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Wikipedia: Left-Hand Path
Left-Hand Path
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Left-Hand Path (LHP) religions are religions that share most of the following characteristics:
  • An agnostic view of the existence of gods and goddesses, often a Platonian-like view of gods and goddesses as "First-Forms".
  • The belief that people should strive to become as god/desses and that some (probably not all) people have the potential to do so.
  • The rejection of karma, divine retribution, Threefold Law, and similar, in favor of self-determined codes of morality.
  • The goal of becoming god- or goddess-like and retaining one's isolate intelligence and identity for as long as possible.

In addition to the distinctions made above, most Left-Hand Path religions accept:
  • The possible existence of both a male and female polarity of natural forces.
  • The possible existence of more than one god.
  • That practice and knowledge, not faith, makes a Pagan.
  • That deity, internal and external, is both transcendent and immanent.
  • That a person is solely responsible for his own actions and there is no external salvation from the results of those actions.
  • That the forces of the universe can be bent to one's personal will (magick).
  • That magick is based on natural laws and works in accordance with scientific principles that cannot (yet) be explained.
  • The understanding that we are all interconnected to, and are an inseparable part of, this Earth.

Some Pagans and Satanists are considered to be Left-Hand Path. On the other hand, most Wiccans and Christians are considered to be Right-Hand Path.

The term does not seem to have distinct origins. Some people believe that the terms Right-Hand Path and Left-Hand Path and the philosophy relevant to them came from India. However, there are some who hypothesize the term came from this Biblical verse:

And he shall separate them one from another,
as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats.
And he shall set the sheep on his right,
but the goats on his left.
-- Matthew 25: 32-33

Followers of the Left-Hand Path sometimes utilize the symbol of a goat or Baphomet. They sometimes refer to followers of the Right-Hand Path as sheep, implying that they exhibit a "herd mentality."

The religion of Thelema meets many of the listed criteria. However, founder Aleister Crowley did not include himself in the Brethren of the Left-Hand Path, reserving that name for Christian clergy. He wrote in Magick that "'The Devil' is, historically, the God of any people that one personally dislikes."

Further Reading

See also: Church of Satan, Temple of Set, Luciferians


Left Hand Path is the debut album by Swedish death metal band Entombed.


  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 
Modified by Geona