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This material was apparently excerpted from a book titled What is Odinism?. We encourage you to visit The Odinic Rite for more information. --sacred-texts Editor

 
 
                                  ODINISM, WHAT IS IT? 
      1.  What do you mean by Odinism?
 
              Odinism isthe indigenous religiousfaith of theScandinavian, British
      and other  peoples of Northern Europe; it is an amalgam of attitudes, ideas
      and behavior,  both a  personal faith and  a communal way  of life.  In its
      beginnings Odinism is probably as old as our race. Historically it may be
      divided into three periods:
 
           A.   Before the coming of Christianity
           B.   Its gradual merging with Christianity and the ensuing Period of
                Dual Faith, and
           C.   Its efforts in the present century to free itself of Christian
                influences and to reassert its ancient independence.
 
       2. How have the tenets of Odinism been preserved? 
          Is there an Odinist holy book?
 
          The ancient oral traditions of Odinism were during the Middle Ages
      embodied in writings, the Odinist books of wisdom, the principle of which
      are the Eddas.  The poetic Elder Edda presents the Odinist cosmogony, the
      mythological lays and the heroic lays, including the story of Sigurd and
      Brynhild which were in later times moulded into the Lay of the Nibelungs.
      The Younger Edda is a prose synopsis of the Odinist faith.
 
       3. When did Britain and the rest of Europe cease to be Odinist?
 
          The first of our Northern countries to succumb to the false promises of
      the  new religion were  the Goths, in  the fourth century  of the Christian
      era; the  Icelanders became Christians by official  decree in the year 1000
      CE, to be followed by the  Scandinavian countries over the next two hundred
      years. England was "converted" between 597 and 686 CE and Scotland somewhat
      earlier (although some of  the people of Ross-shire were  still worshipping
      the old Gods as late as the seventeenth century). Ireland, when Patrick the
      Proselytizer landed  there in the  year 432,  was described  as "a  heathen
      land";  Dublin and the other principal Irish towns were actually founded by
      Odinist Vikings, who dedicated the country to the god Thor.
 
       4. Well, the people were converted to Christianity.  
          Would you have denied them their freedom of choice?
 
          They had no choice. Most of those who were "converted" had little 
      knowledge of Christian doctrine; the new religion was imposed on them by
      sword and sermon. The Revd S. C. Olland's Dictionary of English Church
      History is explicit:   "The adoption of Christianity generally depended
      upon State action: the king and his nobles were baptized and the people
      largely followed their example. . . . .The wholesale conversions. . . . .
      could not have implied individual conviction."  On one day alone in the
      year 598 more than ten thousand English "converts" were baptized in a mass
      ceremony; it is unlikely that they had received a great deal of instruction
      in the Christian faith. Even in the twentieth century the  vast majority of
      Christians  are still quite ignorant  of Christian doctrine.  It was always
      so.
 
 
                                                                              765
 
      5.  Why do you say that Odinism was practiced in the Church
          during what you have called "the Period of Dual Faith"?
 
          We can see the evidence everywhere, even today. When the foreign
      missionaries subverted Britain what they  could they repressed and what    
      they could not they ignored or adopted. The ancient spring renewal festival
      of  Summer  Finding  was  transformed  into  the  Christian  feast  of  the
      resurrection; the Mid-winter festival of Yule became Christmas. Not only
      the folk festivals connected with the great changes of season - May Day and
      Midsummer  and  Harvest  -  but numerous  customs  associated  with  life's
      milestones, birth  and marriage  and death,  all showed  that the  old Gods
      lived  on in  the life  and in  the  language of  the people.  Many of  the
      external signs of the ancient faith were retained: water was consecrated
      and wood was blessed. A Christian writer, Professor P. D. Chantepie de la
      Saussaye DD, has said, "We recognize in this folklore a form of historical
      continuity, the bond of union between the life of the people in pagan and
      In Christian times." Even today when we say, "Touch wood!" we are recalling
      the  sacred nature of an important symbol  of our ancient religion; and how
      many people are aware that they  are paying unconscious tribute to the Gods
      of  Odinism when  they light  their Christmas or  Paschal candles  or their
      bonfire  on the  fifth of November?  Or that  the very  "Christmas tree" is
      itself the  World Ash of Odinism? Even the sign  of the cross is really the
      sign of Thor's hammer!
 
      6.  How long did the Period of Dual Faith last?
 
              The  period during which Odinism  was actually practiced within the
      Church extended in Britain from about  the seventh century CE right down to
      the 1930's, when the purity of ancient worship was revived by a number of
      groups working outside  the Church for the  first time for more  than a    
      thousand years.  
 
      7.  But the adoption of Christianity, a creed that preaches peace on earth
      and  the equality of all men was, surely  you must agree, a step forward in
      the civilizing of our people?
          
          Odinists were happy enough to put up with the new doctrines so long as
      they were  allowed to go  on practicing their  own faith in peace.  But the
      inherent contradiction  at the heart of  Christianity is that it  denies in
      action the  faith  that it  professes  verbally.  There is  no  history  of
      religious warfare in Europe before the coming of Christianity. It is ironic
      indeed that the message  of peace on earth has been propagated with so much
      bloodshed.  As for the equality  of all men, we just  do not believe in it;
      and even the Christian god has his "chosen people".
 
      8.  Why is it now necessary to reassert what you describe as Odinism's
      ancient independence? Why can you not , in the present unsettled state
      of  society, leave  well alone. Surely  we should be  getting together, not
      creating more divisions amongst ourselves?
 
          First of all it is necessary to state that because of its organic
      origins  and   development  Odinism  is   a  religion   of  visual   truth.
      Nevertheless,for just so long  as Christian and Odinist ethics  coincided -
      even superficially - it was possible for Odinists to worship the Gods under
      their  Christian  designations;  but only  for  so  long  as they  remained
      adequate interpretations of the true divinities of Odinism (the nature of a
      god being of greater importance than his name).
 
 
                                                                              766
 
          The Churches are today opposed to many of the things that Odinists hold
      sacred:  they sin against nation and people by espousing causes whose
      ultimate  aim is our destruction;  they condone legislation  that has given
      statutory  approval  to  unnatural  sexual deviance  and  perversion;  they
      encourage criminal activities by calling for the exemption from punishment,
      or  even  prosecution, of  whole  categories of  lawbreakers;  they provide
      financial aid  for revolutionary  propaganda and even  terrorist activities
      against our  own people; they remain totally indifferent to the rape of our
      countryside in the  short-term interests of  economic gain and  technology;
      and they have  successfully divided the people  of our own  islands against
      themselves  (eg, in  Ireland).  Life in  Northern  Europe is  today,  after
      fifteen  hundred  years of  Christianity,  almost  entirely concerned  with
      material wealth and self-indulgence  and the Christian clergy have  largely
      forsaken  their  spiritual  vocations in  order  to  preach  the causes  of
      subversion and revolution.
 
               The people yearn for spiritual bread but have been offered by the
      Churches only a political stone. It is no longer possible for anyone who is
      aware of  his debt to  our past or  who has concern  for the future  of our
      nation and  race to  remain within  the  Christian Church.  This must  not,
      however be taken  to imply that Odinists bear hatred towards Christians; we
      recognize that there are many good  and sincere people within the Christian
      community  from whose example Odinists themselves could not fail to profit.
      But the Church  is itself  largely responsible for  the "present  unsettled
      state of society". Odinists see it as their duty to oppose those who menace
      the things that they regard  as holy. If we cannot in justice  always blame
      the sheep we should and do attack the shepherds.
 
      9.  But surely it would be preferable to have one god for all mankind?
 
          Why? One god or many Gods, it really does not matter. Our true Gods are
      actually  worshipped by  peoples  all  over  the  world,  using  their  own
      mythologies and adapting their worship to local cultures and conditions.
      We prefer to  worship the Gods in our own way  with people of our own kind.
      And  we respect the right of others to their own beliefs. It was an Odinist
      gothi (priest), Sigrith,  who told  the foreign missionaries,  "I must  not
      part from the faith which I have held, and my forefathers before me; on the
      other hand  I shall make  no objection  to your believing  in the god  that
      pleases you best."
 
      10. You have mentioned the "Gods of Nature". Does this mean that Odinists
          are nature-worshippers?
 
          Odinists recognize man's spiritual kinship with Nature, that within
      himself are in essence all that is in the greater world, which perform
      within him the same functions as in the world. Thus there are in man the
      four elements, the vegetative life of plants, an ethereal body - the god-
      soul - corresponding to the heavens, the sense of animals, of spiritual
      things and reason and understanding. Because in this way man comprises
      all the parts of the world within himself he is thus a true image of the
      Gods.
 
 
                                                                              767
 
          Also containing the essence of the universe within themselves, the Gods
      are everywhere and in everything: they show themselves to us as fire,  as a
      flower, as  a tree.  Odinists  believe that  all life  should  be lived  in
      communion and in accord with the mind of the Gods. Christianity turned away
      from Nature and concentrated its adherents' attention on the human soul and
      became obsessed with the fall of man, by which it was  implied that man had
      brought  all Nature down into  sin with him.  Christian teaching encouraged
      man to  see Nature only in her physical form whereas Odinists regard Nature
      as a true manifestation of  the divine. "We and the cosmos  are one," wrote
      D. H. Lawrence, "The  cosmos is a vast living  body, of which we  are still
      part.  The sun is  the great heart  whose tremors run  through our smallest
      veins.  The  moon is  a great  gleaming nerve-centre  from which  we quiver
      forever.  . . . Now  all this is  literally true, as men  knew in the great
      past and  as they will know again." Whoever shall properly know himself and
      all  things in  himself shall know  the Gods.  The Odinist,  because of his
      awareness of his relationship with Nature, is able to feel a consanguineous
      kinship with plants and animals and the land - a complete oneness.
 
      11. You speak of "the Odinist mythology". Do you really expect anyone to
          believe in a myth?
 
              Every  religion is  mythical in  its development. Mythology  is the
      knowledge  that  the ancients  had  of the  divine; it  is  religious truth
      expressing  in  poetical terms  mankind's desire  for personal  and visible
      gods.  The mythology of Odinism consists of a group  of legends, fables and
      tales  relating to  The Gods, heroes,  demons and other  beings whose names
      have been preserved in popular belief. Our object must be to discover, with
      the  help of  our mythology,  the Gods  who manifest  themselves throughout
      Nature:  in the streets and in the  trees and in the rocks, in the  running
      streams and in the  heavy ear of grain, in  the splendor of the sun  by day
      and in the star-strewn sky at night.  But it is not the myth  that Odinists
      believe in but the Gods whom that myth helps us to understand.
 
      12. What, then, is the Odinist mythology?
 
          Briefly, our mythology unfolds in five acts (which may be compared to
      the evolution of the seasons of the year):
 
            A.   the Creation (spring)
            B.   the time preceding the death of Balder (summer)
            C.   the death of Balder (summer's end)
            D.   the time immediately after the death of Balder (autumn)
            E.   Ragnarok, the decline and fall followed by the regeneration of
                 the world (winter and spring)
 
          The first effort of speculative man has always been to solve the
          mystery of existence, to ask what was in the beginning. The condition
          of things before the world's creation is expressed in the Eddas
          negatively; there was nothing of that which sprang into existence:
 
                                         Nothing was
                                         Neither land nor sea,
                                         Nor cool waves.
                                         Earth was not ,
                                         Sky was not,
                                         But a gaping void
                                         And no grass.
 
 
                                                                              768
 
          Ymir was a frost-giant, eg chaotic matter:
 
                                         From Ymir's flesh
                                         The world was made,
                                         And from his blood the sea.
                                         Mountains from his bones,
                                         Trees from his hair,
                                         And the welkin from his skull.
 
              There were as yet no human beings upon the earth when one dayas the
      Gods Odin,  Hoener and Loder were  walking along the seashore  they saw two
      trees from which they created the first human pair. Odin gave them life and
      spirit, Hoener endowed them with reason and the power of motion  and Loder
      gave them blood, hearing, and a fair complexion. The man they called Ask
      ash)--and the woman Embla (elm). As their abode the newly-created pair
      received from the Gods Midgarth and from them is descended the whole human
      race.
 
              Balder is the godof the summer, the favorite god ofall Nature and a
      son of Odin; he is one of the wisest and most eloquent of the Gods and his
      dwelling is in a place where nothing impure can enter. The story of Balder,
      well-known in the Northern  countries, finds explanation in the  seasons of
      the year,  in the change from  light to darkness; he  represents the bright
      and clear summer and his death is the impermanent victory  of darkness over
      light, of winter over summer, of death over life. When  Balder is dead, all
      Nature   mourns.  His  death   presages  the  disaster   of  Ragnarok,  the
      consummation of  the world,  followed by  its cleansing  and return to  the
      primal state.
 
          Ragnarok, the Twilight of the Gods, represents a great conflict between
      good and evil  powers. The idea  is already suggested  in the story  of the
      Creation in which the Gods are represented as proceeding from giants, that
      is from an  evil and chaotic  force. And whatever  can be born must  surely
      die. In the seasons and activities of Nature we see a constantly recurring
      picture of the necessity for death and the equal certainty of its being
      overcome. At Ragnarok all the worlds of Nature will be destroyed and even
      the giants must die. But from that catastrophe will emerge a renewed world
      and the Gods themselves will be born again. We see this drama enacted
      every year in miniature when autumn heralds the period of decline and decay
      until with the spring we witness the magic of resurrection and new life.
 
          This, briefly told, is the myth that explained to our ancestors their
      origin and the origin of the world, the creation of life from chaos and the
      mergence of evolution and harmony.
 
      13.  Who is Odin?
 
              Odinis the first and eldest ofthe Gods, the all-pervading spirit of
      the  sun, the moon, the stars,  the hills, the plains and  of man. With his
      help were made heaven and  earth and the first man and woman. All knowledge
      came from him; he is the inventor of poetry and discovered the runes; he
      governs all things, protects the social organization influences the human
      mind, avenges murder and upholds the sanctity of the oath. He is well
      named Allfather. And because he chooses to surround himself with a
      bodyguard of those who have fallen in battle he is also known as
      Valfather, Father of the Slain.
 
 
                                                                              769
 
          In the mythology Odin's single eye (the other he sacrificed in exchange
      for wisdom) is the sun, his broad-brimmed hat the arched vault of heaven,
      his  blue  cloak the  sky.  A conspicuous  passage  in the  Edda  is Odin's
      sacrifice of himself to himself:
 
                                         I know I hung
                                         on the windy tree
                                         nine nights through:
                                         I know I hung
                                         I know I hung
                                         myself to myself,
                                         on the tree
                                         that springs
                                         from roots unknown.
 
          Order is the basis of Odin's government. Nature the garment by which he
      manifests himself. Odinism says:  study the natural laws, conform to them
      and you will prosper; ignore them or violate them and you must suffer.
      Just so far as you study and obey Nature exactly so far will Nature reward
      or punish you. For under Odin the government of Nature is harmonious and
      unchangeable.
 
      14. Who are the other Gods of Odinism? What kind of Gods are they?
 
          We have already spoken of Odin and Balder. Of the other Gods the best-
      known is Thor, the most famous story concerning whom tells of this
      Warrior-God crushing the powers of chaos. He rules over clouds and rain
      and makes his presence known in the lightning's flash. He is the protector
      of the farm worker, the chief god of agriculture, a helpful deity who makes
      the crops grow and who also blesses the bride  with fertility. In the words
      of  Professor P. V. Glob,  " He wishes  all men well and  stands by them in
      face  of their enemies and against the new God, Christ."  Tyr is the God of
      martial  honor, the  most daring  and intrepid  of the  Gods. He  dispenses
      justice in time of peace and valor in war. He it was who sacrificed  a hand
      when  overpowering the evil Fenris Wolf,  showing us that we ourselves must
      be prepared  to make sacrifices in  order to protect ourselves  and our kin
      from those who seek to cast our society into anarchy and chaos.
 
          Frey is God of the harvest and is therefore also a God of fecundity and
      growth;  some  authorities  believe that  he  and  Christ  may have  become
      blended, in England at least, in so a God of fecundity and growth; some    
      authorities believe that he and Christ may have become blended, in England
      at least, in the new religion of Christianity. Freya is a Goddess of love
      and the sister of Frey: barren women may invoke her and she is also the
      Goddess of death for all women. Another God, Vali, is called he Avenger
      because when he was yet only one night old he avenged Balder's death, thus
      demonstrating the moral obligation we have of punishing society's enemies.
      Other Gods include Brage, Heimdal, Vidar, Frigg and Forsete.
 
 
                                                                              770
 
          The Gods of Odinism are the ordaining powers of Nature clothed in
      personality. They direct the world which they themselves created. They are
      referred to collectively as the Aesir, of whom every living thing forms  a
      part (thus not all the Gods are necessarily good ones). Objects and
      phenomena that are regarded as greater or lesser Aesir are qualities such
      as thought and memory, and natural things such as the sun, rivers,
      mountains  and trees as  well as animals  and ancestral  spirits. There are
      also  the guardian  Gods of  the land,  of skills  and occupations  and the
      spirits of national heroes, the Einheriar and other men and women whose
      outstanding deeds and virtues have contributed to our civilization,
      culture and well-being.
 
      15. Is there a table of commandments that sets out the rules to be
          followed by Odinists?
 
          The main rules of Odinist conduct are listed in the Nine Charges which
          are:
 
          1.   To maintain candor and fidelity in love and devotions to the tried
               friend:  though he strike me I will do him no scathe.
              2.   Neverto make a wrongsome oath: for great andgrim is the reward
             for the breaking of plighted troth.
          3.   To deal not hardly with the humble and lowly.
          4.   To remember the respect that is due great age.
              5.  To suffer noevil to go unremedied andto fight against the      
        enemies of family, nation, race and  faith:  my foes will I fight        
      in the field nor be burnt in my house.
              6.  To succor thefriendless but to putno faith in the pledgedword  
            of a stranger people.
          7.   If I hear the fool's word of a drunken man I will strive not: for
               many a grief and the very death groweth out of such things.
              8.   To give kind heedto dead men:  straw-dead, sea-dead or        
      sword-dead.  
          9.   To abide by the enactments of lawful authority and to bear with
               courage and fortitude the decrees of the Norns.
 
              The Chargesare based on the rules oflife indicated by the High Song
      of Odin and in the Lay of Sigurd in which the Valkyrie gives counsel to
      Sigurd. They may be summarized as demanding in the struggle for life a
      self-reliance which should be earned by a love of learning and industry, a
      prudent foresight in word and deed, moderation in the gratification of the
      senses and in the exercise of power, modesty and politeness in intercourse
      and a desire to earn the goodwill of our fellow men.
 
      16. The first four Charges seem fairly innocuous, but I must say the
          Fifth Charge sounds rather sinister! Isn't it all very violent and
          retributive?
 
 
                                                                              771
 
              "To suffer no evil to gounremedied," does appear to run contrary to
      the  trends  of  modern progressive  thinking.  And  the  idea of  fighting
      "against the enemies  of family, nation, race and  faith" would be anathema
      to many people. Unlike the Christian,  whose duty it is to "turn  the other
      cheek" (advice that is  more often observed ub  tge breach than  otherwise)
      and to be patient and long-suffering under the most grievous attacks, it is
      the duty of the Odinist to punish wrongs and above all those wrongs offered
      to his own family and kin. Society's enemies already know the basic law of
      life:  that the race is to the strong and that the meek will inherit th
      earth only when the earth inherits them dust to dust. Others should also
      learn to recognize this truth.
 
      17. What do you mean by "kinship loyalty"?
 
              We mustof course give loyal service to anyoneor any concept to whom
      or to which loyalty is due. But we owe our loyalty in the fullest degree to
      our immediate family and to  those who are related  to us by blood-ties  or
      blood-brotherhood.  A husband owes loyalty  to his wife,  for instance, and
      vice versa, just as  a son owes loyalty to his parents  to a greater extent
      than  to anyone  outside the  immediate family circle.  Beyond that  we owe
      allegiance  to  our own  country  and  racial kindred  before  we can  even
      consider giving it to strangers who  must therefore have the last call upon
      us.  But  there may  be  occasions  when loyalty  to  nation  and kin  must
      transcend even our loyalty to our own family.
 
              This concern for kin is an essential part of Odinist teaching. More
      than twelve centuries  ago the Christian  proselytizer, Boniface, wrote  of
      the  Odinists, "Have  pity  on  them, because  even  they   themselves  are
      accustomed to  say,  "We are  of  one blood  and  one bone".  Filial  love,
      patriotism and kinship loyalty are religious principles still adhered to by
      Odinists. In the words of the Edda:
 
           We shall help our kinsmen as foot helps foot. . .
           If one foot stumbles then shall the other restore balance.
 
      18. You seem to have an exaggerated respect for things like law and order!
          What about unjust laws?
 
              No, not an "exaggerated respect for law and order"; just regard for
      the rules  by which  civilized man must  live. But laws,  to be  just, must
      apply equally to all citizens and groups without discrimination. Odinists
      certainly have a duty to oppose what they regard as unjust laws but in
      doing so they accept the consequences of their opposition and do not expect
      to be given exemption or favorable treatment.
 
      19. What view do Odinists take of modern, enlightened substitutes for
          traditional, repressive forms of punishment? Do you agree that the
          wrong-doer in our society is more often than not the victim of his
          environment and that we are thus all guilty?
 
 
                                                                              772
 
              Odinists refuse to accept responsibility for the actions of others.
      Just as  it would be wrong to accept credit  for another person's merits so
      it is wrong to  relieve the wrong-doer  of responsibility for his  actions.
      "Crime  should  be  blazoned abroad  by  its  retribution,"  wrote Tacitus.
      Punishment  should be  an  unpleasant and  memorable  experience. Those  in
      authority who neglect to punish the criminal adequately place themselves in
      the position of  being accessories  after the fact.  Odinists believe  that
      anyone who seriously  or continually flouts  the law should  forfeit for  a
      period  of time  his rights to  protection under  that law;  enemies of the
      community should not be  permitted to run with the  hare and hunt with  the
      hounds!
 
 
      20. The Sixth Charge speaks about putting no faith in the pledged word of
          a stranger people. What is meant by "a stranger people"?
 
              By "a strangerpeople" we mean those from differentcultures than our
      own.  It is a warning that words often mean different things to different
      peoples, that their standards are not always the same as our own. It is
      simply one of those things in life that ought to be widely known and
      appreciated but does not seem to be!
 
      21. Please explain the Ninth Charge, which speaks of "the decrees of the
          Norns". Who or where are the Norns?
 
          The Norns are the three Fates of Northern mythology, the Goddesses of
      time. They are named Urd (the past), Verdande (the present) and Skuld (the
      future). They watch over man; they spin his thread of fate at his birth
      and mark out with it the limits of his sphere of action through life;
      their decrees are inviolable destiny, their dispensations inevitable
      necessity. Urd  and  Verdande,  the  past  and  present,  may  be  seen  as
      stretching a web from the radiant dawn of life to the glowing sunset,
      while Skuld, the future tears it to pieces!
 
          Man's fate must be met but the way in which it is met rests with the
      individual; and by the way in which he meets his fate man is able to
      demonstrate his free will. This important principle shows a man that it is
      worth while fighting life's battles courageously while at the same time
      fate's inexorable nature allows no room for careful weighing of  arguments
      for and against or for anxiety about the nature of things that are in any
      case destined to happen.
 
      22. What other aspects of human behavior are admired by Odinists?
 
          The Noble Virtues are held in high esteem.   They are:
 
                                         Courage
                                         Truth
                                         Honor
                                         Fidelity
                                         Discipline
                                         Hospitality
                                         Industriousness
                                         Self-reliance
                                         Perseverance
 
 
                                                                              773
 
          The Odinist must do what lies before him without fear of either foes,
      friends or the Norns. He must hold his own council, speak his mind and
      seek fame without respect of persons; be free, independent and daring in
      his actions; act with gentleness and generosity towards friends and
      kinsmen but be stern and grim to his enemies (but even towards the latter
      to feel bound to fulfill necessary duties);  be as forgiving to some as he
      is unyielding and unforgiving to others. He should be neither trucebreaker
      nor oathbreaker and utter nothing against any person that he would not say
      to his face. These are the broad principles of Odinist behavior, features
      of the spirit that made our Northern peoples great.
 
      23. You call industriousness a Noble Virtue?  What is so spiritual about
          that?
 
          Industriousness is a virtue which, partly inherited, is nevertheless
      acquired largely through training  and self-discipline; it is at once
      something we owe to ourselves, to our family and to the community. There
      is a time for relaxation as there is a time for most things but it is not,
      for instance, during our working hours; neither should it be at the expense
      of other members of the community by way of the so-called welfare state.
 
      24. What about material possessions?
 
              A principle of Odinism is the realization of the worthlessnessand  
      fleeting nature of  worldly possessions. Enough should be  enough. Adam of 
      Bremen,  a Christian,  remarked how  Odinists with  whom  he had  come into
      contact "lack nothing of what we revere except our arrogance. They have no
      acquisitive love of gold, silver, splendid chargers, the furs of beaver and
      marten or any of the other possessions we pine for". One thing alone is
      worth while in this life:  the stability of a well-earned reputation.
      "Goods perish, friends perish, a man himself perishes," says the Edda "but
      fame never dies to him that hath won it worthily."
 
      25. You describe self-reliance as one of the Noble Virtues. Surely even
          you must admit that none of us is, or can be, self-reliant in these
          days?
 
          Self reliance does not, as you appear to suggest, imply selfishness or
      mean that a man must live in isolation from his fellows. We recognize that
      men are dependent upon Nature and on the community of which he forms part;
      he has obligations to that community as well as to his employer (or
      employees). He receives from society and he owes a debt to society.
      Odinism teaches that people must be encouraged to stand on their own feet
      and  not to ask  continually, "When is  somebody going to  do something for
      me?"
 
 
                                                                              774
 
      26. Do Odinists believe in prayer?
 
          Odinism is not a philosophy invented to ease mankind's comfort or to 
      assuage his fears; that kind of  religion acts against rather than in man's
      interests because it takes from him his independence and self-respect and 
      makes  of  him  a  humble  supplicant   by  encouraging  him  to  shed  his
      responsibilities. The person who prays to a saint or God asking for help 
      or guidance is seeking to shift the responsibility from his own shoulders, 
      surrendering his own faculties of thought and physical action, unless he 
      also does something to help himself. To pray is to beg and plead; it is 
      self-abasement ("we worms of the earth"). That is not the object of true 
      religion which, as Carlyle has told us, is "transcendent wonder":  wonder 
      without limit or measure, reverent admiration alike for the immensity of 
      creation, the inspiration of the human heart and the capability of the 
      human brain. 
 
              Odinists in theirinveitan (praise); singular, inveita) callupon the
      Aesir to approach them in their thoughts as  they themselves strive towards
      the   Aesir. Through increased understanding is achieved wholeness, a unity
      with the Gods that helps us to think out our problems and how they may be 
      overcome.  We  project  the  Gods  within  ourselves  and  that, externally
      realized, speaks to the divine in others. Through their invetian Odinists 
      express gratitude for life and the world they live in and resolve to try 
      to make it better - not just to  leave it to "someone up there" or hope for
      something better in the next world. 
 
      27  How do Odinists regard good and evil?
 
              Evil of itself cannot originatein man but must always beregarded as
      an intruder, like an illness or  an affliction; as such it must  be opposed
      and  expelled. Good and evil  are relative:  there can  be no absolute norm
      and actions must depend upon circumstances and motives as well as time and
      place. The ethical standards relating to custom and tradition are flexible
      and responsive to the specific demands of different ages, so that moral
      judgments of what is right and wrong cannot be placed in a fixed system
      of standards but must vary according to time and situation. Just as the
      world is constantly changing so are values constantly changing, so that
      nothing can be regarded as unconditionally good or evil in all ages. In
      general, that which disturbs the social order and peaceful evolution and
      causes unhappiness - including such natural disasters as floods and
      earthquakes, disease and pollution - obstructs the natural development of
      the world and must be regarded as evil. As for sin, Odinism knows but two
      major sins -  perjury and murder:  that is sin against the Gods and sin
      against one's fellow man.
 
      28. Do you believe in Original sin?
 
              Man is inherently good andthe world in which he livesis good. There
      is no sin in man which has been inherited from his first, or any other,
      ancestor;  it is  enough that  he should  be held  responsible for  his own
      actions. But a lthough his spirit is good, his flesh and his senses may
      succumb to evil, especially when by neglecting his own spiritual well-
      being he has left his defenses weakened. So it is necessary for him to be
      able to distinguish between what is good and what is evil.
 
 
                                                                              775
 
      29  What do Odinists believe about marriage - and divorce?
 
              Odinists support theinstitution of marriageand marital fidelity.But
      a broken marriage is and unhappy marriage and traditional Odinic law allows
      great latitude  to separation of husband wife, at the will of both parties,
      if a good reason exists for the desired change. It is recognized that the
      worst possible service is rendered to those who are forced to live together
      against their will; but it must be borne in mind that marriage is basically
      a solemn exchange of vows between two people and  as such can only be ended
      by agreement between the same two people.
 
      30. Does Odinism offer salvation to those who believe?
 
          Odinism offers no salvation in the sense in which that term is used by
      Christians. Instead, the Odinist seeks liberation by bringing the Aesir
      into the world of man and into his daily life - whether at home or at work.
      Liberation refers to the human condition as we know it, which is subject to
      birth and death and decay. It is not, " the kingdom of God which is with in
      you," but the Gods themselves which exist within man.
 
      31. Does man possess an immortal soul? Is there a life after death and
          will people go to Odin in heaven?
 
          Odinists believe that man consists of body (i.e. matter) and spirit or
      soul.  Physical man is  born, produces young  and eventually dies.  But the
      whole of  Nature  shows us  that  death is  not  final: the  material  body
      decomposes and recombines, it is regenerated and lives again. As it was in
      the beginning so it is now; every atom continues to exist and must exist
      as in the beginning. There is nothing new under the sun and what we call
      death is really nothing more than transformation.
 
              Spiritual  man is divided into two distinct souls, one passive, the
      other  active,  the divine  and  the  human,  which  we call  God-soul  and
      human-soul. The first is in the fullest sense a divine being, contemplating
      a past eternity and a future immortality, occupying itself in contemplation
      rather than in action and to be regarded as a kind of guardian spirit.
      Although the God-soul and the material body are associated in this life,
      the former is not bound to man in the way that, say, a limb is (it may
      indeed  absent  itself   from  his   body  during  sleep   or  periods   of
      unconsciousness). Without the spirit there can be no motivation:  when the
      physical change (i.e. death) takes place the God-soul passes to another 
      living  organism -a human being, a tree, an animal, perhaps a bird. This
      is the element that gives man his mystical attachment to a particular
      district or country (which is what we call patriotism):  because it is
      where the God-souls of countless generations of ancestors dwell. It is
      because  of this  that man  is compelled  to nurture,  love and  defend his
      country, which is, in the purest sense, a holy land. The philosopher
      Fichte said, "Death  is the ladder  by which my  spiritual vision rises  to
      anew life and a new nature." This is also the reason why Odinists regard
      all life as sacred and unnecessary violence as criminal.
 
 
                                                                              776
 
              The  human-soul  (or self-soul),  is  essentially  individual to  a
      particular person.  It may be likened  to his personality, his  fame or his
      infamy.  Because the  whole of man's life  is a continuing struggle of  the
      good  and light Gods  on the one  hand and the offspring  of chaotic matter
      (the giants, Nature's disturbing forces) on the other, the human-soul is
      extremely active. It is involved in a struggle that extends to man's
      innermost being: both the human-soul and the God-soul proceed from the
      Gods; but the body be longs to the world of giants and they struggle for
      supremacy. If the human-soul conquers by virtue and courage then it goes
      after death to Valhalla, to fight in concert with the Gods against the
      evil powers. If on the other hand the body conquers and links the spirit
      to itself by weakness then after man's death the human-soul sinks to the
      world of the giants and joins itself with the evil powers in their warfare
      against the Gods. Long after his individual identity has been forgotten a
      man's  human-soul,  absorbed into  the  corporate spirit  of  the regiment,
      college, village, nation or other group, continues to demonstrate its
      immortality by inspiring future generations to noble deeds - or to acts of
      degradation.
 
      32. If the God-soul migrates to other living things after death, how can
          you square this with, for example, the need to slaughter livestock in
          order to sustain human life? Isn't it rather like killing a God?
 
          The God-soul must not be confused with the being that it inhabits.
      Animals, birds and trees have always been regarded by Odinists with
      respect; it is indeed probable that the domestication of some creatures
      arose from their former sacred character. Every living thing is a
      manifestation of the divine and its spirit is immortal:  every time a tree
      is felled or an animal slaughtered it is indeed a kind of sacrifice. But
      the tree or the animal is only a temporary dwelling-place for the immortal
      God. Everything in Nature has a purpose and it is necessary in order that
      life may be sustained in others for such "sacrifices" to be made. Such an
      attitude encourages consideration and reverence for Nature and discourages
      its wanton despoliation. It is the unnecessary, cruel or unnatural killing
      of animals (or of human beings), the unjustifiable destruction of trees or
      landscape and the defiling of natural resources, that is wrong.
 
      33. You have mentioned "ancestral spirits". Does this mean that Odinists
          believe in ancestor-worship?
 
          The human-souls of one's own family ancestors provide us with  moral
      strength and inspiration. Just as we received our spirit from Odin, so we
      received our physical being through our parents and our ancestors from
      time memorial. Our respect for ancestors maintains the continuity of the
      family, the kin and the race. We have a duty to try to attain the ideals
      of our ancestors and an equal duty of cherishing our descendants so that
      they in their turn will come to understand and realize our own hopes and
      ideals. Life is continuing process:  we must try to visualize ourselves as
      ancestors; for ancestors and descendants are genealogically one. Edmund
      Burke once remarked that society was a partnership between those who were
      living, those who are dead and those yet to be born; past and present and
      future are seen as a continuing evolvement and must be looked upon as
      complete being.
 
 
                                                                              777
 
      34. What kind of status do women have within the Odinist community?
 
              Odinists do  not need  reminding  of women's  rights! Our  religion
      anciently held women in high honor:  not only are Goddesses included in the
      Odinist pantheon, but, when the Odinist priesthood is restored, all offices
      will be open to women just as they were before the Christian usurpation
      relegated them to permanent backbenches of religious life.
 
      35. What are the chief festivals of the Odinic Rite?
 
          In ancient times there were three great festivals: Yule (the Mid-Winter
      Festival), Summer Finding (or spring equinox) and Winter Finding (autumn
      equinox). To these we nowadays add the Midsummer Festival.
 
              Yule, the popularFestival ofMid-Winter (sometimescalled theFestival
      of Light), heralds the beginning of the Odinist year. It is the birthday of
      the unconquered sun, which at this time begins to new vigor after its
      autumnal decline when, having descended into darkness, it pauses, kindles
      the fire of germination and ascends renewed with the fruit of hope. The
      Mid-Winter Festival includes the Twelve Nights of Yule, encapsulating the
      twelve months of the year in miniature, and culminates in the celebration
      of Twelfth Night.
 
          Summer Finding, in March, is the Festival of Odin. It celebrates the
      renewal, or resurrection, of Nature after the darkness of winter. It was
      transformed by the Christians into their Easter (named after the Odinist
      Goddess of the Saxons, Ostara), Rogation and Whitsun and was also recalled
      in folk custom by the festivities of May Day.
 
              The Midsummer Festival, theFeast of Balder, is thegreat celebration
      of the triumph of light and the sun.
 
          Winter Finding mourns the death of summer and heralds the coming of
      autumn. It is dedicated to the god Frey, patron of the harvest, and is
      also sometimes called the Charming of the Fruits of Earth, when we render
      thanks for the years supply of life-giving foods.
 
      36. What other Odinist festivals are there?
 
              Besides the great festivalsthere are a number ofsecondary festivals
      and also some commemorations of local Gods or various aspects of life.
 
          The secondary festivals of the Odinic Rite are:
          The Charming of the Plough,  January 3
              The festival ofVali, Febuary 14, whichcommemorates the family andis
      an  occasion for  betrothals,  the renewal  of  marriage vows  and vows  of
      kinshiployalty.
              The festival of the Einheriar on November 11, known asHeroes'  day,
      which honors the dead.
 
 
                                                                              778
 
      37. What is the Odinist Committee?
 
          The committee for the Restoration of the Odinic Rite (to give its full
      title) was set up on April 23, 1973 with the limited objects of restoring
      Odinist ritual and ceremonies, to define Odinist faith and doctrine and to
      constitute a teaching order of gothar (singular: gothi, meaning priest of
      teacher). When these immediate objects have been achieved the Committee
      will  disband. In the past not a great deal of attention was paid to
      systemizing the doctrinal aspects of Odinism and consequently the body of
      writing on the subject has remained limited and uneven. The Odinist
      Committee will place the worship of the Aesir on a more formal and
      permanent basis.
 
      38. How do I go about becoming an Odinist?
 
              First of all by understanding, thenby believing. You do not have to
      "be born again" but you are  expected to live your whole life  according to
      the Odinist precepts. There is a ceremony of reception (or initiation) into
      the Odinist community for those who wish it. The secretary of the Odinist
      Committee, 10 Trinity Green, London, E1, will be able to tell you whether
      there is an Odinist group in your neighborhood or, if there is not one,
      how you may form one.
 
      39. Can the Odinist Committee supply me with a list of Odinist temples
          and shall I be permitted to attend some of the inveitan?
 
              There are at presentno Odinist hofs (temples) in Great Britain open
      for public worship. Odinism starts with the individual and extends, through
      the family, to the community and the world. So with worship, which is at
      present practiced mostly at family level, the festivals of the Odinist
      year being celebrated in the home, with friends and other Odinist
      sometimes being invited to participate. But it is expected that various
      regional meeting places will be authorized when eventually the ritual of
      Odinist worship has been fully restored and gothar licensed by the
      successor body to the Odinist committee.
 
                          These things are thought the best:
                                    Fire, the sight of the sun,
                             Good health with the gift to keep it,
                                   And a life that avoids vice.
 
                                                 The High Song of Odin *
 
      * The verse from The High Song of Odin is from Paul B. Taylor and W H
      Auden's translation of The Elder Edda and is reproduced by permission of
      Messrs Faber and Faber. Other quotations from the Eddas in the foregoing
      pages are from the translation by Rasmus B. Anderson.
 
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                                                                              779
 


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