My New Age Hippie Counterculture, One-World Mission
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By Thomas Ivan Dahlheimer
Picture of me in Wahkon, MN
In an online encyclopedia document about the history of the New Age there is a statement that reads: "From a historical perspective, the New Age phenomenon is rooted in the counterculture of the 1960s."
The Rainbow Family is a large international, hippie counterculture group. It is also considered one of the largest and most geographically diverse New Age groups. The Rainbow Family is an active and influential New Age part of [today's] hippie counterculture movement.
A "New Age hippie" is someone who is both part of the hippie counterculture movement and the New Age movement. These two movements are closely linked culturally and spiritually. Several modern intentional communities are spiritually and intellectually where these two movements converge and fuse together into another movement.
The Rainbow Family is one of these "modern intentional communities".
Google search states: Several modern intentional communities continue to be inspired by the fusion of hippie counterculture and New Age ideas.
Another one of these "modern intentional communities," is The Farm. It was founded in 1971 by Stephen Gaskin and 300 spiritual seekers from Haight-Ashbury and San Francisco. It is located near Summertown, Tennessee. It is also an eco-village. Albert Bates is a prominent member of The Farm. He is also a renowned hippie counterculture icon who was a co-founder and president of Global Ecovillage Network (GEN). GEN connects 6,000 grass-root communities in 114 countries.
Stephen Gaskin
(1935-2014) hippie icon
Albert Bates
a hippie icon
Mr. Bates is also GEN's representative to the UN climate talks. He is a lawyer who has argued cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. He has authored more than 20 books. He and I occasionally correspond. He has been supportive of my work.
An article of mine that Albert Bates read and was impressed with to the extent that he called it "a good article" is located here on a site named Hippyland. It is also located here.
I have a Facebook group that is about my New Age hippie counterculture, one-world revolutionary mission. It is titled "The Mr. & Mrs. I. (I) C. (See) Rainbow Family Mission." Several of my Rainbow family relatives have joined this Facebook group.
Both my Facebook group's introduction and an article of mine present evidence as to why I believe my extended Mr. & Mrs. I. C. (I See) Rainbow family is destined to lead this revolutionary counterculture mission to its ultimate goal. The establishment of the New Age of peace, love and unity. Wherein humanity will be religiously liberated and also united in a one-world government, religion and economic system.
Caryl Matrisciana, the author of the best-selling book "Gods of the New Age" produced a popular video (also presented below) about (1.) how the Beatles' late 1960s counterculture and New Age spirituality rapidly gained global acceptance at the time, and (2.) how it rapidly gained global acceptance in the following decades, and (3.) how "it is still rapidly gaining global acceptance, today."
When referring to the 1960s "hippie spiritual revolution" and the "New Age," Peter R. Jones, an internationally renowned Christian theologian, lecturer and author, wrote: Indeed, the Sixties was a spiritual revolution that has now morphed into a worldview that promises to alter how we all believe and act in the planetary era.
In the 1960s, the hippie spiritual and religious revolution was highly influenced by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Paramahansa Yogananda and the Beatles.
(1.) Picture of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi with the Beatles. (2.) Picture of Yogananda and his line of gurus on the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover.
This picture of Yogananda in the clouds and under a rainbow came from an
Ananda Sangha Worldwide article. This picture is now also on my Facebook
"One-World Church Expected This Year,” this is the title of an article published in Catholic Culture. In the article its author, Cornelua R. Ferreira, wrote: Global ethicists are actually following Helena Blavatsky, founder of the New Age Movement. Blavatsky said she wished to revive Second—and Third—Century theosophy, which aimed "to reconcile all religions, sects and nations under a common system of ethics" and "to induce [religions] to lay aside their ... strifes, remembering only that they [all possessed] the same truth" or "ancient wisdom".
New Age Hippie countercultural religiosity manifests as a syncretistic ecumenism of the world's religions, religious revolution seeking to unite humanity in a one-world religion within an emerging new astrological age. It is highly influenced by Theosophy, Hinduism, Buddhism and "Christian" Gnosticism. I believe it will soon also be highly influenced by the Lakota religion.
"Although not common throughout the counterculture, usage of the terms 'New Age' and 'Age of Aquarius' – used in reference to a coming era – were found within it, for example appearing on adverts for the Woodstock festival of 1969, and in the lyrics of 'Aquarius', the opening song of the 1967 musical Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical." - encyclopedia
More about the Rainbow Family:
The international hippie "non-organization" named the "Rainbow Family of Living Light," a group commonly called the "Rainbow Family," has many devotees of the New Age hippie counterculture revolution.
A few years before a 2015 Time Magazine article chronicled "today’s hippie counterculture movement," the world's largest Indian news source, "Indian Country Today Media Network," published an article that promotes a book titled Hippies, Indians and the Fight for Red Power. This same book is promoted in a 2015 article by Dina Gilio-Whitaker, an associate scholar at the Center for World Indigenous Studies.
In the article Gilio-Whitaker wrote: "The uproar about the Rainbow Family Gathering in the Black Hills reminds us that the counterculture is alive and well in the US. Not just a relic of a forgotten era." In the article she also states that "in the 1960's and 70's counterculture hippies were important allies who helped advance the Red Power movement."
I have been an Indigenous rights advocate since I was a 1960s hippie. I have received correspondence and support from several internationally renowned Indigenous activists for an advocacy initiative of mine. I have also received correspondence and support from both, an official representative of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and a Bishop representative of the Pontifical Council Of Peace And Justice. More on my advocacy work: 1.(MN bill) 2.(Initiatives & Accomplishments)
"Those who attend Rainbow Gatherings usually share an interest in intentional communities, ecology, New Age spirituality and entheogens." (ref.)... At Rainbow Gatherings: "New Age beliefs are prevalent." (encyclopedia ref.) (ref.)
Hippyland:
There is an over 290,000 registered members interactive website named Hippyland. Its founder and webmaster, Ship Stone, has posted and prominently displayed articles of mine that promote my New Age hippie counterculture, (I See Rainbow) One World Mission.
Video of a rainbow over the City of Wahkon, Minnesota:
This video of a rainbow over the City of Wahkon, Minnesota was produced by yours truly. This rainbow appeared on the day I sent a letter to my kinship Rainbow family relatives calling them to come and join me in Wahkon, form into a kinship tribe and then usher in the New Age. I believe that the appearance of this rainbow is a divine sign.
Wahkon Minnesota USA
Richard Carter And The Coming One World Religion | To Be Headquartered in Wahkon, Minnesota USA.
I believe in the coming One World Religion, as prophesied in the video titled "Amir Tsarfati: The Rise of the One World Religion. I also believe that the headquarters of this coming One World Religion will be in Wahkon, Minnesota USA.
One of the reasons why I believe that it will be in Wahkon is because in the late 1960s one of the leaders of the One World Religion mission of the hippie counterculture revolution (mostly a telepathic leader on a high spiritual level), Richard H. Carter, traveled from the world center of this revolutionary religious movement, the San Francisco Bay Area, to Wahkon, with his wife (Lois) and I, to promote the hippie counterculture revolution, as we did everywhere we went.
Richard, Lois and I were open to welcoming people we met on our trip to join our forming commune. We met and spent time with some of my Rainbow family relatives in Wahkon. We informed them of our plan to establish a commune. Today, I am on a mission to evangelize these same Rainbow relative as well as all my Rainbow family relatives to come together with me in kinship tribalism in Wahkon and then work to fulfill Richard's, Lois's and my original hippie counterculture revolutionary mission: to usher in the New Age.
Steven Gaskin and his hippie commune had this same mission: to usher in the New Age. And they had a worldview around the Indigenous word wakan (often phonetically rendered as wahkon). The Lakota, Dakota and Nakota (Oceti Sakowin) word for Holy is Wakan (Wahkon).
Mr. Gaskin wrote in his book Volume One | Sunday Morning Service On The Farm (page 95): "The word is used among the Indians all up and down both continents to mean Holy...It is a strong and universal concept...All across the world there are people who know something about it." The word is pronounced as wah-KAHN.
In the Oceti Sakowin worldview the word Wahkon (Wakan) represents a foundational spiritual principle. It describes a sacred energy that permeates all existence.
Hollywood’s historical reliance on Lakota (Sioux) imagery in movies watched around the world—such as tipis, war bonnets, the hunting of buffalo and the frequent vocalization of the sacred Lakota word Wahkon—has created a global "pan-Indian" archetype. An archetype that generally portrays the Indigenous tribes of the Americas with a common spirituality.
A spirituality that can be described as a universal spiritual unity centered around the sacred Lakota concept Wahkon. The word describes a supernatural power or sacred essence that permeates the universe and everything within it. Which is a common belief amongst the indigenous peoples of the Americas.
This "global 'pan-Indian' archetype" serves as a universal representative for Western indigenous peoples in the global imagination. This stereotypical portrayal has led many around the world to believe that Lakota spiritual concepts, like Wahkon (Holy) and Wahkontonka (Great Mystery) are commonly believed in amongst nearly all of the indigenous peoples of the Americas.
Therefore, because today's counterculture hippies, or at least many of us, believe that the most valuable cultural features within all of the world's cultures are the Indigenous people's cultural features, such as kinship tribalism, ecological spiritualities, decolonizing globalization...etc., therefore, we have made it the dominant culture of our one-world-culture, world-unifying globalization movement. Therefore, we also describe our movement, at least I do, as a worldview around the word (or concept) Wahkon.
In the late 1960s, Richard often attended Stephen Gaskin's Monday Night Class at the Family Dog Ballroom in San Francisco, California. Around 1500 to 2000 hippies participated in the class. Richard met and spoke with Mr. Gaskin a few times. And when a caravan of buses filled with 300 hippies who were getting ready to leave San Francisco with Gaskin, and then left, to find some land to establish a commune on Richard was there to watch this historic event happen.
Monday Night Class at the Family Dog Ballroom - San
Francisco,
CA ~ August 1969
Around this same time, Richard had also made friends with Tarthang Tulku, a Tibetan Buddhist Rinpoche with a monastery in Berkeley, California. Richard was teaching him about why the hippie psychedelic-drug-taking movement was influencing so many hippies to become interested in Buddhism. Years later, Richard established a Zen Buddhist center in Tucson, Arizona.
Richard Carter is an environmentalist who was the Governor of Arizona's Environmental Delegate to both the U.S./Mexico Border Governors and Mayors Conferences for five consecutive years (from 1991 to 1996) and Co-Chairman of the Arizona Environmental Technology Industry Cluster. As co-Chairman of this Cluster he bridged the gap between policy and industry, promoting Arizona's environmental technology sector to international partners at conferences.
Today, Richard and I correspond. We are friends and he supports my eco-tribalist hippie counterculture mission.
More On Why I Believe Wahkon Will Be The Headquarters Of The Coming One World Religion.
Matthew Fox
Reverend Matthew Fox is a world-renowned Episcopal priest, theologian and the principal promoter of creation centered spirituality. His 42 published books have reached global audiences in nearly 80 different languages.
Rev. Fox has a Daily Meditations Facebook site where several selective comments are usually posted on his daily posts. I have submitted many comments and almost all of them have been posted. A comment of mine is posted on Rev. Fox's December 16, 2025 post. It reads:
Matthew Fox came up to me at the 1983 Tekakwitha Conference and asked if I would have a “talk” with him. I said yes! I was a long haired hippie at the time. During our talk Matthew told me that Thomas Merton had asked him to reach out to the hippies. I then told Matthew about my hippie counterculture, one world mission, with a worldview around the Indigenous world wahkon (holy).
During one of Matthew’s Tekakwitha Conference lectures a missionary priest spoke to the people gathered there and said “There is a whole worldview behind the word wahkon.” Matthew said he remembered hearing this. I also told Matthew that I was promoting the lyrics in Van Morrison’s song “Into the Mystic,” wherein he sings “unanimously we will flow into the mystic.” Matthew then said “those are some good lyrics.”
Decades after our meeting, Matthew gave his support for my Indigenous advocacy mission to change a badly named river in Minnesota. I am still a hippie and I am still working to accomplish my one world mission. A recent article of mine is titled “My Hippie Counterculture, One World Mission.” It is located at: https://www.towahkon.org/GlobalHippieMission.html.
The 1983 Tekakwitha Conference was represented by almost one hundred tribes. Thomas Merton was a world renowned Catholic mystic. The missionary priest who spoke about "a whole worldview behind the word wahkon", Reverend Stan Maudlin, was a leader of the Conference from its origins. In Matthew's Dec. 16th post he promotes mysticism. This is why I mentioned Van Morison's song "Into The Mystic." Minnesota's "Rum River" received its profane name "Rum" by way of a punning-translated that perverted its ancient Indigenous Holy name Wahkon.
I am trying to change (or restore) the river's name back to its sacred Indigenous (Dakota, Lakota and Nakota) name Wahkon. My river name-change website is located at: https://www.towahkon.org/.
Wahkon River in Minnesota
I have received support for my advocacy initiative to change the profane name of a Minnesota river, the "Rum River," to show respect for the river and its Indigenous people who named it Wahkon.... from the Tekakwitha Conference, Matthew Fox, several internationally renowned Indigenous activists and the United Nations Permanent Forum On Indigenous Issues. I also received a letter from the Pontifical Council Of Peace and Justice, mainly in response to an Archbishop's and Bishop's support. The Mdewakanton Dakota hereditary chief and public spokesperson for Minnesota's Dakota people, Chief Leonard Wabasha, has been supportive of my effort to change the river's name. A list of all supporters can be found at: https//www.towahkon.org/Supporters.html.
Father Gilbert Hemauer, a Capuchin Franciscan who served as a pivotal leader of the Tekakwitha Conference at its origins and who was also a leader of the Conference when he was its Executive Director from 1977 to 1989.
Fr. Hemauer often spoke on the integration of Native spirituality with Catholicism. In his teachings, he explored the Lakota concept of wahkon (or wakan), describing it not merely as "sacred" but as a comprehensive worldview of the Great Mystery that permeates all of creation.
Catholic Amazon Synod Goes Hippie And Promotes Kinship Tribalism
In an article of mine titled "Pope Francis Preaches Eco-Tribalist/Hippie New Age Beliefs," subtitled "The Amazon Synod Goes Hippie" I present evidence that proves the Church is now promoting kinship tribalism by way of the 2019 Amazon Synod. I also present evidence in the article as to why I believe that when my kinship Rainbow family relatives come together in kinship tribalism in Wahkon this will help the Holy See to promote kinship tribalism in the Church and beyond it throughout the world. In the mentioned above article there is a statement that reads: Indigenous society is the one closest to the human ideal. And it is to this kind of society that we must return
Introduction to a Caryl Matriscia video about the Beatles:
In a popular contemporary video produced by the author of the best-selling book "Gods of the New Age," a video about the Beatles' late 1960s hippie counterculture and New Age spiritual philosophy.....the video's anti-New Age and anti-counterculture narrators (including Caryl Matrisciana, the video's producer) present evidence and acknowledge that the Beatles' promotion of the counterculture and New Age spiritual philosophy was originally accepted, globally...and that because of this Beatles' inspired and promoted spiritual and religious revolution, a revolution "that radically changed a generation's perspective on the meaning of life, it is still rapidly gaining global acceptance, today."
Here is the Caryl Matrisciana video about how the Beatles' late 1960s spiritual philosophy is still rapidly gaining global acceptance, today.
Because of wide-spread Christian propaganda about the New Age, a lot of people wrongly believe that the Beatles' late 1960s expression of the counterculture and New Age religion (and all expressions of the New Age religion) are about pantheism, or the from of pan[en]theism that is essentially pantheism.
Those who believe in this form of pan[en]theism perceive God beyond the universe as not as important as God in creation. Or they radically exaggerate the importance and purpose of the creation. They are, from my perspective, Creation Centered panentheists and not God -Transcendent Centered panentheists.
The above linked to article about a form of panentheism was authored by Father Mitchell Pacwa, S. J.. Fr. Pacwa taught an EWTN TV series on the New Age movement. In the article he erroneously teaches that the New Age is about pantheism. Two pontifical councils produced a document on the New Age. In it they state that the New Age is more precisely about pan[en]theism.
This statement of theirs is referring to creation-centered pan[en]theism, which is creation centered, but also expresses a belief in God's transcendence. I believe that true New Age panentheism is God -Transcendent Centered. Helena Blavatsky, "the founder of the New Age movement," was a God -Transcendent Centered Panentheist, as confirmed by AI.
Creation Centered panentheists believe in the "goodness of the creation." A globally recognized Catholic Creation-Centered panentheist, the late Franciscan priest Richard Rohr, believed that the creation was good at its origins and that it will be restored to the purity of its origins at the end of history and exist forever, this is a Catholic dogma. He also believed that this "restoration" includes the resurrection of the dead in Christ and life everlasting, this is also a Catholic dogma. In addition, he believed, as do some Hindus and New Agers (myself included), that the universe is an emanation of God transcendent.
Pope Francis reportedly encouraged Rohr to continue teaching these beliefs.
In an encyclical letter titled Laudato Si' Pope Francis presented his panentheistic view of creation when he wrote, "We should think of the whole [universe] as open to God's transcendence within which it develops" (79).
God -Transcendent Centered panentheists (such as true New Agers/Theosophists, having some Hindu and Gnostic beliefs) believe that the material creation was corrupt from its origins (believing evolution proves this) and that the creation is still corrupt (not good or sacred) and will never be good or scared and that it is also temporary. It is thought to be kind of like the Catholic purgatory (from a New Age and Theosophical syncretic Hindu-Gnostic perspective), a place to escape from and never return to. This is accomplished by a person evolving spiritually during his/her life to a level where they will not have to, after death, reincarnate back into this world.
Creation Centered Communities' Nov./Dec. 2019 Newsletter has an article of mine published in it on this (creation was corrupt from its origins) topic. It is titled A Critique Of Creation as Original Blessing.
Doing good works, like being a good environmentalist, helps a person to escape this corrupt material creation, which is, according to Yogananda and my belief, an illusionary projection and degradation of the divine (an essentially undifferentiated mass of light) manifestation of the Universe.
Helena Blavatsky, recognized widely as the mother of the New Age movement, and Paramahansa Yogananda, the "Father of yoga in the West" whose influence was worldwide, both make it clear in their teachings that the ultimate goal of the devotee is to become One with the Everlasting Infinite Spirit beyond the Universe. They were God Transcendent Centered Panentheist, as confirmed by AI.
In THE SECRET DOCTRINE Vol. 1, Page 274, Blavatsky wrote "The Universe is called, with everything in it, Maya, because all is temporary therein, from the ephemeral life of a fire-fly to that of the Sun. Compared to the eternal immutability of the One [Spirit]." Yogananda wrote: Spirit is not the universe; Spirit is that which was and will be whether the universe does or does not exist.
The Transcendent Infinite Spirit, by way of an emanation of Itself, is also in the universe. This aspect of Spirit outwardly manifests as the Universe. Yogananda said the Universe is "an essentially undifferentiated mass of light." Albert Einstein wrote: "What we have called matter is energy....matter is spirit....there is no matter. The devotee has to become One with the Divine (light-energy and no matter) manifestation of the Universe before he/she can go through It to become One with the Infinite Spirit beyond the Universe.
Because Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, Rumi (a Sufi Muslim) and others, experience themselves (in part) as the divine manifestation of the Universe we can therefore go through them to become One with the Transcendent Infinite Spirit. Their ultimate Identity is One with the Infinite Spirit beyond the Universe.
Yogananda's Guru wrote: Jesus meant, never that he was the sole Son of God, but that no man can obtain the unqualified Absolute, the transcendent Father beyond creation, until he has first manifested the ‘Son’ or activating Christ Consciousness within creation. - Swami Sri Yukteswar.
Yogananda's classic book:
ANANDA, a global movement that promotes the Beatles' (mostly George Harrison's) late 1960s spiritual philosophy of Yogananda
Swami
Kriyananda
Founder of Ananda
Some more evidence of the growing contemporary "global acceptance" of the Beatles' late 1960s counterculture and New Age spiritual philosophy can be found at Ananda Sangha Worldwide. And, even more so, in an article about Ananda, an article titled "How the West Was (Spiritually) Won by Paramhansa Yogananda." I believe in Ananda!
Here is one of Ananda's videos:
Beatles' Inner Light With Joanne DiMaggio:
Joanne DiMaggio was the national chapter director of the "Beatles USA Limited," the official national Beatles fan club. In the video, Joanne talks about how the Beatles "planted the seeds" of the counterculture and New Age spiritual philosophy. She also talks about how these "seeds" have been sprouting and growing, and that this has produced a revival of the Beatles' late 1960s spirituality philosophy. In the video, there is a clip of the Beatles with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in India. Paramahansa Yogananda's name is also mentioned.
Ram Dass, born Richard Albert in 1931, became a disciple of the Indian Hindu guru Neen Karoli Baba in 1967. With the name Baba gave him, Ram Dass became a spiritual teacher to a multitude of hippies in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He became very popular after his best-selling 1971 book "Be Here Now" was published and read by many. Mostly, by way of the hippie spiritual revolution, Ram Dass helped popularize Eastern spirituality and yoga in the West.
Richard Albert (Ram Dass) often sat next to Stephen Gaskin during Monday Night Class. Like Richard Carter, Ram Dass watched Stephen and the caravan of buses filled with hippies leave San Francisco to find some land to establish a commune on.
Ram Dass died in 2019. I believe his legacy will grow as today's contemporary revival of the late 1960s and early 1970s hippie spiritual revolution continues to move forward toward its goal: to usher in the New Age, wherein "the world will live as one." - John Lennon.
"The United Nations' religion is the hippie religion" - Dr. James Lindsay
An American best-selling author and internationally recognized speaker, Dr. James Lindsay, produced a video titled "The Occult Theosophy Of The United Nations," wherein he says this occult religion of the UN is the "hippie religion." An article of mine on this Dr. Lindsay's video is titled "The Gnostic Theosophical Movement Of The United Nations."
Mr. Matt is opposed to today's one-world religion movement. He says the 1960s Vatican II Catholic Church is now very active in it and is leading it. He also says, if it is not stopped by traditionalist Catholics, the Vatican II Catholic Church --- the Church that, from its origins in the 1960s, "moved away" from a Catholic dogma as it merged with the 1960s counterculture, one world religion movement --- will, with the pope as the head of the counterculture movement, establish a "diabolical one-world religion."
Alice Bailey
Alice Bailey (1880-1946) was a renowned New Age and Theosophical philosopher. A former United Nations Assistant Secretary-General, Robert Muller, openly promoted a worldview based on the spiritual philosophy of Bailey and her guru, Djwhal Khul. Their teachings are now highly influential in the broader New Age movement. Bailey's and Khul's New Age esoteric ideas heavily influenced Muller's work as a central figure in shaping the UN's spiritual and educational initiatives.
Mrs. Bailey and her husband, Foster Bailey, founded Lucifer Publishing Company (which was later renamed Lucis Trust) to promote their and Khul's New Age Spiritual philosophy.
Bailey and Khul were profoundly influential in shaping the New Age movement. They were preparing humanity to one day be unified in a single, universal world religion.
Bailey prophesied that "the Christ" (both, an impersonal force and the head of a group of spiritual masters within It, including Jesus Christ and others) would work through the churches [to usher in the New Age] only when there is a living nucleus of true [New Age] spirituality [prevailing in the churches]."
Since the assignation of Charley Kirk and the publication of his book "Stop In The Name Of God," wherein he wrote about the seventh-day Sabbath (Saturday) being the biblical day of rest and worship, not Sunday, there has been a number of celebrity people expressing their positions on this issue, causing the Seventh-Day Adventist Church to come into the limelight. And because the SDAs are very anti-New Age and publicly attack it, the New Age is also getting publicity at this time.
A Lighthouse Trails Research anti-New Age, Christian article about this topic is titled Will the Evangelical Church Help Usher in the “Age of Enlightenment” and the Coming False One.? The Seventh-Day Adventists (SDAs) believe that the Evangelical Church will help usher in "the Age of Enlightenment" and the "Coming False One", who New Agers believe is the Coming True One, "the Christ," who will come with Jesus Christ (the Second Coming) and the other Ascended Masters.
The SDA Church believes that American apostate Protestantism (particularly evangelicalism) is the "end-times false prophet" who will soon influence the U.S. government to bring about the unification of church and state and then enact and enforce Sunday "false Sabbath" laws. Three SDA videos about these prophecies are located here, here and here. The narrators of these videos use Lucis Trust audio recordings to platform a very important once-a-century Lucis Trust, 2025 New Age Conclave to show how century-old SDA prophecies are being fulfilled.
They also contrast Alice Bailey's teachings with the SDA prophetess Ellen White's teachings. I believe that the SDAs know what is occurring, but that they are on the wrong side. SDAs believe that in these End-Times the New Age religion, U.S.A. apostate Protestantism and the Roman Catholic Church will converge and fuse together, creating a united religious system that will establish a One World Religion that will persecute them.
Like most Christians, the narrators of these three videos wrongly believe Lucifer and Satan are the same being. Most Christians, including the narrators of these three videos, erroneously use the names interchangeably. Blavatsky stated that Lucifer (redeemer) and Satan (tempter) are different characteristics of a single force. Lucis Trust is Luciferian not Satanic, which the narrators of these two videos do not teach. They want their followers and those just watching their videos to believe Lusic Trust openly claims to be Satanic.
The Emerging New Age "Christianity":
ABOUT THE EMERGING "CHRISTIAN" NEW AGE SPIRITUAL PHILOSOPHY: A HIPPIE WORLD UNITY SIGN (pictured below) is prominently displayed in a Caryl Productions 2012 video about a large contemporary New Age/New Spirituality "Christian" movement that is portrayed as a new expression of the "1960s young people's" (hippie's) Hindu-Gnostic/Buddhist New Age spiritual philosophy. This Caryl Productions video is titled: WIDE IS THE GATE - The Emerging New Christianity VOLUME 1, VOLUME 2. and VOLUME 3 - 5. There is also a green hippie peace sign on the cover of the video's advertised DVD.
In this article I promote a decolonization global paradigm shift based primarily on a radical transformation of Christianity, a transformation that is already occurring by way of both, (1.) the massive infiltration of New Age/Hindu or Eastern mysticism and yoga meditation into Christian churches and (2.) the renunciation of the Doctrine of Christian Discovery and Domination of Indigenous Peoples by the World Council Of Churches and several mainline denominational Christian Churches.
Because of (1.) modern-day scientific discoveries that expose a Christian dogma as false and (2.) the Doctrine of Christian Discovery and Domination of Indigenous Peoples radical injustice as well as other reasons, I do not believe in historic and traditional Christianity and I would like to see it come to an end.
However, I am a devout New Age "Christian" follower of Jesus Christ, who I believe is a New Age hippie/Hindu-Gnostic guru. I believe that there are Bible scriptures that prophecy this coming global paradigm shift that I am promoting.
Alex O’Connor, a famous atheist who is leaning towards becoming a Gnostic Christian said in a video titled The Fine-Tuning Argument is Terrible – Sean Carrollthat the early Christian Gnostics believed that the Creator of the material universe was the evil Demiurge. And that the fine-tuning argument fits better with that [the Gnostic perspective] because you have got these meta conditions that makes it really, really very difficult to bring about the material world [and life in it] and yet it comes about, implying that the true Creator of everything, the Source of all being [whom Gnostics believe in] really does not want the material world to exist. But this sort of evil, you know, trickster comes in and just sets things up just right. The fine tuning argument points [because a good Creator would not have evil/suffering in the world] a lot more strongly to something like that than it does to the God of traditional theism.” I, Tom Dahlheimer, believe in the Gnostic Christian fine-tuning argument.
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