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Neo-Paganism
Neo-Paganism is any of several spiritual
movements that attempt to revive the ancient polytheistic religions of Europe and the
Middle East. These movements have a close relationship to ritual magic and modern
witchcraft. Neo-Paganism differs from them, however, in striving to revive authentic
pantheons and rituals of ancient cultures, though often in deliberately eclectic and
reconstructionist ways, and by a particularly contemplative and celebrative attitude.
Typically people with romantic feelings toward nature and deep ecological concerns,
Neo-Pagans centre their dramatic and colourful rituals around the changes of the seasons
and the personification of nature as full of divine life, as well as the holy days and
motifs of the religions by which their own groups are inspired.
Modern Neo-Paganism has roots in 19th-century Romanticism and activities inspired by it,
such as the British Order of Druids (which, however, claims an older lineage). Sometimes
associated with extreme nationalism, Neo-Pagan groups and sentiments were known in Europe
before World War II, but contemporary Neo-Paganism is for the most part a product of the
1960s. Influenced by the works of the psychiatrist Carl Jung and the writer Robert Graves,
Neo-Paganists are more interested in nature and archetypal psychology than in nationalism.
Neo-Paganism in the postwar decades has flourished particularly in the United States and
the United Kingdom and in Scandinavia. Some of the major Neo-Pagan groups are the Church
of All Worlds, the largest of all the pagan movements, which centres on worship of the
earth-mother goddess; Feraferia, based on ancient Greek religion and also centred on
goddess worship; Pagan Way, a nature religion centred on goddess worship and the seasons;
the Reformed Druids of North America; the Church of the Eternal Source, which has revived
ancient Egyptian religion; and the Viking Brotherhood, which celebrates Norse rites.
Beginning in the late 1970s, some feminists, open to feminine personifications of the
deity, became interested in witchcraft and Neo-Paganism.

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Author: Originally by Taliesin einion Vawr, Revised by Celtic Church of Dynion Mwyn, Inc. Copyright © 1977, 1992, 2003, 2009 by Celtic Church of Dynion Mwyn, Inc. All rights reserved. Revised: 29 Mar 2010 15:06:08 -0500
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