Dictionary Definition
heathen adj : not acknowledging the God of
Christianity and Judaism and Islam [syn: heathenish, pagan, ethnic] n : a person who does not
acknowledge your God [syn: pagan, gentile, infidel]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From hæþen.Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -iːðən
Adjective
- Not adhering to an Abrahamic religion, pagan, adhering to polytheistic beliefs, especially when uncultured or uncivilized. (derogatory)
- uncultured, uncivilized, savage.
- pertaining to Germanic currents of neo-paganism known as Heathenry.
Translations
not adhering to an Abrahamic religion
- Finnish: pakanallinen
- German: heidnisch
- Russian: языческий
- Spanish: pagano
savage
- Finnish: pakanallinen
- Russian: дикий
pertaining to heathenry
- Finnish: pakanallinen
- German: heidnisch
- Spanish: pagano
Noun
- A person who does not follow an Abrahamic religion, a pagan. (derogatory)
- an uncultured or uncivilized person.
- self-designation of some adherents of neo-paganism.
Translations
person who does not follow an Abrahamic religion
- Finnish: pakana
- German: Heide
- Russian: язычник
- Spanish: pagano
uncultured or uncivilized person
- Finnish: pakana
- Russian: дикарь
self-designation of some adherents of
neo-paganism
Extensive Definition
Paganism (from Latin paganus,
meaning "country dweller, rustic") is a word used to refer to
various religions and religious beliefs from across the world. It
is a term which, from a Western perspective, has modern
connotations of spiritualist, animistic or shamanic practices or beliefs
of any folk
religion, and of historical and contemporary polytheistic
religions in particular.
The term can be defined broadly, to encompass the
faith traditions outside the Abrahamic
monotheistic group of
Judaism,
Christianity,
and Islam.
The group so defined includes many of the Eastern
religions, Native
American religions and mythologies, as well as non-Abrahamic
ethnic
religions in general. More narrow definitions will not include
any of the world
religions and restrict the term to local or rural currents not
organized as civil
religions. Characteristic of pagan traditions is the absence of
proselytism and the
presence of a living mythology which explains
religious practice.
The term "pagan" is a Christian adaptation of the
"gentile" of Judaism,
and as such has an inherent Christian or Abrahamic bias, and
pejorative
connotations among Westerners, comparable to heathen, and infidel, mushrik and kafir (كافر) in Islam. For this
reason, ethnologists avoid the term
"paganism," with its uncertain and varied meanings, in referring to
traditional or historic faiths, preferring more precise categories
such as polytheism,
shamanism, pantheism, or animism; however others
criticise the use of these terms, claiming that these are only
aspects that different faiths may share and do not denote the
religions themselves.
Since the later 20th century, "Pagan" or
"Paganism" has become widely used as a self-designation by
adherents of Neopaganism. As
such, various modern scholars have begun to apply the term to three
separate groups of faiths;
Historical Polytheism (such as Celtic
polytheism and Norse
paganism), Folk/ethnic/Indigenous
religions (such as Chinese
folk religion and
African traditional religion), and Neo-paganism
(such as Wicca and Germanic
Neopaganism).
Etymology
Pagan
The term pagan is from Latin paganus, an adjective originally meaning "rural", "rustic" or "of the country." As a noun, paganus was used to mean "country dweller, villager." The semantic development of post-classical Latin paganus in the sense "non-Christian, heathen" is unclear. The dating of this sense is controversial, but the 4th century seems most plausible. An earlier example has been suggested in Tertullian De Corona Militis xi, "Apud hunc [sc. Christum] tam miles est paganus fidelis quam paganus est miles infidelis," but here the word paganus may be interpreted in the sense "civilian" rather than "heathen". There are three main explanations of the development:- (i) The older sense of classical Latin pāgānus is "of the country, rustic" (also as noun). It has been argued that the transferred use reflects the fact that the ancient idolatry lingered on in the rural villages and hamlets after Christianity had been generally accepted in the towns and cities of the Roman Empire; cf. Orosius Histories 1. Prol. "Ex locorum agrestium compitis et pagis pagani vocantur." From its earliest beginnings, Christianity spread much more quickly in major urban areas (like Antioch, Alexandria, Corinth, Rome) than in the countryside (in fact, the early church was almost entirely urban), and soon the word for "country dweller" became synonymous with someone who was "not a Christian," giving rise to the modern meaning of "Pagan." This may, in part, have had to do with the closeness to nature of rural people, who may have been more resistant to the new ideas of Christianity than those who lived in major urban centers and were cut off from the cycles of nature and the forms of spirituality associated with them. However, it may have also resulted from early Christian missionaries focusing their efforts within major population centers (e.g., St. Paul), rather than throughout an expansive, yet sparsely populated, countryside (hence, the Latin term suggesting "uneducated country folk") until a bit later on.
- (ii) The more common meaning of classical Latin pāgānus is "civilian, non-militant" (adjective and noun). Christians called themselves mīlitēs, "enrolled soldiers" of Christ, members of his militant church, and applied to non-Christians the term applied by soldiers to all who were "not enrolled in the army".
- (iii) The sense "heathen" arose from an interpretation of paganus as denoting a person who was outside a particular group or community, hence "not of the city" or "rural"; cf. Orosius Histories 1. Prol. "ui alieni a civitate dei..pagani vocantur." See C. Mohrmann, Vigiliae Christianae 6 (1952) 9ff.
"Peasant" is a
cognate, via Old French
paisent. (Harry
Thurston Peck, Harper's Dictionary of Classical Antiquity, 1897;
"pagus").
In their distant origins, these usages derived
from pagus, "province, countryside", cognate to Greek πάγος "rocky
hill", and, even earlier, "something stuck in the ground", as a
landmark: the Proto-Indo-European
root *pag- means "fixed" and is also the source of the words page,
pale
(stake), and pole, as well as pact and peace.
While pagan is attested in English from the 14th
century, there is no evidence that the term paganism was in use in
English before the 17th century. The OED
instances Edward
Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776): "The divisions of
Christianity suspended the ruin of paganism." The term was not a
neologism, however, as
paganismus was already used by Augustine.
Less than twenty years after the last vestiges of
paganism were crushed with great severity by the emperor Theodosius
I Rome was seized by Alaric in 410. This
led to murmuring that the gods of paganism had taken greater care
of the city than that of the Christian God, inspiring St
Augustine to write The City
of God, alternative title "De Civitate Dei contra Paganos: The
City of God against the Pagans", in which he claimed that whilst
the great 'city of Man' had fallen, Christians were ultimately
citizens of the 'city of God.'
Heathen
Heathen is from Old English hæðen "not Christian or Jewish", (c.f. Old Norse heiðinn). Historically, the term was probably influenced by Gothic haiþi "dwelling on the heath", appearing as haiþno in Ulfilas' bible as "gentile woman," (translating the "Hellene" in Mark 7:26). This translation probably influenced by Latin paganus, "country dweller", or it was chosen because of its similarity to the Greek ethne, "gentile". It has even been suggested that Gothic haiþi is not related to "heath" at all, but rather a loan from Armenian hethanos, itself loaned from Greek ethnos.Terminology
Common word usage
Both "pagan" and "heathen" have historically been used as a pejorative by adherents of monotheistic religions (such as Judaism, Christianity and Islam) to indicate a disbeliever in their religion. Although, in modern times it is not always used as a pejorative. "Paganism" frequently refers to the religions of classical antiquity, most notably Greek mythology or Roman religion, and can be used neutrally or admiringly by those who refer to those complexes of belief. However, until the rise of Romanticism and the general acceptance of freedom of religion in Western civilization, "Paganism" was almost always used disparagingly of heterodox beliefs falling outside the established political framework of the Christian Church. "Pagan" came to be equated with a Christianized sense of "epicurian" to signify a person who is sensual, materialistic, self-indulgent, unconcerned with the future and uninterested in sophisticated religion. The word was usually used in this worldly and stereotypical sense, particularly among those who were drawing attention to what they perceived as being the limitations of paganism, for example, as when G. K. Chesterton wrote: "The pagan set out, with admirable sense, to enjoy himself. By the end of his civilization he had discovered that a man cannot enjoy himself and continue to enjoy anything else." In sharp contrast Swinburne the poet would comment on this same theme: "Thou hast conquered, O pale Galilean; the world has grown grey from thy breath; We have drunken of things Lethean, and fed on the fullness of death."Christianity itself has been perceived at times
as a form of paganism by followers of the other Abrahamic
religionsbecause of, for example, the Christian doctrine of the
Trinity, the celebration of pagan feast days, and other practices
– through a process described as "baptising"or "christianization". Even
between Christians there have been similar charges of paganism
levelled, especially by Protestants, towards the Roman Catholic and
Orthodox Churches for their veneration of the saints and
images.
Heathenry
"Heathen" (Old English hæðen) is a translation of Paganus. The Germanic tribes were distributed over Eastern and Central Europe by the 5th century, and their dialects ceased to be mutually intelligible from around that time, Christianization of the Germanic peoples took place from the 4th (Goths) to the 6th (Anglo-Saxons, Franks) or 8th (Alamanni, Saxons) centuries on the continent, and from the 9th to 12th centuries in Iceland and Scandinavia.Pagan classifications
Pagan subdivisions coined by Isaac Bonewits- Paleopaganism: A retronym coined to contrast with "Neopaganism", denoting a Pagan culture that has not been disrupted by other cultures. The term applies to Hinduism, Shinto, pre-Migration period Germanic paganism as described by Tacitus, Celtic polytheism as described by Julius Caesar, and the Greek and Roman religion.
- Mesopaganism: A group, which is, or has been, significantly influenced by monotheistic, dualistic, or nontheistic worldviews, but has been able to maintain an independence of religious practices. This group includes aboriginal Americans as well as Australian aboriginals, Viking Age Norse paganism. Influences include: Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism, Theosophy, Spiritualism, and the many Afro-Diasporic faiths like Haitian Vodou, and Santería. Bonewits includes British Traditional Wicca in this subdivision.
- Neopaganism: A movement by modern people to revive nature-worshipping, pre-Christian religions, or other nature-based spiritual paths. This definition may include anything on a sliding scale from Reconstructionist at one end to non-reconstructionist groups such as Neo-druidism and Wicca at the other.
Groups considered Pagan
Historical polytheism
Contemporary ethnic religion
see ethnic religion There are many surviving traditions of ethnic religion. Organized ethnic religions that achieved the status of a civil religion are Shinto, tied to Japanese identity, and Judaism, tied to Jewish identity. In nationalist definitions, Hinduism may be tied to Indian identity.Uninstitutionalized folk
religion is found mainly in rural and sparsely populated areas.
These include Animism, ancestor
worship and Shamanism of
Asia, Africa, the Americas, as well
as New
Guinea and other Pacific
islands. Chinese
folk religion is an umbrella term for uninstitutionalized folk
traditions under a secular regime.
All world
religions, however, also include folk religious aspects, as
opposed to their theological or philosophical aspects, see folk
Christianity, or local institutions of revealed religions may
become strongly tied to ethnic identity, e.g. Yazdânism
(Kurdish faiths descending from Zoroastrianism),
Tibetan
Buddhism, or various Christian national
churches such as the Armenian
Apostolic Church, the various Syriac
churches, and the various branches of the Orthodox Church, e.g.,
Anglican
Orthodox, Greek
Orthodox, Russian
Orthodox and other non-Roman churches.
Africa
During the expansion of the Sokoto Caliphate in West Africa, Islamic Fulbe (Fula) labelled their non-Muslim neighbours, such as this Kapsiki diviner, Kirdi, or "pagans".Eurasia
Eurasian ethnic religions became largely extinct in the course of the Middle Ages, first with Christianization in the West and the spread of Buddhism in the East, and then with the Islamic conquests of Persia, Central and South Asia. A notable survival of pre-Islamic traditions are the people of Kafirstan, now shrunk to the Kalasha people, inhabiting three valleys in the NWFP, Pakistan. The 2002 census of the Russian Federation reports 123,423 people (0.23% of the population) as belonging to ethnic groups predominantly adhering to "traditional beliefs", mostly in Siberia and the Russian Far East. In Japan, there is the Ryukyuan religion.Central America
see Mayan astrology In spite of five centuries of persecution Mayan paganism is alive and well in Guatemala, and is experiencing a resurgence of interest among young Mayans. Recent peace accords signed by the Guatemalan government have provided funds to teach Mayan language and traditional religion in rural schools.Pagan revivals and new religious movements
Neopaganism
Neopaganism includes reconstructed religions such as Hellenic, Celtic or Germanic reconstructionism as well as modern eclectic traditions such as Discordianism, or Wicca and its many offshoots.Many of the "revivals", Wicca and Neo-druidism
in particular, have their roots in 19th century Romanticism and
retain noticeable elements of occultism or theosophy that were current
then, setting them apart from historical rural (paganus) folk
religion. The
Íslenska Ásatrúarfélagið is a notable exception in that it was
derived more or less directly from remnants in rural
folklore.
Neopaganism in the United States accounts for roughly a third
of all neopagans worldwide, and for some 0.2% of US population,
figuring as the sixth largest non-Christian denomination in the US,
after Judaism (1.4%),
Islam (0.6%),
Buddhism
(0.5%), Hinduism (0.3%)
and Unitarian
Universalism (0.3%).
Modern nature religion
Many current pagans in industrial societies base their beliefs and practices on a connection to Nature, and a divinity within all living things, but this may not hold true for all forms of Paganism, past or present. Some believe that there are many deities, a pantheon of deities, which is known as polytheism. By contrast, pantheism is the belief that the combined subconscious spirit of all living things form the Universal Deity. Panentheism takes this one step further, incorporating the idea that the Universal Deity is both in everything (in the universe) but also extends beyond the known physical universe. Ancient Greek paganism, which tended in many cases to be a deification of the local deity, as Athena in Athens, saw each local emanation as an aspect of an Olympian deity during the Classical period and then after Alexander to syncretize the deity with the political process, with "state divinities" increasingly assigned to various localities, as Roma personified Rome. Many ancient regimes would claim to be the representative on earth of these gods, and would depend on more or less elaborate bureaucracies of state-supported priests and scribes to lend public support to their claims.In one well-established sense, paganism is the
belief in any non-monotheistic
religion, which would mean that the Pythagoreans of ancient
Greece would
not be considered Pagan in that sense, since they were monotheist,
but not in the Abrahamic tradition. In an extreme sense, and like
the pejorative sense below, any belief, ritual or pastime not
sanctioned by a religion accepted as orthodox by those doing the
describing, such as Burning Man,
Halloween, or
even Christmas, can be
described as "pagan" by the person or people who object to them and
the individuals who choose to claim this title.
Demographics
Paganism has been previously defined broadly, to encompass many or most of the faith traditions outside the Abrahamic monotheistic group of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. If the Indian religions are included, nearly 30% of the world population can be termed as Pagans.The term has also been used more narrowly,
however, to refer only to religions outside the very large group of
so-called Axial Age
faiths that encompass both the Abrahamic religions and the chief
Indian religions. Under this narrower definition, which differs
from that historically used by many (though by no means all)
Christians and other Westerners, contemporary paganism is a
relatively smaller and more marginal numerical phenomenon.
According to Encyclopedia
Britannica estimates (as of 2005), adherents of Chinese
folk religion account for some 6.3% of world population, and
adherents of tribal
religions ("ethnogeligionists") for another 4.0%. The number of
adherents of neopaganism is insignificant in comparison, amounting
to 0.02% of world population at the most, or some 0.4% of the
"ethnoreligious" population.
See also
Notes
References
- Michael York, Pagan Theology: Paganism as a World Religion NYU Press (2003), ISBN 0814797083.
External links
Articles
- BBC - Religion & Ethics - Paganism - overview with many articles and links
- BBC - The Revival of Paganism - short report on modern Paganism
- The Demise of Paganism by James J. O'Donnell
- Surviving in church as a Pagan - article supporting the claim that Pagan religions influenced Christianity
Organisations
- Netherlands Centre for Indigenous Peoples
- Pagan Association UK
- The Pagan Federation International
- The Pagan Federation UK
- Pagan Network
- Speaking 4 Earth: International Platform for Indigenous Peoples
- Chakana: NGO & knowledge centre about Indians of the highlands (Nederlands)
- Vortigern's Cave, Pagan Networking in South East UK
heathen in Afrikaans: Paganisme
heathen in Arabic: باغانية
heathen in Bengali: অবিশ্বাসীবাদ
(পেগানিজম)
heathen in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Паганства
heathen in Bulgarian: Езичество
heathen in Catalan: Paganisme
heathen in Czech: Pohanství
heathen in Welsh: Paganiaeth
heathen in Danish: Hedenskab
heathen in German: Heidentum
heathen in Estonian: Paganlus
heathen in Modern Greek (1453-):
Παγανισμός
heathen in Spanish: Pagano
heathen in Esperanto: Paganismo
heathen in French: Paganisme
heathen in Western Frisian: Heidendom
heathen in Galician: Pagán
heathen in Indonesian: Paganisme
heathen in Italian: Paganesimo
heathen in Hebrew: פגניות
heathen in Lithuanian: Pagonys
heathen in Hungarian: Pogányság
heathen in Dutch: Heidendom
heathen in Japanese: ペイガニズム
heathen in Norwegian: Paganisme
heathen in Narom: Pagannisme
heathen in Uzbek: Paganizm
heathen in Polish: Pogaństwo
heathen in Portuguese: Paganismo
heathen in Russian: Язычество
heathen in Albanian: Paganizmi
heathen in Simple English: Paganism
heathen in Serbian: Паганизам
heathen in Finnish: Pakanuus
heathen in Swedish: Paganism
heathen in Tatar: Mäcüsilek
heathen in Turkish: Paganlık
heathen in Ukrainian: Язичництво
heathen in Yiddish: אפגאט
heathen in Samogitian: Paguonībė
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Gothic,
Philistine, agnostic, allotheist, allotheistic, animist, animistic, atheist, atheistic, barbarian, barbaric, barbarous, bibliolatrous, bookless, chthonian, deceived, disbeliever, disbelieving, doubting, ethnic, faithless, fetishistic, functionally
illiterate, gentile,
godless, grammarless, heathenish, heretic, heretical, hoodwinked, idol worshiping,
idolater, idolatress, idolatric, idolatrical, idolatrous, idolistic, ill-educated,
illiterate, infidel, infidelic, irreligious, led astray,
lowbrow, minimifidian, misinformed, misinstructed, mistaught, nonbeliever, nonintellectual,
nullifidian,
pagan, paganish, paganistic, pagano-Christian,
pantheistic,
polytheist, polytheistic, primitive, profane, rude, savage, sceptic, sceptical, secularist, unbeliever, unbelieving, unbooked, unbookish, unbooklearned, unbriefed, unchristian, uncivilized, uncultivated, uncultured, unedified, uneducated, unenlightened, unerudite, unguided, uninstructed, unintellectual, unlearned, unlettered, unliterary, unread, unrefined, unscholarly, unschooled, unstudious, untaught, untutored, zoolatrous