03
Jul
11

Pardon my dust…OR…If it does not fit, do not use it and shut the f…f…f…front door


Banner made by Pa Osir Djutmosu Si Hat-Hor

(Intone the following few sentences with the most condescending and annoying voice possible) Oh, I just don’t know if I can call myself a Pagan anymore, the term is so watered down. Yeah, and it’s such a negative term anyway. Like, it’s so stupid now.)

So I have been awakened from my slumber by an identity crisis. I am not the Pagan police, but for the sake of all sanity can we get a few things straightened out here so that those whose poo poo smells like potpourri can move on. Yes, the term Pagan has become watered down, however, primarily by people who are way to cool and advanced for us anyway and those that are afraid what the neighbors will say.

Here we go folks, it is this simple: Modern Paganism began as a phenomenon in the Western world to recover those elements of pre Christian religious, spiritual, and philosophical practice that seemed the most beneficial to our own spiritual and psychological wellbeing and growth. What we found were truths and meanings of a reality that never went away because truth and meaning do not change with new management. The roots of its modern rediscovery are found in the currents of the nineteenth century’s philosophical, spiritual, artistic and literary sub cultures which, taken together, were questioning the entire project known broadly as Christendom or Western Christian Civilization. When Einstein’s theories blew apart the Cartesian universe and introduced the concept “relativity” to the masses, those crazy Romantic poets, artists, and philosophers did not look quite so far “out there” anymore. Both science’s mechanical universe and Christianity’s Biblical universe now had holes big enough to drive a locomotive through.

Modern Paganism at its core emerged out of this milieu as a fundamental rejection of Christian theology and cosmology. (I did not say it is anti-Christian you crybabies) Given Christianity’s roots, this extends to its cousins Judaism and Islam as well. That is why the moniker PAGAN was proudly taken on by the 1960s and 70s for crying out loud! Whatever the word’s origins, it is a term that came to symbolize the antithesis of Christianity and the other Abrahamic faiths long before the 20th century rolled around. In reviving its use, it was meant to say unequivocally that “I think Christianity, and the stifling social and political culture it has created, have been a hindrance to my spiritual development, please do not bother me while I spend time and effort unlearning your teachings and rediscovering what your spiritual forefathers tried to destroy.”

If you are living by the precepts of our Pagan ancestors, you are most likely already doing your part to be amicable and play nice with the other children. The fact that we took on an “attitude” in our reclamation, in hind sight, was necessary considering the times. It gave us the space we needed to rediscover the enduring truths and meanings of the universe as manifested through the lens of our ancestors. The fact that some still take an attitude in order to break the centuries old programming they have been fed, should be understood for what it is, “Pardon my dust, I am remodeling here. Watch your step.”

In the last century or so we have plumbed the depths of classical  civilizations, early civilizations, and prehistoric culture. We have found a treasure trove of mythology, spirituality, religion, and philosophy. We have made missteps along the way, gotten sidetracked by charlatans, and both reconstructed and reconstituted many things from the ancient past. In this process we expanded our conceptual borders to accommodate the fact that there was a natural diversity in the pre-monotheistic world, and when politics were not involved, a healthy religious tolerance. Most of all we discovered that this thing IS NOT STATIC.

It is not about who has more faithfully reconstructed the ancient past or broadened the tent wide enough to include every hyphenated Pagan on the planet. It is the rediscovery of truth and meaning, as filtered through a primarily European lens, which was sublimated in the onset of monotheism in the Western/Mediterranean world. It is rooted in the indigenous, classical, and mystery traditions of the broadly European and Mediterranean world. Some of it survived through art and the written word; we know what the Renaissance artists were getting at! We know what the artists and poets of the 19th century Romantic Movement were getting at. It is different from the Eastern, African, Caribbean, and Pacific traditions. However, it also has many similarities with these. It is most significantly different from, and an open rejection of, the Abrahamic traditions. Certainly the truth and meaning that permeates creation is the target we are all aiming for, but in our meager human conditions we understand and approach that project a little differently depending on a number of factors that shape who we are.

In the 20th century Western world a group finally said, “We are Pagans damn it! I do not believe in the Abrahamic version of truth and meaning. I am reclaiming the beliefs of my ancestors the best I know how and then moving on from there.”

The only identity crisis going on is the one being had by those who say Paganism is having an identity crisis. They don’t approve of this or that, this is too much, this is not enough, I still feel Christian, I think I’m an atheist…blah blah blah. If the name does not fit, do not use it, and by the way shut the front door on your way out, I am busy here.

13
Mar
10

The Prophesy of Hermes Trismegistus


I am not much of a dweller on the end of the world and prefer to focus on the those eternally good elements of existence, however, I found this interesting for some reason.

From the Hermetica, written around the first or second century:

“In their weariness the people of that time will find the world nothing to wonder at or to worship…People will find it oppressive and scorn it. They will not cherish this entire world…They will prefer shadows to light, and they will find death more expedient than life…The reverent will be thought mad, the irreverent wise; the lunatic will be thought brave, and the scoundrel will be taken for a decent person…Soul and all teachings about soul as I revealed them to you will be considered not simply laughable but even illusory…Nothing holy, nothing reverent nor worthy of heaven or heavenly beings will be heard of or believed in the mind.”

“How mournful when the gods withdraw from mankind!… Every divine voice will grow mute in enforced silence. The fruits of the earth will rot; the soil will no more be fertile; and the very air will droop in gloomy lethargy.”

“Such will be the old age of the world: irreverence, disorder, and disregard for everything good.”

28
Feb
10

Symbols, reality, and context


These are just some thoughts emerging from my research into cognitive archaeology.

Culture is what separates us from the rest of the animal kingdom and that culture is based on the use of symbols. Symbols only have meaning in the context of a shared reality: symbol (X) = thing (Y) in (Z) context. The word (a symbol) “cow” has no meaning to someone who has never seen one, nor to someone who has not previously assigned “that thing” the value of “cow”; they must understand that  (X) = cow. The phonetic sound which is “cow” in English also has different meanings in other languages so it only works if the (Z) context = (English speakers who know what a cow is).

We also assign different types and levels of value to various things; the easiest example being gold and silver. What gives these metals value and what makes something a cow? There are things rarer than gold and we could just as easily call small furry creatures that squeak a cow, and in India some still view cows as sacred animals. The symbols, their value, and the context in which they make sense are completely invented and for all intents and purposes arbitrarily so. Yet they become what archeologist Colin Renfrew calls “institutional facts”. They become a reality, even though they are not. This objectively unreal reality is, however, what human culture is built on and it is what separates us from the rest of the animal kingdom. It is, therefore, in fact very real and it is a linking of the internal universe of the human being with the external physical universe. Furthermore, it took these invented institutional facts to create the “individual”. To create “me” and “you”, “this” and “that”, “us” and “them”. These symbols separated the earth and the sky as well as the light and the dark. The universe was brought into existence through arbitrary symbols being accepted by a group of individuals. A human said “light” and there was light.

How do symbols become real? How do things inherit intrinsic value? If the symbols and value assigned to things are arbitrary, how could the nation of Spain colonize the Americas and enslave Natives and Africans in order to extract silver from dangerous mines after they had already annihilated the Inca and Aztec cultures in pursuit of their gold? That is pretty brutal stuff to do just for arbitrary symbolic values!

Is it really just collective experiences that can be identified, labeled, and incorporated into the collective reality of a culture? The same would hold true then for spiritual experiences. If there is not an experience (X) that everyone understands, then it cannot be represented by symbol (Y) and incorporated into context (Z). There must be something there to assign a value to. Ergo, the concept “spiritual” exists because it was experienced enough to be assigned value with a symbol. We can then extend this to the those things which populate the spiritual realm and the various experiences of this realm. Something has to exist to be labeled.

Some things to think about:

Does the spiritual only exist and operate when its value is recognized and its symbols are known?

What has value; the thing, the symbol, the context, or something else?

What would we dream about if there were no symbols with inherent value?

What value does ANYTHING have without symbols and ascribed values within cultural contexts?

Does any value exist outside of symbolic contexts?

13
Feb
10

Primordial waters and sacred spaces pt. 2


Mercea Eliade’s Myth of the Eternal Return brings a different perception to some common Pagan concepts and I believe makes more sense out of some ancient and modern practices.    

As was mentioned in the last post, Eliade’s focus is on the concept of creation and how that manifested in the mythologies and ritual practices of the “archaic” peoples as he calls them. It might even be more accurate to say that his observations of the ritual practices of the archaic peoples led him to an understanding of the prominent role their view of creation played in their beliefs and practices.    

So prominent was creation in their beliefs that many, if not most, ritual activities were intended to bring participants into sync with the ongoing process of creation or to pay homage to that process in some way. Viewed this way, certain ancient beliefs and ritual activities make more sense than the usual interpretations we have grown accustomed to from academics or those practitioners of later religions. Among these are seasonal rites and the creating of sacred space in the form of temples and the sacred designation of natural spaces like groves and springs.    

Traditionally the explanation for participation by the ancients in such rites as seasonal festivals has been to say that the people involved believed they were insuring the seasonal cycles would continue to occur. An example would be rites occurring around the winter solstice being performed in order to insure that the sun would return. Eliade’s evidence demonstrates this is incorrect. He suggests that the rites were instead intended to put individuals and communities in sync with that rhythm of rebirth that was occurring. They, according to Eliade, were not audacious enough to believe that they could “control” the sun or that by their activities they would “convince” the Gods to bring the warm season back. They were not so ignorant that they did not realize the cycles of the seasons would happen regardless of what they did. The tens of thousands of years of observing nature that I mentioned in the “Sapient Paradox” post was not all for nothing.    

What they did observe was that compared to humans and their activities, “nature” seemed to move in a surer, deliberate, and more predictable manner in regards to time. The celebration of a seasonal rites was recognition of this reality and an attempt to recalibrate individuals to be more in sync with this natural flow of time which is the never-ending process of creation itself. As humans we live in creation but are not, unless we make the effort, in sync with the unfolding of creation itself. Eliade suggests that the many creation stories throughout the world which talk of humans suffering some fall from grace, whether it be the garden of Eden in the Middle East or the various stories of humans disappointing or irritating the Gods in other myths, are not necessarily intended to suggest that we are “fallen” but is rather a recognition that humans live in a daily sphere that is removed from sacred time. A modern phrase is “we are not in tune with nature.”    

Therefore, the continual process of creation and the cycles of death and rebirth that perpetuate it were considered the “real” or “true” measure of time and human time is temporal, artificial, or a complete illusion as seen in the Hindu concept of maya. The seasonal celebrations and their accompanying rituals were all about recognizing and transcending the temporal, artificial, or illusory nature of everyday human existence in order to experience the reality of the eternal unfolding of creation.    

All of this ties into the creation or designation of sacred spaces as well. Joseph Campbell made points on several occasions that coincide with Eliade’s description of sacred time and mundane time, but also specifically supports what Eliade says about sacred space. Both of them point out that the idea of a temple, cathedral, or church is to create space that alters the orientation of our senses away from the mundane world. Stained glass, incense, idols and artwork are to tell your senses that you are now entering a different space where eternity is the dominant concept. Sticking with Eliade’s themes, this sacred space is intended to take the individual out of mundane time and put them into the space where true time is perpetually unfolding in the form of creation. The primary distinction being that the time unfolding outside of the sacred space is temporal or less than real compared to the time unfolding within the sacred space. In this way everything is linked back to the nature of creation being an eternally unfolding process that we can choose to take part in or not.    

This function of sacred space has been recognized by some within monotheistic religions who take a more mystical approach to their religion and the Catholic Church wittingly or not has preserved this function of sacred space with their churches and cathedrals. Many Protestant denominations have actively worked against this by rightly accusing the Catholic Church of perpetuating Pagan practices with everything from the use of symbolism in the building of cathedrals to the use of idols (statues of saints, Jesus, Mary, etc.), incense, robes, and the list goes on. All of these are elements intended to alter the human senses and conscience in order to orient it more toward the eternal. Protestant denominations often denounce the senses and are freaked out by “spooky” things like conscience and so criticize these things rightly as being Pagan in origin.    

I believe, quite obviously, these are not exclusive property of Paganism; however, it is the monotheistic traditions that set themselves in opposition to nature and those who recognize it as sacred. Thus it was not until the advent of monotheism that there was a distinction between right and wrong religions. As historian R. A. Fletcher in The Barbarian Conversion: From Paganism to Christianity, (New York: H. Holt and Co, 1998) and other scholars have pointed out, this notion of one “true” god or a “right and wrong” way to recognize eternity and celebrate it was always hard for Pagans to conceive. This was why sacred groves and temples were destroyed in the conversion process, because Pagans did not see how continuing their practices of visiting sacred spaces and recognizing sacred time (seasonal festivals) conflicted with believing in the Christian god. How could a god be averse to such things as celebrating reality?    

As for the designation of natural features of the environment like groves, springs, and lakes etc. as sacred, it is just recognition of the eternal unfolding of creation in nature itself. Instead of needing to create the sacred space it has already been done for us. Certain natural places are recognized to have a particularly strong impact on the senses and conscience, thus altering our perceptions in a way that puts us in tune with creation. Some would argue this is the best way to experience it because it is nature itself and not an artificially created structure. Some experience all of nature as being the manifestation of eternal time and do not need to designate this place or that as sacred, for it is all sacred.    

Perhaps the words of William Blake sum this post up best:    

To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower,
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour.    

11
Feb
10

Primordial waters and sacred spaces pt. 1


Mercea Eliade (1907-1986), professor, historian of religion, and philosopher, gives interesting insight into the origins of using water in rituals of transformation the purpose of sacred space. In his book The Myth of Eternal Return (New York: Pantheon Books, 1954). Eliade emphasizes the view of creation and the role it played in what he calls the “archaic” cultures. By archaic he was generally referring to pre Judeo-Christian and therefore Pagan cultures of the ancient world.

By the early Neolithic (c. 10,000-8,000 BCE) the Mediterranean world, and even beyond, left evidence of the first definable widespread religious devotion. The evidence, which was conclusive before Eliade’s and has only continued to mount since, are statues, figurines, altars, and bas-reliefs of what some scholars have nicknamed the “Great Goddess.” Since this was still an era before th invention of writing, we have to wait for the first creation myths to be written down in order to have descriptions of the way this “Great Goddess” was viewed. Eliade and many other scholars have noted that she first appears as the primordial chaos from which all things were created, including the gods themselves. She is the thing that existed before all things, from which all things were born. Even in the version of the Mesopotamian creation myth found in the Bible, “God” is moving over the face of the chaotic deep.

For the ancient Pagan cultures creation was/is a continuing process, not something that happened way back then. As such many ritual activities were disigned around puting individuals in sync with that continuing creation, even if only for a moment. The use of water in ritual as a transforming element predates Christian “baptism” by thousands of years. According to Eliade, however, its original function was not necessarily that of “cleansing” as it is often viewed in both Pagan and Abrahamic (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) religions. The intent was to symbolically put the person being submerged or doused temporarily in the primordial undifferentiated (shapeless, formless etc.) state that existed before creation. In this respect the person is created anew, or we might say reborn.

In my next post I will look at how this manifests in the concept of sacred spaces, whether temples, groves, or circles.

09
Feb
10

The Sapient Paradox


The “Sapient Paradox” is an issue that perplexes scholars of prehistory like Colin Renfrew in the book Becoming Human: Innovation in Prehistoric Material and Spiritual Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. It is based first on the likely fact that 70,000 to 100,000 years ago our species emerged in Africa. Not some pre-human hominid but anatomically and “cognitively” humans. That means that for around 100,000+ years human evolution has been primarily cultural not physical. The paradox is that while these humans had the same brain capability as us, minus our schooling, it took over 40,000 years to develop the cultural capacity to create the Chauvet cave paintings, 60,000 to 90,000 years to discover agriculture, and almost 100,000 years to develop civilization. That is a loooong time! The Roman Empire dissipated only a little over 1500 years ago. Writing has only been around for a little over 5000 years. What were these cognitively capable humans doing that it took that long to develop the rudimentary elements of “high” culture, but in 5,000 years we learn to write, make wheels, fly, and travel to the moon in a space ship?

How many humans with the intellectual capability of an Einstein or the creative abilities of a da Vinci sat around bon fires in those tens of thousands of years?

What does this mean about those fantastic stories that comprise the first creation and other myths? Remember, complex mythological stories with psychological and spiritual allegories embedded in them do not just happen one day. These are the work of generations of insightful people.

At what point did someone realize Descartes famous phrase “cogito ergo sum,” I am thinking therefore I am? Or has that sense of awe and wonder been around since the beginning only to become repressed by things like monotheism?

Does it make you wonder about anything else?

07
Feb
10

Paganism and Egocentric Spirituality


Jordan Paper, an academic who has focused primarily on comparative religion topics over the years, makes the following insider’s observation about Native American and “shamanic” traditions in general, in a fascinating little book called The Deities are Many: A Polytheistic Theology:

Modern Western individualism is not the primary mode of existence in other cultures. To carry out activities for oneself, especially to do so with the aid of spirits, is the only evil perceived in the cultures being discussed . . . . [T]hose understood so to act are considered an extremely dangerous threat to the community and are likely to be killed. These are egalitarian societies in which prestige comes from giving possessions away rather than accumulating them. Hence, anyone perceived as being far better off than others in the community is liable to be suspected of evil sorcery, sometimes called in these communities, “witchcraft.”

If Paper’s observations are correct and we add in any or all the following assumptions, this leads to some interesting philosophical considerations for modern Paganism. I am not advocating the following assumptions, but using them as points of reference:

  1. Assumption number one: This “egalitarian” societal structure that Paper is speaking of greatly resembles the Neolithic “pre-warrior culture invasion” societies that Wicca and other modern traditions aspire to emulate or feel a spiritual kinship with. Even if there is no hard and direct documented link to this distant past (see Hutton, Triumph of the Moon), notions of it being an idyllic past where women were more revered and/or war and oppression were almost unheard of still abound in Pagan circles.
  2. Assumption number two: These ancient pre-invasion societies would have been sustained by similar notions of all for one and one for all as described by Paper. That is all magical activity was conducted only for the purposes of the group or others in the group. Magic benefitting the individual would be considered evil.
  3. Assumption number three: The fact that covens, and even less tightly knit Pagan social groupings, have persistent organizational problems or often blow apart  because of rampant egoism, is a result of the presence of a spirit of “Western individualism.” Thus the saying, “Organizing Pagans is like trying to herd cats.”

While I have at least a dozen different questions and opinions on this subject swirling in my mind, I want to solicit other views instead of advocate and I do not want to burden the initial post with too many questions:

  • Are any or all of my three mentioned assumptions reasonable? If not, where do you disagree?
  • If the above assumptions are true, what does that say about the fact that most Pagans seem be solitary and very much into sustaining “themselves” through magical and other practices?
  • Is individualism actually a fundamental and crucial/positive element of Paganism as it is understood in the West?
  • Is Paganism, or should it be, a catalyst of egalitarianism that promotes or insists upon a non egocentric spirituality whereby one is encouraged to focus more on others and the group before considering one’s self?
  • Is there a difference between the way professed Wiccans and other Pagans approach this issue?



May 2024
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