CUUPS Events on April 21

adopt a spot signPlease join us at 12:45 on Sunday, April 21 for our bi-monthly Adopt-a-Spot cleanup.  We’ll pick up trash on Fulton Street from Crescent to University as part of the Keep Denton Beautiful program.  It takes 45 minutes to an hour, depending on how many people we have.

Come out and help us care for our little corner of Mother Earth!

Afterwards (or about 2:00) we’ll move to Cynthia’s house for a potluck lunch and our Spring Social Gathering.  Contact Cyn or John for the address.

Please bring a dish to share for a potluck lunch.

This is primarily a social gathering, but we’ll also discuss plans for Summer classes, Fall circles, and other gatherings.

New members and friends are especially encouraged to attend.

See you on the 21st!

CUUPS camping Nov12 27

Ostara Circle March 23

Come celebrate the Rites of Spring with the Denton Covenant of Unitarian Universalist Pagans.

As the wheel of the year turns we mark Ostara, the Spring Equinox, with a joyous celebration of fertility in all its glorious forms. Please join us on Saturday, March 23 for our celebration. We will gather at DUUF at 7:00 pm and begin promptly at 7:30 pm.

Prepare for new beginnings!

Please bring an item of food or drink to share after the ceremony. Donations of a dollar or three to help defray expenses will be appreciated but are not required.

Children who can participate maturely and respectfully are welcome to join in. Childcare will be provided if requested by Tuesday, March 19.

If you have any questions, just ask here in the comments.

Ostara 2013

Imbolc Moves to Friday, Feb 1

Our Imbolc Circle is moving to Friday, February 1.  Gathering begins at 7:30 PM and the circle will begin promptly at 8:00.

Imbolc was previously scheduled for Saturday, January 26.  However, Denton UU minister (and CUUPS member) Rev. Pam Wat was chosen to participate in a local version of “Dancing With the Stars” to benefit the United Way of Denton County.  We’d hate to ask people to choose between supporting Rev. Pam and celebrating Imbolc, plus moving to the following Friday lets us hold it on the exact date of February 1.

Please adjust your calendars and plan to join us for Imbolc on Friday, February 1.

Imbolc flyer 2013

A Call to Action

Last night’s Winter Solstice ritual was everything I had hoped it would be: a good turnout, lots of participation, the presence of the gods and ancestors, and a very strong response to the Call to Action in the main working.

For those of you who couldn’t be there, here’s the Call to Action. The Old Gods and Goddesses are still calling…

the altars and priestesses of Danu, Cernunnos, and Morrigan

We all know what happens when a species’ predators are removed from its environment. Reproduction increases, resources are consumed at an ever-increasing rate, and competing species are crowded out. Eventually the population exceeds the carrying capacity of the ecosystem. Then individuals and groups fight over scarce resources, starvation begins and many die.

Our natural predators of disease and famine are not gone, but they have been beaten back. War still kills too many, but it kills far fewer than at any time since civilization began. Aided by the fear of scarcity, the myth of dominion, and ordinary greed, the human population has exploded and is consuming resources at a rate that cannot be sustained.

Some feel the Earth would be better off without us; if we drove ourselves to extinction and some other species took our place. I think they’re wrong. Any species that came after us would be shaped by the same evolutionary forces that shaped us and would likely behave much like us. The best chance the Earth has of evolving intelligent, compassionate life is for us to grow up.

Tonight, one Mayan long count calendar comes to an end and another long count calendar begins. Tonight, one era, one aeon ends and another begins – not because it is written in the stars but because we will make it so.

We are not alone in this great work. Our goddesses and gods, our ancestors, and the spirits of Nature stand ready to inspire us and guide us and assist us. We are their hands, making the Divine manifest in this world.

Tonight, three ancient deities have joined our circle. Danu asks you to help her create new ways of living and being. Cernunnos asks you to help him nurture these new ways so they can grow and expand. Morrigan asks you to help her protect the new aeon from those who are so invested in the old era they can’t see they’re leading us down the road to extinction.

If one of these deities is speaking to you, if one of these roles calls to you, I ask you to come forward, choose a token and be blessed by the priestess. You will take no oaths and you will make no obligations. But you will declare your intent to help create a world that is intelligent, compassionate and sustainable.

Come, be blessed, and become a part of this New Aeon.

Tokens of a Calling

Which one speaks to you?  Which one calls to you?  Which one needs you in their Great Work?

Denton CUUPS Winter Solstice
Friday, December 21
gather at 7:30 PM, ritual begins at 8:00

Winter Solstice Circle – Friday, December 21

Please join us for our Winter Solstice circle on Friday, December 21.  Gathering begins at 7:30 PM and the ritual begins promptly at 8:00 PM

December 21 is the Winter Solstice, the shortest day and the longest night, when as our ancestors did long ago we celebrate the Rebirth of the Sun.

This year, December 21 also marks the end of the Mayan Long Count calendar after over 5125 years.  Some say this means the end of the world.  Some say it means the end of an aeon, and perhaps, the beginning of a new aeon.  We don’t think the world is going to end, but we do think our world needs new ways of living and being, new ways that are compassionate and sustainable.

In this circle we will take the energy surrounding the Mayan calendar, combine it with the energy of the Winter Solstice and use it to create a new aeon of our own.

Please bring an item of food or drink to share after the ceremony.  Donations of a dollar or three to help defray expenses will be appreciated but are not required.

Children 10 and older who can participate maturely and respectfully are welcome to join in.  We will have childcare available for younger children.

For more information, please contact John Beckett at JohnFranc@aol.com or 972-948-9211

Pagan Reading List

Cynthia and I put this together for our Introduction to Modern Pagan Religion class. It’s a list of the books we found helpful when we were starting out. Some books I liked when I first read them, but as I learned more (through both study and practice) I realized they were off-base. These books have held up.

So, if you’re just starting out, or if you missed one of these your first time through, or if you found this site through UU links and you’re curious about Paganism, here’s our recommended reading list.

Basics

Wicca, A Guide for the Solitary Practitioner – Scott Cunningham. Start here. This was recommended to me when I started 17 years ago, and it’s still the best introduction there is. It’s written from a Wiccan perspective, but 98% of it is applicable to any Neopagan path. Easy to read, easy to understand, and most importantly, easy to put into practice.

The Spiral Dance – Starhawk. Another classic of contemporary Paganism. I found her approach to be too radically political for my center-left tastes, but I’ve been told the 20th Anniversary Edition has commentary that tones some of that down. Politics aside, the rituals in Spiral Dance are excellent and are great to use either as is or as a guide for writing your own.

Creative Visualization – Shakti Gawain. This is a “New Age” book rather than Pagan (old joke – Q: what’s the difference between New Age and Pagan? A: one decimal place in the price), but it does a very good job of teaching visualization skills, which are essential for performing magic. Short, to the point, and effective.

Ritual

Neopagan Rites: A Guide to Creating Public Rituals that Work – Isaac Bonewits. I have the first edition, titled Rites of Worship. Isaac writes from a Wiccan/Druid perspective, but the concepts and processes he describes will work in just about any religious setting. If you want to understand why some religious services leave you energized and others put you to sleep, read this book.

The Elements of Ritual – Deborah Lipp. This is written from a traditional Wiccan perspective, but Wicca has influenced most modern Pagan traditions (for good and for ill), so it’s applicable to most of us. Lipp does an excellent job of deconstructing Wiccan liturgy and explaining the symbolism in it – I particularly like her description of the traditional circle casting as a ritual re-enactment of the Creation of the Universe. Interestingly, Lipp is Isaac Bonewits’ ex-wife.

Personal Practice

The Circle Within – Dianne Sylvan. There are very few books on Pagan personal practice – this is the best of them. It covers relationships with deities, ethics, meditation, and personal rituals. Paganism is more than the eight sabbats and the full and new moons – this book helps you figure out what to do every day.

The Veil’s Edge – Willow Polson. This book nominally deals with the Veil Between the Worlds, but its real value is in presenting a magical worldview in a way that is easy to understand and easy to put into practice. If What the Bleep Do We Know? had been written by Pagans, this is what it would look like. I led a group study of this book a few years back – it was very helpful. I’ve still got my outline if anybody wants it.

The Way of the Shaman – Michael Harner. This is the classic text on “core shamanism,” the processes and techniques common to most shamanic traditions. Shamanism can be a practice all its own, but as with visualization, the techniques are very helpful in working magic and communing with deities.

Classics

The Power of Myth – Joseph Campbell. The book is good, the 6-hour videos/DVDs are better. This began in 1988 as a PBS special, with Bill Moyers interviewing Campbell about his work and his views on mythology, which focus on universal themes found in myths around the world. PBS still shows this occasionally, especially at pledge drive time.

Witchcraft Today – Gerald Gardner. The Witchcraft Act wasn’t repealed in Britain until 1951. In 1954, Gardner wrote this book presenting Wicca – the religion of witchcraft – to the mundane world. Yes, some of Gardner’s stories about the roots and origins of Wicca were more fantasy than fact, but this book is a good look at the early years of Wicca. We’ve come a long way.

Witchcraft For Tomorrow – Doreen Valiente. Valiente was one of Gardner’s high priestesses and a superb writer. She’s largely responsible for reworking The Charge of the Goddess into the beautiful poetry we have today. Lots of interesting historical information, and the spells, rituals, and poetry are classics.

The Mabinogion. This is the classic collection of Welsh myths. They weren’t written down until well into the medieval period, meaning they’ve been thoroughly Christianized. But the original Celtic heroes, deities, stories and concepts are still easy to follow. The version I have is translated by Patrick K. Ford.

The Norse Myths – Kevin Crossley-Holland. This is a translation of the Prose Edda, the collection of Norse myths written down in the 13th century by Icelander Snorri Sturluson. These stories are as much a part of our Anglo-Saxon cultural heritage as the Celtic myths of The Mabinogion. JRR Tolkien drew heavily on them in writing his Middle Earth novels.

History

The Triumph of the Moon – Ronald Hutton. Every Wiccan, Druid, Heathen, and other modern Pagan needs to read this book. Hutton is Professor of History at the University of Bristol in England – this is a serious look at the origins and development of Wicca, and through it (directly or indirectly), most other modern Pagan traditions. The book is literally hard to read – it’s printed in 8-point type. But if you want to separate the truth of the origins of modern Paganism from the fantasy, misinformation, and outright lies, you need to read this book.

The Great Transformation – Karen Armstrong. This book has very little to do with ancient paganism and nothing to do with modern Paganism. It’s Armstrong’s history of the Axial Age, the relatively short period about 2600 years ago when several major religions were founded/developed, including Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism, and Judaism. For those coming to Paganism from the monotheistic religions, The Great Transformation does a good job of explaining the religious history nobody taught in Sunday School. And it reminds us that all religions – old or new – need a strong this-world ethical component. If you want something that focuses solely on the three Western monotheistic religions, try Armstrong’s A History of God.

Welcome to Denton CUUPS new site!

If you’ve tried to access our old website anytime in the last couple months, you know it’s been down.  Resurrecting it turned out to be just about impossible.  So we decided we’d just start over from scratch:  new address, new web host, and a new site using WordPress.  It’s not as quite flexible as the old HTML code, but it’s far easier to work with… which should make it easier to keep updated.

We’ll use this site to keep our calendar and contact information.  We’ll post announcements here, but we’ll keep posting them on our Facebook page and via our YahooGroup too.

It’s good to have a web presence, and it’s good to be back.  See you at the next circle!