Here is a response to a forum thread that I posted in around 2007. Back then, I had been a heathen for a few years, but was new to researching it on the internet - prior to that I had simply been "experiencing my heathenry" in Sweden and the UK.
Original post was on the Kindred UK pagan / heathen forum.
How do you see the Gods?
I have to say I fall heavily on the side of their being anthropomorphic representations of the forces of nature/the cosmos or abstract concepts promoted in a form that people can more readily understand. Explaining renewal/order/'justice'/culture to people even today is pretty hard. Explain that there are gods and goddesses who personify these roles and people can relate to them. Especially with the teutonic gods who are peculiarly more 'human' than many others.
But, more than this, I see there is a counterpoint to this in that the gods can also represent similar aspects of our own psyches. Thor might represent my protective instinct, my pragmatic side and also my no-nonsense approach to problem solving. Freyja might represent the my sexual side. Loki my mischevious side. The stories in the eddas and other sources can be seen as a guide to how these various aspects of ourselves interact and/or how they should be viewed/nurtured.
But, then on another level entirely, I think by following the gods, honouring them in our day to day lives, we breathe a life/more life into them. To all intents and purposes they become independent beings. All we ever know of each-other (as humans) is what our eyes see, our ears hear and, essentially, what our brains process about that person. It is the same when we bring the gods and goddesses into our lives. We see them active in the world and they have an effect on and through us.
Whether what I have reasoned means they are or are not actual, real entities, I am not yet sure. I have only just come to heathenism, but I hope through studying diligently on the evidence of how our faith was practiced traditionally, by reasoning how that should be interpreted in a modern context, and maybe with the odd moment of spiritual enlightenment, I might find out one day.
Also, please note, my knowledge of the gods and goddesses is very primitive at the moment. Forgive me if I have made any inappropriate connections or somesuch 'newbie mistake' ;)
My views differed a little back then to what they have evolved into these days. Naturally, you might say. Opinions and beliefs should always be tested and subject to change and development.
Good to see how, even back then, I was still very accepting that my way (whatever that turned out to be) would not be the only way. If only others - especially new seekers - could accept that.
Pagan-Heathen blog centering on UK-based heathenry but also covering wider pagan issues and paths. The site's remit has now been broadened to cover European pre-Christian history and associated spirituality (historic and reconstructed). First and foremost, though, it is a journal of my journey along my pagan path which is gradually evolving toward an animist perspective. The aim is to promote a positive society inspired by the pre-Christian and non-capitalist cultures of the past.
Thursday, 9 April 2015
Article of mine from around 2007
Labels:
2007,
aesir,
article,
goddesses,
gods,
Kindred UK forum,
neopaganism,
new pagan,
opinion,
vanir,
viking mythology
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Louth, Louth, Lincolnshire LN11, UK
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