Druidry to be recognized as a religion

From the BBC:

Druidry is to become the first pagan practice to be given official recognition as a religion.

The Charity Commission has accepted that druids’ worship of natural spirits could be seen as religious activity.

The Druid Network’s charitable status entitles it to tax breaks, but the organisation says it does not earn enough to benefit from this.

The commission says the network’s work in promoting druidry as a religion is in the public interest.

The move comes thousands of years after the first druids worshipped in Britain.

Druidry was one the first known spiritual practices in Britain, and druids existed in Celtic societies elsewhere in Europe as well…..

BBC religious affairs correspondent Robert Pigott says that with concern for the environment growing and the influence of mainstream faiths waning, druidry is flourishing more now than at any time since the arrival of Christianity.

Druidry’s followers are not restricted to one god or creator, but worship the spirit they believe inhabits the earth and forces of nature such as thunder.

Druids also worship the spirits of places, such as mountains and rivers, with rituals focused particularly on the turning of the seasons.

After a four-year inquiry, the Charity Commission decided that druidry offered coherent practices for the worship of a supreme being, and provided a beneficial moral framework.Add an Image

The decision will also mean that druidry will have the status of a genuine faith.

Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, was inducted as a Druid in 2002, an act which shows a surprising degree of prescience on his part. It provides him an employment opportunity for when the time comes – perhaps it has already come – when the Church of England is no longer recognized as a religion.

2 thoughts on “Druidry to be recognized as a religion

  1. I think that the “Druid” group that himself joined is a different one, a silly
    Victorian invention. The “Druid Network” is likely neo-pagan.
    Neither one has anything to do with historical Druids of course.

  2. Yeah, pretty much what I remembered – “the rank of “Druid” was not introduced into the Gorsedd system until 1876”, Victoria was on the throne, and “Robes were first worn at the Caernarfon Eisteddfod in 1894” – quotes from pages referenced below.

    Also from the Beeb – It was the Gorsedd of Bards
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/wales/2172918.stm that Archbishop (of Wales, then) Williams joined. The Gorsedd of Bards has a website at http://www.eisteddfod.org.uk/english/content.php?nID=43, conceding its 1792 foundation. It even tells you how to join:

    Syllabuses are available in Poetry, Music, Language and Prose, and there are also specific syllabuses for harpists and in the field of Cerdd Dant. You must pass two exams in your chosen subject…

    (Cerdd Dant is also known as penillion singing.)

    Amusingly enough, the Druid Network has a long page on the relationship between the Gorsedd and the neo-druids at http://druidnetwork.org/articles/meiniachadair.html

    Iolo invented a past onto which he could safeguard the future of the Welsh language, culture and the sacred craft of Bardism. He convinced the most eminent figures of Welsh society that an unbroken lineage to the ancient Druidic wisdom of the British Isles was alive and well in him.

    and

    Although the rituals seem rather pagan on the surface, Iolo was in fact a devout Monotheist and active member of the Unitarian Church

    and

    The Eisteddfod and the Gorsedd is not Pagan, nor do they practise any form of Paganism, the display of druidic splendour is merely tradition, as inspired by the great Iolo Morgannwg. It is very much a Christian organisation.

    Note that the pagans are the ones disclaiming the paganness of the Gorsedd.

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