Saturday, September 25, 2021

The Mystifying World of Paganism!

 



Photo from Google


Author’s Note

 

“The metaphysical insanities of Athanasius, of Loyola, and of Calvin, are, to my understanding, mere lapses into polytheism, differing from paganism only by being more unintelligible.”

 

Thomas Jefferson

 

Reflections

 

All civilizations on our planet have a god, gods, and goddesses, or at least some important, mythical leader who created the universe and offered protection from the unknown forces the people of that civilization faced daily. These beings could be called on for a variety of reasons including help during times of trouble, help for good harvests, support during wars, healing during times of sickness, help to achieve financial prosperity, et cetera.

 

What is paganism? Paganism is defined as a religion other than one of the main world religions, specifically a non-Christian or pre-Christian religion, or a modern religious movement incorporating beliefs or practices from outside the main world religions, especially nature worship.  When historians use the word pagan in the pre-Christian Greco-Roman world, the term refers to a person who believed in any of the polytheistic religions that existed, who was neither a Jew nor Christian. However, in the fourth century CE, the word pagan became a derogative word invented by Christians to disparage polytheistic adversaries. The word was equivalent to calling someone a hillbilly in our culture.

 

At this point it might be interesting to give an approximate timeline of ancient civilizations and their religions, to give you an idea when the religious traditions might have begun. Prior to the Greco-Roman period which began in 900 BCE and 800 BCE respectively, other ancient civilizations existed including Ancient Mesopotamia in 3700 BCE, the Ancient Caral Civilization located in north-central coastal Peru in 3500 BCE, Ancient Egypt in 3150 BCE, Ancient India in 2900 BCE, Ancient China in 1800 BCE, and Ancient Israel in 1850 BCE.

 

            Here is a useful summary about the major aspects of ancient religions outside of ancient Israel and early Christianity taken from Bart Ehrman’s book, The Bible -A Historical and Literary Introduction.

·       They were polytheistic, they worshipped many gods.

·       These gods had many functions: gods of war, gods of weather, gods of health, gods of agriculture, gods of forests, rivers, home, the hearth, et cetera.

·       There could be a chief god.

·       A person need not restrict their worship to one.

·       The people worshipped the gods because life was difficult, and the gods could provide people what they could not provide for themselves.

·       People thought the gods were powerful and deserved to be worshipped. By worshipping the gods, they were granted access to divine power.

·       The gods were worshipped through cultic acts (not some kind of bizarre and secretive practice). This refers to care of the gods by two chief ways, through sacrifices (animals, food, wood, etc.) and by saying prayers.

·       Almost all ancient religions had sacred places such as sanctuaries and temples where sacrifices and special prayers could be made.

 

Although these ancient civilizations were separated by vast distance and time, it is interesting to note they somehow had similar gods, only with different names. If you really think about it the logic is not difficult to understand. People, no matter which civilization they were born into are naturally in awe of things. When they could not understand something occurring around them, they would become scared. They found comfort from these things by creating or inventing gods, who they believed, if worshipped or praised, would protect them. They believed in return for protection, the gods required prayers of adulation and sacrifices.

 

Although many ancient religious traditions lack written texts, cuneiform documents dating back to 2600 BCE do exist from Sumer and Egypt. Cuneiform documents were formed by pressing a reed stylus into soft clay tablets that were later hardened in the sun.

From these sources, these traditions can be thought of as practices created by humans to compel gods or nature to obey human commands. These religious practices were then incorporated into daily life. 

 

The Assyrians recorded religious texts in cuneiform documents in the first millennium BCE. These documents were collected by the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal and included the Creation Epic, the Epic of Gilgamesh, and the earliest account of the Flood. All ancient civilizations have creation myths, explaining how the world was created from chaos.

 

      The Creation Epic is an interesting creation myth that tells the story of the great god Marduk's victory over the forces of chaos and his establishment of order at the creation of the world. This text helped establish a religious context for the Babylonian state and its system of government. The Egyptian creation story describes how the sun god Ra, also called Atum, created his son Shu and daughter Tefnut and they worked together to create order in Nu - the chaos of the universe. They created humans from tears of happiness and then made Yah the moon, Geb the earth, and Nut the sky. Geb and Nut had four children - two gods and two goddesses - who represented the four forces of life. They were:

  • Osiris, god of fertility
  • Isis, the mother goddess
  • Set, god of evil
  • Nephthys, goddess of death.

 

            It is interesting to note the similarities of these creation stories with the account in Genesis of the Hebrew Old Testament.

 

Greek religious practices included the worship of household and local gods, sacrificial rites, and prayers, vows, divination, and omens. Although the polytheistic Greek religion included a multitude of gods, representing a certain facet of the human condition, the most important gods were the twelve Olympian gods, led by Zeus, who resided on Mount Olympus. These gods were given human bodies and characters, both good and bad. In the stories of Greek mythology, these gods directly intervened in human affairs. These stories were first passed on through oral tradition, but later were put in writing by Hesiod in His Theogony and in the poems of Homer, the Iliad and Odyssey.

 

Roman religious practices began with early Roman ancestor worship that evolved into a complex system of household and state gods. A turning point in Roman religion occurred with the deification of Julius Caesar, establishing the practice of emperor worship. Before the rise of Christianity led to the end of paganism, Roman paganism had other rivals such as Zoroastrianism and other various cults from around the Mediterranean world.

 

What was paganism and why did it flourish in the pre-Christian Greco-Roman period? Bart Ehrman describes it well in his book, The Triumph of Christianity, in this way:

 

“Pagan religions were almost entirely about practice, about doing things, about giving the gods their due – not through mental affirmations of who they were or what they had done, but through ritual actions that showed reverence and devotion.”

 

           Most of the rites and practices of Pagan belief systems died out centuries ago.  However, some modern spiritual seekers have recovered those ancient wisdom traditions and now proudly identify as Pagan. Modern paganism is one of America’s fastest growing religions. Modern Paganism encompasses a wide and rich variety of polytheistic religious traditions: Sumerian, Egyptian, Greek, and Roman practices, as well as Wicca (modern witchcraft), Asatru (the worship of Norse gods, goddesses, and land spirits), and Druidism (as Indo-European priesthood).  

 

Unlike Judeo-Christian traditions that center around biblical authority, clergy and codified belief systems, Modern Paganism is all about the rituals, that often include drumming, dance, ceremonial fires, incense, and representations of the four elements earth, air, fire, and water.

 

 

Silent Prayer

 

Creator God, we stand in awe of the beauty of nature!

 

Music

 
Yggdrasill - Viking Pagan Folk Song

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RS3MU3aqXkI

 

Barry

 

English Lyrics for Yggdrasill

 

An ash I know it stands -

It is named Yggdrasill.

High tree, sprinkled,

with white mud.

There from come the dews,

That fall on the dale!

It stands always green, above -

The source of Urdhr.

 

There from come the maids,

Much knowing.

Three, their dwelling,

Stands under the tree.

Urdh is named one,

The other Verdhandi,

They notched wood –

Skuld is the third.

They set up the laws,

They decided on the lives,

Of the children of time (the children of man)

They promulgate faith.

 

 

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