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Archive for April, 2005

A Merry Beltane


The May Queen surrounded by her defenders the “White Women”
From the yearly Beltane Fire Festival on Calton Hill, Edinburgh

Oh, do not tell the Priest our plight,
Or he would call it a sin;
But we have been out in the woods all night,
A-conjuring Summer in!
- Rudyard Kipling

“By Celtic reckoning, the actual Beltane celebration begins on sundown of the preceding day, April 30, because the Celts always figured their days from sundown to sundown. And sundown was the proper time for Druids to kindle the great Bel-fires on the tops of the nearest beacon hill (such as Tara Hill, Co. Meath, in Ireland). These ‘need-fires’ had healing properties, and sky-clad Witches would jump through the flames to ensure protection.”Mike Nichols

“Beltane, and its counterpart Samhain, divide the year into its two primary seasons, winter (Dark Part) and summer (Light Part). As Samhain is about honoring Death, Beltane, its counter part, is about honoring Life. It is the time when the sun is fully released from his bondage of winter and able to rule over summer and life once again.”Christina Aubin

“Early Gaelic sources from around the 10th century state that the Druids would create a need-fire on top of a hill on this day and rush the village’s cattle through the fires to purify them and bring luck (“Eadar d? theine Bhealltuinn” in Scottish Gaelic, “Between two fires of Beltane”). People would also go between the fires to purify themselves. This was echoed throughout history after Christianization, with lay people instead of Druid priests creating the need-fire. The festival persisted widely up until the 1950s, and in some places the celebration of Beltane continues today.”Wikipedia

“Up to 150 000 self-styled witches and warlocks, New Age practitioners and the simply curious are converging for May Eve revelries on the summit of the highest peak in the Harz Mountains, Germany, on Saturday night.”Ernest Gill, Mail and Guardian

“I am very down to earth, pretty damn skeptical, raised as a non-believer of everything. My father is a fully-practicing atheist who hates any form of non- scientific thought! I don’t describe myself as a hippie, new- ager or anything like that and nor do I call myself pagan, but Beltane is probably one of the most important elements of my life.”Clo Dear

“Why did the Labour Movement choose May Day as International Labour Day? It’s more that May Day chose the Labour Movement. Unlike Easter, Whitsun or Christmas, May Day is the one festival of the year for which there is no significant church service. Because of this it has always been a strong secular festival, particularly among working people who in previous centuries would take the day off to celebrate it as a holiday, often clandestinely without the support of their employer. It was a popular custom, in the proper sense of the word – a people’s day – so it was naturally identified with the Labour and socialist movements and by the twentieth century it was firmly rooted as part of the socialist calendar.”Bonnie Hamre, About.com

“Although Beltane is the most overtly sexual festival, Pagans rarely use sex in their rituals although rituals often imply sex and fertility. The tradition of dancing round the maypole contains sexual imagary and is still very popular with modern Pagans”BBC Religion and Ethics

A merry Beltane to you tonight and tomorrow! Spend it with someone special. Have a go at the old Maypole if you have the chance, give The Wicker Man a watch, and let us not forget the plight of the workers as well.

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The Challenge of Minority Faiths

Salon interviews Christian Smith, a professor at the University of North Carolina who is co-author of the book “Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of Teenagers”. While I disagree with his statistical findings on teens who adopt minority faiths like Wicca, I do think he has some cogent things to say about living as an adherent to a minority faith in a Christian-dominated landscape.

“There are two basic options when you’re a minority religion. One is to construct an isolated subculture or counterculture that you can center your whole life on — so you would have to be like the Amish, or Orthodox Jews in New York. You’d have to be part of an encapsulated community. But most people can’t or don’t do that and so that means that they are constantly exposed to values and practices of cultures different from their religion, and then that presents a challenge that they have to continually evaluate — they have to continually decide how to respond. Do they resist? How? Do they acculturate? It could also be, and I don’t have data on this, but most teens just want to fit in. They want acceptance, and so with teens of minority faiths, who have to deal with the ubiquity of Christianity, and have these cultural markers that are basically like neon signs that say, “I’m different, I’m weird,” many of them don’t want that.”

Which is why I’m surprised that he accepts that “less than %1″ of teens adhere to some sort of minority faith. I know from my own experiences as a teen Pagan that most of my companions led double lives so as not to “freak out” their parents. I think the sales of Pagan and witch-oriented merchandise targeting teens is far more indicative of exactly how many teens (on some level) claim a Pagan faith.

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Questions Most Likely Never Answered

Leading proponent of Creation Spirituality and friend to many Pagans Matthew Fox who was censured and later dismissed from the Catholic Church (he is now an Episcopal priest) has 22 hard questions for the new Pope. Here is one of them:

“Why do you denounce Buddhists as “atheists” and “autoerotocists?” Why do you condemn Hindus? Protestant churches? Pagans? Goddess worshippers? Native American believers? Feminists? The practice of Yoga? (You write that it gets you “too much in touch with your body”). Is your church–mother of Inquisitions and Crusades and anti-Semitism–without sin and the holder of all spiritual wisdom? Why did your church never excommunicate Hitler?”

I’m thinking an answer won’t be quick to come.

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But Will He Catch Them?

Just thought I would point out that Jay (AKA The Zero Boss and a fellow Juggler) has re-started his Pagan blog “Kensho Godchaser”. He is off to a great start so add him to your Pagan blogroll, you’ll be glad you did.

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Unitarian Universalist Discordian

This past Sunday my local UU church had a guest sermon from a local Discordian. It talks about Jesus, Bob, St. Syadasti, and the nature of belief.

“Howdy, folks. My name is Jonathan Prykop, and I’m a baptized Catholic, born-again Discordian, ordained minister of the Universal Life Church, and recent zealous convert to Unitarian Universalism. I’m what you might call a freelance minister in this town, preaching in any church that will have me, and so I would like to thank Jesse Spencer-Smith and the Worship Committee for giving me the opportunity to speak to you today, and I thank you for coming to listen. I’d like to especially thank Maryly Crutcher, my partner in crime, without whose help I could have never pulled this service together. Before we begin, I’d also like to clarify that the opinions expressed in this sermon are my own, and do not necessarily represent the views of this church or the Unitarian Universalist Association.”

Worth a gander, it was certainly an entertaining service.

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The Return of Birthing Rituals

Neat article on a new trend towards ‘birth-circles’. My favorite quote was from a Catholic attendee “the pagan aspect was a bit of a shock.”

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Is That Triumphalism I Smell?

Catholic World News waxes rhapsodic over the new Pope’s coat-of-arms.

“An especially distinctive element in the new papal coat of arms is a bear with a pack-saddle, the so-called ?Bear of Corbinian.” There is a charming legend involving a bear that is told about Bishop Corbinian, who preached the Christian faith in the ancient Duchy of Bavaria in the 8th century and is honored as the spiritual father and patron of the archdiocese. It is said that while he was traveling to Rome a bear mauled his pack-animal. The saint then rebuked the wild beast, and commanded the bear to carry his packs to Rome. Once he arrived there, however, he let the bear go, and it lumbered back to its native forest. The meaning of the legend is clear: Christianity tamed and domesticated the ferocity of paganism and thus laid the foundations for a great civilization…

Thanks for all that civilization Christianity! I’m going to go read that part in the history books where Constantine finds an empty patch of ground and totally creates the whole idea of civilization! It is SO awesome. Laws, government, medicine, science, art, like the power of Jesus was really flowing through him to be able to invent all the stuff from nothing.

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