F
flameburns623
Guest
Some of my best friends are Pagans and Heathens.Once you strip away all negative assumptions and associations, Paganism is nothing but another religion (or rather, a group of religions). They certainly have different morals and such, but still. They don’t do human sacrifices (at least not mainstream ones, not anymore), they’re not explicitly evil (any evil they have is simply lack of Jesus).
I mean, why do Christians make a big deal about Pagans and witchcraft, to the point of blaming Harry Potter (which is flat out stupid, but that’s another topic) but have no real say about Hinduism, Shintoism, Taoism or any other religion?
Seriously.
I’m reading Alain de Benoist and Tyr, a journal of Pagan thought now. Have read a significant number of other good thinkers and writers in this area of religious thought and think Christians neglect this area to our own hurt. Much of the mysticism connected with these spiritual disciplines, for example, is very much similar to the mysticism practiced among Christians, which perhaps is one of the appeals of the NeoPagan revival.
Catholic apologists should take note that the Pagan/Heathen revival has been generating some very sophisticated philosophical and moral reasoning over the past 40 years. A lot of the popular apologetics addressing this movement major in minor issues and/or confound pre-Christian European folk religions with demonology/Satanism/occultism.
Catholics–usually better trained philosophically and rather more able to deal with nuances, ambiguities, and differences between the Christian faith and Paganism, and ought also to be able to make reasonable distinctions between Heathen faiths and outright worship of evil, as sometimes manifested in explcit Satanist groups.
F’rinstance–a Catholic apologist ought to be able to distinguish between Luciferian pagans and Satanists. To clue in the unaware: ‘lucifer’ is the Latin name of the Morning Star (Venus), and is used in Scripture metaphorically BOTH of Christ, and of a pagan king who has typified a sort of Satan. Most ‘Luciferians’ loathe the idea of Satan: they think of Lucifer as an avatar rather than as an embodiement of evil.
So far as I can tell, all of the Heathen and Pagan world are riddled with these sort of ambiguities, and well-meaning Prptestant Evangelicals and Fundamentalists latch onto the more shocking things without really addressing the serious and well intentioned practitioners of these reconstructed and re-imagined religious movements. Causing us to talk past one another rather than truly dialogue one with each other.