Animism:
ancient philosophy that views everything in Nature as having an indwelling
spirit/soul, including the plants, rocks, waters, winds, fires, animals,
humans, and other life forms. Animism is the foundation of shamanism
and has been considered the earliest form of human religion on planet
Earth.
Earth-centered
Spirituality: honoring the spiritual interconnectedness of
life on planet Earth, often as Mother Earth or Gaia, but sometimes
as a gender neutral Earth Spirit. Sometimes called Earth religion
and Gaian (Gaean) religion. Related EcoChristian form is Creation-Centered
Spirituality.
Ecofeminism:
feminist environmental philosophy that draws parallels between the
oppression of women and the oppression of Nature by patriarchy and
which advocates the spiritual and political liberation of both.
Goddess
Spirituality: revering Nature and honoring the Great Goddess
in one or more of Her many forms. Usually polytheistic and sometimes
multicultural in practice. Usually incorporates feminist perspectives.
Heathen:
Another name for Pagan. Many contemporary practitioners of Teutonic
Nature religions prefer this term for themselves and their spirituality.
Nature
Religions: religions that include an honoring of the Divine
as immanent in Nature. May be pre-modern, modern, or post-modern in
philosophical orientation. Usually polytheistic, animistic, and pantheistic.
Include traditional ways of various native peoples of the Americas,
Africa, Asia, Australia, Polynesia, Europe, and elsewhere; religions
of ancient Pagan cultures, such as Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Minoan,
Assyrian, Celtic, Teutonic, and others; and contemporary Paganism.
Nature
Spirituality: honoring the spiritual interconnectedness of
life not only on Planet Earth, but throughout the Universe/Cosmos;
more encompassing term than Earth-centered Spirituality because it
also includes Celestial religions; used by some as synonymous with
contemporary Paganism and by others as also including interfaith blends,
such as those that combine Paganism with EcoChristianity or EcoBuddhism.
NeoPagan:
Contemporary Pagan.
Pagan:
pertains to a Nature religion or a practitioner of an ancient and/or
contemporary Nature religion; also used to refer to a Nature Spirituality,
Earth-centered Spirituality, and/or Goddess Spirituality group or
practitioner.
Pantheism:
the Divine as immanent; the Divine is in everything and everything
has a Divine aspect.
Panentheism:
Pantheism that also includes a transcendent component conceptualized
as the Sacred Whole or Divine Unity.
Polytheism:
honoring Divinity in two or more forms. Can be belief in/worship of
multiple aspects of a particular deity; of the Divine as Goddess and
God; or of many Goddesses, Gods, Nature Spirits, and/or other Divine
forms. Some, but not all, polytheistic Nature religions acknowledge
an all encompassing Divine Unity.
Shaman:
an adept who serves as healer and spirit world communicator for her/his
tribe or community. Sometimes known as a Medicine person. This role
is tribal culture/community defined.
Shamanic
Practitioner: someone learning and working with shamanistic
healing practices for self-development, and in some cases, also for
helping others. Sometimes known as a Medicine worker. This role is
self-defined.
Shamanism:
animistic spiritual healing practices usually involving ecstatic
trance and spirit world journeys by adepts. Forms of shamanism include
Traditional, which are rooted in specific indigenous tribal peoples
cultures, and Multicultural, which are contemporary forms that integrate
old and new spirit wisdom ways from more than one culture.
Wiccan
Spirituality: contemporary paths rooted in one or more Nature
folk religions of old Europe. Also known as the Old Religion, the
Craft, Wicca, Wicce, Ways of the Wise, NeoPagan Witchcraft, and Benevolent
Witchcraft.
Witch:
Some Wiccan practitioners use the word "Witch"
for themselves in connection with their spirituality to bring back
its pre-Inquisition use in Europe as a term of honor and respect meaning
"medicine person/medicine worker," "shaman/shamanic
practitioner," "wise woman/man," "priestess/priest
of the Old Religion." Other Wiccans refuse to use the word "Witch"
because of later negative definitions of the word which led to its
use as a tool of Pagan genocide and religious oppression in Europe
and North America for hundreds of years. During the "Burning
Times" of the Middle Ages, bigots in power changed its definition,
making it a term linked with evil, and used it as a brand to mark
and exterminate folk healers, those who refused to convert to state-sanctioned
forms of Christianity, political rivals, and others. Contemporary
usage of the word "Witch" by non-Wiccans is diverse but
in recent years has been changing in academia and elsewhere to reflect
the growing public awareness and understanding of Wiccan Spirituality's
reclaiming of the word.