• THE MEN'S CIRCLE

    From Beth Martin to ALL on Tuesday, November 04, 2025 06:26:36
    THE MEN'S CIRCLE
    (c)1986, by Robin

    The April meeting of the Men's Group at the home of Wayland
    Smith discussed the theme of "Gods and Archetypes in Every Man".
    This was partially inspired by the book, "Goddesses in Every
    Woman". As always, we got off on a number of side roads in our
    conversational journey, some of them as interesting as the main
    topic. One of those side roads was the relationship between
    modern Christianity and modern Paganism, a topic which has been
    expounded upon in recent issues of this journal. From the point
    of view of individual Pagans, there seem to be two attitudes.
    Some people came to feel, perhaps quite early in life, that the
    version of Christianity in which they had been raised was
    detrimental to their psychological and spiritual health and have
    now rejected it totally. Others, like myself, gradually came to
    feel that while Christianity had a lot to offer them and was fine
    for many people, it lacked some essential spiritual vitamins
    that they themselves needed. Some of this difference in attitude
    comes from differences in the individual, but a lot seems to
    come from the difference in the particular version of
    Christianity involved. I was raised as a Catholic, and came to
    the Craft with an appreciation for colorful ritual and ceremony,
    and an awareness of its potentialities and power. The Catholic
    reverence for the Blessed Virgin helped also. There is quite a
    contrast in these areas with mainstream Protestantism.

    In retrospect, perhaps my first step toward Paganism came
    when I helped write a new Catholic ritual for small groups, to be
    performed without a priest. We submitted it for formal approval
    and never got a word back. Even excommunication would have been
    preferable to being ignored.

    A few months after my First Degree initiation I went
    traveling around Italy with my old friend Ron. We visited some
    catacombs near Rome and it was surprising how strong the psychic
    impression left by the early Christians still was after eighteen
    centuries and thousands of tourists. Still more surprising was
    the type of psychic impression. It felt very close to what one
    feels in Circle with one's fellow coven members. That, and some
    historical hints, suggest that in its first few centuries
    Christianity was more similar to contemporary Paganism in what it
    offered people than most of us are inclined to think. What we
    now call psychic and/or magical abilities seem to have been
    commonly accepted, priests were much more a part of everyday
    community life than religious leaders are now, many women had
    substantial power and influence, and a lot of individual
    interpretation went on.

    What happened to change all that? I'm inclined to agree, at
    least in part, with Buck Jump, our resident Heretic.
    Institutionalization was and is the culprit. Institutions have
    bureaucracies, and bureaucracies by their nature stifle
    individual interpretation. They also develop rigid power
    structures, and these can't tolerate people outside the
    structure developing power through special abilities, psychic or
    otherwise. A contemporary example of this is what happens to a
    rigidly organized corporation that suddenly computerizes its
    operations. People who formerly were inconsequential in the
    power structure now have considerable power through their
    special technical knowledge and access to information. The
    whole pecking order is thrown into disarray, and the resulting
    turmoil is fascinating to watch from a safe distance of course.
    A friend described this happening at the Rocky Mountain News a
    few years ago. We Pagans are still a ways from large scale institutionalization, but sooner or later we will start feeling
    the pressure. It probably won't be sudden, it took Christianity
    three or four centuries to get there, but we should start
    thinking about alternatives now.

    The pressure can be subtle there are a lot of nice things
    you can do with institutions that are hard to do without them.
    Building a college for example. A couple of years ago I went to
    a class reunion at my old school, L'Universite de Notre Dame du
    Lac The University of Our Lady of the Lake famed for football
    and the administration building's golden dome, surmounted by a
    gold statue of Mary, Virgin and Mother of an Aspect of the
    Christian God. From the ground the campus seems open and meadow
    like, but from the top of the library it looks like a college in
    a forest; white buildings surrounded by the tops of trees, and
    over it all a golden statue of the Queen of Heaven. At the time
    I thought, "What an appropriate school for a Witch to have atten
    ded." Now I'm tempted by the thought, "Wouldn't it be nice if we
    Pagans had one of our own." Be careful what you ask for, you
    might get it!
    _____Robin
    .........from R.M.P.J. 8/86

    This article is excerpted from the Rocky Mountain Pagan Journal.
    Each issue of the Rocky Mountain Pagan Journal is published by
    High Plains Arts and Sciences; P.O. Box 620604, Littleton Co.,
    80123, a Colorado Non-Profit Corporation, under a Public Domain
    Copyright, which entitles any person or group of persons to
    reproduce, in any form whatsoever, any material contained therein
    without restriction, so long as articles are not condensed or
    abbreviated in any fashion, and credit is given the original
    author.!


    Beth,
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080