THEOCRATS REVISITED
In Kyle Griffith's War in Heaven (download book for free, and see chapter 10, or see Notes bij Zeitlin) we were being introduced to the term 'Theocrats' as being those in the astral planes that would act like 'kings' or 'gods'. They would be dependent on those living on our planet in the way that they need 'our' belief or attention in them in order to feed from the energy associated. If you have a certain belief-system like christianity or the Islam you would in a way fuel the theocrats that play important roles in those belief-systems.

Since  religion is losing ground in the western world the theocrats had to find new ways of receiving enough energy and that made them invest in large meetings like those in footballstadium, concerts. They would try to make as many people as possible focus on something (on a team or a rock band, or perhaps even people in certain game-worlds) and then they try to 'steal' energy from those participating in these events.

EGREGOR

Another associated term is 'egregor'. You could define 'egregor' as the resulting 'living' energy/conciousness that arises out of a certain group belief, you might call it a 'group soul'. If many people believe in God or in Satan, then they would simply come into existence because - apparently - many people want them to exist. The same would go for all religions and group belief systems. This doesn't of course mean that there is no god or satan, but it does mean that something comes into existence and remains energetically alive as long as there are people believing in them, since believing is like fueling egregors.

ANASTASIA AND EGREGORS
I have referred to the Anastasia-series before (see ...). In the fifth book ('Who Are We?') the woman from the Russian taiga, Anastasia, mentions the term 'egregor' as well. When Vladimir Megre (the author of the books) asks her in chapter 23, 'Moses, Jesus Christ, Mohammed, Rama, Buddha, who are they? What do you think of them?' she responds that she considers them as her brothers. She also says that their egregors are huge: they have millions of people who feed these egregors by sending them their energy in the form of prayer and worship. 

All those people who worship and pray would have lost parts of their energy to these egregors. Anastasia goes on to say that through the ages many people have condemned the deeds of her brothers because of these energy-draining egregors. For long she couldn't understand why they collected all that energy for so many years (some for thousands of years). No one was able to really grasp the possible reason for this, until the dawning of this new era.
Anastasia then says that the ones that were/are worshipped for ages would have decided to actually combine all their egregors, their collected energy, into one field and then they would divide (and thereby return) all the energy amongst the people who live on the planet right now.

THEOCRATS HANDING OVER THEIR POWER?
It sure is a wonderful thought: imagine that all the energies of prayer and worship that people have invested in their gods or prophets would actually be returned to the people on our planet. I would love to strengthen that thought-form.
On the other hand I have become slightly sceptic towards the possibility that those inhabitants and theocrats in the astral planes and above would be willing to give away their powers. What would happen to them if they would lose their energetic income from humanity? Would they perhaps have been forced to release their egregor-energies?

And what about all those people still worshipping these gods in the skies? Would their energy be directed towards other people instanteneously from now on? Perhaps we would all do better to invest our worshipping/praying energy into the divinity within all of us? Then there is no need to store energy in dubious egregors, we could use the energy to develop ourselves, to raise our own awareness in order to move out of the dense fog of mechanised behavior and thought.

Recommendations:
- Index
- Osho Notices the War in Heaven (february 2007)
- Exploring the Theocratic Mind (august 2006)
- The Afterlife (may 2006)