
Officially, my job as managing editor does not start until next Sunday, but I’m very excited, and I wanted to give you a preview of what’s to come.
But before I do, I want to look back briefly. It’s hard to believe that just over two years ago, this site began as B. T.’s personal blog. It is only through B. T.’s ambitious vision, peerless skill as an author and editor, and tireless hard work that HP has become what it is today: a community for hundreds of Naturalistic Pagans and friends.
Just recently, I came across these words in the introduction to HP’s first ebook, Year One: A Year of Humanistic Paganism:
“Finally, I have a name! … your site more than anything else gives me hope that the term “Pagan” can be reconciled with humanistic values. … I was on the verge of abandoning the term Pagan altogether because of the associations with supernaturalism, until I found [this] site and this group. Thanks!”
Those were my words to B. T. two years ago, and they are more true today than ever before. And I know many more people out there feel the same way.
I’m glad to know that B. T. will be staying on as advising editor and treasurer. And I am also very grateful for the work done by NaturalPantheist as our social media coordinator. I look forward to working with them both.
Here are some of the exciting things you can look forward to here at HP.
This December we will start having regular columnists as some of our contributors. I will be announcing who they are in November, so keep your eyes open for that. It’s my hope that having columnists will provide some increased continuity to our content. There will still be plenty of room for your submissions, so keep them coming!
One thing you will notice right away is that we will have different themes which will change semi-seasonally (8 times a year). The theme for the rest of this month will be “Finding Meaning”. The theme for late fall will be “Death and Life”. I will be sending out a call for submissions a month or so in advance so you can start thinking about what essays, articles, and art you would like to submit. Eventually, I’m going to try pushing our boundaries a little with these themes. For example, the theme for early spring 2014 will be “Intuition”, and I will be looking for visual art and poetry, as well as submissions on what role intuition might play in a Naturalistic Pagan practice.
Once a month we will have a meditation post. This will be a poem, book excerpt, or video designed, not convey information, but to stimulate an experience. I would like to encourage our readers to take these posts as an opportunity to take a short break from everything else. Rather than treating these posts the way you would any other post, set aside 10 minutes someplace quiet and semi-private to have an experience. While we won’t all be doing this at the same time, many of us will still be doing it “together” in a sense. And if you would like to send in submissions for these monthly meditations, they will be welcome.
Right away you will notice that the regular humanistic holiday posts will be replaced by a single post on the first of each month which will tell you what to look forward to that month. The first one will be posted tomorrow. You can also find a complete Humanistic Paganism Calendar here, or under the Practices tab above. Additional content will be added to the Calendar as the year goes on. The information previously found on the Calendar page can be found on the Seasonal Celebrations page here, and also under the Practices tab above. For those of you who follow Sagan’s Cosmic Calendar, we will have a Cosmic Calendar Special on December 31. We hope this will free your inboxes and RSS feeds up a little. This will also reduce the likelihood of receiving multiple posts from HP in one day.
All the regular Sunday submissions will be followed by a poll or a series of questions designed to stimulate more discussion. That is where our community really happens: in the comments to the posts. So have fun with the polls, but remember to comment afterward.
On thing I would like to do is to reach out to the broader Pagan community and stimulate more interaction with our community. While a vocal minority of Pagans may sometimes feel that our naturalistic community does not belong under the Pagan umbrella, it is my experience that the majority of Pagans welcome us and are sympathetic to our unique form of Paganism. We have many friends and allies among Pagans who do not explicitly identify as Humanistic or Naturalistic. We grow mutually through respectful interaction. I welcome your suggestions as to how we can accomplish this. At the same time, HP will continue to be a home and refuge for those who want a Paganism without supernaturalism.
I would like to see this interaction with the broader Pagan community extend to greater participation by Naturalistic Pagans in Pan-Pagan events like Pagan Pride Day, Pantheacon, Pagan Spirit Gathering, and Paganicon. A couple of years ago, one of our contributors, Eli Effinger-Weintraub, participated in a panel discussion at Paganicon, humorously entitled, “Those Godless Pagans: Non-Deistic and Naturalistic Paganism”. Eli reported that the discussion was very positive. And a more public presence at these events could help us reach those Naturalistic Pagans who are not active on the Internet.
And while we’re talking about gatherings, I would like to start a discussion about a real live Naturalistic Paganism event, like an indoor conference or outdoor campout. There are enough of us now that I think that we can make that happen in the next few years.
We’re looking for a few individuals to join the staff here at HP. First of all, we’re looking for a Science News editor. There is lots of exciting science being done, and we need someone who can help identify what would be of most interest to Naturalistic Pagans and include it in our content here.
We’re also looking for an HPedia editor who will move the project to a wiki format and then oversee it as it develops through open collaboration with other Naturalistic Pagans.
We’re also looking for an ebook editor who will bring together some of the work we have done here with some new content to produce a marketable product.
If you’re interested in any of these positions, email me at humanisticpaganism [at] gmail.com.
Lastly, we need your submissions! Only a fraction of the content here at HP comes from unsolicited submissions. Ideally, the reverse would be true. We’re hoping that the semi-seasonal themes and calls for articles will stimulate more submissions. Send your submissions to humanisticpaganism [at] gmail.com.
As your editor, I will strive to provide the same professional and personal support that you are used to from B. T. I welcome to your suggestions for further improvements. Thank you for helping to make HumanisticPaganism what it is. I look forward to an exciting future for this site and our community.
John Halstead
Incoming Managing Editor
I wanted to look at the subject of Ritual. Is there any point to it? Can it bring value to our lives as Naturalistic Pantheists? Ritual is a major part of most religions, but the question is why?
I would like to suggest that there are three reasons why ritual is important, whether or not we believe in anything supernatural about it – it reminds us to stop and be aware of the world around us, it has an effect on us internally and it helps us to connect to something bigger than ourselves.
How many of us think about all the plants and animals around us when we walk down the street? How many of us eat a meal without thinking about the fact that something had to die so that we could eat and live? Many of the spiritual practices of the worlds religions have at their core, the practice of Mindfulness. They call to us to take time out, amidst the hustle and bustle of everyday life, to forget the baggage and distractions, and to stop, to be, to focus, to listen. They call us to be mindful and aware of the world around us, to be aware of other people and of nature. They put the important things in life at the centre of our attention – the sacred things, and give us the chance to focus on them.
Ritual is a powerful tool. It effects us in a way that mere intellectual thought and debate never can – it taps into our psyche in a very strong way because it allows us to experience something. Experience can have a very powerful influence on our thinking and behaviour and is a key factor in forming who we become. The ritual experience can change us at a deep level, it can help us to form and ingrain habits and to build character so that we can become the type of people we wish to be.
There is something “more” to life, there is something “bigger than ourselves”. That thing is nature, it is the universe. Through ritual we can come to realise that, to realise that there is more to life than “my ego.” Ritual helps to teach us to be humble, to be reverent and respectful and to celebrate life. It teaches us that we are just one part of a greater and awesome whole. And it can help us connect to that whole, to honour our relationship with it, in a way we couldn’t do otherwise.
This article first appeared at Naturalistic Pantheist Musings.

NaturalPantheist: A former Christian, I now see myself as a Naturalistic Pantheist with an interest in Druidry.
My blog is at naturalpantheist.wordpress.com
Check out NaturalPantheist’s other posts:
Ancient philosophy meets Darwin: Can science offer a way of life? by B. T. Newberg
Hidden spirits, by Bryan Beard
A tropical rainforest ontology: In search of a non-reductive naturalism, by John Halstead

How shall we humans use this wonderful power we call intention?
To what should I aspire? by Thomas Schenk
Appearing Sunday, October 6th, 2013
Your help is needed! Please critique this entry from the HPedia: An encyclopedia of key concepts in Naturalistic Paganism. Please leave your constructive criticism in the comments below.
The imagination plays an important role in Contemporary Pagan discourse and practices, including visualization.
From Merriam-Webster:
Imagination: an act or process of forming a conscious idea or mental image of something never before wholly perceived in reality by the one forming the images (as through a synthesis of remembered elements of previous sensory experiences or ideas as modified by unconscious defense mechanisms); also : the ability or gift of forming such conscious ideas or mental images especially for the purposes of artistic or intellectual creation
The ontological status of imagined content may be a key area of contention between naturalistic and hard polytheistic interpretations. Sensations of divine presence or communications often happen in the “mind’s eye”, which may or may not be identical with the imagination.
Naturalists and hard polytheists are likely to differ on whether imagined content is “real”, as well as on what constitutes “reality” in the first place. The following provides one possible naturalistic interpretation.
From a naturalistic point of view, things that are imaginary are real as such. It is only when the imagined content is reified into an objective reality beyond imagination that unreality begins.
Compare the difference between dreaming and lucid dreaming. Both are real as such, but non-lucid dreaming also involves an unreal aspect introduced by tacitly mistaking the dream content for objective world content. Becoming lucid, i.e. realizing it is a dream while still in the dream, rectifies the situation by recognizing the content for what it really is.
Similarly, interacting with figures of myth via the imagination can only involve unreality if those figures are taken as objective realities. Interaction that is consciously aware of its imaginative character, on the other hand, is a pure experience of reality.
Brian Swimme envisions human imagination as that of the earth, which is pulled in a certain direction by an attractor state yet to emerge. See Earth’s Imagination.
Some interesting research by French scholars distinguishes the imagination from the imaginaire and the imaginal (see Braga).
Check out other entries in our HPedia.
Once again it’s the Autumn Equinox, which has always been a time of changes for me. This time round, it has to do with a change of leadership at HP.
I couldn’t be more proud of what HP has become. To date, more than fifty contributors have conspired to make this site what it is. In these few years since our inception in 2011, we Naturalistic Pagans have gone from a little-understood fringe phenomenon to a recognized presence in the Pagan community. Our unique perspective has been discussed by well-known authors such as Brendan Myers, debated widely in the blogosphere, and sought out by forums such as Pagan Square. We’re emerging onto the mainstream scene, and a generation of new talent is bursting forth.
That’s why I feel it’s time for HP take the next step:

John Halstead, managing editor of HP starting Oct. 6th
Time to let others take the lead.
I am proud to announce that as of October 6th of this year, John Halstead will be taking over as managing editor. As a frequent contributor to HP and the author of The Allergic Pagan and Dreaming the Myth Forward, John has proven a prolific voice. He is an insightful writer, and a rock-steady supporter of the community. I can’t wait to see the new energy he will bring to HP.
Meanwhile, I will be staying on as treasurer and advising editor. I’ll continue to contribute articles now and again, and take part in the discussions. You can also find me exploring ancient naturalism at Naturalistic Traditions, researching religion and evolution at BTNewberg.com, and developing an introductory course for spiritual naturalists with DT Strain at the Spiritual Naturalist Society. This change of leadership will give me breathing space to renew my energy, and will give HP a fresh new approach.
So, that makes our new staff structure look like this:
So, that’s the big change here at HP. I hope your autumn is eventful and inspiring. I know mine will be!
Ancient philosophers differed from those today in one crucial way:
For them, philosophy was a way of life.
Can science, too, be a way of life?
All the ancient philosophers, from Socrates to the Buddha, investigated their world not just for the sake of learning, but in order to discover how to live a flourishing life.
For example, when Socrates asked his fellow Athenians about piety or virtue, it wasn’t just for love of conversation – he wanted to expose the confusion fouling up the unexamined life. When Hypatia of Alexandria explored mathematics and astronomy, it wasn’t just for the sake of learning – she wanted to know how she fit into the cosmos. And when Siddartha Gautama investigated the nature of desire and aversion, it was not out of pure interest in psychology – he wanted to know how to eradicate suffering. All their explorations led eventually back to one key question: How should we live?
Today, we know much more about nature than the ancient philosophers ever did.* Yet, we seem to know far less about how to live. Can ancient philosophy teach us how to find science spiritually-relevant again? Read More