Jung (who had illicitaffairs with other women being an adulterer against his ...
archetypes (or figures from his fantasies) can improvesomeone's conscious mind.
Carl Jung Carl Jung is one of the controversial figures in human history.Carl Jung lived fora long time from 1875 to 1961. He changed the way we look at the humanpscyhe. He was a pioneer of the New Age Movement. Jung (who had illicitaffairs with other women being an adulterer against his wife of 52 years) saidthat we are entering into the Age of Aquarius. He was a pioneer of dreamanalysis, which is about interpretating human dreams. Some have criticized Jungas a medicine man who utilized descredited scientific views on the human mind.Others praise him. Carl G. Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist. His disciples called himthe "Hexenmeister of Zurich" or the Master sorcerer. Some have classified him asa Christian or his father as a Lutheran pastor.This just isn't true, because Jungadmitted privately that he was a Gnostic. He even borrowed elements of histhinking from ancient Gnosticism. Jung was a very intelligent man. He couldread Latin, Greek, German, English, and French. He was a medical doctor, anuniverstiy professor, and an early disciple of the controversial Sigmund Freud.
Jung was the founder of his own school of psychology called AnalyticalPsychology. Carl Jung expored dreams, myths, imagination, and the occult. He“experienced precognition, clairvoyance, psychokinesis, and haunting” ( Harper’sEncyclopedia of Mystical and Paranormal Experience ). His critics contend that heregularly used New Age thought under the cover of psychological science. Soon,Freud broke form Jung. Carl Jung experienced a six year breakdown afterwards. Jung believed that archetypes (or figures from his fantasies) can improvesomeone's conscious mind. Carl Jung believed
that one archetypes (which hecalled daemon or a demon) named Philemon would guide his as his "teacher."These are Carl Jung's words about his "spirit guide" Philemon: "...Philemon and other figures of my fantasies brought home to me the crucialinsight that there are things in the psyche which I do not produce, but whichproduce themselves and have their own life. Philemon represented a force thatwas not myself. In my fantasies I held conversations with him, and he said thingswhich I had not consciously thought. [?] Psychologically, Philemon representedsupeerior insight.” (The Automatic Writings of Jung by Philip Coppens)Carl Jung even worked with his mother and 2 female cousins in hypnoticallyinduced seances. The Bible condemns spiritism and demon contact. Even theBible says that Satan can masquerade as an angel of light. It doesn't matter if aso‐called "spirit guide" expresses great intellect. If this being says something thatis baltantly contrary to the Scriptures, you ought to reject that "being." John gavethis warning: “Do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether theyare from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world” (I John4). He has so much demon contact that Jung claimed to experience poltergeists inhis house. Jung wrote the Gnostic book of the Seven Sermons of the Dead (thatpraised the false Gnostic god of Abraxas, which embodied both good and evil inone). In Scripture believers are admonished, "give no regard to mediums andfamiliar spirits; do not seek after them, to be defiled by them: I am the Lord yourGod" (Leviticus 19:31).Carl Jung's embrace of the occult didn't end there. He promoted the embrace ofoccult phenomena as apart of the exploration of the unconscious. He cointed thescientific sounding word of synchronicity to describe it. Synchronicity can referto meaningful coincidences as well. He tried to legitimatize divination, the IChing, yoga, astrology, and all manner of psychic practices. This is strange fora doctor to embrace such unscientific methods such as astrology . Evenautomatic writing has been embraced by some scientists to explore theunconscious. Carl Jung believed that the metaphysical occult world have certaincomponents that is found in all religions, therefore giving the human psycheequal status to all religious views. Jung believed in visualization and in the innerchild (or that even an adult has a representation of a child that represents the way he or she was treated as a child. Jung views it as an archetype. An archetypeis a mental image that are innate in human lives. They can have a life of theirown and influence religious experiences). Visualization deals with using mentalimages and using the mind in esoteric methods (some want to do it for paincontrol, psyhcotherapy, and other reasons). According to Carl Jung, there is animpersonal "collective unconscious" or a type of library possessing all things everknown. This is present in each person's unconscious. The “collectiveunconscious” is pure myth. Richard Webster wisely observes that “theUnconscious is not simply an occult entity for whose real existence there is nopalpable evidence. It is an illusion produced by language‐‐a kind of intellectualhallucination” (Richard Webster, Why Freud Was Wrong , p. 250, quoted from EdHird). According to Don Matzat,“Jung theorized that all humanity, past and present, were connected on anunconscious plane. Therefore, deep within each individual was the collectivewisdom of the ages, including all religious, mythical content. ? Jung placed a"scientific" footing under occult phenomenaa and mystical experience. Jung wasdeeply involved in the occult and did his doctoral thesis on parapsychology. Healso was interested in Catholic mysticism and conducted seminars on theteachings of Ignatius Loyola.” That's interesting since Loyola claimed that hisunbiblical trances gave him inspiration from God. Actually, God doesn't leadpeople into trances. Either Loyola was hallucinating or demonic forces inspiredLoyola to create his Jesuit order. Hence, there is a Jesuit connection to CarlGustav Jung. Even the faulty lie detector test and the MBTI (or Meyers‐ BriggsType Indicator, which is a personality and psychological test to see what makespeople tick) are based on Jung's theories. Jung embrace pagan principles.According to Elliot Miller, “The movement that
Jung initiated is much closer innature to a neopagan (Aryan) cult than the scientific psychiatric discipline that ithas always claimed to be. It is not just religious but a religion.” (Book review “The Jung Cult: Origins of a Charismatic Movement” By Elliot Miller Includes allquotes by J. Budziszewski)Fritz Springmeier in his "Be Wise as Serpents" book wrote interestinginformation on Carl Jung:"... Many of the modern educational ideas within such a school are not even berealized by the general public as occultic. People get very defensive when one