I'm going to use Nellie's comments from the last post as my entry today because it's full of very good and useful information and insight.  It makes me see sacrifice in a new light and not quite the enemy I presumed it to be.  I always learn a lot from her.  
One thing I love about the Brython group I'm involved with is that  they'll tell it to me like it is. If I'm talking bollocks, that's what  they'll tell me. It's not about being intolerant of other people's path,  it's more about keeping each other accountable so you don't float off  into a fantasy world where most of the pagan world is too afraid to tell  you you're barmy incase it seem like you're being intolerant. There's a  difference, so I see no problem with you telling it how you see it LOL!
From  my own point of view I think maybe your old Christian understand of  sacrifice is colouring things for you, and not in a good way. Christian  sacrifice is about going without, giving yourself the harsh treatment  etc etc. You get it far better than I do. But in pagan/druid/recon terms  it doesn't have the same connotations (IMHO). In the case of burning  things it isn't to destroy them but to transform them from the physical  to the spiritual level. If you spend months on a piece of beauty as an  offering to the gods you want to be able to give it to them right? But  they can't take it in its physical form because they are spirit, so the  burning changes the form of your gift to them so that they can actually  accept the gift. I might have understood the details wrong, but I think  that is basically it. Sacrifice though is often about reenacting a  primal truth. The Indo-European faiths are all generally built upon the  notion that it was sacrifice that created the universe in the first  place. Either sacrifice of a god or goddess or of the first man.  According to Cesirw Serith in that earliest religion sacrifice maintains  the balance of the world and stops chaos overtaking and destroying the  world so the rituals of sacrifice (whatever they might have involved as  we can only speculate and try to reconstruct something plausible) were  performed to keep the forces of chaos from destroying the world by  reenacting that first sacrifice. This comes from his book 'Deep  Ancestors' but if you take a look at his website you can read the book  online for free (highly reccommended! I don't agree with all his  thoughts but its a hugely interesting read and has added so much depth  to my personal practise). The idea of sacrifice doesn't have to mean  going without or destroying something either. The breaking of a loaf and  offering it to the gods is a perfectly suitable sacrifice for the 21st  century! :D
I hope I have come across too preachy, Gods know you've  had enough of that! Just thought it might be another angle that you  might find interesting?
Blessings my lovely, and I commend you for finding your voice :)
~Nellie @abitofgardeningspirit
 
 
Wow, thank you for sharing that, Kathy. That is immensely helpful to me as well, reframing the whole concept for myself on my own path.
ReplyDeleteNellie is awesome. I love her words and read her blog whenever she has a new post. A Wise Woman.
ReplyDeleteGee I'm really flattered! I'm pleased this helped :)
ReplyDelete~ Nellie @abitofgardeningspirit
You're welcome, Tana. I admit it was such a foreign concept to me that I didn't grasp the Pagan view of sacrifice. Now that Nellie has so wonderfully explained it to me, it's like a light bulb (energy saver, of course) going off. And it's something I can see myself doing in the future. Another example of how Christianity has blurred my view of things.
ReplyDeleteOh, yes, DM. She's a marvel. I try to read every one of her posts or at least catch up when I've not spent time online as much. I don't always understand what she says because I hadn't read anything about it before but fortunately I am able to go back after I've been further introduced to the same things she's talking about. She's amazing.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Nellie. It really helped me to understand it. You're right that my understanding of sacrifice was badly colored by Christianity. Thanks for explaining it so well.
ReplyDelete