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Dark Secrets of the New Age: Satan's Plan for a One World Religion Paperback – February 1, 2000
by
Texe Marrs
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Texe Marrs
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Print length286 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherRivercrest Publishing
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Publication dateFebruary 1, 2000
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Dimensions5.68 x 0.76 x 8.58 inches
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ISBN-100966742141
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ISBN-13978-0966742145
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Texe Marrs is author of the landmark #1 national bestseller, Dark Secrets of the New Age, and 35 other books. He has taught American defense policy, international affairs, and political science at the University of Texas at Austin and two other universities. A retired career officer in the U.S. Air Force, he served throughout Europe and Asia. His Power of Prophecy shortwave radio program is heard around the world.
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Product details
- Publisher : Rivercrest Publishing; 2nd ed. edition (February 1, 2000)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 286 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0966742141
- ISBN-13 : 978-0966742145
- Item Weight : 10.7 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.68 x 0.76 x 8.58 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#588,343 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #142 in Christian Fundamentalism
- #183 in Religious Fundamentalism (Books)
- #373 in Religious Cults (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
37 global ratings
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To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.
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Top reviews from the United States
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Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2011
Verified Purchase
very informative book, , it helps if you are a born-again bible-believer to really grasp everything that is covered here.
11 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2014
Verified Purchase
This was one of the best books i've ever read .
I read it twice and let a lady who waz going to a pro choice rally in washington D.C. and after reading never went.
I read it twice and let a lady who waz going to a pro choice rally in washington D.C. and after reading never went.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2013
Verified Purchase
this book is very true and scary if you are not a christian. our world is in a big mess this writer seams to know his bible well .i read all his books.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2009
Verified Purchase
i read
Authorized
King James Bible
is the only Book
like no other book
our Bible is In Legal
Biblical English
and Holy Book
was written
Final Authority
to prevent any
doubletalk...
like
it takes
a particular level
of intelligence
sensitivity
need for
experimenting
to be attractive
to the unholy
from the other side
to become channel
or possessed
as i was reading
'Dark Secrets...'
Indeed, His Son Jesus
bought us
we are His
in His love for us
he paid the price
and now he offers to us
the world's
richest possession
greater than all the
diamond mines in South Africa
all the gold and jewels
that King Solomon
ever possessed:
the priceless gifts
of forgiveness
of our sins
contentment
while on earth
and the incredibly
valuable
rewards that await
each believer in heaven
Authorized
King James Bible
is the only Book
like no other book
our Bible is In Legal
Biblical English
and Holy Book
was written
Final Authority
to prevent any
doubletalk...
like
it takes
a particular level
of intelligence
sensitivity
need for
experimenting
to be attractive
to the unholy
from the other side
to become channel
or possessed
as i was reading
'Dark Secrets...'
Indeed, His Son Jesus
bought us
we are His
in His love for us
he paid the price
and now he offers to us
the world's
richest possession
greater than all the
diamond mines in South Africa
all the gold and jewels
that King Solomon
ever possessed:
the priceless gifts
of forgiveness
of our sins
contentment
while on earth
and the incredibly
valuable
rewards that await
each believer in heaven
4 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2011
Verified Purchase
I like the book,it got a little kooky for one or two chapters towards the end but overall its a good read.
5 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2018
I added 2 stars simply because at the very least, you can get a good chuckle out of the read, remembering the maudlin yet humorous claims of the Satanic Panic of the 1980s of an occultic devil hiding under every corporate brand or non-sanitized bit of secular media.
Would've been better if it was marketed as a satire. From its lack of accurate information, to it's grandiose attempt at strawmanning, this book is one of many that are responsible for people like myself turning their backs on religion. In its an attempt to fear monger, it invents ridiculous conspiracies that fall apart instantly with just 15 minutes of factual, nonbiased research. From the claims that the "New Age movement" is non-inclusive of acknowledging Jesus Christ as a divine being (not only untrue, but there are many New Age belief systems that centralize around Jesus as a divine spirit master) , to the claims that there is an underground coordinated faction of "New Agers" who are conspiring a diabolical plan for global domination (have you ever MET people in the New Age community? No offense to them but they'd be lucky if they can agree on coordinating a bake sale), Marrs attempts to position himself as some sort of spiritual cultural pundit, and fails miserably to provide any factual, rationally verified information.
I added 2 stars simply because at the very least, you can get a good chuckle out of the read, remembering the maudlin yet humorous claims of the Satanic Panic of the 1980s of an occultic devil hiding under every corporate brand or non-sanitized bit of secular media.
I added 2 stars simply because at the very least, you can get a good chuckle out of the read, remembering the maudlin yet humorous claims of the Satanic Panic of the 1980s of an occultic devil hiding under every corporate brand or non-sanitized bit of secular media.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Good for a laugh to kill time at the laundromat
By Elana on May 2, 2018
Would've been better if it was marketed as a satire. From its lack of accurate information, to it's grandiose attempt at strawmanning, this book is one of many that are responsible for people like myself turning their backs on religion. In its an attempt to fear monger, it invents ridiculous conspiracies that fall apart instantly with just 15 minutes of factual, nonbiased research. From the claims that the "New Age movement" is non-inclusive of acknowledging Jesus Christ as a divine being (not only untrue, but there are many New Age belief systems that centralize around Jesus as a divine spirit master) , to the claims that there is an underground coordinated faction of "New Agers" who are conspiring a diabolical plan for global domination (have you ever MET people in the New Age community? No offense to them but they'd be lucky if they can agree on coordinating a bake sale), Marrs attempts to position himself as some sort of spiritual cultural pundit, and fails miserably to provide any factual, rationally verified information.By Elana on May 2, 2018
I added 2 stars simply because at the very least, you can get a good chuckle out of the read, remembering the maudlin yet humorous claims of the Satanic Panic of the 1980s of an occultic devil hiding under every corporate brand or non-sanitized bit of secular media.
Images in this review
9 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2012
I don't read many of the contemporary Christian "anti-New Age" books, since I've learned by word of mouth many of their uncritical disdain for psychology. There are too many other good books to read, so the likes of Dave Hunt and Constance Cumby have been dropped by the wayside. Crossway Books seduced me with this one, though, and I was more pleased with the result.
Marrs, in his Dark Secrets, doesn't hardly touch psychology at all, and when he does it is with both alarming justification and with quotes and links that aren't the usual. (We all know many of our great theoriest swallowed the garbage, like Jung, Fromm, Horney, Rogers, Maslow, Perls, Reik, Kubler-Ross, and others.) Rather than assaulting psychology, Marrs examines the Satanic elements of the New Age movement. Documentation is excellent throughout the book. The Occult definitely doesn't represent mainstream America, but he does show that we are many times taken in unaware because modern Occultism plays on many of the central themes of modern humanism: relativistic values, hedonism, narcissism, psychic determinism, sexual and familial relativism.
He calls secular humanism the New Age movement's "fellow traveler." And psychologists have been heavily involved in the formation of New Age ideology. The Association for Humanistic Psychology is heavily New Age (Marrs only donates a paragraph, but I've been on their mailing list for 10 years and have a file full of guru seminars.) A psychologist wrote the Course in Miracles and other parapsychologists at UCLA produced and promoted the book and movement. My beloved Esalen Institute, where I confess I still make a pilgrimage almost every year, is distinctly New Age. Many psychologists and psychiatrists write new Age Christ Consciousness texts.
Marrs, though, walks on the fine line of being like so many other "conspiratorial" books. Though one can easily see similarities in the civil religion of Rousseau or the humanistic religion of Comte, Marrs links the New Age religion squarely with ancient Babylon. Marrs' treatment is much more balanced than many of the statements of Lindsay, Crouch, Hunt, Swaggart, and Wilkerson, but sometimes borders on the same hysteria. He is a sensationalist doomsayer who thinks that the end of the world is coming any minute. Christ and His Kingdom are not the victors: Satan is truly Prince of this world. Nothing really happened at the Cross except personal salvation, and so Marrs' program calls for more personal salvation before the coming Armageddon.
And Marrs, like many others on this theme, sometimes does slip into loosely linking more mainstream thinkers and Christians into New Age thought without much evidence. His statements about the World Council of Churches, the Prosperity movement, and a few others just aren't grounded in much evidence. People who have a couple points in common cannot really be linked in the same movement.
Marrs, in his Dark Secrets, doesn't hardly touch psychology at all, and when he does it is with both alarming justification and with quotes and links that aren't the usual. (We all know many of our great theoriest swallowed the garbage, like Jung, Fromm, Horney, Rogers, Maslow, Perls, Reik, Kubler-Ross, and others.) Rather than assaulting psychology, Marrs examines the Satanic elements of the New Age movement. Documentation is excellent throughout the book. The Occult definitely doesn't represent mainstream America, but he does show that we are many times taken in unaware because modern Occultism plays on many of the central themes of modern humanism: relativistic values, hedonism, narcissism, psychic determinism, sexual and familial relativism.
He calls secular humanism the New Age movement's "fellow traveler." And psychologists have been heavily involved in the formation of New Age ideology. The Association for Humanistic Psychology is heavily New Age (Marrs only donates a paragraph, but I've been on their mailing list for 10 years and have a file full of guru seminars.) A psychologist wrote the Course in Miracles and other parapsychologists at UCLA produced and promoted the book and movement. My beloved Esalen Institute, where I confess I still make a pilgrimage almost every year, is distinctly New Age. Many psychologists and psychiatrists write new Age Christ Consciousness texts.
Marrs, though, walks on the fine line of being like so many other "conspiratorial" books. Though one can easily see similarities in the civil religion of Rousseau or the humanistic religion of Comte, Marrs links the New Age religion squarely with ancient Babylon. Marrs' treatment is much more balanced than many of the statements of Lindsay, Crouch, Hunt, Swaggart, and Wilkerson, but sometimes borders on the same hysteria. He is a sensationalist doomsayer who thinks that the end of the world is coming any minute. Christ and His Kingdom are not the victors: Satan is truly Prince of this world. Nothing really happened at the Cross except personal salvation, and so Marrs' program calls for more personal salvation before the coming Armageddon.
And Marrs, like many others on this theme, sometimes does slip into loosely linking more mainstream thinkers and Christians into New Age thought without much evidence. His statements about the World Council of Churches, the Prosperity movement, and a few others just aren't grounded in much evidence. People who have a couple points in common cannot really be linked in the same movement.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2010
A well written introduction to the New Age. What is the New Age? The author convincingly shows that while Christianity is going through varying degrees of criticism that replacement beliefs are being promoted. That unidentified "spirit guides" wish to take control if you let them. That for some decades, a new awareness or consciousness or even the physical manifestation of some being will usher in a pseudo-utopia and/or another step in man's development.
An actual look at history shows that these things did not happen but even today, people are being asked to believe something else. In summary: the author cautions Christians to be wary of deceptions, to be wary of strange sounding ideas that promise amazing things, and to watch as they continue to reimagine and repackage themselves. There are people out there who are committed to these things and they wish others to join them. There is real evil out there.
An actual look at history shows that these things did not happen but even today, people are being asked to believe something else. In summary: the author cautions Christians to be wary of deceptions, to be wary of strange sounding ideas that promise amazing things, and to watch as they continue to reimagine and repackage themselves. There are people out there who are committed to these things and they wish others to join them. There is real evil out there.
10 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries
Flat earth Christian
5.0 out of 5 stars
Higly recommended
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 4, 2017Verified Purchase
Really good revealing book packed full with knowledge and insight. Good chapter on demons. As Texe says 25% of Jesus's ministry was "dealing" with demons. They are more prevalent today than ever.
Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars
Four Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 4, 2017Verified Purchase
Great book, good condition a swell
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars
Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 17, 2016Verified Purchase
very good book
kathy1
1.0 out of 5 stars
Not scripturally based
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 1, 2013Verified Purchase
Condition okay packaging okay price okay. But book not scripturally safe. Would advise reading it and checking with your Bible and don't take all that is said as truth. Other things spot on ie new age movement.
thank you
Kathleen
thank you
Kathleen
One person found this helpful
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