Techno-Pagans at work

A blogger covering the General Assembly of the Unitarian Universalists writes,

Dinner with Niko, the one other member of the New Bedford church besides me to be at General Assembly. He told me about the big outdoor solstice ritual that the pagan group held today. And how did they find a suitable outdoor space in downtown St. Louis within walking distance of the convention center? They used the satellite photos in Google Maps, and found a perfect little green space. There was even a grassy circle within a grove of trees.

I should mention that I am big fan of Mary Oliver too.

(Pointy) hat tip to Prairie Mary.

Tags: ,

Brief blogging hiatus

I’m on the road this week. Blogging will re-commence after the 25th. Happy solstice, everyone.

Why Muslims want to kill us

Gordon Nickel, who teaches at a Christian university in Canada, discusses–verse by verse–all those Koranic commands about killing “unbelievers,” “idolators,” and “polytheists”.

At face value, therefore, polytheists appear to be at greater risk than Jews or Christians.

Yes, that would be us Pagans today, I think, not just someone in the Middle East centuries ago. You think differently?

Tags: ,

What is ‘academic writing’?

I have been looking at a book proposal for the Pagan Studies series that I fear would not be an “academic” book. (Of course, the proposers might revise it yet.)

Too often, people think that the definition of “academic” writing is (1) writing by people with advanced degrees that (2) no one else would care about.

Try this instead.

Some of the writer’s subtitles:

  • Scholarship does more than evoke feelings
  • Scholarship goes beyond self-justification
  • Scholarship transcends group advocacy
  • Scholarship makes appeals beyond personal experience
  • Scholarship utilizes theory in non-cosmetic ways
  • Scholarship admits to reasoned criticism

Read the whole thing.

MacRaven: “Odin Lives”

In a long and interesting post, Dave Haxton discusses Heathenry’s resiliance and his own encounter with a certain wandering god.

UPDATE: Bad link corrected.

Let’s drop ‘Neopagan’

Back in the 1970s, when Tim (now Oberon) Zell was editing Green Egg (America’s leading Pagan zine at the time), “Neopagan” or “Neo-Pagan” was a cutting-edge term for a collection of religious movements from Wicca to Egyptian Reconstructionism.

More recently, the British Pagan scholar Graham Harvey has suggested dropping the term on the grounds that after fifty or more years, we are not so “neo” anymore.

In academia, it is more and more replaced with “contemporary Paganism(s),” as in the Consultation on Contemporary Pagan Studies in the American Academy of Religion. (A “consultation” is a type of program unit.)

Meanwhile, various conservative Catholic writers seem to be re-discovering “pagan” and “neo-pagan” as a term of abuse, starting at the Vatican.

Here the pope’s astronomer refers to “creationism” as “a kind of paganism.” I think that is because the Vatican accepts evolution; therefore, creationism is non-Christian, or pagan and superstitious.

G.K. Chesterton, patron saint of all rightwing Catholic writers, referred to the Nazis as pagan and in fact used the term neo-Pagan (as modern “anti-Christian”) at least forty years before Green Egg came along.

Here’s a Catholic blogger doing the same thing. He seems to equate Sir Edmund Hilary’s “neo-paganism” with merely being worldly and irreligious.

So they are not talking about us directly because we are not really on their radar yet.

In Pagan Theology, Michael York (who does not capitalize the term) argues for both the existence of Pagan religion as a category, whether ancient or contemporary, as well as for Pagan elements (pilgrimages, veneration of shrines, etc.) in the bookish religions. In a future post, I can discuss his definition. But buy the book anyway.

To me, “Pagan” has value as a term defining polytheistic, nondualistic religions whether ancient or present-day. Eventually even the pope will realize that.

But Roman Catholics aside, I find Graham Harvey’s argument convincing.

Tags: ,

Courting the Lady, a Wiccan Autobiography

Some know Patrick McCollum as California’s official state Pagan prison chaplain, who has advised correctional systems across the country. Some know him as a jewelry designer.

But he has also been working on his autobiography as a Witch, beginning with his teenage years, and the first volume is now available for order.

I will be ordering the book and will post my own review later.

Tags: ,

Rutherford Institute defends Wicca (sort of)

John W. Whitehead, founder of The Rutherford Institute, a sort of ACLU of the religious right, says that Christians should support Wiccans’ efforts to get tombstones for military veterans.

Although our country was founded on a Judeo-Christian base, the Framers of the U.S. Constitution understood that religious freedom was for everyone, not just Christians. In other words, the only way that freedom can prevail for Christians is for Christians to stand up and fight for the minority beliefs and religions of others.

Without it, freedom will most likely be lost. And we will be left wondering whose freedoms we are really fighting for.

OK, he does have to slip in the “founded on a Judeo-Christian base” line. It would be more accurate to say “founded on a Neoclassical Deist base.” Remember what the Constitution says about Jesus Christ? Nothing at all. But his overall point is a good one.

Tags: ,

Tinfoil hats aid government mind control

Researchers at MIT have determined that tinfoil (actually aluminum foil) hats actually increase the effectiveness of government mind-control satellite transmissions.

Please take appropriate action.

Tags: ,

Woman marries cobra

In the Indian state of Orissa, a woman has married a cobra. Apparently that is no big deal. Don’t let Ted Haggard find out.

Villagers were thrilled when Das confessed her love for the snake. Some even offered to arrange a grand feast.

Hat tip to Steve Bodio. And, no, I’m not marrying any rattlesnakes.