The Occult Rejects

The Occult Rejects

Occultists, Rejects, and Mystics trying to educate others about magick and occultism so others can figure out who they are and the world around them.

  1. Christian Architecture As Ritual Technology Part 3- Hidden Rooms, Holy Water, & The Dead

    1 天前

    Christian Architecture As Ritual Technology Part 3- Hidden Rooms, Holy Water, & The Dead

    If you enjoy this episode, we’re sure you will enjoy more content like this on The Occult Rejects.  In fact, we have curated playlists on occult topics like grimoires, esoteric concepts and phenomena, occult history, analyzing true crime and cults with an occult lens, Para politics, and occultism in music. Whether you enjoy consuming your content visually or via audio, we’ve got you covered - and it will always be provided free of charge.  So, if you enjoy what we do and want to support our work of providing accessible, free content on various platforms, please consider making a donation to the links provided below.   Thank you and enjoy the episode! Links For The Occult Rejects https://linktr.ee/theoccultrejects Occult Research Institute https://www.occultresearchinstitute.org/ Substack https://substack.com/@theoccultrejects?r=7auau0&utm_campaign=profile&utm_medium=profile-page Cash App https://cash.app/$theoccultrejects Venmo @TheOccultRejects Buy Me A Coffee buymeacoffee.com/TheOccultRejects Patreon https://www.patreon.com/TheOccultRejects BIBLIOGRAPHY Hidden Rooms, Holy Water, and the Dead White, L. Michael. The Social Origins of Christian Architecture, Volume I: Building God’s House in the Roman World: Architectural Adaptation Among Pagans, Jews, and Christians. Trinity Press International, 1996.  Key use: Essential source for early Christian architectural adaptation, especially the shift from domestic and semi-domestic gathering spaces toward more specialized Christian buildings. White’s work is useful for showing that early Christian architecture develops inside a broader Roman social and architectural world, not in isolation. White, L. Michael. The Social Origins of Christian Architecture, Volume II: Texts and Monuments for the Christian Domus Ecclesiae in Its Environment. Trinity Press International, 1997.  Key use: Companion volume for the textual and archaeological evidence behind the domus ecclesiae, early meeting spaces, and the built environment of pre-Constantinian Christianity. Yale University Art Gallery. “Christian Building.” Dura-Europos: Excavating Antiquity.  Key use: Strong anchor for the Dura-Europos Christian building and its wall paintings. Yale notes that the Christian paintings were uncovered in 1932 and that Clark Hopkins described the murals as preserved from more than three-quarters of a century before Constantine recognized Christianity in 312. Yale News. “House Call: A New Study Rethinks Early Christian Landmark.” 2024.  Key use: Useful cautionary source for not oversimplifying Dura-Europos as merely a domestic “house church.” The report highlights recent scholarship reexamining how domestic the Dura Christian building really was and why its architectural classification needs care. Smarthistory. “Dura-Europos.”  Key use: Accessible overview of Dura-Europos as a multicultural Roman frontier site, including the adapted Christian building used as a meeting place and baptistery in the first half of the third century. Peppard, Michael. The World’s Oldest Church: Bible, Art, and Ritual at Dura-Europos, Syria. Yale University Press, 2016.  Key use: Major source for the Dura-Europos Christian building, its baptistery, biblical imagery, ritual use, and the danger of reading the site too simply through later church categories. Snyder, Graydon F. Ante Pacem: Archaeological Evidence of Church Life Before Constantine. Mercer University Press, revised edition, 2003.  Key use: Important archaeological source for Christian life before Constantine, especially material evidence for worship, burial, symbols, and everyday Christian practice before public imperial privilege. Mercer University Press identifies the book as focused on archaeological evidence of church life before Constantine. Jensen, Robin M. Baptismal Imagery in Early Christianity: Ritual, Visual, and Theological Dimensions. Baker Academic, 2012.  Key use: Core source for baptismal images, ritual meaning, water, initiation, death and rebirth, and the way visual programs frame baptismal practice. Jensen, Robin M. Understanding Early Christian Art. Routledge, 2000.  Key use: Early Christian visual culture, catacomb imagery, baptismal scenes, Good Shepherd imagery, Jonah, Daniel, Lazarus, and the visual language of salvation and resurrection. Ferguson, Everett. Baptism in the Early Church: History, Theology, and Liturgy in the First Five Centuries. Eerdmans, 2009.  Key use: Major historical and theological source for baptismal practice, initiation, immersion, anointing, catechesis, and the development of baptismal rites. Johnson, Maxwell E. The Rites of Christian Initiation: Their Evolution and Interpretation. Liturgical Press.  Key use: Development of initiation rites, catechumenate, baptism, post-baptismal rites, and how Christian initiation becomes structured over time. Spinks, Bryan D. Early and Medieval Rituals and Theologies of Baptism: From the New Testament to the Council of Trent. Ashgate, 2006.  Key use: Long-range ritual and theological development of baptism, useful for tracking how early baptismal space later becomes more formalized. Britannica. “Catacomb.”  Key use: Baseline definition of catacombs as subterranean cemeteries composed of galleries or passages with recesses for tombs; useful for correcting the popular misconception that catacombs were primarily secret churches rather than burial landscapes. Stevenson, James. The Catacombs: Rediscovered Monuments of Early Christianity. Thames & Hudson, 1978.  Key use: Classic overview of Roman catacombs, burial architecture, inscriptions, symbols, and early Christian memory. Rutgers, Leonard V. Subterranean Rome: In Search of the Roots of Christianity in the Catacombs of the Eternal City. Peeters, 2000.  Key use: Catacombs as archaeological and social evidence, including burial practice, community identity, and the relationship between Jews, Christians, and Roman funerary culture. Fiocchi Nicolai, Vincenzo, Fabrizio Bisconti, and Danilo Mazzoleni. The Christian Catacombs of Rome: History, Decoration, Inscriptions. Schnell & Steiner, 2002.  Key use: Detailed treatment of catacomb history, inscriptions, burial spaces, and visual programs. Brown, Peter. The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity. University of Chicago Press, enlarged edition.  Key use: Essential source for the holy dead, saint veneration, relics, tombs, pilgrimage, and the way corporeal remains became central to Christian religious life. The University of Chicago Press describes Brown’s work as exploring how worship of saints and their corporeal remains became central to religious life in Western Europe. Brown, Peter. The Body and Society: Men, Women, and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity. Columbia University Press, 1988.  Key use: Christian body theology, asceticism, holiness, discipline, and why the body is so central to late antique Christian imagination. Yasin, Ann Marie. Saints and Church Spaces in the Late Antique Mediterranean: Architecture, Cult, and Community. Cambridge University Press, 2009.  Key use: Churches, saints, relics, cult practice, community identity, and how sacred spaces are organized around holy bodies and memory. Grabar, André. Martyrium: Recherches sur le culte des reliques et l’art chrétien antique.  Key use: Classic work on martyr shrines, relic cult, and the relationship between architecture, art, and the holy dead. van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage.  Key use: Separation, liminality, and incorporation. Crucial for baptism, catechumenate, thresholds, initiation, and the movement from outsider to insider. Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure.  Key use: Liminality, threshold states, ritual transition, and communitas. Useful for baptism, catacomb descent, martyr devotion, and controlled access. Kilde, Jeanne Halgren. Sacred Power, Sacred Space: An Introduction to Christian Architecture and Worship. Oxford University Press, 2008.  Key use: Christian buildings as arrangements of power, worship, divine presence, and embodied access. Useful for thresholds, sanctuary divisions, nave, altar, and congregation. Kieckhefer, Richard. Theology in Stone: Church Architecture from Byzantium to Berkeley. Oxford University Press, 2004.  Key use: Church architecture as theology made spatial. Useful for altar, pulpit, nave, threshold, symbolic layout, and worship practice. Krautheimer, Richard. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture. Yale University Press / Pelican History of Art.  Key use: Classic architectural history for early Christian and Byzantine buildings, including the shift from pre-Constantinian spaces to basilicas, baptisteries, martyr shrines, and later monumental forms. Mathews, Thomas F. The Clash of Gods: A Reinterpretation of Early Christian Art. Princeton University Press, 1993.  Key use: Early Christian imagery, visual conflict, ritual meaning, and the development of Christian art within the Roman world. Elsner, Jaś. Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph: The Art of the Roman Empire AD 100–450. Oxford University Press, 1998.  Key use: Roman visual culture, Christian adaptation, imperial imagery, and the shift into Christian public art and architecture. MacMullen, Ramsay. Christianizing the Roman Empire: A.D. 100–400. Yale University Press, 1984.  Key use: Social and historical context for Christian expansion before and after Constantine, useful for understanding how Christian space changes as Christianity grows. Mango, Cyril. Byzantine Architecture.  Key use: Lon Also want to remind people about the website, if you're into reading we have tons of information by multiple contributors, and we got t-shirts up on the site if you're interested. Fun fact, the art is all based on the eyeball. A

    56 分鐘
  2. The Mechanics of Magick: Dark Rooms, Float Tanks, Initiation, and the Brain That Sees Without Light Part 1

    2 天前

    The Mechanics of Magick: Dark Rooms, Float Tanks, Initiation, and the Brain That Sees Without Light Part 1

    Links For The Occult Rejects https://linktr.ee/theoccultrejects Occult Research Institute https://www.occultresearchinstitute.org/ Substack https://substack.com/@theoccultrejects?r=7auau0&utm_campaign=profile&utm_medium=profile-page Cash App https://cash.app/$theoccultrejects Venmo @TheOccultRejects Buy Me A Coffee buymeacoffee.com/TheOccultRejects Patreon https://www.patreon.com/TheOccultRejects Part 1: The Road of Rhythm Part 1 focuses on the drum as an ancient technology of altered consciousness. The argument is not that every beat causes trance, or that neuroscience has proven spirits. The stronger argument is that rhythm enters the human organism through hearing, motor prediction, breath, movement, attention, emotion, expectation, culture, and social synchrony. The drum becomes powerful when sound, body, group, ritual frame, and meaning converge. These sources support the archaeology, neuroscience, EEG research, shamanic studies, possession studies, Indigenous and culturally specific drum traditions, ritual theory, placebo and meaning-response research, ceremonial magic, and modern witchcraft material used in the episode. Core Academic and Scientific Sources Huels, Emma R., Hyoungkyu Kim, UnCheol Lee, Tirsa Bel-Bahar, Ana V. Colmenero, Alexandra Nelson, Stefanie Blain-Moraes, George A. Mashour, and Richard E. Harris. “Neural Correlates of the Shamanic State of Consciousness.” Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15 (2021): 610466.  Use for the strongest modern EEG anchor. This study used high-density EEG with shamanic practitioners and controls during rest, shamanic drumming, and classical music listening. It assessed altered-state reports alongside brain measures such as power, connectivity, signal diversity, and criticality. Use carefully: the study does not prove spirits or show that drumming mechanically causes trance in everyone. It supports the more careful claim that trained practitioners entering shamanic states with drumming show measurable brain-state differences. Gordon, Yoel, Golan Karvat, Noa Dagan, and Ayelet N. Landau. “Neural Tracking at Theta Predicts Drumming-Induced Altered States of Consciousness.” Scientific Reports 16, no. 1 (2026): Article 10204.  Use for the strongest updated drumming/theta/neural-tracking source. This study tested drumming at theta, delta, and alpha-rate rhythms while recording EEG, and found that stronger rhythmic neural tracking at theta was linked to stronger altered-experience reports. Use carefully: this does not mean theta equals the spirit world or that one frequency opens a portal. The serious point is that altered experience may depend partly on how strongly the nervous system tracks rhythmic stimulation. Aparicio-Terrés, R., et al. “The Neurobiology of Altered States of Consciousness Induced by Drumming and Other Rhythmic Sound Patterns.” Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2025.  Use for the newer review literature showing that rhythmic sound is now a serious altered-consciousness research topic. This supports the opening claim that modern academia is examining drumming, rhythmic sound, absorption, relaxation, cognition, and neural activity without reducing the subject to one simple “trance frequency.” The review is especially useful for framing the field as promising but still complex. Neher, Andrew. “Auditory Driving Observed with Scalp Electrodes in Normal Subjects.” Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology 13 (1961): 449–451.  Use for the historical bridge between repetitive sound, EEG, auditory driving, and early scientific interest in rhythmic stimulation. Neher, Andrew. “A Physiological Explanation of Unusual Behavior in Ceremonies Involving Drums.” Human Biology 34, no. 2 (1962): 151–160.  Use carefully. This is useful as an early attempt to connect ceremonial drumming and physiology, but it should be balanced with Rouget because the “drum simply causes trance” argument is too mechanical. Maurer, R., V. K. Kumar, L. Woodside, and R. J. Pekala. “Phenomenological Experience in Response to Monotonous Drumming and Hypnotizability.” American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis 40, no. 2 (1997): 130–145.  Use for monotonous drumming, subjective altered experience, imagery, absorption, and hypnotizability. Maxfield, Melinda C. “Effects of Rhythmic Drumming on EEG and Subjective Experience.” PhD diss., Institute of Transpersonal Psychology, 1990.  Use as older supporting context on drumming, EEG, imagery, body-image changes, and subjective altered experience. Do not make this the main scientific proof; use it as background. Nozaradan, Sylvie, Isabelle Peretz, and André Mouraux. “Tagging the Neuronal Entrainment to Beat and Meter.” The Journal of Neuroscience 31, no. 28 (2011): 10234–10240.  Use for EEG evidence that the brain can track beat and meter. This supports the claim that the brain does not merely hear rhythm as background sound; it can represent rhythmic structure in measurable ways. Nozaradan, Sylvie. “Exploring How Musical Rhythm Entrains Brain Activity with Electroencephalogram Frequency-Tagging.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 369, no. 1658 (2014).  Use as broader rhythm/EEG entrainment support. This helps explain frequency-tagging, beat tracking, meter, neural entrainment, and the measurable relationship between rhythmic structure and brain activity. Thaut, Michael H., Gerald C. McIntosh, and Volker Hoemberg. “Neurobiological Foundations of Neurologic Music Therapy: Rhythmic Entrainment and the Motor System.” Frontiers in Psychology 5 (2015).  Use for rhythm as motor-system timing information. This supports the claim that a beat can become bodily instruction, not just sound for the ear. Especially useful when discussing rhythmic auditory stimulation, motor planning, gait, entrainment, and the auditory-motor bridge. Ross, Jessica M., John R. Iversen, and Ramesh Balasubramaniam. “Time Perception for Musical Rhythms: Sensorimotor Perspectives on Entrainment, Simulation, and Prediction.” 2022.  Use for rhythm, timing, prediction, sensorimotor entrainment, and the way musical rhythm interacts with time perception. Hove, Michael J., and Jane L. Risen. “It’s All in the Timing: Interpersonal Synchrony Increases Affiliation.” Social Cognition 27, no. 6 (2009): 949–960.  Use for synchrony and social bonding. This helps support the group-body argument: moving or acting in time with others can increase affiliation. Wiltermuth, Scott S., and Chip Heath. “Synchrony and Cooperation.” Psychological Science 20, no. 1 (2009): 1–5.  Use for the claim that synchronized movement can increase cooperation and attachment among participants. Tarr, Bronwyn, Jacques Launay, and Robin I. M. Dunbar. “Music and Social Bonding: ‘Self-Other’ Merging and Neurohormonal Mechanisms.” Frontiers in Psychology 5 (2014): 1096.  Use for music, synchrony, bonding, endorphin/social mechanisms, and why group rhythm can feel like more than private listening. Fancourt, Daisy, Rosie Perkins, Sara Ascenso, Louise Atkins, Fatima Kilfeather, and Aaron Williamon. “Effects of Group Drumming Interventions on Anxiety, Depression, Social Resilience and Inflammatory Immune Response among Mental Health Service Users.” PLOS ONE 11, no. 3 (2016): e0151136.  Use for modern group-drumming research showing psychological and physiological effects, including anxiety, depression, social resilience, wellbeing, and inflammatory immune response. Use carefully: this does not make group drumming a cure-all. It supports the more grounded claim that embodied rhythm and group participation can affect mood, social connection, and body chemistry. Bittman, Barry B., et al. “Composite Effects of Group Drumming Music Therapy on Modulation of Neuroendocrine-Immune Parameters in Normal Subjects.” Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine 7, no. 1 (2001): 38–47.  Use as older supporting material on group drumming and neuroendocrine-immune measures. Keep secondary. Fancourt is cleaner for the main script body. Archaeology and Deep History of Drums Lawergren, Bo. “Neolithic Drums in China.” In Music Archaeology in China. 2006.  Use for clay drums in Neolithic China and the deep-history claim that drums are not just poetic symbols of antiquity. They appear in the archaeological record as instruments tied to early sound-making, ceremony, and social order. Both, Arnd Adje. “Music Archaeology: Some Methodological and Theoretical Considerations.”  Use as general support for why ancient instruments should be treated as ritual and social evidence, not merely decorative objects. Anthropology, Ethnomusicology, Ritual, and Trance Rouget, Gilbert. Music and Trance: A Theory of the Relations Between Music and Possession. Translated by Brunhilde Biebuyck. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985.  Essential source. Use for the caution that music does not mechanically or universally cause trance. Rouget helps keep the argument academically serious by emphasizing culture, ritual frame, meaning, and expectation. Becker, Judith. Deep Listeners: M Also want to remind people about the website, if you're into reading we have tons of information by multiple contributors, and we got t-shirts up on the site if you're interested. Fun fact, the art is all based on the eyeball. A

    1 小時 11 分鐘
  3. Many Christianities: The Battle to Define Jesus — Part 2: The Curse, the Slogan, the Liturgy, and the Crowd

    5 天前

    Many Christianities: The Battle to Define Jesus — Part 2: The Curse, the Slogan, the Liturgy, and the Crowd

    If you enjoy this episode, we’re sure you will enjoy more content like this on The Occult Rejects.  In fact, we have curated playlists on occult topics like grimoires, esoteric concepts and phenomena, occult history, analyzing true crime and cults with an occult lens, Para politics, and occultism in music. Whether you enjoy consuming your content visually or via audio, we’ve got you covered - and it will always be provided free of charge.  So, if you enjoy what we do and want to support our work of providing accessible, free content on various platforms, please consider making a donation to the links provided below.   Thank you and enjoy the episode! Links For The Occult Rejects https://linktr.ee/theoccultrejects Occult Research Institute https://www.occultresearchinstitute.org/ Cash App https://cash.app/$theoccultrejects Venmo @TheOccultRejects Buy Me A Coffee buymeacoffee.com/TheOccultRejects Patreon https://www.patreon.com/TheOccultRejects Part 2 — Core Citations / Bibliography Secondary Works and Reference Sources Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Perpetua.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “The Passion of Saints Perpetua and Felicity.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Polycarp.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Christianity: Relations between Christianity and the Roman Government and the Hellenistic Culture.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Decius.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Diocletian.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Christianity: Catechesis: Instructing Candidates for Baptism.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Kerygma and Catechesis.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Exorcism.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Eucharist.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Early Christian Art.” Smarthistory. “Catacomb of Priscilla, Rome.” Vatican Museums. “Jonah Sarcophagus.” Yale News. “House Call: A New Study Rethinks Early Christian Landmark.” Yale News. “Yale Art Gallery Painting Might Be Oldest Known Image of the Virgin Mary.” Yale University Art Gallery. Materials on Dura-Europos and the Christian Building/Baptistery. Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Chi-Rho.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Paschal Controversies.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Melito of Sardis.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Christology: Early History.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Docetism.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Adoptionism.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Cerinthus.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Theodotus the Tanner.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “St. Ignatius of Antioch.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Apologist.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Saint Justin Martyr.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “First Apology.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Dialogue with Trypho.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Celsus.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Christianity: Apologetics: Defending the Faith.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Tertullian.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Athenagoras.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “First Letter of Clement.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “St. Cyprian.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Novatian.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Saint Irenaeus.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Christianity: Aversion of Heresy: The Establishment of Orthodoxy.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “The Process of Canonization.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Late 2nd-Century Canons.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Muratorian Fragment.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Biblical Canon.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Codex.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Christianity: Authority and Dissent.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Christianity: Relations between Christianity and Judaism.” Joshua Ezra Burns. “The Parting of the Ways in Contemporary Perspective.” In The Christian Schism in Jewish History and Jewish Memory. Cambridge University Press. Adam H. Becker and Annette Yoshiko Reed, eds. The Ways That Never Parted: Jews and Christians in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Fortress Press. Judith Lieu. Neither Jew nor Greek? Constructing Early Christianity. T&T Clark. Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Constantine I.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Arianism.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “First Council of Nicaea.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Saint Athanasius.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Festal Letters.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. “First Council of Constantinople.” Primary Texts Used The Martyrdom of Polycarp. Used for the early literary shaping of martyrdom, witness, bishop-martyr memory, and the theological interpretation of death. The Passion of Saints Perpetua and Felicity. Used for imprisonment, trial, visions, martyrdom, and the rare preserved voice of a female Christian martyr. Apostolic Tradition, traditionally associated with Hippolytus. Used for baptismal preparation, catechumenal scrutiny, exorcism, fasting, vigil, renunciation, oil, and immersion. 1 John 4. Used for the anti-docetic pressure around confessing Jesus Christ as having “come in the flesh.” Ignatius of Antioch. Letter to the Smyrnaeans. Used for Christ’s real flesh, real suffering, Eucharistic theology, and bishop-centered unity. Ignatius of Antioch. Letter to the Philadelphians and related letters. Useful backup for episcopal unity, Eucharistic order, and anti-schismatic arguments. Melito of Sardis. On Pascha. Used for Paschal theology, Christ as Pascha, typology, and Christian interpretation of Passover. Justin Martyr. First Apology. Used for apologetics, public defense, accusations against Christians, Eucharistic misunderstanding, and Christian worship. Justin Martyr. Dialogue with Trypho. Used for Christian-Jewish polemic, scriptural inheritance, fulfillment arguments, and the hardening separation between Christianity and Judaism. Athenagoras. A Plea for the Christians / Embassy for the Christians. Used as a major example of second-century apologetics addressed to imperial authority. Athenagoras. On the Resurrection of the Dead. Used as a philosophical Christian defense of resurrection. Tertullian. Apology. Used for Latin apologetics, Christian defense against Roman accusation, and the combative posture toward pagan criticism. Tertullian. Prescription Against Heretics. Useful backup for rule of faith, public apostolic teaching, and anti-heretical boundary-making. Origen. Against Celsus. Used for Celsus’ pagan critique and Origen’s major intellectual defense of Christianity. Celsus. The True Word / True Doctrine. Survives mainly through Origen’s quotations and refutations; used for educated pagan criticism of Christianity. First Letter of Clement. Used for early ministry order, Roman intervention in Corinth, appointed bishops and deacons, and the emerging logic of succession. Cyprian of Carthage. On the Unity of the Catholic Church. Used for episcopal unity, schism, discipline, and the theological seriousness of the bishop’s office. Novatian. De Trinitate. Used as a witness to mid-third-century theological conflict and Roman Latin theology. Irenaeus. Against Heresies. Used for anti-gnostic consolidation, rule of truth, fourfold Gospel authority, apostolic succession, and public apostolic memory. Eusebius. Ecclesiastical History. Used for the Paschal controversy, Polycarp and Anicetus, Victor and Polycrates, Irenaeus’ intervention, early church memory, and the broader historical framing. The Didachē. Used as part of the wider early Christian literary world that remained influential outside the final New Testament canon. Letter of Barnabas. Used for anti-Jewish polemic, allegorical reading of Hebrew Scripture, and Christian claims over Israel’s inheritance. The Shepherd of Hermas. Used as an example of a beloved early Christian text that was widely read but later excluded from the New Testament canon. Apocalypse of Peter. Used as part of the wider early Christian apocalyptic library that circulated before the canon fully closed. Muratorian Fragment. Used for the late-second-century Roman list of recognized Christian writings and the emerging shape of the New Testament. Cyril of Jerusalem. Mystagogical Catecheses. Used for post-baptismal instruction and the interpretation of initiation after the rite had been received. Ambrose of Milan. On the Mysteries and On the Sacraments. Used for mystagogical teaching, baptismal interpretation, anointing, and sacramental instruction. The Nicene Creed / First Council of Nicaea, 325. Used for creed formation, anti-Arian settlement attempts, and the conciliar compression of Christological conflict. Athanasius. Festal Letter 39. Used for the earliest surviving list matching the 27-book New Testament canon recognized in the mainstream tradition. Constantinopolitan Creed / First Council of Constantinople, 381. Used for the later stabilization and expansion of Nicene theological identity. Also want to remind people about the website, if you're into reading we have tons of information by multiple contributors, and we got t-shirts up on the site if you're interested. Fun fact, the art is all based on the eyeball. A

    1 小時 19 分鐘
  4. Christian Architecture as Ritual Technology Part 2- Loaded Ground and Temple Grammar

    6 天前

    Christian Architecture as Ritual Technology Part 2- Loaded Ground and Temple Grammar

    If you enjoy this episode, we’re sure you will enjoy more content like this on The Occult Rejects.  In fact, we have curated playlists on occult topics like grimoires, esoteric concepts and phenomena, occult history, analyzing true crime and cults with an occult lens, Para politics, and occultism in music. Whether you enjoy consuming your content visually or via audio, we’ve got you covered - and it will always be provided free of charge.  So, if you enjoy what we do and want to support our work of providing accessible, free content on various platforms, please consider making a donation to the links provided below.   Thank you and enjoy the episode! Links For The Occult Rejects https://linktr.ee/theoccultrejects Occult Research Institute https://www.occultresearchinstitute.org/ Substack https://substack.com/@theoccultrejects?r=7auau0&utm_campaign=profile&utm_medium=profile-page Cash App https://cash.app/$theoccultrejects Venmo @TheOccultRejects Buy Me A Coffee buymeacoffee.com/TheOccultRejects Patreon https://www.patreon.com/TheOccultRejects BIBLIOGRAPHY Loaded Ground and Temple Grammar Bradley, Richard. An Archaeology of Natural Places.  Key use: Natural features as ritual centers: springs, caves, mountains, watery places, unusual stones, and the way landscape itself becomes an active participant in sacred behavior. Bradley, Richard. The Significance of Monuments: On the Shaping of Human Experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe.  Key use: Monumentality, repeated movement, ritual landscapes, and how built earth/stone structures anchor memory and collective story. Scarre, Chris, ed. Monuments and Landscape in Atlantic Europe: Perception and Society During the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age.  Key use: Landscape archaeology, perception, monument placement, sacred routes, and social memory. Tilley, Christopher. A Phenomenology of Landscape: Places, Paths and Monuments.  Key use: Embodied movement through sacred landscapes. Good for explaining why approach, walking, turning, climbing, entering, and returning matter as much as the site itself. Ruggles, Clive. Ancient Astronomy: An Encyclopedia of Cosmologies and Myth.  Key use: Archaeoastronomy, horizon alignment, sky events, and methodological caution against sloppy “everything is a star map” claims. Ruggles, Clive. Astronomy in Prehistoric Britain and Ireland.  Key use: Prehistoric monuments, solar/lunar alignments, and sky-ground relationships. Watson, Aaron, and David Keating. “Architecture and Sound: An Acoustic Analysis of Megalithic Monuments in Prehistoric Britain.” Antiquity 73, no. 280 (1999): 325–336.  Key use: Archaeoacoustics, megalithic sound environments, echo, resonance, and how ancient monuments may have shaped movement and perception through sound as well as sight. Eliade, Mircea. The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of Religion.  Key use: Sacred space, center, axis mundi, threshold, and the difference between ordinary space and holy space. Smith, Jonathan Z. To Take Place: Toward Theory in Ritual.  Key use: Ritual as place-making. Useful for the idea that sacred places are not merely found; they are produced through repeated action, interpretation, and return. Tuan, Yi-Fu. Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience.  Key use: Lived place, memory, orientation, and the difference between abstract space and meaningful place. van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage.  Key use: Separation, threshold, and incorporation. Useful for crossings, caves, temples, initiation, and the movement from ordinary to sacred space. Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure.  Key use: Liminality, betweenness, communitas, and why thresholds create psychological and social transformation. Vitruvius. Ten Books on Architecture / De Architectura.  Key use: Classical architecture, proportion, order, temple siting, and the ancient architectural concern with harmony, geometry, and orientation. Scully, Vincent. The Earth, the Temple, and the Gods: Greek Sacred Architecture.  Key use: Greek temples in relation to landscape, sightlines, deity, terrain, and sacred placement. Ward-Perkins, J. B. Roman Imperial Architecture.  Key use: Roman monumental space, basilicas, civic authority, imperial architecture, and the built environment Christianity later inherits. Wycherley, R. E. How the Greeks Built Cities.  Key use: Greek civic and sacred urban planning, temple placement, public space, and the relationship between architecture and city order. Onians, John. Bearers of Meaning: The Classical Orders in Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance.  Key use: Classical orders as carriers of meaning, authority, proportion, and inherited architectural language. Assmann, Jan. The Search for God in Ancient Egypt.  Key use: Egyptian sacred space, temple theology, divine presence, ritual service, and cosmic order. Shafer, Byron E., ed. Temples of Ancient Egypt.  Key use: Egyptian temple structure, processional access, restricted interiors, ritual activity, light/dark progression, and the temple as cosmic environment. Levenson, Jon D. Sinai and Zion: An Entry into the Jewish Bible.  Key use: Temple, mountain, divine presence, sacred center, covenant, and the biblical imagination of holy place. Levine, Lee I., ed. Jerusalem: Its Sanctity and Centrality to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.  Key use: Jerusalem, sacred center, Temple memory, pilgrimage, and the later religious mapping of holiness. The Bible, especially Exodus, Leviticus, 1 Kings, Ezekiel, Psalms, the Gospels, Hebrews, and Revelation.  Key use: Tabernacle, Temple, altar, priesthood, sacrifice, holiness, veil, divine presence, living water, pilgrimage, heavenly city, and sacred orientation. Misstear, Bruce. “The Hydrogeology of Sacred Wells: Insights from Ireland.” Hydrogeology Journal, 2024.  Key use: Sacred wells as real groundwater systems, including hydrogeological settings, water chemistry, cultural meaning, and anthropogenic impacts. This supports the line that holy wells are both sacred sites and physical water systems. Bord, Janet, and Colin Bord. Sacred Waters: Holy Wells and Water Lore in Britain and Ireland.  Key use: Holy wells, healing traditions, local water lore, offerings, vows, and repeated devotional return. Rattue, James. The Living Stream: Holy Wells in Historical Context.  Key use: Historical context for holy wells, Christianization, local devotion, and the persistence of sacred water sites. Ray, Celeste. The Origins of Ireland’s Holy Wells.  Key use: Irish holy wells, sacred water, pilgrimage, healing, local tradition, and the complex relation between Christian practice and older water sites. National Churches Trust. “Medieval Bridge Chapels.”  Key use: Bridge chapels as medieval crossing sites, often chantry chapels connected to prayers for founders, benefactors, travelers, and pilgrims. Green, Edward. “Bridge Chapels.” Building Conservation.  Key use: Bridge chapels as Christian worship sites built on or near bridges for travelers, safe arrival, and the sacralization of movement. Research report. The Bridge Chapels of Medieval Britain.  Key use: Bridge construction and maintenance as pious and charitable work, chapels and crosses at bridges, safe passage, tolls, repairs, and the link between devotion and infrastructure. Walsham, Alexandra. The Reformation of the Landscape: Religion, Identity, and Memory in Early Modern Britain and Ireland.  Key use: How sacred geography, wells, crosses, shrines, roads, memory, and local religious landscapes were reclassified and contested during the Reformation. Ren, L., et al. “GIS-Based Viewshed Analysis on the Visibility of Historic Towns.” ISPRS Archives, 2021.  Key use: Viewshed analysis, line-of-sight, historic structures, and the use of GIS to study visibility in built heritage environments. Useful for keeping claims about towers, spires, and landmark dominance grounded in method. Vaz de Freitas, I. “Historical Landscape: A Methodological Proposal to Characterise the Landscape of Monasteries in Early Medieval Portugal.” Religions 15, no. 10 (2024): 1158.  Key use: Early medieval monastic landscapes, GIS method, religious siting, and environmental variables. Useful for sacred visibility, water proximity, slope, altitude, and landscape choice. Kilde, Jeanne Halgren. Sacred Power, Sacred Space: An Introduction to Christian Architecture and Worship.  Key use: Broad Christian architecture source for power, worship, sacred space, and the way buildings shape religious experience. Kieckhefer, Richard. Theology in Stone: Church Architecture from Byzantium to Berkeley.  Key use: Church architecture as theology in built form. Useful as a bridge from ancient sacred grammar into later Christian architectural expression. Also want to remind people about the website, if you're into reading we have tons of information by multiple contributors, and we got t-shirts up on the site if you're interested. Fun fact, the art is all based on the eyeball. A

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Occultists, Rejects, and Mystics trying to educate others about magick and occultism so others can figure out who they are and the world around them.

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