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mta
Wiccan/Pagan/Other Mark Unseen   Feb 24 22:59 UTC 1999

I havea very basic question here.  I think it's been touched on in some
previous items, but not discussed in depth.

Background:  I've thought of myself as "a pagan" and a "hearth witch" for
decades.  I never really thought much more about labels than that, but if
asked whether I was a Wiccan, my answer was generally "No, not exactly".

See, I assumed Wiccan was a specific path of paganism -- sort of like Baptists
are a specific sect of Christianity.  I think of myself as a generic pagan
rather than the more specific Wiccan because I borrow freely from whatever
traditions speak to me.  Sure, there are Wiccan aspects to how I worship. 
There are also Hindu and native American aspects, and many others.

Recently however, I was told that I was being dishonest in not calling myself
Wiccan because that's what I am...

I dion't deny it -- I'm just not sure how to separate what a wiccan believes
from everything else I believe.  I have no idea whether I'm a Wiccan or not.

So...can anyone try to give me a hand in understanding what distinguishes a
Wiccan from any other Pagan tradition?

Thanks!

25 responses total.
jazz
response 1 of 25: Mark Unseen   Feb 25 03:26 UTC 1999

        It's a good question.  I can think of several definitions as I
understand them, and I'm sure I could find a dozen people in this conference
alone who could correct me, or disagree with me, or take offence.

        Wicca's always had Celtic overtones - though most of the serious Celtic
believers I've met perfer to think of themselves as Wittan, instead - but also
conveys anything descended from Gerald Gardner, and can cover many different
theologies.

        Don't let them give you a hard time about labels;  the pagan community
hasn't agreed upon one yet. :)
kami
response 2 of 25: Mark Unseen   Feb 25 04:58 UTC 1999

Aaaaarrrrgh!  (sorry- overreacting, not actually upset)
1. Wicca is not Celtic, although it borrows some Celtic holiday names, etc.
Really.  And "Celtic Wicca" isn't.  Although some folks practice a hybrid
which uses Wiccan forms and Celtic deities, imagery, etc.
2. Witta is utter bullshit.  It's not even a possible word in any Celtic
language.  The book was Wicca with vaguely Celtic overtones, once again. Grr.
The Celtic pagans I know call themselves Celtic pagans or Druids or Filidh
or some such.

Now, to answer your question, Misti- I think you've got the right of it;
you're an eclectic pagan, a "hearth witch", and a very good one. 
*Technically*, a Wiccan is an initiate of one of the traditions descended from
Gerald Gardner's work.  I'd include "gardneroid eclectic" in that mix,
although "stuffy traditionalists" <g> would not.  So the Crafters are Wiccan,
to my way of thinking, since their basic training is pretty straightforward
Wiccan, even though they are not currently a recognized tradition. (Who
knows...<g>) Another local group, "The Wyrd Roots of the Sacred Forest" (I
think) are *not* Wiccan in their practice, although the influence is certainly
there.  Nor do they call themselves Wiccan, they are their own tradition (I've
forgotten the name, <sigh>) with its own intitiatory process and ritual
structure.

If you want to be more specific, you could certainly say you're "pagan with
Wiccan leanings" or "Wiccan-influenced pagan", but why worry about it? You
know what you do and believe, and who's job is it to judge you, beyond that?
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