Spiritual Dowsing
Tools for Exploring the Intangible Realms
Sig Lonegren
Revised and updated fourth edition
Click here to order
Chapter Two
Dowsing the Earth Energies
Dowsing is best known as a tool for locating underground
veins of water, oil, lost objects, missing persons
and buried treasure. Note these are all tangible, or
physical targets. This kind of dowsing yields itself easily
to evaluation by the scientific method.When the forked
stick goes down, the target is either there, or it isn't.
Physical-target dowsers' work can be checked by observation,
by digging or drilling.
On the other hand, when one is intent on using
dowsing as a tool for spiritual growth, for intangible
target dowsing, the process isn't quite so easy.How can
one 'prove' that one has found an edge of the human
aura (a field of energy found around all living things)
when there are presently no scientifically acceptable
tools to measure it? (Isn't it interesting that some have
given machines the power to define reality?) True to his
veneration of analytical, linear thinking, twentieth
century Western Man has determined that something
is real only if he can see, smell, hear, taste, feel it. Or if
a needle moves on a machine. What a limiting and
limited view of reality!
At sacred centers, a dowser finds all kinds of Earth
Energies, s/he can feel them as well, but as yet, they
certainly haven't been demonstrated empirically. How
can someone scientifically demonstrate that they have
grown spiritually? And yet most of you who are reading
this know that in the last several years you have grown
at least a bit closer to your Creator.This is an awareness
that all on the path have. And yet, how can that be
proven scientifically? It can't. While physical-target
dowsing can be proved empirically, intangible-target
dowsing, spiritual dowsing, isn't as easily verified by the
scientific mind-set.
Western Man has based his primacy on logical
thought and the five senses.Auras and Earth Energies
in fact all the intangible targets of the spiritual realms
don't yield themselves easily to this method of viewing
reality. Dowsing can help us begin to look into those
worlds beyond the five senses. It is a bridge that can
help us touch the intangible.
Primary Water
Dowsing is a tool we can use to help us 'see' the Earth
Energies at sacred sites. Every valid site that marks a ley,
an alignment of sacred sites, has water under it. There
are two kinds of underground water. There is the 'water
table' water that most hydrologists are interested in.The
other is 'primary water' (some call it 'juvenile water').
Primary water doesn't come from rain water, but rather
is created in the bowels of the Earth as the by-product
of various chemical reactions. This water is then forced
under pressure towards the surface of the Earth in what
dowsers in the United States call 'domes' (in Great
Britain, they are called 'blind springs'). I picture domes
to be like geysers that just don't reach the surface. The
water continues its upward journey until it hits an
impermeable layer of rock or clay. The pressure then
forces the water out horizontally, in what dowsers call
veins cracks and fissures in the rock. As a spiritual
dowser, one can find domes or at least crossing veins of
primary water under any valid marker of a ley. When
these veins of primary water reach the surface in many
parts of the world, they are considered to be holy wells,
places of healing and spiritual contemplation, places of
the Earth Mother.
An Agreement on Primary Water
There is one aspect of the Earth Energies that as
dowsers we should all be able to agree on. This has to
do with the presence of primary water at these sites. It's
always there. For this reason, if you want to become a
good Earth Energy dowser, I urge you to work at some
time in your development with a competent drinking-
water dowser. Apprentice yourself to one long
enough to be sure that where s/he finds water, you find
water. This sure knowledge of the location of underground veins of water is critical in determining not only
how the veins dance at power centers, but where there
are zones in a home that are detrimental to a person's
health. A spiritual dowser must also be a water-witch.
In the nineteen-thirties, Reginald Allender Smith was
one of the first dowsers to write about finding water as
a primary ingredient of any sacred space. This has been
corroborated by many fine dowsers since his time. I
have worked with Bill Lewis, one of the master dowsers
of the British Isles; Tom Graves, author of several important
books on dowsing and the Earth Mysteries; and
Terry Ross, the person who brought the notion of
dowseable leys to the United States. All of them find primary
water under valid markers of the ley system. I
believe it is time for all Earth Energy dowsers to agree
on this. It is always there. Too many good dowsers have
been finding it for too long now for it not to be there.
If you are not finding primary water at sacred sites,
once again, perhaps it is time for you to go spend time
with a water-well dowser.
Leys and Energy Leys
Leys, these alignments of sacred sites, are the result
of our ancestors locating their holy sites over primary
water. I find that many, but by no means all, of these
leys also have straight beams of male, or yang energy,
flowing along them. These are called 'energy leys'.
Energy leys are normally six to eight feet wide, and have
a direction of flow, like a river. In England, most leys (but
again, not all) have these energy leys flowing concurrently
with them. In New England where I did my
Masters research, I know of four or five leys, but I have
dowsed well over four hundred energy leys.
(Please remember my comment in the Preface about
"Sig's Hypothesis Number One": Even if they were trained
by the same teacher,when dowsing for intangible targets
in sacred space, it is quite probable that no two dowsers
will ever find exactly the same things. In this book I am
reporting to you the intangible Earth Energies as I "see "
them. Please dowse for what I am suggesting, but, just
as the founders of the great religions "saw" the One
differently, each of us perceives the spiritual realms
differently depending on what we were taught to see,
our present level of consciousness, and what we are
therefore ready to see. It could be that you might
find completely different energies from what I find.And
that's not only ok, but that's how it is.)
Sacred Space
This Earth of ours (the Greeks called her Gaia) has
always had a series of places all over her surface where
the yin and the yang, the female and male, the domes
and veins of primary water and the straight energy leys
have come together forming what is called a 'power
center'.The energies at any given power centre (defined
as a minimum of one vein of primary water crossed by
one energy ley) are not always the same throughout
the year. Each one reaches its peak of power at one or
more times during the year based on various factors
including what the Sun, Moon, and to a lesser extent,
other planets and stars are doing.When an energy ley
aligns with the rising or setting of the Sun, for example,
the energy becomes much more potent.
Many temples and other sacred spaces are associated
with specific times of the year Stonehenge with the
Summer Solstice Sunrise, Newgrange with the Winter
Solstice Sunrise, Solomon's Temple with the Equinox
Sunrise. At these times, the energy ley that runs along
the site's major axis joins the power center there with
the point on the horizon where Sun rises or sets on that
Solstice, Equinox, or Cross Quarter day. (If you think of
the Solstices and Equinoxes as dividing the year up into
quarters, the Cross Quarter days divide the year up into
eighths, and occur at the beginnings of November,
February, May and August.) Other sites are oriented
towards the rising points of the Moon,Venus, or certain
stars. In these cases, the point on the horizon marks a
significant place in the cycle of that particular heavenly
body. Whatever the alignment, it creates a massive
increase in the energy available at that particular power
center at that particular time.Different sites were set up
to utilize this energy in different ways. So different sites
used their major axis astronomical alignment to
enhance the intent of the builders to use these energies
for healing, for foretelling the future (the veil to the
other side being thinner at that point), for fertility (the
priests of the Nile were responsible for the fertility of
that ancient valley), and, perhaps most importantly,
for general growth in spiritual consciousness.
His Story and Her Story of Alignments
Until the discovery of the Nag Hammadi documents
just after World War II, the only thing we knew about
Gnostics, an early Christian sect who were judged to be
heretics,was what was written about them by the early
Church Fathers who didn't like them. Most of what
we initially knew about feng shui, Chinese geomancy,
came from Ernest J Eitel, a Christian missionary to
China who, once again, didn't like this heathen practice.
History (his story) is written by the victors. The patriarchs.
But what about her story? One of the things that
I remember from somewhere in my training to become
a Western Man was the notion that there is no such
thing as a straight line in nature, and yet, since before
the beginning of recorded time, we humans have
known and utilized the power of alignment. From the
alignment of passage graves and standing stones constructed
in the middle of the fourth millennium Before
the Common Era (BCE) to the present day intentional
alignment in Washington DC of the Lincoln Memorial,
the Tidal Basin Pool, and the dome of the rotunda over
the Capitol of the United States, we humans have been
using alignments. Prior to the dawning of Western Man
consciousness, these alignments were used for spiritual
purposes, to mark centers of, among other things,
healing, fertility, and prophesy. This kind of alignment,
a ley, might consist of holy sites from many different
periods throughout history.
Until roughly the time of the Protestant Reformation,
the people of Europe built their sacred sites in straight
lines, leys, that ran across the countryside in harmony
with the Earth Energies. Since that time, Western Man
has continued to use the power inherent in alignments,
but for different purposes. Let us look then at our use of
alignments throughout herstory and history to see how
we might use dowsing as a spiritual tool.
Until the beginning of the Neolithic (New Stone Age)
period, roughly 6000 BCE, Europeans were hunter-gatherers.
As we followed the herds and the various
crops that ripened in their time, we were in tune with
Nature, and were naturally at the appropriate power
centers at the specific time of the year we needed to be
there to perform our various ceremonies and rituals.
Gaia led us to the right place at the right time, and our
spiritual lives prospered accordingly. John Michell has a
good discussion of this concept in his book, Earth Spirit.
The First Farmers
When we settled down and became farmers, however,
we had a problem we had to make do year 'round
with the power centers that were in our local area.We
then had to find ways to enhance the Earth Energies at
times when they were not at their peak. The archaeological
evidence indicates that by the middle of the
Neolithic period (4000 BCE ±) we were building incredibly
sophisticated sacred enclosures that, among other
things, demonstrate a thorough knowledge of geometry
thousands of years before the Greeks supposedly
invented it! These sacred sites were built on previously
existing Earth Energy power centers, utilized sacred
geometrical ratios in their construction to enhance the
energy, and were oriented towards specific significant
horizonal astronomical events. All of this was done
apparently with an incredible amount of human labor,
to know better when the energies would reach their
zenith and, at other times of the year when they were at
lower levels of intensity, to concentrate them for use in
spiritual activities. There seems to be a solid connection
between the introduction of farming and our first
permanent temples built on sacred space.
The Earliest Alignments
The earliest use of alignments that I know of is found in
Ireland. In the lush green valley of the Boyne River north
of Dublin, Neolithic people of about 3200 BCE created
a spectacular array of massive circular mounds of earth
with cruciform stone-lined tunnels called passage
graves. Some align with the Sun as it rises and sets at
significant points of the year Solstices, Equinoxes and
Cross Quarter days. Others line-up with similar structures,
standing stones and smaller burial mounds that
resemble round barrows.
Martin Brennan has done some magnificent work
with these Irish passage graves and has identified
the oldest leys that I know of in the world. A good
example would be the alignment that starts at Knowth,
a passage grave with two stone-lined tunnels, one
oriented to the Equinox Sunrise, and the other to
the Equinox Sunset. About three quarters of a mile to
the southeast, the line runs through a standing stone,
one of a dozen that surround the best known passage
grave of all, Newgrange. The cruciform chamber of
Newgrange is oriented towards the Winter Solstice
Sunrise. The line from Knowth goes through that chamber
where the main tunnel and side chambers converge.
(Many other alignments with other sites and/or
astronomical events also cross at this point as well.) The
alignment then exits the passage grave and goes
through another of those twelve stones that surround
the site. The alignment ends about a half a mile further
to the southeast where it hits Mound 6, one of the
round barrow-shaped mounds that are also found in
the valley of the Boyne River. Five points within two miles,
all are related to ritual, and they're in a straight line.
Several hundred years after the construction of the
Boyne Valley complex, the Neolithic people of south-central
England began to construct an enormous
sacred megalithic complex, a landscape temple that
truly staggers the mind. She is called Avebury.
Avebury
Ah, Avebury! One's being is confounded and delighted
by the impressive West Kennet long barrow, a magnificent
burial chamber oriented towards the Equinox
Sunrise, and Silbury Hill, the largest wo/man made prehistoric
mound in Great Britain (in all of Europe, for that
matter). And then there is the magnificent henge monument
itself, the Avebury stone circles. There are three
of them, two small (or should I say normal-sized circles)
inside the truly enormous ring of huge sarsen stones.
These megaliths delineate and dominate the inner
bank of the deep ditch and towering outer bank that
create the henge. All of this was accomplished around
the beginning of the third millennium before the
Christian era by Stone Age farmers using antlers for
picks and oxen hip-bones for shovels.
But let's turn our attention to that apparently serpentine
West Kennet Avenue. It consists of two rows of
large,mostly either diamond- or phallic-shaped stones
that run parallel to each other for over a mile and a half
from the circles at Avebury to a smaller circle of stone
and wood posts called The Sanctuary, located above
the hamlet of East Kennet. In the eighteenth century
drawings of Avebury by William Stukeley, the West
Kennet Avenue is one of two that run from outlying
sites to the main circle, much like the fallopian tubes go
to the uterus in the human female reproductive system.
Following this logic, The Sanctuary would be analogous
to one of the ovaries.Perhaps this image stretches things
a bit, but make no mistake;we are in the territory of the
Earth Mother.
It turns out that rather than being serpentine, seemingly
constructed in a series of arcs, the West Kennet
Avenue is actually made up of a series of straight lines.
Paul Devereux, Director of the Dragon Project, and I,
have been interested in the alignment potential there
for some time.At the top of the first gradual rise leading
away from the henge itself is one particular segment of
that series. It includes two of the larger stones that are
left in the entire Avenue. Their major axes align along
one of the best leys I have ever seen. These two stones
are aligned in such a way that one can just see between
them. In one direction to the southeast one sees the
tip of another standing stone in that row and above it,
a Bronze Age round barrow in the distance can be seen
through the slit between the two stones.
To the northwest, in the opposite direction, the
steeple of the village church in Avebury can be seen
through the vesica pisces frame of the stones in the
Avenue. In the mid-ground between the church and
the sighting sarsen stones, the ley runs along a perfectly
straight section of the massive ditch of the Avebury
henge itself. This occurrence of a ley tangentially
striking circular prehistoric features is quite common
in Britain.
So here we have an alignment that has six valid
points on a dead straight line in less than a mile and
a half! On top of that, the two stones in the middle of
the ley focus one's vision to an incredibly narrow
visual alignment in both directions. The points all have
primary water under them. It's the tightest ley I've ever
seen. It's about four inches (10cm) wide! While there
is primary water under each of the points, there is
no dowseable energy ley running concurrently with
that ley.
This seems to be a second phase in our ancestors'
use of alignments. The first leys developed naturally as
a result of building on power centers. There was no
intent to put the sites in a line; it just happened because
some of the sites were on the same energy ley. But
by the time of the construction of the West Kennet
Avenue, we had learned how to make intentional
alignments that didn't necessarily have energy leys
flowing along them. Still, the specific points were
chosen because they had primary water under them.
Stone rings like Avebury have been found to mark
the crossings of two or more leys. Dowsers find that
they also mark the crossing of energy leys over primary
water. One of the ongoing spiritual aspects associated
with ancient sacred sites is fertility. Perhaps those who
worked with the Earth Energies might have wanted to
spread their fertilizing aspects over more of the countryside.
(Being a country boy, a vision of a spiritual
manure spreader comes to mind here.) Having realized
that the holy places were naturally aligning themselves,
perhaps these non-energy leys might have served as
channels for energies of fertility that were reflected
down them from power centers like Avebury.
A cyclotron is used by physicists to speed up atomic
and sub-atomic particles in a circular accelerator by
spinning them round and round until they reach the
appropriate velocity. The particles are then shunted off
on to the target. Dowser Tom Graves has suggested a
cyclotron effect at Rollright stone circle. Graves found
energy being spun around the circle, and then released
outwards at various points along the circumference.This
cyclotron effect is especially interesting when we consider
our Avebury non-energy ley is tangent to the circle.
The only non-Neolithic point on that ley is the Christian
church, and, as one of the points, it stands alone to the
northwest of the circle, on the wrong side of the flow. All
the other points are to the southeast. If the energy at the
Avebury circle were swirling in a widdershins or counterclockwise
direction, and released at the point where
our non-energy ley is tangent to that circle, it would flow
down that ley, along the Avenue towards the round
barrow on the horizon, thus spreading the fertilizing
potential of these power centers out into the land.
All of the ley markers discussed at Newgrange and at
Avebury (standing stones, passage graves, round barrows,
the henge monument and the church) have
primary water under them. All except for one the
church at Avebury were built or constructed over a
thousand years before Christ. All of them have clear
unambiguous connections with ritual, ceremony and
sacred space. I believe that the first leys were the
unintentional result of early farmers working with their
local power centers to access the source of spiritual
power on a year 'round basis. The alignments just
happened. They were the result of putting ceremonial
sites on places where the yin comes together with the
yang, where Earth Mother comes together with the
Solar Father. Within five hundred years of the earliest
leys, by the first part of the third millennium BCE,
wo/man had learned to construct intentional alignments
that connected sacred sites, but did not necessarily
run concurrently with energy leys.
It is difficult to find strictly Neolithic leys. There are
some good examples in Cornwall, and at the Devil's
Arrows up in Yorkshire, but people all around the world
have been intentionally building their sacred sites
on power centers until comparatively recent times.
Europeans did so until around the end of the time
of the great Gothic Cathedrals. Some people, the
Aborigines of Australia, geomancers in Hong Kong, and
some Native Americans, just to mention a few, are still
doing it today.As a result of this multiple cultural use of
the same Earth Energy system, leys tend to be somewhat
mixed in the sense that there are sacred sites of
quite different time periods on the same alignment.
This is a particularly hard one for archaeologists and
anthropologists to understand because they just can't
imagine that something that we don't know about
today was recognized by those primitive savages,
utilized by various succeeding pagan cultures, and also
known by those men of God who built the Gothic
Cathedrals.We forgot because the witch trials and other
heresy persecutions of Western Man made us forget.
But more of that later.
The First Signs of Western Man
At about 1000 BCE one finds a new feature intruding
into the confines of what initially had been sacred
alignments. Bit by bit, the secular begins to intrude.
John Barnatt, an archaeologist who has done a lot of
work on Dartmoor and up in the Arbor Low area
in Derbyshire, has postulated that the archaeological
evidence seems to suggest that prior to around the
second millennium before Christ, the people were held
together (perhaps controlled?) by spiritual power
healing, fertility, oracular, and heightened awareness.
Everyone experienced this power. The ceremonial
centers started with a big blast at Avebury in the fourth
millennium, with its breath-taking long barrows (actually,
they are breath-giving) and were followed by the
builders of the magnificent stone rings. These became
more and more complicated until they culminated
with the tremendous sarsen trilithons of what is called
Stonehenge III in about 1500 BCE. It was as if we were
building more and more elaborate structures to hold
down that elusive quicksilver energy. And we were
forgetting how to do it.
At Stonehenge we can see this shift in a different way.
Stonehenge was constructed in three different chunks.
Stonehenge I was the earliest, 3100 BCE ± and consists
of the henge (the ditch and bank), the four small Station
Stones that dot the Aubrey Holes (52 circular chalk-filled pits just inside the ditch), and the Heel Stone(s).
Everyone could clearly see what was going on at the
center. Everyone could be involved.
Stonehenge II added the human-sized Prescelly
Blue Stones around 2150 BCE. When the builders of
Stonehenge III, at just the beginning of the second
millennium BCE, added the tall trilithons in the center,
the lay people around the periphery could no longer
see what was going on in the center. In a final blooming
from around 2000 to 1500 BCE, approximately 60 of
the bluestones were reset in a circle immediately inside
the sarsen circle, and another 19 were set inside the
great horseshoe of sarsen trilithons. A similar development
took place in the development of rood screens
in the Gothic Cathedrals 3000 years later. Perhaps this
represents a move on the part of the priesthood to
consolidate their power. In any event, the end result
of the trilithons and rood screens was that less and
less people really knew what was going on. This concentration
of spiritual power into the hands of a few led
next to the desire to have power down on the physical
level as well. And there's good evidence for this in the
Iron Age that arose soon after Stonehenge III, around
1000 BCE.
There's a famous ley that Sir Norman Lockyer, an early
astro-archaeologist / archaeo-astronomer (interested in
astronomy and how it relates to ancient sites), found at
the turn of the last century. It begins at a tumulus (2000
BCE ±) just north of Stonehenge where it runs tangentially
to the circular ditch (3100 BCE ±) and then on to an
Iron Age hill fort called Old Sarum.
Hillforts were an introduction of the Iron Age which began in southern
Britain at around 1000 BCE. They were defensive military
positions, the first points on leys that were clearly not
ritualistic in nature. Two millennia later, the Normans
put a military camp in the center of this hill fort. Shortly
thereafter, an impressive church was also built at Old
Sarum; however, the soldiers and the priests didn't get
along, so someone fired an arrow into the air, and the
present Salisbury Cathedral was constructed where it
landed. The ley does not go through the spire of that
building which towers over the crossing of the nave
and transept, but rather, it goes through the high altar,
to the east of the spire.The ley then continues through
two further Iron Age hill forts, Clearbury Ring and
Frankenbury Camp.
It is with the inclusion of hill forts in the Iron Age, all
of which still have primary water under them where the
ley strikes them (often only a glancing blow), that the
use and function of leys in Britain begin to change.
As Barnatt points out, the people weren't being controlled
and ruled by the spirit anymore, but by force.
Hill forts were not sacred places; they were one man's,
a family's, or clan's statement to the world about their
physical power.
The Romans
The Romans carried on this use of leys for physical purposes
when they built their famous roads on the more
ancient leys. The Romans have always been praised for
their roads.The reality is that they built only the surface
of them.These straight tracks had been used for millennia
as sacred ways, but the Romans debased them by
using them as ways of quickly getting their armies
around Europe. They used spiritual paths for military
purposes. Actually, except for the many examples of
Roman roads on leys, there are very few other Roman
structures in England that are on these alignments.
With a few exceptions, like the foundations of Wells
Cathedral, the Romans just didn't seem to build many
other structures on leys here in Britain. The Romans
were the first people to use these sacred ways for secular
purposes as a matter of national policy. But they
weren't the last. Throughout the rest of history there is
more and more evidence for secular use of alignments.
Pope Gregory and the Benedictines
In the sixth century CE Pope Gregory, in a letter to St
Augustine of Canterbury who was to carry Catholicism
to Britain, cautioned him not to destroy the ancient
sites. Gregory wanted missionaries to destroy the idols,
for sure, but he urged them to build churches on the
older holy places. Even if these missionaries did not
know of these Earth Energies (some clearly did as
evidenced by some beautiful Medieval leys), their
churches would therefore have been automatically
linked to the alignment of earlier holy sites. Again, just
by choosing to place his churches on the previous
culture's sacred spaces, Gregory assured that they fell
into straight lines as they dotted the countryside of
Dark Age Britain.
At least part of the Church at that time, the
Benedictines,were well aware of these Energies. In fact,
Gregory was a Benedictine himself! The Order was
founded by St Benedict in the first half of the sixth
century CE. Unlike earlier orders of the Church, the
Benedictines stressed communal living, and their
abbeys were like homes of Christian families with
abbots as fathers. Perhaps the most fascinating aspect
about them is that throughout Europe, these
Benedictine abbeys and monasteries were built on
major power centers sites with much earlier spiritual
connections as well. Monte Cassino in Italy is one.
And so is Monserrat, a major pilgrimage site on the
side of a mountain of the same name, northwest of
Barcelona in Spain where there is also a black wooden
image of the Virgin supposedly carved by St Luke.
Monserrat was thought to have been the castle of the
Holy Grail. At Fulda, in Germany, St Boniface founded a
Benedictine abbey. It was from Fulda that Christianity
spread throughout central Germany.
The St Michael's Geomantic Corridor
In the English Channel there are two well-known island
power centers that utilized the ley system for sacred
purposes. Both are islands at high tide only; at low tide
they both connect with the mainland. Both Mont
St Michel off the coast of France and St Michael's Mount
off the coast of Cornwall in southwestern England,were
Benedictine abbeys. St Michael's Mount is at one end
of a famous geomantic corridor or dragon path, first
identified by John Michell. He called it the Michael Line,
and it runs in a northeasterly direction to the Beltane
(May Day) Sunrise. It runs through a series of important
English power centers including many that are dedicated
to St Michael or to other dragon-killing saints like
St George and St Margaret. It traverses England from
St Michael's Mount to at least as far as the St Michael's
church in Clifton Hampden, almost two hundred miles
to the northeast in Wiltshire. Because of its length, there
is a great deal of controversy as to the relative straightness
of the entire line.Part of the problem is that due to
the curvature of the earth, one should be employing
spherical geometry rather than plane geometry to calculate
its straightness. Hamish Miller and Paul
Broadhurst dowsed their Michael and Mary lines running
up this same alignment like the Ida and Pingala,
the twin serpents of the kundalini.
Three of the points in the middle of this geomantic
corridor are of particular interest. The southern
entrance of Avebury is at one end, and Burrowbridge
Mump in Somerset is at the other.The major axis of the
Mump (mound) aligns with this corridor. In between
them is perhaps the most famous of the St Michael
points on this dragon path the Glastonbury Tor,
whose major axis also runs along this May Day (Beltane)
alignment. Glastonbury was an island at the time when
Joseph of Arimathea, the uncle of Jesus, came and built
the first above ground Christian church shortly after the
crucifixion. The Celtic Christianity that was formed was
a beautiful blend of Christianity and Druidism; the
Christ energy was an important source when working
in the spiritual realms, but Nature was also held in
reverence. Glastonbury remained an important Celtic
Christian shrine until it was taken over in the 10th century
by guess who? the Benedictines. It then became
one of the most powerful religious centers in England
until Henry VIII broke it up in 1539.
By holding the important mountains and other geomantically
strategic sites, the Benedictines attempted
to control Europe for the Church.As they built on power
centers, their monasteries and abbeys were automatically
plugged-in to the ley system.These energies were
tapped to ensure the primacy of the Church of Rome
and its growing political control as well.
This control by the Church culminated in the person
of St Bernard of Clairvaux. While not a Benedictine,
he was an abbot of a Cistercian monastery at Clairvaux.
He refused higher Church offices, but his obvious
spirituality, his immense capacity of mind, will-power,
and eloquence made him the most powerful man in
Europe in the first half of the twelfth century. He was a
maker and confidante of Popes, started the Second
Crusade, and was a peacemaker among the rulers of
western Europe.He consummated the art of combining
the use of spiritual power with political/physical power.
This was a totally different use of spiritual energies
than the builders of Newgrange I had in mind.
My argument so far is that at least initially, leys were
the result of building on power centers as a means of
enhancing spiritual growth. At first there was no intent
to build in straight lines; it just happened as a result of
building on the underlying energy system. By 3000 BCE
the awareness grew that we had been building sacred
sites naturally in straight lines.Then came the first intentional
alignments that did not coincide with energy
leys. Initially, these too were made solely for spiritual
purposes.The four-inch wide ley at Avebury is an example
of this.But the introduction of Iron Age hill forts and,
later, Roman roads and Medieval castles as points on
older leys, indicates that Western Man was developing
alternative uses for this phenomenon.
There isn't a specific date when the spiritual uses of
the leys ceased and the political/secular ones commenced,
as there was a long period of over a thousand
years when both were going on at the same time.There
are several examples of purely ecclesiastical leys in
Medieval England. Brian Larkman, an Earth Mysteries
researcher, has uncovered a ley in York that, in addition
to several other features, includes three churches, the
magnificent York Minster, and the Deanery Chapter
House all on that same ley! Five Christian structures
on an energy ley; all have related primary water
under them.
But our days of conscious knowledge of the Earth
Energies were numbered. Western Man ensured that
his linear objective consciousness would predominate
by waging a systematic war of elimination against
the intuitives and the Goddess. One of the first things
that Constantine did after he made the Christian
Church the state religion of the Roman Empire was to
genocidally root out the Gnostics, intuitives and followers
of Christ who demanded the right to hear and
interpret God's word for themselves. No one was to
be allowed to think for themselves, to define their relationship
with Christ for themselves.
Heresies and the Witch Trials
As the Dark Ages went on, the Church found more and
more ways to deny the people access to spiritual
realms. These attacks culminated in atrocities that are
similar to America's genocidal war on the Native
Americans, or Stalin's decimation of dissidents in Russia.
If the treatment of those people the Church called
heretics or witches had occurred anywhere else on
Earth other than in supposedly civilized Europe, modern
historians would have called the torture and burnings
at the stake truly barbaric acts of primitive savages.
(Actually the term "primitive savage"has come to mean,
to me, a culture that is probably very much more spiritually
advanced than we are.)
The last time that human sacrifice was practised in
Europe was during the witchcraft persecutions.Witches
were perceived as a threat by the Church for several
reasons. They were the remnant of the Goddess-centered
religion who used power centers and incantations
to connect with the spiritual without going
through the Church. Also, its Earth Mother-centered
path was at variance with the Church's patriarchal mode
of operation.
The Medical Profession Lends a Hand
In the villages of the Middle Ages, it was women who
provided the medical care. These healers knew about
things like herbs and spells. Many were also midwives.
This became a threat to a new professional class of men
that was arising doctors. "I've just been through five
years of intensive study at University to be a doctor.
How can this untrained peasant woman know anything
about delivering babies?" The medical profession
joined the Church in the persecution of witches (read:
women, and mostly lower class). Western Man continued
to burn witches/women at the stake up into
the seventeenth century. In Salem,Massachusetts, they
were killing women called witches in 1692. The last
woman in Scotland to be killed for being a witch was
put to death in 1722.
Eventually they had run out of lower class women, so
they began to go for the upper class wives.But with the
seventeenth century came the Age of Rationalism. An
aristocratic husband could now argue, "What are you
picking on my wife for? You know those realms don't
rationally exist anyway!" So the persecutions ceased,
and the knowledge of the Earth Energies faded away.
Dowsing as Heresy
It's easy to see how dowsing got into trouble. It is
potentially a spiritual tool that doesn't have to go
through the Church to get answers. As dowsing was
thought to be a craft practised by witches, it fell into
extreme disfavor. It had been practised through the
ages by those who were in tune with the deeper harmonies
of the Earth Energies, but dowsing was a direct
challenge to the patriarchal linear thinking and rational
methodology of Western Man and his Church especially
when it was used as a tool for direct personal perception
of the spiritual (it's also called 'divining').
Dowsing had to be stamped out. Only its use as a tool
to locate drinking water was deemed to be so essential
that dowsing for it had to be tolerated as an acceptable
channel to intuitive knowledge.
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