What is Paganism?
A simple, factual explanation of what Paganism actually is. It is pure information written for anyone who is non Pagan or who is Pagan but wants to know more. It is not meant to impress or proselytise.
NOTE: I have had some letters from Christians who claim this essay is anti-Christian. That is not the case. The comparisons with Christianity are objective and without any harmful intent.
In simplest terms Paganism is a religion of place, or a native religion, for example the Native American's religion is Pagan, Hinduism is a form of Paganism. All Pagan religions are characterised by a connection and reverence for nature, and are usually polytheistGoddesses.
Modern Paganism as practised in the west is particular to the native peoples of the west and although there are many forms most are descended from Celtic origins. Modern Paganism or 'neo-Paganism' has the following characteristics:
1. Paganism is a religion of nature, in other words Pagans revere Nature. Pagans see the divine as immanent in the whole of life and the universe; in every tree, plant, animal and object, man and woman and in the dark side of life as much as in the light. Pagans live their lives attuned to the cycles of Nature, the seasons, life and death.
2. Unlike the patriarchal religions (Christianity, Islam, Judaism) the divine is female as well as male and therefore there is a Goddess as well as a God. These deities are within us as well as without us (immanent); they are us. They are not simply substitutes for the Muslim or Judeo-Christian God. This is because the Gods of the major religions tend to be super-natural i.e. above nature whereas Pagan deities are natural, symbolizing aspects of nature or human nature. Having said that God and Goddess are split from the Great Spirit or Akashka which probably equates to the God of the patriarchal religions.
3. The Goddess represents all that is female and the God represents all that is male. But because nature is seen as female the Goddess has a wider meaning. Often called Mother Earth or Gaia she is seen as the creatrix and sustainer of life, the mother of us all which makes all the creatures on the planet our siblings.
4. There are sub-groups of named Gods and Goddesses called Pantheons, drawn from the distant past, for example Isis and Osiris from Egypt or Thor, Odin, Freya et al from Norse religion and mythology. Ancient Pagans would have worshipped one or a small number of Gods and Goddesses, whilst often recognizing the validity of other people's deities. The concept of an overall, un-named Goddess and God, the sum totals of all the others, appears to be a recent one but individual named deities represent particular human qualities or archetypes and are often used as a focus for celebrations and spiritual rites.
5. Paganism has developed alongside mankind for thousands of years; as cultures have changed so has Paganism, yet it is grounded in deep rooted genetic memories that go back to neolithic times and before. Thus Paganism is not just a nature religion but a natural religion.
6. Paganism in the west takes a number of forms including Wicca, Druidism, and Shamanism.
7. To Pagans the four ancient elements, Earth, Air, Fire and Water have special significance. The importance of these is hard to define because they have so many correspondences, for example they are associated with the four directions, North, East, South and West. Each element is a kind of spiritual substance from which all things are made especially ourselves and at the same time are Guardians both of ourselves and of the Goddess and God, and guarding the gateways between this world and the other world.
8. Many Pagans believe in reincarnation in some form. It gives Pagans a substantially different view of life. Early Christians saw Karma as a kind of treadmill, trapping people in endless reincarnations, never free. But Pagans see reincarnation as, at best, a chance to improve or to continue unfinished work, and at worst just a simple re-cycling of souls.
The revival of Western Paganism is mainly due to the creation of Wicca, the nice modern name for Witchcraft. However Paganism is not Wicca; Wicca is an Occult form of Paganism.
The old religion was virtually wiped out by the church of Rome using a combination of propaganda, torture and genocide. Some people held on to the old religion. These were often the wisemen and women or Witches, the root 'wit' meaning 'wise'. The church became impatient and began a purge beginning around 1484 involving the burning of Witches and wholesale slaughter of thousands of people across Europe just on suspicion of being Witches. Not surprisingly, in the face of such oppression the old religion went 'underground' and Witches dedicated to preserving the religion formed themselves into secret groups called covens.
Christianity's purge was so successful that the old religion was virtually extinct by the 1900s but in 1899 a book was published by Charles Leland called 'The Gospel of Aradia' about Witches in Northern Italy who practised 'La Vecchia Religione' - the Old Religion. In 1921 an English historian, Margaret Murray published a book, 'The Witch Cult in Western Europe' in which she maintained that Witchcraft had been a religion. A British ex colonial administrator called Gerald Gardner supposedly revived Witchcraft and called it Wicca. In 1951 the laws against Witchcraft in Britain were repealed and he published a milestone book on the subject, 'Witchcraft Today'.
Since that time Wicca has grown in popularity and has encouraged the revival of the original Pagan roots and the re-emergence of other Pagan branches such as the Northern tradition and the modern Druids. Wicca itself has become more eclectic and has absorbed elements of other systems such as the Qabala and elements of Hindu. While Wicca is relatively new, Paganism is as old as mankind and its traditions are still being rediscovered.
What do Pagans do?
Pagans revere the cycles of Nature through rituals or ceremonies of various kinds. Pagans of the western traditions celebrate up to eight festivals or Sabbats each year (not all Pagans celebrate all the Sabbats). They comprise the four solar quarters i.e. the two solstices (longest and shortest days) and the two equinoxes (day and night are the same length) plus four Celtic 'fire' festivals. All these mark important events in the cycle of life and also symbolise changes in the Goddess and God. They are:
Samhain(pronounced "sowain"), 31st October: the feast of the dead; remembrance of ancestors and people, now dead, who were important to us. It marks the end of the Celtic year and the start of the spiritual new year. Also known as All Hallows day, the night before being All Hallows Eve (Halloween) or all souls night.
Yule, the winter solstice, 21st December approx.: rebirth of the sun and the gradual lengthening of the days towards springtime and new life.
Imbolc or Bride's day: start of spring and the return of the Goddess to the land.
Ostara (Easter), the spring equinox, 21st March: Return of the sun from the south, springtime proper. Some celebrate a holy union between God and Goddess.
Beltane (starting on May day): Summertime begins celebrating new life and the holy marriage of God and Goddess.
Midsomer (Midsummer) or Litha, the summer solstice, 21st June approx.: Everything is green thanks to the God of nature, the Green Man.
Lughnasadh or Lammas end of August: the festival of the first (corn) harvest.
Mabon, the Autumn equinox, 21st September approx.: second (fruit) harvest celebration, making plans for the winter months to come.
And finally back to Samhain and another turn of the wheel of the year. or wheel of life
Samhain, Imbolc, Beltane and Lammas are known as fire festivals. Traditionally there was always a fire at these celebrations. These festivals were never held on exact dates for example Lammas would have been celebrated when the barleycorn was harvested.
Although the word Witch is hated the word Pagan still rings alarm bells in the minds of many Christians or people in the sub-Christian culture. Why? Because Paganism was the enemy within. The church of Rome was determined to stamp it out by any means available and successfully built up an image of evil around Pagans so that even today ordinary people think Pagans and/or Witches sacrifice babies, perform evil spells and so on. The church also masked out or absorbed Pagan celebrations, for example Jesus was not born on the 25th December but was more probably born around April in 7 BCE. This was moved to the 6th January (the Eastern Orthodox church still uses that date). Then at the council of Niceae in 325 the western Christian church persuaded Emperor Constantin to move the celebration of the birth of Jesus to that other celebration of the birth of the sun, in Roman times the festival of Mithras, the God of Light at the winter solstice (which was thought to be 25th December).
Some fundamental differences between Christianity and Paganism
It sometimes helps to define Paganism by making comparisons with Christianity:
1. Christianity sees life and the world as linear i.e. having a beginning and an end, creation to the day of judgement. The Pagan view is circular - the endless cycle of the seasons, of death and rebirth. There will be no end of the world or the universe. The big bang was not the moment of creation but the last rebirth of the universe. For example Christmas celebrates an event which happened 2000 years ago. Yule celebrates an annually recurring event, the rebirth of the sun.
2. The bible tells that people were made in the image of God. (Note: this is really a Hebrew concept; the word God in the first chapter of Genesis is a mistranslation of the word Elohim which means Gods, plural and genderless. The creation and fall of Adam comes in chapter 2 and essentially describes the creation of the Hebrew tribe. The old testament is a chronology of the development of the Hebrew nation and the new testament is a continuation of this. Therefore Christians are, in a sense, subscribers to the Semitic lineage.) The Pagan Gods and Goddesses were really made in our image which is the other way round. Pagan deities are images or symbols of deep rooted memories which Jung called archetypes. The more ethereal 'God' and 'Goddess', which relate to Binah and Chokma in the Qabala, or Shakta and Shakti in the Hindu system do not have any particular form. Artists may present them as human but that is personal choice.
3. Pagans have no concept of sin and no Satan. So there is no fiery hell to worry about either. They have their own values and ethics.
4. The bible and gospels are the guiding rules for Christians (though the interpretation varies immensely); Pagans are responsible for their own actions.
The Pagan view of the universe is one of complemetary opposites - light/dark, yin/yang, earth/sky, male/female, Shakta/Shakti. The major patriarchal religions have a duality of good and evil, God and Satan. The concept of Satan has been around for thousands of years, not only in the Hebrew tradition. The Babylonians, Chaldeans, and Persians believed in a dualism between the forces of darkness and light. Even Paganism has it's Hades and Hel (A Northern Goddess of the underworld), however the concept of Satan was developed by the Church and eventually he was called the Devil, a term meaning 'little God'. While God was originally responsible for good and bad (for example he sent plagues etc. to punish his followers) it was slowly assumed that God did only the good things and the Devil/Satan all the bad things. The Christian church developed the concept of Lucifer, the fallen angel. The Devil was officially adopted by the Christian church in 447 and he was pronounced immortal in 547. Consequently it is impossible for Pagans to adopt the concept of the Devil which is a Judeo-Christian concept. Likewise the Satanists are, in a sense followers of the Judaic/Christian belief system because they worship an anti-god figure which belongs to that system.
While Christianity can be shown to have been hijacked by the church of Rome to gain power Islam (which means 'obedience') is almost a designer religion, carefully planned by Mohammed around 630 years after Christ. Mohammed drew on the indigenous Pagan religions for many ideas but developed it into an aggressive Patriarchal religion that conquered most of Asia just as Christians conquered all the Pagan West and much of the rest of the world as well. Like Christianity it ruthlessly suppressed the Pagan religions in its own back yard, showing much more tolerance to other patriarchal religions like Christianity.
Sex and nakedness are not the taboo subjects that they can be in the major religions. After all they are merely part of nature. In the western tradition the seasons are equated with the relationship of the Goddess and God, for example Beltane, the May Sabbat is a celebration of the Hieros Gamos or holy marriage of the Goddess and her consort, through which the fertility of nature is ensured.
The spiritual path Gardner launched he called Witchcraft but eventually he came up with the name 'Wicca' after the Saxon name for Witch. Its appeal was the mystique of Witchcraft and the elaborate ceremonies, also equality of male and female and freedom from Christian puritan morals. So Wicca is a recent name for Witchcraft. In fact a Witch is simply anyone who has special powers and can be of any religion, for example a Jewish witch. So to be accurate Wicca is not another name for Witchcraft. In fact Wicca is a mix of various practices, ancient and recent put together like a badly fitting jigsaw puzzle by Gerald Gardner; each piece is valid but they didn't fit together right and some pieces were missing. Wiccans are the present-day guardians and priesthood of what is known as the Western Mystery Tradition which has at least some of its roots thousands of years old and many Wiccans spend much time and effort researching the missing pieces. Wicca is now mainly a modern spiritual path geared to today's society and needs, a path to self knowledge and self improvement. Each and every Wiccan is his or her own Priest or Priestess, the implication being there is no intermediary between them and deity - no religious hierarchy.
Modern Wicca is mostly practised in small groups called covens or by solitaries.
Generally children do not get involved in esoteric rituals or mystery teachings such as Wicca until at least 16 years old. But the children of Pagan families may well join in simple exoteric rituals such as dancing round the Maypole, or round the bonfire on one of the 'fire festivals' (Beltane, Lammas, Samhain, Imbolc). Pagan children are often very much aware of some differences from the surrounding culture, for example the Goddess. They might have an altar in their home and Pagan artefacts which the other children usually don't have.
At Christmas most Pagan children still get Santa and they usually get drawn into the baby Jesus thing too. They probably know that things like the Christmas tree (Yule tree) are really Pagan things. Yule is, of course, celebrated a few days earlier than Christmas and Pagan families do their best with it in spite of being overshadowed by Christmas. Easter is a lot more Pagan and all the hot cross buns and Easter eggs are all Pagan traditions. Whereas the Christian impacts on children are limited to Christmas and Easter the Pagan children continue to celebrate the natural cycles of God and Goddess all round the year.
Pagan children are occasionally asked not to mention this or that to their friends or teachers or relatives and it becomes quite a task to help children understand this is because some people get upset about other religions, not because Pagans are doing anything wrong. It is hard for them to understand how things like making a corn dolly or lighting candles to Bridget or celebrating Samhain (Halloween) can possibly be wrong in the eyes of others.
There is a movement by the Christian Coalition to bring prayer back into American Schools which now and again gets close to succeeding. This requires amendment to the first amendment to the American constitution which aims to separate church and state. Through this change Christian teachers will be able to teach Christianity to captive audiences in state schools. In the UK, with no written constitution, this is already part of the status quo on the grounds that it is a Christian country.
The USA has a fragmented culture with groups of totally different persuasions apparently living side by side. In some parts of America Pagans have been able to be more open about what they do than in Europe, giving talks on TV, opening shops with neon Pentagram signs etc. yet in others have been subjected to persecution and abuse.
This article was written by David (Copyright 1997)
This is from http://isle-of-avalon.com/pagan.htm.
You may write to him at HPDavid@isle-of-avalon.com. Please do not send hate mail! If you are interested, here are some other websites for learning more about Wicca: - http://paganwiccan.about.com/cs/whatiswicca/a/aawhatiswicca.htm -http://www.religioustolerance.org/witchcra.htm#mod
*I also posted this on my Myspace blog.




I have not found anything however that demonstrates how Mohammed "designed" Islam for a specific purpose. I have found that it is has been his successors who designed Islam by creating the Hadiths AND injecting Arab desert culture into the religion
When Mohammed actually 'designed' the beginnings of Islam, he's only purpose was to make a change. The evolution of this religion was unknown and would habve been unexpected for him.
Mohommed did very little to control how Islam grew or was formed. It wasn't even until three hundred years after his death that muslim women were 'required' to wear veils. Mohammed was a spiritual leader, not a man out to form a specific ideal--throughout his life his ideas about God changed many times and with them his beliefs and the beliefs of his followers.
As far as Wicca goes, my aunt is wiccan and so I know a little, but good sum up.
~CallieV
Good summary of how a lot of modern Pagans see themselves. Unfortunately, too many Pagan spokespeople have a habit of perpetuating misconceptions about Satanism while trying to dispel misconceptions about their own beliefs, and the author of the article you quoted is no exception. He repeats a slightly toned down version of one of the usual Pagan mis-statements about Satanism: "Likewise the Satanists are, in a sense followers of the Judaic/Christian belief system because they worship an anti-god figure which belongs to that system." This is like saying that Christians are really followers of the ancient Pagan Hellenistic Mystery religions because Christianity's central themes (rebirth and immortality, with rites including baptism, dedication, and sacramental meals) are borrowed from those religions. The vast majority of Satanists do NOT simply accept Christian theology except for siding with Christianity's Other Guy. The most popular form of Satanism, LaVeyan Satanism, is atheistic, seeing Satan only as a symbol of individuality, independence, etc. More theistic forms of Satanism exist too, but they typically have decidedly non-Christian/non-Abrahamic interpretations of who and what Satan is, often incorporating ideas from other/older worldviews. Obviously Satanism's central name/symbol is derived from "the Judaic/Christian belief system," but this, in itself, does not make Satanists "followers of the Judaic/Christian belief system." At least your quoted author - unlike some Pagan spokespeople - does NOT accuse Satanists of committing any atrocities. You might be interested in the section To Pagans and occultists on my Against Satanic Panics website.
I was going to say something about the Satanism bit, but I guess someone else has pointed it out.
Sorry about offending people with the comments about Islam and Satanism. That was just what my source said. I don't really know too much about his comments about Islam being a designer religion, so I can't really say anything about it. As for Satanism, I think maybe he was saying that Satanism is based off of Christianity not in actual beliefs but in worshipping same deities. I think that was what he was really getting at.
I am Pagan as well, though I am not Wiccan and often spend much of my time trying to explain the differences between my own tradition and those practiced by Wiccans. However, that's not the point of this post :) I just wanted you to know you were not alone.
The problem I see with this article, however, is that the author tried to group a definition of Pagan and Paganism together. If you ask a room of thirty people to define Paganism, you will get thirty different answers - especially if all thirty of those asked are Pagan in one form or another. He also spent a lot of time comparing Wicca and grouping it with other Pagan traditions. While Wicca is very much eclectic, I cringe when I see someone use the term so liberally in reference to a religion. Wicca, as with every other religion, has it's own guidelines and regulations that sets it apart from other religions. If that were not the case, they would just call it Strega, or Santeria. While a person can modify it to a degree to better suit their needs, to do so by going outside of such guidelines is not following the religion, making that person no longer accurate in his or her claim that she is Wiccan. It would be the same as if a Christian were to say she did not believe Christ was a savior - it's too far outside the guidelines set up by the doctrines of the religion for that person to accurately calim to be Christian.
The comparisons to Christianity come across as merely Good paganism vs. Bad Christianity and the historical context for comparison is mythological and pieced together from New Age books. The "old religion" was extinct as far back at 600AD and modern paganism is born out of 19th century Romanticism. One key point is your "linear vs. cyclical" metaphor- as if the latter is better than the former. Christianity is not of this world and doesn't labor for a worldly heaven, it's worship is of the Creator, to return to the Creator- not the creation. Paganism gives the promise of death, over and over. The Christ promises everlasting life. Linear = not too bad.
Paganism does NOT give the promise of death over and over. It gives the promise of rebirth over and over. It does not end with death. I personally like that better. Also, many Pagans believe in a resting place. Me personally, while I do believe in reincarnation, I also believe that people who are moral can stay in Elysium (it was a resting place for fallen heroes in ancient Greece). Buddhism, Taoism, Shintoism, Hinduism all have this same philosophy. The term for 'elysium' or heaven in eastern phiosophy is Nirvana. Also, paganism did not start from 19th century Romanicism. It has been around since the beginning of civilizations. Witchcraft started around in the middle ages - it of course was persecuted to nothing, until around the 1950s, when Wicca (modern witchcraft) was started. The Pagan traditions have been around since the beginning of time. The Greek religion started in ancient Greece, the ancient Egyptian religions started in ancient Egypt...etc., etc. Paganism is just a group of religions that believe in many Gods. It is not one belief. The different religions were started in ancient times, before the advent of Christianity. If Paganism hadn't started until 19th century Romanticism, then why does the Bible talk about Gentiles that worshipped many Gods? It seems like your own Bible doesn't agree with your statements. Also, the multiple religious inquisitions instigated by the Church throughout history weren't directed at nothing. They were directed at Pagans, and sects of Christianity that supported values and ideas prohibited by the Church.
The article on Paganism is inaccurate and misleading. The article perpetuates the same kind of ethnocentric bias that it purports Christians are guilty of. Paganism simply means non Christian. The definition of Pagan is
1. One who is not a Christian, Muslim, or Jew.
2. A non-Christian.
One could also reasonably add any non Judeo-Christian religion that has resisted assimilation or extermination. The article implies that Pagans are essentially Wiccan or that all Pagans have belief systems similar to Wiccan. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The fact is Pagans are not interconnected at all. Pagans do not have the same or even similar belief systems. Buddhists do not have the same dogma, beliefs or deities as Shinto. Just as the 500 DIFFERENT Native American religions or ways of life are no more connected to each other than Santeria and Hinduism are connected. The Sundance religion does not have the same beliefs, rituals or dogma as the Native American Church or The Hopi religion or The Smoke House religion. None of them have any connection in philosophy, belief or ritual to Druid or Celtic religions. Just as Satanism is not Wiccan. But Satanism and Wiccan along with all other non Christian religions are Pagan.
The idea that all Pagan beliefs systems are the same, connected or interchangeable is a New Age concept an extension of the same ethnocentric myth Christians have perpetuated. That misconception does as much harm to Pagans as all the other attempts by Christianity to exterminate or assimilate them. This article's New Age definition of Paganism attempts to assimilate all non christian religions into one belief system by defining Paganism with Wiccan dogma. Assimilation of Pagan beliefs effectively destroys the great variety and unique ways to worship, pray, live given to all people by the Creator however you may define Him / Her / It. To accept spiritual homogenization is to undermine the centuries of efforts of non Christians to preserve their beliefs in the face of overwhelming persecution. If we accept the assimilation of all Pagan religions into an all is one and the same spiritual stew. We all lose. The unique flavor, meaning and lessons that each Pagan religion holds true, will be lost to us all.
This assimilation is especially offensive to Traditional Native American people who for centuries in this country, their country have been forbidden to pray according to their beliefs. Not until 1976 has it been legal for Indians to pray. For hundreds of years American Christians have imprisoned beaten tortured and killed Native People simply for praying according to their beliefs. For centuries Traditional Native People resisted all efforts to destroy their culture, language, traditions, and beliefs. In spite of federal state local political and Christian efforts Native People have survived. Our First People have kept their religions and traditions alive. Now once again under the guise of friendship good intentions and understanding New Age non natives are attempting to lay claim to Native beliefs rituals and traditions. Trying to assimilate Native Beliefs into their own, even claiming to be Native Spiritual Leaders, Elders or Medicine people with no true understanding of what they claim to support. All the while claiming its all one, it's all good. In doing so repeating the evil of their forefathers, stealing and destroying what is Sacred
Is it not time to put aside the myths and misunderstanding. We are different from each other. Creator gave each of our peoples a good way to pray, a path to follow to spiritual maturity. We do not have to be the same, Creator made us different. Let us celebrate that. Let us pray together each in our own way according to the beliefs of our people. Let us enjoy the different flavors each of our people bring to the table and not seek to become a tasteless stew of meaningless mediocrity.
This is Candy7468: (It won't let me log in)
My intent was not to put down other Pagan religions. This quote was mainly focused towards Wiccans mostly. Also, it is mainly an overall explanation of paganism to people who are not familiar with it (like Christians). I just wanted to increase understanding of my religion, Wicca. It was not my intent to put down other Pagan religions while doing so.
Muhammad was a prophet, the last to be exact. What he did was spread more of the religion than actually designing a change. It is after his death that these changes you speak of occurred. First their was the split of the religion into two; the Sunnis and Shiites. They believed in different things, so the religion basically took on two different meanings and beliefs. Because the leader after his death of the two tribes were different, they had changes instilled that were different. Those changes are similar to the "desert culture" spoken of earlier.
But the major change of the religion has come from its spreading to different areas after the crusades, the battles, etc. Furthermore, sects of Islam arose; ie kurds, black muslims, etc. These sects were very orthodox in some areas, and very conservative in other areas. Thus, changes occurred there. Then there is the passing of the religion from generation to generation.
Then there was the emergence of "Islamism" known to many as Radical Islam as seen in the Taliban, Nation of Islam, Hamas, etc. These groups took the Quran, and basically redefined the background in such a way that violence is encouraged as opposed to being stopped.
All of these conditions have caused a change from the "initial Islam". If you wish to see Islam in its nearest to ideal conditions, go to Mecca during Hajj or Ramadan, and you can see it there.
Now paganism is, from what I know, a word defining followers that are not christian, jewish or muslim. I haven't heard the religion being associated with the devil, but frankly, any religion can be called devilish because there is an evil force in every religion, and people who don't obey their religion are called followers of the devil.
Disclaimer : this is my opinion.
nice point. where si the site you got thise information. i would love to read more about this