![]() ![]() The Process Church of the Final Judgment members walked around in black robes with hoods with Goat of Mendes patches preaching the coming Apocalypse, and that humanity was evil – the spawn of the Devil. ![]() Hell, even these magicians knew that when something works, copy it, change a few teachings, and tenants, repackage it with a new name, and you can create a Cult that makes you appear to the profane like some sort of genius or even Satan himself. and then helped from some of the ideas for the Chruch of Scientology. The Process Church was just another manifestation of the same Satanic stream that created the O.T.O. that he used later to invent the Church of Scientology. As a result, they would incorporate several of Scientology’s techniques, such as the E-meter, into the Process teachings early on.Īs I explained in my article, Rocket Scientist Jack Parson’s and Scientology’s Ron Hubbard’s Satanic Adventures, Hubbard had learned black magic while in Aleister Crowley’s O.T.O. The founders had met while both were enrolled in the Church of Scientology, which was operated by the former secret society member of the Ordo Templi Orientis’ (O.T.O.), L. Its founders, two former Scientologists, Robert de Grimston, and Mary Ann MacLean, combined a weird mix of Satanism, Scientology, Sex, and Christianity, mashing it all into their own thriving business that became a famous global Cult. And finally, who could be a stranger tie-in with your freaky group than Charles Manson, L.The Process Church of the Final Judgment emerged from the 1960s London Counter Culture. Here is the chapter of Ed Sander's "The Family" (mentioned in OmieWise's post) that was later removed from the book at the behest of the Process' lawyers. The Fortean Times has a great article on the group BTW ("Sympathy for the devil", May 2000 FT 134) but sadly it is registration only. I had never heard about the Funkadelic connection before BTW.įor anyone interested in what the group actually believed, Wikipedia has a pretty good synopsis available. And not only was there a Charles Manson connection as you've noted, but a strong Scientology connection as well. Some of it is online but there's something about holding the actual books in your hand that can't be beat. I managed to get a lot of old newspaper articles on the Process' none-too-easy introduction to the Toronto area (operating a soup kitchen and stuff, holding folk concerts, making nice with the freaked out squares) through microfilm orders, and also ordered a bunch of original Process literature from the Toronto Public Library which was very interesting. I do believe that was this site which is also showing up as currently inactive. This all seemed very lame to me, and quite against the spiritual aspects of the original group. I also found a new-ish looking site which at the time was selling Process t-shirts (!!!) and the like. The interest seemed to me to have more to do with the Processes' uniforms and the aforementioned symbol than with Robert DeGrimston Moore's writings or thought, but YMMV. had sort of 'hijacked' the group's name/image (especially that 'cool' swastika-looking symbol). But I could be wrong about the group's name.įrom what I could gather in my research, Psychic TV, Skinny Puppy & Co. I believe this was the Society of the Processeans, who have a link on DisInfo's page on the Process which sadly no longer works. There was a really interesting page up on the web at that time, put together by a former member who was seeking to find other old members it seemed as though they were interested in getting things going again. I got really interested in the Process a few years back, partly because I found out they had had a church in Toronto 30 years ago or so. ![]()
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