The problem is that seldom do you find agreement throughout a whole religion as theorists define religion. There isn't really one Judaism, or one Christianity, or one Islam, or one Buddhism, or one Hinduism, or any other defined religion. No more than there's one French language, or one Spanish, or one Italian, or one Mandarin, or one Cantonese. Religions have denominations and sects. Languages have dialects. Cultures have subcultures. And even the groups within each are influenced by those in the other overarching categories. We like to categorize and file everything because our minds, our Ruach, our Talker, likes order and organization. But life is messy and human interaction is messy. As black and white a thinker as I am, life is greys and colours. Life is Chaos and disorder. Order can only hold for so long before it falls apart, and the larger the area, the more people, it tries to control, the sooner and the faster it falls. Rome fell in Chaos because it got too big. The same is true over and over throughout history.
So it's impossible to look at a religion only from what all it's people believe, for there is no true Catholic (universally accepted) or Orthodox (the right belief). All dissolves into heterodoxy and heresy if you you look at it too closely. Chaos and Prophecy always overcome Order and Establishment. All is Paradox.
So how do you understand another religion? You have to look from within and from without. You have to look at tradition and the current state of it. And you have to understand that no statement can completely enclose the whole religion.
FFF,
~Muninn's Kiss
"And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." ~Friedrich Nietzsche
Monday, 27 June 2011
Thursday, 23 June 2011
June: The Time of Water, of Rain, of Flooding
The sun setting over the Laramie River |
The mountains, and hence my working site, are still off limits right now, because the snow is still too deep and all the roads are closed. The pass through the Snowys from Centennial to Saratoga is usually open by Memorial Day (May 30 this year), but this year they say it might not open at all. There's still ten feet of snow up there, and every night what they plowed, from both sides, the day before is filled back in. It was quite a winter.
Across the Laramie River from the bridge, normally 10 feet across, now about 50. |
Down by the riverside. |
Laramie River at dusk. |
So, here I am in Laramie, in the Time of Water. And it is glorious and gorgeous here.
FFF,
~Muninn's Kiss
Tuesday, 21 June 2011
All Hail the Summer King!
Image from TundraFunda.com. |
Desert in New Mecixo. Image by BawBaw on IgoUgo. |
The Tao-Chi showing the year. Image from Chinese Fortune Calendar. |
- All things have two facets: a Yin aspect and a Yang aspect.
- Any Yin or Yang aspect can be further divided into Yin and Yang.
- Yin and Yang mutually create each other.
- Yin and Yang control each other.
- Yin and Yang transform each other.
This understanding of Yin and Yang has greatly influenced my understanding of the Divine Twins in the Feri tradition of witchcraft. And the Divine Twins are fundamental in my understanding of the universe. It is the Dance of the Twins that creates and destroys, that is what makes up our universe. They are Yin and Yang, opposites, yes, but also one. There is not one without the other, and neither function independently. It is their interplay that defines all things.
Tao produced the One.When the West looks at an event, they look for cause. Everything is cause and effect. A leads to B leads to C. The search that lead to Western science is the search for the Causae Causantes, the cause of the cause, the reason of the cause, the originating cause. We want to know what happened first, what started it all. And when we look at events in our lives, we look for why, not what. My stomach is sick today. I've been thinking about the scallops I ate last night as a cause, instead of thinking, what's wrong now?
The One produced the two.
The two produced the three.
And the three produced the ten thousand things.
The ten thousand things carry the Yin and
embrace the Yang and through the blending
of the Qi they achieve harmony.
~Tao Te Ching, Chapter 42
When the Chinese look at an event, they want to understand the state in the moment. What is out of balance now. What does the event mean now. They don't not believe in cause and effect, they just mostly find it irrelevant. The title of the book, The Web That Has No Weaver, makes the point well. In the West, we always had our weavers: the three Fates, the three Furies, the three Norns (and all the lesser norns), Ananke, Necessity, Fate, Destiny, and many more besides. Wyrd/Fate/Destiny/Necessity, by whatever word and whatever name, have always played a big part on the Western psyche. But this "who" isn't important to the Chinese. It's the web not the weaver that matters. It is a dance, not a chain of events. For my stomach, the cause would be irrelevant, what matters is what it out of balance at the moment that can be balanced to fix the problem.
Summer King/Winter King from Hrana Janto's 1995 Myth & Magic Calendar from Llewellyn. Image from Hrana Janto's Goddess Gallery. |
Title page for The Boy's King Arthur. Image from Wikimedia Commons. |
Many people celebrate Midsummer differently. The day varies as does the name, but like all the different holidays around Midwinter, around the equinoxes and the "quarter-quarters", it seems a natural time to celebrate. Some celebrate for religious reasons, some just for fun. Some practice magic on this day (or Midsummer's Eve), while others use scientific instruments to observe the sun at its highest point.
"John the Baptist and Jesus" cast bronze by Lawrence Plowright. Image from Plowright Studios. |
Goddess of Fire - both sacred fire and domestic. (Hestia/Vesta). Image from True Time Tales. |
Just about every culture for every holiday used bonfires at some point. The Yule log from Germanic origins is the remnants of the Yule/Midwinter bonfires, as are the candles and Christmas lights many use for Christmas. On Samhain, the Celts in Ireland would put out all fires and wait for the new fire to be lit. It was lit at Tlachtga then carried to Tara, where all the people would gather. It would be used to light a bonfire there, from which all the people would get new fire to bring back to their homes. There's of course the famous story of St. Patrick lighting the bonfire on Slane, drawing the people to look away from the fire of the old religion to the fire of the new religion. In Britian, bonfires are lit in honour of Guy Foxe's Gunpowder Rebellion. Fires were burnt at Beltaine and Easter as well, and many other days.
Gozanokuribi Daimonji bonfire from Gozan no Okuribi. Image from Wikimedia Commons. |
My scallops last nigh. |
If I want to look at my own traditions, the celebration of solstice could be seen in Fourth of July, with the fireworks (bonfires?), picnics, parties in the park. It's a little later than the solstice, but I'd say that's where I can find it in my own traditions.
But what would I do on the Summer Solstice if I wasn't sick? Would I celebrate it with a trip to the mountains (oh, yeah, they're still closed because of snow)? Would I do some great work of magic up in the hills (oh, yeah, snow)? Maybe in my back yard? Ritual inside on the Summer Solstice seems sacrilege. Would I walk my dog by the river (oh, yeah, all the paths are flooded because of all the snow melt and the fact that June is the rainy month here)? Maybe a long walk around the neighbourhood? Lay in the back yard in our hammock? I honestly don't know.
The Summer Solstice is a time of high magic, sun magic, life magic, the reign of the Summer King. It's the transition from planting to haying in many European agricultural societies, a transition point, a liminal point. At the minimum, it's a point of change, a point to acknowledge and remember to see how the world changes from the past to the future, the light to the dark. At the most, it's a time to make change.
All Hail the Summer King All hail the Summer King! For now he reigns supreme! Dark has failed and light has won, And now it begins again. All hail the Summer King! For now he reigns supreme! His brother’s dead, off with his head, His blood runs down the streets. All hail the Summer King! For now he reigns supreme! The fires burn, the waters flow, And all is as it seems. All hail the Summer King! For now he reigns supreme! Upon his throne, with his lovely bride, Good cheer he spreads around. All hail the Summer King! For now he reigns supreme! But darkness grows, and Winter comes, And soon his time will come. |
FFF,
~Muninn's Kiss
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