In case you haven’t heard, my newest book Mythologies of the Wild of God, is now available from Angelico Press.
The Grail Moon
Have you been paying attention to the Grail Moon? The Grail Moon is the cycle that begins with the new moon just prior to Easter (and since Easter always falls just after the first full moon following the Vernal Equinox, that means the Grail Moon begins two weeks before Easter). Over these two weeks, we see the moon fill with light until at its fullness it presages the resurrection: “Why is this night different from all other nights?”
Rudolf Steiner makes quite a bit of the connection of the moon to the mystery of Easter and speaks of it in terms that can only be described as a poetic metaphysics:
“And let us remember that in the Parsifal saga it is emphasised that on every Good Friday, and thus during the Easter festival, the Host descends from Heaven into the Grail and is renewed; it sinks into the Grail like a rejuvenating nourishment—at the Easter festival, when Parsifal is again directed towards the Grail by the hermit; at the Easter festival, whose significance for the Grail has also been brought nearer to mankind again through Wagner’s Parsifal.”
The decent of the Host on Good Friday in Parsifal, according to Steiner, is figured in the position of the moon at this time of the liturgical and planetary year:
“Because the moon reflects the sun’s rays and in this way brings into being the gold-gleaming vessel, it appears to us as the bearer of the Sun-spirit, for the Sun-spirit appears within the moon’s vessel in the form of the wafer-like disc.”
That is, at this time of the year, the entire cosmos figures the Eucharist.
Excerpts from the film version of Parsifal by Hans Jurgen von Syberberg. It is one of the wildest films I’ve ever seen.
The Celtic Church
Since St. Patrick’s Day approaches, I cannot help but return to one of my touchpoints, The Celtic Church. Sophiology, indeed, bears many resonances with Celtic Christianity in that both are intimately aware of the synergy between the invisible and visible worlds, the supernature and nature, with Sophia as the metaxu connecting both. As a result, we find ourselves in a realm of spirituality that participates in both rationality and intuition, in the material and the spiritual, in waking consciousness and in that of dreams and visions. Sophiology and the Celtic Church, then, comprise a “Church of the Between,” a Church of the Metaxu. In the words of St. Patrick,
“Our God is the God of all men, the God of heaven and earth, of sea and river, of sun and moon and stars, of the lofty mountain and the lowly valleys, the God above heaven and in heaven and under heaven; he has his dwelling round heaven and earth and sea and all that in them is. He inspires all, he quickens all, he dominates all, he sustains all. He lights the light of the sun; he furnishes the light of the light; he has made springs in the dry land and has set stars to minister to the greater lights.”
As with some Native American tribes (as my beloved friend Matthew Milliner explains in his very fine book The Everlasting People), some argue that the pre-Christian Celts already had intimations and intuitions of Christ—even the experience of him—prior to the arrival of Christian missionaries. As the sixth century Welsh bard Taliesin described it,
“Christ, the Word from the beginning, was from the beginning our Teacher, and we never lost his teaching. Christianity was in Asia a new thing; but there was never a time when the Druids of Britain held not to its doctrines.”
That’s a bold claim.
Writing in the ninth century, the Irish monk John Scotus Eriugena upholds precisely this intuition: “In all human beings, indeed to put it simply, in the created universe as a whole, the Word is the true light that subsists now and always has, because it never ceases to subsist in all things” (Homily on the Prologue to Saint John’s Gospel [trans. Christopher Bamford]). This is Sophiology in its purist form.
The ancient Celtic churches held to a different iteration of Christianity than that of their Mediterranean counterparts. Unlike those under the yoke of Rome in more politically and geographically hostile—and mostly urban—contexts, Christians in the British Isles—entirely rural at first—were blessed with a psychological conditioning more conducive to finding the sophiological between in an atmosphere of burgeoning greenness and life—of fish and birds, of rivers and wind, of angels and stars. As the nineteenth-century poet and Anglican priest Robert Hawker writes,
They rear’d their lodges in the wilderness, Or built them cells beside the shadowy sea, And there they dwelt with angels, like a dream. So they unroll’d the Volume of the Book And fill’d the fields of the Evangelist With thoughts as sweet as flowers.
This, then, is a Christianity that discovered Christ organically.
Of course, history is tumid with examples of ecclesiastical and moralistic busybodies whose only reason for existence, apparently, is to make sure no one’s having and too much fun or enjoying the blessing of God’s grace without a sufficient measure of misery. Self-disgust is always an added bonus! This was the case with the Calvinist killjoys in early modern England who outlawed both May poles and Christmas—not to mention cakes and ale. And it was also the case in the Celtic British Isles. Robert Graves (always interesting, always blunt) explains in his customary manner:
“One can sympathize with the [Celtic] poets, in so far as their predecessors had accepted Christ without compulsion and had reserved the right to interpret Christianity in the light of their literary tradition, without interference…. The first Christian missionaries had conducted themselves with scrupulous courtesy towards the devotees of the pagan Sun-cult, with whom they had much mystical doctrine in common…. In Ireland, when St. Columcille founded his church at Derry he was ‘so loth to fell certain sacred trees that he turned his oratory to face north rather than east’—north, towards Caer Arianhod. And when he was in Scotland, he declared that ‘though he feared Death and Hell, the sound an an axe in the grove of Derry frightened him still more.’ But the age of toleration did not last long, once the iconoclasts were politically strong enough to begin their righteous work, the axes arose and fell on every sacred hill.”
God save us from zealous converts.
It is difficult to properly articulate the loss that Christianity as a whole experienced as a result of the neutering of Celtic Christianity. Such an impoverishment. As one of my household saints, H.J. Massingham says, “If the British Church had survived, it is possible that the fissure between Christianity and nature, widening through the centuries, would not have cracked the unity of Western man’s attitude toward the Universe.” But the British/Celtic Church didn’t survive, and the unity hath been destroyed ever since.
Yet it persists in pockets.
I see it persisting, for example, in the religious intuitions of my friends Paul Kingsnorth and Martin Shaw. I deeply appreciate their sincerity in approaching Eastern Orthodoxy as a way to retrieve a liturgically beautiful, theophantically attentive spirituality in the British Isles. I see this in Paul’s current project of writing about “50 Holy Wells” on his Substack (though I’m starting to be glad he didn’t find a hundred!). And while I don’t think the Eastern approach is ultimately useful or practical in the West (and I say this as an estranged Eastern Rite Catholic) celebrating Easter out of synch with the rest of one’s neighbors is rather a buzzkill and encourages the taint of “specialness” (a kind or Orientalism) that infects so much Orthodox discourse among the newly converted (and, to be clear, I DO NOT see Paul or Martin participating in that at all).
I also see it in the synergy—which I have always recognized—between certain neopagans and Christianity. As I’ve mentioned repeatedly in my books and essays, those attracted to neopaganism, to me anyway, indicate a hankering for the kind of ecologically and mystically embodied Christianity that the Celtic Church possessed—and which is to be found absolutely nowhere in the current Christian denominational landscape. Nevertheless, the neopagans give me hope. They would, I am sure, have no problem joining me in this ancient Irish prayer:
Son of the Dawn Son of the clouds Son of the stars Son of the elements Son of the heavens Son of the Moon Son of the Sun.
For my family, this Alt-Christianity, as I have mentioned before, led us to house church—first out of necessity when all the churches were closed indefinitely four years ago, and then by preference. And that would have been unthinkable had I not been so deeply washed in Sophiology before then. For it was through Sophiology that by intuition I discovered spiritual and temporal realities much in harmony with the ancient Celtic Church and the organic discovery of Christ by Native Americans.
Such a Christian expression, as should be expected, can certainly bring one into conflict with the protectors of the Christian establishment and orthodoxy. I’ve had plenty of push-back already—from friends and enemies alike. And I know that many would take the axe to our sacred trees—and even set me on a pyre—did cultural conditions allow. But here I stand.
Nevertheless, I do think the times call for an Alt-Christianity, in the spirit of the ancient Celtic Church and the Native Americans. In fact, they call to us from the past: “Return, my children. Return to the Wild of God.”
Some Celtic Christian vibes.
I still have an interest in attempting to baptize Kashmiri Shaivism, according to which the great goddess Shakti is immanent as the life of the Creation, while also being in the syzygy of marital union with the transcendent god Shiva (who is blue as well, like Krishna). So, keep the fundamental structure but think of it in terms of Sophia and Jesus, would be the idea.
(If the ancient Church had no qualms with baptizing Greek philosophy, and the Celts were so wondrously syncretic, then I don't see why we should be so timid now.)
That's maybe for later, though. I've been doing another edit of my book this week, so as to make sure that the draft is in the best possible shape when Angelico Press is good to get the ball rolling.
Thanks, Michael, for this. I went through a similar process of discovery as you describe finally arriving at “home church.” (Hope you don’t mind if I go on at some length about this. You give me a rare opportunity.) It was in the late eighties. I took a journey (about 15 years) through numerous “Christian Churches,” some of whom didn’t clearly understand the difference between a “church building” and “the church as the body of Christ,”--a living temple of individuals. Even those who did clearly understand that point, succeeded, nevertheless, to create a “material temple” from the spiritually understood principle, by making (very high) teachings and teachers into gods. Many of us were serious students of the New Testament, which does, by the way, teach the Way of the Wild God—once it’s unpacked from theological cerements. Several families gathered in one or another’s home for meetings. It was the “Wild God” that we (most of us young people), were hungry for. We did have many, memorable “Wild God” experiences. We called our goal simply: “The New Testament Church.” We took the wild John the Baptist for our “patron saint,” who didn’t mind wearing “unclean” camel skins to offend the religious. Who lived in the wild and was unafraid to call out the hypocrisy of religion. We reveled in the Jesus who knocked over the money changers. And the Jesus who healed on the Sabbath day. We loved the “King David” who stole the holy shewbread to feed himself and his men, and danced nearly naked before the ark of the covenant. In fact, I was dubbed “King William,” because I did occasionally get up and dance in the excitement of revelation in meetings. That was a younger me but I’d do it again given the inspiring spirit of the Wild God. We broke whole loaves of bread and gave pieces to each other, meeting each other’s eye with appreciation for each persons contribution as “living stones” in the temple of God—as “bread broken” for each other. We shared a cup of “wine” acknowledging our willingness to spill our blood for each other as He did for us. We did our own music, much of it composed, especially lyrics, by us. So much for home church in the 1980s.
There was much in the Christendom of those days that troubled me, in spite of the fact that I was honored for dancing in church meetings—mostly the un-universal, often uncharitable, small-minded “Jesus Cult.” By that I mean that there wasn’t the breadth and depth of cosmic Christianity, the Christ of cosmic, universal, cosmopolitan proportions one finds in Anthroposophical Christology, for instance—not to minimize our beloved Lord Jesus. That’s not to say that Anthroposophists don’t tend to be uncharitable. It isn’t the Christology that is to blame—it’s the “universal” small-mindedness of humans. And almost totally missing was the beautiful nature-loving Celtic spirit—except for a beloved Methodist, pastor George Smith, who was a poet of a man and could weave the livingness of a full-orbed life that revered mountains and lakes and streams and everything green and ruddy—into his sermons.
I agree with you, Michael, that “Alt-Christianity is the New Celtic Christianity.” Today, I take comfort in the fact that the old Nordic god Vidar is back in commission as we enter Ragnarok—as prophesied in the Nordic Edda—coming to slay the Fenris Wolf. Reading from the Mission of Folk Souls in Relation to Teutonic Mythology, by Steiner, “He [Vidar]...had undertaken another mission—that of becoming the inspirer of esoteric Christianity, which was destined to live on further in the Mysteries of the Holy Grail, in Rosicrucianism...All the underlying teachings and impulses of esoteric Christianity, have their source in his inspirations.” Archangel Vidar in the new guardian of the “youth forces” after Archangel Michael who has risen to Time Spirit. Vidar, who is the revealer of the Living Christ, is among us to revive and renew what is old—to guide us into the wilds of connecting to the elemental world, over whom he is guardian (as leading angel of Christ the “Lord of the Elements”)—in fine Celtic fashion. Towards that end I have written five essays on Vidar, the ambassador of the Living Logos—restorer of the Lost Word if anyone is interested. I’m inspired by this “Wild God” idea—it will show up in my continuing Vidar work.
https://www.academia.edu/98293450/How_to_Recognize_and_Connect_with_Vidar_The_Archangel_of_the_New_Community