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Witches Weekly -- Clergy

I've not been keeping up with Witches Weekly. However, I decided to take a peek at this week's questions. Having looked at them, I decided they were well worth answering.

1. What do you think the role of pagan clergy is in our society/communities?

To e honest, I'm not big on "clergy." I personally have no use for them. Furthermore, a part of me would rather encourage the Pagan community as a whole to avoid them altogether.

However, this is because of the form of witchcraft that I practice. I am looking to join a priesthood, and become a direct priest and servant of the gods. As such, I don't expect to need or want the help of clergyperson. Sure, I might need some advice or assistance from time to time, but I can get that from a sister or brother witch.

Some people aren't interested in the kind of service I'm looking to take on, though. And I'm starting to understand that some Pagans still need and want trained clergy to offer pastoral, counseling, and similar services to them. I can respect that. However, as that's not something I'm entirely interested in having or offering, I'll leave that to those who are interested.

2. If there was a pagan temple in your community like the Temple of Sekhmet, would you use it for a place to hold handfasting, naming, and coming of age rituals?

I don't really know, to be honest. My initial reaction is to say no, however. For example, not being a devotee of Sekhmet, I would find it inappropriate to use a temple dedicated to her for my services. (Just as I'd personally find it inappropriate to get married in my old church.)

If it was a "general" temple not dedicated to any specific deity, I suppose I might consider it. But even then, it would depend on a large number of factors and circumstances. I think of the specific rituals mentioned and I'm not sure I'd have any of those events be a public rite anyway. If I were to have a handfasting, it would be a magical ceremony that woudl be held with my covenmates as a private affair. As such, we would probably have a private temple or workspace we would use instead. Even if we chose to use a public temple for some reason, we would probably work the rites ourselves and not involve those who run the temple.

Specifically on the subject of the handfasting, I should note that I do not intend to have a public handfasting. If my lover and I decide to have a public ceremony at all, it will be extremely simple and mostly civil. To be honest, the majority of my family wouldn't show up just because I'd be marrying another man. I don't need to add the complication of throwing a lot of "Pagan mumbo jumbo" at them. (Besides, they're not welcome to my spiritual and magical rites, anyway.)

3. Would you feel comfortable getting counseling from a member of the pagan community?

This is not an easy yes or no question, in my book. To be perfectly blunt, if I am lookig for a counselor, that counselor's religious practices are not my primary concern. I'm not sure they're even in my list of concerns at all. Sure, I might want a counselor who is "Pagan friendly" -- or at least doesn't see my belief in Pagan gods and magic as something that needs to be "cured." If I can find a counselor I can work with, though, I don't care if she or he is Pagan, Buddhist, atheist, or even a fundamentalist Christian. The primary concern is "can I work with this person to work through the healing process I'm here for?" Nothing else.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on July 6, 2005 5:18 PM.

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