causticus: trees (Default)
[personal profile] causticus
There were some interesting discussions on yesterday's Magic Monday post and on the past month's or so posts on the Ecosophia blog regarding the collapse of alternative spirituality in the West and a likely impending cultural backlash against decades of general rot and grubbiness that is decaying our civilization from within.

Some of us here in the US are afraid that a sudden cultural jolt in the other direction, away from leftism/progressivism, will result in any type of spirituality that doesn't fit a narrow, literalist Christian/Abrahamic format as being seen by the reaction mob as "part of the problem." Anything the people leading and directing this backlash deem to be adjacent to the aforementioned cultural rot will be lazily lumped together into one big, bad conspiracy against what they believe they are trying to save and preserve. This likely means anything occult/esoteric, overtly pagan, or too foreign will be included, with very little nuance. As we know, the moral collapse of both Neopaganism and the postmodern occult scene hasn't helped matters at all in this respect, especially in light of recent tragic events.

Anyway, I want to know what anyone else here thinks of this and anything in your own area (US or somewhere else) you have seen indicative of a new cultural direction that may or or may not involve the condemnation of the things I listed above (or anything else that comes to mind). Also, we could use this space to think up ideas on how to preserve and carry on various spiritual teachings and practices if/when an intolerant religious climate becomes reality.

This is an open post that will stay open for quite a long time.

(no subject)

Date: 2025-10-03 04:45 pm (UTC)
jprussell: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jprussell
Just figured I'd tag in [personal profile] lukedodson here, in case he misses this thread, as he has also been developing a relationship with Mithras and might be very interested to hear what you've been working on.

I am also a big fan of taking cues from the Druid Revival. I think a lot of what it has done has contributed to it being long-term stable and reasonable, and a while back I wrote a blog post analyzing some of what I think has contributed to that, with the idea of how other religious movements (in my case, Heathenry) might borrow some of those approaches (in very brief form: have a clear, but fairly broad, idea of what makes X an X - for Druids, it's connecting with the sacred through nature, allow for lots of heterodoxy and heteropraxy around that core, but have a minimal set of practices and symbols in common, and make the focus individual spiritual development, with allowances for group rituals/activities).

Cheers,
Jeff

(no subject)

Date: 2025-10-05 04:01 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] lukedodson
Thanks, Jeff. I am hopeful that someday my talk from the Ecosophian Convention will be uploaded, because it might be of interest here. To summarise, I experienced a set of synchronicities from 2023-2025 (beginning with a trip to the reconstructed Mithraeum in London in late 2023) that led me to the conclusion that Mithras/Mitra, Lugh/Lleu/Lugos, Jupiter (especially in his early Roman aspect as Jupiter Fidius), and Tyr/Baldr are all interconnected in a very close manner, very possibly being the same god under different names. As such, I have been developing a relationship with all of these gods to varying degrees, including Mithras. It gets a little complex and hazy sometimes, and I have floated the question with them as to whether they mind me blurring the boundaries between them in my prayers, but they don't seem to mind too much! Certainly, such syncretism was quite common in the ancient world.

The archetype that links them all is what Dumezil (taking his cue from another comparatist whose name escapes me right now) called the Lawful Sovereign. What is particularly striking about this figure in myth is that he seems to have an eschatological function - that is to say, he comes at the *end* of a cycle, to complete a cosmic struggle, clear away the old world, and restore order. The Buddhist Maitreya is etymologically linked to Mithras, for example, while the Iranian version, the Saoshyant, is also known as 'airyaman', recalling Mitra's attendant (and possible double) Aryaman in the Vedas.

What I find even more interesting is that this mythic association with the end-times seems to be reflected in the history of religion; Mithras seemed to take a little bit of a backseat in Iranian religion with the rise of Zoroastrianism, but then he reappears, totally unexpectedly, in the later days of the Roman Empire - towards the end of the historical cycle in which Rome was born, flourished, and ultimately perished.

With tensions flaring up in *Iran*, of all places, I would not be surprised if this isn't the last we hear from Mithras...

(no subject)

Date: 2025-10-05 08:18 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] brenainn
My experience of Mithras points me toward the conclusion that he is part of a pluriform deity. Also, in addition to the deities you've mentioned, my experiences point toward the possibility that Jesus and this pluriform god have a closer connection than normally assumed. At any rate, I think Mithras will have a fair amount to say in the decades and centuries ahead.

(no subject)

Date: 2025-10-06 09:21 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] lukedodson
I'd strongly concur with that - Christ's story fits into the 'Lawful Sovereign' pattern very well (betrayed, pierced with a spear, comes at the end of a cycle to 'fulfil the law' and be reborn).

(no subject)

Date: 2025-10-06 09:38 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] lukedodson
And synchronistically enough, this video from Taliesin's Map popped up on my YouTube feed just now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLkxR26VHG0

(no subject)

Date: 2025-10-05 04:54 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] brenainn
I didn't know that about Luke. I'm happy to compare notes, if he's interested. As far as the DR and MR, I've been trying to flesh out some kind of approach to common practices and symbols. Being solitary, that ain't so easy! But I have been thinking about a sort of "congregationalist" approach. The ancient Mithraic Mysteries seem to have followed what we would today called congregationalism. Each Mithraeum appears to have been (by design) a small group of men largely governing themselves as part of a large but loose network of initiates throughout the ancient Greco-Roman world. I suppose what I'm doing now is determining what common beliefs and practices I'd want a hypothetical congregation of worshipers to share with my hypothetical congregation. Does that make sense?

(no subject)

Date: 2025-10-06 09:24 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] lukedodson
Brenainn, I'd be very happy to keep in touch and compare notes. My email is (sans spaces): lukesdodson at protonmail dot com.
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