The New
Age Comes to the Girl Scouts of America
By
Deborah Dombrowski
For nearly one hundred years, since 1912, the
Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) has existed. By 1920, over 70,000 girls had
joined; and there are currently about 3.6
million
Girl Scouts and an alumnae of more than 50 million women. The founder, Juliette
“Daisy” Gordon Low, believed in developing girls “physically, mentally, and
spiritually.” While there have been many wholesome and practical aspects of
the Girl Scouts in the past (teaching cooking, sewing, and outdoor skills),
today the Girl Scouts has become a place where potentially millions of girls
will be introduced to New Age spirituality. While the organization discourages
the use of Christian emphasis in its meetings, it seems to show no reluctance
when it comes to New Age spirituality.
For instance, in a 12 page brochure for
their upcoming annual National Council Session, to be held in Indianapolis in
October 2008, it states: “Channel your inner being. Be one with your mind,
body, and soul. Yoga for everyone!” Yet, on their website it states: “Doxology
is not an appropriate Girl Scout event song, as it is easily identified as a
Christian church song.”
References to Yoga can be found in Girl
Scout literature and activities, such as the Spring-Summer 2007 issue of Leader Magazine (the official GSUSA
publication) where it tells of a Charleston, WV Girl Scout chapter
participating in Yoga. And then there is a program called “Fit’s Inn” where
“girls try sports and dance, and even learn yoga.” Yoga is also mentioned in a report titled A Report from the Girl Scout Research
Institute in a favorable way (p. 29).
Yoga has been promoted by the GSUSA for at
least five years. In a 2003 article on the group’s main website, the subheading
reads “Volunteering--From Yoga to PR.4,” and another article titled Become the Best You Can Be encourages
learning how to meditate and practice yoga.
While these references and promotions of
Yoga are disturbing to say the least, a recently formed partnership between
GSUSA and a group called The Ashland Initiative will take Girl Scouts to a
whole new level of New Age spirituality! The Girl Scouts will be incorporating
the Ashland Initiative’s Coming Into Your
Own program, saying the program’s aim is “to create a team of adult
champions who will model a search for integrated leadership that springs from a
deep sense of self-knowledge.” The Ashland Institute (located in Ashland,
Oregon) is a group that teaches ‘Attunement’ (metaphysical energy healing)
described as “Creative Energy Practice,” which “deepens” the “connection with
the Source of Life.”
The Coming
Into Your Own program is a “personal development program for women” who are
going through “transition.” An opening quote in the program brochure is from
lesbian poet May Sarton (1912-1995); the program works in partnership with an
organization called Dialogos, also a proponent and resource for Attunement. A
75 page online book about the Coming Into
Your Own program reveals the New Age nature behind the program. Another
partner of The Ashland Institute is The Fetzer Institute, where a broad
assortment of mystical, New Age resources is offered. Thomas Merton, the Dalai
Lama, David Steindl-Rast, and other mystics are touted.
The Ashland Institute lists eleven resources
for their participants, the majority of which are other New Age/New
Spirituality promoting groups, such as Collective Wisdom Initiative,
Co-Intelligent Institute, The Millionth Circle (to “shift planetary
consciousness” it says), and The World Cafe.
The Girl Scouts’ move to partner with the Ashland
Initiative will help create leaders within the GSUSA who will take the New
Age agenda to countless girls, and instead of just teaching girls sewing,
outdoor skills, and cooking, they will introduce them to meditation and the
‘divinity within,’ the basic message of the New Age. This is further evidence
that today’s world has become a mystical New Age society; and much of this
has been accomplished by directing efforts toward children.
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Deborah Dombrowski is the co-founder, along
with her husband Dave, of Lighthouse Trails Research located in Silverton,
OR. Their website, LighthouseTrailsResearch.com, is a huge site devoted to
exposing the various satanically inspired variations of New Age mystical spirituality,
its supporters and promoters, and how these movements have infiltrated the
Church. A wide variety of well documented
books and articles on the Emerging Church, contemplative prayer, mystical
spirituality, and related topics are available on their website. I
highly recommend visiting their website www.LightHouseTrailsResearch.com. The Dombrowski’s can be contacted by
writing them at Lighthouse Trails Research, P.O. Box 958, Silverton, OR 97381
or calling them at (503) 873-9092.