Thursday, June 6, 2013

Commentary on the Charge of the Goddess 37: Conclusion on the Thealogy of the Charge



One glaring absence from the thealogy of the Charge, one which is very prominent in later Wiccan ritual must be mentioned: nowhere is there any mention of the God. The most obvious explanation would appear to be that since this is the Charge of the Goddess there would be no reason to mention him at all. In the modern ritual context of the Charge, in which the moon is drawn down into the High Priestess by the High Priest, in their personifications of the divine couple, this does not seem to make sense. This would mean that a central mystery of the Wiccan religion is being acted out, and the Goddess then completely ignores her consort to address a speech to the coven (in ‘you’ form, therefore addressed to you plural).
This omission makes even less sense in the earlier context for the use of the Charge, to the newly initiated witch, after her initiation. Since the 1960s an address to the new initiate has come into use in Wicca, which is quite different to the Charge here examined. I am unable to account for the omission of the God from the Charge, used to address new initiates in the early days.
Having examined the sources and thealogy of the Charge, one thing is most striking: Wicca as an achievement. Wicca is sometimes seen as the result of a number of different cultural streams over the couple of centuries before it was made public in the 1950s. On the light of the thealogy found in the Charge, I would enlarge this statement to say that I feel that Wicca is the culmination of these influences. Wicca’s syncretic nature leads to criticism of it as a pick-and-mix religion cribbed together from any sources that can’t get away, but the fact that a whole new religion could have started from a collection of rather divergent sources, and emerged as a fairly unified whole which hangs together is no mean achievement. The ‘ingredients’ – folklore, contemporary understandings of ancient religion, freemasonry, western occult tradition – do not of themselves imply that a unified whole could be made from them. Saddle that mixture with the name of ‘witchcraft’, which has had an overwhelmingly negative meaning at all times and in all places, and it would seem to be doomed. Yet the respected chaos magician Phil Hine, whose own early magical training was in Alexandrian Wicca, was able to write that by the late 1970s, English occultism was dominated by Western Qabalah, Thelema, and Witchcraft.[1] No wonder if these three strands also draw on each other for inspiration. The fact that decades on, this religion is growing and attracting interest in its own rather eccentric way, is no mean achievement: you might almost call it magic.
Some particular aspects of Wiccan thealogy, which run underneath many of the key ideas and emerge in some unexpected places, must be mentioned. The influence of Aleister Crowley, the ‘mad uncle in the attic’ of Wicca, on the Charge – both textual and on its thealogy – even in the final version, cannot be ignored. Valiente’s revision makes the Charge sound less like Crowley’s writing, but many of his ideas are still there, although given a new twist for Wicca. His adage of ‘love is the law’ is altered to ‘my law is love’, for example. His universality of ‘the law is for all’ is changed to a law which is explicitly not intended for all, it is for those who are interested, and this interest is often attributed to having been a witch in a previous life. Once again, retaining influences from the notorious ‘Great Beast’ makes the achievement of Wicca more remarkable. The new twist given to each of the ideas inherited from him means that in my opinion Wicca is not a sort of folk version of Thelema, as is sometimes asserted, but rather a wholly different tradition, drawing on some of the same ideas.
A similar process is undergone by the passages quoted from Aradia: each is given a subtle new appearance in Wicca, which is plainly not the witch-cult pictured in Aradia. Making love in the woods becomes a central sacrament of divine union in Wicca, nudity becomes the means of raising power, gathering under the moon gathers further occult significance to itself.
Some of the ideas (as well as direct quotations) in the Charge may also have come from Crowley; as noted repeatedly in the thealogy, many of his ideas are also found in Wicca. It is striking how passages from Aradia, which Valiente kept in the final version of the Charge as supposedly ‘traditional’, are reflected in passages from Crowley. His writings talk repeatedly about human dignity, about intimacy with the Gods, about freedom from slavery, about the joy of the authentic human being, and about finding the Will and doing it. When Wiccans end a spell, ‘As I do will, so mote it be,’ they need to understand the exact meaning of these words! I do not believe the evidence supports the rumour that he had a hand in the composition of the rituals, nor that he was ever involved in a pre-Gardner ‘witch-cult’, nor yet that Wicca is a ‘pop’ version of Thelema. I think the resemblances between Wicca and Thelema actually come from their birth and development in similar environments, that is the occult worlds of the first half of the twentieth century. They were both influenced by the same cultural world, and the occult revival of the late nineteenth century again influenced them both.
Another notable absence from the Charge is the grimoire tradition of ceremonial magic, a major source for other Wiccan ritual texts, and of which some writers believe Wicca to be a continuation.[2] Of course it is there present in ideas such as the ability of the individual to influence the world around them by magic, for example. Many of the ideas taken from Crowley may be taken as more religious than magical, as used in the Charge. The Charge feels different from the grimoire tradition, with its evocations of demons, commands, and conjurations, and perhaps this explains this tradition’s absence in the Charge, which is after all a pagan Goddess speaking to us, whereas the cosmology of the grimoire tradition is completely Judaeo-Christian. It is as if, in the Charge, magical ideas have been ripped from their setting in the Judaeo-Christian tradition, and placed in a different context.
Does it matter that the roots of Wicca can be found in many diverse sources, and yet it is presented as an ancient tradition, a tradition for which, moreover, there is no evidence at all? Rather than seeing in this situation an indication that Gardner was an old fraud, I believe it actually puts Wicca into a great tradition. Reading Gardner for the first time, having already read the criticisms of him, I was struck by the feeling that he is the real thing. If you read his books, ignoring the gaping holes in his history and sheer ingenuousness of some of his explanations for what happens in the witch-cult, and pay attention to the experience of which he is writing, you gain an impression of simple joy, an urge to communicate this mystery he had discovered to others, and an impression of a great magician. This is what places Wicca in a great tradition: magicians have always ascribed their work to previous magicians,[3] it is part of the psychic scene-setting which makes magic work, rather than a spurious front: if you join Wicca thinking it to be the continuance of the hypothetical witch-cult of Western Europe, and some time later discover the witch-cult never existed, but nonetheless have discovered that Wicca works as a magico-religious system, which promotes your personal dignity and improves the world around you, this piece of scene-setting has merely done its job.
A major theme recurring throughout the Charge is the presence of the Goddess: at times this is concentrated within the individual witch, and at times explained by the presence of the Goddess throughout everything. At the extreme of this idea, the Goddess is everything, creating a dynamic tension between her immanence within the individual witch and the transcendence of a Goddess who is everything. The result of this tension is an ideal of a right proportion in all things for the witch: Mother is both so great that our loves and hates can be seen as insignificant compared to the love of the Goddess for all living, and yet because of that love she is intimately involved in everything. Conversely, it also seems that because of the divinity within, the name of each individual witch is a name of the Goddess, and the witch can name the things surrounding her as Goddess.
Compared to this emphasis on immanence, the familiar Wiccan theme of polarity, especially as experienced in the divine polarity of Goddess and God, is all but missing from the Charge. In the Charge, however, the principle finds other expressions than that of gender polarity, for example in the polarities contained in the ‘virtues’.
Gender polarity is not, however completely absent: it is tacitly present in the emphasis on fertility and sexual love, which are themselves often only implicit in the Charge, being revealed by consideration of the ideas underlying the phrases. In this, the Charge is a truly magical composition, since many of its ‘correspondences’ are only revealed by digging under surface meanings to reveal them.
I have been surprised at the extent to which the Charge can be interpreted (once again, I am not claiming that any of these interpretations is the only possible one) as referring to a mystery cult. Since the Book of Shadows has now been in print for several decades, we can forget that there was a time when it was not. The ideas about the mysteries that were current in Gardner’s day may have contributed to the ideas of initiation, secrecy, enactments of the divinities’ mythologies, ecstasy, liberal ideas about sexuality, and ideas about what happens when we die.
The idea of time in the thealogy of the Charge is different from that proposed in most monotheistic religions, that is, cyclical rather than linear. In most monotheisms, we are seen as only having one life, on which our eternal fate depends, whereas in our view life is cyclical and recurring, so if we don’t get it right the first time the opportunity will doubtless come round again. The irony is that the linear monotheistic conception of our life can actually give greater significance to the events and actions of our life, whereas a recurrent view of history can lead to a certain fatalism. The ennui created by a philosophy in which life has few ‘carrots’ can lead to restlessness and the continuing search for distraction and achievement. Conversely the significance of our lives’ events and relationships is granted a greater significance if the people we love are those we have known and loved before.
Another current underlying all aspects of Wiccan thealogy is its countercultural nature: and this only begins with the fact that we call God ‘she’. The countercultural elements most evident in the Charge are ritual nudity, secrecy, not seeing the Goddess as other from ourselves, and sex as sacred. Practitioners of some other religions will protest that sex is sacred in their religions as well, and so it is, but in Wicca it is sacred in a different way. In Christianity the tendency has been to protect the sacredness of sex by locking it up into certain approved contexts, such as within marriage or only for procreation. In Wicca there are no approved contexts for sex, it is the major sacrament of our religion, in which the divine can both be met, and joined in union. In Wicca the only context for sex which can be disapproved of is that which does not respect the divinity of the other person, and their power to make their decision. Perhaps these countercultural elements are what are most striking in the thealogy of the Charge, and mean that Wicca as a religion is really like no other which has come before.
At times these countercultural elements of Wiccan thealogy are extended to become an inversion of the values of the surrounding society: the most obvious being the inversion of the wicked witch archetype into an archetype of a member of an oppressed, ancient, minority religion. Ritual nudity could be taken as an inversion of our society’s prevailing values: the Christians may get dressed up for church, but we get undressed for it. That these two examples are the ones which spring to mind may be no accident, and I would suggest that the principle of inversion in Wicca is not basically an inversion of societal values. I feel that such an inversion would have made Wicca a much more political animal than it is, and would place it in the tradition of religious protest of such groups as the Ranters, which tradition, while present in Wicca, is only an undercurrent in most forms of it. It would also imply a thealogy of either ‘fallen’ humanity and/or a Golden Age, which again can be found in some traditions, but is not a major theme of Wiccan thealogy. Rather I feel the significance of the inversion motif is that what is inverted is always something related to Christianity. For example, ‘the Christians burned nine million witches, claiming that they were devil worshippers, when actually they were the remnants of an ancient Pagan religion.’ Certainly the prevailing Judaeo-Christian mores of our society have helped greatly to the creation of a ‘diabolic’ witch figure, and Wicca is consciously acting against the grain of these mores in creating a positive figure of the witch. The purely religious function that these inversion seem to serve, then, is the differentiation of the witches from both Christians, but at the same time, from the prevailing Judaeo-Christian norms of the surrounding society.
This inversion is mirrored by the recurring theme of descent, which in Wicca appears most obviously in the initiation rites and in the descent myth quoted by Gardner. This motif of a descent necessary for ascent can be interpreted in several ways: in overtly ‘mythological’ language as a descent to the domain of Death, enabling a rebirth, or as a psychological descent into the subconscious enabling wholeness and integration. Perhaps these two interpretations may ultimately amount to the same experience. Certainly the myth of descent leading to ascent is reflected in the similarly recurring motif of love, birth, death, and rebirth, and the precept that the Goddess must be sought within certainly implies an inward aspect to these cycles.


[1] Phil Hine: Condensed Chaos: An Introduction to Chaos Magic. New Falcon Publications, Tempe, Arizona, 2003.
[2] D’Este and Rankine, 2008.
[3] For more on the nature of this, as well as countless examples of it, see Owen Davies: Grimoires: A History of Magic Books. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2009.

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