The power of positive thinking has taken an occult turn. After his UFC victory at the White House last month, Sean O’Malley told Joe Rogan that he had seen the outcome beforehand and manifested it into reality.
Whether he meant those words casually or literally, they reflect an increasingly common belief among athletes, entrepreneurs, influencers, and podcasters. Success is no longer merely achieved through discipline and hard work. It is manifested — even conjured. Consciousness itself creates the future.
Our thoughts influence our actions, but they do not govern reality. We make plans, set goals, exercise prudence, and work diligently. The outcome ultimately belongs to God.
At first glance, this language may sound harmless. Athletes have long used visualization techniques. Coaches encourage competitors to imagine success before a game. Olympic athletes mentally rehearse routines. Quarterbacks visualize throws. Fighters picture victories.
But modern manifesting goes far beyond sports psychology.
Traditional visualization is straightforward. Imagining success can improve focus, reduce anxiety, build confidence, and prepare the body for performance. The athlete does not create reality through thought. He prepares himself to perform when reality arrives.
Manifesting makes a different claim.
It holds that consciousness participates in creating reality. The fighter does not merely prepare for victory; he helps bring it into existence. The entrepreneur does not merely work toward success; he attracts it. The individual does not merely respond to the world; he creates his own reality.
This way of thinking has become so common that many people no longer recognize how strange it is. Yet it represents a significant religious shift in modern American culture.
Ironically, little about it is new.
The roots of today’s manifestation movement extend into 19th-century American religious history and, before that, into occult and hermetic traditions.
One important source was Christian Science, founded by Mary Baker Eddy. Christian Science taught that matter is subordinate to mind and that many human problems result from false thinking rather than objective conditions.
Christian Science differs from today’s manifestation culture in important ways, but both assign consciousness a far more fundamental role than traditional Christianity permits.
Closely related was the New Thought movement. Its writers and lecturers taught that positive thinking could produce health, prosperity, and success. The message was simple: Change your thoughts, and you can change your reality.
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Many modern manifestation teachers merely repackage New Thought for the social media age.
The vocabulary has changed, but the assumptions remain strikingly similar.
Instead of speaking about positive thinking — the scientific language of that era — people now invoke frequencies, vibrations, energy, alignment, and quantum possibilities — the scientific language of ours. Instead of spiritual laws, they speak of neuroscience and mindset.
The central claim remains unchanged: Your thoughts possess creative power.
The fundamental reality, they teach, is consciousness. The awakened self is divine.
This worldview also resembles older occult, esoteric, and theosophical traditions.
Historically, occult systems taught that hidden knowledge gave initiates access to powers unavailable to ordinary people. Reality operates according to secret principles that could be learned and harnessed. The enlightened individual gained mastery by acquiring that knowledge.
It is the promise of the serpent in the garden: You will know as God knows.
Human beings know by discovering what is real. God knows as the creator who determines what is real.
Modern manifestation culture often follows the same pattern. Its teachers claim that reality contains countless possible futures and that consciousness selects among them. Individuals are urged to discover hidden truths about their power, unlock limiting beliefs, raise their vibrations, and learn the principles by which the universe operates.
The pattern appears throughout many nonbiblical religions: You are a higher consciousness trapped in a body and must discover the secret that will restore you to divinity.
The problem is not sin but rather ignorance of your own godhood.
You do not need redemption through Christ to restore communion with God. You need enlightenment to remember that you are God.
That is why modern manifestation can accurately be described as a form of neo-gnosticism.
Ancient gnosticism taught that human beings contained a hidden divine element. The fundamental human problem was ignorance of this truth. Salvation came through secret knowledge that awakened people to their true nature.
Modern manifestation often follows the same structure:
You possess hidden creative powers.
You do not understand your true potential.
Limiting beliefs keep you trapped.
Special knowledge sets you free.
The language differs, but the story remains familiar. And its attraction is obvious.
Manifestation promises control in an uncertain world. It offers success without dependence, power without submission, and meaning without repentance. It assures individuals that they are not subject to forces beyond themselves but possess the power to shape their destinies.
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Yet the system contains a serious flaw: It is self-validating.
When someone succeeds, the success proves manifestation works. When someone fails, the failure is blamed on faulty manifestation. Success confirms the theory. Failure confirms it too.
It resembles the gambler who remembers the one time double zero hit twice in a row and forgets every losing bet.
A theory that can absorb every possible result explains nothing. It merely improvises a new explanation after the fact.
Christianity begins somewhere else entirely.
Scripture teaches that human beings are not creators but creatures. God alone exists from eternity. He created human souls and a material world, and he called that world very good.
Our thoughts influence our actions, but they do not govern reality. We make plans, set goals, exercise prudence, and work diligently. The outcome ultimately belongs to God.
The biblical question is not, “What reality can I create?” It is, “What has God ordained, and how should I respond faithfully?”
That distinction may sound subtle, but it marks two radically different visions of the world.
One places creative sovereignty in human consciousness.
The other places it in God.
So when O’Malley says he manifested his victory, he may mean only that he visualized success and prepared himself mentally. If so, there is little controversy.
But if he means that consciousness itself helped create the result, then he is participating in a much larger religious movement — one stretching from 19th-century metaphysical spirituality through New Thought and occultism into today’s podcast culture.
The language is modern. The temptation is ancient.
Joe rogan, Manifesting, Opinion & analysis, Positive thinking, Sean o’malley, God, Divinity, Creation, Occult
