Scripture

Tract: Man’s Search For His Soul

Scientologists handed out this tract during our 03 June 2004 picket in Vancouver:

Online claim

Source: http://www.rightscientology.org/

For countless ages a goal of religion has been the salvage of the human soul. Man has tried by many practices to find the pathway of salvation. He has held the imperishable hope that someday in some way he would be free. Man has spoken of the second coming of Christ and of the Judgement Day. America has kept wide the doorway for this salvation by retaining religious freedom. And here, after these ages of grief and suffering, through terrible wars and catastrophe, the hope still lives—and with that hope, accomplishment. […]
Scientology site: http://www.rightscientology.org/

Note how the Scientology cross is positioned against other religious figures.

Hymn of Asia

According to the introduction in the 2000 edition, “L. Ron Hubbard wrote Hymn of Asia for a Buddhist convention during the 1955-56 worldwide celebrations of the 2,500th year of the Buddhist era.” The specific prophesy he claimed to fulfill:

When he shall be seen in the West, seated in the Western fashion, his hair like flames about his noble head, discoursing, then shall the inhabitants of the Three Worlds (*) rejoice, knowing that the emancipation of all sentient beings is imminent. Then it shall be called the age of the blessed because it will become commonplace to achieve emancipation in one lifetime.” (*) The “Three Worlds” in Tibetan scripture refers to: Body (the physical world pertaining to the body and life), Speech (the “world” of communication between entities and things) and Mind (one’s own world, the world of one’s own Creation.)
—Hymn of Asia © 1974, 2000 L. Ron Hubbard Library

Introducing Dianetics - Public Lecture Given at Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles

Hubbard answers questions about Dianetics; comments about its compatibility with religion, faith and atheism.

There are many questions that have come up regarding Dianetics, some of which I will answer here.

[…]

“Are there Catholic practitioners of Dianetics?”

We have been receiving a great many letters from persons of the Catholic faith. I know of a Catholic priest who has been having excellent success with Dianetics, and there are many others. The Catholic Church in many of its locales seems to be using Dianetics and finding no evidence that it questions the Catholic religion.

“What will Dianetics do for an atheist?”

Atheism is rooted in engrams, and people who have had such engrams run out of them are no longer atheists. It does not mean that they suddenly have an abiding faith in religion. But a man who has no faith, even if it is only faith in himself, has no purpose.

The ministers and priests who have been working with Dianetics have been espousing it, and I have had no single letter from any church organization which condemned Dianetics. There is no conflict. After all, it says right in one of the tenets of Dianetics that a man seeks his potential immortality as a spirit.

Dianetics does not take into consideration such a thing as a belief. A science can’t believe in something. For instance, physics never believed in Einstein, and as a result there is no conflict between the two. You will find, however, occasionally an aberrated person will feel assaulted by Dianetics and he will become very protective of his own engrams and will find some excuse to take it up. But so far there is nothing between Dianetics and religion and I hope it so continues.
— L. Ron Hubbard
Lecture 10 August 1950: Introducing Dianetics - Public Lecture Given at Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles

Dianetics The Original Thesis

Scientology gives a history of Hubbard’s “original thesis,” and the several titles under which it has been published.

Dianetics: The Original Thesis was written by Ron in 1947, fifteen years after he began his studies of the mind. […]

Originally titled Scientology: A New Science, the book was retitled Abnormal Dianetics when it was offered to the medical and psychiatric profession in early 1948. The work was not utilized by these professions; it was, however, accepted broadly by the public at large. […]

The first hardcover edition, titled Dianetics: The Original Thesis was published in Wichita, Kansas in December 1951.

In 1983, the book was newly released with an updated title: The Dynamics of Life.

— L. Ron Hubbard Library © 1991 Technical Bulletins Vol. 1, p. 3

The introduction to Hubbard’s “original thesis” dishonestly omits the occult nature of his philosophic studies.

INTRODUCTION

In nineteen thirty-two an investigation was undertaken to determine the dynamic principle of existence in a workable form which might lead to the resolution of some of the problems of mankind.1 A long research in ancient and modern philosophy culminated, in nineteen thirty-eight, in the heuristically discovered primary law. A work was written at that time which embraced man and his activities.2 In the following years further research was undertaken in order to prove or disprove the axioms so established.

Certain experiences during the war made it necessary for the writer to resolve the work into applicable equations and an intensive program was begun in nineteen forty-five toward this end.3

A year later many techniques had been discovered or evolved and a nebulous form of the present work was formulated. Financed chiefly by a lump sum disability compensation, that form of Dianetics was intensively applied to volunteer subjects, and the work gradually developed to its present form.4

Dianetics has been under test by the writer, as here delineated, for the past three years. The last series of random volunteers, numbering twenty, were rehabilitated, twenty out of twenty, with an average number of work hours of 151.2 per subject. Dianetics offers the first anatomy of the human mind and techniques for handling the hitherto unknown reactive mind, which causes irrational and psychosomatic behavior. It has successfully removed any compulsions, repressions, neuroses and psychoses to which it has been applied.5
L.R.H. January, 1948

Adeptus ExemptusThe Adeptus Exemptus Thesis

The Exempt Adept will possess a thorough knowledge of all these courses [Student Grade through Adeptus Major Grade] and present a thesis of his own, as a general Epitome of his own Attainment as reflected in the sphere of the Mind. (Curriculum, THE EQUINOX No. XI)

The Adept must prepare and publish a thesis setting forth his knowledge of the Universe, and his proposals for its welfare and progress. He will thus be known as a leader of a school of thought. (One Star in Sight)

This assignment is self-explanatory; but perhaps the reasons for it are not entirely clear.

Certainly there are enough practical reasons. The Exempt Adepts are “senior statesmen of the spirit,” the best trained, most learned, most advanced magicians, mystics, and philosophers of the Inner College. Furthermore, such a person will have ripened his or her own unique perspective of the Great Work. Every person has a unique point of view, and every window on the Divine gazes upon a different aspect, a different vista. Each spiritually mature expression of such a view constitutes one of the great philosophical treasures of the world.
— James A. Eshelman, The Mystical & Magical System of the A.’.A.’.

Excalibur, Dianetics: The Original Thesis, Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health and every Scientology text or lecture until his death were Hubbard’s knowledge of the universe and his proposals for its welfare and progress. As the founder and director of Scientology he became indeed the leader of a school of thought. He worked his damndest and got others to do their damndest to have his views accepted as not just great, but the greatest philsophical treasure the world has ever seen.

When David Miscavige announced the “Golden Age of Tech” he was really making an assertion of the completion of Hubbard’s “Great Work.”

The essential characteristic of the Grade [of Magus] is that its possessor utters a Creative Magical Word,6 which transforms the planet on which He lives by the installation of new officers to preside over its initiation.
— Aleister Crowley, Liber ABA Book 4 (pp. 491-493)

The Adept must prepare and publish a thesis setting forth His knowledge of the Universe, and his proposals for its welfare and progress. He will thus be known as the leader of a school of thought.

[…]

To attain the Grade of Magister Templi, he must perform Two Tasks: the emancipation from Thought by putting each idea against its opposite, and refusing to prefer either; and the consecration of himself as a pure vehicle for the influence of the Order to which he aspires.7
— Aleister Crowley, Liber ABA Book 4 (p. 493)

Entry level Scientologists learn to view the unwanted elements around the ego as “engrams” contained within the reactive mind. However, at the “confidential” levels above Clear, Scientologists come to learn that the elements are actually “body thetans,” degraded beings that require Scientology processing to eliminate by a pseudo-scientific system of exorcism.

Should [the Adept] fail, by Will or by weakness, to make his self-annihilation absolute, he is nonetheless thrust forth into the Abyss8; but instead of being received and reconstructed in the Third Order, as a Babe in the womb of Our Lady BABALON, under the Night of PAN, to grow up to be Himself wholly and truly as He was not previously, he remains in the Abyss, secreting his elements round his Ego as if isolated from the Universe, and becomes what is called a “Black Brother.” Such a being is gradually disintegrated from lack of nourishment, and the slow but certain action of the attraction of the rest of the Universe, despite his most desparate efforts to insulate and protect himself, and to aggrandize himself by predatory practices.
— Aleister Crowley, Liber ABA Book 4 (pp. 491-493)

Hubbard was a Black Brother who sought to thrust people into the abyss with Dianetics and Scientology, and to get Scientologists shoving more and more people into the abyss.9
———
1 See Bare-faced Messiah timeline .

2 Excalibur The Dark Sword.

3 Hubbard was hospitalized at Oak Knoll hospital in Oakland, CA for much of 1945. He took a convalescent leave in August and visited Agape Lodge of the O.T.O. in Pasadena, CA, where he met Jack Parsons and his future wife, Sara “Betty” Northrup.

4 There is no record of a lump sum disability compensation. However in 1946, Hubbard ran a confidence scheme on Jack Parsons, making off with Jack’s girlfriend Betty and $10,000 of Jack’s money. See, e.g., Carter, John. Sex and Rockets, Venice, CA. Feral House 1999; Miller, Russell, Bare-faced Messiah, Chapter 7

5 Hubbard was an accomplished stage hypnotist and took research credit for hypnotizing Hollywood party-goers during this period. See also: www.lermanet.com/excalibur/index.html

6 Hubbard’s “One Word” is of course Survive, first announced in an unpublished 1938 manuscript he titled first The One Command and then Excalibur The Dark Sword, and repeated thereafter throughout his Dianetics and Scientology material. Scientology does not relate Hubbard’s research into the mind to any occult training curriculum.

Although I trained extensively in Scientology, to Class IX Auditor, at no time was I taught about Hubbard’s occult background, or the true nature of his pre-Scientology “research.”

7 Hubbard’s “emancipation from Thought by putting each idea against its opposite” is evident at the Scientology processing levels, especially at Clear and OT II, where psychological dichotomies such as “Love/Love no-” and “Create/Create no-” are desensitized.

8

1 a·byss n.
1. An immeasurably deep chasm, depth, or void: “lost in the vast abysses of space and time” (Loren Eiseley).2.
a. The primeval chaos out of which it was believed that the earth and sky were formed.
b. The abode of evil spirits; hell.
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=abyss

Abyss: The great gulf or void that constitutes a solution de continuité between the phenomenal world of manifestation and its noumenal source, i.e., non-manifestation.
— Kenneth Grant, Nightside of Eden

9

It is a purpose of Dianetics to pass man across the abyss of irrational, solely reactive thought and enter him upon a new stage of constructive progression to the ultimate goal.
— L. Ron Hubbard, Dianetics: The Original Thesis (Emphasis added.)