|
Finding
the Goddess in Ireland
By
Patricia Monaghan
Scratch a bit at the thin topsoil of Irish Catholicism,
an Irish saying goes, and you soon come to the solid bedrock of
Irish paganism. And indeed, Ireland is still what novelist Edna
O'Brien calls a pagan place. But that paganism does not
conflict with a devout Catholicism that embraces and absorbs it, in
a way that can seem mysterious, even heretical, elsewhere. In Ireland,
Christianity arrived without lions and gladiators, survived without
autos-da-fé and Inquisitions. The old ways were seamlessly bonded
to the new, so that ancient rituals continued, ancient divinities became
saints, ancient holy sites were maintained just as they had been for
generations and generations.
Thus
the goddess remains alive in Ireland even in the first years of the
third millennium of the Christian era. But that sentence is inexact.
For the goddess does not merely remain alive in Ireland she is
Ireland. Ireland has always been a woman, says O'Brien,
a womb, a cave, a cow, a Rosaleen, a sow, a bride, a harlot, and,
of course, the gaunt Hag. The island still bears her ancient name:
Éire, from Ériu, an ancestral goddess whom the invading
Celts met and adopted (or did she adopt them?) around 400 B.C.E. Ireland
is the goddess. She is every field still fertile a thousand years after
its first cultivation. She is every river that still floods with salmon
despite millennia of fishing. She is the dancing pattern of the seasons,
the fecundity of sheep and cattle, the messages written in the migratory
flight of birds. She is the sun's heat stored deep in the dark bogs.
She is the refreshment of pure water and of golden ale. She is living
nature, and she has never been forgotten in Ireland.
Every stream has its special connection with divinity and thus is pictured
as a unique and individual god or goddess. As the Greeks expressed it,
every tree has its dryad, every rock its oread, every ocean wave its
nereid. Paradoxically, such polytheism often sees nature as a whole
called Gaia by the scientist James Lovelock, after the Greek
goddess of earth as divine. In Ireland, that divinity is unquestionably
feminine. This paganism remains a part of Irish life today. Celtic spirituality
did not just bring together the goddess of the land with the god of
the cross; it brought together a deep love of nature, the heritage of
paganism, with the new social ideals of Christianity. What resulted
is a Church that has always been subtly different from the Roman one.
Subtly? Perhaps radically. Sometimes I fancy that the Irish have not
yet heard the news that Augustine bested Pelagius. Sixteen hundred years
ago, the Archbishop of Hippo waged a war of words on the Celtic monk
who preached that the world we see and hear and touch and taste was
created, just as it is, by god. Therefore, Pelagius said, we must learn
to love this world, just as it is. Sex is good; why else would god have
created us as sexual beings? Death has a purpose; why else would god
have made us mortal? The sky, whether blue or slate, is there when we
lift our heads. Water is there, clear and cool, to quench our thirst.
Life is good, Pelagius said. We only have to love it, as god intended.
This was the happy heresy that Augustine, infuriated by
his inability to control his sexual urges, set out to crush. And crush
it he did; we have the African Saint Augustine, but no Celtic Saint
Pelagius. Yet in Ireland, love of the natural world continued to be
the baseline of spiritual experience. The passionate joy of life in
a mortal body in a world of changing seasons floods Irish poetry, including
that written by monks and clerics. I have news for you,
goes the first Irish poem I learned, the stag calls, snows fall,
summer goes ... Cold catches birds' wings, ice covers all things,
this is my news. I immediately loved and still love
the tension between the first and final lines and the rest of the poem.
News? What can be new about the commonness of life? But that anonymous
poet of the ninth century reminds us of the only real news we can ever
know: the glorious sensual specificity, the absolute newness, of each
moment we experience in our unique and living bodies, the same glorious
sensual specificity that my ancestors, like other pagans the world over,
associated with the goddess.
Patricia
Monaghan, Ph.D is the author of The Red-Haired Girl From the
Bog: The Landscape of Celtic Myth & Spirit (New World Library).
She is on the faculty at DePaul University, Chicago
|

NG
Celtic
Festival

Millennium
Healthcare |