Wednesday, December 30, 2009

The Case For God

Karen Armstrong’s new book The Case For God is billed as a rebuttal to the New Atheists. And a rebuttal it is, although anyone expecting Hitchens-like vitriol will be sorely disappointed. Instead, it’s a reasoned look at how we got to where we are in this fundamentalist shouting match currently going on in the Western world, and why both sides have it wrong.

Armstrong begins with a description of the Lascaux caverns and their 15,000 year old shamanistic paintings, using it as an example of the intrinsic religious nature of humans – a concept with which I totally agree. She says “religion was not something tacked on to the human condition, an optional extra imposed on people by unscrupulous priests. The desire to cultivate a sense of the transcendent may be the defining human characteristic.”

Most of the book is a brief history of Western religious thought. There is some overlap with her earlier book A History of God, though The Case for God focuses mostly on Christianity. Her main argument is that from the dawn of time until the Enlightenment, people understood the difference between mythos and logos – whether a myth (including a religious myth) is literally true is beside the point. People were content with not knowing – they understood some things were beyond their capacity to know.

Enlightenment thinking and the rise of science changed Western culture, and religion changed with it. As more and more of the natural world was explained, people began to expect that everything would eventually be explained and should be explained, and in the process we lost the sense of mythos. Only then did theologians and other religious leaders begin to read the Bible literally. When science began to show that the Bible was not literally true, some couldn’t accept it and began the reactionary movement we know as fundamentalism.

It is literal interpretations and fundamentalist religions that the New Atheists rant against. Armstrong spends only a few pages pointing out the weakness of their argument. She says “the new atheists show a disturbing lack of understanding of or concern about the complexity and ambiguity of modern experience, and their polemic entirely fails to mention the concern for justice and compassion that, despite their undeniable failings, has been espoused by all three of the monotheisms.” Also, “the danger of this secularization of reason, which denies the possibility of transcendence, is that reason can become an idol that seeks to destroy all rival claimants.”

Most of the book describes the historical precedent for, and the advantages of, a better way. But it isn’t an easy way: “Religion is a practical discipline, and its insights are not derived from abstract speculation but from spiritual exercises and a dedicated lifestyle” and “The truths of religion are accessible only when you are prepared to get rid of the selfishness, greed and self-preoccupation that, perhaps inevitably, are ingrained in our thoughts and behavior but are also the source of so much of our pain.” It is only through spiritual practice (meditation, prayer, ritual, study) that the wisdom of religious myths begins to speak to us, and it is only through ethical practice (acts of compassion and a refusal to harm others) that the true power of religion manifests in the material world.

As you might expect, not everyone agrees with Armstrong. Many of the book reviews I found on-line were negative, some to the point of ridicule. In a Wall Street Journal piece, Richard Dawkins called Armstrong an atheist because her God isn’t the God Dawkins doesn’t believe in either. More dispassionately, Ross Douthat of The New York Times states the primary objection:

Most people, though, are not mystics and philosophers, and they are hungry for myths that are not only resonant but true. Apophatic religion [silent religion that embraces unknowing] may be the most rigorous way to go in search of an elusive God. But for most believers, it will remain a poor substitute for the idea that God has come in search of us.
Armstrong admits that some people need a literal religion. If they practice it diligently and with compassion, it can still be meaningful to them and helpful to the world – look at the charities run by Catholic church or the disaster relief work of the Southern Baptist Convention.

But the rest of us – a group that includes most Pagans and virtually all UUs – find ourselves caught between those that say we believe too little and those who say we believe too much. We don’t have to convert them or defeat them. We just have to have the confidence and the courage – and the determination – to practice our faith to the best of our abilities.

From almost the very beginning, men and women have repeatedly engaged in strenuous and committed religious activity. They evolved mythologies, rituals, and ethical disciplines that brought them intimations of holiness that seemed in some indescribable way to enhance and fulfill their humanity. They were not religious simply because their myths and doctrines were scientifically or historically sound … they were not bludgeoned into faith by power-hungry priests or kings. The point of religion was to live intensely and richly here and now. …

Instead of being crushed and embittered by the sorrow of life, they sought to retain their peace and serenity in the midst of their pain. Those who applied themselves most assiduously showed that it was possible for mortal men and women to live on a higher, divine, or godlike plane and thus wake up to their true selves.
May we have the courage to wake up!

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Than To Live With Fear in Your Heart

In the Denton CUUPS Yule ritual, Dolores (who was coordinating) included a Charge of the God that ended with this line: “Keep this ever full in your mind, it is better to fall upon my sword than to live with fear in your heart.” Though I’m familiar with this line, it struck me as inappropriate for a Yule circle. I started to ask her to use something else, then I decided that if Dolores (who is one of the strongest intuitives I know) put it there, it was probably there for a good reason.

It was. It was there for me.

In his 1949 Book of Shadows, Wicca founder Gerald Gardner included this challenge at the beginning of the First Degree initiation: “O thou who standeth on the threshold between the pleasant world of men and the domains of the Dread Lords of the Outer Spaces, hast thou the courage to make the Assay? For I tell thee verily, it were better to rush on my weapon and perish miserably than to make the attempt with fear in thy heart.”

Novelist Katherine Kurtz phrases it better in her excellent 1983 historical fiction Lammas Night: “O thou who wouldst cross the boundary between the worlds, hast thou the courage to face the tests which will be required of thee? For I tell thee, it were better to throw thyself upon this sacred blade and perish now than to essay the trials with fearing in thy heart.”

A challenge is rather common in initiation rituals. The Entered Apprentice (i.e. – first) Degree of Freemasonry includes a challenge at sword point, but at least in the versions I can find online, it does not include the warning against entering with fear in your heart. Gardner was writing at a time when witchcraft was still illegal in Britain, and he was writing something he would pass off as having been handed down from the burning times. Clearly, he wanted to make the point that you could not be an effective witch if you were afraid either of the authorities or of whatever you might encounter in the world of the gods and the dead.

It can also be argued that Gardner was simply being overdramatic, but if so he’s far from the only religious leader to do so. In any case, his point is valid – living in fear is no way to live.

The work-related stress I’ve been suffering from has its roots in fear: fear of unpleasant confrontations, fear of continued long hours, fear of loss of prestige, and ultimately, fear of losing my job and income. These fears, while at times overblown, are not ungrounded.

But the goal of spiritual development – in any religious tradition – is not to make life easy. As the Buddhists say, before enlightenment, you chop wood and carry water. After enlightenment, you chop wood and carry water. The goal of spiritual development is to learn to transcend life’s sorrows and difficulties.

Throughout my life I have repeatedly shown that when faced with real challenges I always find some way through them. Most of us do. We work a little harder, or a little longer. We get out of our comfort zones and do what we have to do. We recognize our limitations and ask for help. We recognize a lost cause and try something new. We re-evaluate our priorities and refocus on what’s really important.

I’ll get through this stressful time at work – I always have. And if my worst fears come true and this job goes away, I’ll find another one. I’ve done it three times before, and if I have to I can do it again. But this isn’t the real challenge in this situation.

The real challenge is to overcome the day-to-day, hour-to-hour fear that is the true source of my stress. It is the fear – not the long hours, not the difficult work, not the demanding co-workers – that is distracting me from my daily practice, that is keeping me from being a good exemplar of Druidry, and that ultimately is a roadblock to my spiritual growth and development. I like to talk about preparing for “something big” that’s coming somewhere down the road, but this is about as big as it gets. This is here and now.

Hast thou the courage? While Gardner’s challenge is rather dramatic, the real challenge isn’t to enter the circle with no fear. The challenge is to have the courage to enter in spite of your fears. Have perfect trust in the perfect love of the Goddess and God and move forward boldly.

The first test comes tomorrow at 7:30 AM.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Before the Dawn

I have a strong interest in prehistory. Part of that is simple curiosity, but another part is a quest for the origins of religion. So, on a recommendation (that I’ve forgotten who or where it came from), I read Before the Dawn by Nicholas Wade on our recent trip.

Wade is a science writer for the New York Times, and it shows. He writes better than most scientists, and he isn’t writing to make a name for himself in academic circles. That leaves him free to argue both sides of unsettled issues, and to engage in speculation where the evidence is inconclusive. That is both the strength and weakness of this book.

Before the Dawn is primarily concerned with the determinations and implications of genetic research. From mitochondrial DNA analysis, it can be shown that Europeans, Asians, Micronesians and Native Americans (that is, everyone except for Sub-Saharan Africans) are descended from one group of about 150 people who left Africa about 50,000 years ago. Other analysis shows that the human gene line split from the chimpanzee line about 5 million years ago (chimps, along with bonobos, are our closest relatives). Wade does a good job of explaining the likely factors that caused natural selection to favor various mutations in our evolution.

But Wade seems virtually certain that humans gained the genes for speech at 50,000 years ago. Back in February I blogged about The First Word by Christine Kenneally, who is Ph.D linguist. Kenneally is far less certain, pointing out that humans had evolved into more or less the form we have now 200,000 years ago – part of that last big evolutionary leap may have been the capacity for language.

And Wade’s observations on religion were disappointing, to put it mildly. His theory boils down to a belief that evolving language gave humans the capacity to lie, so they developed religion to serve as a counterbalance. This is an extremely simplistic view of religion that completely ignores religious experience and the strong evidence we have for religious behavior in our pre-homo sapiens ancestors who almost certainly could not speak.

Where Wade sticks to reporting genetic research, though, the book is informative. Most encouraging is the strong indication that human evolution hasn’t stopped. He cites genetic changes that gave some Africans resistance to malaria (at the cost of increased vulnerability to sickle cell anemia) and other changes that gave Europeans the ability to digest lactose into adulthood as evidence.

The bottom line on Before the Dawn? It’s interesting reading on human evolution and the migrations of early modern humans. But for getting a glimpse of the origins of religion, it’s not helpful at all.

Friday, December 25, 2009

The City of Light and Illusion

The “Old World Elegance” of Bellagio (1998) on the right, the “Urban Sophistication” of City Center (2009) on the left


There is perhaps no less spiritual city in the country than Las Vegas. So why did I just get back from a Solstice / Christmas trip there? Well, Cathy loves the slot machines. And after the past couple months at work, all I wanted to do was kick back, read a bit, and forget about things. Las Vegas is good for that: plenty of good food and drink, all kinds of distractions and diversions, and a great place to people-watch. Plus with the economy being down the room rates are really cheap right now.

Cathy and I have made several trips to Las Vegas, the first in 1996. In that time it’s gone from “DisneyWorld for adults” to “old world elegance” to what’s now being called “Urban Sophistication” – lots of glass and steel and sharp angles. What hasn’t changed is what Las Vegas sells – illusion.

I’m not talking about Lance Burton or David Copperfield. And I’m not really talking about gambling, although gambling is still a major source of the city’s income. Anybody with a high school proficiency in math can figure the odds, and more importantly, that they aren’t on the players’ side.

No, I’m talking about the illusion that you can become someone glamorous just by going to Las Vegas. First it was being cool like Frank and Sammy and Dean, or hanging out with the mob. Then it was visiting Rome or Paris, Egypt or Camelot. In the 90s the illusion was being wealthy enough to afford it all. Now the emphasis is on clubs and lounges and ultra-expensive restaurants and shopping – you too can be a rich idle celebrity with nothing better to do than spend thousands looking sexy and chasing the latest novelties.

I’ve always been uneasy in Las Vegas, fascinated (and a bit seduced) by the gaudy decadent excess of it all, but also unwilling to pay the fare to buy the illusion. I’m either maturing or just getting old, because the last couple of trips the illusion hasn’t bothered me in the least.

There is one piece of spirituality in Las Vegas – the Cirque du Soleil shows. I’ve described them as one part circus, one part gymnastics and three parts psychedelic drugs. The shows and the performers are incredibly beautiful, but they’re so bizarre my logical mind can’t figure them out. So for once, I don’t try. I just experience, and enjoy.

This time we saw Le Rêve, which technically isn’t a Cirque show, but since it was developed by former Cirque du Soliel director Franco Dragone you’d never know it. I’m not going to try to review it, but here’s a review I mostly agree with. I’ll just say the ticket prices are horrible but they’re worth every penny.

Maybe there are some illusions I will buy…

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Winter SolstiCelebration

The Wandering Druid, Father Winter (Ed Townley), and Mother Winter (Valery Guignon). Photo by Jennifer Walz.


The theme of this year's Winter SolstiCelebration was "joy and wonder". It was joyous and wonderful.

Winter SolstiCelebration is not a Pagan event, though there were plenty of Pagans involved. Amy Martin's tribe is a smorgasbord of alternative religions. It's always been an interfaith event - this year it seemed more interfaith than most. Perhaps that's because it was co-produced by the Center for Spiritual Living. Whatever the reason, it worked. Of the five SolstiCelebrations I've attended (including participating in the last three) this was the best.

For me, the highlight of the service was the choir, a combined effort of the Center for Spiritual Living and Unity Dallas. They did a unique arrangement of "Amazing Grace" and a rendition of "Halleluiah Anyhow" that got everyone on their feet quite spontaneously.

It wasn't a cure for work-related stress, but it helped. A lot.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

The Dilemma of Using Magic

Those of you who know me in the real world – or those of you who’ve been coming to this blog and reading the posts that aren’t there – know that I’ve had a very heavy load of work-related stress for the past eight months in general and the past eight weeks in particular. I’m not to my breaking point, but I can see it from here.

In the material world, I tend to favor material action, but this situation seems to call for using every tool in the toolbox – including magic.

The skeptical say the danger of using magic is that you’re relying on something that isn’t real – magic doesn’t work. On the contrary, perhaps the biggest danger of using magic is that it works too well. But magic doesn’t give you what you want – it gives you what you ask for, and what you work for. Parse your spells as carefully and precisely as a corporate lawyer writing a contract, or you’ll find Coyote or Loki or some other Trickster laughing while you slip on a cosmic banana peel.

So I set out to carefully and precisely define what I want and need. I spent several hours going over what’s wrong, how I got there, and what needs to happen to make things well. When I finished, I read it over carefully… and it sounded an awful lot like “put things back the way they were before work went to hell.”

As I’ve said before, I’d make a lousy Buddhist, but the Buddhists are right about one thing: suffering is caused by attachment (the Buddhists are right about a lot of things, most of which I have trouble accepting). And while suffering is by definition unpleasant, it’s also a good motivator. If a factory hadn’t closed in 1995 I never would have left Chattanooga and all the baggage of living in my home town. If another factory hadn’t downsized in 2001 I never would have left Atlanta and formed the connections and relationships that are so helpful and so pleasant in my life now.

If I put things back the way they were, what opportunities for growth may I be turning down?

When I came back from the Druid Gorsedd in August I said I had seen what was possible: Pagans living successful lives in the mundane world and then working and practicing on off time. I was building a network of connections in the Pagan and UU worlds. I was prepared to spend the next 20 years becoming a wise Druid and using my professional career to finance it all.

Is this stress and suffering calling me to something else? And if so, what?

If I work magic to reset my life, I will inevitably work toward a vision that’s based on what I know – incremental changes from what I am/have now. On the other hand, if I say “Goddess, put me where you want me” then I open myself up to things I'm not thinking of now, but I also fail to take responsibility for where my life goes... which is also likely to be incremental changes from what I am/have now.

It seems the magic I most need to work now isn’t to fix my job, it’s to open my eyes and ears to what I’m truly called to do and be.

Whatever that is.

UU Atheist Elected to City Council

From the First Amendment Center via WitchVox, here’s a story of Cecil Bothwell, an Asheville, NC city council member who’s an atheist. Apparently, some conservative Christians are threatening to sue the city for seating him, since the North Carolina state constitution prohibits anyone from holding public office “who shall deny the being of Almighty God.”

Never mind the fact that Article VI of the US Constitution prohibits any religious test for office holders, and that the application of that article to state and local governments was affirmed by the US Supreme Court in 1961.

Bothwell is a member of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Asheville.

It’s good to see some religious diversity in government. I haven’t been to Asheville in many years, but it’s become a Southern outpost for Pagans, artists, gay and lesbian people, and non-conformists of all types.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Ogham Cards

For this year's Winter SolstiCelebration, Amy Martin asked me to be a roving character - someone in costume who interacts with the people who come. She's had Father Christmas, Mother Winter, and the Boogeyman for quite some time - I'm honored to be asked to join them as a Wandering Druid.

But I felt like I need to do something other than stand there and look pretty [ahem]. Offering blessings seems like a very Druidish thing to do, particularly if they're offered in the context of the Oghams, the Celtic Tree Alphabet.

And so, with a rare free Saturday and some cardstock left over from so long ago I can't remember why I bought it, I made Ogham Cards to hand out to anyone who wants to interact with the Wandering Druid. Each card has an Ogham character, its name and tree, the English letter equivalent, its divinatory meaning (at the Little White Book level, which is to say, very very general), and a blessing that combines the themes of the particular Ogham, the Winter Solstice, and this year's SolstiCelebration. The back is a piece of clip art that uses the same tree/root imagery Amy has used in the past.

It's something for people to take home and, hopefully, think about.

So, come out to the Winter SolstiCelebration, see the Wandering Druid, and get your Ogham Card. Whatever I have left over I'll bring to the Denton CUUPS Yule Circle on Saturday the 19th.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

The Material World Intrudes, Again

Let's see... four posts over the Thanksgiving holiday, and one copy & paste post since. Notice a trend? My paying job supports everything else I do, but over the past few weeks it's gone from "extremely" busy to "how much longer can I keep this up?" busy.

I have some thoughts I'm working on now, if I can find time to write them down.

And I did manage to get down to the Cathedral of Hope last night to rehearse the Winter SolstiCelebration opening ceremony. What can I say, other than it's going to be excellent. It's amazing what Amy Martin can do with a small stage and a crew of volunteers. I'm honored and excited to be a part of it all.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Winter SolstiCelebration

If you're in the DFW area, please come out to the 17th annual Winter SolstiCelebration. It is, to the best of our knowledge, the second largest Solstice celebration in the country. This will be my third year as a participant - I'll be a "wandering Druid".


17th annual
2009 Winter SolstiCelebration
Joy & Wonder

Friday December 18, 2009
Solstice service from 7 to 9 pm ~ Yule Fest from 6 to 7 pm & 9 to 10

Cathedral of Hope
5910 Cedar Springs at Inwood, Dallas, Texas 75219
northeast corner, access through Ford dealership on Inwood

We’ll be accepting donations of canned meat, fish and saltine crackers, plus winterwear items, for the Cathedral of Hope assistance programs.

$10, for seniors & kids $5
Advance tickets via credit cards $8 at the Earth Rhythms store.

Presented by Earth Rhythms and Center for Spiritual Living, with support from Cathedral of Hope and Unity Dallas.

Experience the redemptive power of darkness and the regenerative nature of light in Winter SolstiCelebration, the multi-cultural, non-sectarian tradition now in its 17th year.

This year, performers explore the theme of Joy & Wonder through: Song ~ poetry ~ ceremony ~ dance ~ comedy ~ ritual ~ storytelling ~ drumming ~ participatory movement ~ a myriad of musical styles.

New for 2009: Puppetry ~ magic ~ juggling ~ variety performers ~ professional yo-yo artistry.

In the hour before and after the Winter Solstice service, a lively Yule Fest in the lobby hosts roving characters, music, photos with Father Winter and much more.