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How Shock
Musician Marilyn Manson
Lost his Christianity
By Paul
Coughlin
In his fuming autobiography, The Long Road Out of Hell, shock
musician Marilyn Manson reveals how years of false teaching about the return of
Christand the apocalyptic conspiracy theories that enhance such
teachingleft him feeling abused, cheated, and eventually caused him to
reject Christianity. He, like so many within the church today, endured pounding
lecture upon lecture about receiving the Mark of the Beast during these
"last days." "Those that don't receive the mark, the number
of his name (666)" warned Ms. Price, Manson's Friday-night teacher at
Heritage Christian School during the early 1980s, "will be decapitated
before their families and neighbors."
Then, as today, the Goth
protagonist was told that the mark was concealed as the Universal Product Code
that appears on everyday items in your grocery store, which, with the help of
blatantly false reporting, works out to be the same demonic numbers, 666. All
this was presented as factnot opinion and never speculationdrawn
straight from the Bible. Writes Manson, "They didn't need proof; they
had faith."
Nightmares soon visited his 12-year-old mind. "I
was thoroughly terrified by the idea of the end of the world and the
Antichrist. So I became obsessed with it, watching movies like . . .A Thief in the Night, which described
very graphically people getting their heads cut off because they hadn't
received 666 tattoos on their forehead."
Manson's landfill
lyrics, lashing instrumentals and caustic stage sets were cited by damp-handed
critics as propelling the murder and suicides at Colorado's Columbine High
School on April 20, 1999. Indeed Manson canceled a Colorado concert soon after
the shooting, reportedly in an attempt to avoid hostile demonstrations.
The study of End Times conspiracy theories shows we are hardwired to
search for simple answers to overwhelming tragedy, especially when it involves
the loss of children. Though we put our finger upon correct influences, we
often overplay their import, which is understandable. So just as it is
thin-headed to blame Manson for the sinister plans of vengeful,
trench-coat-wearing youth there in Columbine, it would be equally wrong to
blame the architects of today's pop End Times prophecy as the sole cause
of Manson's descent; a dive made more likely in the pursuit of riches than
to display his melding of transvestite and pro-wrestling outfits.
Though popular End Times prophecy is not the sole cause of his descent, its
role cannot be easily dismissed. How we live and mis-live our lives is the
result of many influences. When it comes to apocalyptic conspiracy theories
shared by numerous Christians across America, those influences must not be
discounted as irrelevant. End Times conspiracy theories have influenced
millions of ordinary people and more noted ones such as David Koresh, his
followers, the Weaver family on Ruby Ridge and Christian conspiracy theorists
such as Norman Olson and Dean Compton, two of America's more noted militia
leaders who express End Times angst.
Popular and contemporary Bible
prophecy and the conspiracy-prone political interpretation of the John Birch
Society are dovetailed by influential church leaders such as Don McAlvany,
Chuck Missler, Y2K doomster Gary North and others in this community of
charismatic and self-appointed experts. It is a mindset that brought us the
belief that the U.S. government intentionally killed civilians on Ruby Ridge,
in Waco and at Oklahoma City as part of what they believe is a one-world
government plot found in the book of Revelation, or what is commonly called the
"New World Order."
This mindset is one-part flesh (as with
Waco, conspiracy theories often form around a grain of truth) and nine-part
poltergeist (but as with Waco, around this grain of truth are many leaps in
logic and selective reporting), graze upon our fear of the future. There is no
better contemporary example than the recent Y2K hysteria that burned throughout
Evangelical and Fundamentalist media. They also offer the allure of exclusive
information, similar to their twin, psychic readings. Both provide a patterned
and coherent world if only one is willing to truckle to their leadership and
claims of exclusive knowledge. Both are accompanied by a reasonable price tag
and bulging marketing, and both create a kind of crystal ball but with one
telling difference; conspiracy theories appeal to the head while psychic
readings appeal to the heart. They tickle the ears of those willing to pay for
the newest tape or book on how to survive economic hell on earth, and those who
will gladly spend two dollars a minute to discover if love is in their
future.
Christian conspiracy theories are the modern-day equivalent of
eating from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. As in the Garden of Eden,
we long for such inside information and magic formulas of faith. But seeking
solace in secret formulas was always forbidden by Godnot because this
shortcut worked, but because it did not. Mere knowledge of good and evil will
never satisfy our longings or calm our fears. (Secrets, Plots & Hidden Agendas, What
You Don't Know About Conspiracy Theories p.199)
After a year
passed, then another, then another, and the End-Times predictions of his youth
panned out to be false, the young Marilyn Manson, who says he still has
End-Times nightmares, felt cheated and lied to. "Gradually, I began to
resent Christian school and doubt everything I was told." He wrote in his
notebook when he still went by his suburban birth name Brian Wardner,
"Fools aren't born. They are watered and grown like weeds by
institutions such as Christianity." Not exactly, Brian. Orthodox
Christianity has always warned us not to call a conspiracy what others call a
conspiracy (Isaiah 8:11-13). Also, many End-Times scenarios
have more in common with a complex dualistic religion called Manicheism than a
vibrant Christian faith (Secrets, Plots
pp. 167, 198).
Brian and countless other forming boys and girls
throughout the last 30 years have been caught in a net tied with earnest hands
and hearts. Their innate fear of the future, mine included, was exploited in an
attempt to drive them into the arms of a loving Savior. But perfect fear often
casts out love. It was a message created by those who believe that there are no
atheists in fearful Sunday School classes, but who refuse to acknowledge that a
kid's mind often changes when he walks into the sun of a new day. Worse,
troubled Brian Wardners resent the fear and manipulation and curse the little
god who they were told is behind it all. God-shock is inevitable and perhaps
preacher David Hawking said it best:
" . . .Oh, some of the prophecy preachers got a little out of hand . . .and we were even told that . . .when Israel became a nation in 1948 it would be forty years and then the Lord would come. So we back it up seven. So the rapture is coming in 1981. I've met people all over this country who believed that, followed that, anticipated that. It did not come and as a result many of them bombed out, dropped out, copped out; they're not around anymore (emphasis added)." (Secrets, Plots, p.141)
It's fitting but
still distressing that Marilyn Manson, who adopted the names of two pop culture
icons as his ownthe first a likely victim of pop-culture fame and power,
the second a sinister predator hell-bent on fame and power at any priceis
himself an example of pop culture's corrosive nature. There is the
ever-present question of obligatory drug use. His lyrics rationalize that
sturdy self-centeredness which he exploits so well, the same quality found in
daytime soaps that are tailored toward a more sophisticated self-absorption.
His body is a canvas of scars, reported to have more than four hundred. His
mind, like all of ours, is a canvas as well. It began with a base layer of
abuse by those who violated his young body with brutal blows and bewildering
sexual acts. Then came his spiritual abuse at the hands of earnest pop-prophecy
teachers, which on this canvas of the mind should be understood as splashes of
blood red. They do not represent Redemption to Manson (pray that they will) but
rage and disappointment with God. And the Devil walks laughing.
Paul Coughlin is a freelance journalist, photographer
and former talk show host. He is author of Secrets, Plots & Hidden Agendas,
What You Don't Know About Conspiracy Theories (InterVarsity Press 1999),
which investigates the political, psychological and theological components
behind conspiracy thinking in America. The unabridged audio version is
available through Blackstone Audiobooks.
Bible
Reference
Isaiah 8: 11-13
11 The LORD spoke to
me with his strong hand upon me, warning me not to follow the way of this
people. He said: 12 "Do not call conspiracy everything that these people
call conspiracy; do not fear what they fear, and do not dread it. 13 The
LORD Almighty is the one you are to regard as holy, he is the one you are to
fear, he is the one you are to dread,
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