Monday, 2 March 2026

Christian Polytheism

 The rivalry between Christianity and paganism seems to be reviving in the West as the secular materialism of the post-war period becomes increasingly threadbare and unsatisfactory. Once our stomachs are full and we have a roof over our heads and maybe a family of our own, many us find there is still something lacking in our lives and we look for what might fill that lack. What is missing is meaning, of which there is none in the modern world. Meaning is only to be found in religion, though some seek it in art but even there it only exists when art looks beyond this world for inspiration.

It is the search for meaning that is behind any revival of religion. Some people turn to Christianity but often today some look to the pagan traditions which can provide an ethnic foundation to spiritual practice that Christianity does not have. A problem for would-be pagans is that the pagan religions died out centuries ago so all we have are modern simulations, based on records from the past but not living traditions. Therefore, any modern pagan is of necessity being somewhat performative when he practices his religion. It's rather like Westerners following the path of Hinduism which can never be a natural thing. There is always a cultural difference, in one case caused by space, in the other by time, and that renders the act artificial which is to say false. That doesn't mean it has no value but it will only have limited value.

Another problem is that paganism died out for a reason. It was superseded by the advent of Christ who really did make all things new. And yet some things were lost in the process, in particular a real connection to creation and a contact with the inner workings of nature as well as a proper relationship with the spirit of place. This is why the contemporary Christian needs to re-engage with paganism and even add a pagan element to his Christianity. This element should be seen in the light of Christ, in other words it must be baptised, but it provides a form of spiritual nourishment that Christianity lost as it lost touch with nature, with the earth and the land.

This is what I mean by Christian polytheism. Such a polytheism does not mean believing in many gods rather than one God. It means that under God there are many what we can justifiably call gods who carry out his work in creation. This is not too great a leap from where Christians already are, characterising them as angels, but angels are often regarded as somewhat abstract or, worse, sentimentalised. By seeing them as gods our minds can enter more deeply into the spiritual universe and the inside of creation. You could call them the inner energies of creation though with the understanding that behind these energies are beings not mere impersonal forces.

As a matter of fact, many of us have long been exposed to Christian polytheism without necessarily recognising it as such. C.S. Lewis and Tolkien were Christian polytheists, at least in their fiction, and that is a good deal of what makes their work appeal so much to the imagination. They were devout Christians but they were pagans of a sort too due to their creative absorption in the myths and legends of the past which deeply marked their literary work. Their reconciliation of pagan and Christian elements shows how each tradition can bring greater life to the other. You might see this as paganism providing soul to Christianity while in return Christianity brings spirit.

 150 years ago what had been esoteric began to be revealed until now all hidden teachings are out in the open, available for anyone interested to see. And yet the esoteric remains for there is always something more behind the scenes. How do you discover new levels of the esoteric now, ones that have the power of spiritual transformation that is largely lost when what is secret becomes externalised? You must go beyond the human mind and start to enter directly into the mind of Christ, and this you can do through love and imagination. An imaginative engagement with Christian polytheism in which the spiritual levels between the Creator and his emissaries, the gods and angels of creation, are explored will act like water on earth under the sun of Christ causing many beautiful flowers to grow.

5 comments:

Bruce Charlton said...

Thanks - that's really excellent! It's an excellent take on how we could, and should go forward from here. A theme worthy of further exploration, I think.

William Wildblood said...

Thanks Bruce.

Kristor said...

This topic has recently become a locus of intense activity. From the theological side, Michael Heiser (Unseen Realm) and Fr. Stephen de Young (Lord of Spirits podcast & books); from the folklorists, Martin Shaw; and from the biologists, Michael Levin. Not sure how to categorize Patrick Harpur - folklore, maybe? - but he's on the same wavelength. And of course credence in demons has exploded, thanks to Epstein and UFOs; credence in angels goes hand in hand with that.

Finally, Christianity outside the sophistical modernist Eurosphere never stopped hearty involvement with saints and angels. What seems to be happening now is the modernist world view is coming apart at the seams, in pretty much every respect.

William Wildblood said...

Yes, I was thinking that early Celtic Christianity and Orthodox Christianity and probably medieval Catholicism too with saints and angels all ran somewhat along these lines, and we have lost something important since then. As you say, the modernist world view is collapsing as its inconsistencies and falsehoods can no longer be compensated for simply by material prosperity.

Moonsphere said...

You've put it so well William that it's difficult to add anything further except to agree wholeheartedly.

Now is indeed the time for Christians to open themselves to the wider spiritual realities. Sadly many have withdrawn into narrow defensive positions. In their absolutist denial of the older religions and paganism they have become what the new atheists joked about when they said they believed in just one less God than the Christians.

Rather than putting on "the armour of God", they have donned an actual suit of armour which repels truth and falsehood alike thus entirely missing the New Age of Light that is now dawning.