Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Heresies and Preconceptions: for Star Foster

In a recent posting on Patheos, Star Foster speculated on whether or not Wicca is a Christian heresy.   A number of commenters disputed her claim: most agreed with Erynn Rowen Laurie that: "[Wicca] doesn't position itself as Christian in the same way that, say, Mormonism does." I tend to agree. Wicca does not attempt to redefine Christian Scriptures in the way Christianity redefined Judaism's holy books as the Old Testament and Islam redefined Christianity's "New Testament" as the Injil. Nor have they redefined the holy figures of Christianity, save insofar as they might incorporate any other mythical being into their practices. In fact, most American Pagans at least run screaming from anything which might suggest "Christian corruption."  Only recently have Pagans begun exploring Psalm magic, petitions to the Saints, and other practices which have long been part of traditional folk witchcraft.

Instead, I might argue that what many modern Neopagans have done is the opposite of heresy. Heretics seek to cull away the detritus and distractions which have accrued upon the True Faith.  They do not reject their natal religion: rather, they seek to save it from those who have led it astray.  To that end, they reject the innovations and missteps which they see as corruptions.  Compare and contrast this with the Neopagans who begin their journey into the faith by rejecting the Church altogether.  They see Wicca and Goddess Religions not as the perfection of the Christian faith but as its antidote.

Yet, paradoxically, this often means that they preserve more of the original orthodox belief structure.  The heretic must carefully pick and choose what parts of the True Faith come from the original and which parts are deviations.  No such caution is required by someone who wants to jettison the whole structure and start anew.  They see their rejection as an end in itself: all they need do is remove those elements which are obnoxiously and obviously "Christian."  And so they rebuild a faith which contains no crosses or Messiahs - but which is redolent of many other Nazarene ideas and preconceptions.

I've spoken in the past about the Neopagan interest in Holy Writ.  Snorri Sturlsson identified as a Christian and compiled the Elder Edda stories as a political rather than religious act: Ovid wrote his Metamorphoses to entertain patrons, not honor the Gods.  And yet many Neopagans seek to determine the validity of spiritual experiences by comparing and contrasting them to these and other ancient works of fiction.  There are, of course, many religions which get along just fine without Sacred Scriptures, relying instead on amorphous collections of myths and tales.  (see Ocha'ni Lele's collections of Patakis for one excellent example).   But this model is often neglected in the quest for a guidebook: the Lore said it, I believe it, and that settles it.

Then we have the "Threefold Law" and the idea that bad deeds bring "bad karma" while noble behavior reaps "good karma."  In Vedic Hinduism and Buddhism "good karma" is like "good cancer" -- karma is that which entangles us in this world and keeps us strapped to the Wheel of Rebirth.  Yet in the West Gautama's wisdom has been conflated with the prosperity Gospel which states that God rewards the virtuous and punishes the wicked in this lifetime as well as the next.  The idea that actions have consequences is certainly not unique to Christianity: many faiths believe, for example, that violating spiritual taboos can be devastating to one's health and well-being.  But I would argue the self-righteous outrage of the Karma Kops and Threefold Lawyers has more in common with their hated Fundie preachers than with the spiritual practices of pre-Christian Europe.

In its early days, Christianity incorporated all kinds of myths and spiritual heroes into its practices, then re-interpreted them for a Christ-loving audience.  Local gods and heroes were recast as saints working within a Christian paradigm in the service of the One God.  Compare and contrast this with efforts to mix and match various gods and pantheons into a "Horned God/Mother Goddess" model.  Instead of accepting these gods and their stories as a truth in themselves, they are reduced to a signpost which points the way to a Greater Truth. 

And finally we have what may be the most insidious of preconceptions: the Manichean battles between Good and Evil.  Many Neopagans are happy to tell you that there is no Satan in Wicca - then yammer on at length about the horrors of Christianity and how the Evil Christians destroyed the peace-loving matriarchal Goddess-Worshippers.  They never stop to think how their claims echo tales of Christian warfare with powers and principalities, how their slain witch-queens play the role of Christian martyrs, or how they have exchanged the TV evangelist's polyester suit for a tie-dyed pentagram T-shirt.

Luckily, this situation is not hopeless.  Earlier I asked for non-Christian examples of evangelism and martyrdom: in response, Sannion at House of Vines provided a lengthy list of Dionysian priests and priestesses who had spread His fame and even given their lives for His cause.  Imagine an ecstatic faith based not on Christian models but on the Bacchanalia, one fueled by passionate believers who were willing to die for Dionysos and who wanted to set the world aflame with His passion.  This is the kind of revival we could see - indeed, which we must see - when we strive to reach beyond mimicking Pagan ways of worshipping and strive instead for Pagan ways of seeing, living and being.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's amazing how many ways that Christian mindset surreptitiously creeps into neo-paganism. I can't count the number of times, for instance, I've had to correct someone in Hellenic polytheism who was assuming a "priest" of a god would need to be a pastoral counselor - sorry, that's a Christian model, not an ancient Greek one (in which priests were either highly devoted servants of the deity, usually of one specific temple, or just elected or inherited officials with good public standing and a list of nominal duties). It helps that I wasn't raised Christian and never had anything to reject overtly, I think it enabled me to more easily embrace a different mindset.

Eli Fennell said...

Thank you for pointing out, as I often do myself, the Western fallacy (also found in some of the more populist and degenerated forms of Eastern esotericism, e.g. the cult of Sai Baba) regarding the notion of "good karma" and "bad karma" and its ties implicitly or explicitly to a concept of an universal reward/punishment system. Though I have heard one variation that seems esoterically sound, i.e. "neither good karma nor bad karma lead to rewards or punishments, but to act out of compassion, love, kindness, etc... generally (almost universally) leads to a greater "quality" of existence overall, while their opposites generally lead to a lower "quality" of existence overall, though neither one leads to "awakening" (the literal meaning of buddha, "enlightenment" being again far more Western Judeo-Christian than either Eastern or "Pagan", at least in and of themselves."

I am also wont to point out the perversion of mangling multiple pantheons into some kind of "composite pantheon" where roles are interchangeable and reducible to their most banal and superficial aspects, or worse, attempting to force beings into brand new roles and situations. The book "Modern Sex Magick" is perhaps the most horrifying example... wherein is disclosed the fact that some "groups" are "swinging" so to speak the deities during great rites. Yeah, Zeus and Hera were so jealously possessive of one another (He because of a love spell, She because of his infidelities) that they started epic wars over it... but sure, why not try to hook Hera up with Cernunnos, see how that works out for ya!

As to Bacchanalianism... I've already seen much of a purely hollow version of this in the more shall we say liberal Pagan groups. Drinking, hooking up, and showing off one's garb or relative-lack-thereof (i.e. nudity or considerable exposure such as emphasized cleavage and extremely short even to the point of revealing buttocks skirts for women and bare chests, bare ass chaps, or loin cloths on men) becomes the whole raison d'etre of the gathering. Ancient Bacchanalianism was, before it degenerated into nothing more than hedonism, a highly developed ecstatic esoteric system, as well developed as any of the contemplative traditions (such as their rival Appolonians). The lack of spiritual depth in modern Paganism is a serious threat to any modern attempts to revive such a system or create a modern analog. Nor should we discount the validity of contemplative traditions, as these existed within ancient "Pagendom" as well. Different people are best suited to these different paths.

magickal_realism said...

I'd never considered this view of karma before. While I don't for a minute think that Wicca is a Christian heresy at all, I do think that we are heavily influenced by the Christian overculture because most of us were born and raised in it. Our very first concepts about deity and religious practice were often presented as the ONLY concepts, or in some homes, one of three choices (plus atheism.) At least, that's the experience in my upbringing. Given how Christianity permeates so much of our culture, it's unsurprising that we Wiccans don't totally separate from it, or find ourselves falling into Christian expectations and patterns without realizing it.

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