Alice Bailey's 10-Point Charter
Based on the provided search results, Alice Bailey’s 10-Point Charter is a plan to destroy Christianity and promote the dominance of the New Age movement. Here is a summary of the charter’s points:
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Get governments to make laws that undermine Christian values: This point aims to erode the influence of Christianity in society by promoting laws that contradict biblical principles.
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Remove God and prayer from the education system: By eliminating prayer and references to God from education, the charter seeks to disconnect children from their Christian heritage and values.
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Reduce parental authority over children: This point aims to undermine the traditional family structure by diminishing parental authority, leading to a lack of discipline and respect for authority.
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Destroy the Judeo-Christian family structure: The charter promotes the destruction of traditional Christian marriages and families through the normalization of sexual immorality, same-sex marriages, and other forms of family breakdown.
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Make sex free and abortion legal: By promoting sexual freedom and making abortion widely available, the charter seeks to further erode Christian values and morality.
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Make divorce easy and legal: This point aims to normalize divorce and reduce the importance of marriage as a lifelong commitment.
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Promote excessive child rights: By giving children more autonomy and reducing parental authority, the charter seeks to create a generation that is more susceptible to New Age influences.
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Redistribute wealth and resources: The charter promotes socialism and the redistribution of wealth, which is antithetical to Christian teachings on stewardship and generosity.
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Create a one-world government: This point aims to establish a global government that is hostile to Christianity and promotes New Age values.
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Establish a New World Order: The charter’s final point seeks to establish a new world order that is based on New Age principles and rejects Christian values and authority.
These points are based on the teachings of Alice Bailey, a prominent occultist and Theosophist.
Any sauce on this?
I'm reasonably familiar with Bailey, and this reads a lot more like the Communist handbook than it does the theosophist plan or viewpoint.
Until I see sauce, I'm calling BOGUS.
Update: Numerous indicators (red flags) saying "bogus"
There are a good number of results for the "Alice Bailey's Ten Point Charter" but as far as I can see, none of these have actual concrete source.
When I was a young fella, before I met Christ, I read through quite a few of Bailey's books. This so-called 10-point charter reflects NONE of the content of her books and teachings.
In fact, Bailey was as stepping stone for me to come to Christ, whereas prior to Bailey, I only had a very negative view of Christianity, Christians and religion in general.
No Sauce
None of the results I found could point to ANY place where Bailey actually issued this so-called charter. None of them give references to her publications or works that are the sauce of this.
Content extremely at odds with actual writings by Bailey
There are many issues with Theosophy, and things that need to be addressed and understood in the larger context of Christ's teachings, BUT this so-called charter seems very bogus, and I strongly suspect that it is planted deliberate disinformation intended to discredit actual opposition to the actual facts around the Communist Strategy and the actual Satanic vision of the New World Order.
Appealing to confirmation bias
By injecting fake content that people will readily gobble up based on confirmation bias (i.e. in this case, Christians who have natural concerns about the New Age movement and fringe teachings or ideas), this actually dilutes the pool of truth, discredits legitimate concerns that others might reasonably express or have about the Globalist agenda, the Communist Strategy, even New Age teachings, etc.
I'm not a theosophist by any means, but I fiercely detest disinformation operations that damage our collective pursuit of uncovering and exposing actual TRUTH.
Below is a link to an article that addresses the so-called 10-point plan from a theosophist viewpoint, which rings true with my knowledge of Bailey and her writings. (Bailey is strong on many important Christian points, but has some serious flaws, including, importantly, not recognizing the satanic nature of the angel Lucifer.)
Still, it is very much worth reading if you wish to actually be informed and form and informed opinion on some level about Bailey's writings and views (but don't take this as your only source. To be informed, you need to look at both arguments for and against, but make sure both are grounded in facts and actual sauce, etc)
"Re-visiting Alice Bailey’s 10 Point Plan"
https://isobelblackthorn.com/2021/03/11/re-visiting-alice-baileys-10-point-plan/
NOTE: It should be noted that there is no ten point plan or strategy in the Bailey teachings and not one single point listed in the graphic below was ever promoted by Alice Bailey, herself a devoted Christian who never relinquished her faith in favour of Theosophy.
Bailey's entrance to the Theosophical Society caused a schism and students of Blavatsky has since been warning against Bailey. Here are some articles by the British ULT:
From the New Dawn Magazine, Australia:
If Blavatsky warned against Bailey that would make me more inclined to trust Bailey! Interesting concept that the Tibetan was a Christian Priest! Who is to say he wasn't a man from Tibet who became Christian & then a priest? That would make Bailey be more honest & a way to secretly interject Christian wisdom
The fact that Bailey's teachings stemmed from the Jesuits is the greatest red flag. Looks like you have not read the agenda of Bailey and her "Master", and the vices of her associates, Leadbeater and Besant. Will talk more about that later.
There are a lot of things I haven't read but no one in that era would have been so blatantly anti-Christian, even if they were. Reiterating this false 10-Point Charter of hers only makes us look stupid. I'm not saying they were not secretly out to destroy Christianity but they never made that an overt claim.