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Neo-paganism sees growth in numbers
It's Halloween and the obligatory neo-pagan story is on the wires.
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Personally, I don't think there is a wrong place to look for life's answer, since the answer is different for each of the 6.4 billion people on this planet. When I go to a yard sale I look at all of the tables, I don't just grab something off of the first one and say "I've found something. I'm done." As for Pagans and Christians, let them have fun with it this time of year, especially with Halloween falling on a Sunday. Pay no attention to the Jewish man in the corner. :biggrinpi |
If all people were as enlightened as you, Rich, we'd all be far better off.
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Good points, richlevy. I turned to Wicca because there is no room for a woman at the top (so to speak) in either Judaism or Christianity--both are so firmly patriarchial and some branches are outright hostile to women. It's hard to worship a God who shows such favoritism. Wicca fully embraces the female aspect of the Diety. As someone who was brought up in the Catholic church, that is refreshing. In Catholicism a female can choose to be one of two things: a whore or a virgin. Correct me if I am wrong, but Judaism has a prayer thanking God for "not making me a woman"--? Yikes! My boyfriend is Jewish, but as you pointed out on another thread, he's the "intellectual" brand and isn't observant!
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I think I've brought up the 'thank G-d for not making me a woman' issue myself on the Cellar. The fact is that anyone can make up a prayer and one groups adoption does not reflect the views of all members of a religion. The fact is that there are Jewish fundies who would rival the most venomous Christian and Muslim fanatics. There are also laid-back Orthodox who live their own lives and do not try to be judgemental about the choices others make. I'm not very good at practicing my religion when it comes to prayer and kashrut (keeping kosher). While I don't eat pork (much), I do like cheeseburgers, cheesesteaks, chicken cheesesteaks, shrimp, the occasional clams casino, and a number of other prohibited foodstuffs. While Reform Judaism might let me slide on the chicken cheesesteak issue (that woman rabbi even mentioned it in one of her sermons), the other items would make me a bit of a hypocrite. Still I make sure that once in a while I take a deep breath and look for G-d. And the prayers I say are still in Hebrew. I don't want to be one of those people who need to be carried by G-d every moment of their lives, for fear of becoming their bad old selves. I don't want to see G-d as some attendant with a straight jacket following me every day of my life to make sure I don't screw up by wrapping me up in my faith. I see G-d as a companion who I hope will pull me back if I am about to step in front of an oncoming truck but who will otherwise just enjoy that I enjoy being who I am. One of the ceremonies that I didn't participate in much at home but that I did enjoy was the Havdallah service. Lighting candles to celebrate and smelling spices to give us something to remember for the rest of the week is a great way to start the week. There is also an interesting psychological component given that smell is one of our most powerful keys to memory. From the Havdallah prayers, we can see the use of Havdallah as a buffer between the spiritual and the everyday existence. If we look back to the time when survival required long days of hard labor, we can understand the importance of Sabbath much better than we can than today with the two day weekend and push button entertainment. The only issue I have with Judaism is the fact that the entire religion has been in mourning for almost 2000 years. The reason that music is not allowed in services is to comemerate the fall of the temple in 56 AD. This is the equivalent of the US ordering all flags to fly at half-mast because of 9/11 for 2,000 years. All we do now is give up work religiously and pray. While we still celebrate the Sabbath, we deliberately hold back from the way it used to be. Quote:
We may not get our music back until the Messiah comes, and noone knows when that will be. The Jewish position on that is: 1) Jesus Christ wasn't the messiah. 2) Neither is George W. Bush. So I will have to sit back and watch, maybe for a few hundred more years. |
If you believe 2, it appears that you haven't been getting the mail from the Republican Jewish Coaltion. I still don't know why I'm getting it ...
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All religious denominations are seeing a growth. Even athiests.
What you have is a whole lot of people either scrabbling for hope or giving up. It's not complicated, most people need to compensate for some lack in their lives. Religion fills the bill nicely because it requires no evidence or proof. |
richlevy-thanks for the links. Do the colors of the Havdallah candles represent something?
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The ignorance and prejudice of some people, especially fundamentalists is just appalling. I live in a smaller town which has acquired a reputation for being an artists' community and a haven for "witches." As soon as I'll tell someone where I live, they're likely to roll their eyes and say, "So, you're one of THEM?" or "You live up with the WITCHES?!?" Yeah, you wanna make something of it, buddy? Even though I'm not a Pagan, I enjoy life among the "witches." There is NO violent crime in my community. I feel perfectly safe walking the streets alone at 2:00 am. The Jehovah's Witchness'es don't show up at my door at 9:00am on Saturday mornings trying to make me repent and bring me back into the fold of "the Goddess." "Witches" seem to be a very tidy bunch with a great love of plants and flowers because every yard around here is ablaze with flowers all summer long. "Witches" put on the best halloween festivities around. Right before Halloween my town had one of those big highway department flashing road signs posted on the main road coming in. "WARNING!" it read, "COFFIN RACES SAT A.M./ GHOULS' MASQUERADE SAT P.M. I'd rather be a Buddhist among the Pagans than a Buddhist among the Fundamentalists any time! |
No Pagan will ever knock on your door at 8:00 AM on a Saturday morning...unless your house is on fire, and they happened to still be up from the previous night's frolics and noticed it, and were trying to save your life.
Pagans have their own particular sets of irritating characteristics, but most of them do not affect you unless you are actually personally involved with them in some way. We make good neighbors for the most part, unless you are a fanatic about tidiness. |
I'm waiting for the Pagans to stand up and try for some of that 'Faith-based Initiative' money. Under equal protection, they could not be denied except on merit.
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It will never happen.
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I'm going to join a radical group of witches and start wearing heavy eyeliner and chiffon...why not? the world is coming to an end.
I might even talk to Laurie Cabot (if that is her real name! |
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Getting pagans to actually DO anything, however, is, as it is said, like herding cats. There's an understanding that something SHOULD be done, that someone SHOULD do it, and that it would be a REALLY GOOD IDEA. That's about as far as things get. |
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