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of the most striking characteristics of Druidism is the degree
to which it is free of dogma and any fixed set of beliefs or
practices. In this way it manages to offer a spiritual path,
and a way of being in the world that avoids many of the problems
of intolerance and sectarianism that the established religions
have encountered. There is no
‘sacred text’ or the equivalent of a bible in
Druidism and there is no universally agreed set of beliefs
amongst Druids. Despite this, there are a number of ideas
and beliefs that most Druids hold in common, and that help
to define the nature of Druidism today:
Theology
Since Druidry is a spiritual path – a religion to some,
a way of life to others – Druids share a belief in the
fundamentally spiritual nature of life. Some will favour a
particular way of understanding the source of this spiritual
nature, and may feel themselves to be animists, pantheists,
polytheists, monotheists or duotheists. Others will avoid
choosing any one conception of Deity, believing that by its
very nature this is unknowable by the mind.
Monotheistic druids believe there is one Deity: either a
Goddess or God, or a Being who is better named Spirit or Great
Spirit, to remove misleading associations to gender. But other
druids are duotheists, believing that Deity exists as a pair
of forces or beings, which they often characterise as the
God and Goddess.
Polytheistic Druids believe that many gods and goddesses
exist, while animists and pantheists believe that Deity does
not exist as one or more personal gods, but is instead present
in all things, and is everything.
Whether they have chosen to adopt a particular viewpoint
or not, the greatest characteristic of most modern-day Druids
lies in their tolerance of diversity: a Druid gathering can
bring together people who have widely varying views about
deity, or none, and they will happily participate in ceremonies
together, celebrate the seasons, and enjoy each others’
company – realising that none of us has the monopoly
on truth, and that diversity is both healthy and natural.
Nature forms such an important focus of their reverence,
that whatever beliefs they hold about Deity, all Druids sense
Nature as divine or sacred. Every part of nature is sensed
as part of the great web of life, with no one creature or
aspect of it having supremacy over any other. Unlike religions
that are anthropocentric, believing humanity occupies a central
role in the scheme of life, this conception is systemic and
holistic, and sees humankind as just one part of the wider
family of life.
The Otherworld
Although Druids love Nature, and draw inspiration and spiritual
nourishment from it, they also believe that the world we see
is not the only one that exists. A cornerstone of Druid belief
is in the existence of the Otherworld – a realm or realms
which exist beyond the reach of the physical senses, but which
are nevertheless real.
This Otherworld is seen as the place we travel to when we
die. But we can also visit it during our lifetime in dreams,
in meditation, under hypnosis, or in ‘journeying’,
when in a shamanic trance.
Different Druids will have different views on the nature
of this Otherworld, but it is a universally held belief for
three reasons. Firstly, all religions or spiritualities hold
the view that another reality exists beyond the physical world,
rather than agreeing with Materialism, that holds that only
matter exists and is real. Secondly, Celtic mythology, which
inspires so much of Druidism, is replete with descriptions
of this Otherworld. Thirdly, the existence of the Otherworld
is implicit in ‘the greatest belief’ of the ancient
Druids, since classical writers stated that the Druids believed
in a process that has been described as reincarnation or metempsychosis
(in which a soul lives in a succession of forms, including
both human and animal). In between each life in human or animal
form the soul rests in the Otherworld.
Death and Rebirth
While a Christian Druid may believe that the soul is only
born once on Earth, most Druids adopt the belief of their
ancient forebears that the soul undergoes a process of successive
reincarnations – either always in human form, or in
a variety of forms that might include trees and even rocks
as well as animals.
Many Druids share the view reported by Philostratus of Tyana
in the second century that the Celts believed that to be born
in this world, we have to die in the Otherworld, and conversely,
that when we die here, we are born into the Otherworld. For
this reason, Druid funerals try to focus on the idea that
the soul is experiencing a time of birth, even though we are
experiencing that as their death to us.
The Three Goals of the Druid
A clue as to the purpose behind the process of successive
rebirths can be found if we look at the goals of the Druid.
Druids seek above all the cultivation of wisdom, creativity
and love. A number of lives on earth, rather than just one,
gives us the opportunity to fully develop these qualities
within us.
Wisdom
The goal of wisdom is shown to us in two old teaching stories
– one the story of Fionn MacCumhaill (Finn MacCool)
from Ireland, the other the story of Taliesin from Wales.
In both stories wisdom is sought by an older person –
in Ireland in the form of the Salmon of Wisdom, in Wales in
the form of three drops of inspiration. In both stories a
young helper ends up tasting the wisdom so jealously sought
by the adults. These tales, rather than simply teaching the
virtues of innocence and helpfulness, contain instructions
for achieving wisdom, encoded within their symbolism and the
sequence of events they describe, and for this reason are
used in the teaching of Druidry.
Creativity
The goal of creativity is also central to Druidism because
the Bards have long been seen as participants in Druidry.
Many believe that in the old days they transmitted the wisdom
of the Druids in song and story, and that with their prodigious
memories they knew the genealogies of the tribes and the stories
associated with the local landscape. Celtic cultures display
a love of art, music and beauty that often evokes an awareness
of the Otherworld, and their old Bardic tales depict a world
of sensual beauty in which craftspeople and artists are highly
honoured. Today, many people are drawn to Druidry because
they sense it is a spirituality that can help them develop
their creativity. Rather than stressing the idea that this
physical life is temporary, and that we should focus on the
after-life, Druidism conveys the idea that we are meant to
fully participate in life on earth, and that we are meant
to express and share our creativity as much as we can.
Love
Druidry can be seen as fostering the third goal of love in
many different ways to encourage us to broaden our understanding
and experience of it, so that we can love widely and deeply.
Druidry’s reverence for Nature encourages us to love
the land, the Earth, the stars and the wild. It also encourages
a love of peace: Druids were traditionally peace-makers, and
still are. Often Druid ceremonies begin with offering peace
to each cardinal direction, there is a Druid’s Peace
Prayer, and Druids plant Peace Groves. The Druid path also
encourages the love of beauty because it cultivates the Bard,
the Artist Within, and fosters creativity.
The love of Justice is developed in modern Druidry by being
mentioned in ‘The Druid’s Prayer’, and many
believe that the ancient Druids were judges and law-makers,
who were more interested in restorative than punitive justice.
Druidry also encourages the love of story and myth, and many
people today are drawn to it because they recognize the power
of storytelling, and sense its potential to heal and enlighten
as well as entertain.
In addition to all these types of love that Druidism fosters,
it also recognizes the forming power of the past, and in doing
this encourages a love of history and a reverence for the
ancestors. The love of trees is fundamental in Druidism too,
and as well as studying treelore, Druids today plant trees
and sacred groves, and support reforestation programmes. Druids
love stones too and build stone circles, collect stones and
work with crystals. They love the truth, and seek this in
their quest for wisdom and understanding. They love animals,
seeing them as sacred, and they study animal lore. They love
the body and sexuality believing both to be sacred.
Druidism also encourages a love of each other by fostering
the magic of relationship and community, and above all a love
of life, by encouraging celebration and a full commitment
to life - it is not a spirituality which tries to help us
escape from a full engagement with the world.
Some Druid groups today present their teachings in three
grades or streams: those of the Bard, Ovate and Druid. The
three goals sought by the Druid of love, wisdom and creative
expression can be related to the work of these three streams.
Bardic teachings help to develop our creativity, Ovate teachings
help to develop our love for the natural world and the community
of all life, and Druid teachings help us in our quest for
wisdom.
Living in the World
The real test of the value of a spiritual path lies in the
degree to which it can help us live our lives in the world.
It needs to be able to provide us with inspiration, counsel
and encouragement as we negotiate the sometimes difficult
and even tragic events that can occur during a lifetime.
The primary philosophical posture of Druidism is one of love
and respect towards all of life – towards fellow human
beings and animals, and all of Nature. A word often used by
Druids to describe this approach is reverence, which expands
the concept of respect to include an awareness of the sacred.
By being reverent towards human beings, for example, Druids
treat the body, relationships and sexuality with respect and
as sacred. Reverence should not be confused with piousness
or a lack of vigorous engagement – true reverence is
strong and sensual as well as gentle and kind.
This attitude of reverence and respect extends to all creatures,
and so many Druids will either be vegetarian or will eat meat,
but support compassionate farming and be opposed to factory
farming methods. Again, the belief that we should love all
creatures is likely to be tempered with a robust realism that
will not exclude the possibility that we might want to kill
certain creatures, such as mosquitoes.
For many Druids today the primary position of love and respect
towards all creatures extends to include a belief in the idea
of causing no harm to any sentient being. This idea is known
in eastern traditions as the doctrine of ‘Ahimsa’,
or Non-Violence, and was first described in around 800 BCE
in the Hindu scriptures, the Upanishads. Jains, Hindus and
Buddhists all teach this doctrine, which became popular in
the west following the non-violent protests of Mahatma Gandhi.
The Parehaka Maori protest movement in New Zealand and the
campaigns of Martin Luther King in the USA also helped to
spread the idea of Ahimsa around the world.
Many Druids today adopt a similar stance of abstaining from
harming others, and of focussing on the idea of Peace, drawing
their inspiration from the Classical accounts of the Druids,
which portrayed them as mediators who abstained from war,
and who urged peace on opposing armies. Julius Caesar wrote:
‘For they [the Druids] generally settle all their disputes,
both public and private… The Druids usually abstain
from war, nor do they pay taxes together with the others;
they have exemption from warfare.’ And Diodorus Siculus
wrote: ‘Often when the combatants are ranged face to
face, and swords are drawn and spears are bristling, these
men come between the armies and stay the battle, just as wild
beasts are sometimes held spellbound. Thus even among the
most savage barbarians anger yields to wisdom, and Mars is
shamed before the Muses.’
In addition Druids today can follow the example of one the
most important figures in the modern Druid movement, Ross
Nichols, who in common with many of the world’s greatest
thinkers and spiritual teachers, upheld the doctrines of non-violence
and pacifism. Many of Nichols’ contemporaries, who shared
similar interests in Celtic mythology, were also pacifists,
including T.H.White, the author of the Arthurian The once
& Future King. Nichols often used to finish essays he
wrote with the simple sign-off: ‘Peace to all beings.’
The Web of Life and the Illusion
of Separateness
Woven into much of Druid thinking and all of its practice
is the idea or belief that we are all connected in a universe
that is essentially benign – that we do not exist as
isolated beings who must fight to survive in a cruel world.
Instead we are seen as part of a great web or fabric of life
that includes every living creature and all of Creation. This
is essentially a pantheistic view of life, which sees all
of Nature as sacred and as interconnected.
Druids often experience this belief in their bodies and hearts
rather than simply in their minds. They find themselves feeling
increasingly at home in the world – and when they walk
out on to the land and look up at the moon or stars, or smell
the coming rain on the wind they feel in the fabric of their
beings that they are a part of the family of life, that they
are ‘home’, and that they are not alone.
The consequences of this feeling and belief are profound.
Apart from this trusting posture towards life bringing benefits
in psychological and physical health, there are benefits to
society too. Abuse and exploitation comes from the illusion
of separateness. once you believe that you are part of the
family of life, and that all things are connected, the values
of love, and reverence for life naturally follow, as does
the practice of peacefulness, of harmlessness or ‘Ahimsa’.
The Law of the Harvest
Related to the idea that we are all connected in one great
web of life is the belief held by most Druids that whatever
we do in the world creates an effect which will ultimately
also affect us. A similar idea is found in many different
traditions and cultures: folk wisdom in Britain says that
‘what goes around comes around’ and in ancient
Egypt, the idea attributed to Jesus when he said ‘As
ye sow, so shall ye reap,’ was spoken by the god Thoth
several thousand years earlier in the Egyptian Book of the
Dead, when he said ‘Truth is the harvest scythe. What
is sown - love or anger or bitterness - that shall be your
bread. The corn is no better than its seed, then let what
you plant be good.’ In Hinduism and Buddhism the idea
is expressed as the doctrine of cause and effect (karma).
The two beliefs - that all is connected and that we will
harvest the consequences of our actions - come naturally to
Druids because they represent ideas that evolve out of an
observation of the natural world. Just as the feeling of our
being part of the great web of life can come to us as we gaze
in awe at the beauty of nature, so the awareness that we will
reap the consequences of our actions also comes to us as we
observe the processes of sowing and harvesting.
Excerpts from What do Druids Believe?
by Philip Carr-Gomm, Granta 2006
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