What is Paganism?
Paganism is not new or unusual in our modern
life. For many people it exists less as an active religion than as parts of
our popular culture. Halloween costumes and treats, Christmas trees and
mistletoe, Easter bunnies and eggs, maypole dances, harvest festivals and
hundreds of other folkways began as Pagan practices. Modern-day Pagans seek
to restore the religious context of these practices.
Defining Paganism
The origin of the word pagan is from the
Latin paganus, meaning a country dweller. When cities were Christianized the
people in the country continued to practice the old religions. The word
pagan took on the meaning of "those folks out there in the sticks who still
do all that old-fashioned stuff." Later it came to mean any member of an
indigenous folk or tribal religion or anyone who was not "of the Book"
(i.e., the Koran, Bible, Torah).
Pagan religions originated in a time when
people lived close to the land. Pagan theologies reflect an awareness of
nature with its cycles of the seasons, as well as the cycles and seasons of
human life. Such awareness is a common thread among Pagans today. Few modern
Pagans can fully know or follow how our ancestors worshiped. Instead we
invent and reinvent our religious practices, and even our beliefs, as we
determine how they resonate with our contemporary lives. Some people prefer
to use the word "Neopagan" to describe this form of modern Paganism.
We capitalize the words Pagan and Paganism
in accordance with standard practices for religious names, e.g., Buddhist
and Buddhism, Muslim and Islam. Paganism is a vital, genuine -- and growing!
-- spiritual path.
What Pagans Believe
Modern Pagan theology is like a great
tapestry with strands originating in many distinct religious traditions.
Contemporary Pagans may embrace all or part of the Pagan tapestry. Some
Pagans explore their ethnic roots and discover the indigenous practices of
their ancestors. Others incorporate indigenous practices that belong to a
wide variety of cultures. Still other Pagans follow newly created practices.
Common among these Pagans is their tie to nature in a way that resonates
with their inner spiritual voice.
Some Pagans believe in the Goddesses and
Gods of the old religions and others do not. Many Pagans understand deity as
immanent, in everything, and believe revelation is found in nature instead
of written in scriptures. Some believe in an afterlife and that their
actions in this life will determine their place in the next. Others believe
only in this life and that their actions here are all that matters. Still
others believe in reincarnation. Some Pagans believe in an active Spirit
World while others do not. Because Paganism is a non-creedal religion such
divergent beliefs can exist together under one religious name -- just like
in Unitarian Universalism!
Many modern Pagans find their beliefs are
very much in harmony with Unitarian Universalist Principles, especially the
reverence for "the interdependent web of which we are a part."
(Thanks to National CUUPS for this information) |