P987:5, 90:2.1
Spirit
conjuring was a very precise and highly complicated procedure, comparable
to present-day church rituals conducted in an ancient tongue. The human race
very early sought for superhuman help, for revelation; and men believed
that the shaman actually received such revelations. While the shamans utilized
the great power of suggestion in their work, it was almost invariably negative
suggestion; only in very recent times has the technique of positive suggestion
been employed. In the early development of their profession the shamans began
to specialize in such vocations as rain making, disease healing, and crime
detecting. To heal diseases was not, however, the chief function of a shamanic
medicine man; it was, rather, to know and to control the hazards of living.
P987:6, 90:2.2
Ancient black art, both religious and secular, was called white art when practiced
by either priests, seers, shamans, or medicine men. The practitioners of the
black art were called sorcerers, magicians, wizards, witches, enchanters,
necromancers,
conjurers, and
soothsayers. As time passed, all such purported
contact with the supernatural was classified either as witchcraft or shamancraft.
P987:7, 90:2.3
Witchcraft embraced the magic performed by earlier, irregular, and
unrecognized spirits; shamancraft had to do with miracles performed
by regular spirits and recognized gods of the tribe. In later times the witch
became associated with the devil, and thus was the stage set for the many
comparatively recent exhibitions of religious intolerance. Witchcraft was
a religion with many primitive tribes.
P987:8, 90:2.4
The shamans were great believers in the mission of chance as revelatory of
the will of the spirits; they frequently cast lots to arrive at decisions.
Modern survivals of this proclivity for casting lots are illustrated, not
only in the many games of chance, but also in the well-known "
counting-out"
rhymes. Once, the person counted out must die; now, he is only it in
some childish game. That which was serious business to primitive man has survived
as a diversion of the modern child.
P988:1, 90:2.5
The medicine men put great trust in signs and omens, such as, "When you
hear the sound of a
rustling in the tops of the mulberry trees, then shall
you
bestir yourself." Very early in the history of the race the shamans
turned their attention to the stars. Primitive astrology was a world-wide
belief and practice; dream interpreting also became widespread. All this was
soon followed by the appearance of those temperamental shamanesses who professed
to be able to communicate with the spirits of the dead.
P988:2, 90:2.6
Though of ancient origin, the rain makers, or weather shamans, have persisted
right on down through the ages. A severe drought meant death to the early
agriculturists; weather control was the object of much ancient magic. Civilized
man still makes the weather the common topic of conversation. The olden peoples
all believed in the power of the shaman as a rain maker, but it was customary
to kill him when he failed, unless he could offer a plausible excuse to account
for the failure.
P988:3, 90:2.7
Again and again did the Caesars banish the astrologers, but they invariably
returned because of the popular belief in their powers. They could not be
driven out, and even in the sixteenth century after Christ the directors of
Occidental church and state were the
patrons of astrology. Thousands of supposedly
intelligent people still believe that one may be born under the domination
of a lucky or an unlucky star; that the juxtaposition of the heavenly bodies
determines the outcome of various terrestrial adventures.
Fortunetellers are
still
patronized by the credulous.
P988:4, 90:2.8
The Greeks believed in the efficacy of
oracular advice, the Chinese used magic
as protection against demons, shamanism flourished in India, and it still
openly persists in central Asia. It is an only recently abandoned practice
throughout much of the world.
P988:5, 90:2.9
Ever and anon, true prophets and teachers arose to denounce and expose shamanism.
Even the vanishing red man had such a prophet within the past hundred years,
the
Shawnee Tenskwatawa, who predicted the eclipse of the sun in 1808 and
denounced the vices of the white man. Many true teachers have appeared among
the various tribes and races all through the long ages of evolutionary history.
And they will ever continue to appear to challenge the shamans or priests
of any age who oppose general education and attempt to thwart scientific progress.
P988:6, 90:2.10
In many ways and by devious methods the olden shamans established their
reputations
as voices of God and custodians of providence. They sprinkled the newborn
with water and conferred names upon them; they circumcised the males. They
presided over all burial ceremonies and made due announcement of the safe
arrival of the dead in spiritland.
P988:7, 90:2.11
The shamanic priests and medicine men often became very wealthy through the
accretion of their various fees which were
ostensibly offerings to the spirits.
Not infrequently a shaman would accumulate practically all the material wealth
of his tribe. Upon the death of a wealthy man it was customary to divide his
property equally with the shaman and some public enterprise or charity. This
practice still obtains in some parts of Tibet, where one half the male population
belongs to this class of
nonproducers.
P989:1, 90:2.12
The shamans dressed well and usually had a number of wives; they were the
original aristocracy, being exempt from all tribal restrictions. They were
very often of low-grade mind and morals. They suppressed their rivals by
denominating
them witches or sorcerers and very frequently rose to such positions of influence
and power that they were able to dominate the chiefs or kings.
P989:2, 90:2.13
Primitive man regarded the shaman as a necessary evil; he feared him but did
not love him. Early man respected knowledge; he honored and rewarded wisdom.
The shaman was mostly fraud, but the veneration for shamanism well illustrates
the premium put upon wisdom in the evolution of the race.