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Elizabeth Clare Prophet with Erin L. Prophet. Summit University Press,
Corwin Springs, MT, 1997, 412 pages.
The
subjective tone of this book is set in the foreword, where Erin Prophet
states, “For me, reincarnation and Christianity have always gone
together.” As Elizabeth Clare Prophet’s eldest daughter, Erin grew
up in a “new age” religion lately known as Church Universal and
Triumphant (CUT) and founded by her parents. Her mother underscores this
subjectivism in the preface: “Reincarnation forms a pivotal part of my
belief system because it allows us another chance.” The elder Prophet
is alluding to the notion that earthly life is a “school” from which
we cannot “ascend” or graduate until we pass all of our tests. If we
flunk, we repeat and repeat until we get it right. The thesis or
argument in this book is syncretic: it purports to demonstrate that
distinctly non-Christian beliefs, such as reincarnation and spiritual
evolutionism, have been unfairly deleted by Church leaders, and that the
“mystical” and Gnostic traditions of Christianity sustain these
beliefs. It is syncretic because Elizabeth Prophet blends a conflicting
variety of religious systems in her attempt to “prove” her
beliefs.
The cover
reveals the authors’ intent. Incorporated in a Taoist yin-yang circle
are the Byzantine-style image of Christ healing a blind man and a
fragment of a Nag Hammadi Codex. Thus we have Gnosticism, orthodox
Christianity, and an Oriental tradition blended together. Prophet’s
CUT presents an amalgam of nearly every religion under the sun with its
“guru” as an exclusive spokesperson for the heavenly hierarchy of
all: Prophet channels
“masters” from many religions and mythologies. Near the bottom of
the front cover is an endorsement by Brian L. Weiss, author of Many
Lives, Many Masters, and a controversial promoter of reincarnation
in his psychic therapy practice.
The
Prophets rehash old themes familiar to CUT devotees and most New Agers.
There are chapters on reincarnation in Judaism, Greek religion,
Gnosticism, and Jesus’ trip through India. Although reincarnation
beliefs exist in Greek religion, in certain Gnostic sects (but not all),
and among some Jewish and Christian mystics, Prophet’s continued,
unfortunate suggestion that Jesus traveled through India almost as a
yogi betrays how weak in evidence this book is. The only
“scientific” research cited is that of Ian Stevenson, whose results
have been anything but compelling. Typical of Prophet’s books,
especially found in the last chapter in this one, is the recruitment
pitch for her religion. She offers a technique that is said to erase all
negative karma. The authors suggest the use of CUT “decrees,” or
mantras, that should be chanted rapidly, as the viable way to achieve an
“ascension” into the spiritual worlds. “If you repeat this [two
decrees are offered out of the hundreds used by CUT devotees] and other
prayers and decrees mentally and verbally as often as it is comfortable,
you will build a momentum that can propel you into a state of divine
union” (p. 314).
The
book’s last hundred pages contain notes and an impressive
bibliography, giving the book a scholarly image. Image may be enough for
a New Ager, but scholars of religion will find this book tiresome,
especially in its lack of an index and its abuse of legitimate
historical research. For example, the authors often treat Gnostics as
though they were all of one kind and all believed in reincarnation: for
example, “Reincarnation was an important part of Gnostic theology”
(p. 143). An eminent scholar on gnosticism, Ioan P. Couliano, states
from the very book listed in the Prophets’ bibliography that “some
gnostics” believe in the “preexistent” soul, not all. Perhaps the
Prophets should have studied Couliano’s research before presenting theirs.
One might
ask why Prophet and her daughter needed to write this book. One answer
comes through Elizabeth Prophet’s subchapter, “Sandbox
Recollections” (pp. 20–23). Like so many immature mystics worldwide,
Prophet believes that her profound “mystical” experiences represent
a literal reality without a neurological or psychological explanation.
She was a child in Red Bank, New Jersey, in her backyard sandbox in her
“own little world.” “As though someone had turned the dial on a
radio, I was on another frequency—playing in the sand along the Nile
River in Egypt.” Her mother later “confirmed” for her that she had
a “past life” memory. In 1978 I heard from CUT devotees who were
close friends of mine that “Mother” (Elizabeth Prophet) suffered
from petit mal seizures, a type of epilepsy. Researcher and long-time
CUT critic, Kathy Schmook of Montana, also discovered that those closest
to Prophet are aware of her disorder. Anyone familiar with this type of
temporal lobe disorder knows how vivid and “spiritual” one’s
imagination becomes during the “aura” prior to an epileptic
incident, which does not always include a seizure. If the epilepsy
connection is true, it goes a long way to explain why it is important
for Prophet to construct an alternative reality rather than admit to
embarrassing fantasies triggered by a neurological dysfunction.
In my
opinion, that is the purpose of this book: to shore up one woman’s
prophecies about herself and her devotees. CUT devotees have told me
that Prophet “remembers” that she was Queen Nefertiti, Catherine the
Great, Catherine of Sienna, St. Martha, Lady Guinevere, and others. She
“remembered” that her middle daughter, Moira, was John F. Kennedy,
and her daughter-coauthor Erin was none other than the heroic Mahatma
Gandhi. Although you will not find this “personal” information in Reincarnation, CUT devotees have been aware of the famous lives of
all the Prophet family since the early 1970s from Summit Lighthouse
books and group gossip.
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