It’s this sort of both/and thinking that many Pagan traditions have. There’s no need to debate whether person A’s gods are real because the world is big enough for all of them to exist, even YHVH.
First of all, thank you, Loka, for being such a pleasant, patient, and unflappable source of knowledge about a subject many are unfamiliar with or don’t understand. Heil thu farir!
Second, that being said, the above quote focuses the problem that led to my departure from Paganism. It has to do with the nature of the gods. If all we know about them, aside from personal experiences, comes from the myths and lore told about them; if those sources tell us, for example, that Frigga is matronly and concerned with family while Freya is more concerned with natural fertility, then the myths define, in a sense, what those gods are. The problem I had was how the gods relate to the natural world, and the myths of other traditions. Specifically, the very nature and essence of YHVH is that he is the only god that exists, period. So if other gods exist, and are not demons or otherwise subordinate creations within the Judeo-Christian tradition, YHVH is in fact NOT the only god who exists. Thus he would lack the defining characteristic that makes him who he is rather than some other deity; in fact, he would not be YHVH at all, but someone else.
The same problem exists with other attributes of deities. For example, Odin, Vili, and Ve create the earth using the body of the slain giant Ymir. Other traditions have other myths. But if Odin is not the Fashioner of Midgard, who is he, then? And if he is, then Marduk or Nut or YHVH isn’t, in which case the problem is theirs, unless they are all metaphors, which is of course possible. But the problem isn’t which creation story corresponds to reality because, as science has shown, none of them do. The problem is this:
- We get our information about what gods do, specialize in, are interested in, mainly from myths.
- Gods are useful/attractive to us insofar as they can help us in those areas. No one prays to Aphrodite for strength in battle, for example.
- But all the stories conflict. Who’s in charge of what area? Are all the war gods interchangeable? If so, why specialize in only one pantheon? How do you know it’s the right one, if that question has any meaning? It all seems arbitrary, and thus cause and result (i.e. sacrifice/ritual followed by blessing) impossible to verify.
To summarize, until late antiquity, when the melting pot of the Roman Empire made Isis and Serapion a sort of mythic glue holding bits from various traditions together, all the mythic cycles of the various traditions stood alone; they did not recognize others, or the victorious one absorbed the others, as Odin tended to absorb Tyr and Bragi. Or the gods of other cultures were just our gods with the wrong names. What relation do any of these myths have to reality? You mentioned that if making an offering to Freya (I think) was followed by increase in prosperity, then she was probably pleased. But putting the whole coincidence issue aside, what is the connection between Freya and prosperity? How is it established? By the myths. But if the myths are unreliable, or nobody can say they have any connection to the laws of probability, economics, chance, or whatever governs your state of wealth, how do you know she had anything to do with it? Am I making any sense here?
I raised these issues some years ago on a Pagan message board and nobody else seemed to think it was much of a problem, but I couldn’t make sense of it any more. Does the question of the specific nature and metaphysical reality of the gods matter at all to Pagans these days? Or do you still just go on having fun and doing rituals without bothering much about questions that probably can’t be answered anyway? I’m curious, and do not intend to be critical. Thanks.