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I can think of three right off the top of my head.I'd really love to see a definition of Pagan banged out here. Dictionary definitions are so dry.
Hi Azakel,
I've always found Peter Carrolls distinction between Left and Right hand path the most useful:
The RHP is that which tends to put its emphasis on having faith in God, the universe or some higher being however envisedged, while the LHP put their faith in the individual.
Regards
Gaddock
Hi Azakel,
I've always found Peter Carrolls distinction between Left and Right hand path the most useful:
The RHP is that which tends to put its emphasis on having faith in God, the universe or some higher being however envisedged, while the LHP put their faith in the individual.
Regards
Gaddock
wow.
I guess that would make me ambidextrous!
I'm sorry, but is that a word of your own coining, or did you mean "pantheistic/ panenthesitc"?I have a pantheionistic concept of God of which we are an important and conscious constituent part.
Hi Azakel,
I've always found Peter Carrolls distinction between Left and Right hand path the most useful:
The RHP is that which tends to put its emphasis on having faith in God, the universe or some higher being however envisedged, while the LHP put their faith in the individual.
Regards
Gaddock
Pagans - People who worship spirits of the earth usually through ceremonies and practice "white magic" sometimes and are polytheist usually
Left Hand Path - IanAlmighty said it best, worship is virtually non-existent in left-hand path religious thought. Worship of life, nature and, most importantly, one's self.Worship of oneself is practiced through rejecting mainstream dogmas of altruism and egalitarianism and focusing on yourself and your close friends and family before falling prey to the notion that you need to sacrifice everything to everyone.
Reconstructionist - I know absolutely nothing about them as far as I am aware of.
That's what I understand about the three.
Hmm...
Does that mean that Hinduism is both? Brahman-Atman and all that.
I've always found Peter Carrolls distinction between Left and Right hand path the most useful:
The RHP is that which tends to put its emphasis on having faith in God, the universe or some higher being however envisedged, while the LHP put their faith in the individual.
Although I'm not claiming to be the greatest expert on Hinduism, I did study it for a while and their have certainly been atheistic strains within Hindusim - or at least versions that did not see God as ultimately a personal entity. As I said, hinduism has been very diverse. Whether you would want to classify these strands as RHP or LHP is another matter. I think the point about Hinduism isn't that it is both, but contained elements that could be identified with either, at various times in its development.
There are certainly elements of Tantric practices such as AMOOKOS that have LHP leanings and which have their origins in Hinduism.
Gaddock