|
Satanic Bible | 
enlarge | Authors: Anton Szandor Lavey, Peter H. Gilmore Publisher: Avon Category: Book
List Price: $7.99 Buy New: $3.15 You Save: $4.84 (61%)
New (40) Used (19) from $3.15
Avg. Customer Rating: 414 reviews Sales Rank: 3785
Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 0380015390 Dewey Decimal Number: 133.422 EAN: 9780380015399 ASIN: 0380015390
Publication Date: December 1, 1969 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review One might expect The Satanic Bible at least to offer a few prancing demons or a virgin sacrifice, but if you hopped this train expecting a tour of the house of horrors, you're on the wrong ride. Far from a manual for conquering the realms of earth, air, fire, and water, The Satanic Bible is Anton LaVey's manifesto of a new religion separate from the "traditional" Judeo-Christian definitions of Satanism. While LaVey rails against the deceit of the Christian church and white magicians, he busily weaves his own deceptions. The Satanic Bible claims the heritage of a horde of evil deities--Bile', Dagon, Moloch, and Yao Tzin to name a few--but these ancient gods have no coherent connection between each other or to Satanism, except that all have been categorized by Christianity as "evil." Calling on these ancient names like a magician shouting, "Abracadabra," LaVey attempts to shatter the classical depiction of Satanism as a cult of black mass and child sacrifice. As the smoke clears, he leads us through a surprisingly logical argument in favor of a life focused on self-indulgence. The Satanic Bible is less bible and more philosophy (with a few rituals thrown in to keep us entertained), but this philosophy is the backbone of a religion that, until LaVey entered the scene, was merely a myth of the Christian church. It took LaVey, and The Satanic Bible, to turn this myth into a legitimate public religion. --Brian Patterson
Product Description
Called "The Black Pope" by many of his followers, Anton La Vey began the road to High Priesthood of the (lurch of Satan when he was only 16 years old and an organ player in a carnival: "On Saturday night I would see men lusting after halfnaked girls dancing at the carnival, and on Sunday morning when I was playing the organ for tent-show evangelists at the other end of the carnival lot, I would see these same men sitting in the pews with their wives and children, asking God to forgive them and purge them of carnal desires. And the next Saturday night they'd be back at The carnival or some other place of indulgence. "I knew then that the Christian Church thrives on hypocrisy, and that man's carnal nature will out!" From that time early in his life his path was clear. Finally, on the last night of April, 1966 -- Walpurgisnacht, the most important festival of the believers in witchcraft -- LaVey shaved his head in the tradition of Ancient executioners and announced the formation of The Church Of Satan. He had seen the need for a church that would recapture man's body and his carnal desires as objects of celebration. "Since worship of fleshly things produces pleasure," he said, "there would then be a temple of glorious indulgence . . ."
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 409 more reviews...
gives Satanism a bad name! November 16, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Give the book credit, at least, for being appropriate: it is a joke bible, for a joke religion, and a fraud on every level.
I am writing this review for the benefit of those few people with two brain cells to rub together, the young especially, who will look into this thing thinking it has something to do with real Nietzschean or "left hand path" philosophy. The hopeless, the brainless and the con artists associated with the LaVey movement can stop reading now and go ahead and click "not helpful", if that makes them feel better.
This is to spare you the ten minutes research it would take to figure out that the book is not a work of philosophy but an incoherent, almost entirely plagiarized mishmash of other people's works. Also, LaVey's biography is a pack of lies, and the church he founded is nothing more than the old scam of sucking a little bit of money and attention from pseudo-intellectuals and psueduo-occultists who need something to beef up their self-image. It is simply the worst thing that ever happened to the whole "satanic" movement. No one with an i.q. larger than his shoe size can possibly take LaVey or his disciples seriously, so transparent and indeed brazen is their phoniness.
So, why bother with this when you can go straight to the source: Nietzsche's Zarathustra, or if that's too much for you at first, Redbeard's Might Makes Right?
And if you want to call yourself a Satanist, that's cool, but don't let some silly, superficial bunch of con artists tell you they're the only "real thing" or that LaVey is the founder of some kind of movement. Satanism was around a long time before this clown and will be around a long time after he and the rest of these poseurs have gone on to their infernal reward.
And Nietzsche will be around forever.
Perfect for White Wiccans November 13, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book goes to show that if your a white wiccan and have some reservations about being christian too, you can still sin and get away with it.Reign on Templars! OsirisMidnight
The Satanic Bible August 10, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Well, as Peter H. Gilmore said in the Introduction to the newest edition of this book, it has changed my life. If you're a Satanist you know that after reading this is when you took upon that title. You won't find Satanic Priests going about handing these out: you have to find it. The basic philosophy of Satanism is written herein, and with it you will have concrete evidence of a tool you can use to get the absolute most out of life.
The Foundation For Modern Satanic Belief July 21, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Ah, Satan the old nemesis, the great rebel, the stand-by rouser and the trigger point of the superficial, the ignorant, the rabble and the narrow-minded...
The Satanic Bible by Anton Szandor LaVey was conceived in 1969 three years after the man's public conversion to Satanism in California. With the founding of the Church Of Satan in San Francisco came the need for a volume encapsulating the beliefs and the agenda of the development, which lead to the creation of The Satanic Bible. Seeking to introduce man to a more natural and unaffected way of life congruous to humankind's nature, LaVey sought to not only launch a new level of discourse regarding life and religion, but also to free Satan from its Christian/Luciferian pigeonhole into a more honest and vital force.
The Satanic Bible is essentially made up of two parts. The first part enlightens man on his true nature, free from predisposition and ingrained ignorance. The second part - collects from the past and philosophers like Nietzsche, John Dee and Aleister Crowley - to teach symbolic rituals and rites, as well as the devil's own Enochian language in which the nineteen keys have been written.
As controversial as the text is today one can imagine how it would have been received 30 years ago. Anti-hypocritical, open and pioneering the book is obviously mischievous as it tries to awaken the reader and his senses. The devil is not occult or evil, as these themes are demystified - unless man wants it to be. Inspiring and fresh, the bible corrodes conformity as it casts aside uniformity in contradiction of its own name. Rites and words are given symbolic power that is only alive in the will of the practitioner. Satan is not about animal sacrifice, virgins or harm - unless one wants it to be. Free sex and unencumbered intercourse are not endorsed as Satanic - unless the reader wishes it for himself. Those fables are reserved for the devil of the major mainstream religions. That is where LaVey's major thrust lies, a fact obfuscated often by the majority and the organized.
The Satanic Bible requires just a little bit of an open mind. With the door left ajar, the teachings resonate easily given their direct appeal to man's true nature. Therein lie the problems. Such willingness is not easy in a society rooted in ...isms and ...ity. To live free one has to acknowledge the uncomfortable and the absence of good or bad. What will a society free from guilt and a population unrestrained by self-denial mean? The answers explain why the book is of limited appeal and the cause of worry and scare-mongering to this day and surely many more years to come.
Being written by a man and acknowledged with pride as such, The Satanic Bible is both imperfect and inconsistent. Nevertheless, being free from hypocrisy and in touch with a higher level of intellectual honesty, The Satanic Bible is the path to a world free from 'good' and 'evil' and living a life worthy of man's taste for honesty.
Now, if only LaVey had told us about Yankee Rose...
Practicing Satanism July 11, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I went into this with some idea of what I was getting into. I never followed a religion and I questioned multiple things about the existing religions that had been out there. After read LaVey's Satanic Bible I realized I had been practicing Satanism without knowing it. I think many people are practicing it and they don't know it or they are turned off by the "negative stigma" that Satanism has been given by those who have not educated themselves on it. It is an exrememly well written book. I've enjoyed reading it and learning about myself in the process.
|
|
|
Copyright 2008 - RailroadBookstore.com
| |