| Druidry |

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Druidism, or Druidry as it is often called, is for some a
spiritual path, for others a religion, and for others a cultural
activity.
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Read different authors’ views on What is Druidry?: |
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What does it mean to be a Druid today? Above all
else, Druidry means following a spiritual path rooted in the green Earth. It
means participating in a living Western spiritual tradition drawn from many
sources, including surviving legacies from Celtic wisdom teachings, but
embracing the contributions of many peoples and times. It means learning from
archaic traditions, from three centuries of modern Druid scholarship, and from
the always changing lessons of the living Earth itself. It means embracing an
experiential approach to religious questions, one that abandons rigid belief
systems in favour of inner development and individual contact with the realms of
nature and spirit.
John Michael
Greer, Druidry – A Green Way of
Wisdom |
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It’s an attitude, an
understanding, an exquisitely simple and natural philosophy of living. For a
great many it is a rich and ancient religion, a mystical spirituality. For
others it’s simply a guiding way of life. It is absolutely open and free for
anyone to
discover.
Emma Restall
Orr, Druid
Priestess |
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Rather than being an organised religion, Druidry
offers a personal individual life path that can become part of a modern urban
existence as easily as a rural life. It connects us instinctively to the
life-giving energies of the earth beneath the pavements, and the sky above the
highest office or apartment
block.
Cassandra Eason,
The Modern-Day
Druidess |
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What is Druidry? A
Spiritual Path, a way of life, a philosophy, Druidry is all of these…Druidry
today is alive and well, and has migrated around the world forming a wonderful
web of people who honour and respect the Earth and the sacred right to life of
all that is part of the Earth. Like a great tree drawing nourishment through its
roots, Druidry draws wisdom from its ancestral heritage. There is a saying in
Druidry that ‘The great tree thrives on the leaves that it casts to the ground’.
Druidry today does not pretend to present a replica of the past, rather it is
producing a new season’s growth.
(information with kind
appreciation from the order of bards, ovates
and druids. click on the link to learn
more) |