“In unraveling the intricacies of a culture's myths, symbols, and archetypes, we embark on a journey of discovery that traverses the terrain of its collective soul. We navigate the labyrinth of meaning, unraveling the enigmas that define its identity. By deciphering these keys to understanding, we gain access to the inner sanctum where a culture's deepest reservoirs of values, fears, and aspirations converge, offering us a profound glimpse into the heart of humanity's ceaseless quest for meaning and belonging.”
― Mircea Eliade
Image: Theseus and Minotaur (Detail) by Maestro dei Cassoni Campana
― Mircea Eliade
Image: Theseus and Minotaur (Detail) by Maestro dei Cassoni Campana
“Monotheism mounted a two pronged attack on pagan cultures. It appealed to the rulers of societies as a superior means of social control and it appealed to the poor masses as it made a virtue of avoiding the sybaritic excesses that they could not usually afford to indulge."
― Peter J Carroll, Liber Kaos
Image: The Coronation of Charlemagne by Friedrich Kaulbach
Notes: Charlemagne, widely revered as the "saviour of Europe," engaged in a 32-year conflict of domination and spiritual transmutation against the pagan Saxons, from 772 to 804. His intention was to supplant the ancient beliefs and cultural foundations of the Saxons with the moral code and governance of Christianity.
The Charlemagne Prize continues to uphold the core values of its namesake, and was initially awarded to Richard von Codenhove-Kalergi. Subsequent recipients have included Tony Blair, Winston Churchill, Angela Merkel, Henry Kissinger and the current recipient, Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
― Peter J Carroll, Liber Kaos
Image: The Coronation of Charlemagne by Friedrich Kaulbach
Notes: Charlemagne, widely revered as the "saviour of Europe," engaged in a 32-year conflict of domination and spiritual transmutation against the pagan Saxons, from 772 to 804. His intention was to supplant the ancient beliefs and cultural foundations of the Saxons with the moral code and governance of Christianity.
The Charlemagne Prize continues to uphold the core values of its namesake, and was initially awarded to Richard von Codenhove-Kalergi. Subsequent recipients have included Tony Blair, Winston Churchill, Angela Merkel, Henry Kissinger and the current recipient, Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
"Authority should be questioned, not blindly obeyed. Critical thinking is the antidote to manipulation and control. In a world where authority figures and institutions often claim unquestionable power, it is crucial to cultivate a mindset of critical thinking and skepticism. Blind obedience to authority can lead to the erosion of personal freedom and the perpetuation of harmful systems. By questioning and critically examining authority, we can discern between legitimate and illegitimate exercise of power. Critical thinking enables us to challenge assumptions, seek evidence, and make informed decisions based on our own reasoning and understanding.”
― Mark Passio
Image: John Nada / They Live by Dave Merrell
― Mark Passio
Image: John Nada / They Live by Dave Merrell
“Christianity is a creed embraced by billions, but rarely chosen by anyone. The same is true of Islam, whose followers now make up about one-fifth of the world’s population of six billion people. Jews are racially born into their religion. Today we have utterly forgotten that heresy derives from the Greek heraisthai, ‘to choose.’ To be heretical means to have choices and not be forced or obligated to believe what one is told to believe. A heretic is free to choose what to believe, or not to believe.”
― John Lamb Lash, Not in His Image: Gnostic Vision, Sacred Ecology, and the Future of Belief
Image: Fallen Angel by Alexandre Cabanel
― John Lamb Lash, Not in His Image: Gnostic Vision, Sacred Ecology, and the Future of Belief
Image: Fallen Angel by Alexandre Cabanel
"I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man she must be quiet.”
― 1 Timothy 2:12, New Testament
"The Germans believe that those of the female sex posses an inherent sacredness and the wisdom for prophecy; and as such the men do not avoid asking advice of their women and nor do the men ignore when their women reply.”
― Germania, Tacitus
Notes: From a Gnostic viewpoint, acknowledging the inherent sacredness of the female sex, rooted in Wisdom, mirrors the significance of Sophia within the cosmic order. Just as Sophia embodies divine Wisdom and understanding, women can serve as channels for elevated spiritual insight and intuition. The imposition of the Abrahamic religions, which uphold an off planet male deity removed from the realm of senses disrupts our connection to the sacred Earth and nature. Simultaneously, it undermines the historical role of women in prophecy, insight, and Wisdom.
Image: The Inquisition by Samson Goetze
― 1 Timothy 2:12, New Testament
"The Germans believe that those of the female sex posses an inherent sacredness and the wisdom for prophecy; and as such the men do not avoid asking advice of their women and nor do the men ignore when their women reply.”
― Germania, Tacitus
Notes: From a Gnostic viewpoint, acknowledging the inherent sacredness of the female sex, rooted in Wisdom, mirrors the significance of Sophia within the cosmic order. Just as Sophia embodies divine Wisdom and understanding, women can serve as channels for elevated spiritual insight and intuition. The imposition of the Abrahamic religions, which uphold an off planet male deity removed from the realm of senses disrupts our connection to the sacred Earth and nature. Simultaneously, it undermines the historical role of women in prophecy, insight, and Wisdom.
Image: The Inquisition by Samson Goetze
“Diet, injections, and injunctions will combine, from a very early age, to produce the sort of character and the sort of beliefs that the authorities consider desirable, and any serious criticism of the powers that be will become psychologically impossible. Even if all are miserable, all will believe themselves happy, because the government will tell them that they are so.”
― Bertrand Russell, The Impact of Science on Society, 1952
Image: Still from ‘In Shadow: A Modern Odyssey’ by Lubomir Arsov
Check out the short film (13 mins) here
― Bertrand Russell, The Impact of Science on Society, 1952
Image: Still from ‘In Shadow: A Modern Odyssey’ by Lubomir Arsov
Check out the short film (13 mins) here
“The dissident artist must see himself as an ancient bard. His duty is to guide, to warn, to advise, to preserve the wisdom and heritage of the tribe, and to inspire great deeds. Time is up for the self-indulgent ‘troubled’ artist. That artist is both a creation of the decadent modern age and also partly responsible for creating the decadent modern age. The dissident artist must lift his people up and out of these marshlands of malaise and mediocrity.”
― Pox Populi, Guide to Creating Dissident Nationalist Art
Image: The Bard by Thomas Jones
― Pox Populi, Guide to Creating Dissident Nationalist Art
Image: The Bard by Thomas Jones
“The mark of Cain is stamped upon our foreheads. Across the centuries, our brother Abel was lain in blood which we drew, and shed tears we caused by forgetting Thy love. Forgive us, Lord, for the curse we falsely attributed to their name as Jews. Forgive us for crucifying Thee a second time in their flesh. For we knew not what we did.”
― Pope John XXIII
Notes: The scapegoating, self loathing and public self flagellation of ‘woke’ isn’t a new phenomenon but instead a natural outgrowth of the previous ‘religion’ imposed upon the peoples of Europe. Just as "woke" culture prompts Europeans to perceive their ancestors as malevolent and unethical oppressors, Christianity previously instructed them to view their forebears as primitive demon worshippers. Those with discernment will recognise they derive from the same source and ultimately share a common purpose.
Image: Cain slaying Abel by Peter Paul Rubens
― Pope John XXIII
Notes: The scapegoating, self loathing and public self flagellation of ‘woke’ isn’t a new phenomenon but instead a natural outgrowth of the previous ‘religion’ imposed upon the peoples of Europe. Just as "woke" culture prompts Europeans to perceive their ancestors as malevolent and unethical oppressors, Christianity previously instructed them to view their forebears as primitive demon worshippers. Those with discernment will recognise they derive from the same source and ultimately share a common purpose.
Image: Cain slaying Abel by Peter Paul Rubens
"Man's highest vocation is to seek knowledge of himself. Knowledge of oneself is the beginning and the end of all philosophy. A man who knows himself knows what is meant by life and death…Such a man is able to distinguish between good and evil, and between virtue and vice. He understands what is meant by justice and injustice. He knows the nature of all things, and why they exist, and for what purpose. He knows the cause of his own existence, and the cause of all things.”
― Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival
Image: Parsifal In Quest Of The Holy Grail by Ferdinand Leeke
― Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival
Image: Parsifal In Quest Of The Holy Grail by Ferdinand Leeke
The Mystery of the Grail: The Celtic Cauldron
The origins of the grail mythos is often widely disputed with many citing it as a strictly Christian relic while others look to further afield to Persia and the near East. In tracing back it’s mythological origins the Celtic Cauldron holds a significant role as a cultural and mythical object and is considered to be the precursor to the Grail.
The cauldron appears as a prominent motif within Celtic narratives, with the Dagda, a deity, possessing a ‘cauldron of plenty’ that nourishes valiant warriors but denies food to cowards.
The cauldron is also associated with the Celtic goddess Cerridwen, her magical cauldron takes a year and a day to brew its potent knowledge and inspiration potion. Her wisdom earns her the Crone status, aligning her with the darker aspect of the Triple Goddess. Symbolised by a white sow, she embodies both fertility and motherly strength as a goddess of the Underworld. Cerridwen is revered by for her connection to the full moon as both the Mother and the Crone. This vessel also appears within the Celtic legend of Bran the Blessed. Bran, mighty warrior-god, obtains a magical cauldron of wisdom and rebirth from Cerridwen.
The cauldron while also perhaps a physical vessel symbolizes rebirth, renewal, fertility, and sustenance, often linked to water-based cults. Actual Celtic cauldrons have been discovered in aquatic settings, indicating they were offered as votive objects.
Notably, the Gunderstrup cauldron was dismantled and placed in a peat bog as a ritual offering. A similar practice involved depositing valuable weaponry into bodies of water as offerings to otherworldly water deities, echoing the Arthurian tale of the Lady of the Lake gifting and later reclaiming Excalibur.
Irish mythology recounts four magical items, including the Cauldron of the Dagda. These artefacts were introduced to Ireland by the Tuatha de Danaan, a conquering race described as Otherworld faery beings. These items, along with the Stone of Destiny, the Spear of Lugh, and the Sword of Nuada, held symbolic importance in Celtic culture. In the Grail stories, these magical items serve as the basis for the symbols of the Cup, Spear, Stone, and Dish, collectively known as the four hallows.
The origins of the grail mythos is often widely disputed with many citing it as a strictly Christian relic while others look to further afield to Persia and the near East. In tracing back it’s mythological origins the Celtic Cauldron holds a significant role as a cultural and mythical object and is considered to be the precursor to the Grail.
The cauldron appears as a prominent motif within Celtic narratives, with the Dagda, a deity, possessing a ‘cauldron of plenty’ that nourishes valiant warriors but denies food to cowards.
The cauldron is also associated with the Celtic goddess Cerridwen, her magical cauldron takes a year and a day to brew its potent knowledge and inspiration potion. Her wisdom earns her the Crone status, aligning her with the darker aspect of the Triple Goddess. Symbolised by a white sow, she embodies both fertility and motherly strength as a goddess of the Underworld. Cerridwen is revered by for her connection to the full moon as both the Mother and the Crone. This vessel also appears within the Celtic legend of Bran the Blessed. Bran, mighty warrior-god, obtains a magical cauldron of wisdom and rebirth from Cerridwen.
The cauldron while also perhaps a physical vessel symbolizes rebirth, renewal, fertility, and sustenance, often linked to water-based cults. Actual Celtic cauldrons have been discovered in aquatic settings, indicating they were offered as votive objects.
Notably, the Gunderstrup cauldron was dismantled and placed in a peat bog as a ritual offering. A similar practice involved depositing valuable weaponry into bodies of water as offerings to otherworldly water deities, echoing the Arthurian tale of the Lady of the Lake gifting and later reclaiming Excalibur.
Irish mythology recounts four magical items, including the Cauldron of the Dagda. These artefacts were introduced to Ireland by the Tuatha de Danaan, a conquering race described as Otherworld faery beings. These items, along with the Stone of Destiny, the Spear of Lugh, and the Sword of Nuada, held symbolic importance in Celtic culture. In the Grail stories, these magical items serve as the basis for the symbols of the Cup, Spear, Stone, and Dish, collectively known as the four hallows.
Forwarded from The Fyrgen • ᚫᛚᚢ:ᚢᛚᚫ
All 33 Fyrgen Podcast episodes, free to download and listen:
Episode 1: Why Paganism?
Episode 2: Practicing Paganism
Episode 3: The Power Process with Heiðrūn
Episode 4: The Northman
Episode 5: Divine Encounters
Episode 6: The Coming Battle
Episode 7: Restoring Pride with Mimir's Brunnr
Episode 8: Gnostic Paganism with John Lamb Lash & Rob Miller
Episode 9: Grand Humanism with Stephen McNallen
Episode 10: Ask Me Anything
Episode 11: Folkish Religion with Hwitgeard
Episode 12: The Abrahamic Infection
Episode 13: Pagan Music
Episode 14: Heathen Orthodoxy with Dave Martel
Episode 15: Citizen or Pagan?
Episode 16: Black Metal Roundtable
Episode 17: Working with Wyrd
Episode 18: Solutions with The Woodlander
Episode 19: Astrology with Fiona Ædgar
Episode 20: Ask Me Anything #2
Episode 21: Taking Action with Golden Age Man
Episode 22: Ethnic Healing with Emma Lucy Shaw
Episode 23: The Heathen Soul with Anders Nilsson
Episode 24: Yule 2022 Roundup
Episode 25: The Mechanurge with Dave Martel
Episode 26: Man vs Machine? with Heiðrūn
Episode 27: Théodish Belief with Þórbeorht Hláford
Episode 28: Hard Times, Strong Men with Noah Revoy
Episode 29: Scopcræft with Ælfric Avery
Episode 30: Ask Me Anything #3
Episode 31: Observing The Lore with Mark Puryear
Episode 32: The Secrets of Fire in the White Stone, with ΔĐΔΜ (1)
Episode 33: The Secrets of Fire in the White Stone, with ΔĐΔΜ (2)
Episode 1: Why Paganism?
Episode 2: Practicing Paganism
Episode 3: The Power Process with Heiðrūn
Episode 4: The Northman
Episode 5: Divine Encounters
Episode 6: The Coming Battle
Episode 7: Restoring Pride with Mimir's Brunnr
Episode 8: Gnostic Paganism with John Lamb Lash & Rob Miller
Episode 9: Grand Humanism with Stephen McNallen
Episode 10: Ask Me Anything
Episode 11: Folkish Religion with Hwitgeard
Episode 12: The Abrahamic Infection
Episode 13: Pagan Music
Episode 14: Heathen Orthodoxy with Dave Martel
Episode 15: Citizen or Pagan?
Episode 16: Black Metal Roundtable
Episode 17: Working with Wyrd
Episode 18: Solutions with The Woodlander
Episode 19: Astrology with Fiona Ædgar
Episode 20: Ask Me Anything #2
Episode 21: Taking Action with Golden Age Man
Episode 22: Ethnic Healing with Emma Lucy Shaw
Episode 23: The Heathen Soul with Anders Nilsson
Episode 24: Yule 2022 Roundup
Episode 25: The Mechanurge with Dave Martel
Episode 26: Man vs Machine? with Heiðrūn
Episode 27: Théodish Belief with Þórbeorht Hláford
Episode 28: Hard Times, Strong Men with Noah Revoy
Episode 29: Scopcræft with Ælfric Avery
Episode 30: Ask Me Anything #3
Episode 31: Observing The Lore with Mark Puryear
Episode 32: The Secrets of Fire in the White Stone, with ΔĐΔΜ (1)
Episode 33: The Secrets of Fire in the White Stone, with ΔĐΔΜ (2)
"Christian morality (so called) has all the characters of a reaction; it is, in great part, a protest against Paganism. Its ideal is negative rather than positive; passive rather than action; innocence rather than Nobleness; Abstinence from Evil, rather than energetic Pursuit of Good: in its precepts (as has been well said) 'thou shalt not' predominates unduly over 'thou shalt."
— John Stuart Mill, On Liberty
Image: Life of St. Benedict (extract) by Giovanni Antonio Bazz
— John Stuart Mill, On Liberty
Image: Life of St. Benedict (extract) by Giovanni Antonio Bazz
Forwarded from The Fyrgen • ᚫᛚᚢ:ᚢᛚᚫ
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Is this material world an illusion, or worst still, a prison?
This is the worldview commonly associated with the Gnostics, and is undeniably blasphemous to the Pagan mind. But is it really what the Gnostics believe(d)? Certainly not if you ask one-time Fyrgen Podcast guest and scholar John Lamb Lash.
Some German friends recently introduced me to the 1982 animated film 'The Last Unicorn' which, despite being a children's film, is quite enjoyable. One scene in particular caught my attention, because it rather perfectly expresses what I believe to be the true Gnostic message regarding illusion.
In this scene it is revealed that a 'witch' is able to alter how men perceive reality, but never to alter reality itself. The false Demiurge and Archons spoken of by the Gnostics are, likewise, able to deceive mankind into mis-perceiving the natural world, but cannot create or alter material reality itself.
Nature is wondrous in her display and intent. Deception is the ugly polyester robe cast upon her.
This is the worldview commonly associated with the Gnostics, and is undeniably blasphemous to the Pagan mind. But is it really what the Gnostics believe(d)? Certainly not if you ask one-time Fyrgen Podcast guest and scholar John Lamb Lash.
Some German friends recently introduced me to the 1982 animated film 'The Last Unicorn' which, despite being a children's film, is quite enjoyable. One scene in particular caught my attention, because it rather perfectly expresses what I believe to be the true Gnostic message regarding illusion.
In this scene it is revealed that a 'witch' is able to alter how men perceive reality, but never to alter reality itself. The false Demiurge and Archons spoken of by the Gnostics are, likewise, able to deceive mankind into mis-perceiving the natural world, but cannot create or alter material reality itself.
Nature is wondrous in her display and intent. Deception is the ugly polyester robe cast upon her.
“Shamanism, spiritualism, energy work, rainbows and crystals, totems and spirit animals. In our modern world, these things have existed in the realm of either ‘exotic’ (non-white) cultures or have been snugly in the possession of lefty wingnuts. In the sphere of Western paganism, there has been a great deal of discussion about reconnecting to holistic living, which is in turn often connected to ‘we are all one’ ideology. The irony is that Europeans did, in fact, hold an animistic understanding of the world at one point in time. We, too, believed in an interconnectedness of life and fluidity between the spirit and mundane realms. In fact, the mortal world was not actually mundane at all. It was teeming with spiritual life-force to such an extent that one might say that Midgard, the land of mortals in the Teutonic worldview, was seen as enchanted.”
― Carolyn Emerick, More than Meets the Eye: The Death and Resurrection of European Animism
Image: The Night of Ivan Kuala by Boris Olshansky
― Carolyn Emerick, More than Meets the Eye: The Death and Resurrection of European Animism
Image: The Night of Ivan Kuala by Boris Olshansky
“Two soul forms struggle for world domination: Paganism and Christianity. The denominations that bear this name only have very superficial relationships to the that soul forms… The Orient is the main carrier of the Christian, the Occident the main carrier of the pagan mentality: the "pagan" Chinese are better Christians than the "Christian" Germans.
Paganism places vigor at the forefront of ethical value scale, Christianity love. The Christian ideal is the loving saint, the pagan ideal the conquering hero. Christianity wants to convert into a homo domesticus, the pet man, while Paganism wants to convert man to superman homo ferus, the predator man. Christianity will tame Tiger Cats - paganism turns cats to tigers.”
― Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, Praktischer Idealismus
Image: The Tiger Hunt by Peter Paul Rubens
Paganism places vigor at the forefront of ethical value scale, Christianity love. The Christian ideal is the loving saint, the pagan ideal the conquering hero. Christianity wants to convert into a homo domesticus, the pet man, while Paganism wants to convert man to superman homo ferus, the predator man. Christianity will tame Tiger Cats - paganism turns cats to tigers.”
― Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, Praktischer Idealismus
Image: The Tiger Hunt by Peter Paul Rubens
“With his fabricated “Jesus” and his fabricated “afterlife,” Paul drained all value from this world, the real world. It turned believers into weak and subservient sheep, ones whose lives are oriented around the manufactured sayings of a marginal rabbi and of prayer to Jehovah, the invisible God of the Jews. It took a few hundred years, but when enough people fell for the hoax, it helped to bring down the Roman Empire. And when people—lots of people—still believe it after two thousand years, it cannot but degrade society, weighing us down, blocking us from attaining that which we are capable of, that which was only hinted at in the greatness of Athens and Rome.”
― David Skrbina, The Jesus Hoax: How St. Paul’s Cabal Fooled the World for Two Thousand Years
Image: Saint Paul by Barolomeo Montagna
― David Skrbina, The Jesus Hoax: How St. Paul’s Cabal Fooled the World for Two Thousand Years
Image: Saint Paul by Barolomeo Montagna
“The new Age of Aquarius is the Age of ‘Knowing’, traditional astrologers considered the whole Age, all 2150 years, to belong to Saturn, but recent astrologers, since the rediscovery of Uranus, have placed the father of Saturn (Uranus) as the ruler for the first 1000 years of this epoch. This makes for a very interesting contrast of planetary energies influencing humanity. While the controlling elite, predominantly aligned with Saturn, are expanding their restrictive Saturnian control grid; Uranus, the planet of rebellion, revolution and unpredictability will be pouring out cosmic frequencies over the human consciousness. Energetic vibrations of freedom, new technology and a need to break with tradition. This will certainly lead to interesting times.”
―Brian R Taylor, Metaphysics of WW2
Image: Aquarius by Jake Baddeley
―Brian R Taylor, Metaphysics of WW2
Image: Aquarius by Jake Baddeley
“The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a green thing that stands in the way. Some see nature all ridicule and deformity... and some scarce see nature at all. But to the eyes of the man of imagination, nature is imagination itself.”
― William Blake, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
Image: Hadrians Wall Sycamore Gap by Peter Phillips
― William Blake, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
Image: Hadrians Wall Sycamore Gap by Peter Phillips
“This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land,
Dear for her reputation through the world,
Is now leased out, I die pronouncing it,
Like to a tenement or pelting farm:
England, bound in with the triumphant sea
Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege
Of watery Neptune, is now bound in with shame,
With inky blots and rotten parchment bonds:
That England, that was wont to conquer others,
Hath made a shameful conquest of itself."
― William Shakespare, Richard II, Act II Scene 1
Image: The Duke of York Discovering his Son Aumerle’s Treachery by William Hamilton
Notes: This eloquent patriotic soliloquy is spoken by John of Gaunt and reflects his lamentation over the state of England, which he views as being misgoverned and suffering from corruption and decay.
Dear for her reputation through the world,
Is now leased out, I die pronouncing it,
Like to a tenement or pelting farm:
England, bound in with the triumphant sea
Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege
Of watery Neptune, is now bound in with shame,
With inky blots and rotten parchment bonds:
That England, that was wont to conquer others,
Hath made a shameful conquest of itself."
― William Shakespare, Richard II, Act II Scene 1
Image: The Duke of York Discovering his Son Aumerle’s Treachery by William Hamilton
Notes: This eloquent patriotic soliloquy is spoken by John of Gaunt and reflects his lamentation over the state of England, which he views as being misgoverned and suffering from corruption and decay.
“The Anglo-Saxon word 'treow' meant both 'tree', and 'trust' or 'truth'. The tree seemed to represent the very essence of spiritual reality in cosmology, and material trees manifested this deepest level of integrity. For this reason, trees were even thought to provide witness for the most serious of contracts between people. Sacred vows, such as marriages or pledges, were carried out in the presence of these spirits of nature - rather like a pre-Christian ceremony equivalent to swearing on a Bible. Not surprisingly, the Church authorities objected: one of their pronoscriptions admonished ‘no one shall go to trees, or wells, or stones…or anywhere else except to God's church, and there make vows or release himself from them.’”
―Brian Bates, The Real Middle Earth: Magic and Mystery in the Dark Ages
Image: The Hallowing Of Heirdom by David Taylor
―Brian Bates, The Real Middle Earth: Magic and Mystery in the Dark Ages
Image: The Hallowing Of Heirdom by David Taylor