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THE PROPHECY

We live in interesting though frightening times. In many countries, governments have declare a state of emergency. There are restrictive measures to slow down the spread of the Coronavirus, such as a partial or complete lockdown. For many of us, we try to find a sense of safety in our own homes, and do our best to shun the virus to the best of our abilities. We wash our hands as much as we can (finding out that hand cream is essential for our now sore skin), we avoid approaching our fellow human beings (finding out that garlic is a multipurpose miracle plant), and we pillage the nearest supermarket in the village (finding out that toilet paper and weed are necessities of life). Also, drinking Corona beer doesn’t spread the virus, but it can give you hangovers if you drink too many bottles. Who knew? Apart from the quarantine meme machine entertaining all those confined to their own houses, religion is doing remarkable things as well. As a PhD candidate in Religious Studies, I find this absolutely fascinating. Therefore, based on a selection of recent articles on the subject, I aim to better understand how religions are coping with the threatening situation we are facing today. Let’s take a closer look at religion in times of the Coronavirus pandemic as observed from my office called Home.

Illuminatus! Disaster! Card

Introduction

The Coronavirus pandemic has led to a renewed popular interest in apocalyptic theologies, remarkable prophecies and conspiracy theories. It is said that the terrifying COVID-19 virus has been foretold in various ways – from Bible verses to cryptic fragments in books, from prophecies by Nostradamus to those of the Bulgarian seer Baba Vanga, and, once again, in the animated television series The Simpsons, and the Illuminatus! board game. In the light of religious coping mechanisms, attempts to predict the future can be seen as a way of trying to gain control of an uncertain situation. Moreover, prophecy and precognition, as well as various methods of divination such as crying in a crystal ball, reading tarot cards, and astrology, are widespread practices that fascinate the believer and unbeliever alike. It is argued that these expressions of religiosity can therefore be better understood as ‘secular sacralizations’ in the context of implicit religion.[1]

Consfearacy

Let’s start with some enigmatic prophecies that people claim to have discovered in the Bible. The Old Testament is believed to hold many mysterious secrets. Rabbi Matityahu Glazerson claims to have cracked the so-called ‘Bible Code’. By means of a complex method, he shows that the Torah literally spells out words related to the virus and even the name itself as we know it today. The controversial claim is that the following words and phrases, among others, are revealed in the Five Books of Moses: in Hebrew Kāf כ – Rēsh ר – Vav ו – Nun נ – Hē ה spells out C’RON’H, or Corona, and Vav ו – Yōd י – Rēsh ר – Vav ו – Samekh ס makes VIRUS. Now that the code is believed to be cracked, the message of the Torah for people today, as the rabbi suggests, is in plain sight.

Some Christians are convinced that the New Testament also holds revelations about the current COVID-19 pandemic, be it in a more descriptive manner. A small group of Christians believes that the Pale horse of Revelation has finally arrived in the form of the Coronavirus, and that the end of the world is near. They argue that plaques are one of the signs of the End Times, and the virus is understood as one of the Four Horsemen: Death, War, Famine and Pestilence. These ‘fatal four’ are what the millennialist Christian is on the outlook for as a prelude to the Eschaton, as explained in Revelations 6:7-8:

And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth beast say, Come and see. And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth.

Not only the Bible, but also other books are said to hold prophecies. The pages of two books in particular went viral on social media the last couple of weeks. The author of the first book that we will discuss, the psychic Sylvia Browne, had as her objective to predict the future indeed. Her book with the telling title End of Days: Predictions and Prophecies About the End of the World, published in 2008, is said to have predicted the rise and fall of COVID-19 as follows:

In around 2020 a severe pneumonia-like illness will spread throughout the globe, attacking the lungs and the bronchial tubes and resisting all known treatments. Almost more baffling than the illness itself will be the fact that it will suddenly vanish as quickly as it arrived, attack again ten years later, and then disappear completely.

The author of the other book that was shared a lot on social media couldn’t have foreseen what implications his work of fiction would have. However, writer Dean Koontz did, allegedly, predict the Coronavirus in his 1981 novel The Eyes of Darkness. People have been shocked by the similarities between the book’s biological weapon named ‘Wuhan-400’ and the currently spreading COVID-19 virus that originated in the Chinese city Wuhan:

It was around then that a Chinese scientist named Li Chen defected to the United States, carrying a diskette record of China’s most important and dangerous new biological weapons in a decade. They call the stuff ‘Wuhan-400′ because it was developed at their RDNA labs outside of the city of Wuhan, and it was the four-hundredth viable strain of man-made microorganisms created at that research center. “Wuhan-400 is a perfect weapon. It afflicts only human beings. No other living creature can carry it. And like syphilis, Wuhan-400 can’t survive outside a living human body for longer than a minute, which means it can’t permanently contaminate objects or entire places the way anthrax and other virulent microorganisms can. And when the host expires, the Wuhan-400 within him parishes a short while later, as soon as the temperature of the corpse drops below eighty-six degrees Fahrenheit. Do you see the advantage of all this?” (…) “If I understand you, the Chinese could use Wuhan-400 to wipe out a city or a country, and then there wouldn’t be any need for them to conduct a tricky and expensive decontamination before they moved in and took over the conquered territory.” “Exactly,” Dombey said.”

It seems that there can be no disaster without Nostradamus’ cryptic writings being closely examined for a prediction that points to it. It shouldn’t come as a surprise that his prophecies have come to the surface again lately and started to circulate on social media. The one that has been shared in the context of the Coronavirus seems frighteningly accurate, and too good to be true:

There will be a twin year (2020) from which will arise a queen (corona) who will come from the east (China) and who will spread a plague *virus) in the darkness of night, on a country with 7 hills (Italy) and will transform the twilight of men into dust (death), to destroy and ruin the world. It will be the end of the world economy as you know it.

Indeed, it has been suggested that this Nostradamus prophecy is a forgery. The text was seemingly written in retrospect only recently and attributed to the great seer.

It is said that the ‘Nostradamus of the Balkans’, Baba Vanga, predicted the Corona pandemic in 1996, stating that “the corona will be all over us“. It was initially believed that the prophecy referred to a different threat: that of Russia, which seemed the most logical interpretation at that time. However, the present crisis situation has made people look at the prediction with fresh eyes. The Bulgarian seer also prophesied about the next event, which is the death of the 45th president of the United States caused by an “unknown disease“. People have been discussing if this disease might actually be COVID-19, as the 45th president is the one in office today, Donald Trump. Moreover, Europe will become a Caliphate with Rome as its capital city (which was predicted for 2016), the earth will cease to exist in 3797, and, after humanity’s space migration, the universe will collapse in the year 5079, according to Grandmother Vanga.

Apart from archaic prophecies and old oracles, contemporary pop culture has been a remarkable source of predictions and conspiracies. The episodes of The Simpsons have always seem pretty surrealistic and witty, but the series has come to be known for its odd predictions. One of the most well-known ones is foreseeing that Donald Trump would become president of the United States of America. It has been claimed that The Simpsons also knew that the Corona pandemic was going to happen. In 1993, there was an episode in which pretty much all inhabitants of Springfield eagerly wanted to have a juicer. We see hardworking warehouse employees packing the juicers, whereby an ill, Asian-looking employee coughs into one of the parcels. This is the beginning of the spread of the Japanese ‘Osaka Flu’, which some Simpsons conspiracy fans interpret as the Coronavirus. Even though COVID-19 originally emerged in China, the enthusiasts consider this close enough. One of the writers of the episode in question thinks this is too far-fetched, and he has denied that the story line is a prediction of the current health crisis. There is also a still of the series being shared on social media which explicitly shows the name ‘Corona virus’, but this turned out to be a photoshopped image – most likely created by someone eager to jump on the Simpsons prophecy bandwagon for some immememortality.

Lastly, let’s discuss a striking prediction coming from the countercultural underground. It is a source that plays with conspiracy theories and secret societies in a tongue-in-cheek manner, and has therewith fed rumours about them. In 1975, Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea published The Illuminatus! Trilogy. The book(s)’s narrative combines already existing and non-existing conspiracy theories and secret societies, and portrays them as being part of the legendary battle between the Discordian Society (the good guys) and the infamous Illuminati (the bad guys) with all kinds of surrealistic events and plot twists happening. Having sophisticatedly implemented Robert Anton Wilson’s idea of ‘guerrilla ontology’ in the text, it is hard for the reader to discern what is true and what is not. In RAW’s own words:

All phenomena are real in some sense, unreal in some sense, meaningless in some sense, real and meaningless in some sense, unreal and meaningless in some sense, and real and unreal and meaningless in some sense.”

Robert Anton Wilson

The books have been adapted into a play recently, but in the 1980s, it was also turned into a board game. Ever since, people believe that its playing cards depict events that have happened in later years. It is said that the board game’s cards predicted 9/11 and the tragic death of Princes Diana. In the current situation, the game card titled Disaster! (which is shown above) stands out. Individual cards belong to a certain category, and this specific card is part of ‘Epidemic’. The Disaster! card depicts a red cross behind medicine and a bottle of liquid, a face mask, gloves, something that looks like dead bodies in the background, and the words QUARANTINE. For some, this clearly points to the present-day Coronavirus pandemic, and therewith it is claimed to be another prediction of the Illuminatus! board game cards. Moreover, following Baba Vanya’s prediction about Donald Trump, but with a twist, people have argued that yet another card depicts a future event: the assassination of this 45th president of the United States.

Conclusion

In this last part of Religion in Times of the Coronavirus Pandemic, the focus is on a rather different aspect of religion – a form of religiosity that many people wouldn’t immediately consider as such. There is a broad fascination for the paranormal, mysterious and occult in society at large, and many people like to speculate whether or not the future can be foretold. Predictions that seem to have become reality in the light of current events appeal to many and give people the chills at the same time. Even when people don’t think of themselves as religious or spiritual – which is a significant number of those living in a contemporary secular society – there still is a strong tendency to wonder: but what if prophecies are true…? From a Religious Studies perspective, how can such expressions of religiosity in a secular environment be understood?

Social media seems to be the main distributor of prophecies in these times of mass quarantine. We have seen posts, quotes, memes, and videos in our feeds that like us to believe that there was foreknowledge about current (and future) affairs. In this regard, Christopher Partridge has argued that pop culture is an important source of alternative religious and spiritual ideas that re-enchant the secularized West. Pop culture can be an influential vehicle for planting ideas in the minds of its consumers which ‘sacralize the secular’. Partridge has stated that this spread of alternative ideas is a movement from the margins to the masses.[2] This rings true for the popular tv series, books and board game we discussed in particular. Other prophecies are part of the corpus of institutionalized religions, such as Bible verses of the Apocalypse. An unconventional way is the supposedly cracked Bible Code. Meanwhile, seers and psychics are often on the fringe of established religions or at the center of alternative spirituality. The various predictions, then, appeal to all kinds of people – both religious and non-religious.

The concept of ‘implicit religion’ can be useful in this context. It refers to religiosity of people that occurs outside of religious institutions.[3] In an article that I wrote together with Frans Jespers and David Kleijbeuker in 2012, Qualifying Secular Sacralizations, we proposed a tool to categorize and therewith better understand “free floating forms of religiosity” as ‘secular sacralizations’. Using this tool, it can be concluded that prophecies and predictions can be seen as ‘fragments of sacralization’. In our model depicting the experience of religiosity in the secular world, this sphere is the furthest away from the core that is religion. We have discussed two other degrees that move more towards religion, namely ‘moments of sacralization’ and, the most religion-like, ‘functional equivalents of religion’. Prophecies that are believed to have predicted the spread of COVID-19 can be considered as fragments of sacralization, because they can befall the religious and non-religious alike with a “confirmation of a meaning of some sacredness” as if struck by lightening. As a result, it can “evoke something extraordinary” in people, perhaps unexpectedly, in a secular environment.[4]

A prophecy that is perceived as true can raise questions about providence and even predestination. In a secular context, these questions can have religious undertones:

How did we end up in this frightening situation? If we knew that this was going to happen to us, why didn’t we do anything to prevent it? Did we fail to see the signs? Is there more between heaven and earth?

The questions imply, again, the wish to be able to control unfortunate events, and, even more, reveal the helplessness of humanity. Moreover, they add the lecturing element of “I told you so“. Posed next would be: “And now what? What can we do?“, which has been discussed in Part II.

On the other hand, the widespread circulation of prophecies, their mesmerizing effects as scary stories, and even the obsession of some people to create fake predictions in retrospect, could tell us something about the very human fascination for the unknown, the marvelous mystery of existence itself, and the burden that we might never really know what the future holds for us. As fragments of secular sacralization, prophecies provide a sense of meaning for some of the most dreadful events stored in our collective memory.

In Part I, we have discussed both the willingness of various religions to change and the conservatism when trying to safeguard religious belief and ritual, whereas in Part II, we have delved into the use of religious practices that empower believers to spiritually battle the Coronavirus, and which can be understood as a religious coping mechanism.  

Did I miss an interesting story about religion and the Coronavirus? Is there more to come? Most probably… So if you come across anything worth checking out, feel free to let me know in the comments.


Footnotes

[1] Frans Jespers, David Kleijbeuker & Yentl Schattevoet. “Qualifying Secular Sacralizations” in Implicit Religion 15:4 (2012), 533-551. Weblog post.

[2] Christopher Partridge. The Re-Enchantment of the West: Alternative Spiritualities, Sacralization, Popular Culture and Occulture (volume 1). London: T&T Clark International, 2004.

[3] Edward Bailey. “Implicit Religion” Encyclopedia of New Religions, edited by Christopher Partridge, 397–398. Oxford: Lion Publishing, 2004. Edward Bailey. “Implicit Religion” in Religion 40 (2010), 271–278.

[4] Frans Jespers, David Kleijbeuker & Yentl Schattevoet. “Qualifying Secular Sacralizations” in Implicit Religion 15:4 (2012), 541, 542, 548.

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USE THE MAGIC, MAKE A CHANGE

We live in interesting though frightening times. In many countries, governments have declare a state of emergency. There are restrictive measures to slow down the spread of the Coronavirus, such as a partial or complete lockdown. For many of us, we try to find a sense of safety in our own homes, and do our best to shun the virus to the best of our abilities. We wash our hands as much as we can (finding out that hand cream is essential for our now sore skin), we avoid approaching our fellow human beings (finding out that garlic is a multipurpose miracle plant), and we pillage the nearest supermarket in the village (finding out that toilet paper and weed are necessities of life). Also, drinking Corona beer doesn’t spread the virus, but it can give you hangovers if you drink too many bottles. Who knew? Apart from the quarantine meme machine entertaining all those confined to their own houses, religion is doing remarkable things as well. As a PhD candidate in Religious Studies, I find this absolutely fascinating. Therefore, based on a selection of recent articles on the subject, I aim to better understand how religions are coping with the threatening situation we are facing today. Let’s take a closer look at religion in times of the Coronavirus pandemic as observed from my office called Home.

Genesis Breyer P-Orridge

Introduction

In Part I, we have seen that religion can be both tenacious and creative when it comes to finding solutions for the current health crisis. Religion also enables believers to formulate answers to existential questions, and therewith provide meaning in a universe that is hard to grasp. Both the positive and negative interpretations of why we find ourselves in the present situation shed light on what is believed to be the higher purpose of COVID-19. Therefore, in this part of Religion in Times of the Coronavirus Pandemic, we are going to delve into the deeper meaning of the virus, and the religious practices that people use in an attempt to stop it. In addition to profane health measures, prayer and magic give religious people the feeling that they can actually contribute to regaining a new, healthy earth.

Meaning at the Center of It All

In a recent email newsletter of the Findhorn Foundation – a New Age “colony of seekers”, as Religious Studies scholar Steven Sutcliffe has called it[1] – it was communicated that Dorothy Maclean, the last co-founder of this spiritual community in Scotland, passed away on the 12th of March, 2020, at the extraordinary age of 100. The timing of her death is understood in a spiritual sense: “Dorothy’s choice to pass at this time of extreme planetary crisis is significant“. The email doesn’t mention what this significance is exactly, but there was a follow-up email a few days later titled What does the world need from us now? This suggests that the Findhorn community is at a crossroads, which is not an unusual experience for religions when their founders or leaders pass away. The death of Dorothy and the current pandemic are closely connection for the inhabitants of Findhorn, and not without significance:

It feels surreal, a global wake-up call, a critical juncture in humankind’s evolution and an invitation towards adaptation and resilience. And we can’t help but notice that with the human race on ‘pause’, there is a sense of spaciousness as the Earth finally has a chance to rest and heal too.

The Findhorn Foundation is contemplating their role in this world, especially during this time of crisis. This, even though it seems frightening at first, is seen in a positive light in the sense that it offers a moment to stand back and think. They have concluded that the events are seen as an opportunity to come together as a community:

The world needs centres like ours more than ever and we will continue to be the beacon of light that we know inspires so many of you, all over the world.

The message, then, is one of “unity of all life and the need to act from a sense of wholeness and deep love, as one human family“, which is in its core, the wisdom that Dorothy has left behind. It also serves as a guideline on how to proceed from the here and now as a spiritual community.

May we all strengthen our inner connection with spirit and our non-physical connections with each other at this significant moment in human history. Someone said to me today, we may need to be physically distancing, but it is not really socially distancing – in fact, we are coming much closer together. Expect a miracle!

Dorothy was known for her spiritual experiences with devas or nature spirits and angels. This affinity with the spirits of nature is closely related to contemporary Pagan beliefs. Julian Vayne’s explanation of a Pagan interpretation of the Coronavirus might shed some light on such a world view. He argues that Pagans might believe that the meaning of COVID-19 has to do with the present-day environmental crisis and that is seen as “a karmic consequence of the terrible treatment of the biosphere by our species“. Vayne also provides an occult interpretation by explaining that the situation is typical for the Aeon of Horus, the current age according to adherents of Thelema, the religion founded by the occultist magician Aleister Crowley.

Two days after Dorothy’s passing, the influential occultist and countercultural musician, Genesis Breyer P-Orridge past away at the age of 70 after battling leukemia. With their bands such as Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV, Gen was a pioneer of Industrial music characterized by the use of William S. Burroughs’ cut-up technique and samples. As a chaos magician, Genesis founded the occult network Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth (TOPY) in 1981, and published a compilation of articles in Thee Psychick Bible: Thee Apocryphal Scriptures Ov Genesis Breyer P-Orridge and Thee Third Mind Ov Thee Temple Ov Psychick Youth. One of the central practices of TOPY was the creation of magical sigils. Genesis even influenced Religious Studies in a way by coining the concept occulture. In The Re-Enchantment of the West, Christopher Partridge states that occulture can be understood as the contemporary alternative socioreligious milieu that is re-enchanting the West, especially from the margins of pop culture to the masses.[2]

For Christians, however, the spread of COVID-19 can raise the theological question of theodicy: why does a good and all-powerful God allow evil to exist? The title of an article in a Dutch Christian newspaper gives a suggestion: “Not Corona but God Reigns“. For some, the Coronavirus is God’s punishment for sins, just like God sent a series of plagues to ancient Egypt in one of the stories of the Old Testament. The core idea is drawn from the Biblical story of the Fall, in which it is narrated that death came into the world only when the first human beings committed a sin. In this line of thought, Raymond Burke, the Catholic cardinal mentioned in Part I, blames modern secular society for producing evils such as “gender theory” and “paganism which worships nature and the earth“. He believes that these developments lead to the wrath of God. Likewise, some Muslims see the virus as God’s punishment for infidels, and a radical Islamic leader has stated that Corona is God’s payback for the Chinese oppression of Uyghurs, a Muslim minority.

Livin’ On A Prayer

The only remedy for today’s health crisis, legitimised by the interpretation of the Bible by the editor in chief of the Dutch news paper Reformatorisch Dagblad, is first and foremost prayer of repentance for one’s sins, preferably in packed Christian churches. The latter advice obviously goes against the health and safety measures of the government, such as social distancing. A safer option is connecting via a live stream, as we have discussed earlier. For instance, during the interreligious National Day of Prayer whereby the faithful use the power of prayer to fight the Coronavirus. The communal online prayer session was accompanied by churches ringing their bells. Also, the Catholic Church in Ireland has shared a collection of prayers for personal use so Christians can ask for divine aid in times of the virus outbreak. The collection includes Pope Francis’ “Prayer to Mary“, “a prayer for healthcare workers during this time of the Coronavirus COVID-19“, a prayer – probably very much required as many religious still gather in church – “for our priests as they exercise their ministry during this time of the Coronavirus COVID-19, and a “lockdown reflection” for contemplation. Elsewhere, a “novena prayer for an end to the Coronavirus pandemic” was published.

With the practice of asking for the prayers of saints, Catholics seem to have a trump card with Saint Corona. It sounds like a miraculous coincidence that Saint Corona is named as the patron saint of plagues and epidemics – just like Saint Roch and Saint Sebastian, among others. However, the association of this second century saint with the current pandemic might actually be a very recent invention of tradition.[3] Before the COVID-19 outbreak, Saint Corona was known as the patron saint of “superstitions involving money“. Another invention of tradition seems to have taken place in the Dutch city of Maastricht, where the Basilica of Saint Servatius stands. The basilica’s Treasury houses the in 1160 created reliquary chest which contains the remains of the city’s patron saint. The box is known as the ‘Chest of Distress’ for a reason. Catholics believe in the miraculous healing powers of relics. Not only is the chest taken on a pilgrimage visiting all the churches of Maastricht every seven years, it is also taken out of its resting place during times of distress. This has been happening since the year 1409 when the city was under attack. Now, 29 years after the previous threat – the Gulf War – the Catholic Church has decided that now is such a time again. However, as the Coronavirus is lurking around every corner, instead of carrying the Chest of Distress around the city and risk spreading the disease, the bishop and dean said their prayers in the Treasury near the chest of Saint Servatius’ relics to actually stop the virus. Moreover, while many Catholic churches have emptied the fonts out of fear that it might spread COVID-19, the Greek Orthodox bishop Amvrosios is convinced that Holy Water destroys the Coronavirus.

A Kind of Magic

While Bulgarians are eagerly waiting for the first signs of spring – the blooming flowers and storks in the sky – to decorate the trees with martenitsi hoping Baba Marta will grant health and luck, contemporary Pagans have been celebrating Ostara, the Spring Equinox. Magic seems to be afoot, as Pagans, Witches and Occultists alike are creating and performing rituals to stop the Coronavirus. On social media, an image circulated with a call for a ‘Covid 19 Ritual‘ on the 21st of March, 2020. During this ritual, it was advised to light a white candle for “peace, healing, protection, and leadership“. There are more initiatives for communal magical rituals like this. There was a ‘Corona Protection Ritual‘ during which the Celtic goddess of healing, Brighid, was invoked, and a ‘Worldwide Ritual/Meditation/Healing re: Covid-19‘, among other events. All of these highly personalized rituals took place on a set date and time either in the private sphere or at home via a live stream.

Pagan ritual against COVID-19

Elsewhere, the aid of the Greek healer god Apollo is asked for in a ritual against the spread of the Coronavirus written by the Pagan magician Nick Farrell. Traditionally being the god of plagues, Apollo Paean seems like the right god to invoke in this complex Golden Dawn-inspired ritual. The magical words are a prayer to this pagan god: “stay off your Arrows of the Covid-19 virus and make this epidemic stop!” Another Greek deity that has been suggested for Pagans to invoke during this time is Hygieia, the goddess of health and cleanliness.

Moreover, chaos magician Julian Vayne has shared a ritual against COVID-19 that was developed by a member of the Illuminates of Thanateros, which is based on the four elements East, Air, Fire, Water which together form Spirit. It includes the creation of a sigil in the form of a simple line drawing of a virus cell embraced by a heart. The fitting name for this sigil is ‘hearty’. The aim of this sigil magic is “sending vibes of solidarity” to those of vital professions, “conjuring breakthroughs” so a cure might be found quickly, “sending spells to directly affect the virus” so it won’t spread further, “doing some classic shamanistic or trance work to enter the imaginal world and directly battle with the virus” (which is definitely not for the fainthearted), and “calling into manifestation those timelines in which our species respond to this challenge in ways that support better ways of living together on the planet and with all our relations (both human and non-human)“. Ritual creativity is evident as Vayne suggests the use of the sound of a COVID-19 genome during the ritual. Correspondences like this one are typical for magic in general, and it can be understood as a form of contagious magic in the sense that ‘like attract like’ (obviously not contagious in a medical sense). Another religious practice advised by Vayne is what he calls “future nostalgia” whereby magicians chat with each other about the disappearance of the Coronavirus as if it already happened in the past. The emergence and vanishing of the virus is given a positive spin as well as the beneficial effects of the virus on the environment and economy are emphasized: “Do you remember how it was that COVID-19, for all the sadness it brought, finally helped us come together as one people to address climate change and wealth inequality?

Conclusion

From a religious perspective, various meanings – both negative and positive – are giving to the current Coronavirus pandemic. We have seen that, in the news articles discussed, some religious leaders of abrahamic faiths in particular, believe the outbreak to be a punishment of God for humanity’s sins. Even though it should teach humans a lesson, religious means are used to ward off the negative effects of the virus. On the other hand, alternative religions, such as New Age spirituality, Paganism and Occultism, understand the spread of the virus as having a higher purpose, most notably a global wake-up call. For many, this perceived opportunity coincides with the bigger scheme of things such as the current “planetary crisis”, “ecological crisis”, and living in the Aeon of Horus. In other words, COVID-19 has come at the right time and for the right reasons, which would eventually save the planet and bring humanity together.

The psychologist Kenneth Pargament has theorized that religious people in particular are searching for a “sense of significance” during a time of crisis. After having formulated what the meaning of it all is, coping mechanisms are put in motion. The religious wonder how they can contribute to stopping the virus from spreading. Pargament has stated that there are two ways to cope with this threatening situation. The first one is doing everything in one’s power to make the virus itself go away. The worldly means as advised by medical professionals and governments, such as social distancing and quarantine, work well to stop the Coronavirus, as will finding a cure. However, there is another way of coping with a crisis, and this has to do with regulating emotions about the perceived danger. It is not backed up by science that practices such as prayer and magic make COVID-19 disappear, but psychologists have shown that belief in the effectiveness of religious means give people hope for a bright and healthy future. Prayer, magic, meditation, and other spiritual practices add to the physical well-being of people, not only by lowering anxiety levels and boost the immune system, but especially when it comes to cultivating positive emotions. Coping with the threat of the spread of the virus emotionally has a lot to do with believing that one can play their part in solving the crisis. The key is having a sense of control over the situation, which can make a difference as to how people handle it. Petitionary prayer to God or saints, the invocation of gods, and using magic or collective positive intention to make things change can do just that.[4]

The underlying idea of Christianity in particular is that religious practices and artefacts – prayer, relics, holy water, the sacraments – are sanctified by the divine and therewith overrule the ‘lesser power’ of the worldly virus. Some religious leaders have stated that the disease has no church access as it is believed to be holy ground. For New Age spirituality, Paganism and Occultism, the general underlying idea is that positive intention, invoking and honoring gods, and magic are effective to provide healing, and ward off the Coronavirus.

In any case, there is a strong belief in the power of the masses: ritual practices against COVID-19 not only give a sense of community by bringing like-minded people together – even home alone with a live stream – they also give the impression of being in control of an uncertain situation, and, even more, change the course of things for the good of all by creating a powerful collective consciousness – or egregore, to use an occult concept. It is claimed that “supernaturalism arises when secular control efforts fail“.[5] It seems that people locked in their homes turn to their religious capital to provide one of the few helping hands they can offer, knowing that, out there, a virus lurks in broad daylight.

In Part I, we have discussed both the willingness to change and the conservatism when trying to safeguard religious belief and ritual. In Part III, we will examine various thrilling prophecies of the virus as a form of implicit religion. Stay safe!

Did I miss an interesting story about religion and the Coronavirus? Is there more to come? Most probably… So if you come across anything worth checking out, feel free to let me know in the comments.


Footnotes

[1] Steven Suthcliffe. “A Colony of Seekers: Findhorn in the 1990s” in Journal of Contemporary Religion 15:2 (2000), 215-231.

[2] Christopher Partridge. The Re-Enchantment of the West: Alternative Spiritualities, Sacralization, Popular Culture and Occulture (volume 1). London: T&T Clark International, 2004.

[3] Eric Hobsbawm & Terence Ranger, eds. The Invention of Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

[4] Ralph W. Hood Jr., Peter C. Hill & Bernard Spilka. The Psychology of Religion. An Empirical Approach (fourth edition). New York & London: The Guilford Press, 2009.

[5] Ralph W. Hood Jr., Peter C. Hill & Bernard Spilka. The Psychology of Religion. An Empirical Approach (fourth edition). New York & London: The Guilford Press, 2009.

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