Showing posts with label magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magic. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2022

English Mystic John Dee on this Day in History

 

The History and Mystery of Alchemy is now available on Amazon...and it is only 99 cents.

This day in history: English mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, teacher, occultist and alchemist John Dee was born on this day in 1527. He was the court astronomer for, and advisor to, Elizabeth I, and spent much of his time on alchemy, divination and Hermetic philosophy. As an antiquarian, he had one of the largest libraries in England at the time. As a political advisor, he advocated the foundation of English colonies in the New World to form a "British Empire", a term he is credited with coining.

Dee eventually left Elizabeth's service and went on a quest for additional knowledge in the deeper realms of the occult and supernatural. He aligned himself with several individuals who may have been charlatans, travelled through Europe and was accused of spying for the English crown. Upon his return to England, he found his home and library vandalized. He eventually returned to the Queen's service, but was turned away when she was succeeded by James I. He died in poverty in London and his gravesite is unknown.

Dracula author Bram Stoker wrote the following about John Dee:

Even a brief survey of the life of the celebrated “Doctor Dee,” the so-called “Wizard” of the sixteenth century, will leave any honest reader under the impression that in the perspective of history he was a much maligned man. If it had not been that now and again he was led into crooked bye-paths of alleged occultism, his record might have stood out as that of one of the most accomplished and sincere of the scientists of his time. He was in truth, whatever were his faults, more sinned against than sinning. If the English language is not so elastic as some others in the matter of meaning of phrases, the same or a greater effect can be obtained by a careful use of the various dialects of the British Empire. In the present case we may, if English lacks, well call on some of the varieties of Scotch terminology. The intellectual status of the prime wizard, as he is held to be in general opinion, can be well indicated by any of the following words or phrases “wanting,” “crank,” “a tile off,” “a wee bit saft,” “a bee in his bonnet.” Each of these is indicative of some form of monomania, generally harmless. If John Dee had not had some great qualities, such156 negative weaknesses would have prevented his reputation ever achieving a permanent place in history of any kind. As it is his place was won by many accomplished facts. The following is a broad outline of his life, which was a long one lasting for over eighty years.

John Dee was born in 1527, and came of a Welsh race. A good many years after his start in life he, after the harmless fashion of those (and other) times, made out a family tree in which it was shewn that he was descended from, among other royalties, Roderick the Great, Prince of Wales. This little effort of vanity did not, however, change anything. The world cared then about such things almost as little as it does now; or, allowing for the weakness of human beings in the way of their own self-importance, it might be better to say as it professes to do now. John Dee was sent to the University of Cambridge when he was only fifteen years old. The College chosen for him was St. John’s, and here he showed extraordinary application in his chosen subject, mathematics. He took his probationary degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1545, and was made a Fellow in 1546. In his early years of College life his work was regulated in a remarkable way. Out of the twenty-four hours, eighteen were devoted to study, four to sleep, the remaining two being set apart for meals and recreation. Lest this should seem incredible it may be remembered that three hundred years later, the French Jesuits,157 having made exhaustive experiments, arrived at the conclusion that for mere purposes of health, without making any allowance for the joy or happiness of life, and treating the body merely as a machine from which the utmost amount of work mental and physical could be got without injury, four hours of sleep per diem sufficed for health and sanity. And it is only natural that a healthy and ambitious young man trying to work his way to success would, or might have been, equally strenuous and self-denying. His appointment as Fellow of St. John’s was one of those made when the College was founded. That he was skilled in other branches of learning was shown by the fact that in the University he was appointed as Under Reader in Greek. He was daring in the practical application of science, and during the representation of one of the comedies of Aristophanes, created such a sensation by appearing to fly, that he began to be credited by his companions with magical powers. This was probably the beginning of the sinister reputation which seemed to follow him all his life afterwards. When once an idea of the kind has been started even the simplest facts of life and work seem to gather round it and enlarge it indefinitely. So far as we can judge after a lapse of over three hundred years, John Dee was an eager and ardent seeker after knowledge; and all through his life he travelled in the search wherever he was likely to gain his object. It is a main difficulty of158 following such a record that we have only facts to follow. We know little or nothing of motives except from results, and as in the development of knowledge the measure of success can only bear a small ratio to that of endeavour, it is manifest that we should show a large and tolerant understanding of the motives which animate the seeker for truth. In the course of his long life John Dee visited many lands, sojourned in many centres of learning, had relations of common interests as well as of friendship with many great scholars, and made as thinker, mathematician, and astronomer, a reputation far transcending any ephemeral and purely gaseous publicity arising from the open-mouthed wonder of the silly folk who are not capable of even trying to understand things beyond their immediate ken. Wherever he went he seems to have been in touch with the learned and progressive men of his time, and always a student. At various times he was in the Low Countries, Louvain (from whose University he obtained the degree of LL.D.), Paris, Wurtemberg, Antwerp, Presburg, Lorraine, Frankfort-on-the-Oder, Bohemia, Cracow, Prague, and Hesse-Cassel. He even went so far afield as St. Helena. He was engaged on some great works of more than national importance. For instance, when in 1582, Pope Gregory XIII instituted the reform of the Calendar which was adopted by most of the great nations of the world, Dee approved and worked out159 his own calculations to an almost similar conclusion, though the then opposition to him cost England a delay of over one hundred and seventy years. In 1572 he had proved his excellence as an astronomer in his valuable work in relation to a newly discovered star (Tycho Brahe’s) in CassiopÅ“ia. In 1580 he made a complete geographical and hydrographical map of the Queen’s possessions. He tried—but unhappily in vain—to get Queen Mary to gather the vast collections of manuscripts and old books which had been made in the Monasteries (broken up by Henry VIII) of which the major part were then to be obtained both easily and cheaply. He was a Doctor of Laws (which by the way was his only claim to be called “Doctor” Dee, the title generally accorded to him). He was made a rector in Worcestershire in 1553; and in 1556, Archbishop Parker gave him ten years’ use of the livings of Upton and Long Leadenham. He was made Warden of Manchester College in 1595, and was named by Queen Elizabeth as Chancellor of St. Paul’s. In 1564, he was appointed Dean of Gloucester, though through his own neglect of his own interest it was never carried out. The Queen approved, the Archbishop sealed the deed; but Dee, unmindful, overlooked the formality of acceptance and the gift eventually went elsewhere. Queen Elizabeth, who consistently believed in and admired him, wanted to make him a bishop, but he declined the responsibility. For once the formality at consecration:160 “Nolo Episcopari” was spoken with truthful lips. More than once he was despatched to foreign places to make special report in the Queen’s service. That he did not—always, at all events—put private interest before public duty is shown by his refusal to accept two rectories offered to him by the Queen in 1576, urging as an excuse that he was unable to find time for the necessary duties, since he was too busily occupied in making calculations for the reformation of the Calendar. He seems to have lived a most proper life, and was twice married. After a long struggle with adversity in which—last despair of a scholar—he had to sell his books, he died very poor, just as he was preparing to migrate. At his death in 1608 he left behind him no less than seventy-nine works—nearly one for each year of his life. Just after the time of the Armada, following on some correspondence with Queen Elizabeth, he had returned to England after long and adventurous experiences in Poland and elsewhere, during which he had known what it was to receive the honours and affronts of communities. He took back with him the reputation of being a sorcerer, one which he had never courted and which so rankled in him that many years afterwards he petitioned James I to have him tried so that he might clear his character.

If there be any truth whatever in the theory that men have attendant spirits, bad as well as good, Dr. Dee’s bad spirit took the shape of one who161 pretended to occult knowledge, the so-called Sir Edward Kelley of whom we shall have something to say later on.

Dee was fifty-four years of age when he met Sir Edward Kelley who was twenty-eight years his junior. The two men became friends, and then the old visionary scholar at once became dominated by his younger and less scrupulous companion, who very soon became his partner. From that time Dee’s down-fall—or rather down-slide began. All the longings after occult belief which he had hitherto tried to hold in check began not only to manifest themselves, but to find expression. His science became merged in alchemy, his astronomical learning was forced into the service of Astrology. His belief, which he as a cleric held before him as a duty, was lost in spiritualism and other forms of occultism. He began to make use for practical purposes of his crystal globe and his magic mirror in which he probably had for long believed secretly. Kelley practically ruined his reputation by using for his own purposes the influence which he had over the old man. His opportunities were increased by the arrival in England of Laski, about 1583. The two scholars had many ideas in common, and Kelley did not fail, in the furtherance of his own views, to take advantage of the circumstance. He persuaded Dee to go with his new friend to Poland, in the hope of benefiting further in his studies in the occult by wider162 experience of foreign centres of learning. They journeyed to Laskoe near Cracow, where the weakness of the English scholar became more evident and his form of madness more developed. Dee had now a fixed belief in two ideas which he had hitherto failed to materialise—the Philosopher’s Stone and the Elixir of Life, both of them dreams held as possible of realisation to the scientific dreamer in the period of the Renaissance. Dee believed at one time that he had got hold of the Philosopher’s Stone, and actually sent to Queen Elizabeth a piece of gold taken from a transmuted warming-pan. As it is said in the life of Dee that he and Kelley had found a quantity of the Elixir of Life in the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey, we can easily imagine what part the latter had in the transaction. It was he, too, who probably fixed on Glastonbury as the place in which to search for Elixirs, as that holy spot had already a reputation of its own in such matters. It has been held for ages that the staff used by Joseph of Arimathea took root and blossomed there. Somehow, whatever the Glastonbury Elixir did, the Philosopher’s Stone did not seem to keep its alleged properties in the Dee family. John Dee’s young son Arthur, aged eight, tried its efficacy; but without success. Perhaps it was this failure which made Kelley more exacting, for a couple of years later in 1589, he told his partner that angels had told him it was the divine wish that they should have163 their wives in common. The sage, who was fond of his wife—who was a comely woman, whereas Kelley’s was ill favoured and devoid of charms—naturally demurred at such an utterance even of occult spirits. Mrs. Dee also objected, with the result that there were alarums and excursions and the partnership was rudely dissolved—which is a proof that though the aged philosopher’s mind had been vitiated by the evil promptings of his wily companion he had not quite declined to idiocy.


Friday, September 25, 2015

The Occult Spirit World & the Bible - 170 Books to Download


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Contents (created on a Windows computer):

Ghosts of the Bible by Converse Ennis Nickerson 1922 ( Ghosthood or Immortality, Spirit Communication, Jehovah, The Spectre Chieftain, Ghost Councilors, The Return of Samuel, Ghosts of Daniel, The Man of Nazareth, Ghosts of Acts)

Talking with the Dead by Judge J.F. Rutherford (Watchtower) 1920

The History of the Origin of all Things being particularly a history of the spiritual state of man, from death of the body to knowledge of God by the Spirit of Jesus Christ

Man and the Spiritual World as disclosed by the Bible by Arthur Chambers 1900

The Angel and the Book, an annotated text book of the inspiration, spirit ministration and angel visitation of the Bible by HG Paul 1902

The Magical Message According to Ioannes commonly called the Gospel according to St. John 1909

Further Communications from the World of Spirits by the spirit of Joshua (Biblical figure) 1861

Three Articles on Modern Spiritualism by a Bible Spiritualist 1863

Psychic Research and Gospel Miracles a study of the evidences of the Gospel's superphysical features in the light of the established results of modern psychical research by Edward Duff 1902

Higher Aspects of Spiritualism by Stainton Moses 1880 (Judaism and Jesus Christ, The World at the Birth of Christ, John Baptist and his Message, The Mission of the Christ, Modern Christianity and Modem Spiritualism, The Bible Miracles and the Fhenomena of Spiritualism, etc) 1880

A Genetic study of the spirit-phenomena in the New Testament by Elmer H Zaugg 1917 (Ancient Belief in Spirits and Demons, Jewish Beliefs in Spirits and Demons, The Believer as Pneumatikos: The Gifts of the Spirit, The Believer as Pneumatikos: Means of Acquiring the Spirit, The Believer as Pneumatikos: The Benefit of Spirit-Possession, Jesus as Pneumatikos)

The Occult Life of Jesus of Nazareth by Alexander Smyth Given on Spiritual Authority from Spirits who were Contemporary Mortals with Jesus While on Earth 1899

The New Testament of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ as Revised and Corrected by The Spirits, by Leonard Thorn 1861
(“I, Jesus, came in spirit bodily, and revised and corrected the first four hooks of the new testament, namely, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and also the Revelations…Paul came personally in the spirit and corrected the Acts of the Apostles, and all of the other books in this testament which are called Paul’s writings…James, Peter, John, Jude, all came in the spirit personally, and revised and corrected their own books.” [Introductory Remarks])

Autobiography of Jesus Christ (Spirit) 1894 (Being his historical life given by himself through the inspiration of the Scribe.)

Holy Theomonistic Bible, or, The evolutionary Gospel of fulfilment of prophecy, which John calls the bitter and sweet open book and everlasting Gospel: being the authentic continuation and consummation of the Jewish and Christian Bibles and other sacred books namely the testament of God with men of today and all the future in the Psychic Age or Theomonistic Era, which started 1916 A. D. AS REVEALED BY ELOAH, the Almighty God of the Universe; by Jehovah, Father of our own Solar System; by Basa Jesus Christ Xeovah, the only rightful King of Earth, and a large Host of Earthborn and Non- Terrestrial Angels, Through mediumistic Automatic Writing of MRS. WELARI, the Clairvoyant Inspiration of the Editor, BISHOP THEODOLITHOS, S. T. D., and the guidance by their soulmates, THEODOLINDA and BISHOP PHILLIPS BROOKS (1919)

The Holy Scriptures translated and corrected by the Spirit of Revelation by Joseph Smith, the Seer 1867

1904 - The New Testament Revised and Translated, by A. S. Worrell (American Baptist Publication Society. 1904)
“...the writer, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit (as he believes), undertook the immensely responsible task of furnishing to the public, a correct and literal translation of these Scriptures, put up in good style, with brief notes designed to help the ordinary Christian, who has no knowledge of the original Greek.”
The Apocalypse Unsealed, being an Esoteric Interpretation of the Revelation of St John by James Pryse 1910

The Life of Jehoshua, the prophet of Nazareth, An Occult Study and a Key to the Bible by Franz Hartman 1888

Spiritual Manifestations by Charles Beecher 1879

A Review of the "Spiritual Manifestations" by Charles Beecher 1853

A Discussion on the Automatic Powers of the Brain, being a defence against Rev. Charles Beecher's attack upon the philosophy of mysterious agents, in his review of "Spiritual Manifestations" by EC Rogers 1853

Spiritualism versus Christianity by JW Daniels 1856

Esoteric Christianity by Annie Besant 1905

Discourses on Religion, Morals, Philosophy and Metaphysics by Cora Richmond 1858

The Identity of Primitive Christianity and Modern Spiritualism by Eugene Crowell 1874

Thoughts of the Spiritual by Arthur Chambers 1905

Demon Possession and Allied Themes by John L Nevius 1896

The Question Settled - a Careful Comparison of Biblical and Modern Spiritualism by Moses Hull 1869

The Esoteric Basis of Christianity by William Kingsland 1891

A Three-fold Test of Modern Spiritualism by William R Gordon 1856

Demonosophy Unmasked in Modern Theosophy by Mersene Elon Sloan 1922

Spiritualism identical with Ancient Sorcery, New Testament Demonology, and Modern Witchcraft with the testimony of God and man against it by W McDonald 1869

The New Psychic Studies in their Relation to Christian Thought by Franklin Johnson 1887

The Gospel According to Satan, by Standish Grey 1881

The Gospel in the Stars by Joseph A Seiss 1884

Clear Light from the Spirit World by Kate Irving 1884 (My Investigations into the Spiritualism of the Jewish Scriptures)

Spiritualism, a Satanic Delusion and a sign of the times by William Ramsey 1856



Spiritism and the Fallen Angels in the Light of the Old and New Testaments by James M Gray 1920

Experimental Investigation of the Spirit Manifestations demonstrating the existence of spirits and their communion with mortals - doctrine of the spirit world respecting heaven, hell, morality, and God - also, the influence of Scripture on the morals of Christians by Robert Hare 1855

An Exposition of Modern Spiritualism showing its tendency to a total annihilation of Christianity with other miscellaneous remarks and criticisms in support of the fundamental principles of the Christian Religion by Samuel Post 1861

Spiritual Communications presenting a Revelation of the Future Life, and illustrating and confirming the fundamental doctrines of the Christian faith by Henry Kiddle 1879

Old truths in a new Light - An earnest endeavour to reconcile material science with spiritual science and with Scripture by Marie Sinclair Caithness 1876

The Spirit World by Joseph Hamilton 1906

Magnetic astronomy of the Bible by Wm W Smith 1893

An Esoteric Reading of Biblical Symbolism by Harrit T Bartlett 1916

The True Church of Christ Exoteric and Esoteric by John William Brodie-Innes 1892

The Esoteric Character of the Gospels By Helena Petrovna Blavatsky 1895

Demonic Possession in the New Testament by William Menzies Alexander 1902

The New Testament Occultism by John Hamlin Dewey 1895

The Mystery of the Ages contained in the Secret Doctrine of all religions by Marie Caithness 1887

Jesus: an Unfinished Portrait by Charles Van Norden 1906 (The Occult Jesus)

Occult Experiences, a true narrative of experiences in the present time and deductions therefrom by R Buren 1919 (Christian Mysteries)

Astrology in a Nutshell by Carl Webber 1902

The Star of the Wise Men - being a Commentary on the Second Chapter of St. Matthew by Richard Trench  1850

The Wise Men: Who They Were and how They Came to Jerusalem by Francis William Upham 1901

The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion by James George Frazer

Witness to the Stars by EW Bullinger 1893

Astrology Theologized by Valentin Weigal by Anna Bonus Kingsford 1886

The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses - Moses' Magical Spirit Art 1880

The Gospel in the Stars by Joseph A Seiss 1910

God-man - the word made flesh by George W Carey 1920 ("The book of Job is the most wonderful and beautiful literary production ever given to the world. Certainly the scientific truths of astrology and alchemy, and of the Spirit's operation in flesh, as set forth in that book, are without a parallel.)

Christianity as Mystical Fact and the Mysteries of Antiquity by Rudolf Steiner 1914

Mysticism in Christianity by WK Fleming 1913

The Open Door - The Secret of Jesus, a Key to Spiritual Emancipation and Mastery by John Hamlin Dewey 1896

The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception - Mystic Christianity by Max Heindel 1920

The Mediaeval Attitude Toward Astrology By Theodore Otto Wedel 1920

Studies in Mystical Religion by Rufus M Jones 1919

Lilith - Legend of the First Woman by Ada Langworthy Collier 1885

Lilith - Adam's First Wife, article in the Sunday Magazine 1884

The Lilith Legend, article in the Museum Journal 1912

The Spirits in Prison by EH Plumtre 1884

The Gadarene - Spirits in Prison by JO Barrett 1874

The Mediator or a Medium by Albert Wyckoff 1920

The Classic of Spiritism by Lucy McDowell Milburn - 1922 ("The Bible surely is the classic of Spiritism")

Do the Dead Still Live? by David Heagle 1920

Shall the Churches Take Psychical Research Seriously? by George Barten Cutten 1914

The Witch of Endor and Modern Spiritualism by Geo C Baldwin 1872

Portraits of Women of the Bible by Thomas E Miller 1910 (has a section on the Witch of Endor)

Woman in Sacred History by Harriet Beecher Stowe 1874 (has a section on the Witch of Endor)

Famous Women of the Old Testament by Morton Bryan Wharton 1889 (has a section on the Witch of Endor)

Saul and the Witch of Endor, article in The Religious Monitor 1885



Sauls interview with the Witch of Endor, article in The Methodist Quarterly Review 1869

Demonology and Witchcraft by Sir Walter Scott 1872

Is Christianity a Supernatural Revelation? by James F Clarke 1903

Supernatural Revelation - an essay concerning the basis of the Christian Faith by Charles M Mead 1889

The Bible history of Satan. Is he a fallen angel? 1858

History of the Fallen Angels of the Scriptures -Proofs of the being of Satan and of evil spirits by Josiah Priest 1839

Babylonian Influence on the Bible and Popular Beliefs - A Study of Genesis 1 and 2 by Abram Smythe Palmer 1897

The Life of Jehoshua, the Prophet of Nazareth: An Occult Study By Franz Hartmann 1888

The God of this World - The Devil in history by Hollis Read 1875

The Fall of Lucifer - The Origin of Evil by ET Smets 1896

The History of the Devil and the idea of evil by Paul Carus 1900

The Bible Devil, a Modern Interpretation By Henry Richard Bender 1917

The Serpent of Eden: a philological and critical essay on the text of Genesis 3 and its various interpretations by Jose P. Val d'Eremao 1888

The Existence and Fall of Satan and his Angels, article in the Methodist magazine and quarterly review 1838

The Fallen Angels and the Heroes of Mythology by John Fleming 1879

The Angel of Jehovah, article in the Bibliotheca Sacra 1859

The Angel of Jehovah, article in The Exegete and homiletic monthly 1880

The Angel of the Lord; or, Manifestations of Christ in the Old Testament by William Pakenham Walsh 1876

The Angel of Jehovah, article in The Christian examiner and general review 1836

The Letter G, article in The American Tyler-keystone 1903 ("The swastika is composed of four gammas combined, and was known among old time craftsmen as the Tetragrammaton [Jehovah].")

Medical Symbolism in Connection with Historical Studies in the Arts by Thomas S. Sozinskey 1891
"Tetragrammaton — that is, J H V H, or, as it is commonly rendered, Jehovah — was the same thing as the IAW. Much could be said about it, as those familiar with Masonic legends and occult literature are aware. Lenormant states, of the wide belief in the power of the hidden "name of the Lord," that "we now see clearly that it came from Chaldea." p. 133

Holy Holy Holy - A Study of the Trisagion 1913 (features the Tetragrammaton)

The Principles of Occult Healing by Mary Weeks Burnett 1916

The Law of Psychic Phenomena - a working hypothesis for the systematic study of hypnotism, spiritism, mental therapeutics by Thomson Jay Hudson 1904 (...the Bible sanctions the belief in the power of spirits to hold communion with the living."

Enemies and evidences of Christianity by John Duncan Quackenbos 1899 (Chapters: What is Christianity more than Theosophy? - What is Christianity more than Spiritism?)

Reincarnation in the New Testament by James Pryce 1904

Reincarnation a study of Forgotten Truth by E.D. Walker 1888 (chapters on Reincarnation in the Bible, and Reincarnation in Early Christendom)

Materialism and Occultism by E Wake Cook 1922

The Hidden Wisdom of Christ and the Key of Knowledge, Volume 1 by Ernst Christian L. von Bunsen - 1865

The Hidden Wisdom of Christ and the Key of Knowledge, Volume 2 by Ernst Christian L. von Bunsen - 1865

Has Spiritualism any Foundation in the Bible? by Lewis Evarts 1894

The "Delusion" of Spiritualism compared with a belief in the Bible by JW Cadwell 1884

Incidents in the life of Albert Colby, the man who proves that modern spiritualism is a delusion identical with Bible witchcraft, and that it is the work of devils 1875

Spiritualism or Christianity - A Friendly Correspondence by Moses Hull 1873

From Theosophy to Christian faith by ER McNeile 1919

Numbers: Their Occult Power and Mystic Virtue By William Wynn Westcott ("Properties of Numbers according to the Bible, Talmud")

The Metaphysic of Christianity and Buddhism by Dawsonne Melanchthon Strong - 1899

Notes on the Lost Secret of Christianity By David Blair 1860

Essays on the Supernatural Origin of Christianity by George Park Fisher - 1871

A Brief Defence of Supernatural Christianity by John Kennedy 1875

Plus You Get:

Spiritualism versus Christianity, or, Spiritualism thoroughly Exposed by JW Daniels 1856

The History and Power of Mind by Richard Ingalese 1902 (Lesser Occult or Psychic Forces and their Dangers, Hypnotism and How to Guard Against It)

Facts and Mysteries of Spiritism by Joseph Hartman 1885

Spiritualism, article in the The Bible Christian magazine (The so-called "light" of spiritualism is no other than the light of the pit, and its doctrines are "the doctrines of Devils."") 1881

Spiritism and the Fallen Angels in the Light of the Old and New Testaments by James Gray 1920

Spiritism the Modern Satanism by Thomas Coakley 1920

A Complete Refutation of Astrology by TH Moody 1838

Modern Spiritism - its Science and Religion by AT Schofield 1920

The Menace of Spiritualism by Eliot O'Donnell 1920

Modern Necromancy, article in the The Christian Treasury 1871

What Say the Scriptures about Spiritism - That it is Demonism by Charles Taze Russell 1897

The Rappers - The Mysteries, Fallacies, and Absurdities of Spirit-rapping, Table-tipping, and Entrancement 1854

Spiritualism exposed by F Fawkes 1920

Modern Spiritualism Laid Bare, unmasked, dissected, and viewed from spiritualists' own teachings and from Scriptural standpoints

Spiritualism - a personal experience and a warning by C Kernahan 1920

The Case against Spiritualism by Jane Stoddard 1919

Confessions of a Medium 1882

Sketches of Imposture, Deception, and Credulity 1845 (has chapters dealing with Astrology, Vampires and Alchemy)

Spiritualism and Necromancy by AB Morrison 1873

Spiritualism, or Modern necromancy by Edward Cridge 1870

Some Phases of Modern Occultism - Article in the Rosary Magazine 1903

Spiritism and Religion, a moral study by J Liljencrants 1918

The Physical Phenomena of Spiritualism, Fraudulent and Genuine, being a brief account of the most important historical phenomena, a criticism of their evidential value, and a complete exposition of the methods employed in fraudulently reproducing the same by H Carrington 1908

Three Lectures on Modern Spiritism by Carl August Blomgrem 1922 -

"The final word of the Bible on Spiritism seals its eternal doom. Bevelation XXI:8"
The Probable Effect of Spiritualism upon the social, moral, and religious condition of society by Anna Blackwell 1876

Modern Spiritualism - a history and a criticism, Volume 1 by Frank Podmore 1902

Modern Spiritualism - a history and a criticism, Volume 2 by Frank Podmore 1902

Spiritualism on Trial by Rev. F. W. Evans 1875



The New Black Magic and the Truth about the Ouija-board by J Rauper 1919

The Question Settled. A careful Comparison of Biblical and Modern Spiritualism by Moses Hull 1891

Psychic Research and Gospel Miracles - a study of the evidences of the Gospel's superphysical features in the light of the established results of modern psychical research by Edward Duff 1902

Essays in Occultism, Spiritism, and Demonology by William Harris 1919

Serpent-worship and other essays by Charles Wake 1888

Frauds exposed by Anthony Comstock 1880

The Popes and Science by James Walsh 1908 (appendix talks about Astrology)

The Greatest Debate within a Half Century Upon Modern Spiritualism by Moses Hull and William F. Jamieson 1904

The supernatural in modern English fiction by Dorothy Scarborough 1917

Fact and fable in psychology by J Jastrow 1901 (The modern occult. The problems of psychical research. The logic of mental telegraphy. The psychology of deception. The psychology of spiritualism. Hypnotism and its antecedents.)

Astrology, article in the Knickerbocker Magazine 1836

The Autobiography of Satan by John Beard 1872 (has a chapter on Astrology)

A Note on Astrology and Spiritualism, article in Papers for the Times 1879

The Mediaeval Attitude toward Astrology by TO Wedel 1920

The Delusions of Clairvoyance, article in Scribner's Monthly 1879

Psychology as a natural science applied to the solution of occult psychic phenomena 1889 by Charles Raue

Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions Volume 1 by Charles Mackay 1850

Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions Volume 2 by Charles Mackay 1850

Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions Volume 3 by Charles Mackay 1850

Modern Mysteries Explained and Exposed by Asa Mahan 1855

Hypnotism and Spiritism; a Critical and Medical Study by G Lapponi 1907

The Pharmacy of the Bible, article in Canadian pharmaceutical journal 1872 (In the list of the evil practices of the day given by St. Paul in his Epistle to the Galatians, occurs the word " witchcraft." The Greek word for this is "pharmakeia," from which our word pharmacy is derived.)

Chronicles of Pharmacy, by A. C. Wootton 1910 (The Greek word, pharmakeia, the original of our " pharmacy," had a rather mixed history in its native language. It does not seem to have exactlv deteriorated, as words in all languages have a habit of doing, for from the earliest times it was used concurrently to describe the preparation of medicines, and also through its association with drugs and poisons and the production of philtres, as equivalent to sorcery and witcheraft. It is in this latter sense that it is employed exclusively in the New Testament. St. Paul, for instance (in Galatians, v, 20), enumerating the works of the flesh names it after idolatry. The word appears as witcheraft in the Authorised, and as sorcery in the Revised Version.)

Religious Delusions - Study of the False Faiths of Today by JV Coombs 1904 (Chapters on Witchcraft, Superstitions, Spiritualism and Hypnotism)

The Swedenborgian Delusion by George Burgess 1870

Rev. Joseph Cook Versus Emanuel Swedenborg 1879 (Swedenborg may be said to be the father of Spiritualism, a belief that one can communicate with the dead).

The Holy Spirit and Other Spirits by Daniel Teasley 1904 (many pages hard to read)

Is the Devil a Myth? by CF Wimberly 1913

Claims of Modern Psychical Research, article in Our Day 1895

Spiritism and the Cult of the Dead in Antiquity by Lewis Bayles Paton - 1921

Preliminary report of the Commission appointed by the University of Pennsylvania to investigate modern spiritualism, in accordance with the request of the late Henry Seybert 1887 (The Seybert Commission was a group of faculty at the University of Pennsylvania who in 1884-1887 investigated a number of respected spiritualist mediums, uncovering fraud or suspected fraud in every case that they examined.)
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