Earth-Religion and the Troth of the North
Originally published in Mountain Thunder 6, 1992
Earth-Religion and the Troth of the North
Diana L. Paxson
There is no single Right True and Only Way to practice Germanic religion--
or for that matter any other. Despite the attempts of the Church to confine
faith to written creeds, the history of Christianity is one of continual
splinterings. The same is true, of course, in paganism, except that pagans
(or heathens, about which I will have more to say later), usually have the
sense to accept the situation as natural and even desirable. Thus, there is
not, nor can there be, any official description of "Earth-Religion". The best
I can do is to offer a very simple definition which I think might be accepted
by most of the people who use the term, and follow it with a discussion of
what I believe to be its implications.
To me, "Earth-religion" means the spiritual beliefs and practices of
people who recognize that they depend on the Earth for survival.
In practice these include most traditional cultures. Societies whose
day-to-day existence depends on the willingness of animals to be killed and
plants to grow incorporate the propitiation and invocation of the powers of
nature into their spirituality-- indeed for many, the whole purpose of
religion is to ensure fertility, safety, and food. For the community, saving
the soul can wait until the belly is full.
Despite two millenia of Christian attempts to direct attention away from
this world and towards the next, and notwithstanding the best attempts of
today's food industry to disguise the origins of what goes into our grocery
stores, even 20th century Americans cannot completely ignore the fact that
the food we eat ultimately comes out of the ground. The ancient Norse, a
hard-headed and practical people, were in no doubt about it. When Thorbjorg
the Völva came to visit, folk asked her when the famine would end, not
what spiritual path they should choose.
Of course what Georges Dumézil (in Gods of the Ancient
Northmen) calls the "Third Function" is not the whole of religion. A
people's gods reflect their concerns, and once the food supply is taken care
of, a healthy culture will be concerned with other activities, such as
craftsmanship, government, war, and magic. Although in practice, the latter
two activities are often directed towards extracting food by force from other
people or protecting what you have ("An army travels on its belly."). I think
one will find that the real concerns of Germanic religion are expressed quite
clearly if one looks at their pantheon.
Heathens and their Gods.
The Vanir, obviously, are Third Function deities. They govern the
different kinds of labor required to produce food-- herding cattle, planting
and harvesting grain, fishing, and commerce. Dumézil may place this
function third, but the Vanir, Freyr in particular, are certainly not minor
figures in what we know of Germanic religious practice. The autumn feast
honored the disir (led by Freyja Vanadis) and alfar, the ancestors, of whom
Freyr lord of Alfheim was the chieftain. At the Yule feast they sacrificed
Freyr's boar and prayed to him for "peace and good seasons". He was the
ancestor of the Ynglings, and Anglo-Saxon warriors went into battle with his
boar on their helms. A look at Scandinavian folklore demonstrates a
continuing recognition of the powers of the lesser spirits of hearth and
garth, even when Christianity had suppressed worship of their chieftains.
What then of the Aesir? The other residents of Asgard dealt with a
variety of concerns-- including battle, sovereignty, and magic. However even
they had some interest in continuing the food supply. Thor's paternity varies
depending on one's source, but he is without doubt the "Son of Earth". As a
storm god, he was invoked to bring rain or to stop it. His lightning
fertilizes the fields. Even as chief foe of the Jotnar, his purpose was to
maintain the balance between the giants and the gods and humans they
protected. In Germany, the peasants left the last sheaf of wheat standing for
Wodan's horse. It was Odin also who made sure that all the Aesir got a share
in the sacrifices. Tyr gave his hand to prevent the Wolf from eating up the
food supply.
Note that I am speaking here of religion as practiced in the
Germanic-speaking countries during the pre-Christian period, not necessarily
as it is practiced today. In my article on "Utgard", I carefully defined my
subject as the "Northern branch of the Old Religion", not as "Theodism",
"Asatru" or even "Vanatru", much less Norse Wicca. I doubt that any Norseman
of the period would have identified his religion in any of these terms, though
he might have been able to puzzle out their literal meaning. They are names
invented by modern people to identify their religion in a world which
requires that everything be differentiated, defined, and labeled
scientifically. Those who follow them are free to define their beliefs as
they please, with or without reference to Earth-religion. My contention is
only that the religious practice characteristic of the ancient Germanic
peoples can be so defined. (And, of course, so can my own!)
The closest that ancient believers came to self-definition was something
like a faith in "the gods of my fathers,", or "the gods my people swear by,"
or perhaps the gods of a specific clan or tribe, to differentiate them from
their neighbors. "Pagan" is a Latin word meaning the people of the "pagus" or
countryside (who were more likely to cling to ancient ways). "Heathen" is a
Germanic word meaning people of the heath, or wilderness, who were likely to
be doing the same thing. Neither, properly speaking, assumes a specific
religious practice or mythology.
A Christian priest would probably refer to the unconverted as pagans if he
were speaking Latin and heathens if he were speaking English. The earliest
appearance of the latter word is in Ulfilas' Gothic translation of the Bible,
in which "haithno" equals "mulier gentibus", e.g. a Gentile woman. In the King
James Bible, "heathen" is used for polytheists from the Egyptians on down.
Nonetheless, although there is nothing approaching a "heathen creed", or
"Pagan Bible", one does not have to subscribe to Frazier's identification of
every legend as a "vegetation myth" to notice a surprising number of
correspondences between the underlying assumptions and religious practices of
tribal and village peoples not only in both northern and southern Europe, but
all over the world. It is this constellation of beliefs that I (for lack of a
better term) identify as the "Old Religion".
Both the content and the way in which these ideas are expressed should be
considered suggestive, rather than prescriptive. I would never expect total
agreement on all of them, however I think that polytheists living in hunting
or agricultural societies would probably feel reasonably comfortable with
most. The illustrations given are all from Norse/Germanic sources. Note that
Northern religion also featured a number of other beliefs not mentioned here--
the purpose of this essay is only to discuss those ideas which seem to be
common to all and to provide some evidence that they were characteristic of
the North as well.
Beliefs of the Earth Religion.
Toleration. A basic concept seems to be the idea that all paths
and theologies have some validity (although it may be limited to a family a
village, etc.), and no individual or group has the right to impose their
religion on others. One is reminded of Queen Sigrid's answer when King Olaf
Trygvason required her to convert before he would marry her
"I will not go from the faith I had before, and my kinsmen had
before me. I will not say anything against thee if thou believe in
the god that pleases thee."
(Snorre Sturlasson: The History of Olaf Trygvason: 61)
At this point, the king called her a heathen bitch and slapped her.
Needless to say, the marriage did not take place.
Polytheism. Although the deeper thinkers of all cultures seem to
recognize an underlying Divine Principle which is beyond personification
(perhaps seen in Norse myth in the mysterious references to the High One,
Just-as-High, and Third), heathens in general prefer to relate to the Divine
Powers through symbols and images, while recognizing that none of them can
express the totality. Individuals may serve one god or another, but they
recognize the power and validity of all.
Gender parity. Although females may have a lower status in some
pagan cultures, polytheology continues to recognize the power and divinity of
the female principle as well as that of the male. Certainly Germanic mythology
includes both goddesses and gods, and both men and women are allowed to serve
them. Indeed, the earlier one looks, the greater the honor women seem to have
received.
Animism. Heathens believe in an animate universe, in a continuum
of consciousness that extends from stones to spiritual pantheons. To this day,
the Icelanders route their roads around rocks known to be inhabited by alfar.
All the Germanic peoples reverenced sacred trees, and a spirit inhabited every
wood and waterfall.
Earth-kinship. All over the world one finds the concept of
Mother (or occasionally Father) Earth. An Anglo-Saxon herbalist's prayer
may show some Classical influence, but it is certainly not Christian! It
begins-- "Holy goddess earth, parent of all things in nature, who all things
generates, and regenerates the planet which thou alone shows to the people."
(Harley MS 1585: p. 24, 11th cen.).
Other Old English charms invoke Earth equally with sky. However one
interprets the "Erce, eorthan modor" of the Aecer-blot spell, the invocation
that follows is certainly addressed to the earth, and when the first furrow
is driven, the farmer says--
Hal wes ðu, folde, fira modor,
Hail to thee, earth, mother of men
beo ðu growende on Godes fæðme,
Be thou fruitful in God's protection,
fodre gefylled firum to nytte.
with food filled, men to benefit.
(Cotton Caligula A VII, ff.17;6a-178a, 12th cen.)
Even at a time when it was forbidden to call on Thor or Odin, the Church
could not prevent the farmer from invoking Mother Earth for bread.
A corollary of this is the idea of kinship with other beings. In the
north, traces of totemism survived into the Viking Age, and it was by no
means inconceivable that a man should take on the nature of a wolf or a
bear.
Positive Sexuality. In a theology in which Adam and Eve never
"fell", there is no need to despise the physical world or the human body. All
human functions, including sexuality, are therefore inherently positive. In
the sagas, sex becomes a problem only when it upsets the judgement and
threatens family survival. Both sexes are expected to enjoy it.
Self-determination. In a heathen society, individuals are
responsible for their own spiritual development. No outside power will "save"
you, nor can you be damned by any force except your own will.
Community. In most heathen societies, the village, clan, or
family is more important than the individual. Religion and magic may inspire
and empower the individual, but their purpose is to serve the community.
Fate and Free-will. A belief in reincarnation is not required to
be a pagan, but many traditional cultures, including the Germanic, believed
it was at least an option. Fate, or wyrd, might shape a person's life, but
the individual retained the free-will to decide how to meet it, and was
expected to live bravely as long as possible.
Reward and retribution. The pagan equivalent of the Golden Rule
is best expressed by the law of three-fold return -- whatever one does to
others will return three-fold, for good or for ill. Northern folklore is full
of examples of people whose virtuous deeds are rewarded, and villains who get
their just deserts in the end.
The cycle of birth and death. All societies that live close to
the earth recognize that birth and death, creation and destruction, are part
of the natural cycle of existence. But Spirit is eternal, only the form of
its manifestation is changed. As a result, death is not seen as anything to
fear so long as one dies well. This concept is especially well-expressed in
the Eddas. Ragnarok is a destruction, but it only ends one age of the world,
and will be followed by the emergence of a new earth, governed by the children
of the gods.
Relative Evil. The Old Religion is not dualistic-- good and evil
are not absolute, but dependent on the situation. Many of the Germanic
deities, including Odin, are highly ambiguous, their beneficence depending on
whether their purposes happen to accord with the desires of men. Even the
giants are not wholly evil, but rather mighty beings whose powers must be
kept in balance to preserve a space for humankind.
Spiritual reality. No traditional pagan would understand the
need to state that the spiritual world is as real as the physical, but those
of us raised in a civilization which believes only in those things its
instruments can measure need reminding. To those who follow an Earth Religion,
what happens "above", in the spiritual world is reflected by and connected to
what happens "below", it is both possible and natural to make contact between
one and the other.
Magic. Another characteristic of the heathen worldview is a
belief in magic, the idea that by using words and symbols, one mind or many
working together can change the world. This belief underlies much religious
practice, in which the gods and other powers are honored in order to invoke
their friendship, as well as spells for healing and protection. Although some
Viking warriors believed in nothing but the strength of their own sword-arms,
the numbers of amulets, runespells, and sacrifices found from the Viking Age
or referred to in its literature are proof that most people took whatever
help they could get.
The above beliefs are characteristic of a worldview which is very aware of
the need to work with the cycles of nature, and in which "nature" includes the
spiritual world. The gods do not exist in some distant heaven but are at
home and active in our lives. We sense Freyja in the scent of a rose, hear the
voice of Odin in the whispering of the leaves; we salute Hugin and Munin
whenever we see the ravens fly. Those who follow an Earth-religion live in a
world of connections, rich in symbols, in which the conscious and unconscious
minds communicate through visions and dreams. In this view, men do not seek
to escape to heaven, but to understand and enjoy this world. It is a worldview
whose faith can be described as an Earth-Religion because it is grounded in
Midgard.
I believe that those of us who seek to recover the spirituality of the
North should strive for a balance which includes all the powers of earth and
heaven. In closing, I can do no better than to repeat Sigdrifa's
prayer
Hail to thee Day! Hail, ye Day's sons,
Hail Night and daughter of Night!
With blithe eyes look on all of us
and send to those sitting here victory!
Hail Aesir! Hail Asynjur!
Hail, earth that givest to all!
Goodly spells and speech bespeak we from you,
and healing hands, in this life.
"Sigdrifumál": 2-3
Copyright © 1992, Diana L. Paxson. All rights
reserved.
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