My main premise in this thread is that paganism, if it’s going to be authentic and not just mumbo jumbo, has to take issue with modern society. Paganism must take on the myth that if five people voted for Jones, and only four people favored Smith, therefore everything Jones says is law and true and best. Pagans need to abandon the modern piety that different people can live in harmony.
In short, pagans have to stand for something that is actually pagan.
Well, that’s assuming that every pre-Christian society was the same. There’s a lot of variation there. Also, within that same society, which time period are we talking about? I know Pagans who take inspiration from Classical Greece while others focus more on the Hellenistic period.
Seriously, even the most hardcore reconstructionists (as in, the sort of recon who will eat you alive if you don’t have a PhD. thesis in your topic of discussion) realize that we can’t go back to How Things Were Done Back Then (no matter how much we might want to) because it just won’t work. We don’t have city-states where everyone practices the same religion (which makes city-wide festivals possible), let alone an actual state religion. We’ve since switched from a largely agriculturally-based society to one that is more service-based, we no longer need to go raiding simply to survive, I could go on, but my point is that society has changed so much, and I honestly don’t know a single person who would want to go back to the good old days where life was Nasty, Brutish, and Short.
Okay, that was a bit of a rant, so I’ll use an example I saw recently:
There’s a group on a forum that I frequent that honours Brighid. Specifically, they honour her by “keeping her flame” (lighting a candle for a certain amount of time). Someone posts in their space complaining that she (paraphrased) “couldn’t imagine a great Irish goddess requesting chocolate and popping in to remind someone to do the dishes” adding that if they wanted to worship her
properly they would throw a valuable item into a boggy area, the way the Irish did historically.
The response was, in effect: “This is how we believe Brighid wants us to worship her, based on our own experiences. You are free to comment on how you believe it should be done, but you will refrain from telling anyone that their devotional practices are somehow incorrect.”
Are their practices historically accurate? No, not really.
Do they derive some benefit from them, despite the fact that they don’t do things the exact way the pre-Christian Irish did? Obviously, or why bother?
The second is what’s more important, not trying to exactly replicate the past (which, as I said, even the one’s who are
really into reconstruction realize).