Heddwen wrote:Ah yes, but is this druidry?
A small slice.
Cool avatar BTW
thanks
Heddwen wrote:Ah yes, but is this druidry?
Cool avatar BTW




DJ Droood wrote:Davin Raincloud wrote:I reckon we should give Athiest Druids a hard time. Start a thread where we say they aren't real Druids. They just don't get it!
I double dare you.
Heddwen wrote:Ah yes, but is this druidry?
Cool avatar BTW
cursuswalker wrote:Heddwen wrote:Ah yes, but is this druidry?
Cool avatar BTW
An atheist Druid can:
Honour their Ancestors
Love the gods of their Ancestors and study the lore and mtyhs associated with them
Care for the environment
Take part in druid ritual
So.......yes.
Hawthorn_Ent wrote:cursuswalker wrote:Heddwen wrote:Ah yes, but is this druidry?
Cool avatar BTW
An atheist Druid can:
Honour their Ancestors
Love the gods of their Ancestors and study the lore and mtyhs associated with them
Care for the environment
Take part in druid ritual
So.......yes.
Cursuswalker, I agree, as a Christian Druid I feel the same, even though my beliefs are different from my ancestors. While I can't quite say I " love " the gods of my ancestors, except the Christian one, I do study the myths and lore associated with them. By studying ones ancestoral beliefs one forms a bond with those long passed.
Care for the environment is GOOD!
How is an atheist ritual done? On a pagan or Christian one, a deity is usually involved. I would suppose an atheist would center it exclusively on the natural world. Life itself has an energy, a spirit if you will, all it's own. Is it that that is connected to during ritual? Or is rituals just a simple way of giving thanks to the physical natural world? I am just trying to understand it.
You are really helping me understand the views of the Atheist Druid. Thanks.

Heddwen wrote:Kernos wrote:DJ Droood wrote:It has learned not to...
I think I would say 'evolved' or "matured'.
Does this mean that you think that atheist druids transcend deity?
Arth Frown wrote:Sorry a couple of question that I need clearing up.
Does a atheist druid who loves the gods of their Ancestors, love Jesus Christ and his Dad?
Also how does a atheist druid define honour?


Nicholaas wrote:One may try exemplify some of the virtues attributed to Jesus in the New Testament (care for the poor, etc) while not actually thinking he was anything more than a man, for example.




DJ Droood wrote:Nicholaas wrote:One may try exemplify some of the virtues attributed to Jesus in the New Testament (care for the poor, etc) while not actually thinking he was anything more than a man, for example.
or perhaps even a story....(although I personally think there is a man lurking in the mists)
Which makes a question like "Does this mean that you think that atheist druids transcend deity?" an odd one to try to answer. You could say "Does this mean that you think that atheist druids transcend the Power Rangers?" In a way,no...the average athiest druid (and pious Christian and irreverant Hindu) doesn't have the same place in the zeitgeist, but being real people, we all transcend those characters, so yes.

Heddwen wrote:I can see from this board that the atheists here believe in some things and not others, although I find it difficult to understand at times.
Of course, we transcend the things that we do not believe have religious significance, but if, as druids, we believe in the sanctity of nature, then everything has a spiritual element (although not the Power Rangers!)
My original question - do you think atheist druids transcend deity? referred to Kernos' quote about having 'matured' or 'evolved' . From what to what ? Does this mean that atheists have evolved beyond religion ?
Is this something we will develop into like some sort of atheist ascended masters?!





Arth Frown wrote:Sorry a couple of question that I need clearing up.
Does a atheist druid who loves the gods of their Ancestors, love Jesus Christ and his Dad?
Also how does a atheist druid define honour?
cursuswalker wrote:HAVING SAID THAT I still think it is right to lay into any superstitious belief that is used NOW to justify making people suffer or have power imposed upon them...
He said religions created a "celestial dictatorship" which was "greedy for praise from dawn to dusk".
Kernos wrote:cursuswalker wrote:HAVING SAID THAT I still think it is right to lay into any superstitious belief that is used NOW to justify making people suffer or have power imposed upon them...
I liked the way Christopher Hitchens said this, if I'm reading you right ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11843586 ):He said religions created a "celestial dictatorship" which was "greedy for praise from dawn to dusk".
DJ Droood wrote:Heddwen wrote:I can see from this board that the atheists here believe in some things and not others, although I find it difficult to understand at times.
I think it is hard to speak of "the athiests" as if they were some sort of collective...*all* atheist means is, loosely, *rejection of belief in the existence of deities*. Outside of that, I think beliefs can be pretty wide ranging..even inside that, there can be lots of philosophical step-dancing...so I wouldn't expect any kind of conformity of opinion on anything.
I think it is somewhat easier with Christianity...there is The Nicene Creed, which has been established as a benchmark of Christian belief for centuries.Of course, we transcend the things that we do not believe have religious significance, but if, as druids, we believe in the sanctity of nature, then everything has a spiritual element (although not the Power Rangers!)
really? Why not the Power Rangers? How are they uniquely devoid of spiritual properties, when other imaginary characters, like, say, Moses, have these properties? I, personally, think everything from Power Rangers to rocks to Moses have *some* spiritual element that could be recognized by humans.My original question - do you think atheist druids transcend deity? referred to Kernos' quote about having 'matured' or 'evolved' . From what to what ? Does this mean that atheists have evolved beyond religion ?
Certainly it is an evolution beyond the belief in deities and supernatural powers...(I doubt any true atheist believes in supernatural magic...probably just metaphorical magic..the magic of a sunrise or surprise visit form an old friend...or maybe the complex workings of physics...string theory or something...that is easier to call magic because we are too dumb to understand the real answers, etc....I believe in *karma*, although I don't think "gods" have anything to do with it..I think it is a complex system I don't understand...and I can admit I may be dead wrong and it doesn't exist at all. ) I suppose an atheist could still be involved in religion....I'm pretty sure this Sunday there are lots of people sitting in church beside a spouse, checking messages on the iphone while the man in the dress at the front is going "bla bla bla, sex is evil, hate homosexuals."....or making an appearance at the Men's Christian Golf Prayer Breakfast because it is good for their careers. I am fairly certain there are many priests and preachers who are in it for the crystal meth and deviant sex as well, if the news headlines are to be trusted....not so much for "deity".Is this something we will develop into like some sort of atheist ascended masters?!
You can only hope, and keep striving....the recalcitrantly ignorant may be immune, and will simply go extinct, but I think you show promise, Heddwen.
Heddwen wrote:well, i'm not so sure about that! Ok I see your point about the Power Rangers, I was coming from the belief that Moses was not imaginary, although what is real or imagined would probably form a whole new thread in itself.




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