Ascendant
Modern Essays on Polytheism and Theology
Rivised Edition
With Contributions by P. Butler, Patrick Dunn, John Michael Greer, Brandon Hensley, Wayne Keysor, and Gwendolyn Reece.
Edited by
Michael Hardy
Bibliotheca Alexandrina, 2019
Theology, the discipline that analyzes, examines, and seeks to explain
religious ideas, is a vibrant area of inquiry. Scholars and philosophers have produced
countless works of theology over the past several thousand years.
In the West, however, virtually all theology concerns monotheistic faith systems.
Polytheism escapes the notice of most scholars, and those who do address it rarely
write books intended for a general, non-academic audience.
Polytheology must become its own active discipline if modern
Pagan practice is to deepen and grow. Monotheistic assumptions so pervade our
culture that even those few people born into polytheist religions
(or those who grew up with no religion at all) cannot help but be influenced by them.
Polytheology raises questions that cannot be adequately addressed by answers
originally developed in a monotheistic context. Because polytheism is inherently
open to variation, the goal of polytheology is not to arrive at a single truth so
much as to elucidate the possibilities, to honor and embrace differences, to explore
the nature of the Gods and their relationship to humanity. These philosophical
ideas provide a greater understanding of the Cosmos, Gods and humanity, and
topics such as morality, mortality, and myth.
This volume - with contributions from Edward P. Butler, Patrick Dunn, John
Michael Greer, Brandon Hensley, Wayne Keysor, and Gwendolyn Reece -
is, we hope, a useful addition to this young but growing field.
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