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Religion vs Magic |
Art ©Robin Wood 1997 Used with Permission |
It is my philosophy that in this religion that we call
the Craft, or Wicca, the religion itself is more important than magic,
or gifts, or abilities, or anything else. After all, in this particular
religion, all initiates are Priestesses and Priests, by definition.
When someone asks me how I think of myself, if I see myself as a Witch,
or a Wiccan, or what, I have to answer that I see myself as a Priestess
of the Lady. Pure and simple.
The religions that we choose determine the way in which we relate to
the Divine, to those beings outside ourselves that are more powerful
than we are. This is true no matter how we see them personified, even
if we choose to have no religion, to acknowledge nothing more powerful
than ourselves.
If you believe in a vindictive God who punishes wrongdoers, then you
will see everything that happens to you as either reward or punishment.
If you believe that the Gods set us lessons to be learned, then you
will see everything that happens as a lesson, and so on.
And, of course, you will project that view onto others. When a volcano
explodes, or a plane goes down, you may see that as a punishment for
those who die. Or you may see it as a reward, a way off this earthly
prison. Or you may see it as a simple act of nature, with no divine
intervention necessary. But the way you see it will be colored by your
religion. If one of the dead was a family member, or a close friend,
such a tragedy may cause you to re-examine your belief structure. But
the basic belief will play a part.
That is why the belief is so important. It determines how you live your
life, what you do, how you think. It colors every experience that you
have.
And there is increasing evidence, even from scientific fronts, that
your belief can change the way things actually work for you. What you
expect, to a large extent, is exactly what you get.
Magic, seeing auras, energy work, scrying, empathy, and all the rest
are simply tools that we can use to honor the Gods and help them with
the work they would like us to do. They are not ends in themselves,
because nothing is. They cannot be used in a vacuum, because nothing
can. Everything you do, by magical or mundane means, reflects who you
are and what kind of connection you have to the Divine both within yourself
and without.
Wicca is a nature religion. We worship the Earth and all her children.
All ground is sacred ground. Every interaction with another is a sacred
act.
Because of this, we are careful of the Earth. I think any Witch who
is careless of this precious planet is missing the point. We recycle.
We rebuild. We repair. We reuse.We don't take anything without putting
something back.
In practical terms, this means that we don't just pull up the wayside
plants. We harvest what we have planted ourselves and nurtured to harvest.
Or we purchase what we need from others who have planted. When we do
harvest wild things for medicine or magic, we always leave something
of equal value behind. We pick a few flowering yarrow heads (never more
than one in three, for the plants must be able to meet their own needs
and thrive for following years,) and we leave some bread at the root
of each plant we have picked from, for extra fertilizer, and as a thank
you for the gift it has given us.
We know that the seasons come round again and again. We don't live in
a perpetual now, with no future and no past. We live on the wheel, ever
turning, ever repeating. We remember, and learn from, the past. We plan
for the future. Therefore, we don't treat the world as if it were a
hotel room we are just about to check out of, and ignore the fire that
is starting in the waste basket.
This is our Home, and our Mother, and our Goddess. We care. Even if
the repercussions of something we do will not appear until long after
the deaths of these physical bodies, we know we are going to be coming
back. And anyway, we love this place. So we treat it with respect and
love.
And we treat everything on it with respect and love too. That means
everything, from the smallest single cell creature floating in the ocean
to that guy down the block.
We respect things by taking care of them, and letting them be free,
and never harming them.
We respect people the same way.
We never use anyone or anything.
We always pay our own way.
We don't control, or seek power over, anyone or anything. The only person
any of us can control, and the only person we should be trying to control,
is ourselves.
If a tree is in our yard, or a child is in our homes, it becomes our
responsibility to see to it that they are cared for. Trees and children
and pets cannot go out and find the things they need, and take care
of themselves.
We can set out food for the wild birds, and they will decide to come
and eat it or not. If they decide to show up, then we have taken on
a responsibility, because they become dependant on us. If we lose interest
and stop feeding them, many who have chosen to stay in this place because
of the ready supply of food here are likely to wait around expecting
more until it's too late, and they will die.
But we also allow them their freedom. We let them choose to come to
our homes and feeders or not. We don't trap them and bring them inside
because they are pretty and we want them to sing for us. I think that
would be wrong, and cruel.
When a child is young, those responsible for her must make many choices
for her, because she doesn't have the experience to make wise choices
for herself. That is why children are helpless for so many years. That
is why the emotional bond between children and their care-takers is
so strong, so that wise choices will be made and the children will survive.
But children grow up, and then we must give them their freedom, and
pray that they have learned from the choices we made for them and the
ones we allowed them to make for themselves.
Adults must be allowed to make their own choices, no matter how unwise
they are. We don't have the right to choose another's path.
Occasionally, though, the choice made will harm more than the chooser.
In that case, I think we do have a responsibility to warn, and possibly
to intervene.
If I see someone about to stab another, I don't plan to sit around saying,
"Well, that's their choice." I'll stop it any way I can.
If I see someone about to take another I know is unstable or dangerous
as a lover, I also won't just stand around. I'll warn the person. I'll
not just repeat vague gossip, I'll site dates and times and places,
and let them know who to call for corroboration. But if they want that
lover anyway, then that is their choice, and I will not do anything
about it.
Because sometimes you have to live through something to understand it.
And even if it kills you, you have lived through it, and learned from
it, and may not have to do that the next time around.
We never take anything from another person. Not food, not money, but
most of all, not energy. We can accept what is freely offered; we can
even ask for things. But we must never, ever, simply take.
If we can't tell the difference, then we play it safe, and don't even
accept anything.
But I have written a whole book about ethics.
The other important thing about this particular religion is that we
are all clergy.
In any religion you care to mention, the clergy are, at least on paper,
the service part of the organization.
This means that we are here to lead others in worship, and to counsel
and heal and help. Isaac Bonewits once said that you could tell who
the leaders in the Pagan community were; they were the ones sweeping
the floor after the event.
As we become more evolved, and more aware, and more in tune with the
Gods, we become more convinced that we are here to help. We have fun
and learn things at the same time; but mostly we help.
Only those who don't "get it" yet expect to get something
for nothing.
Witchy behaviour has nothing to do with freeloading or getting a free
ride. Witchy behaviour is realizing that everything you do comes back
to you three times, and making sure that you pay your own way, and more
than your own way.
It means realizing that you may be further along some part of the path
you have chosen, but you are never intrinsically more important than
anyone else.
I have often said that my definition of a cult is any organization that
claims to be a religion, but spends more than 50% of it's total resources
(time, money and people) trying to convert others. I figure that if
you are spending more trying to get other people to join than you are
worshipping or doing whatever your religion does, it doesn't really
count as a religion. (If what your religion does is try to get others
to join, then I rest my case.)
I find that I am beginning to think that people who don't spend time
in actual worship and thanksgiving are probably not practicing a religion,
either. Think about it. How much time do you spend thinking of the Gods,
and thanking them for the things they have done for you, and asking
them to let you know what you can do for them? And how much time do
you spend petting your cat? And what is really important to you here?
And while we are on the subject, yes. I did say asking them to let you
know what you can do for them. I think it's supposed to be a two-way
street. If we are the children of the Gods, then they love us and try
to take care of us (if we let them.) But unless we are thinking of ourselves
as the infants of the Gods, we can help out, too. I think that is a
good part of the reason we are here.
And that is where magic and all the rest of it finally comes in. Then
and not until then.
That is why I will not teach anything beyond basic grounding and centering
to anyone until I am sure that they want this knowledge to help and
heal, because that is what it's for.
I won't teach this stuff to anyone until I think that they understand
the rest of the religion.
I won't teach it as long as they are talking about controlling others,
or using others, or taking anything and not putting something of equal
value back.
I won't teach it until they understand not only that they should recycle,
but why. Until they realize that they are a part of the Earth, and not
some kind of superior creature that can do what they like with it. Until
it hits them that being a Witch means loving, and taking care, and yet
allowing freedom. Until they know that they are completely responsible
for their own actions.
Until they "Get it."
Because the magic is such heady stuff. And it's so easy to forget why
we can do it, and just do it.
You catch the same kind of karma for doing things magically as you do
for using mundane means. It can be quicker, and hit you harder, but
it's the same stuff because karma is the universes' way of burning your
fingers if you touch the hot stove. It's not a punishment, per se. But
if the stove is hot, the natural consequence is to get burned.
So if you behave in a selfish or thoughtless manner, the natural consequence
is to get hurt.
The whole universe is set up to be co-operative, and generous.
If the first cells hadn't learned to cooperate, there would be nothing
in the world but single cell creatures.
If plants hadn't covered their seeds with fruit that is good to eat,
the seeds would not be scattered as widely.
If people had never cooperated, neither one of the survivors would have
any safety or peace.
You get the idea.
But because magic seems so simple, and so hard to trace, the temptation
to use it for self aggrandizement is very great. In fact, it isn't hard
to trace at all; but it often seems so to the beginner in the first
flush of what appears to be high-power stuff.
In a society in which it seems that we are often told that we are powerless,
being able to do magic can make one feel like a super hero.
That is why I think it so very vitally important to learn that we are
all far from powerless before we learn magic. When you already know
that there are no limits except what you impose yourself, then magic
is just a tool, not a trip.
Copyright ©Robin
Wood
Reprinted with Permission
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