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The Devil Is a Gentleman: Exploring America's Religious Fringe
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The Devil Is a Gentleman: Exploring America's Religious Fringe Hardback - 2006

by J.C. Hallman


From the publisher

J. C. Hallman, a graduate of the Iowa and Johns Hopkins writing programs, has published fiction and nonfiction in GQ and other national magazines. His first book, The Chess Artist, was published to wide acclaim. Hallman is currently a writer in residence at Sweet Briar College.

Details

  • Title The Devil Is a Gentleman: Exploring America's Religious Fringe
  • Author J.C. Hallman
  • Binding Hardback
  • Edition First Edition; F
  • Pages 322 pages
  • Language EN
  • Publisher Random House Publishing Group, New York
  • Date 2006-05-16
  • ISBN 9781400061723

Excerpt

Infinite

Yet how believe as the common people believe, steeped as they are in grossest superstition? It is impossible--but yet their life! Their life! It is normal! It is happy! It is an answer to the question!

--William James

The Andromedans hear your voice like distant amusement park music

converged on by ambulance sirens

and they understand everything.

They're on your side. They forgive you.

--Denis Johnson

1. Applewhite

I coasted my rental over Lake Hodges, on I-15 toward Del Dios Highway. The hills of California wriggled and waved like crumpled bedsheets. This was homecoming for me. I grew up on the messy suburban folds. The January warmth and the chaparral minimalism outside the car were offset by nostalgia, the scrutiny of personal faith attendant to voyages home.

When I was a boy, Lake Hodges had appeared overnight. The lake had dried long before I was born but the bridge had always been there, an anachronistic hulk, spanning a divot where cows roamed. One winter it rained for a month and there was the lake, proof that Noah had been right. I crossed the span and the road doubled back to follow the shoreline, pretty curves connecting the dry inland burb of Escondido to the coastal paradise of Del Mar. Del Dios Highway means "God's Highway." The twisting road jutted from steep canyon walls above the lake. Palatial estates rode the crest of the hills.

I left Del Dios well before the coast, turning in toward a residential neighborhood that ranked among the richest in the nation. I stopped the car to jot a note. I smelled the air outside for the first time since the airport and thought: shampoo. It was eucalyptus--that's how long I'd been gone. California, a state-sized mecca for new religious movements, was that place where plants didn't have leaves. Instead they had fronds, silver dollars, feather dusters, spines, the juicy tubules of ice plant, the thick gnarls of cacti.

I was looking for a house where thirty-nine adults had killed themselves in the name of seeking. The incident was five years old now, and I found that all my maps were wrong. The names of the nearby streets had been changed in the wake of the event. And that wasn't all. The house where the seekers took their poison had been razed. I learned all this by fumbling about, knocking on expensive doors and lying about my credentials as a journalist. I triangulated from a few sets of vague directions and found myself on a sloping street with four driveways climbing away from a dead end. Each had an automatic gate and an intercom system. One of the driveways appeared abandoned, covered with pine needles blown into curvy drifts like sand. Everything was quiet. I jumped the gate and ascended.

If California was a draw for new religious movements, then San Diego, for some reason, drew UFO groups. I'd come home to visit two such groups, each founded by an unlikely couple. One was now a ghost; the other had just experienced the failure of the prophecy that had fueled their existence for twenty-seven years.

This was still early in my study of religion--in fact, it was my first step, taken on a whim--but even so it had a Jamesian goal. If you know nothing else about the thinking of William James on religion, you might still know of James's categories of the healthy-minded folk and the sick souls. The healthy-minded type were the world's optimists, cheerful almost to a fault, and the sick souls were the pessimists, the cynical intellectual brooders. That's about what I knew of James when I first went back to California--from a mostly forgotten course in psychology--but even with just that scrap of knowledge I'd had the thought that the two UFO groups I was there to visit might neatly express James's most basic human bifurcation.

Details on the first group were hard to come by. Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Lu Nettles had been drawn together in the early seventies by mutual interest in pop metaphysics. Applewhite had checked into a Texas hospital where Nettles was employed as a nurse. She quickly became his Nightingale. The relationship was immaculate--Applewhite was a homosexual secure in his closet--and the belief they came to shape together combined Christian scripture, metaphysical teachings, and UFO lore.

The couple quickly turned prophet, pitching themselves as seers of a Revelation model. They took new names: Guinea and Pig, Bo and Peep, Ti and Do, or just The Two. Their first success at recruitment came in 1975 in Los Angeles. Twenty-four people abandoned their lives to fall in behind the message. An even more successful event followed in Waldport, Oregon. The earliest teachings of the group described the familiar Human Level of experience, and told of a cloud that was actually a spaceship that would take them all to the Next Level. Recruitment efforts continued through 1975 with meetings throughout the Midwest. Then they hit a snag. Two men from Oregon infiltrated the group in an attempt to find a friend who had vanished. The Two feared it was an assassination attempt, and vanished themselves.

The group struggled without them. They lost members as often as they attracted them and split into weak factions spread thin through the country. The Two reappeared in 1976, and gathered the hundred members who remained to initiate what sociologists have since called the group's "camping phase." Now the emphasis shifted toward deindividualization. Members wore uniforms and were assigned a variety of tasks, such as "fuel preparation" (cooking) and "brain exercises" (jigsaw puzzles). They were also encouraged to deny their sexuality (a number of members eventually underwent voluntary castration like early Christian ascetics). Nettles died around 1985. The camping phase continued until the early nineties, when Applewhite inherited $300,000. The group changed direction again, renting suburban homes and taking mainstream jobs. In 1994, they ran a full-page advertisement in USA Today announcing that civilization was about to be recycled. They rented a large home in Rancho Santa Fe and went high-tech, starting a webpage design company called Higher Source. The company's own webpage was called Heaven's Gate.

The Hale-Bopp comet, streaking past Earth in 1997, offered Applewhite the opportunity to claim that his spaceship-cloud had arrived. The Heaven's Gate website announced that a shadow in the wake of the comet was the ship that would carry them to the Next Level. The group had been heavily studied by sociologists in the seventies and eighties, but by the mid-nineties it had been years since anyone had paid any attention to them. It would take an anonymous phone call to the police to reveal that late in March 1997, the group had arranged their ascension to the comet by mixing phenobarbital with either applesauce or pudding and washing it down with vodka. The members were all dressed identically, and some had recorded video farewells. Each was found with five dollars and several quarters in one pocket.

Heaven's Gate was precisely the kind of group that William James's detractors have cited to criticize the voluntaristic system that James crafted to finagle his combination of belief and cynicism. But the criticism isn't fair. Not even James was willing to wipe away what he called the "wrong side of religion's account." Fanaticism, he said, was loyalty carried to a convulsive extreme, and to the charge "that religion and fanaticism are twins, we cannot make an unqualified denial." The problem, as James saw it, was fanaticism's conception of God. Extreme loyalty to a despotic deity lent itself to atrocity. "But as soon as the God is represented as less content on his own honor and glory," James said, "[fanaticism] ceases to be a danger." Better gods make for better religions.

But no one really knew what the Heaven's Gate followers' conception of God was in their final days, and in a world where James has mostly been set aside, the best choice seemed to be to forget the whole thing. The names of the streets in Rancho Santa Fe were changed to confuse pilgrims who would try to commune with land whose only memory was fear and latent guilt. And the house's owner bulldozed the place just in case it could remember, too.

Better to play it safe, I agreed, as I huffed up the driveway's incline past birds-of-paradise sheathed in violent weeds and flowering trees struggling for bloom. The estate sat near the top of one of those crimped California sheets, the steep grades made accessible with numerous sets of concrete stairs. Only the foundation of the house remained, a life-sized concrete blueprint spattered with weeds making a go of it in the cracks. A tennis court covered the flat at the peak of the hill, and only this and a brick gazebo had been left untouched. A swimming pool and a jacuzzi yawned empty and trapped lizards. Just before the suicides, the only contact Heaven's Gate adherents had with the outside world was a yard sale they held just before the spaceship was due to arrive. The members struck outsiders as colorless and robotic, but Applewhite himself was said to be lively, talkative, even friendly. Sociologists tend to dismiss brainwashing as the explanation for events like Heaven's Gate. It's too easy--like imagining that a haunted house can be exorcised with heavy machinery, or that history amounts to street signs. Besides, high rates of turnover suggested that membership in Heaven's Gate was entirely voluntary. As crazy as the movement seemed, there was something about the world that made it seem wackier than Applewhite's hybrid of beliefs.

I lingered for a time inside the foundation as a lonely trespasser, looking out across California. Afternoon mist threaded through a canyony maze of rises and gulleys, and the sun began to set between two stately palms. Great leaves had been falling from these trees--or not leaves, but huge man-sized fronds now scattered all about, conspicuous as corpses. I didn't have to talk myself into the sense that the land was haunted. I had to talk myself out of it.

A common enough explanation for unusual belief systems claims that people believe what they need to believe. But James never bought it. It was a fine enough theory, he said, until it was applied to what you believed, when of course you knew that your belief was a revelation of the living truth. At the same time, however, James acknowledged that different molds of people had different kinds of happiness available to them. There were varieties of religious experience precisely because people came in varieties. This was why he was willing, carefully, and with any number of caveats and exceptions, to distill categories of people, the sick souls and the healthy-minded type. Before this, however, James had published "Is Life Worth Living," an essay that defended any belief that helped make sense of the world:

We have a right to believe the physical order to be only a partial order . . . a right to supplement it by an unseen spiritual order which we assume on trust, if only thereby life may seem to us better worth living again.

Of course, the problem with Heaven's Gate's unseen order was that it hadn't made life seem particularly worth living. Was the group made up of sick souls or the healthy-minded? James considered himself a sick soul, and had contemplated suicide, seemingly at length, as a young man. But Heaven's Gate members might just as easily have resembled the healthy-minded types who saw good in everything, even their own deaths. The difference between sick souls and the healthy-minded was precisely this: the healthy-minded individual blinked out the darker side of existence in favor of optimism and contentedness; the sick soul was more methodical and empirical, could not ignore life's shadows, and generally had to make sacrifices to correct a world imperfectly built. Which group Heaven's Gate ultimately belonged to didn't matter because either way something had gone awry. They were the wrong side of religion's account. James had taken as his purpose the defense of the flip side of the account, when religion did not descend into fanaticism. What this now meant for me was climbing back over the fence and driving my rental across San Diego to the second UFO group I had come to see.

I tried the neighbors before leaving. Two of them refused to speak to me through their intercoms, and the third was simply quiet. Just as I gave up the house's owner appeared, a woman in a Mercedes returning home. I slunk up beside the car as her gate pulled aside too slow for her to avoid me. She looked out at me sadly. She knew what I would say, but pushed the button that lowered her window anyway.

I sort of lied about being a reporter.

"I don't talk about that," she said. "I wish I could help you, but it was just too horrible."

2. Fairy Godmother

By 2001, I had left Atlantic City behind, but not before my religious curiosity had taken another step toward religious study. I attended more services. They were not Vietnamese this time, not even Catholic. I tagged along with a girlfriend to another urban church. This one combined Baptism and Pentecostalism. There was a lot of music, and sometimes there were guest speakers whose talks were rapid-fire rants. My girlfriend and I tended to stay in the back, but up front people had their foreheads batted and there was some writhing around on the floor. I wanted to creep forward and take notes, but I worried what my girlfriend would think. Sometimes I loaned money to my girlfriend only to have her turn around and tithe 10 percent of it. It wasn't a relationship that would last. But even then, at the back of the church, craning my neck for a view, I had the thought that a study could be made of travel to America's more unusual forms of religious expression.

So perhaps that's how I found myself in December 2001, moved to a new town, tinkering around on the Internet, surfing for religious movements to read about. I stumbled across the Unarius Academy of Science. In 1974, Unarius's prophet, Uriel, Queen of the Archangels, made the prediction that in the year 2001 Muons from the planet Myton would land on a small plot outside San Diego, beginning for the planet Earth (a.k.a. the Insane Planet of the Robots) a spiritual renaissance of logic and reason. But now Uriel was dead and it was ten days before the thirty-year-old prophecy would officially fail. I had to decide whether to visit them quickly. I was about to fail myself. I'd left my job behind in New Jersey and my bank account was homing in on zero, and when I tallied the expenses of the trip it came to something like 70 percent of my net worth.

"So will this be a spiritual journey for you?" said Celeste Appel, a longtime member of Unarius, when I called to ask if I could attend their first meeting after the failed prediction.

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