Dedicant's Path

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Nine Virtues: Piety




As defined by the Handbook: Correct observance of ritual and social traditions,  the maintenance of the agreements, both (personal and societal), we humans have with the Gods and Spirits, Keeping the Old Ways through ceremony and duty.  

piety -n,  pl -ties 1. reverence for God or devout fulfillment of religous obligations.  2) the quality or state of being pious.  3) dutiful respect or regard for parents,  homelande, etc: filial piety 4) a pious act, remark, belief or the like. (Webster's Universal College Dictionary -1997 Gramercy Books Random House New York New York

Religion is  a semi-solitary activity.  We each struggle with our own available resources.  Piety is our day to day interactions with the spiritual realm, and our intent and actions  in recognizing them and making them holy.     It's the time sitting at our shrines making offerings, its about attending the eight sabbats and keeping them sacred,  and its about keeping our spiritual lives organized and tidy.   I was recently chastised about not walking the walk in my faith.  Its not always about attending a weekly church service, especially in the case of paganism.  It is the talks to the deities, ancestors, and nature spirits and making those connections, and keeping those connections open.   It is the meditations and following through of our oaths: 

I , Cat take the name Stonegiver in honor of the patrons who bless my paths.    I promise to forge pathways with the spirits, Shining Ones, and ancestors.   I take an oath to finish the Dedicant’s path, and follow the guidance of the powers towards  whatever paths they may lead.   I take an oath to make room in home and hearth for all powers gathered here.    I promise to stay steadfast in my devotions and to keep the light of the Gods in my heart. 

It is doing the legwork to understand our religion and the beings that inhabit those realms.  

   

   

Nine Virtues: Wisdom


Wisdom: good judgment, the ability to perceive people and situations correctly, deliberate about and decide on the correct response (ADF Publishing 15).

 
Wisdom is the state of being wise.   It is gained by a combination of knowledge, experience, and intuition, and using this combination to make decisions and act in situations.   All actions feed into the totality of experience that affects wisdom, but not all actions are wise ones.   Unfortunately, there is not a nice equation that reflects proportions of knowledge, experience, and intuition that result in wise actions.  Wisdom is not easily obtained, and generally one recognizes true wisdom after the fact.  I know that I don’t normally go around spouting sage advice, but when I have been considered wise, it is because I looked into the totality of the situation.

 For the most part, I am in agreement with Wisdom as a virtue, but I dislike the definition, wisdom doesn’t always mean the ability to perceive people and situations correctly, sometimes wisdom can come from looking at a situation completely different perspective, but it does not always mean that it was correct.  Copernicus was a great astronomer, who reasoned out a heliocentric model of the universe at a time when a geocentric model was definitive.   He was, however, partially incorrect, and it would take Kepler a couple of hundred years later to determine.   This does not mean Copernicus was any less wise, it meant that he was dealing with incomplete information which can affect us all.    Therefore, I might redefine wisdom as the ability to perceive people and situations correctly at that given moment; deliberate about and decide on the correct response. 

Works Cited

Publishing, ADF. Our Own Druidry. Tuscon: ADF Publishing, 2009.