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David Spangler

 
(1945-)

David Spangler, prominent architect and theoretician of the New Age movement, was born in Columbus, Ohio, on January 7, 1945. He was raised in a family open to the psychic realm, and as a boy of seven he had his first mystical experience. As a teenager he affiliated with several theosophical groups, and through the writings of Alice A. Bailey, Spangler first learned of the coming New Age at the end of the twentieth century. In 1964 he settled in Los Angeles, where he and Myrtle Glines opened a counseling service. He began to channel an entity named "John," who would periodically emerge over the next decades, and in 1967 he authored the booklet The Christ Experience and the New Age.

In 1970, Glines and Spangler traveled to Great Britain, where Spangler decided to pay a brief visit to the Findhorn Community in northern Scotland, an early New Age center. He then canceled his travel plans and joined the 15-member community for three years. Here Spangler began to articulate an idea that the coming New Age would be a cooperative venture between humans and cosmic forces. He disagreed with Find-horn leader Peter Caddy, who believed that the New Age would be brought in by a cataclysmic event.

In 1973 Spangler returned to the United States as an apostle of the New Age movement and founded the Lorian Association in Belmont, California, based on the Findhorn model. He lectured widely and wrote a series of books about the New Age. Major titles include Revelation: The Birth of a New Age (1976), Towards a Planetary Vision (1977), Explorations: Emerging Aspects of the New Culture (1980), and his autobiography Emergence: The Rebirth of the Sacred (1980).

By the 1980s, the New Age idea had become a mass movement. Spangler, who had worked so hard on popularizing the idea, now found himself in the role of critic of the more dubious aspects of the New Age. He vilified the interest in crystals, psychic phenomena, and even channeling, as taking people away from a focus on self-transformation and upon developing a compassionate and creative life. In 1988, after several years of silence, Spangler published a series of articles in which he professed to have given up on the idea of the New Age as a social event. He now described the New Age as a metaphor for personal transformation and said that its essence would be found in the change and growth of individuals. He called upon such people to work for real change in the social order.

Sources:

Spangler, David. The Call. New York: Putnam, 1997.

——. Emergence: The Rebirth of the Sacred. New York: Delta, 1980.

——. Everyday Miracles: The Inner Art of Manifestation. New York: Bantam/Doubleday/Dell, 1996.

——. Explorations: Emerging Aspects of the New Culture. Forres, Scotland: Findhorn Publications, 1980.

——. Parent as Mystic, Mystic as Parent. New York: Berkeley Publishing Group, 2000.

——. Revelation: The Birth of a New Age. San Francisco: Rainbow Bridge, 1976.

——. Towards a Planetary Vision. Forres, Scotland: Find-horn Publications, 1977.

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David Spangler (b. 7 January 1945) is an American spiritual philosopher and self-described "practical mystic". Instrumental in helping establish Findhorn in northern Scotland, and a friend of William Irwin Thompson, he is considered one of the founding figures of the modern New Age movement, although he is highly critical of what much of the movement has since become, especially its commercialistic and sensationalist elements.

Contents

Childhood and education

Spangler was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1945. At the age of six, he moved to Morocco in North Africa where his father was assigned as a counterintelligence agent for U.S. Army Intelligence. He lived there for six years, returning to the United States when he was twelve in 1957. He attended Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts, though his time there was interrupted when his family moved to Phoenix, Arizona, where he graduated from high school. He attended Arizona State University where he was working for a Bachelor of Science degree in biochemistry but continued to pursue other subjects of interest.

Clairvoyant development

From his earliest years, Spangler claims to be clairvoyantly aware of non-physical entities. While in Morocco at age seven, he said he had a classical mystical experience of merging with a timeless presence of oneness within the cosmos and then remembering his existence prior to this life as well as the process by which he chose to become David Spangler and entered into his present incarnation. Following that experience, he claims his awareness of and contact with various inner worlds of spirit was heightened, though he believed throughout his childhood that everyone shared the kind of perception and experience that he had. This changed when he moved to Phoenix where he claims to have discovered other individuals who were clairvoyant or were acting as "channels" for non-physical entities and realized that his own inner experiences were not common. In his late teens he was asked by members of metaphysical study groups to give talks on his own inner contacts, leading up to 1964 when he gave the keynote address at a national spiritual conference on "Youth and the New Age." The led to his receiving a number of invitations from around the United States to come and give lectures to various spiritual and metaphysical organizations. At the time he refused these invitations to concentrate on his scientific studies, but the following year, in 1965, he decided to leave college and begin sharing his own particular insights and inner perceptions.

This led to his going to Los Angeles in the summer of 1965 where a series of lectures led to further invitations and resulted in the career that he has followed since then as a lecturer and teacher of spirituality. Some of this early history can be found in his books Blessing: The Art and the Practice and Pilgrim in Aquarius.

The Findhorn Foundation

In 1970, Spangler journeyed to Britain where he visited the spiritual community of Findhorn in northern Scotland. Before leaving the United States he claimed to have been told by his own non-physical, spiritual contacts that he would find his "next cycle of work" in Europe; he arrived at Findhorn and was told that one of the founders, Eileen Caddy, had had a vision three years earlier that he would be coming there and would live there to work in the community. Not knowing who David Spangler was, Eileen and her husband Peter Caddy and their colleague, Dorothy Maclean, the three founders of the Findhorn Community, had been waiting for someone with that name to show up. Upon Spangler's arrival, he was offered and accepted joint directorship of the community along with Peter. He remained in the Findhorn Community until 1973, at which point he returned to the United States with a number of other Americans and Europeans, including Dorothy Maclean who was Canadian, where they founded the Lorian Association as a non-profit vehicle for the spiritual and educational work they wished to do together.[1][2]

Lindisfarne Association

Also in 1974 Spangler helped William Irwin Thompson, the author of At the Edge of History, Time Falling Bodies Take to Light, and various other books on contemporary culture, science and spirit, to found the Lindisfarne Association and became one of the first Lindisfarne Fellows, a group of scientists, artists, religious teachers, political activists, economists, and visionaries whose number included Gregory Bateson, John and Nancy Todd, Elaine Pagels, E. F. Schumacher, Stewart Brand, Paul Hawken, James Lovelock, and Paul Winter, among others.

Going beyond the "New Age"

Over the years since then, Spangler has continued to lecture and teach and has written numerous books on spirituality. He is considered one of the founding figures of the modern New Age phenomenon, but early on he identified its shadow and rejected what he termed "its further outgrowth into a myriad of 'old age' pursuits (including spiritual pursuits) dressed in 'new age' garb". This devolution into commercially-driven fads, identity politics, mystical glamour, atavistic spiritualisms, and uncritical guru reverence was a main theme of his Reimagination of the World, co-authored with fellow-traveler and cultural historian William Irwin Thompson.[3]

Spangler has often been miscast as a new-age channeler due in part to the "transmissions" received while living at the intentional community at Findhorn, Scotland in the 1970s, which became the core of his first book Revelation: The Birth of a New Age[4] In hindsight it can be seen that Spangler's ideas were at that time transitional between the earlier theosophical esotericism represented by Alice Bailey and an emerging worldview that is more postmodern, less obscure, and less metaphysical than theosophy[5]. Spangler himself reports that it took him some years to develop a language in which to communicate clearly the insights and experiences he had been having since childhood.

Recent Activities

In recent years he has emphasized a practical or incarnational spirituality in which our everyday lives -- our physical, embodied, sometimes resplendent and sometimes shabby persons -- can be experienced as spiritual or sacred, as opposed to a spirituality concerned solely with the transpersonal and transcendent.[6] He is founder of the Lorian Association (see links).

Also, on April 24th 2008, Spangler gave a lecture called Ritual: Where the Particle Meets the Wave at the New York Open Center [7]. The lecture explained how rituals are a way of connecting our individual selves to the larger world, whose vastness is sometimes overwhelming.

References

  1. ^ Paul Hawken, The Magic of Findhorn Bantam Books, 1975
  2. ^ Steven Sutcliffe, Children of the New Age: a history of spiritual practices, Routledge, 2003, ISBN 0415242983 ISBN 9780415242981 pp.120 ff.
  3. ^ Wouter Hanegraaff, New Age Religion and Western Culture, State University of New York Press, 1998, pp.39, 105
  4. ^ ibid pp.38-9
  5. ^ ibid p.104
  6. ^ davidspangler.com/incarnate.htm
  7. ^ Gaia com events - Ritual: Where the Particle Meets the Wave

Partial Bibliography

  • David Spangler, 1976 (first version: 1971), Revelation: The Birth of a New Age, Rainbow Bridge.
  • David Spangler and William Irwin Thompson, 1991, Reimagination of the World: A Critique of the New Age, Science, and Popular Culture, Bear & Company.
  • Martin Palmer, 1993, Coming of Age: An Exploration of Christianity and the New Age, Aquarian Press.
  • David Spangler, 1996, Everyday Miracles, Bantam Books.
  • David Spangler, 1996, The Call, Riverhead Books.
  • David Spangler, 1998, Parent as Mystic, Mystic as Parent, Riverhead Books.
  • David Spangler, 2001, Blessing: The Art and the Practice, Riverhead Books.

External links


 
 

 

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Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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