Guest Post by Morbo
Here’s the kind of story I love: A Maryland man who practices Wicca has won nearly $50 million in a multi-state lottery game — and he credits intervention by Pagan deities.
Ellwood Bartlett is an accountant who teaches classes on Wicca on the side. He told The Washington Post he asked Pagan gods to help the computer choose the right numbers.
“I look at it this way,” Bartlett told The Post. “If the gods are going to intervene, it would be easier to manipulate a machine versus me trying to interpret what they are telling me.”
Bartlett will share the $330 million jackpot with three others. If he opts for a lump-sum payment, he will receive at least $48.7 million — $32 million after taxes. Or he could decide to receive $3.7 million a year until 2032. Either way, it’s a nice chunk of change.
If you are Pat Robertson or some other crazy TV preacher, how do you possibly explain this one?
Robertson has railed against practitioners of Paganism and Wicca for years. He can’t understand that the modern-day followers of these systems are not dabbling in the dark arts. Remember, this is the guy who sat silently by while Jerry Falwell blamed the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on “the Pagans and the abortionists, and the feminists and the gays and the lesbians….”
In 2002, Robertson declared war on the Harry Potter books, growling to his TV audience:
“Now, ladies and gentlemen, we have been talking about God lifting his anointing and his mantle from the United States of America. And if you read in Deuteronomy or Leviticus, actually, the eighteenth chapter, there’s certain things that he says that is going to cause the Lord, or the land, to vomit you out. At the head of the list is witchcraft…. Now we’re welcoming this and teaching our children. And what we’re doing is asking for the wrath of God to come on this country…. And if there’s ever a time we need God’s blessing it’s now. We don’t need to be bringing in heathen, pagan practices to the United States of America.”
But perhaps God has (or the gods have) other ideas. If the Supreme Controlling Force of the universe is so mad at Pagans that he punishes them by heaping riches upon them, I want to be next in line for some of those curses.