Naturalistic Paganism

Mystery, not miracle, by Chet Raymo

Fionn Leirg, Ireland

"The music of what happens," said the great Fionn, "is the finest music in the world."

Snowflake by Simply InnocuousWinterviews continues!  From the Solstice (Dec. 21st) till the next Cross-quarter (Feb. 4th), we’re bringing you non-stop interviews and other goodies from big-name authors.  Mark your calendar!

Today we get a special present.  Dr. Chet Raymo, author of When God Is Gone, Everything Is Holy, gifts us with a piece from his Science Musings collection.  Happy Holidays!

When I was writing Climbing Brandon: Science and Faith on Ireland’s Holy Mountain I read a little book on Celtic spirituality by the Irish priest John J. O Riordain, called The Music of What Happens. O Riordain takes his title from an old Irish fairy story of the hero Fionn, who asked his fellow champions what was the finest music in the world. They offered their choices: the song of the cuckoo calling from the hedge, the ring of a spear on a shield, the laughter of a gleeful girl, and so on. Then they asked Fionn his opinion.

“The music of what happens,” said the great Fionn, “is the finest music in the world.”

I’m not altogether sure what is the meaning of the story, but it seems to reflect the pantheistic nature of pre-Christian Celtic thought. Certainly here in the west of Ireland some of that druidic “music of what happens” lingers beneath a veneer of imported Mediterranean dualism — matter/spirit, body/soul, natural/supernatural. O Riordian tries hard to reconcile Christianity with the Celtic reverence for “what happens,” but I fear it is a lost cause. The important thing in Christianity, as I experienced it, is not the patterns of nature, but the interruptions of the patterns — the miracles, the mortifications of the body, the transubstantiations, the rejection of the material world with all its works and pomps. The goal is to get out of here as soon as possible, to another more spiritual place, to be saved, raptured.

And then I read Peig Sayers’ Reflections of an Old Woman, one of the books that came out of the Blasket Island, just there, over the hill:

It was a lovely night, the air was clean, full of brilliant stars and the moon shining on the sea. From time to time a sea-bird would give a cry. Inside in the black caves where the moon was not shining the seals were lamenting to themselves. I would hear, too, the murmuring of the sea running in and out through the cleft of the stones and the music of the oars cleaving the sea across to Ventry.

The birds. The seals. The waves. The oars. The music of this world, this world of flesh and blood and sea and stone. Saint Augustine said it was a waste of time to attend to such things, because they are of no use in reaching blessedness — and so it was in the Christianity of my youth. Not so for Peig Sayers. For her, it was all blessed. The birds, the seals, the sea, the oars. In this she was closer to her druidic ancestors than to the theologians of the south, those dour men with their Greek abstractions and Roman legalisms. She heard the music of what happens. For her, it was the voice of God.

This article reprinted under a Creative Commons license.

The author

Chet Raymo

Chet Raymo (born September 17, 1936 in Chattanooga, Tennessee) is a noted writer, educator and naturalist. He is Professor Emeritus of Physics at Stonehill College, in Easton, Massachusetts. His weekly newspaper column Science Musings appeared in the Boston Globe for twenty years. This is now a daily blog by him. Raymo espouses his Religious Naturalism in When God is Gone Everything is Holy – The Making of a Religious Naturalist and frequently in his blog. As Raymo says – I attend to this infinitely mysterious world with reverence, awe, thanksgiving, praise. All religious qualities.  (bio text courtesy of Wikipedia)

Chet Raymo’s Science Musings are now freely available at blog.sciencemusings.com.

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There’s some big news at the end of this post!

This Sunday

Chet Raymo

Winterviews continues with author Chet Raymo.

Is Christmas Day anything special to you?  Well, whether it is or isn’t, we’ve got a special present for you.  Religious Naturalist Chet Raymo, author of When God Is Gone, Everything is Holy, delivers a gift from his Science Musings collection.

Mystery, not miracle, by Chet Raymo

Appearing Sunday, December 25, 2011

Next Sunday

Bacchus by Caravaggio

Winterviews will be interrupted by a brief interlude to let you catch your breath after the New Years’ celebrations.

Instead, we’ve got a bit of fun coming your way. You know those quizzes that tell you what kind of lover you are, or which Star Wars character you are?  Well, we’ve got one just for you!

What kind of Humanistic Pagan are you? – a personality quiz

Appearing Sunday, January 1, 2012

Recent Work

A poetry of Place: An interview with Glenys Livingstone of PaGaian

Saving the marriage of science and religion, by B. T. Newberg

Existential Paganism, by Ian Edwards

Big news

So my wife and I have big news.

We’re moving to…

South Korea

…South Korea!

We’ve just landed jobs as English teachers there.  We’ll be going into the public schools and teaching alongside Korean teachers of English.  It’s going to be quite an adventure for me, my wife, and our cat too!

How will this affect the Humanistic Paganism site?  It’s difficult to say till we get there and see how much time the job demands, but suffice to say HP will continue.  If anything, the expanded perspective will make it better than ever!

P. S.  Yeah, yeah, we know – stay the *$%# away from North Korea!  Don’t worry, we’re not going anywhere near!  Our jobs are in a southwestern province called Jeollabuk-do, the breadbasket of the country.

Look forward to some great pictures!

A poetry of Place: An interview with Glenys Livingstone of PaGaian

Glenys Livingstone

“For change to really happen one’s cosmology must be embodied”

Snowflake by Simply InnocuousWinterviews is finally here!  From the Solstice (today) till the next Cross-quarter (February 4), we’re bringing you non-stop interviews and other goodies from big-name authors.  Mark your calendar!

Today we interview Dr. Glenys Livingstone, leader of the thriving PaGaian community of naturalistic spirituality, and author of PaGaian CosmologyToday is the Winter Solstice, the shortest day of the year for those in the Northern Hemisphere, but Glenys talks to us from Australia, where it’s the Summer Solstice – the longest day of the year.

B. T. Newberg: Let’s cut right to the chase.  What makes PaGaian different from other Neopagan paths?  Why should readers of Humanistic Paganism sit up and take notice?

Glenys Livingstone: PaGaian is understood as an “evolutionary” spirituality because it is grounded in the evolutionary story, and the practice of ritual at Seasonal points may celebrate that Cosmic unfolding as well as the regional phase of the year – there is not understood to be any separation of Creativity.

BTN: What do you mean by “no separation of Creativity?”

GL: The same Creativity that unfolds the Cosmos manifests in the extant Creativity of the Seasonal cycle, and in any cycle of being – including personal. All layers of Creativity may be celebrated at once – may be understood to be woven into each other.

Thomas Berry and Brian Swimme define three qualities of Cosmogenesis in their book The Universe Story, which I have linked with an ancient Triplicity – as Marija Gimbutas notes in The Language of the Goddess, expressed in later times (evidenced in the last several thousand millennia) as 3 qualities of the Triple Goddess and also in the Triple Spiral of Irish indigenous tradition.

In PaGaian Cosmology I have re-visioned the three faces of Goddess (based in female biology and lunar phases) as Cosmic Dynamics innate to being, no matter your gender or species, and suggest that the Triple Spiral and the ancient noting of a Cosmic Triplicity may have embraced such a notion of Cosmic Creativity.

Such Cosmic Creativity was also understood to be symbolised and microcosm-ed in the female body which may conceive, give birth, and lactate – bring forth new life: surely a central impetus to being and becoming.  Indigenous cultures have no problem with this – She includes all (we all have navels that may remind us of connection to a birthing Cosmos).

PaGaian Cosmology is a synthesis of all that: the science, the Pagan and female metaphor.

And it is a practice – of seasonal rituals that align one’s small self with regional and Cosmic creativity: that is how it happens in our small particular lives – in Conversation (ceremony) with our Place which is understood to be alive and sentient. So PaGaian Cosmology is not just an idea or thought. It has to be practiced in ritual in some way – that is the nature of the Cosmos we are in… it is an Event.

For change to really happen one’s cosmology must be embodied – it can be really simple or with high drama, but it expresses relationship with Place, helps us come Home – not just talk about it.

BTN: And that capital “P” in “Place” is there for a reason, isn’t it?  You’ve said that PaGaian is not even about gods, it’s about Place.  The Goddess is a metaphor: “a place, not a deity.”  What does that mean?

GL: The term “Cosmology” is used decidedly because what is being discussed here and what PaGaian Cosmology is about, is a Place – the Cosmos – as sacred (as many of our ancient forebears apparently knew their Place to be). It is not a theism of any kind – be that athiesm, pantheism, panentheism or whatever, nor even a thealogy. Any references to deities is understood to be metaphor: Poetry is all we have to attempt to express the multivalent awesome Universe.

As I say in my book:

Cosmos is a Place, dynamic and moving, alive and changing, which is indistinguishable from participatory selves, which remains ultimately mysterious and indefinable; thus ultimately only able to be spoken of metaphorically. This then is Poetry. (Ch.1, p.43)

BTN: So, if we’re talking about Place, then why continue to use the word “Goddess?”

GL: Most people who use the word “God” forget that “God” is a metaphor – and it is perhaps past its “use-by” date. Some may not find “Goddess” helpful either, but I am of the opinion that the word needs trotting about – to put a sense of “Her” back on our lips and in our minds: the lack of language that may express or do that is symptomatic of the problem of “Her” invisibility – that we don’t have words to conjure a sense of femaleness to the sacred, and most people on the Planet have forgotten that that is possible.

I also want to say that some may be put off by the sub-title of my book (“Re-inventing Earth-based Goddess Religion”). I chose to use the word ‘religion’, because the root of the word means to connect and ‘cosmological celebration’ is a ‘connecting’ practice – and what I feel is required is a consistent practice of intention, attention, meditation and ritual, that enhances a personal and communal sense of belonging. I would like to write a new version however and change the sub-title to something like “Re-Creating a Gaian Poiesis” or “a Poetry of the Cosmic Mother”.

BTN: So what does all this look like “on the ground”?  How does a person practice PaGaian?  Would an outside observer notice anything different from other forms of Neopaganism?

GL: What PaGaian Cosmology looks like “on the ground” is that it involves a practice of ritual for each Seasonal Moment (as I name the “sabbats”): that means eight a year here at my Place – that could vary according to your place but you would have to work that out.

Essentially PaGaian Cosmology is a practice, not just a head-trip – it has to done: it is an art form. Ritual is the art form of a living cosmology – that is where the transformation happens.

“Conversation” is necessary – and that is how I understand ritual and the creating of it (or any “prayer’ for that matter, but ritual more so as one has to DO a bit, and that is part of the Conversation, the learning, the devotion) – and I get that term for it from Thomas Berry: one needs to be speaking with one’s beloved of the soul which may be named as the “sentient Cosmos”.

The rituals here don’t look/sound much like traditional Wicca or other forms of Neopaganism, in the sense that the central focus of the celebration is frequently quite different and language I have used in the scripts that are offered is quite different (and I do offer scripts because language is important in my opinion – but the words are meant as guides – for a sense – not to be parroted, though they may also be regarded as Poetry and learned by heart with some variation of one’s own).

For example, in terms of language, when the elements are “called”, I speak of “remembering” that we are Water, Fire and so on; and/or that we are expressions of these Cosmic Dynamics. The elements are qualities of Earth/Cosmic manifestation, always present and felt.

In PaGaian Cosmology, the language of ritual needs to express that we are the Earth… so that we may re-learn it more deeply.

In terms of an example of the central focus of a Seasonal ritual being different from other forms of Neopaganism: at Beltaine the PaGaian ritual essentially celebrates Desire – not just a simple notion of “Goddess and God” or even a simplistic version of “Beloved and Lover”, but yet still deeper to a Cosmic essence that is multivalent, and that is felt in the Power and Creativity of Earth-Sun-Moon interaction. Aphrodite is named particularly – as representing this Power (of Allurement/Desire) but need not be: it may be felt as distracting, or there may be other deities (zoomorphic or anthropomorphic) that one may find helpful for personal or collective aesthetic reasons.

PaGaian Cosmology may be summed up in the practice of what I call the “Triple Goddess Breath Meditation” which I teach here on the ground, and is also described on p.12 in the Introduction to my book (The Yoga Mudra as In-Corporation of Gaia’s Breath). I have made a DVD of it for my online students, so they can see it and associate it with imagery – which of course will take off and vary in their own minds. The words, more or less, are on the final pages of Chapter 8 in my book. It expresses the sense of each being (one’s personal being) as a “Place of the Cosmological Unfolding”.

BTN: Speaking of online students, is there a training program?  Are there local or online Pagaian groups?  How does one become more involved in Pagaian?

GL: I teach and facilitate a year-long course called “Celebrating Cosmogenesis” which is a mentoring through the year-long cycle of eight Seasonal Moments: it is now available online for both hemispheres. There is information here. Many simply use my book as inspiration for their Cosmic/Earth rituals – and I update the online versions of the offered ritual scripts in Chapter 7 each time we change it here on the ground at my place.

BTN: Where can we find your book?

GL: You can ask for it at any good book shop, and lots of online retailers such as Amazon. It is freely available with a Creative Commons licence at my website at http://www.pagaian.org/book and a paper copy may also be purchased there (click the BUY button).

BTN: Finally, if you had just one sentence to express the heart of your path, what would it be?

GL: It is a practice of relationship with our Place, and the Place is at once the small self, the communal self – other, and the cosmic self – all that is.

PaGaian Cosmology

PaGaian Cosmology, by Glenys Livinstone, Ph.D.

Available at Amazon and the PaGaian website

The author

Glenys Livingstone

Glenys Livingstone Ph.D. has over thirty years experience on a Goddess path, which has included diverse spiritualities and a scientific perspective, inner work as well as academic scholarship. Her studies have been in theology, ritual, archaeomythology, social ecology, psychology, sociology and education.

Glenys is the author of PaGaian Cosmology: Re-inventing Earth-based Goddess Religion, which was an outcome of her doctoral work in Social Ecology from the University of Western Sydney. Glenys’ doctoral research was an experiential study of the three phases of the Triple Goddess – Virgin, Mother, Crone – as Creative Cosmological Dynamic, and the embodiment of Her in seasonal ritual as a catalyst for personal and cultural change. More recently, Glenys’ continued ritual practice of the seasonal Wheel of the Year and research, has deepened her identification of this Cosmic-Organic Creative Triplicity with the Triple Spiral engraved by the ancients at Newgrange (Bru na Boinne) in Ireland.

Glenys grew up in country Queensland Australia. Glenys considers herself a student of the Poetry of the Universe – a language expressed in scientific story, mythological metaphor, ancient and contemporary images of integrity, body movement and dance, stillness, chants and songs. By these means, she conducts geo-therapy – ecological reconnection – for herself and with others.

Glenys’ work is grounded in the Old European indigenous religious practice, integrated with evolutionary perspective and Goddess scholarship.

Glenys’ M.A. is in Theology and Philosophy and included education in liturgical practice at the Jesuit School of Theology Berkeley California. She lives in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney with her beloved Taffy (Robert) Seaborne, who is also a graduate of the School of Social Ecology and rich life experience. Glenys teaches, writes and facilitates the seasonal rituals in her Place with an open community.

Our ebooks

B. T. Newberg ebooks

Year One: A Year of Humanistic Paganism – ebook

Year One: A Year of Humanistic PaganismHere it is! – an anthology of all our published works to date, organized into one coherent presentation.

Yet this is much more than just an anthology.  Exclusive new material lays out HP’s mission and vision, survey data brings the community to life, and multiple tables of contents arrange the articles in fresh and revealing patterns.

This work includes brand new material:

  • Nine months: The story of HP and its mission
  • Rain dance: A vision for HP

Altogether more than 50 articles from over a dozen authors explore life at the intersection of science and myth.

Whether you’re new to HP or an old veteran, you’re going to love Year One.  You can choose from one of four tables of contents that put the articles in a fresh light:

  • Topical Table of Contents – a practical route
  • Critical Questions Table of Contents – responses to critics
  • Fourfold Path Table of Contents – the basic framework of HP’s path
  • Four Elements Table of Contents – a contemplative experience

Wondering what that might look like?  Check out the Topical Table of Contents:

Introduction

Part I: Basics

A. The Fourfold Path

B. Practice

C. A Retreat

Part II: Advanced

A. Psychology

B. Nature

C. Mythology

Part III: Critical Appraisal

Part IV: Dialogues

Part V: Data on the HP Community

Conclusion

Dynamic Tables of Contents

Get your copy of Year One today – available now for your e-reader!

Year One: A Year of Humanistic Paganism

Editor: B. T. Newberg

Pages: 259

Color photos: 37

Formats: pdf, epub

Price: Suggested $12

© 2011

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Encounters in Nature

Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu – ebook

Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu

Creative nonfiction from the jungles of Malaysia

“eloquent and absolutely unpretentious”

“Newberg’s prose [stories] have a particular beauty all of their own”

“should be required reading for anyone going to Southeast Asia seeking more than a beach vacation or three weeks of drunkenness”

– Southeast Asia Travel Advice

Drawing on personal experiences living abroad, Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu presents three works of creative nonfiction set in Malaysia:

  • Why Climb a Mountain?, a narrative essay, hunts down the motivations underlying the somewhat absurd idea of climbing a mountain.  The brush is cleared away to reveal the search for a sense of significance in one’s life.
  • Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu, which gives the book its title, is a six-chapter story of romance and solitude.  A young teacher revisits an ex-lover on the island of Borneo, and finds more than he bargained for.  When hopes for reunion evaporate, he goes on a journey to find himself in the rotting jungles.  Meanwhile, a mountain said to be a place of ancestral spirits beckons from behind a shroud of clouds.
  • Confessions of a Culture-shocked Alien, a story told in letters, reveals the experience of the same young man three years earlier as an exchange student in Penang, where he first meets the ex-lover from the second piece. In a Muslim country as the World Trade Towers fall and his own country retaliates, he confronts a foreign culture as well as an increasingly alien America. The pitfalls and switchbacks of living abroad lead him on a journey of self-discovery.

The three stories range from romance to rumination, but ultimately affirm the significance of life:

Mountains outscale us. They tower, they loom, they put us in our place. In their shadow, we feel insignificant. There is a sense of majesty and awe. When we climb mountains, we participate in that awe. It’s not that we become greater than the mountain, but that its greatness becomes part of us.

– excerpt from Why Climb a Mountain?

Love and the Ghosts has already received a glowing review from Asian studies scholar Jarrod Brown of Southeast Asia Travel Advice.  Here is an excerpt from the review:

“B.T. Newberg’s book… is for those who come to a different place seeking something other than good times and pretty girls. It is the story of a quest for meaning, and one that stretches further than the individual to the edges of culture and beyond into an exploration of the universal human condition. The journey for the reader is not an arduous one, however, as Newberg’s prose have a particular beauty all of their own.”

The perspective of the book is personal and introspective.  Brown comments:
“It is a rare treat to read something so obviously autobiographic yet so frank and open not only about what is happening around him but also what is happening inside of him in his thoughts and imagination. As a reader one feels almost embarrassed at times, as if one had slipped in and secretly began reading a diary one had found left in open [sic].”
Finally, Brown explores the relationship to Humanistic Paganism:
“Perhaps it is a philosophical commitment to naturalism and humanism that motivates him as an author to “lay bare his soul” in a way not often encountered in prose and always obscured by literary pretenses in poetry. I certainly found philosophical parallels with existential humanism….”
Jarrod Brown, a Ph.D. student at the University of Hawaii and co-creator of the Stories Without Borders documentary project, concludes with a note on the final potential of the book:
What we encounter is not the glorification or bastardization of a place, people or experience, but instead what seems to be an authentic retelling, a man’s retrospective look at a slice of his life, defined by where he was, and the lessons and changes that time brought. As such, it has the potential to change the reader or at least to prepare the reader for transformation deeper than a Phuket tan.
Love and the Ghosts of Mount Kinabalu, by B. T. Newberg
Pages: 72
Photos and illustrations: 19
Formats: epub, pdf
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