Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Saturday, April 27, 2013

My Life is so Totally Ruined (or, Why Pat Robertson is an Idiot)

Polarizing men create polarized opinions about them.  Some of them are celebrated, and some of them are reviled.  Some of them start off either reviled or celebrated and, over time, become the opposite.  Senator Joseph McCarthy was, at one time, thought to be a hero defending the American way from those dirty evil Commies.  Today, his name is associated with McCarthyism, which has become an associated term with witch-hunting, for attacking others with little evidence, to assume guilt until proven innocent.

Pat Robertson, is one of these men.


For the unaware, Pat Robertson hosts a Evangelical Christian show known as "The 700 Club."  It is a religious news/lifestyle show that discusses current events and the like through an Evangelical, Fundamentalist weltanschauung.  Stating that, I'm sure it is pretty obvious that I would disagree wildly with both Mr. Robertson and The 700 Club:

Him                                                                                                Me
Christian                                                                                         Pagan
Conservative                                                                                   Liberal
Homophobic                                                                                   No H8
Successful show host                                                                       Unsuccessful Blogger
Looks nice in a traditional tie                                                            Bowties are cool

I could honestly go on and on, but I think you get the idea by now.

Opposites

So imagine that I am going on some of the news-sites I sometimes go to so I can read up on current events, and I come across Pat Robertson claiming that Dungeons and Dragons literally destroyed peoples lives.  Forget for a moment, that I am a huge nerd and play D&D often, what evidence does he have that D&D is some sort of ticking spiritual time-bomb?  Sure, there was that ONE incident that happened back in the 70's, an incident that launched such things like Mazes and Monsters and Patricia Pulling's Bothered About Dungeons and Dragons.  However, that is only one story of many.  In fact, The American Council of Suicidology discovered no links between role-playing and suicide.  In fact, there are studies that show that RPGs like D&D and such are beneficial in therapy.  Interesting what research brings up!

I would not be knocking Mr. Robertson here if he stated something like "Dungeons and Draons is antithetical to Charismatic/Evangelical Christianity."  I would honestly just look at it as just an religious opinion on the subject.  However, Dungeons and Dragons destroying lives?  I think I have mo anecdotal evidence to back up the Sociological and Psychological research to show that RPGs have beneficial affects on people.  I've heard about how RPGs got kids off the streets and got them to turn their lives around, to take a philosophical view on ethics.  Many actors have played RPGs in their career, respectable actors like Judi Dench (Dame Judi Dench to you).

We cannot deny how much ass Dame Judi Dench kicks!

I know I know, appealing to celebrities does not a point prove, but   I don't see her career in the gutter, and she played.

Pat Robertson might look at me and see a Satan-worshiper that sacrifices babies and desecrates hosts; that doesn't change the fact that I am a college graduate and a philanthropist who feels a spiritual connection to many Gods instead of one singular one.  The thing is, is that I wouldn't sit back and call Pat Robertson a Christofascist that believes that a woman must marry her rapist or that you have to go far from any dwellings only to take a shit in a hole, or that The 700 Club leads to delusions and ruins families.  I have no proof of that, thus making that claim would make me no worse than he.  Mr. Robertson is human, just like us all, and has his flaws and the like.

But from what I can tell, from both research and anecdotes, no, Dungeons and Dragons is no more likely to ruin your life than reading the Bible daily or shopping at Target or Wal-Mart.

Friday, February 1, 2013

PBP #5: Celtic Appropriation


BEFORE READING: I wrote this blog up a while ago, as a beginning of a theme I wanted to have with my series of Pagan Blog Project posts, namely to show off the vastness of our own tradition, to show off how rich and varied it is without resorting to stealing from other cultures.

After typing this, I honestly did sit on it for a while.  I honestly did not know whether or not to post it.  I honestly feel like I could come off as an asshole, which is the last thing I would want to do.  Am I a bit scathing, well, yes, I guess scathing is a bit of an accurate term to use when it comes to bad history and appropriation, but that goes without saying.

This was the first time I did post-writing research, not on the topic, but on others who have posted something similar to this before.  Wicca For the Rest of Us certainly did so, and so did Metal Gaia.  And they an apologetics style defense of appropriation was posted on a Tumblr blog.  I figured with that post, and with the surprising numbers of supporters of it, that this blog needed to be posted.

The original name for the post was Celtophilia, meaning Love of the Celts.  The change was a last minute decision, since I am a bit of a Celtophile, so Celtic Appropriation it is. :)


AND NOW FOR YOUR REGULARLY SCHEDULED PBP POST!



Fluffy Bunny "The Celts believed in a single Goddess split into three aspects, which the Christians stole as their trinity."
-From Wicca For the Rest of Us

The Celts ranged from the Asia Minor all the way out to the Iberian Peninsula in their long history.  Over time, due to wars from both the Germanic tribes and the Romans, as well as Roman Catholicism and the British Empire, the Celtic tribes and nations fell one by one to the 6-9 left today (depending on whom you ask).  These nations being: Ireland, Scotland, Isle of Man, Wales, Cornwall, Brittany, Galicia, Asturias, and Cantabria.  Other groups of Celts still exist today in the process of reviving their culture, but for the most past, those are the nine.



In the 17th century, William Stukeley, an Anglican Vicar and an antiquarian began studying the ancient Druids, and began calling himself a Druid to.  These druids dressed in white, worshipped in stone circles, and believed in and worshipped a single sun god.  In fact, he stated that the only difference between the Druids and the Christians was that the Druids believed in a savior to come, and to the Christians, that savior had come in the form of Jesus of Nazareth.  Now of course, history has proven his theories wrong, but what he started was the archaeological study of the Celts, and the beginning of the Druid Revival.  Countless more followed in history, Iolo Morganwyn, William Price, Ross Nichols, etc.

I think the first point that must be made is that the Celts had a rich and vibrant spirituality and culture that still continues today.  Sure, it's definitely different from the Celts of the time of the Paleo-Druids, but it still lives on.  Within Neopagan Celtic Spirituality, beliefs in the Fair Folk, no matter under what name they are known by, is commonplace; as well as ancestor worship, communion with nature, and the use of poetry and inspiration.  The Celtic nations had varied deities, some shared between the tribes and some that were vastly different.  The popular modern deity Cernunnos actually was not found with the Insular Celts, although he is similar to other figures in their traditional myths, and today he is found among most modern Celts.


This leads me to the discussion on the misunderstanding of what is Celtic, and the appropriation of Celtic culture that happens a lot.  Like most appropriation and mislabeling, it begins with thinking of the Celts as one big unified culture.  Much like Native Americans, whom had many different cultures and tribes, the Celts were similar.  Hell, we even see this with the modern USA.  New English culture is vastly different from Dixie, which is vastly different from Cascadia.  Sure, we share certain features, like a history, certain beliefs about our nation, etc., but we come at them differently.  The Celts are the same.

Where to start.  I think a disclaimer is in order.  I am not folkish at all.  I feel that, if one is called to a practice, or wants to learn more about it personally, they are perfectly free to, as long as they are respectful.  I am no enemy of syncretism or acculturation, if I was, there would be no statue of Budai on my altar, nor would I study Buddhism or use a mala.  I am also not anti Celtic Wicca.  In fact, William Butler Yeats, a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, began creating a Celtic Hermeticism, so Wicca can definitely work within a Celtic context, and can work very well.


What I am against, is this belief that the Celts were Wiccan, and that Neopaganism is Celtic in general.  I know this is an idea that is rare anymore, we as a movement have grown up, but its still notable.  First of all, Wicca is only about 60 years old.  Second of all, the Celts were polytheistic, not Trinitarian (in response to the bunny posted at the top); were definitely patriarchal, not matriarchal (though women in Celtic society had more rights); and had a system that focused on the Land, Sea, and Sky (and not the Classical Elements of Air, Fire, Water, and Earth).  Also, the potatoes, the damn potatoes, need I say more.

The sad point is that appropriation can put lives at risk.  Sounds dramatic, no?  But shall I remind you of the James Arthur Ray sweat lodge debacle in which two people died, and eighteen more were injured.  In the 21 Lessons of Merlyn, amidst the misogyny and very New Agey beliefs about the Druids being from Atlantis, has put down some bad herbalism.  To quote Isaac Bonewits, "He also explains how to make a tincture of mistletoe without mentioning that the berries are deadly poisonous, or whether he is referring to European or American mistletoe, which have very different medicinal properties."  Now, I am going to give the author, Douglas Monroe, the benefit of the doubt.  However, I don't think the everyday person, whom might not know this would take that into account, and may accidentally poison themselves.  I for one, would not want that!

I will speak more of this in my two blogs on Eclecticism when we get to the E's, but there is one easy solution to this.  Solution thy name is education!  Pick up a good book on Celtic culture, both ancient and modern, and skim through it a little.  I'm not saying become a Celtic Reconstructionist.  Neo-Druidry and Celtic Wicca are a-okay in my book.  I don't think there is a way to write this, in some way, much needed blog, without coming off unintentionally as an asshole.  Yet, here I am, stating this fact out, when it's most needed, as we rediscover our footing.

NEXT WEEK: Something less Phlegmatic in humor (although I am pretty Phlegmatic), CARDINAL POINTS AND ASSOCIATED SPIRITS AND SYMBOLS