1/ In pagan cultures, people kept alive a sense of divine partnership between humanity and nature. Rituals were held routinely to fortify the bond between people and trees, rivers, earth and sky.

Feb 6, 2021 · 8:52 AM UTC

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2/ An early dispensation of Christendom destroyed that sacred connection, calling it blasphemous & replacing it with the idea that God had given earth to man to use for his utilitarian purposes. That split was for all intents and purposes the beginning of our environmental crisis
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3/ The attitudinal and philosophical split between humanity and nature has caused extraordinary damage not only to nature but also to ourselves. The industrialized, rationalistic and materialistic perspectives of the 20th C fortified the split and did tremendous collective harm.
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4/ The 21st C has brought a reckoning with a worldview so out of alignment with who we truly are, as well as a rebirth of understanding that a purely material explanation of the world will never satisfy either the needs or longings of the human race. It is time for repair & reset
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Replying to @marwilliamson
Almost all cultures are pagan
Replying to @marwilliamson
Dancing in honor of all living creation's. Even rock's have life and a purpose.
Replying to @marwilliamson
Modern paganism is liberal. But classic paganism isn't as progressive as you make it out to be.
Replying to @marwilliamson
We need an economic system & politics that borrows from the Pagans 💪🏾🌳
Replying to @marwilliamson
I must have missed the day in class where the evil Christians converted the Easter Island inhabitants causing them to provoke environmental catastrophe
Replying to @marwilliamson
And then along came hordesof marauding colonialist-settlers & systemically destroyed it Whooping joyfully as they did so
Replying to @marwilliamson
Psychedelics played a large part in those rituals.