Nico wrote:In our rituals we can call upon that Divine Masculine' and project that into the ritual.
This can range from playing the part of a god as a character in a play-like ritual (which is nice, and slightly boring) to entering into a trance and seemingly become that god (which is more interesting). If you manage to relate this (spiritual) experience to the unfolding of your life and to the passing of the seasons, then you contact the 'bigger thing', nature, the universe, divinity. And then you are engaging in mysticism.
The "problem" with calling upon or enacting a mythical god is that you are really just accessing an ideal of "manhood" from another culture and time. (and probably a poorly translated/interpreted one at that) Without insulting anyone's particular "patron diety", many of the gods in the myths seem sort of like a**holes, imo, and not my ideal of the masculine, at least not how it has evolved in the present day and our present culture. The "divine masculine", is , of course, nothing more (or less) than a reflection of what is in ourselves, not some magical visitor that comes from without, so I can see using anachronistic god-types as being a possible hindrance to discovering your "inner man".
Perhaps rather than using some celibate monk's ancient literary misinterpretations as a resource, a better idea is to look to our fellow male creatures in the animal kingdom, and see how their wild and unfiltered "masculine" energy is expressed, and use that in meditation and ritual....the stag, the spawning salmon, our cousins the great apes, etc.