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A Brief Timeline of the New Age Movement
This article was a sidebar in Volume 16, No. 4, 1999
of The Watchman Expositor. Please note that
this timeline is not meant to be exhaustive. It instead is a brief overview
of some significant figures, groups, and events in the history of the New
Age in the United States.
1840s
Phineas P. Quimby begins his work in New Thought.
1850s
Helena Blavatsky meets her "Master."
1860s
Mary Patterson begins New Thought studies.
1870s
Helena Blavatsky starts the Theosophical Society.
Mary Baker Eddy starts Christian Science.
1880s
Charles and Myrtle Fillmore start Unity.
1900s
Alice Baily identifies Krishnamurti as the Messiah.
1910s
Ernest and Fenwicke Holmes start Religious
Science.
1920s
Alice Bailey starts the Arcane School.
Krishnamurti denies he is the Messiah.
1950s
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi founds the Spiritual Regeneration Movement
Foundation.
1960s
Church Universal and Triumphant founded.
Swami Prabhupada founds ISKCON in America.
The Beatles visit the Maharishi in India.
1970s
Jane Roberts publishes the first volume of her channeled Seth Material.
Transcendental Meditation initiates its "World Plan."
1980s
Shirley MacLaine publishes Out on a Limb.
Deepak Chopra meets the Maharishi, and joins Transcendental
Meditation.
Out on a Limb television miniseries is broadcast.
1990s
James Redfield publishes The Celestine Prophecy.
Hillary Rodham Clinton engages in sessions with the psychic Jean Houston.
39 members of Heaven's Gate commit suicide.
NEW THOUGHT (1842)
The New Thought movement (which includes CHRISTIAN SCIENCE, RELIGIOUS SCIENCE,
and UNITY) was initiated by Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, a student of hypnotist
Anton Mesmer. Quimby theorized, influenced by Mesmer's electro-magnetic
theory of "animal magnetism" and the Hindu and Buddhist belief that matter
is an illusion, that physical maladies are simply the result of translating
into the flesh the incorrect idea of "illness," and therefore developing
the power of the mind will cure people of illnesses. Quimby even established
a short-lived medical clinic based on this theory. One of Quimby's patients
during this period was Mary Patterson, later to become Mary Baker Eddy.
The central concepts of all New Thought religious groups are the belief
that humanity is divine (which naturally involves a pantheistic view of
God), the understanding that the Mind is all that exists, the practice
of metaphysical healing, and the separation of the historical Jesus from
the divine Christ.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE (1876)
Mary Baker Patterson - who became Mary Baker Eddy - was young woman who,
plagued with emotional and physical illnesses, underwent treatment with
mesmerism from Phineas Parkhurst Quimby (see NEW
THOUGHT). Patterson believed herself to be healed by Quimby's treatment
(although, after his death, she disavowed Quimby). Eddy founded the Christian
Scientists Association (later the Church of Christ, Scientist) in 1876,
shortly after publishing Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures.
Eddy's religion, rooted in NEW THOUGHT, claims
to be a reestablishment of early Christianity. Eddy claimed that the early
Church taught mind is the only reality, and that matter is an illusion.
She further taught that Christ healed through the same spiritual influence
with which she wrote Science and Health.
THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY (1875)
In 1851, Helena Petrovna Blavatsky met her "Master" in London; this Master
introduced her to Eastern Spiritualism. During the next twenty-three years
she allegedly traveled around the world to study with gurus and shamans
in Mexico, Egypt, Canada, and Asia. Beginning in 1864, Blavatsky spent
three years studying esotericism in Tibet.
In 1874 Blavatsky came to the United States to defend Spiritualism,
and in 1875 she founded the Theosophical Society with Colonel Henry Steel
Olcott and William Q. Judge. The Society was formed to expound Blavatsky's
teachings that within each person is the divine spark of the Universal
Mind, and this spark can be expanded through the study of diverse spiritual
traditions. Her first book, Isis Unveiled (published in 1877), moved
the theosophical tradition to a greater emphasis on Indian mysticism.
Charles Fillmore and his wife Myrtle started the Unity School of Christianity
after Myrtle was introduced to CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
after reading Mary Baker Eddy's Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures.
The prayer used by Myrtle in her healing, "I am a child of God, therefore,
I do not inherit sickness," alludes to Unity's adherence to the NEW
THOUGHT belief that sickness is an illusion. A key addition made by
the Fillmore's to basic New Thought teachings is the belief in reincarnation.
RELIGIOUS SCIENCE (1917)
Founded in 1917 by Ernest and Fenwicke Holmes as the Metaphysical Institute
of Los Angeles, the United Church of Religious Science teaches the Science
of Mind, which in essence is NEW THOUGHT. Ernest's
1928 book Science of Mind, and the continuing journal of the same
name, teach that freedom is attained through the "scientific" study of
God and His law through meditation and affirmations.
ARCANE SCHOOL (1923)
The Arcane School (which is part of the Lucis Trust) was founded in 1923
by Alice Bailey, who was a student of H. P. Blavatsky (see THEOSOPHICAL
SOCIETY). The most significant development in the history of Alice
Bailey was her proclamation in 1906 that a young Indian boy named Krishnamurti
was the Messiah. Krishnamurti renounced that role in 1929 and founded the
Order of the Star (related to the current Krishnamurti Foundation of America),
which focuses on Hinduism and mystical experiences.
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION (1959)
Founded in 1959 by the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi as the Spiritual Regeneration
Movement Foundation, Transcendental Meditation (also known as TM) exploded
in popularity in 1967 after the Beatles traveled to India to study under
the Maharishi. In 1972 the Maharishi initiated a "World Plan" to introduce
TM to the entire world. Part of this plan included the 1974 purchase of
Parsons College, a Presbyterian school in Iowa, and renaming it Maharishi
International University. TM is also behind the Natural Law Party, a political
organization that is most active in western Europe.
The essential practice of TM revolves around the repetition of, and
meditation upon, a mantra. Mantras, which are central to Hindu spirituality,
are sounds or words that enable practitioners to enter states of higher
consciousness.
ISKCON (1966)
The International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), more commonly
known as the Hare Krishnas, can be traced back to 16th century India. It
was brought to America in 1965 by Abhay Charan De Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada,
who in 1966 opened a storefront center and began publishing Back to
Godhead magazine. The movement grew in popularity following the release
of the song My Sweet Lord by George Harrison (a former member of
the Beatles); the song included the famous "Hare Krishna" mantra.
SHIRLEY MACLAINE (1983)
In 1983 MacLaine, a famous actress, published her autobiography, Out
on a Limb. The book, which described her experiences with astral projection,
UFO encounters, and other New Age events, established MacLaine as the preeminent
New Age celebrity in the 1980s.
The theological significance of MacLaine's teachings is displayed in
the 1986 television miniseries based on her autobiography. In a climactic
scene, MacLaine's guru convinces her to stand on a beach and shout toward
the Pacific ocean, "I am God!"
DEEPAK CHOPRA (1993)
Chopra, a former staff member with TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION,
left TM in 1993 after an alleged conflict with the Maharishi. In that same
year, Chopra published his breakthrough work, Ageless Body, Timeless
Mind: The Quantum Alternative to Growing Old. After an appearance on
The Oprah Winfrey Show (Winfrey also boosted the career of Marianne
Williamson, an advocate of the occult program A Course in Miracles),
Chopra sold 130,000 copies of the book in one day.
Chopra teaches ayurveda, a form of Indian folk medicine which holds
that humans can be healed from all problems by opening themselves to the
flow of the single source of universal energy. His 1995 book The Seven
Spiritual Laws of Success claims that opening oneself to this energy
flow will enable persons to create unlimited wealth and material success.
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Encyclopedia of New Age Beliefs
John Ankerberg and John Weldon
Over two dozen chapters on major New Age beliefs including: A Course
in Miracles, Angels, est and related Neopaganism, Mantras, Martial arts,
New Age education, Medicine, Scientology and a comprehensive New Age Health
Listing. A standard for any New Age library, 670 pgs., Index, Bib. $20.
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