Cultural Backlash: An Open Post
Sep. 23rd, 2025 11:38 amThere 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.
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: 2025-10-05 04:21 pm (UTC)As far as what happens once I go public about being a Mithraist, well, we have a new and relatively young priest at my family's parish. I've already butted heads with him over my mother, who has a severe cognitive impairment now. Our two previous pastors accommodated her inability to remember the proper method of receiving communion but he's publicly admonished her in the communion line (which confused her even more, even scared her) despite being aware of her cognitive impairment. I don't really like the guy, and once I've made it known that I not only worship a "pagan god" but have been working toward becoming one of his priests, well, I can't imagine Fr. Hard Heart will continue to allow me to receive communion. The other angle, of course, is that word will spread that good old Brenainn is a worshipper of a different god. If a witch hunt/moral panic did occur, well, my name will be known to the loons leading it.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on reconstructionism. I've had similar thoughts over the last few years. The gods are living beings and are perfectly capable of communicating to us the old praxis and beliefs, if they felt it was that important. That they don't seem to do that leads me to conclude that an accurate reconstruction isn't important to them. I'm not even surprised by that. The gods seem to meet us where we are at, with our particular cultural forms and concerns.
BTW, I'd be interested in reading your version of the Gathas.