causticus: trees (Default)
Historically, pre-Christian polytheistic religions of Europe were all about the tribe, the clan, the family, and the land. There was no such thing as social atomization or abstract notions of individualism back in those days. The people around back then would have seen atomized living arrangement as being totally alien to their own way of life and probably an abomination. Most of the attempts of our atomized contemporaries to practice the the Old Ways (in which connection to the land has long been severed from the everyday reality of the ordinary person) is just a recipe for the "religion" being little more than some petty intellectual or aesthetic indulgence, or some weekend diversion for bored, affluent people.

If we're to rekindle the "real deal" today, it seems like we must form new “tribes” and “clans” based on the practical and spiritual needs of today; as opposed to looking only to the past to get a sense of tribal identity. In Europe, clans ceased to exist as tribalism gave way to feudalism and the ideological hegemony of the Roman Church. Yes, there were a few mostly-Celtic nooks and crannies where clan societies held on for quite awhile, but this was the exception, not the rule once Christianity spread and took over everything in its path. Christendom became the great tribe, and the church parish and the fiefdom/lordship became the replacement for the clan. Nobility Peerages became the class-tribes of landed aristocrats.

Guilds, Fellowships, and Fraternities

As Europe urbanized and became affluent, the trade guild functioned as the de-facto clan organization for artisans and merchants. The industrial revolution eventually rendered those associations obsolete, as machine-driven mass production replaced handcraft as the primary means of producing goods. In 19th century America, a great variety of Fraternal Orders and Mutual Aid societies sprung up to fulfill the needs of the people. These fellowships and brotherhoods did a remarkable job of instilling clan-like community bonds in the hearts, souls, and hands of Americans. These organizations operated in tandem with the countless church denominations that altogether formed the basic foundation of American social life. Eventually those associations mostly disappeared thanks to the runaway growth of centralized government and the many social "services" this behemoth now doles out to people who are financially destitute or between gigs and without much in the way of family support. Because of the metastatic growth of impersonal bureaucratic institutions, people have had less and less of a practical need for intimate social networks.

From a psychological and spiritual perspective, such a development has most certainly been not a good one! We could say that humans are wired to thrive in small trust networks consisting of people whom one has established face-to-face relationships with. The face connection usually ensured some sort of system of natural accountability is in place. We can use the Old English word Frith to describe this type of relationship.

Peace is a product of Reciprocal Relationships

Frith is often mistranslated as “peace.” Peace is certainly an aspect of Frith, but it’s nothing approaching the whole concept. Frith is a state of social stability and general wellbeing that results from mutually-beneficial (i.e. reciprocal) relationships between people belonging to a community. Because we lack no concise term for this concept in Modern English, trying to elaborate on Frith without a singular term becomes quite the mouthful of abstractions. Frith was in essence the social contract of our ancestral societies. Under this arrangement, things like rights and liberties have corresponding duties and obligations. One must give to receive, and vice versa. Outside the protection of the community, lofty abstractions like “rights” and “the law” simply didn’t exist. The English word “outlaw” used to literally mean a person outside of the law. In other words, without the benefits of belonging to the community, the only law for the outlaw was the law of the jungle.
causticus: trees (Default)
When it comes to the naming and branding of any new group, project, or endeavor, I subscribe to the concept of "Occult Memetics." This concept is basically a recognition of the magical power of language. The term itself is something the Youtuber Tarl Warwick (Styxhexenhammer666) came up with, and he even published a book by that name further explaining the concept.

On how I'm working with that concept right now, it has much to do with the recent turn I've taken in terms of my own polytheistic religious orientation (which I'll explain in another post). I had a recent conversation with a few friends of a similar orientation on how words like "paganism" and "heathen" are loaded with so much historical-ideological baggage that they tend to elicit certain emotional responses in ordinary people who hear these words uttered and it immediately taints the way the rest of the conversation proceeds. Because of that, in my view, organizations/groups that proudly brandish those labels tend to attract more than their fair share of misfits and malcontents; certainly more of these types than sensible people of moderate temperament who are looking for a spiritual option that isn't a dogmatic organized religion that's bogged down with a 1500 year old ideology.

Some alternative brands a few of us have been proposing are as follows:

-Natural Faith
-The Natural Way
-The Ancestral Way
-The Way of Spirit
-Ancestral Faith
-Natural Faith: Northern Tradition (Germanic/Heathen)
-Natural Faith: Southern (or Classical) Tradition (Greco-Roman)

All of these fit well within the fold of the broader effort to revive and revitalize polytheism and animism as religions people can take on and incorporate into their everyday lives. And by refraining from using "polytheism" as the main label, "Natural Faith" allows for the inclusion of various metaphysical positions like Pantheism, Panentheism, ect.

Ultimately, if these "Natural Faiths" of ours are to (re)grow and stick around for the long haul, they must appeal to enough "normies," that is, people who are not excessively eccentric and misfit types; in other words, people who are busy with the things we associate with ordinary life like raising families, working at a trade or other discipline, running businesses, ect. In times past, these traditions survived and thrived in family lineages. This is how the real "paganism" of yore existed.

The way it stands today is that "Paganism" (especially Neopaganism) is little more than a lifestyle diversion for city-dwelling ex-Christians who feel a great sense of alienation from their faith-of-upbringing. The astral and egregoric content associated with words like "Pagan" and "Heathen" are quite off-putting for anyone who hasn't delved into that particular "fandom" subculture.

In a follow-up post I'll go into more detail about the gradual disappearance of the tribe and clan in any official capacity, and the various ways these associations have cropped up again (and disappeared) over time. And of course, I'll go into how these associations are a must if any of us are to revive and revitalize the Ancestral Way.
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