Paganism and the Slow Culture Movement

snail_onwhiteAs the Slow Movement almost oxymoronically picks up steam, I wanted to throw Paganism into the mix as being a relatively unacknowledged, but important tributary in the growing river of this vitally important cultural movement.

For those who don’t know, the Slow Movement got it’s start in Italy when Carlo Petrini founded Slow Food to protest the opening of a McDonald’s near the famed Piazza di Spagna in Rome.

This simple step planted the seeds of what has become a cultural revolution against the cult of speed and the acceleration of just about everything. Recently, journalist Carl HonorĂ© wrote In Praise of Slowness, an acclaimed book about the Slow culture movement and it’s many offshoots.

But where does Paganism fit into this you ask? Right smack dab in the middle I say. The Slow culture movement is about living with meaning. It’s not simply a refutation of speed but a mindfulness of enjoying each moment. This notion may manifest in cooking a meal using local ingredients, or reading a book, exercising with greater care or simply turning off the television.

Regardless of the activity, the idea is to live more fully or, as I have alluded to before, to become more human by taking each moment for what it is instead of simply rushing through life desperate to fit more stuff into less time.

I’d argue that this is part of why Paganism, and more specifically Wicca, has seen the explosion in popularity that it has. As people grow more and more aware that something is missing from their lives, Wicca and other esoteric spiritual paths fill a giant void as we try and unplug from the matrix of technoculture.

As more and more people refute speed and embrace slow (mindfulness), paths like Wicca, other forms of Witchcraft, Buddhism and even New Age approaches are offering a bit of a spiritual oasis in the desert of Big-Screen-Mega-Church Christianity which offers little more than a fast-food approach to spirituality: fill up quick and get a stomach ache later.

By taking the road less traveled, Paganism and Witchcraft offer something far more holistic: a religious framework that requires participation, time, effort, intention and a healthy dose of time spent engaged in their spiritual practice.

Spending the time purifying a space, casting a circle or sphere, reciting words of power or spells and then performing each subsequent ritual with care and attention is as slow as it gets. There’s no hurrying in Witchcraft. And if there is then you’re not doing it right.

So why is this important? It’s important because the tide is changing for many people. And as strange as it may sound at first listen, being a Pagan or Witch or Hermeticist or even an esoteric Christian is at the foundation of a new way of thinking and living. They all succeed where Christianity continues to fail by giving people a means to an end and a way to engage directly in their spirituality instead of simply being a passive spectator in a crowd of people looking at their watches.

And while no one is clamoring for mass conversions to Paganism, what I am arguing here is that perhaps maybe, just maybe, esoteric spirituality can influence how we all practice our faith and in turn how we can live with more meaning and purpose.

I think this is something we can all get behind.

3 Responses to “Paganism and the Slow Culture Movement”

  1. Sarah Says:

    I was going to reply to your comment (I myself could never live farther south than, say, Ohio, though the Outer Banks of North Carolina are tempting), and then I saw this lovely post!

    I never thought of Paganism in terms of the Slow Movement, but now it makes perfect sense!

    I’ve always felt that the quiet introspection of Paganism. Combined with the knowledge that some things should remain mysterious and a love of nature, the Slow Movement seems like (dare I say it?) just another aspect of the Pagan embracing of the earth and the senses.

    Perhaps this explains my penchant for locally grown produce and sustainable agriculture…

  2. brujo Says:

    I’m glad you said it, because I’d agree.

    It’s funny to me how so many people are yearning to embrace things that fit so naturally within the sandbox of Paganism - slow culture, environmental awareness, meditation (or centering prayer), etc.

    I too try and eat local when I can. This act alone can be a real labor of food love.

  3. Kelly Faught Says:

    Being a firm believer of the Slow Movement and all things centred around protecting our Earth, it warms my heart to read this post. So few people pause long enough to “feel” how they are really living-may that be eating, working, exercising or worshipping.

    It is with great amazement I see the future unfolding when one ties together images of the “World of Current Affrairs” - global warming, the need for speed, mass poverty and hunger, world wars (new and old), and last not but not least - the religious group governing our World right now. All eyes cast West and I’m sickened to the core.

    Paganism would certainly fair far better as a united global consciousness,rooting out the evil main-frame that has driven us to near self-destruction. Yet the clock is ticking and we are all powerless. Perhaps the conspiracy theorists have more truth to their stories than we realise. This world is filled with huge sadness and uneven distribution of food, human rights, equality and fairness. Maybe we are being ruled by an Illuminatus organisation/ or some other movement that governs by fear,as everywhere we look there is major illness and dis-ease. Of the body and the mind. Most of this world is living in abject poverty and we stand by to watch, instead of making a change, right here, right now. I’m talking to those who have the social status power to make those changes.

    Happily Pagan..Kelly…Durban/South Africa…

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