406 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
406 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
PAGANISM AT THE CROSSROADS
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by Skytoucher
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These are tricky and dangerous times. Paganism has grown in
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size to the point where we no longer enjoy the luxury of
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obscurity. We now face a choice that all initiatory paths face
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at some time in their development; whether to remain a viable
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initiatory path, and if so under what circumstances; or to
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devolve into a mere religion.
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I'd better backtrack -- some readers may not understand what
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an initiatory path is or how it differs from a religion. Others
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may think paganism is a religion already, and wonder what I mean
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by suggesting it is or could be something else.
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A defense often used against fundamentalist Christians and
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others who attack paganism on a religious basis is to say "We are
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not like you, only different in a few not-so-important ways. We
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are a religion, like you, another belief system, harmless,
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ordinary. We worship the Earth, the Goddess, the same way you
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worship your abstract God. You should extend tolerance to us for
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the same reason you extend it to Muslims or Buddhists or
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Catholics or Jews. When you single us out as something weird,
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you are exhibiting hysterical paranoia." It's an effective
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defense, but somewhat disingenuous.
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We are different. We aren't just a religion. We are at
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present, and in my view should try to remain, a path of
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initiation. It may be inevitable that a religion grow up around
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us. It may even be desirable to employ such a religion as a
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cloak, or a doorway, to both. But a Pagan religion is also a
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threat to the Pagan path of initiation. We need to ensure that
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the growth, if it occurs, is that of a tree from a seed, not of a
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pearl from a grain of sand.
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A tree produces more seeds.
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A pearl only hide the sand to save the oyster from
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discomfort.
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What is an initiatory path? And what, then, is initiation?
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We touch here upon a word badly misunderstood by many
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Pagans. Initiation is one thing; an initiation ritual is
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another. A person is not an initiate, in the sense I mean here,
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just because he or she has passed through an initiation ritual.
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Initiation is a personal experience in which one becomes aware of
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mysteries; realities that were previously hidden and which cannot
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be communicated by one person to another in words or symbols, but
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must be experienced directly, firsthand. This last point is
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crucial. One finds "mysteries" communicated in coven initiations
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or even at festivals, but these are only hidden meanings of
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symbols and tools used in the Craft, or of stories told about the
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Gods. The fact that they can be communicated makes them not true
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mysteries, only secrets.
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A body of teaching, practice, and ritual which facilitates
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initiation is an initiatory path. Most religions start out as
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paths of initiation.
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Religion tends to be conservative. Initiation, however, is
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always revolutionary.
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Initiation transforms a person's life, bringing inner peace,
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greater insight into the workings of fate, and awareness of the
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connections linking all things, as well as magical power. If it
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were a commonplace event, if people went through initiation as
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surely as they go through puberty, we would have a far different
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and better world.
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Even if the circle of initiates included a significant
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minority of the population, the magical effect of such a number
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of altered minds on the world would be profound and positive.
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Of course, this very fact means that initiatory paths will
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be opposed by those interests, both human and non-human, that are
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opposed to positive change. The opposition is not really a
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conspiracy; it seems more than an automatic reaction, a law of
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nature.
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Initiation is not an instantaneous event, but one that
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occurs through years of effort and devotion. It seems likely
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that there is no end to the process, and that the idea of there
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"fully enlightened being" is a peculiar Oriental fantasy. There
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are times, it is true, when revelation comes in a flash like
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lightning, but such moments are exclamation marks punctuating a
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story that unfolds chapter by chapter.
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Many tools and methods for achieving initiation have evolved
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over the ages. Some are intellectual, aiming to expand
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consciousness through thought: Vedanta and the Caballah come to
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mind as among the most impressive. Others are ritual or
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devotional; Bakhti Yoga, chanting the names of the Gods, drawing
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down the Moon, the meditations of the monastics. Some are also
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physical: Hatha Yoga, Sufi dancing, some forms of martial art.
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Some aim at expanding consciousness directly by stretching it to
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its limits; meditation, Raja Yoga, guided visualizations, vision
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quest. Then there are sex magic, drugs, drumming, austerities,
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use of talismans, self-discipline, and so on. Most of these
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techniques evolved outside a pagan context, but they are
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amendable to incorporation in a pagan framework. Initiation
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rituals, of course, are another method, but they are seldom
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sufficient by themselves.
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Initiates can be found into the context of any religion,
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including those least similar to Neopaganism. St. Francis of
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Assisi was an initiate, and many a Sufi and Caballist, Buddhist
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and Yogi, Taoist and shaman. A modern Neopagan initiate has far
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more in common with them than with an illiterate, superstitious
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pagan of the Roman Empire, gobbling the flesh of sacrificed
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animals while contemplating how to backstab his competitors. All
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initiates of all paths have a common heart; it is religions,
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which circle the periphery of the sacred, that differ.
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But, while Christian, Jewish and Muslim initiates do exist,
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the established religions don't make it easy. For every
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illuminated Catholic saint, there are hundreds of burned
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heretics. Indeed, many post-Constantinian saints escaped burning
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themselves only by miracles greater than those for which they
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were canonized. Burning is passe nowadays but condemnation for
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heresy is not, and thrives as well in most Protestant
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denominations. So bound about with the fetters of faith is the
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Christian that initiation is virtually impossible, except for
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their boldest and best minds.
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This is no accident.
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The tragedy of Christianity is that it began so well and
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decayed so quickly into such a parody of its beginnings. This is
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a recurring phenomenon. Again and again, the initiatory message
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has presented itself in some new form and met with some success,
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only to be hidden in a maze of illusions, and crusted over with
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barriers and restrictions. There are always counterattacks from
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outside the new path, from established religions, but the truly
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effective counterattacks come from within, so that what began as
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a bright new hope becomes a mere religion. The priests, the
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figures in authority, forge an instrument for the furtherance of
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their own authority, to which genuine initiation is a serious
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threat. The initiatory impulse is carefully bled off into
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harmless channels, and all magic outside those channels is
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ruthlessly suppressed.
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There is a great deal of magic in Christian monastic orders,
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and more still in Hindu and Buddhist ashrams, or wielded by
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wandering saddhus. But these illuminated souls, both Western and
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Eastern, are sworn to poverty, chastity, humility. Many do not
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reproduce, ensuring that, if there is a genetic component to
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magic, it will be weakened by removing its best practitioners
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from the gene pool. Too, in renouncing the world, they ensure
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that their spiritual insight will play a small role shaping
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events. In contrast, a few secret initiatory paths remain active
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and true to their original mission. These paths, which include
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Hermeticism, the Caballah, surviving shamanic traditions, and a
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few branches of Sufism, have made themselves non-threatening in a
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different way. They continue to live in the world and to learn
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and teach practical as well as spiritual magic, but in such tiny
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numbers and in so furtive a fashion that they hold little promise
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of genuine large-scale transformation. There is not really
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anything wrong with this; such secret orders have acted over the
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centuries to preserve the Mysteries, not to spread them. Without
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them, efforts to break the chains on a large scale would be to no
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avail. But Paganism is different.
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Neopaganism is unique--at this time, though not
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historically--in that it is a genuine initiatory path that has
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grown large. Moreover, in its diversity and flexibility, its
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protean and progressive nature, it promises to incorporate all of
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the virtues of the other surviving paths. It may not be the most
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advanced, the most powerful, or the most aesthetically refined,
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but these characteristics can all be absorbed from the smaller
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paths which possess them, for Paganism is an all-gobbling magical
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amoeba, sucking up the mythos, methods, and knowledge of every
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other path in existence. Once again, an initiatory path
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threatens to break out and make some changes in reality.
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On schedule, opposition has begun to arise.
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As always, some of the opposition is from the outside, but
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I don't think we need to be concerned about that. A strain of
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paranoia is built into our origin myths and traditions, and is
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always a greater danger than the persecution we fear. The
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external opposition has seldom been very effective against any
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path. Some right-wing Christians are beginning to engage in
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Witch-hunting of a relatively genteel sort, mostly involving
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propaganda. However, propaganda is legitimate (they have a right
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to express their opinions about what we do, as we have the right
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to speak in counterpoint.) There may be more serious
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difficulties, even occasional violence, but the Burning Times are
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gone for good, barring a complete collapse of civilization. We
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have more important things to worry about within our own ranks.
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The rapid increase in our numbers in the last few decades
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means there are many newcomers. Newcomers are ripe for
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exploitation, both monetary and political, and both have begun to
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occur. The first fills me with amusement and outrage. The
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second is more alarming.
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There seems to be a growing desire in some quarters to
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commercialize Neopaganism and profit from it. That's only
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natural, but when crystal athames go for $1,400 and classes are
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taught in return for a pledge of a percentage of the students'
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income in perpetuity, somebody is getting fleeced. This is bad
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enough, but not nearly as bad as what might happen in reaction.
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Better a crowd of poorer and wiser novices, the hucksters filling
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the role of the Dweller on the Threshold, than a Paganism reduced
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from a path of initiation to a mere religion, its bright promise
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gone dull, as have so many others.
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The seeds of this development lie chiefly in individuals we
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might call Pagan politicians, and in our response to them. They
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may not be high initiates or powerful magicians, but they are
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skillful at organizing, they like to strike poses in public, and
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they know how to work the media. Sometimes they appear on
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television to say "This is what Paganism is. This is what
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Witchcraft is," self-appointed spokespersons for the entire Pagan
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community. Their power over the Craft may be small, but it could
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easily grow as the Craft grows, as they sink their hooks into
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more and more beginners.
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An experienced initiate is unlikely to be moved by a picture
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on television, or a story in the newspaper. It is otherwise for
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a novice. When first appraising something, it is the surface one
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sees. And there are two dangers in this trend; First, that
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insightful, intuitive, independent people, the kind who would
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make good Witches, maybe turned off by the media spectacle
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(analogy: What is your reaction to the words "New Age?".)
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Secondly, that those who are not repelled may develop a kind of
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mundane "Neopaganism," a mere religion, based as other religions
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are on faith, dogma, and prescribed observances, conservative (in
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the sense of resisting progress, not of voting Republican) and
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anti-initiatory. There may be points in common between it and us
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(such as an environmental ethic or "worship" (how I despise that
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word!) of a Goddess), as a baboon might wear a tuxedo, but the
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heart and soul would be gone. Anyone who sought initiation would
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have to pass the gauntlet of this other paganism first and then
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unlearn this religion to approach the new path. Few could be
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expected to do so.
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It is important to recognize these politicos for what they
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are. They are our would-be clergy who, like Christian priests,
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Muslim mullah and Jewish rabbis, would be religious leaders but,
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with rare exceptions, no initiates. Their authority would derive
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from knowledge of accepted doctrines and from political acumen,
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rather than spiritual awareness. Pagan pontiff pretenders are
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not necessarily malevolent, but they do not comprehend the
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purpose of initiation or the fundamental ways in which Paganism
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differs, not just from this or that religion, from all religions.
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Consequently, they do not understand that priests, ministers,
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rabbis, and so forth are not good role models for Pagan spiritual
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leaders, even if allowances are made for differing value systems.
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Paganism, as currently practiced, is not simply a different
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religion, but a different category of thing altogether. Not
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only does it not suffer without an organization comparable to
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that of established religions, but creating such an organization
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may bury us.
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The bishops who created the Catholic Church were not
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particularly evil men. But they were misguided, and the result
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of their labor was disastrous. Yet some movement on this road is
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inevitable. It is the fruit of growth, a sign that a path of
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initiation has matured into a serious threat to the status quo.
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It represents a counterattack by the forces of inertia.
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Let's not be unduly alarmist. We are not in immediate
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danger, but the clouds can be seen on the horizon, and we need to
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prepare ourselves, and consider whether anything can be done to
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avoid the usual fate of an initiatory path at the crossroads.
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All our predecessors, on reaching this juncture, have taken the
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wrong turning. But we have ;advantages former initiatory paths
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lacked. That no one has succeeded up to now is not so imposing
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an obstacle as it might seem.
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One of our advantages is the First Amendment to the United
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States Constitution and similar provisions, in fact and tradition
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if not law, guaranteeing religious liberty in all Western
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democracies. It is literally impossible for a Pagan Catholic
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Church, even if one comes into existence, to exile or execute
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dissident Pagans, as was done to dissident Christians after the
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Council of Nicaea. It is unlikely that any Pagan organization,
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or that of any other religion, could get a modern Western
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government do its dirty work to any significant degree. Overt
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persecution is reduced from a terror to a nuisance. That's no
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small achievement.
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Another advantage is modern information technology.
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Communication of ideas is now so easy, and suppression of them so
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difficult, that to contain or channel or eliminate the initiatory
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message will be harder than ever before, and may be impossible.
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Of course, the downside of this development is the proliferation
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of blatant nonsense. But I think that is an acceptable price.
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Better the truth be heard whispering through shouted lies and
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bellowed folly than that it not be heard at all.
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The third, subtlest and possibly the greatest advantage we
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have over our predecessors is science.
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By science I do not mean any particular bit of knowledge
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which has been uncovered by scientists, although all that is
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useful as well. I mean the attitudes of science. I mean the
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methods of science. Above all, I mean the vision of science.
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Thanks to science, we no longer think of all knowledge as
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being handed down to us from the past. Thanks to science, we can
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consider magic not only in its sacred and spiritual and aesthetic
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dimensions--though these are certainly important--but in its
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technical dimensions as well, as seek the laws and principles
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that underpin magic, analogous to the laws of physics that
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underpin technology.
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Best of all: Thanks to science, we are not limited to what
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we know today. We understand that even our best picture of
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reality is only an approximation, that we will have a better
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picture tomorrow. This gift promises to upset the creeping
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authoritarianism that has ruined so many paths of initiation and
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created so many religions.
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These are potent advantages. I believe they allow us the
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possibility of success. But not the certainty. As we approach
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the crossroads, there are a number of things that need doing.
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Some of these steps are simply a matter of keeping our attitudes
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in the right places. Others involve research, development, and
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artistic creation. Others still involve magical tasks. We need
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to understand that modern Paganism, though built on the past, is
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not limited by it, that we are capable of improving on our
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ancestor's wisdom--even to the extent that their wisdom is not a
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product of our own romantic imagination, which is large measure
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it is. We need to recognize, once and for all, and say so, that
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our origin myths are just that: Wicca is not a survival from the
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pre-Christian past, but an eclectic/creative construct meant to
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imitate what such a survival should ideally be. Its resemblance,
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and that of Neopaganism in general, to ancient paganism in any of
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its multitude of forms is slight and ultimately besides the
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point.
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We need to do these things because they will allow us to
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take the next step, which is to expand Paganism, as a path of
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initiation, to its potentia. We cannot do that so long as we are
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locked into an old model--real or romanticized. The initiatory
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paths of the past have failed. Therefore, we need something
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better than what has gone before. We can take the essentials of
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Neopaganism, the broad strokes of its mythology and ritual, as a
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starting point, but we must go beyond that start.
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First, we need to penetrate beneath the level of religious
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symbolism to what might be called the physics of magic, the nuts
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and bolts and laws of nature that account for what magic does and
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is. Next to the initiatory experience itself, which can never be
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communicated or replaced by anything--that point cannot be
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emphasized too much or too often--the physics of magic would be
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the deepest level of understanding, accounting for all forms of
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symbolic knowledge. I have developed on system of laws which I
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believe to be workable. (An account of those laws will appear in
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an upcoming issue of Enchante.) It is the duty of every
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scientifically-minded reader to rip them apart as best as
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possible, to test them, and improve on them.
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Secondly, we need to improve our tool chest of spiritual
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methods. Much of the work has already been done by initiates
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outside Paganism. All we have to do is translate it and
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incorporate it within our own framework. At the same time, an
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expanded and improved body of poetic ritual would be useful.
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These things have already begun to happen, but the pace should be
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accelerated. A common recognition of both the possibility and
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the need would be a valid step. We must acknowledge that Yoga
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can meditate us into a corner, that the Caballah theorizes rings
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around us, and that any good shamanic lineage works magic to put
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us to shame. We must also insist that Paganism has advantages
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over these that should not be surrendered, and work to
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incorporate what other paths can teach us into our own framework.
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These accomplishments would serve to strengthen and fortify
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the initiatory path of Paganism. It will need all the strength
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it can get if it is to resist turning into a religion. But there
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are other things that need doing as well, on both the
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communicative and magical fronts.
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Those of us with active pens must communicate the idea of an
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initiatory path that lies within the mythical and ritual
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structure of the Pagan religion, as it out to and once did lie
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within all religions. There is, at present, no established Pagan
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doctrine or dogma, no established pagan clergy, and no
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established Pagan pantheon, and this also must be made clear.
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The magical side of the battle may be the most important
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one. Here, the guiding principle should be a clear visualization
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of what we want Paganism to be.
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Should exoteric Pagan religions grow up around the
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initiatory core, then, ideally, we would want the priest/esse/s
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of this religion to be initiates. But this may not be
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practicable. First, many of us are unsuited for or uninterested
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in the role of ministering to those who are unready for
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initiation. Second, there may be too many newcomers to Paganism
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(by some estimates the fastest-growing religion in North America)
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and too few initiates.
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I believe we could agree on two goals; a viable and visible
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initiatory tradition must be maintained within the religion and
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no exoteric priesthood must be allowed to gain preeminence over
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the path. To those ends, then, the following magical workings
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are suggested.
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Weave the Net. There is a tenuous telepathic link among all
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initiates. This can be invoked as part of the opening of any
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major magical work, which will strengthen both the work and the
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net. Some covens and individuals already do this. Reach out the
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heart's fiery hand and feel the love of one another, both within
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the coven and beyond it, setting aside the quarrels of the mind,
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poles of a tipi each supporting each, moving faster, faster,
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circles made of love. In this way, a synergistic entity, a
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collective consciousness, may be generated, incorporating all our
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diversity yet stronger than any of us alone. This consciousness
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can be invoked like any deity, and can be a guide and
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empowerment. We can give it names; there will be private names
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known to individual covens or solitaries, but among us all the
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name is Love.
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Shine like a Beacon. Another working, which I feel is
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appropriate to a Full Moon ritual, is one to avoid the light-
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under-a-bushel syndrome, to illuminate all minds equipped with
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eyes to see. The metaphor of a lighthouse beacon seems
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appropriate; we can visualize this light shining brightly,
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overpowering any attempt to hide it, so that truth cannot be
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hidden from those able to understand it, initiation cannot be
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denies to those capable of attaining it.
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Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom; or, Divide and Rule. Assume
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that a mundane Paganism must arise; above all we must not allow
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any one sect or denomination of the Pagan religion to achieve
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preeminence over the others. It doesn't matter how much we like
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or dislike what the leaders of this or that sect are saying. Any
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Pagan doctrine will always be wrong, even if it's right, because
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initiation cannot be conveyed in words or symbols. We can,
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through our magic, encourage diversity and creativity in the
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ranks of newcomers and noninitiate leaders, preferring chaos to
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conformity, and subtly bend the path of discourse so that it
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leads toward initiation rather than away from it. We must avoid
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the temptation to encourage a unified, strong Paganism, and that
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temptation will arise! A fractious, splintered, disorganized,
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and confusingly multi-headed Paganism may be somewhat
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embarrassing when it appears on network news or in Time magazine.
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But if the initiatory tradition is clearly visible within, we
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will be far better served by chaos than by an order which serves
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its own purposes, not ours.
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I believe--certainly I hope--that these steps can preserve
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the Neopagan path of initiation, prevent its burial under the
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mantle of religion, and permit what has never before happened:
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genuine, large-scale, beyond-the-point-of-no-return breakout of
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||
the Mysteries, leading to the transformation of human culture and
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||
this planet--assuming, of course, that civilization survives the
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||
crisis of the coming years.
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