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| NeoPaganism Paganism, Wicca, Witchcraft, Reconstructionalism: discussion, questions, issues |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Established member
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Posts: 201
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Re: God
Mmm . . . kind of a loaded question.
The short answer is “no.” I think I would rather say—cautiously—that the Christians, of late-Roman times and up through the Middle Ages, took various pagan gods—notably Pan, Dionysus, Herne the Hunter, and Cernunnos and shaped them into what became the Christian devil. The Church was locked in a pretty desperate struggle in the early days, first against diverse views within its own ranks such as Gnosticism, Arianism, and Manichaeism, then against the pagans [literally “the country folk”] who tended to cling to the old ways and who had little to do with these new-fangled notions coming out of the big cities. By taking a deity with easily identifiable features—horns, goat legs, what-have-you—they could more clearly draw the battle lines between the new faith and the old. “We worship the One True God; you worship Satan.” Most Wiccans I know will answer that question with something like “We don’t believe in Satan. He’s a Christian god.” While a simplistic reply, it’s true. Modern Wiccans worship a wildly diverse bunch of deities, but most tend to focus on the Goddess as a gentle, loving, and nurturing divine-mother figure. Many, but not all, include “the Horned God” as Her consort. Traditional Wiccan groups—Gardnerians, especially—emphasize the balance between male and female and see God and Goddess as equal, or as almost equal but with the Goddess in charge. The Horned God, often named as Cernunnos, is variously seen as the Lord of the Hunt, the Lord of Death*, or the Wild One of the Forest. [*Footnote: Though “Lord of Death” sounds scary to Christian ears, for most Wiccans death is a necessary part of and balance to life, a door through which we all must pass to enjoy new life. Death is a gift, not a curse.] Wiccans emphatically are NOT Satan worshippers as they are so often depicted by the news media or Hollywood. Satanism in fact is a perversion of Christianity, a religion which requires Christianity, and a belief in Christian symbols, to exist at all. The symbolism of a satanic rite—the inverted cross, defiling the host, ritually blaspheming God, the Black Mass itself—is all meaningless without Christianity as the prototype, if you see what I mean. Without God, there could be no devil. And none of that figures in any way in Wicca. It’s interesting to note that throughout the Old Testament, Satan was really a very minor character. In Job he is pictured as “the accuser,” a kind of prosecuting attorney who “goes to and fro upon the earth” in order to find out if good people are really walking the walk. In Genesis, the tempter is simply “the serpent,” which was a widespread near-Eastern symbol for wisdom and which seems to be a hold-over in the text from far more ancient Sumerian myths. In the OT, God Himself is seen as the source of evil. [I Samuel 19:9; II Chronicles 18:21-22/ 34:24; Proverbs 16:4; Isaiah 19:14/ 63:17; Jeremiah 4:6/ 6:19/ 23:12/ 32:42; Lamentations 3:38; Amos 3:6; Micah 1:12; and others too numerous to mention.] The idea of a war in heaven and a rebellion of the angels didn’t become popular until much later—Maccabean times [c. 160 BCE] at the earliest, and in some of the Essene writings a century or more later. Some of these teachings obviously influenced early Christian writings. The early church was also strongly shaped by various other religions—notably Mithraism and Zoroasterism—which tended to see the world in terms of a universe-wide war between a god of light and a god of darkness. Some branches of early Christianity, such as the Manicheans, actually took this idea too far, making Satan essentially equal to God in power or, as the Gnostics thought, identified him as the demi-urge/creator of the material world, with the assumption that spirit = good, matter = bad. Only by the Middle Ages did the devil start to assume his modern appearance—an angelic being who’d revolted against heaven, who is less than God in power, but who still seems to have been granted free rein over his own domain. [A very uncomfortable perch for modern Christianity philosophically: either Satan is not under God’s control, making him equal in power to God, or else God DOES have authority over him, making God responsible for evil.] Wiccans don’t get involved in this mess at all. The Horned One may be the original model of the Christian devil, but that’s hardly THEIR fault! For Wiccans, the god is most often portrayed as Herne, represented by a stag or as a man with a stag’s antlers. Herne was later mutated by the Romans into Cernunnos, who often had goat’s horns and who represented a more pastoral divinity [i.e. a lord of domestic animals versus lord of wild animals in the woods.] The Greek Pan was seen as having a goat’s horns and legs, and is the most obvious prototype for the Christian devil, especially in some of his more, um, licentious aspects. Horns, of course, represent the male principle in nature. Many—not all—Wiccans see nothing wrong with celebrating sexuality as a divine gift and even as an expression of worship. This may be one of the biggest and most important schisms between modern Wicca and modern Christianity. Wiccans find nothing immoral, sinful, or evil about sex or the body or sexual pleasure, which puts them in direct opposition to a modern Judeo-Christian culture that is still up tight about such things—especially in puritanical America. And this is for fundamentalist Christians further proof that Wiccans must be devil-worshippers, since sex is sinful and Satan is the author of sin. So the long answer is . . . there are indeed superficial similarities between the modern Christian devil and the Wiccan Horned God, yes, but they are due to ignorance, arrogance, and deliberate manipulation by the Christian clerics who demonized [literally!] the nature-based religions of the people they were trying to convert. For our part, Wiccans do NOT worship the devil. He is a Christian god. Peace! Bill |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,714
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Re: God
Namaste,
no, and it's also not the Christian devil ![]() as Juan has explained previously, the whole image of the devil is a work of fiction created by Dante for his seminal work "Inferno" Lucifer is the Christian advesary. and it's not what you might think at first blush... this isn't like an enemy, this is more like the Distict Attorney, if you live in America. in any event, you can ask some of the more knowledgeable Jewish visitors to the forum to explain this in more depth, if you have interest. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 6
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Re: God
Last time I checked "nature-based" didn't mean "worship a fallen angel whose only *crime* was rebellion and probably because he was yahweh's fave was sentenced to an eternity for a transgretion that really couldn't have done anything considering what yahweh thinks of himself"... or so I've read (now where's the spellcheck)
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: London, UK, Malkhut she'be'Assiyah
Posts: 1,469
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Re: God
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and, yes, ha-satan is very, very minor compared to what you're talking about here. judaism would have a problem with nature-based religions if their proponents acted immorally or attacked us - which includes taking Divine Names "in vain", xandrew - see my other comments on your use of Divine Names. it's not big or clever to do this. b'shalom bananabrain |
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#6 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: UK
Posts: 1
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Re: God
Wiccans do not have any thing to do with what the Christians call satan.
A wiccan is likely to honor Pan, Apollo, cerrunos, Or just The Horned God of the wild. Nothing to do with Any Evil entity or Christian deity. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Interfaith
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Essex, UK
Posts: 1,125
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Re: God
"The idea of a war in heaven and a rebellion of the angels didn’t become popular until much later—Maccabean times [c. 160 BCE] at the earliest."
I think you will find that the rebellion of angels came from Enoch (pre Moses) and passed on to his son Methuselah who was an old testament patriarch whose life span (recorded in Genesis 5:27) was 967 years. In the New Testament He is mentioned in the gospel of Luke. The teachings of ENOCH appear to have influenced all religions coming from this region in some way. Fragments of the Book of Enoch were found amongst the Dead Sea Scrolls (which apparently scholars now say were not written by the Essenes). Enoch is mentioned a few times in the OT from memory. I understand that Lucifer actually means 'Light Bringer' being love Sacredstar |
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#9 (permalink) | |
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Established member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Northern Indiana
Posts: 375
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Re: God
Quote:
As for whether or not Wiccans Worship Satan, I think that the normal Christian answer to this would be that Wiccans either worship Demons or figments of their imagination. I don't mean this as any form of insult to the Wiccans here I'm just giving the point of view of the average Christian. However I'd like to say that any informed person wouldn't say that Wiccans are attempting to worship demons simply that they are tricked into doing it by power hungry beings. I'd agree with WHKeith that the pseudo-Christian view of Satan (as in what he looks like) probably did come from Pagan gods so it's no surprise that the gods of the Wiccans would look something like the pseudo-Christian view of Satan. a more orthodox view of Satan would be that of a revolting angel because he is only a spiritual being and is thus as beautiful as his soul is pure. |
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#10 (permalink) | |
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New Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 2
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Re: God
Quote:
![]() The short answer is, no, of course not. The Wiccan faith has its roots in faiths far more ancient than even the Jewish faith - of which the Christian faith, is of course an off-shoot - and is entirely based on worship of Nature. |
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#11 (permalink) | |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: London, UK, Malkhut she'be'Assiyah
Posts: 1,469
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Re: God
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b'shalom bananabrain |
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#12 (permalink) | |
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Earth Child, Sky Spirit
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Re: God
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The Roman Catholic Church linked the Devil with Lucifer to try to link Devil worship with Paganism. So, Lucifer is not exactly the Devil. |
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#13 (permalink) | ||||||||||||
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: God
Hello, and Peace to All Here--
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To the Christian, there are two kinds of death. One is physical, and one is spiritual and eternal. I respectfully submit that the Christian view of physical death is not that much different than the Wiccan view. Quote:
Sex is not considered sinful to a Christian at all--it is a beautiful part of life. The Christian view of sex corresponds exactly with bananabrain's explanation of the Judaic view. It is promiscuous sex that is seen as sinful. Quote:
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As to the original question, "Is the Wiccan God the Christian devil?: Quote:
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Anyway, I thank you all for allowing me to jump in here and add to the conversation from a little different view. Hope I did not offend anyone--if I did, it was unintentional. Not here to judge or be judged--just saw a couple of things I thought begged for a little more elaboration. InPeace, InLove |
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#14 (permalink) | |||||
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Between Here and There
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: A Bit North of Lovely Seattle
Posts: 1,610
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Re: God
Hey, InLove and others- I'll add just a bit to what InLove was saying.
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I'd say this depends on who you're talking to. Some Christians don't have a problem with physical death, and treat it as the Wiccans do- as a transition, a birthing process into a new life. But I've run into other Christians who see physical death as a result of the fall of Adam and Eve and consequently have a real problem with it. Gnostics push it even further and say that all matter is evil. Check out the thread on suffering currently on the Christian forum. Overall, I have to say, being both intimately familiar with Druidry (which is quite similar to Wicca) and Christianity, the earth-based religions do go beyond the regular Christian resignation to death and actually celebrate the passing of another into the Otherworld/Summerlands (their heaven-esque kind of place). My own view is closer to the Druid one than the typical Christian one- I want my funeral to be a celebration! Quote:
Yep. Although there is more of a tendency to have a problem with nudity than earth-based religions. I think this is more from cultural origins than religious ones, though. Quote:
But somehow, for many, different = Satanic/demonic. I will say that most of the liberal Christians I know don't go with this view. Maybe I just know more fundamental/conservative Christians.Quote:
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