Friday, April 5, 2013

Persephone Graces a Drum Dance Chant Gathering


On March 31st, which happens to have been Easter Sunday, fourteen souls came together at the Sugarloaf UU church to celebrate and serve the love of the Goddess through drumming, chanting, and dance.

The date was not chosen because it was Easter; however, we were mindful of the correspondence of our gathering with the day on which many of our Christian brothers and sisters celebrate the Resurrection of Christ, defeating death and opening the gate to eternal life.  This correspondence inspired our invocation of Persephone, daughter of the great Goddess Demeter and a goddess in her own right, she who blesses and sustains the souls of the dead, joining the realms of the living and the dead and opening the gate to eternal life.

I think it worthwhile to reflect on some of the correspondences between the ancient pagan religions of the Mediterranean basin and Christian religion as it developed over the first few centuries of the Common Era in that same part of the world:

First, the notion of incarnate deity, the divine manifesting in a living fleshly person, had been common in the Mediterranean world for centuries.  Egyptian kings had been considered gods, as had Persian emperors.  By Jesus time there were temples and priests dedicated to the god Augustus, founding emperor of the Roman Empire.  Mainstream Christian religion came to embrace the doctrine that Jesus had been God Incarnate when he walked on earth.  It’s a very un-Jewish idea and one that would perhaps have seemed strange to incomprehensible to Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus the Jew.

Second, the movement of Christ between the realms of the living and the dead: “He descended into hell.  The third day he rose again from the dead.  He ascended into heaven” parallels the movement of Persephone between the realms of living and dead, joining them.  Persephone’s journey is conceived of as recurrent, engendering the transitions of the seasons.  Christ is conceived to have made the journey once, but the Christian faithful celebrate the event seasonally.

Finally, the triple Goddess of ancient pagan religion parallels the triune God of Trinitarian Christianity.   The pagan triple Goddess is comprised of the elements: maiden, creatrix, and crone, or, in different language, daughter, mother, and wise elder woman.  The triple Goddess associated with the great Goddess Demeter is Core (the personal name of Demeter’s daughter), Persephone (a title accorded to Demeter’s daughter as a goddess in her own right), and Hecate.  The Christian Trinity is God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit which is the spirit of wisdom/truth.  The archetypes have been re-organized and re-imaged as male, but persist across the religious traditions of the Mediterranean world.  Persephone is still with us, but today she is most commonly called Jesus Christ.

Our circle also included a healing ritual prompted by my familiar, Hummingbird Spirit.  Two of our gathered choose to receive healing with laying on of hands.  We chanted the words “Healing Spirits come, come.  Light our way, light our way” to a tune written by Joanne Hammil as a setting for a line from Rumi (“Out beyond ideas of right doing and wrongdoing, there is a field, I’ll meet you there.”)  A lesson for us from Hummingbird was that healing and illumination are much more intertwined that we usually think and are really both aspects of wholeness creation.  She also told me that healing of the individual always heals the world and healing of the world always heals the healers and that our gatherings should always include a chant for healing of the world as well as offer individual healing.  Both of the participants who choose to receive healing in the circle later reported positive results.

Our poly-rhythmic drumming segment seemed to engage us very deeply.  It was full of energy for me and two participants have told me that it was powerful for them.

At the end of the gathering there seemed to be an energy to gather again soon, so perhaps we’ll meet again near the cross quarter.

May we all be blessed

Friday, March 29, 2013

Poetry Reading

Back in February solicitations were made for presenters for the Sugarloaf UU pledge dinner.  I agreed to read some poetry.  Something changed in the interval and the reading never happened, so I thought I'd post it here . . .


Until recently Linda and I had a teen girl from Ethiopia living with us.  We’d intended to adopt her, but it didn’t work out.  That’s been painful, but back in June, when we were full of hope, I wrote this:

Morning Star
Shed your tears on our shoulders
Take our hands and together
    Let us face the East
For a new sun rises
A new day dawns

Together let us heal our broken bones
Together let us join our beating hearts
    That have never broken
Together let us form a circle
    Amidst the circles of our kin
Across the mighty face of Earth
She who loves us
And bears us gently home

. . .

Beginning of last year I got interested in poetry therapy, the use of literature as a means of personal healing.  I took on a wounding that I suffered from my father as a kid.  He’d wanted to read me a well known poem by John McCrae about world war I dead.  It’s a lovely poem that I’m sure most of you will recognize:

In Flanders Fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
 
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
 
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

When I wasn’t able to receive the poem in the way he’d wanted my father let me know how disgusted he was with me.  It was one of many shamings I got when I turned out not to be what he’d wanted.  Last year, I wrote this:

In Flanders Fields my father dreamed
Of noble thoughts, high minded verse
As I walked innocently by
He halted me to hear those words
I might not learn in school

He would be pleased I knew
If I attentive, grateful, heard
From him those noble verses read.
I giggled.
Sternly, he began again.

I really tried.  Despairingly
I tried to hold at bay
My glee and his contemptuous glare
And failing as a literary don
He taught disgust instead.
I took the lesson in.

Oh I took up my quarrel with the foe
That lurked inside, recoiling from
The shame he planted there
And fought the futile battles till I know
That there are places less remarked
Where blood is shed, than Flanders Fields

. . .

McCrae’s famous poem takes a form called a rondeau, it’s one of many medieval French forms to make it’s way into English.  They’re fun to write and I’ve written several.  My favorite is this:

Between the worlds and restless dreams
Where shadows dance and moonlight streams
A spider waits on stealthy web
And feels the trembling in each thread
And coming is and going seems

As moonlight glints off swirling streams
Trees whisper, sighing in their dreams
Expectancy, or is it dread?
Between the worlds

The breeze demanding what it means
The spider skitters soft unseen
Across the taught and trembling web
Vibrations dance as mass is shed
A shadow slipstreams through the screen
Between the worlds

. . .

When I began writing a year or so ago I’d expected to write poetry in free verse; I had no reason to want to write end rhyme or metered lines; but to my surprise I found that if I set myself to write in verse forms something in me engaged the task with great pleasure and my imagination went places I wouldn’t have thought of otherwise.  A playful exercise in verse writing lead to what is probably my wife’s favorite of my recent compositions:

Two moonbeams came bouncing and glistening
Off of the shiny wood floor
They’d slipped through the louvers
Then straight on maneuvered
To the cat near the foyer door

“What ho” said the cat “are you stalking?”
“Then I will go stalking too
For the sky it is wide
And it’s my cat’s pride
To go prowling the night with the moon”

So the cat he ascended a moonbeam
His little feet silently crept
Round the shimmering sky
He was ever so sly
And he never did falter a step

And he gazed at the cities of angels
And he roamed through the lands of the elves
And he spoke to the dreams
Of the silvery moon beams
And he had a fine time for himself!

The morning of course found him napping
All curled in a tight little ball
For though sunlight is fine
A cat’s sense of time
Is a mystery pondered by all

. . .

My friends that’s my five minutes.  I thank you for your kind attention.  May we all be blessed.