Eventually, "being pagan" meant someone without a religion.
Since the word "Pagan" has been adopted by the Pagan movement, some of its perceived stigma has lessened. At the very least, the word helps us to think about the labels history applies to those who differ from conventional Western thought. Some Pagans don't like thr word and use other terms to describe their path, such as African Traditional Religion, Native Spirituality, Celtic Spirituality, Heathenry, Earth-Centered Spirituality, European Traditional Spirituality, the Elder Faith, and the Old Religion.
The term Pagan, after all, refers to ancient, tribal, and usually pre-Christian cultures that are mostly extinct. To avoid confusion between historical Paganism and the modern movement, many social scientists and Pagans alike have decided they prefer the word "neo-Pagan."
The noted author and Druid Isaac Bonewits goes further. He uses the world "Paleopaganism" to describe "the original tribal faiths of Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas, Oceania and Australia."
A few of these tribal faiths, such as Hinduism, Taosim, and Shintoism, whose adherents number imn the millions, have survived to the present.
Next, Bonewts describes "mesopaganism" as re-creations of paleopagan systems, usually with influences from Judeo-Christian thought. Some of his examples are Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism, Theosophy, Voudon, Santeria, and Sikhism.
His third category is "neopaganism," which he defines as religions created from the 1960s onward, and that "have attempted to blend what their founders perceived as the best aspects of different types of paleopaganism with modern 'Aquarian Age' ideals."
I will leave it to you to decide how to refer to your spiritual path or what you want to call those that follow a different path.
I would like to call it "Earth Spirituality".
Edited by
smiless
on Mon 07/20/09 12:18 PM