191 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
191 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
A LITTLE LESS MISUNDERSTANDING
|
|
(What Christians Don't Understand about Neopaganism)
|
|
by J. Brad Hicks
|
|
|
|
|
|
Q: Are you a witch?
|
|
A: That's actually a tricky question to answer, so let me go about it
|
|
in a round-about way. What I am is a Neopagan. Neopaganism is a
|
|
beautiful, complex religion that is not in opposition to
|
|
Christianity in any way - just different. However, some of the
|
|
people that the Catholic church burned as "witches" were people who
|
|
practiced the same things that I do. In identification with them
|
|
and the suffering that they went through, some of us (Neopagans)
|
|
call ourselves witches. One expert, P.E.I. Bonewits, says that
|
|
there are actually several kinds of groups who call themselves
|
|
"witches." Some are people whose ancestors were the village
|
|
healers, herbalists, midwives, and such, many of whom had (or were
|
|
ascribed to have) mental, psychic, or magical powers, which were
|
|
passed down through the family in the form of oral tradition, and
|
|
Bonewits calls them "Traditional Witches." Some are people who have
|
|
deliberately used the term to oppose themselves to Christianity,
|
|
are practicing "Satanists," and practice (deliberately) most of the
|
|
practices invented by the Inquisitors. Bonewits calls them
|
|
"Gothic" or "Neo-Gothic Witches." Of a different kind are some
|
|
radical feminist groups, who call themselves witches because they
|
|
believe that the original Inquisition was primarily anti-female;
|
|
some of these also practice magic, many of them do not - Bonewits
|
|
calls them "Feminist Witches." But the vast majority of modern
|
|
witches are harmless people who worship God in many forms,
|
|
including the Lord of the Dance, the Lady, and the Mother Earth.
|
|
These are the people that Bonewits (and I) call"Neopagan Witches" -
|
|
and this is what I am. I hope that this helps more than it
|
|
confuses.
|
|
|
|
Q: Are you a devil worshipper?
|
|
A: I'm tempted to just say, "No!" and leave it at that, but that
|
|
probably isn't enough. Devil worship (including Satanism) is
|
|
really a Christian heresy. (If you don't believe me, ask an expert
|
|
- say, any well- read pastor or theology professor.) In order to
|
|
worship Satan, you have to believe in him - and there are no
|
|
references to Satan outside of the Christian Bible. So to be a
|
|
Satanist or a devil worshipper, you have to believe in the accuracy
|
|
of the Christian Bible, then identify yourself with God's Enemy,
|
|
proclaim that you are "evil," and then try to "fight against Jesus"
|
|
or similar nonsense. Neopagans do not accept the Christian Bible
|
|
as a source of truth. As a source of some beautiful poetry,
|
|
sometimes, or as a source of myth, but not as a source of truth.
|
|
Emphatically, we do not believe that God has an Opposite, an evil
|
|
being trying to destroy God, the world, man, or whatever. So it is
|
|
non-sensical to say that Neopagans worship Satan. Of course, many
|
|
people insist that any god other than JHVH/Jesus (and his other
|
|
Biblical names) is a demon or an illusion created by Satan. Well,
|
|
you're welcome to believe that if you like - but over half of the
|
|
world's population is going to be unhappy at you. Jews and
|
|
followers of Islam are just as confident that they worship the True
|
|
God as you are, and resent being called devil worshippers. So do
|
|
I.
|
|
|
|
Q: What do Neopagans believe about God?
|
|
A: Neopaganism is a new religion with very, very old roots. It harks
|
|
back to the first religions that man ever practiced (based on the
|
|
physical evidence). Neopagans worship a variety of symbols from
|
|
the Old Religions - the practices of the ancient Celts, the Greeks,
|
|
the Egyptians, the Romans - and differ with each other over what
|
|
those symbols really represent. What I (and many others) believe
|
|
is that they are all aspects of God (or maybe, the Gods) - some
|
|
kind of beautiful, powerful, and loving being or force that ties
|
|
all of life together and is the origin of all miracles - including
|
|
miracles such as written language, poetry, music, art ...
|
|
|
|
Q: Do Neopagans have a Bible?
|
|
A: Not most of us. The closest analogue would be a witch's Book of
|
|
Shadows, which is a sort of notebook of legends, poetry, history,
|
|
and magic ritual which is copied by every newly-initiated witch,
|
|
then added to. But on the whole, even a Book of Shadows isn't what
|
|
Christians think of as a Bible. It's not infallible (couldn't be,
|
|
they've been brought to us via hastily-coppied texts under trying
|
|
circumstances), it doesn't prescribe a specific code of morality
|
|
(except for a few general guidelines), and it doesn't claim to be
|
|
dictated by God - except for a few, debatable parts. Those of us
|
|
who aren't witches don't even have that much. Neopaganism is a
|
|
religious system that relies more on the individual than on the
|
|
Book or the Priest. One of the principal beliefs of Neopaganism is
|
|
that no one, not Pope nor Priest nor Elder, has the right to
|
|
interfere with your relationship to God. Learn from whomever you
|
|
want, and pray to whatever name means the most to you.
|
|
|
|
Q: Did you say magic? Do Neopagans believe in the occult?
|
|
A: Cringe. What a badly worded question - but I hear it all the time.
|
|
Neopagans as a rule don't "believe in the occult" - we practice
|
|
magic. Magic is simply a way to focus the mental abilities that
|
|
you were born with, and use them to change the world in positive
|
|
ways. Magic can also be mixed with worship; in which case it
|
|
differs very little from Christian prayer.
|
|
|
|
Q: But I thought that you said that you weren't a demon-worshipper?
|
|
A: That's right. Magic and demonology are two different things.
|
|
Magic you also know as "psychic powers" or "mentallics" or even as
|
|
"the power of positive thinking" - in essense, the magical world
|
|
view holds that "reality" is mostly a construct of the human mind,
|
|
and as such, can be altered by the human mind. That's all there is
|
|
to it.
|
|
|
|
Q: How do you become a Neopagan?
|
|
A: In a very real sense, nobody every "becomes" a Neopagan. There are
|
|
no converts, as no conversion is necessary. Neopaganism is an
|
|
attitude towards worship, and either you have it or you don't. My
|
|
case is not atypical. All of my life, I have been fascinated by
|
|
the old mythologies. I have always found descriptions of the Greek
|
|
Gods fascinating. If I had any religious beliefs as a child, is
|
|
wat that somewhere, there was a God, and many people worship Him,
|
|
but I had no idea what His name was. I set out to find Him, and
|
|
through an odd combination of circumstances, I because convinced
|
|
that his Name was Jesus. But seven years later, I had to admit to
|
|
myself that Whoever God is, he answers non-Christians' prayers as
|
|
well as those in the name of Jesus. In either case, true miracles
|
|
are rare. In both cases, the one praying has a devout experience
|
|
with God. After searching my soul, I admitted that I could not
|
|
tell that I was better off than when I believed in the Old Gods.
|
|
And in the mean time, I had found out that other people also loved
|
|
the Old Gods - and that they call themselves Neopagans. When I
|
|
realized that what I believed was little or no different that what
|
|
they believed, I called myself a Neopagan, too. The common element
|
|
for nearly all of us is that nearly all of us already believed
|
|
these things, before we found out that anyone else did. "Becoming"
|
|
a pagan is never a conversion. It's usually a home-coming. No one
|
|
ever "brainwashed" me. I finally relaxed, and stopped struggling
|
|
against my own self.
|
|
|
|
Q: I've heard about witches holding orgies and such. Do you?
|
|
A: No, that sort of thing doesn't appeal to me. Most of the crap that
|
|
you've heard about "witch orgies" is nonsense made up by the
|
|
National Enquirer to sell magazines. But I shouldn't be flippant
|
|
about this, because it underlies a serious question - what kind of
|
|
morality do Neopagans hold to?
|
|
"Eight words the Wiccan Rede fulfill:
|
|
An it harm none, do what thou will!"
|
|
from an old Book of Shadows
|
|
That about sums it all up. Neopaganism teaches that it is harmful
|
|
to yourself (and dangerous) to harm others. It also teaches that
|
|
trying to impose your moral standards on somebody else's behaviour
|
|
is (at least) foolish - and probably dangerous, as you run some
|
|
serious chance of hurting that person. Perhaps in a sense
|
|
Neopagans don't have morality, for as R. A. Wilson said, "There
|
|
are no commandments because there is no Commander anywhere," but
|
|
Neopagans do have ethics - standards for behaviour based on honor
|
|
and mutual benefit.
|
|
|
|
Q: I saw on the news that Neopagans use a star in a circle as their
|
|
emblem. Isn't that a Satanic symbol?
|
|
A: A pentacle (that's what it's called) is a Satanic symbol in
|
|
precisely same sense that the cross is a Nazi symbol. The German
|
|
National Socialist Party used an equal-armed cross with four flags
|
|
attached to it as their emblem. (Yes, I know - that's a swastika.
|
|
Well, before the Nazis made the word common knowledge, people just
|
|
called it a "bent cross" - it's an old heraldic symbol, and it
|
|
means the same thing that a normal cross does). That doesn't make
|
|
the Nazis good Christians, and it doesn't make Christians into
|
|
Nazis. In the same sense, Satanists (and some rock groups) use a
|
|
type of pentacle as their emblem. That doesn't make them
|
|
Neopagans, nor does it mean that Neopagans are Satanists (or even
|
|
rock-and-rollers).
|
|
|
|
Q: Are Neopagans opposed to Christianity?
|
|
A: Some Neopagans are ex-Christians, and I'm not going to deny that
|
|
some of them have a grudge against the Church because of what they
|
|
perceived as attempts to control their minds. Further, many
|
|
Neopagans are suspicious of the Church, because it was in the name
|
|
of Jesus Christ that nine million of our kind were murdered.
|
|
Neopagans are opposed to anyone who uses force to control the minds
|
|
of others. Does that include you? If not, then it means that
|
|
Neopagans as such are not opposed to you. Do you work for the
|
|
benefit of mankind, are you respectful to the Earth? Then it makes
|
|
us allies, whether or not either of us wants to admit it.
|
|
|
|
- - - - - - - - - -
|
|
|
|
There are many other misconceptions in the popular mind about the
|
|
Neopagan religion. Unless you've studied it, read about it from
|
|
sympathetic sources, then you really don't know anything about
|
|
Neopagan history, beliefs, practices, customs, art, science, culture,
|
|
or magic. But it would take several entire books to teach you, and I
|
|
already fear that I will be accused of trying to win converts (despite
|
|
what I've said above). If you are curious and willing to learn, try
|
|
some of the following books:
|
|
|
|
Margot Adler, _Drawing Down the Moon_
|
|
Starhawk, _The Spiral Dance_
|
|
P.E.I. Bonewits, _Real Magic_
|
|
Stewart Farrar, _What Witches Do_
|