Because Heaven sounds lame anyways Satanism |
God's own scapegoat |
A devilish plan |
Anton Szandor LaVey (born Howard Stanton Levey)[note 1](1930–1997) was a notorious American cosplay occultist and musician, as well as the founder of the Church of Satan and author of The Satanic Bible. We at RationalWiki abase ourselves before him and his master, and humbly request the dark blessings of Lucifer.
Ironically for a man who started a religion themed around the "father of lies" himself, LaVey also had a habit of manufacturing entire aspects of his life story in order to sell himself better. These tall tales include claiming to have quit high school to join up with the circus at 16, becoming a cage boy with the big cats then later playing the calliope. Noticing that the same patrons for the Saturday night shows also happened to attend tent revival meetings, Levay claimed this made him develop a more cynical attitude towards religion. In his early adulthood, he supposedly graduated to playing the organ at burlesque clubs, where also dubiously claimed to have a brief sexual affair with a pre-fame Marilyn Monroe while she was working a dancer. However, when Levay's past was investigated by journalist Lawrence Wright (who also happened to have looked into a similarly infamous bullshit artist), Wright could find no collaborating evidence for any of these stories.[1][2] He also supposedly made something of a name for himself as a paranormal researcher for the San Francisco police department and eventually formed the Order of the Trapezoid. Again, Wright found no proof of being a paranormal investigator either. Presently, he shaved his head and declared the founding of a new church.[3]
LaVey died from a pulmonary edema in San Francisco on October 29, 1997. Ironically enough, he was taken to St. Mary's Medical Center – a Catholic-run medical facility – but that was merely because it was the closest hospital available, and it would be downright unethical not to admit anyone regardless of beliefs anyway.
Contrary to what many think, LaVeyan Satanists do not actually worship Satan, or any deities at all. It's actually an atheistic, nihilist philosophy that uses the Christian character of Satan as a symbol of defiance, with a healthy dose of trolling. Think of it as a 1960s counterculture version of the Church of the SubGenius. This does not stop many Christians from flipping out whenever it's mentioned, which was probably exactly the kind of reaction that Levay and his colleagues wanted.
The epitome of his creed was given as the "Nine Satanic Statements", appearing in The Satanic Bible (1969):[4]
As an extension of Statement #8, LaVey has his own list of what he feels constitute sins. His "Nine Satanic Sins" are as follows: stupidity, pretentiousness, solipsism (defined here as projecting your own biases onto those around you), self-deceit, herd conformity, lack of perspective, forgetfulness of past orthodoxies, counterproductive pride, and lack of aesthetics (i.e. being a slob).
LaVey's Church of Satan is at some pains to explain that it is an officially atheistic association that does not endorse the practice of magic, witchcraft, or indeed any supernatural beliefs at all. "Satanism is an atheist philosophy, hence it is not congruent with any other philosophy or religion which endorses the belief in supernatural entities, whether they be considered gods or devils."[5] "Satanists do not believe in demons or other supernatural beings, nor do we believe in spells."[6] Notwithstanding this disclaimer, LaVey's Church of Satan uses many of the traditional trappings of the Black Mass and other traditional forms of ritual magic. The Satanic Bible invites its readers to recite gibberish derived from the Enochian keys from the Elizabethan-era magician John Dee, but to its eternal cosmic credit, does come with the disclaimer that 'Herein you will find truth — and fantasy. Each is necessary for the other to exist; but each must be recognised for what it is." Dodgy grammar aside, the disclaimer would fit as well inside most religious texts, and since LaVeyan Satanism is based on the whole aesthetic idea, the idea of babbling in gibberish that you know full well is gibberish doesn't seem too far off.
The roots of LaVey's brand of Satanism trace themselves back to a range of radical individualist and Social Darwinist ideas, the same grounds from which many far-right racial philosophies grew from, including white supremacy and neo-Nazism.[7] Indeed, many passages and ideas from The Satanic Bible appear to be heavily influenced by and/or stolen from Ragnar Redbeard's Might is Right. The Church's inner circle included figures from various underground far-right/neo-Nazi groups and subcultures, including Nikolas Schreck (who married LaVey's daughter Zeena before they both turned away from Satanism), Boyd Rice,[7] and Nick Bougas, the man considered to be the author of the A. Wyatt Mann cartoons that produced the infamous "Le Happy Merchant" caricature.[8]
LaVey, who was of part-Jewish ancestry, was well aware of the irony of his radically individualist philosophy finding traction among believers in a political system that calls for subsuming individual identity to the will of the nation and/or race. In his essay "A Plan", published as part of the posthumous compendium Satan Speaks!, he noted that, for the longest time, the Jewish people were the largest group of religious "rebels" within the Christian world, and were frequently smeared as being in league with Satan by the authorities of the time; as such, he drew intellectual and philosophical connections between Judaism and his philosophy. He envisioned Satanism as a way for modern, non-practicing young Jews (especially those from mixed Jewish/Gentile marriages), who don't fit in with the synagogue, the church, or the white supremacist movement, to claim a new, "tough" identity as an alternative to the humanism of the secular, liberal Jewish mainstream, jokingly suggesting that the Church of Satan was where a "Zionist Odinist Bolshevik Nazi Imperialist Socialist Fascism" could thrive.[9]
One of LaVey's disciples was the actress Jayne Mansfield (1933–1967), known as a blonde bombshell in the Marilyn Monroe mold (although arguably with less acting talent). She apparently sought the assistance of LaVey with her career in the late 60s. However, she was at the time dating her attorney Sam Brody, who despite being married to someone else got jealous and told LaVey to knock it off. In response, LaVey allegedly put a hex on Brody, warning Mansfield to stay away from him. She did not, and, so the story goes, she died in a car accident alongside Brody because of it.[10][11] (It is claimed she was decapitated in the accident but that's one of many picturesque but untrue details about the whole thing.) Whether Mansfield was really killed by the devil is something only you can decide: proponents of the idea include filmmakers Todd Hughes and P. David Ebersole, along with trashmeister John Waters, in their "documentary" Mansfield 66/67 ("one of the least peer reviewed documentaries I’ve ever seen" — Jordan Hoffman, Vanity Fair).[10] Mansfield 66/67 also includes some commentary by Kenneth Anger.[10]