[Vision2020] Joan and the Celtic Goddess
DonaldH675 at aol.com
DonaldH675 at aol.com
Thu Nov 10 13:04:00 PST 2005
Michael and Visionaries:
When early Christian missionary began converting indigenous people, for
example, the Celts, shadows of earlier traditional belief forms lingered, and
were largely unchallenged. (This made the switch from say Druidism to
Christianity (arguably) easier to swallow - particularly when clan leaders dictated
baptism to his/her subjects en masse.) Traditional gods/goddesses maintained a
presence in the habits and culture although the people were described as
"Christian." But, come on Michael, this is basis History 101 stuff, you know
it, and so do the rest of V2020 readers. The steps are simple to follow:
fertility goddess + conversion (often forced) to Christianity = St. Bridget
Joan's discussion of Bridget follows that trajectory. The only medieval
"Saint" Bridget that I am aware of is Bridgit of Sweden who certainly had
nothing to do with St. Patrick - or hospitality for that matter, despite Aaron's
assertion..
Of course there is no heresy connected to Aaron's position on St. Bridget.
It's a charming legend....with roots in paganism. The real question in my
mind is why didn't the bright lights at NSA know this already, and name the room
after a genuine Calvinistic heroine like Jenny Geddes? .
Rose Huskey
"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then
you win." Mahatma Gandhi
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