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PathWalkers.Net Interactive :: Helping you along your path<br />

So often darkness is associated with evil. Since the term evil has no place in a nature-based religion, we<br />

Pagans are forced to look beyond such stereotypes.<br />

Evil is a human term. It begins and ends with us. A tornado is not evil, yet it is destructive. Fire can be<br />

used to benefit life or destroy it. Nature is neither good nor evil. It simply is. It follows no moral code.<br />

Only humans, with our complicated set of emotions and intellect, can justify such categorizations.<br />

Death, destruction, chaos… these are essential driving forces within nature. Life feeds on life; destruction<br />

precedes creation. These are the only true laws, and they are not open to interpretation.<br />

When Pagans anthropomorphisize nature into something good and loving, they deny its very<br />

all-encompassing nature. When the dark deities are shunned in fear of the unknown, we deny ourselves<br />

full understanding of all deities and what they have to offer.<br />

It is our nature to fear the unknown. We cling to archetypal forms representing the aspects of some great<br />

unknowable, encompassing force, which we cannot comprehend. We call them our deities. This is not<br />

wrong; It is in fact, necessary since we cannot grasp the "divine" or cosmic source otherwise.<br />

Some religions choose to see this source as one omnipotent being. However, accepting the existence of<br />

an all-good and just being dictates that there must then exist a counterpart that encompasses evil.<br />

Since nature-based religions view the concept of deity in a more polytheistic and pantheistic way, the<br />

separations of creative/destructive forces are not as well defined. The deities take on aspects of nature or<br />

human ideals. Instead of one omnipotent being, we have deities of love, war, beauty, the sun, the moon,<br />

the sea… Each deity inherently contains both the creative and destructive forces.<br />

It is through the many aspects of the Goddess and God that we come to learn more about the universe<br />

and ourselves. To shun those aspects we fear inhibits our growth. It is the goal of Dark Pagans to<br />

encourage those who hide behind the positive aspects of our deities to embrace their fears and learn.<br />

As a life-affirming spirituality, Paganism often focuses on the positive, creative and nurturing forces in<br />

nature. It is easy to loose touch with the darker aspects. Life begets death and death begets life. Chaos is<br />

the fuel of creation. Something must always be destroyed for something to be created.<br />

Those who shun the darker aspects of nature and ourselves tend to fall into what I have heard called<br />

"Lightside Paganism" - Pagans who think life is all happiness and joy and that once attuned to the<br />

rhythms of nature, life becomes such wonderful dreams. Many subscribers to the "New Age" movement<br />

have this shallow outlook. To them, nature is good and just and ordered.<br />

This simply is not the case. Take these dull-eyed individuals and place them in the wilderness with<br />

nothing but their crystals and they will be some animal's dinner before the end of the week. Nature is<br />

harsh. It is unforgiving. The weak die or are killed by the strong. Life feeds on life. Even the strictest<br />

vegan is a plant killer. Humans, with their technological and medical breakthroughs have "improved the<br />

quality life" by distancing themselves from the harshness of nature.<br />

However, despite this harsh side of nature, it is not evil. It also has its share of beauty. The point is,<br />

nature encompasses both the creative and destructive forces. Ignoring the negative aspects results in an<br />

incomplete view of nature.<br />

It is the goal of dark Paganism to remind us that there is a darker side to all things and that this darker<br />

side is not necessarily harmful and negative. There is beauty in darkness for those who dare enter the<br />

shadows to embrace it.<br />

Many aspects of the darkness are not as harsh as death and chaos. There is reflection, reverence, change,<br />

divination, introspection, trance, autumn, winter, maturity, wisdom, the distant cry of a crow in a forest, a<br />

single candle glowing in the night, the cool embrace of the autumn wind. These are all aspects; these are<br />

its gifts. Perhaps it is through the beauty of a sunset and sunrise and the colors of fall and spring that we<br />

http://www.pathwalkers.net/interactive/modules....ame=News&file=index&catid=&topic=1&allstories=1 (84 of 284) [12/25/2005 12:22:21 AM]

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