS deliberately self differentiates from CoS in several ways most significantly in theology and sociology 188 The philosophy of the Temple of Set may be summed up as enlightened individualism enhancement and improvement of oneself by personal education experiment and initiation This process is necessarily different and distinctive for each individual The members do not agree on whether Set is real or symbolic and they re not expected to 188 Michael Aquino believed that the name Satan was originally a corruption of the name Set 189 The Temple teaches that Set is a real entity 190 and the only real god in existence with all other gods being created by the human imagination 191 Set is described as having given humanity through the means of non natural evolution the Black Flame or the Gift of Set which is a questioning intellect that sets humans apart from other animals 192 While Setians are expected to revere Set they do not worship him 193 Central to Setian philosophy is the human individual 137 with self deification presented as the ultimate goal 194 In 2005 Petersen noted that academic estimates for the Temple s membership varied from between 300 and 500 195 and Granholm suggested that in 2007 the Temple contained circa 200 members 196 Joy of Satan Main article Joy of Satan Ministries Joy of Satan is a website and esoteric occult group that was founded in the early 2000s by Maxine Dietrich pseudonym of Andrea Maxine Dietrich 197 198 199 wife of the American National Socialist Movement s co founder and former leader Clifford Herrington 200 With its inception spiritual Satanism was born a current that until recently was regarded only as theist but then defined into spiritual Satanism by Theistic Satanists who concluded that the term spiritual in Satanism represented the best answer to the world 201 considering it a moral slap toward the earlier carnal and materialistic LaVeyan Satanism and instead focusing its attention upon spiritual evolution 201 Joy of Satan presents a unique synthesis of theistic Satanism National Socialism Gnostic Paganism Western esotericism UFO conspiracy theories and extraterrestrial hypotheses similar to those popularized by Zecharia Sitchin and David Icke 198 199 Members of Joy of Satan are generally polytheists believing that Satan is one of many deities 198 202 203 While Satan and demons are considered deities within JoS the deities themselves are understood to be highly evolved un aging sentient and powerful humanoid extraterrestrial beings 198 202 200 204 205 Satan and many demons are equated with gods from ancient cultures some of which include the Sumerian god Enki and the Yazidi angel Melek Taus being seen as Satan borrowing their theistic Satanist interpretations of Enki from the writings of Zecharia Sitchin and Melek Taus partially deriving from the writings of Anton LaVey 200 Satan is seen not only as an important deity but a powerful and sentient being responsible for the creation of humanity 202 200 Satan is also revered by JoS as the true father and creator god of humanity 203 the bringer of knowledge and whose desire is for his creations humans to elevate themselves through knowledge and understanding 202 203 In their beliefs Yazidism is in juxtaposition with Satanism as they consider the two share similar elements such as Yazidi devotees being defined by Muslims as devotees to Shaytan and regarded as Satanists 201 It is also believed that the figure of Melek Ta Us the peacock angel may derive from much older pagan deities such as Saraswati the Hindu goddess of wisdom who rides a peacock or even the god Indra who transforms into a peacock 201 The story of Melek Ta Us itself is also considered by JoS to have many satanic elements such as being described as the angel who rebelled against the Abrahamic god 201 The sacred text of the Yazidis the Al Jilwah is claimed by the JoS as the word of Satan 201 While maintaining some popularity as a Theistic Satanist sect the group has been widely criticized for its association with the National Socialist Movement and its racial anti Jewish anti Judaic and anti Christian sentiment as well as its anti Semitic conspiracy theories 204 206 Much of their beliefs on aliens meditation and telepathic contacts with demons have become popular in a larger milieu within the currents of recent non LaVeyan theistic Satanism 198 200 According to Petersen s survey 2014 Joy of Satan s angelfire network has a surprising prominence among theistic Satanist websites on the internet 207 In addition James R Lewis s Satan census 2009 also revealed a presence of respondents to Joy of Satan 208 Personal Satanism The American serial killer Richard Ramirez self identified as a Satanist In contrast to the organized and doctrinal Satanist groups is the personal Satanism of individuals who identify as Satanists due to their affinity for the general idea of Satan including such characteristics as viciousness and or subversion Dyrendal Lewis and Petersen used the term reactive Satanism to describe one form of modern Satanism They described this as an adolescent and anti social means of rebelling in a Christian society by which an individual transgresses cultural boundaries 161 They believed that there were two tendencies within reactive Satanism one Satanic tourism was characterized by the brief period of time in which an individual was involved while the other the Satanic quest was typified by a longer and deeper involvement 162 The researcher Gareth Medway noted that in 1995 he encountered a British woman who stated that she had been a practicing Satanist during her teenage years She had grown up in a small mining village and had come to believe that she had psychic powers After hearing about Satanism in some library books she declared herself a Satanist and formulated a belief that Satan was the true god After her teenage years she abandoned Satanism and became a chaos magickian 209 Some personal Satanists are teenagers or mentally disturbed individuals who have engaged in criminal activities 210 During the 1980s and 1990s several groups of teenagers were apprehended after sacrificing animals and vandalizing both churches and graveyards with Satanic imagery 211 Introvigne stated that these incidents were more a product of juvenile deviance and marginalization than Satanism 211 In a few cases the crimes of these personal Satanists have included murder In 1970 two separate groups of teenagers one led by Stanley Baker in Big Sur and the other by Steven Hurd in Los Angeles killed a total of three people and consumed parts of their corpses in what they later claimed were sacrifices devoted to Satan 212 The American serial killer Richard Ramirez for instance claimed that he was a theistic Satanist during his 1980s killing spree he left an inverted pentagram at the scene of each murder and at his trial called out Hail Satan 213 In 1984 on Long Island a group allegedly called the Knights of the Black Circle killed one of its own members Gary Lauwers over a disagreement regarding the group s illegal drug dealing group members later related that Lauwers death was a sacrifice to Satan 212 In particular self declared Satanist and alleged member of the Knights of the Black Circle Ricky the Acid King Kasso became notorious for torturing and murdering Lauwers while attempting to force Lauwers to declare I love Satan during the murder 214 On November 21 1998 Jarno Elg a Finnish Satanist was sentenced to life in prison for murdering a 23 year old man in Hyvinkaa Finland eating some of the body parts and instigating others to participate in a ritual that included torturing the victim 215 DemographicsA survey in the Encyclopedia of Satanism found that people became involved with Satanism in many diverse ways and were found in many countries The survey found that more Satanists were raised as Protestant Christians than Catholic 216 Beginning in the late 1960s organized Satanism emerged out of the occult subculture with the formation of the Church of Satan It was not long however before Satanism had expanded well beyond the Church of Satan The decentralization of the Satanist movement was considerably accelerated when LaVey disbanded the grotto system in the mid 1970s At present religious Satanism exists primarily as a decentralized subculture Unlike traditional religions and even unlike the early Satanist bodies such as the Church of Satan and the Temple of Set contemporary Satanism is for the most part a decentralized movement In the past this movement has been propagated through the medium of certain popular books especially Anton LaVey s Satanic Bible In more recent years the internet has come to play a significant role in reaching potential converts particularly among disaffected young people Religion scholar and researcher of new religious movements James R Lewis 217 Dyrendal Lewis and Petersen observed that from surveys of Satanists conducted in the early 21st century it was clear that the Satanic milieu was heavily dominated by young males 218 They nevertheless noted that census data from New Zealand suggested that there may be a growing proportion of women becoming Satanists 218 In comprising more men than women Satanism differs from most other religious communities including most new religious communities 219 Most Satanists came to their religion through reading either online or books rather than through being introduced to it through personal contacts 220 Many practitioners do not claim that they converted to Satanism but rather state that they were born that way and only later in life confirmed that Satanism served as an appropriate label for their pre existing worldviews 221 Others have stated that they had experiences with supernatural phenomena that led them to embracing Satanism 222 A number of Satanists reported anger toward some practicing Christians and said that the monotheistic gods of Christianity and other religions are unethical citing issues such as the problem of evil 223 For some practitioners Satanism gave a sense of hope even for those who had been physically and sexually abused 224 The surveys revealed that atheistic Satanists appeared to be in the majority although the numbers of theistic Satanists appeared to grow over time 217 225 226 Beliefs in the afterlife varied although the most common beliefs about the afterlife were reincarnation and the idea that consciousness survives bodily death 227 The surveys also demonstrated that most recorded Satanists practiced magic 228 although there were differing opinions as to whether magical acts operated according to etheric laws or whether the effect of magic was purely psychological 229 A number of Satanists described performing cursing in most cases as a form of vigilante justice 230 Most practitioners conduct their religious observances in a solitary manner and never or rarely meet fellow Satanists for rituals 231 Rather the primary interaction that takes place between Satanists is online on websites or via email 232 From their survey data Dyrendal Lewis and Petersen noted that the average length of involvement in the Satanic milieu was seven years 233 A Satanist s involvement in the movement tends to peak in the early twenties and drops off sharply in their thirties 234 A small proportion retain their allegiance to the religion into their elder years 235 When asked about their ideology the largest proportion of Satanists identified as apolitical or non aligned while only a small percentage identified as conservative 236 A small minority of Satanists expressed support for National Socialism conversely over two thirds expressed opposition or strong opposition to it 222 2021 Canadian census The 2021 Canadian census states that 5 890 Canadians identify as Satanist representing 0 02 of the population 237 Compared to the general population Satanists are more likely to be male aged in their 20s or 30s and not a member of any recognized minority group although the Japanese are an exception with the Japanese comprising 0 3 of both Satanists and the population as a whole Comparison of Satanists in Canada against the general population 237 General population SatanistsTotal population 36 328 480 5 890Gender Male 17 937 165 49 4 3 430 58 2 Female 18 391 315 50 6 2 460 41 8 Age 0 to 14 5 992 555 16 5 175 3 15 to 19 2 003 200 5 5 210 3 6 20 to 24 2 177 860 6 810 13 8 25 to 34 4 898 625 13 5 2 755 46 8 35 to 44 4 872 425 13 4 1 250 21 2 45 to 54 4 634 850 12 8 470 8 55 to 64 5 162 365 14 2 165 2 8 65 and over 6 586 600 18 1 60 1 Minority status Non minority 26 689 275 73 5 5 480 93 South Asian 2 571 400 7 40 0 7 Chinese 1 715 770 4 7 50 0 9 Black 1 547 870 4 3 100 1 7 Filipino 957 355 2 6 35 0 6 Arab 694 015 1 9 25 0 4 Latin American 580 235 1 6 55 0 9 Southeast Asian 390 340 1 1 20 0 3 West Asian 360 495 1 0 0 Korean 218 140 0 6 0 0 Japanese 98 890 0 3 15 0 3 Visible minority n i e 172 885 0 5 20 0 3 Multiple visible minorities 331 805 0 9 50 0 8 Legal recognitionIn 2004 it was claimed that Satanism was allowed in the Royal Navy of the British Armed Forces despite opposition from Christians 238 239 240 In 2016 under a Freedom of Information request the Navy Command Headquarters stated that we do not recognise satanism as a formal religion and will not grant facilities or make specific time available for individual worship 241 In 2005 the Supreme Court of the United States debated in the case of Cutter v Wilkinson over protecting minority religious rights of prison inmates after a lawsuit challenging the issue was filed to them 242 243 The court ruled that facilities that accept federal funds cannot deny prisoners accommodations that are necessary to engage in activities for the practice of their own religious beliefs 244 245 In 2019 The Satanic Temple was granted religious IRS 501 c 3 status 246 ArtLiterature Satan in Paradise Lost as illustrated by Gustave Dore From the late 1600s through to the 1800s the character of Satan was increasingly rendered unimportant in western philosophy and ignored in Christian theology while in folklore he came to be seen as a foolish rather than a menacing figure 247 The development of new values in the Age of Enlightenment in particular those of reason and individualism contributed to a shift in many Europeans concept of Satan 247 In this context a number of individuals took Satan out of the traditional Christian narrative and reread and reinterpreted him in light of their own time and their own interests in turn generating new and different portraits of Satan 248 The shifting concept of Satan owes many of its origins to John Milton s epic poem Paradise Lost 1667 in which Satan features as the protagonist 249 Milton was a Puritan and had never intended for his depiction of Satan to be a sympathetic one 250 However in portraying Satan as a victim of his own pride who rebelled against the Judeo Christian god Milton humanized him and also allowed him to be interpreted as a rebel against tyranny 251 This was how Milton s Satan was understood by John Dryden 252 and later readers like the publisher Joseph Johnson 253 and the anarchist philosopher William Godwin who reflected it in his 1793 book Enquiry Concerning Political Justice 251 Paradise Lost gained a wide readership in the eighteenth century both in Britain and in continental Europe where it had been translated into French by Voltaire 254 Milton thus became a central character in rewriting Satanism and would be viewed by many later religious Satanists as a de facto Satanist 248 The nineteenth century saw the emergence of what has been termed literary Satanism or romantic Satanism 255 According to Ruben van Luijk this cannot be seen as a coherent movement with a single voice but rather as a post factum identified group of sometimes widely divergent authors among whom a similar theme is found 256 For the literary Satanists Satan was depicted as a benevolent and sometimes heroic figure 257 with these more sympathetic portrayals proliferating in the art and poetry of many romanticist and decadent figures 248 For these individuals Satanism was not a religious belief or ritual activity but rather a strategic use of a symbol and a character as part of artistic and political expression 258 Among the romanticist poets to adopt this concept of Satan was the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley who had been influenced by Milton 259 In his poem Laon and Cythna Shelley praised the serpent a reference to Satan as a force for good in the universe 260 Another was Shelley s fellow British poet Lord Byron who included Satanic themes in his 1821 play Cain which was a dramatization of the Biblical story of Cain and Abel 255 These more positive portrayals also developed in France one example was the 1823 work Eloa by Alfred de Vigny 261 Satan was also adopted by the French poet Victor Hugo who made the character s fall from Heaven a central aspect of his La Fin de Satan in which he outlined his own cosmogony 262 Although the likes of Shelley and Byron promoted a positive image of Satan in their work there is no evidence that any of them performed religious rites to venerate him and thus they cannot be considered to be religious Satanists 256 Radical left wing political ideas had been spread by the American Revolution of 1775 83 and the French Revolution of 1789 99 The figure of Satan who was seen as having rebelled against the tyranny imposed by Jehovah was appealing to many of the radical leftists of the period 263 For them Satan was a symbol for the struggle against tyranny injustice and oppression a mythical figure of rebellion for an age of revolutions a larger than life individual for an age of individualism a free thinker in an age struggling for free thought 258 The French anarchist Pierre Joseph Proudhon who was a staunch critic of Christianity embraced Satan as a symbol of liberty in several of his writings 264 Another prominent 19th century anarchist the Russian Mikhail Bakunin similarly described the figure of Satan as the eternal rebel the first freethinker and the emancipator of worlds in his book God and the State 265 These ideas likely inspired the American feminist activist Moses Harman to name his anarchist periodical Lucifer the Lightbearer 266 The idea of this Leftist Satan declined during the twentieth century 266 although it was used on occasion by authorities within the Soviet Union who portrayed Satan as a symbol of freedom and equality 267 Metal and rock music Heavy metal singer King Diamond is a member of the Church of Satan During the 1960s and 1970s several rock bands namely the American band Coven and the British band Black Widow employed the imagery of Satanism and witchcraft in their work 268 References to Satan also appeared in the work of those rock bands which were pioneering the heavy metal genre in Britain during the 1970s 269 For example the band Black Sabbath made mention of Satan in their lyrics although some of the band s members were practicing Christians and other lyrics affirmed the power of the Christian god over Satan 270 In the 1980s greater use of Satanic imagery was made by heavy metal bands like Slayer Kreator Sodom and Destruction 271 Bands active in the subgenre of death metal among them Deicide Morbid Angel and Entombed also adopted Satanic imagery combining it with other morbid and dark imagery such as that of zombies and serial killers 272 Satanism would come to be more closely associated with the subgenre of black metal 269 in which it was foregrounded over the other themes that had been used in death metal 273 A number of black metal performers incorporated self injury into their act framing this as a manifestation of Satanic devotion 273 The first black metal band Venom proclaimed themselves to be Satanists although this was more an act of provocation than an expression of genuine devotion to the Devil 274 Satanic themes were also used by the black metal bands Bathory and Hellhammer 275 However the first black metal act to more seriously adopt Satanism was Mercyful Fate whose vocalist King Diamond joined the Church of Satan 276 More often than not musicians associating themselves with black metal say they do not believe in legitimate Satanic ideology and often profess to being atheists agnostics or religious skeptics 277 In contrast to King Diamond various black metal Satanists sought to distance themselves from LaVeyan Satanism for instance by referring to their beliefs as devil worship 278 These individuals regarded Satan as a literal entity 279 and in contrast to Anton LaVey they associated Satanism with criminality suicide and terror 278 For them Christianity was regarded as a plague which required eradication 280 Many of these individuals most prominently Varg Vikernes and Euronymous were involved in the early Norwegian black metal scene 281 282 Between 1992 and 1996 such people destroyed around fifty Norwegian churches in arson attacks 283 Within the black metal scene a number of musicians later replaced Satanic themes with those deriving from Heathenry a form of modern Paganism 284 See also Religion portal Philosophy portalContemporary Religious Satanism Demonology Devil in popular culture Satanic ritual abuseReferencesFootnotes a b c Abrams Joe Spring 2006 Wyman Kelly ed The Religious Movements Homepage Project Satanism An Introduction virginia edu University of Virginia Archived from the original on 2006 08 29 Retrieved 2021 01 01 Gilmore Peter Science and Satanism Point of Inquiry Interview Retrieved 2013 12 09 TST New milestone over 700 000 members TST Retrieved 2023 01 23 a b Petersen 2009a Alisauskiene 2009 Satanism stalks Poland BBC News June 5 2000 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 7 van Luijk 2016 p 16 Petersen 2012 p 92 Gallagher 2006 p 151 Introvigne 2016 p 3 Medway 2001 p 51 van Luijk 2016 p 19 Medway 2001 p 51 Medway 2001 p 52 Medway 2001 p 53 a b c Medway 2001 p 9 a b Medway 2001 p 257 van Luijk 2016 p 2 a b c d van Luijk 2016 p 2 a b Introvigne 2016 p 44 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 13 14 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 14 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 16 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 15 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 19 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 20 van Luijk 2016 p 18 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 21 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 21 22 van Luijk 2016 p 23 a b van Luijk 2016 p 24 van Luijk 2016 pp 24 26 van Luijk 2016 pp 25 26 van Luijk 2016 p 25 van Luijk 2016 p 28 Medway 2001 p 126 van Luijk 2016 pp 28 29 van Luijk 2016 pp 29 31 Medway 2001 p 57 Medway 2001 p 58 Medway 2001 pp 57 58 Medway 2001 pp 60 63 van Luijk 2016 p 35 a b c van Luijk 2016 p 36 Medway 2001 p 133 van Luijk 2016 p 37 van Luijk 2016 p 38 Medway 2001 p 70 Scarre amp Callow 2001 p 2 Introvigne 2016 pp 44 45 Introvigne 2016 pp 58 59 van Luijk 2016 p 66 van Luijk 2016 pp 66 67 a b van Luijk 2016 p 66 Introvigne 2016 pp 60 61 Introvigne 2016 p 71 Introvigne 2016 pp 71 73 Introvigne 2016 pp 74 78 Introvigne 2016 pp 84 85 Introvigne 2016 pp 85 86 Medway 2001 pp 266 267 Medway 2001 pp 141 142 Medway 2001 pp 143 149 Medway 2001 pp 159 161 Medway 2001 pp 164 170 Medway 2001 p 161 Medway 2001 pp 262 263 Introvigne 2016 p 66 Petersen 2005 pp 444 446 a b Introvigne 2016 p 107 a b c Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 37 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 37 38 a b c Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 38 Lewis James R March 2001 The Encyclopedia of Cults Sects and New Religions Google Books ISBN 9781615927388 Retrieved 2022 09 14 Temple Ruth Zabriskie May 24 2008 Modern British Literature Ruth Zabriskie Temple Google Books ISBN 9780804431408 Retrieved 2022 09 14 Wexler Jay June 11 2019 Our Non Christian Nation How Atheists Satanists Pagans and Others Are Jay Wexler Google Books ISBN 9781503609068 Retrieved 2022 09 14 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 36 a b c Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 39 Introvigne 2016 p 227 Hutton 1999 p 175 Dyrendal 2012 pp 369 370 Hutton 1999 p 175 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 42 a b c Medway 2001 p 18 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 43 44 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 45 Introvigne 2016 p 277 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 49 50 a b Introvigne 2016 p 278 Introvigne 2016 p 280 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 50 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 46 a b La Fontaine 2016 p 13 a b La Fontaine 2016 p 15 La Fontaine 2016 p 13 Introvigne 2016 p 381 a b Introvigne 2016 p 372 Medway 2001 pp 175 177 Introvigne 2016 pp 374 376 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 115 116 Medway 2001 pp 178 183 Introvigne 2016 pp 405 406 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 116 120 Medway 2001 p 183 La Fontaine 2016 p 16 Medway 2001 p 369 La Fontaine 2016 p 15 Medway 2001 pp 191 195 Medway 2001 pp 220 221 Medway 2001 pp 234 248 Medway 2001 pp 210 211 a b Medway 2001 p 213 Medway 2001 p 249 La Fontaine 2016 pp 13 14 Medway 2001 p 118 La Fontaine 2016 p 14 Introvigne 2016 p 456 Petersen 2009 p 91 a b Dyrendal 2013 p 129 Lap 2013 p 92 Maxwell Stuart 2011 p 198 Lap 2013 p 94 Gardell 2003 p 288 Schipper 2010 p 107 La Fontaine 1999 p 97 Lewis 2001 p 5 Asprem amp Granholm 2014 p 75 a b Lewis 2002 p 5 Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 p 81 Lewis 2003 p 116 Lewis 2003 p 105 Petersen 2013 p 232 verification needed Lap 2013 p 85 Bromley 2005 pp 8127 8128 Gallagher 2005 p 6530 Harvey 1995 p 290 Partridge 2004 p 82 Petersen 2009 pp 224 225 Schipper 2010 p 108 Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 p 79 Lap 2013 p 84 a b c La Fontaine 1999 p 96 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 70 Lewis 2002 p 2 Gardell 2003 p 288 Drury 2003 p 188 Taub amp Nelson 1993 p 528 La Fontaine 1999 p 99 Petersen 2009a p 9 Lewis 2001 p 330 Warman Stallings Kelly 2012 Who s Right Mankind Religions amp The End Times Authorhouse p 35 self published source a b Schipper 2010 p 109 a b Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 p 80 Lewis 2001b p 50 Lewis amp Petersen 2014 p 408 Wright 1993 p 143 Cavaglion amp Sela Shayovitz 2005 p 255 LaVey 2005 pp 44 45 High Priest Magus Peter H Gilmore Satanism The Feared Religion churchofsatan com The Church of Satan History Channel YouTube January 12 2012 Archived from the original on 2015 07 20 High Priest Magus Peter H Gilmore F A Q Fundamental Beliefs churchofsatan com Ohlheiser Abby November 7 2014 The Church of Satan wants you to stop calling these devil worshiping alleged murderers Satanists The Washington Post Retrieved 2015 11 19 Massoud Hayoun December 8 2013 Group aims to put Satanist monument near Oklahoma capitol Al Jazeera America Al Jazeera Retrieved 2014 03 25 Satanists petition to build monument on Oklahoma state capitol grounds Washington Times Communities The Washington Times December 9 2013 Retrieved 2014 03 25 a b Bugbee Shane July 30 2013 Unmasking Lucien Greaves Leader of the Satanic Temple VICE United States Vice com Retrieved 2014 03 25 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 219 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 220 Oppenheimer Mark July 10 2015 A Mischievous Thorn in the Side of Conservative Christianity The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2015 07 11 FAQ TST Retrieved 2015 12 02 What does Satan mean to the Satanic Temple CNN CNN Retrieved 2015 12 02 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 3 The Nazi Satanists promoting extreme violence and terrorism a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 4 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 3 Introvigne 2016 p 517 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 7 9 a b c Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 5 a b c Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 6 Partridge Christopher 2004 The Re Enchantment of the West Alternative Spiritualities Sacralization Popular Culture and Occulture Vol 1 London T amp T Clark p 82 ISBN 0 567 08269 5 a b Spence L 1993 An Encyclopedia of Occultism Carol Publishing Michelle Belanger 2007 Vampires in Their Own Words An Anthology of Vampire Voices Llewellyn Worldwide p 175 ISBN 978 0 7387 1220 8 a b Goodrick Clarke 2003 p 218 Senholt 2013 p 256 Goodrick Clarke 2003 p 218 Senholt 2013 p 256 Monette 2013 p 87 Goodrick Clarke 2003 p 216 Senholt 2013 p 268 Faxneld 2013 p 207 Ryan 2003 p 53 Senholt 2013 p 267 Gardell 2003 p 293 a b Senholt 2013 p 256 Monette 2013 p 107 Kaplan 2000 p 236 a b c Monette 2013 p 88 Faxneld 2013 p 207 Faxneld 2014 p 88 Senholt 2013 p 250 Sieg 2013 p 252 Goodrick Clarke 2003 pp 218 219 Baddeley 2010 p 155 Goodrick Clarke 2003 p 219 Kaplan 2000 p 237 Ryan 2003 p 54 Harvey 1995 p 292 Kaplan 2000 p 237 Monette 2013 p 114 Faxneld 2013 p 207 Harvey 1995 p 292 A Nazi satanist cult is fuelling far right groups New Statesman 4 March 2020 State of Hate 2020 PDF Hope not Hate March 9 2020 Over the last 12 months four nazis convicted of terrorist offences have been linked to O9A and there are two more cases pending Order of Nine Angles What is this obscure Nazi Satanist group BBC News June 29 2020 The Sonnenkrieg Division with its glorification of sexual violence highlights another disturbing theme relating to the ONA sexual offending as a way of undermining social norms The authorities are concerned by the number of paedophiles associated with the ONA taking the group into a different area of law enforcement activity High Wycombe neo Nazi Jacek Tchorzewski jailed for terror offences BBC News September 20 2019 The satanist text demonstrated a marked fixation with blood the sexualisation of violence a paedophilic projection of adult sexuality onto children and with achieving National Socialist political goals through political violence and acts of terrorism UK Nazi Satanist group should be outlawed campaigners urge BBC News July 16 2020 ONA s Nazi Satanist ideology a supernatural worldview that encourages the disruption of society through violence criminality and sexual offending Order of Nine Angles Counter Extremism Project One piece of propaganda the group produced is called The Rape Anthology a collection of ONA writings praising Hitler Satan and rape while employing Islamic terminology and demonizing Jews and minorities Some of the essays suggest that rape is necessary for the ascension of the Ubermensch Random Murder of Muslim Man Linked to Neo Nazi Death Cult Report September 30 2020 Aquino Michael 2002 Church of Satan PDF San Francisco Temple of Set Archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 12 a b Harvey 2009 Gardell 2003 p 390 Petersen 2005 p 436 Harvey 2009 p 32 Granholm 2009 pp 93 94 Granholm 2013 p 218 La Fontaine 1999 p 102 Gardell 2003 p 291 Petersen 2005 p 436 Granholm 2009 p 94 Faxneld amp Petersen 2013a p 7 Petersen 2005 p 435 Granholm 2009 p 93 Granholm 2013 p 223 Asprem amp Granholm 2014 pp 144 146 a b c d e Introvigne Massimo April 13 2017 Satan the Prophet A History of Modern Satanism PDF CESNUR Retrieved 2021 01 25 a b Petersen Jesper August 27 29 2012 Bracketing Beelzebub Satanism studies and as boundary work ContERN Retrieved 2021 01 25 a b c d e Introvigne 2016 pp 370 371 a b c d e f Twilight Jennifer January 25 2021 Analysis on the Joy of Satan Italian Satanist Union Retrieved 2021 01 25 a b c d McBride Jaemes 2013 The Divine Province Birthing New Earth Ed Rychkun p 84 ISBN 978 1927066034 a b c ATLANTA J F January 9 2014 What do Satanists believe The Economist Retrieved 2021 01 25 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 144 232 Paniccia Enrico January 17 2021 The dark side of Christianity Consul Press Retrieved 2021 01 25 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Satanism HISTORY September 27 2019 Retrieved 2021 01 25 Petersen Jesper 2011 Between Darwin and the Devil Modern Satanism as Discourse Milieu and Self NTNU trykk pp 218 219 144 146 ISBN 978 82 471 3052 0 Holt Cimminnee August 2012 Satanists and Scholars A Historiographic Overview and Critique of Scholarship on Religious Satanism PDF Thesis p 87 via Spectrum Library Medway 2001 pp 362 365 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 130 a b Introvigne 2016 p 445 a b Introvigne 2016 p 446 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 122 Breskin David November 22 1984 Cult Killing Kids in the Dark Rolling Stone IL 18 3 1999 Saatananpalvojat soivat osan uhristaan in Finnish Iltalehti Retrieved 2020 09 22 Lewis James Encyclopedia of Satanism ISBN 9781312360211 a b Lewis James R August 2001b Who Serves Satan A Demographic and Ideological Profile Marburg Journal of Religion University of Marburg 6 2 1 25 doi 10 17192 mjr 2001 6 3748 ISSN 1612 2941 Retrieved 2020 12 30 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 138 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 158 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 146 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 142 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 143 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 202 204 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 200 201 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 179 180 Introvigne 2016 pp 525 527 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 181 182 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 183 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 209 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 210 212 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 151 153 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 153 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 157 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 159 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 160 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 171 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada October 26 2022 Religion by visible minority and generation status Canada provinces and territories census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts www150 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 12 31 Royal Navy to allow devil worship CNN Carter Helen The devil and the deep blue sea Navy gives blessing to sailor Satanist The Guardian Navy approves first ever Satanist BBC News Ministry of Defence Request for Information Navy Command FOI Section 7 January 2016 Linda Greenhouse March 22 2005 Inmates Who Follow Satanism and Wicca Find Unlikely Ally The New York Times Before high court law that allows for religious rights The Christian Science Monitor March 21 2005 Johnson M Alex May 31 2005 Court upholds prisoners religious rights MSNBC Retrieved 2016 08 26 Cutter v Wilkinson 544 U S 709 2005 Oyez Retrieved 2013 10 07 The Satanic Temple is a real religion says IRS The Salt Lake Tribune Retrieved 2023 01 23 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 29 a b c Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 28 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 28 van Luijk 2016 p 70 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 28 30 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 30 Manuel M July 23 2010 Seventeenth century Critics and Biographers of Milton M Manuel Google Books Retrieved 2022 10 08 Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 pp 28 30 van Luijk 2016 pp 69 70 van Luijk 2016 p 70 a b van Luijk 2016 p 73 a b van Luijk 2016 p 108 van Luijk 2016 p 69 a b Dyrendal Lewis amp Petersen 2016 p 31 van Luijk 2016 pp 71 72 van Luijk 2016 pp 97 98 van Luijk 2016 pp 74 75 van Luijk 2016 pp 105 107 van Luijk 2016 pp 77 79 van Luijk 2016 pp 117 119 van Luijk 2016 pp 119 120 a b van Luijk 2016 p 120 Introvigne 2016 p 66 Introvigne 2016 pp 462 463 a b Introvigne 2016 p 467 Introvigne 2016 pp 467 468 Introvigne 2016 p 468 Introvigne 2016 pp 468 469 a b Introvigne 2016 p 469 Introvigne 2016 p 470 Introvigne 2016 pp 472 473 Introvigne 2016 p 471 Death to False Satanism NOISEY NOISEY Retrieved 2016 03 08 a b Introvigne 2016 p 480 Introvigne 2016 p 479 Introvigne 2016 p 482 Dyrendal 2016 pp 481 488 Introvigne 2016 pp 479 481 Introvigne 2016 p 481 Introvigne 2016 pp 503 504 Sources Alisauskiene Milda The Peculiarities of Lithuanian Satanism In Petersen 2009 Asprem Egil Granholm Kennet 2013 Contemporary Esotericism Durham Acumen ISBN 978 1 908049 32 2 2014 Contemporary Esotericism London Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 54357 2 Baddeley Gavin 2010 Lucifer Rising Sin Devil Worship amp Rock n Roll third ed London Plexus Publishing ISBN 978 0 85965 455 5 Bromley David G 2005 Satanism In Lindsay Jones ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 12 2 ed Detroit IL Macmillan Reference USA Cavaglion Gabriel Sela Shayovitz Revital December 2005 The Cultural Construction of Contemporary Satanic Legends in Israel Folklore 116 3 255 271 doi 10 1080 00155870500282701 S2CID 161360139 Drury Nevill 2003 Magic and Witchcraft From Shamanism to the Technopagans London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0500511404 Dyrendal Asbjorn 2012 Satan and the Beast The Influence of Aleister Crowley on Modern Satanism In Henrik Bogdan Martin P Starr eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 369 394 ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 Hidden Persuaders and Invisible Wars Anton LaVey and Conspiracy Culture In Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 pp 123 140 2016 Satanism in Norway In Bogdan Henrik Hammer Olav eds Western Esotericism in Scandinavia Brill Esotericism Reference Library Leiden Brill Publishers pp 481 488 doi 10 1163 9789004325968 062 ISBN 978 90 04 30241 9 ISSN 2468 3566 Lewis James R Petersen Jesper Aa 2016 The Invention of Satanism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195181104 Faxneld Per Post Satanism Left Hand Paths and Beyond Visiting the Margins In Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 pp 205 208 Secret Lineages and De Facto Satanists Anton LaVey s Use of Esoteric Tradition In Asprem amp Granholm 2014 pp 72 90 Petersen Jesper Aagaard 2013a Introduction At the Devil s Crossroads In Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 pp 3 18 eds 2013 The Devil s Party Satanism in Modernity Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 977924 6 Gallagher Eugene V 2005 New Religious Movements Scriptures of New Religious Movements In Lindsay Jones ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 12 2 ed Detroit IL Macmillan Reference USA 2006 Satanism and the Church of Satan Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Eugene V Gallagher W Michael Ashcraft editors Santa Barbara California Greenwood Press pp 151 168 ISBN 978 0313050787 Gardell Matthias 2003 Gods of the Blood The Pagan Revival and White Separatism Durham and London Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 3071 4 Goodrick Clarke Nicholas 2003 Black Sun Aryan Cults Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 3155 0 Granholm Kennet Embracing Others than Satan The Multiple Princes of Darkness in the Left Hand Path Milieu In Petersen 2009 pp 85 101 The Left Hand Path and Post Satanism The Temple of Set and the Evolution of Satanism In Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 pp 209 228 Harvey Graham 1995 Satanism in Britain Today Journal of Contemporary Religion Routledge 10 3 283 296 doi 10 1080 13537909508580747 Satanism Performing Alterity and Othering In Petersen 2009 pp 27 40 Hutton Ronald 1999 The Triumph of the Moon A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 1928 5449 0 Introvigne Massimo 2016 Satanism A Social History Aries Book Series Texts and Studies in Western Esotericism Vol 21 Leiden Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 28828 7 OCLC 1030572947 Kaplan Jeffrey 2000 Order of Nine Angles Encyclopedia of White Power A Sourcebook on the Radical Racist Right Jeffrey Kaplan editor Walnut Creek California AltaMira Press pp 235 238 ISBN 978 0 7425 0340 3 La Fontaine Jean 1999 Satanism and Satanic Mythology In Bengt Ankarloo Stuart Clark eds Witchcraft and Magic in Europe Vol 6 The Twentieth Century London Athlone pp 81 140 ISBN 0 485 89006 2 2016 Witches and Demons A Comparative Perspective on Witchcraft and Satanism Oxford and New York Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 78533 085 8 Lap Amina Olander Categorizing Modern Satanism An Analysis of LaVey s Early Writings In Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 pp 83 102 LaVey Anton Szandor 2005 1969 The Satanic Bible New York Avon Books ISBN 978 0 380 01539 9 Lewis James R 2001 Satanism Today An Encyclopedia of Religion Folklore and Popular Culture ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 292 9 September 2002 Diabolical Authority Anton LaVey The Satanic Bible and the Satanist Tradition Marburg Journal of Religion 7 1 1 16 2003 Legitimating New Religions New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 3534 0 Petersen Jesper Aagaard eds 2005 Controversial New Religions Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515683 6 eds 2014 Controversial New Religions 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 931530 7 Maxwell Stuart P G 2011 Satan A Biography Stroud Amberley ISBN 978 1 4456 0575 3 Medway Gareth J 2001 Lure of the Sinister The Unnatural History of Satanism London and New York New York University Press ISBN 9780814756454 Monette Connell 2013 Mysticism in the 21st Century Wilsonville Oregon Sirius Academic Press ISBN 978 1 940964 00 3 Petersen Jesper Aagaard Modern Satanism Dark Doctrines and Black Flames In Lewis amp Petersen 2005 pp 423 458 2009a Introduction Embracing Satan In Petersen 2009 From Book to Bit Enacting Satanism Online In Asprem amp Granholm 2013 pp 134 158 ed 2009 Contemporary Religious Satanism A Critical Anthology Farnham Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 5286 1 Ryan Nick 2003 Homeland Into a World of Hate Edinburgh and London Mainstream Publishing ISBN 978 1 84018 465 5 Scarre Geoffrey Callow John 2001 Witchcraft and Magic in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Europe second ed Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780333920824 Schipper Bernd U 2010 From Milton to Modern Satanism The History of the Devil and the Dynamics between Religion and Literature Journal of Religion in Europe 3 1 103 124 doi 10 1163 187489210X12597396698744 Senholt Jacob C Secret Identities in the Sinister Tradition Political Esotericism and the Convergence of Radical Islam Satanism and National Socialism in the Order of Nine Angles In Faxneld amp Petersen 2013 pp 250 274 Sieg George 2013 Angular Momentum From Traditional to Progressive Satanism in the Order of Nine Angles International Journal for the Study of New Religions 4 2 251 283 doi 10 1558 ijsnr v4i2 251 Taub Diane E Nelson Lawrence D August 1993 Satanism in Contemporary America Establishment or Underground The Sociological Quarterly 34 3 523 541 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 1993 tb00124 x van Luijk Ruben 2016 Children of Lucifer The Origins of Modern Religious Satanism Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190275105 Wright Lawrence 1993 Saints amp Sinners New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 394 57924 0 Further readingHolt Cimminnee Petersen Jesper Aagaard 2016 2008 Modern Religious Satanism A Negotiation of Tensions In Lewis James R Tollefsen Inga eds The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements Volume 2 2nd ed New York Oxford University Press pp 441 452 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780190466176 013 33 ISBN 978 0 19 046617 6 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Satanism Religious Tolerance page on Satanism Archived 2022 07 20 at the Wayback Machine Satanism at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Satanism amp oldid 1149408847, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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