FORWARD
War in Heaven introduces a completely new and revolutionary
conception of the nature of spiritual reality. The material in it
was dictated to me by automatic writing, but WiH contains more
explicit, detailed spiritual information than most modern channeled
books and it is much more militant and controversial in tone. Some
readers of the pre-publication edition of War in Heaven were
disturbed or frightened by it, and a few attacked the book as evil
and satanic. However, a larger number of readers hailed it as a
major breakthrough in cosmological theory.
War in Heaven is not a typical New Age channeled book, and I am not
a typical New Ager, though I helped to found that movement in the
Sixties and Seventies. I was raised as a traditional occultist, and
my primary goal in life has always been to develop my skills as a
psychic and magician. However, I also possess past-life memories
that have caused me to develop into a very different kind of
occultist from my relatives who were Freemasons, Rosicrucians,
Spiritualists, or Theosophists.
I have been aware since 1946, when I was
four years old, that my soul was deliberately sent to this planet by
an advanced extra-terrestrial civilization to assist Earth people in
dealing with a major crisis in their spiritual evolution. For this
reason, I’ve studied UFOs and related subjects as seriously as I’ve
studied psychic and spiritual phenomena, and the relationship
between the two has always been obvious to me.
The same applies to conspiracy theories – I have known all my life
that unseen forces really do manipulate the course of human history,
and my response has not been fear or anger, but rather a desire to
help any of these agencies whose ethical and political goals seem
similar to mine. I’ve been a left-wing anarchist and a member of the
counterculture since the late Fifties, and I’ve grown more
politically and socially radical with age. In the late Sixties, my
spirit guides suggested that I call myself a Spiritual
Revolutionary, and I’ve been doing so ever since.
However, I didn’t become fully conscious of what the term meant
until 1983, when I made a breakthrough in personal awareness about
spiritual reality. In July of that year, after several years of
intensive magical and intellectual preparation, I asked my spirit
guides: “Tell me the Great Secret, the theory that explains the true
nature of gods and human beings and the relationship between them.”
The reply that I received by automatic writing didn’t surprise me,
but I was absolutely astonished by it just the same.
The spirits seemed to be trying to
dictate a completely new and revolutionary cosmology: a view of
spiritual reality with moral, social, and political implications
that most people would consider literally unthinkable.
I eventually became able to record the messages in clear and
explicit English. It took me over five years, and thousands of hours
of grueling labor, to receive all the spirit-dictated information
for War in Heaven and write it into a book. The review on the next
page will give you an idea of what WiH is about and why I am
advertising it as “The most controversial channeled book of the
century.”
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REVIEW and
COMMENT
Mike Rhyner review
Here is an excerpt from Mike Rhyner’s review of War in Heaven in
the February 1989 issue of Critique:
“War in Heaven is based on messages channeled from a group of
extraterrestrial disembodied spirits who call themselves the
Invisible College. They say that your soul is nourished on
psychic energy generated during life, and when you ‘die,’ it
lives off the energy stored up during embodiment. There are also
spiritual beings that the Invisible College calls the Theocrats,
the ‘bad guys,’ who do not reincarnate but instead get the
energy needed to sustain their souls by sucking the energy from
other souls: psychic vampirism and spiritual cannibalism.
“The Theocrats are the creators of certain forms of organized
religion, which claim that you will have eternal life in Heaven
when you pass over. They create an illusion of this Heaven in
your mind by posing as gods, meanwhile giving you the
after-death state that you expect, whether it is a Heaven or
Hell or an eternal orgy. For instance, if you expect to go to
‘Rock ‘n’ Roll Heaven’ and worship at the feet of Elvis Presley
or Jimi Hendrix, they will create this illusion for you.
However, there are techniques you can use to avoid Theocratic
entanglement after death, which are described in War in Heaven.
“Before I read War in Heaven, the more I studied various
spiritual systems, the more disillusioned I became. My main
paths had been Theosophy and its descendants, and the study of
channeled messages of all kinds, particularly those from
‘Ascended Masters’ and ‘Space Brothers’. Each book I read in
these fields claimed to teach the work of highly evolved beings,
yet each contained glaring contradictions of the others. Then I
read War in Heaven and found out why these contradictions occur
– the authors don’t have an adequate theoretical frame of
reference to correctly interpret the messages they channel, even
though much of the raw information is perfectly valid.
“War in Heaven contains a revolutionary yet completely logical
cosmology which provides such a frame of reference, and has
answered questions that couldn’t be answered by any other
spiritual system that I studied. Reading it did cause more
questions to crop up in my mind, but most of them are answered
by the time I finished the book. The author says that the
purpose of War in Heaven is to help readers make a major
‘Breakthrough in Consciousness,’ and after reading it, I know
what he means. It may well be the most important book ever
published.”
Colin Wilson comment:
The following is from a
letter by Colin Wilson, dated 2/15/89:
“War in Heaven arrived while I was in California last year, and
when I got back, I had so many letters to write that I didn’t
have a chance to read it properly. I have just done so and find
it an absolutely absorbing and fascinating piece of work. If I
had received it fifteen years ago, not long after I’d written
The Occult, I would have thought that it was all wildly
imaginative. But since then, I have learned a great deal more
about this whole field of the paranormal, and a lot of what you
say seems to me to make a great deal of sense. Anyway, very many
thanks indeed for your kindness in sending me this extraordinary
piece of work.”
Jay Kinney review:
And here is an excerpt
from a review by Jay Kinney that was included in the Preface of
the first printing of WiH in 1988. It originally appeared in
Gnosis #6, and was written about the pre-publication edition of
the book, which was circulated in 1987 under the title of
Spiritual Revolution, but it describes War in Heaven equally
well.
“This self-published book is among the most fascinating, and
most troubling, books I’ve read in some time. It is fascinating
because it consists of channeled (i.e. automatically written)
material that is not only clear and pointed but also flies in
the face almost all other channeled teachings. And it’s
troubling because to take Spiritual Revolution (SR) seriously
entails entering into a topsy-turvy worldview that most of us
would normally consider to be highly paranoid.
“Briefly put, the material in SR claims to emanate from a group
of disembodied spirits informally called the ‘Invisible
College.’ As one might guess from its name, this group says it
was the force behind the development of groups such as the
Freemasons and Rosicrucians. More surprising, however, is its
claim to also have influenced the rise of the civil rights
movement, the spread of LSD, the anti-war movement, and even
rock’n’roll. So far so good: if this were all, one could peg the
‘Invisible College’ as the hippest bunch of inner plane guides
around, whispering bright ideas in the ears of the unsuspecting.
However, there’s more.
“The group is apparently engaged in a ongoing struggle against
another powerful conglomeration of inner plane spirits it calls
‘the Theocrats’. These types are apparently the ones behind most
world religions, and, in fact, hang around churches and other
places of worship soaking up the psychic energy that devout
believers beam their way in prayer. These fiends are fond of
meeting the newly deceased as they reach ‘the other side’ and
ushering them into an illusory Heaven where their souls are
gobbled up by the top Theocrats. In other words, according to
SR, spiritual traditions, which teach love of God, and
ultimately, union with the divine, are really scams run by the
inner plane Theocrats to rip off psychic energy and
souls. SR
spells all this out in far more detail than I have space for
here.
“Considering that most channeled messages sound like their
spirit authors have been cribbing from each others’ notes, SR’s
revelations about a “War in Heaven” stand out as decidedly
unique… Spiritual Revolution is a startling book that makes one
re-examine all of one’s spiritual assumptions… Considering that
SR’s thesis undercuts the spiritual moorings of world
civilization, there ought to be some heated discussions to come.
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