Author Topic: Avebury chapel's future  (Read 21430 times)

Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #25 on: September 04, 2015, 11:11:04 AM »

Whatever!

You go on thinking what you think, it will not change what modern pagans believe, it is like all religions a matter of faith!

And I do not, tectchy or not, sleepless or not, have to justify my beliefs to you or anyone else.

I have never asked you to justify your beliefs, nor attempted to change what modern pagans believe, but have pointed out that nobody knows what went on at Avebury (which I think you said you agreed with) and that there is no evidence for any link between Avebury and modern pagans so modern pagans have no more claim or significance regarding Avebury than anyone else. Believe what you want - makes no difference to me - but you suggested there was a real history of Avebury that modern pagans could show in the former chapel but have not been able to back this comment up.

Rhiannon

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #26 on: September 04, 2015, 01:22:03 PM »

I can't speak for Matt but because there is so little written history of paganism within the British Isles we rely on archaeology to understand our past, our sacred sites and also, in a way, ourselves. That doesn't mean to say we don't move forward or claim a lineage that doesn't exist. And archaeology moves forward too. For example, it's now thought that Stonehenge was probably a Winter Solstice site, but the modern pagan drumming up the sun gathering at the Summer Solstice is something modern paganism has well established.

In my experience most pagans are interested in archaeology, reading the landscape, and folklore. We look to these for clues to a past that we feel but don't always know how to express.

As has been said, no one knows what went on at Avebury, Stonehenge and the like so I can't really see any connection between them and modern Paganism. Avebury is my favourite place to visit and I find the whole area fascinating and am very interested in archaeology but am not a pagan. I don't see that Avebury is a sacred site - it is a very important site in world history, but don't understand why people who have no knowledge of what went on there can claim it as sacred to them. It may have been sacred to the people who lived there at the time but they are long gone.

Again I can't speak for Matt but many neopagans value our ancestors, regard them as wise and seek to learn from them. We know that in the past pagans venerated their ancestors; whilst we don't go in for ancestor worship as such most pagans try to understand the pagans of the past.

At the same time we seek to make our own paths with what we have available to us now - I know I am not alone in feeling somewhat robbed of a part of my heritage - and neopagans find the ancient sites speaking to them now, both of the pagan past and people and of the energies and texture of stone and circle now. It's not play acting to go to these sites, but a sacred act seeking connection and understanding to something that is taken for granted by Christians with their buildings and written history, and dismissed as worthless by those who think we are just a bunch of 'losers' into 'hippy shit' (both terms used on this for to describe pagans).

Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #27 on: September 04, 2015, 01:41:13 PM »
Hi Rhiannon,

Thanks for that and I do understand what you are saying. As I say I enjoy visiting Avebury and usually try to do so in the week between Christmas and New Year and think it is a special place. One year I walked over the top of a ridge to look down on Silbury hill with a mist surrounding it's base which was lit by the setting sun for just a few seconds and this was very special. However, as has been said many times, there is no evidence about what went on at Avebury, so I really don't see what it has to do with Avebury. Neopagans may feel a connection and association with the place but just because they feel it doesn't make it so nor does it mean that the place should be considered as a sacred pagan site by anyone else. Sure, respect people's rights to visit the site the same as anyone else and to do whatever at the site so long as it doesn't damage it and is legal but just because a group claims a site as being sacred to them, if there is no evidence of an actual connection then this claim shouldn't have any weight to it surely.

I am quite interested in the use of pagan though - if the people who built Avebury did use it for worship but of totally different gods than modern pagans would you still feel they are fellow pagans and feel some assocaition with them?

Rhiannon

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #28 on: September 04, 2015, 01:59:15 PM »
I think there is a general consensus that stone circles had a ritual use for pagans in the past, although we have no idea what. Personally speaking I think modern pagans approach these sites in two ways. One is to feel a connection with our pagan ancestors. The other is to feel a connection with the site itself - the stones, the landscape and how the circle (in this case) connects and reflects both the landscape and the seasons. The more sites are used now the more that connection builds up. Not far from me the Catholic Church have taken over a house - that is now their scared building even though that isn't what it was built for. There's also a 'sacred site' of trees in a village that has only become used by pagans in the past twenty years or so.

I feel connected to the past full stop. I don't feel disconnected to my blood ancestors because they were Christian. So I guess when I visit a sacred site I try to feel connected to the people there through our common humanity - I feel a connection to the people who have worshipped in our village church for the past eight hundred years or so. My own understanding of what my gods are is so personal - and doesn't involve worship, but connection - I don't seek to find a matching belief in anyone past or present. 

I don't know if that helps?

Owlswing

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #29 on: September 04, 2015, 02:18:06 PM »
So you do not see it as a sacred site, your choice. It is a site that took generations, like Stonehenge, to build. What other use would there be for such an expenditure of labour?
Rome took generations to build, Matt.  Was it built as a 'sacred site'?  Whilst I would agree that many sacred sites took many years/generations to build, length of construction isn't a prerequisite for sacredness.

1 - Avebury was not built without any of the kind of machinery that was used to build Rome;

2 - Avebury was built without the use, and deaths, of thousands of slaves;

3 - So far as we are aware, from archeological experts and not from religious philistines, Avebury was built as a sacred site, Rome was built as a city to hold a population!

4 - You really ought to learn how to answer like with like.

5 - If you knew half what you like to think you know and twice what you actually know - you would still be a pretentious religious nit-wit.
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Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #30 on: September 04, 2015, 03:26:30 PM »
I think there is a general consensus that stone circles had a ritual use for pagans in the past, although we have no idea what. Personally speaking I think modern pagans approach these sites in two ways. One is to feel a connection with our pagan ancestors. The other is to feel a connection with the site itself - the stones, the landscape and how the circle (in this case) connects and reflects both the landscape and the seasons. The more sites are used now the more that connection builds up. Not far from me the Catholic Church have taken over a house - that is now their scared building even though that isn't what it was built for. There's also a 'sacred site' of trees in a village that has only become used by pagans in the past twenty years or so.

I feel connected to the past full stop. I don't feel disconnected to my blood ancestors because they were Christian. So I guess when I visit a sacred site I try to feel connected to the people there through our common humanity - I feel a connection to the people who have worshipped in our village church for the past eight hundred years or so. My own understanding of what my gods are is so personal - and doesn't involve worship, but connection - I don't seek to find a matching belief in anyone past or present. 

I don't know if that helps?

Thanks for that Rhiannon and I would agree with almost all of it. I guess I have difficulty with the idea of calling peoplefrom the past pagan and then linking them to  modern pagans. If you had said 'I think there is a general consensus that stone circles had a ritual use for people in the past, although we have no idea what.' I would 100% agree. It just seems that some people call the people who built Avebury pagan, then say I'm a pagan so I have a special connection to AVebury, when in reality they have no more connection in my view than I do.

Owlswing

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #31 on: September 04, 2015, 03:45:36 PM »
I think there is a general consensus that stone circles had a ritual use for pagans in the past, although we have no idea what. Personally speaking I think modern pagans approach these sites in two ways. One is to feel a connection with our pagan ancestors. The other is to feel a connection with the site itself - the stones, the landscape and how the circle (in this case) connects and reflects both the landscape and the seasons. The more sites are used now the more that connection builds up. Not far from me the Catholic Church have taken over a house - that is now their scared building even though that isn't what it was built for. There's also a 'sacred site' of trees in a village that has only become used by pagans in the past twenty years or so.

I feel connected to the past full stop. I don't feel disconnected to my blood ancestors because they were Christian. So I guess when I visit a sacred site I try to feel connected to the people there through our common humanity - I feel a connection to the people who have worshipped in our village church for the past eight hundred years or so. My own understanding of what my gods are is so personal - and doesn't involve worship, but connection - I don't seek to find a matching belief in anyone past or present. 

I don't know if that helps?

Thanks for that Rhiannon and I would agree with almost all of it. I guess I have difficulty with the idea of calling peoplefrom the past pagan and then linking them to  modern pagans. If you had said 'I think there is a general consensus that stone circles had a ritual use for people in the past, although we have no idea what.' I would 100% agree. It just seems that some people call the people who built Avebury pagan, then say I'm a pagan so I have a special connection to AVebury, when in reality they have no more connection in my view than I do.

Avebury was built 5,000 years ago.

Just what religion do you think they followed if not what is now condsidered "pagan"?

Modern pagans do waht they can to relate to thise pagans who built the circles. Just what do you think is so wrong woith that?

You can, I suppose, get your head round people relating to the premise of a man being killed and coming to life again being a deity, but you cannot relate to pagans relating to what we consider to be what the old pagans believed!
« Last Edit: September 04, 2015, 03:49:47 PM by CMG KCMG GCMG »
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Rhiannon

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #32 on: September 04, 2015, 04:26:26 PM »
I think there is a general consensus that stone circles had a ritual use for pagans in the past, although we have no idea what. Personally speaking I think modern pagans approach these sites in two ways. One is to feel a connection with our pagan ancestors. The other is to feel a connection with the site itself - the stones, the landscape and how the circle (in this case) connects and reflects both the landscape and the seasons. The more sites are used now the more that connection builds up. Not far from me the Catholic Church have taken over a house - that is now their scared building even though that isn't what it was built for. There's also a 'sacred site' of trees in a village that has only become used by pagans in the past twenty years or so.

I feel connected to the past full stop. I don't feel disconnected to my blood ancestors because they were Christian. So I guess when I visit a sacred site I try to feel connected to the people there through our common humanity - I feel a connection to the people who have worshipped in our village church for the past eight hundred years or so. My own understanding of what my gods are is so personal - and doesn't involve worship, but connection - I don't seek to find a matching belief in anyone past or present. 

I don't know if that helps?

Thanks for that Rhiannon and I would agree with almost all of it. I guess I have difficulty with the idea of calling peoplefrom the past pagan and then linking them to  modern pagans. If you had said 'I think there is a general consensus that stone circles had a ritual use for people in the past, although we have no idea what.' I would 100% agree. It just seems that some people call the people who built Avebury pagan, then say I'm a pagan so I have a special connection to AVebury, when in reality they have no more connection in my view than I do.

I don't think it quite works like that. If you go to a cathedral you can appreciate the architecture as a non-believer, but you will also respect the beliefs and practices of those who worship there. In claiming a connection to ancient sacred sites modern pagans are trying to rekindle the respect for the spirituality of pagan sites. Now, I will be the first to say that there are too many pagans who don't know how to respect sites either and it is a problem recognised within paganism. But I don't think pagans claim a 'special' connection; the sites are for all, but we'd just like it to be remembered that they were sacred to our ancestors, and modern pagans are forging our own sacred relationships with ancient places.

Of course the irony from my point of view I s that I live in East Anglia, where there are no stone circles. Ours is a very different sacred landscape, little survives apart from Flag Fen and Grimes Graves. I have to look for old byways and ancient churches for clues, but my sacred sites are the land that I walk, the hedgerows and trees, and my own back garden, and of course the beaches I visit in summer.

Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #33 on: September 04, 2015, 05:14:22 PM »
Interesting. Unfortunately I think that if that is what modern pagans are trying to achieve it is more likely to have the opposite effect on many people.

Its interesting also that you say you don't think pagans are claiming any special connection to these sites but then talk about the spirituality of these sites. To me these sites themselves are not spiritual - and the view that they are does, to me, suggest the idea of a special connection. If a church closes and becomes a domestic dwelling I wouldn't consider that building to be spiritual or have any associated respect for it because of its former use, beyond, as I have said before, the normal respect for old buildings.

Hope

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #34 on: September 04, 2015, 05:17:19 PM »
Just what religion do you think they followed if not what is now condsidered "pagan"?
Animism, ancestor worship, sun worship, ...  there are loads of historical religions which don't fit under the term 'pagan'
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Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #35 on: September 04, 2015, 05:23:51 PM »
Avebury was built 5,000 years ago.

Yes thanks - I know.

Quote
Just what religion do you think they followed if not what is now condsidered "pagan"?

We don't know what their religious beliefs were. Clearly they were not Christian or Jewish so do come under the general definition of pagan but there is no reason to think that the beliefs of modern pagans and their beliefs were the same or similar.

Quote
Modern pagans do waht they can to relate to thise pagans who built the circles. Just what do you think is so wrong woith that?

Nothing wrong with it, as I have said, believe what you want - but when you talk about the 'real history' of Avebury on a discussion forum you ought to expect that comment to be challenged. I'm still waiting to hear what the real history is.

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You can, I suppose, get your head round people relating to the premise of a man being killed and coming to life again being a deity,

What on earth makes you think that?

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.. but you cannot relate to pagans relating to what we consider to be what the old pagans believed!

Like I say - believe what you want but if you claim some special understanding or to know the real history then you should expect to be challenged.

Owlswing

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #36 on: September 04, 2015, 05:37:18 PM »
Just what religion do you think they followed if not what is now condsidered "pagan"?
Animism, ancestor worship, sun worship, ...  there are loads of historical religions which don't fit under the term 'pagan'

What total rubbish - the Christian church's definition of pagan is "not christian" - or at its greatest stretch - non-Abrahamic.

I have never known anyone, on the Beeb forum or on here, that can squirm like you when someone points out an errorin you thinking. You can twist langiuage like a double-helix - but the end point is, on religion, Hope is nerver, ever wrong!

Here is an answer for you - Hope is frequently wrong, in some cases totally so - but it would kill him to ever admit it!
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Rhiannon

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #37 on: September 04, 2015, 05:44:53 PM »
Interesting. Unfortunately I think that if that is what modern pagans are trying to achieve it is more likely to have the opposite effect on many people.

Its interesting also that you say you don't think pagans are claiming any special connection to these sites but then talk about the spirituality of these sites. To me these sites themselves are not spiritual - and the view that they are does, to me, suggest the idea of a special connection. If a church closes and becomes a domestic dwelling I wouldn't consider that building to be spiritual or have any associated respect for it because of its former use, beyond, as I have said before, the normal respect for old buildings.

I don't know - put it this way, I don't think pagans claim any kind of exclusivity over sacred sites. When it comes to the idea of connection, that is down to the individual. But pagans are forging a sacred relationship to sacred sites based in part from a desire to reconnect with the past, but also to ask for respect for pagan spirituality.

I suppose a problem is that you have to have a concept of sacredness to see and respect it. If it doesn't feature in your personal experience on regard to places then it can't have any meaning when others describe somewhere in such terms.

Owlswing

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #38 on: September 04, 2015, 05:59:10 PM »
Rhiannon

I think that Maeght is on a wind-up here; trying to say, or to get us to say, that modern paganism has no history and no spirituality - pagans and paganism are fiction.

As I have said before, Maeght can think whatever he/she likes - I do not have to take any notrice of his/her views and I certainly do not give a tinkers cuss what he/she, or anyone else, thinks about my beliefs.

My beliefs work for me and I will continue to hold them until something come along to change my view of them, but, as sure as eggs are eggs, it will not be anything that Maeght, Hope, Sassy, Johnny C, Alien et al have to say on the subject!
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Rhiannon

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #39 on: September 04, 2015, 06:57:01 PM »
Maeght isn't a Christian though, Matt.

I think when we talk about things such as sacredness it is a completely alien concept to people who haven't experienced that, or who haven't in relation to places or landscapes. I suspect we are just wired different ways. I think when it comes to sites such as Avebury and Stonehenge they really are 'for' everyone, but equally I think the pagan community is entitled to ask for respect for how we feel about these places.

Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #40 on: September 04, 2015, 06:57:18 PM »
Rhiannon

I think that Maeght is on a wind-up here; trying to say, or to get us to say, that modern paganism has no history and no spirituality - pagans and paganism are fiction.

As I have said before, Maeght can think whatever he/she likes - I do not have to take any notrice of his/her views and I certainly do not give a tinkers cuss what he/she, or anyone else, thinks about my beliefs.

My beliefs work for me and I will continue to hold them until something come along to change my view of them, but, as sure as eggs are eggs, it will not be anything that Maeght, Hope, Sassy, Johnny C, Alien et al have to say on the subject!

I don't go in for winding people up - and I think I have had enough conversations with Rhiannon for her to appreciate that (I hope). I have specifically talked about Avebury and your claim that you could present the real history of the site - nothing beyond that - yet you have not focused on that but have talked in wider more general terms. Is this because you realise that your real history comment was in error? I have not questioned your beliefs and have said throughout you can believe what you like as far as I'm concerned. As I say, you made a claim on a discussion forum which you ought to be able to accept being challenged. If not why come on a discussion forum? Rhiannon has attempted to explain how some modern pagan see things and I appreciate that. Perhaps if you attempted something similar or actually addressed what I was challenging you on instead of getting all tetchy things miht go a bit better.


Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #41 on: September 04, 2015, 06:58:25 PM »
Maeght isn't a Christian though, Matt.

I think when we talk about things such as sacredness it is a completely alien concept to people who haven't experienced that, or who haven't in relation to places or landscapes. I suspect we are just wired different ways. I think when it comes to sites such as Avebury and Stonehenge they really are 'for' everyone, but equally I think the pagan community is entitled to ask for respect for how we feel about these places.

No problem with any of that Rhiannon. Thanks.

Owlswing

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #42 on: September 04, 2015, 07:09:28 PM »
Maeght isn't a Christian though, Matt.

I think when we talk about things such as sacredness it is a completely alien concept to people who haven't experienced that, or who haven't in relation to places or landscapes. I suspect we are just wired different ways. I think when it comes to sites such as Avebury and Stonehenge they really are 'for' everyone, but equally I think the pagan community is entitled to ask for respect for how we feel about these places.

I could not agree more!

Sorry, but I found Maeght's comments about modern pagans anything but repectful!
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Rhiannon

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #43 on: September 04, 2015, 07:22:24 PM »
I think the problem is, Maeght, that Matt is old enough to remember when being out as a pagan was dangerous. We are routinely misrepresented in the media - anything on Satanism will inevitably feature pentagrams and chalices, as though Dennis Wheatley wrote fact rather than potboilers. Or, we are dismissed as 'sad acts getting their kit off in the woods' (quote from Silent Witness). And the major faith in this country teaches its adherents that whilst multi faith meetings are good, paganism is at best outside that, and at worst, to be feared - I know, because even as a liberal Christian that is what I was taught.

A child saying it is a pagan in school risks being ostracised by Christian families or even an investigation from social services (this has happened) and the Pagan Federation have noted that pagan victims of domestic violence are less likely to be believed - they even have reported a case where the victim was arrested. You have seen the way we get spoken to on here. Some Christians go on about 'Baal worship'; others have quoted that they should not 'suffer a witch to live' (a quote from the Book of Daniel). I worry about what my kids' friends' families would think if they knew - should I hide my books and my stuff when people visit? Even now Pagan Dawn still has to be delivered in plain envelopes because people don't feel safe about their neighbours knowing.

I've never found you less than fair, although I know we come from differing viewpoints. But Matt has been around longer to pick up far more bruises than I have. I also ignore the insults from some of the posters here (well, most of the time) which means poor old Matt gets the brunt of them. It gets to the best of us from time to time.

Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #44 on: September 04, 2015, 07:47:38 PM »
I certainly sensed a bit of defensiveness Rhiannon :) and I can understand that given what you say. Some of the posts on here about pagans are ridiculous indeed. Very sad that you have to think about hiding your books and stuff if your kids friends come over. I sort of wonder though whether the seeming desire to show/claim that modern paganism has this long tradition going back millennia is counter productive. Perhaps going for the modern would distance neopagans from the old associations? Is it really important to neopagans that there should be this association with the old religions? What do you think?

Owlswing

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #45 on: September 04, 2015, 10:57:16 PM »

I certainly sensed a bit of defensiveness Rhiannon :) and I can understand that given what you say. Some of the posts on here about pagans are ridiculous indeed. Very sad that you have to think about hiding your books and stuff if your kids friends come over. I sort of wonder though whether the seeming desire to show/claim that modern paganism has this long tradition going back millennia is counter productive. Perhaps going for the modern would distance neopagans from the old associations? Is it really important to neopagans that there should be this association with the old religions? What do you think?


Maeght

Just an example to, I hope, explain some of my tetchyness.

Some years ago my daughter, then aged 8, accompanied me and my older daughter, aged 16, to a gathering at the Conway Halls in Holborn; a gathering called the Beltaine Bash. It is a celbration of May Day, one of the eight major Sabbats of the Pagan Calendar.

It was, it is no longer held, a chance to meet pagan friends who we only saw once every six months, to stock up on incenses, to maybe get a new robe or cloak for ritual and to consume copious quantities of mead (alcoholic honey, in case you don't already know, and, reputedly, the oldest alcoholic drink know to man).

There were dozens of other kids of the same or similar ages and 8 year-old had a great time.

As she and her sister were under 18 they were exluded from the opening and closing rituals. This was a necessary precaution due to the "pagans take young girls and do nasty things to them against their will" that was prevalent then - still is in the minds of some.

At school on the following Monday her class were asked what they had done at the week-end and she answered honestly and in some detail, especially when the teacher asked her a lot of questions.

I arrived at school to pick her up and was met by the teacher and two police officers. I was told that I was to be arrested for exposing my daughter to the disgusting sexual excesses of a witch's orgy.

I was lucky that the cops asked me for my version of what had happened, let me go, and told me that they would submit their report to their superiors.

The police contacted me a week later and stated that there was a possibility that I would be charged with exposing a minor to moral danger. As a result of this the officer suggested that I contact the Pagan Federation who had lawyers who would help me.

The upshot was that, thanks to Pagan Fed and the lawyer they supplied, no action was taken and the teacher wound up being reprimanded for the way she had interrogated my daughter, for falsely reporting her as having said things that she did not, confirmed by classmates who now seemed to think that she was " someone of interest" and for passing a confidential report to the local priest.

It was not all good news. She was spat at, slapped, pushed around, sworn at by some of the children. My ex-wife attempted to get a Court Order to prevent me having access to my daughters. The school stamped down hard on the bullying at school and the Pagan Fed lawyer helped me keep my access to my children.

Some on here, as Rhiannon has stated, still feel that pagans, especially pagans who are witches (all witches are pagan but not all pagans are witches), are not really acceptable.

One, you may have noticed, insists on mentioning the fact that I am a witch with monotonous regularity, using it always in a negative manner.         

Maeght, please accept my apologies for the manner in which I have addressed you, many, even in this day and age, still consider that Exodus 22:18 should be acted upon, and it does rankle.

Please understand that most of the history of all pagan "sacred sites" comes from archaeology and archaeologists and most of our (pagans) knowledge of the beliefs of our pagan ancestors comes from fragmentary records that escaped the flames that destroyed most of the written records and from pagans of non-British origin, Gaelic, Celtic, Norse, Greek, Roman and Egyptian.

Thus, I am afraid, your comments and criricsm of modern pagans and their attachment to our ancestors hit a seriosly raw nerve. 

Quote

I sort of wonder though whether the seeming desire to show/claim that modern paganism has this long tradition going back millennia is counter productive. Perhaps going for the modern would distance neopagans from the old associations? Is it really important to neopagans that there should be this association with the old religions? What do you think?


What we are trying to do is to revive the Old Religion. We do not claim to be continuing it.

Despite what Margaret A Murray and Gerald Gardner would have it, paganism as it is practised today is NOT a continuation of the old, pre-Christian, paganism.

It is an attempt to revive that religion, a religion that was ruthlessly destroyed by Christianity (that won't go down well with some here), to recreate it if you will. It is not the fact that it is history that is important to us, it is important for what it stood for, what it thought was important, like the all things natural; natrual things the fed and clothed them, animals and plants and birds. A lot of pagans joined the various Green Partys, until, for the most part, their policies began to head for the lunatic fringes - many pagans are still active members of Greenpeace.

Yes, the historical paganism is important, the more we find out about it the more we can bring back to life - a second case of a resurrection connected to religion?

We do not claim that our rituals are the same as those practised by the people who, we feel sure, used places like Stonehenge and Avebury, we cannot know what they did or said.

Gerald B did modern pagans a serious disservice when he claimed that the Wiccan religion that he invented was a continuation of  pre-Christian paganism; a disservive that we are still trying to reverse. It is a shame that there are still Gardnerian Wiccans who will not accept the truth about Gardner.     

The Holy Bible, probably the most diabolical work of fiction ever to be visited upon mankind.

An it harm none, do what you will; an it harm some, do what you must!

Shaker

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #46 on: September 04, 2015, 11:01:13 PM »
There have been many superb posts on this forum; that one is in the premier league in my book.
Pain, or damage, don't end the world. Or despair, or fucking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man, and give some back. - Al Swearengen, Deadwood.

Owlswing

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #47 on: September 04, 2015, 11:05:15 PM »
There have been many superb posts on this forum; that one is in the premier league in my book.

Thanks Shaker.

I was. lloking back on it, far too rude to Meaght who deserved a more reasoned response, I just hope it has given one.

I am just waiting for the Christian backlash.
The Holy Bible, probably the most diabolical work of fiction ever to be visited upon mankind.

An it harm none, do what you will; an it harm some, do what you must!

Maeght

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #48 on: September 05, 2015, 06:45:12 AM »
Thank you for taking the time CMG KCMG GCMG to put together what, as Shaker said, was a superb post. Sorry if I gave the impression of attacking you in any way. As I mentioned, Avebury is a particularly special place to me and initially I was interested in your comment about its history but, being in a rush, didn't put that across properly. I do find some of the apparent claims of some modern pagans regarding links to ancient sites a little irritating though and think these do need to be challenged and discussed - on the basis of the archaeological evidence though not due to any religious views - and this certainly also influenced my postings. Perhaps my perception that modern pagans make such claims is wrong. The comments of yourself and Rhiannon have certainly helped clarify things for me regarding how at least some modern pagans view the site.

There is clearly in my view an 'image' problem regarding modern paganism which in its most extreme form has resulted in the issues you have faced and which to a lesser extent is probably shared by many. In the past when I have mentioned how much I enjoy visiting Avebury people have made comments such as 'What are you a tree hugger?' or have joked about me 'communing with the stones' and running around naked. It is because of this image problem that I wondered if it was better to focus on the modern and not on the old - but there will always be people who hold a strong anti view to anything outside of their own faith and who will attack pagans based on their own religious views regardless of any efforts to 're brand' so I can understand why pagans may just say 'why should we'.

Thanks again for your post. I am sure there will be 'comments' from some of the Christians but I should just ignore them (hard I know).

Cheers

jeremyp

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Re: Avebury chapel's future
« Reply #49 on: September 05, 2015, 08:37:28 AM »

1 - Avebury was not built without any of the kind of machinery that was used to build Rome;


How do you know?

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2 - Avebury was built without the use, and deaths, of thousands of slaves;

How do you know?

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3 - So far as we are aware, from archeological experts and not from religious philistines, Avebury was built as a sacred site, Rome was built as a city to hold a population!

Clearly Avebury is not a city, but the idea that it must have been a sacred site is speculation based on the fact that it has no obvious purpose and, in our experience, large apparently pointless construction projects are always sacred to the people that built them.

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5 - If you knew half what you like to think you know and twice what you actually know - you would still be a pretentious religious nit-wit.

So. in your opinion, Hope actually knows a quarter of what he thinks he knows.
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