kallistii: (Default)
[personal profile] kallistii
It seems that The Covenant of Unitarian-Universalist Pagans has had it's Independent Affiliate Status renewal rejected by the Unitarian Universalist Association.

Read more here:

http://thelivelytradition.blogspot.com/2007/05/independent-affiliate-mystery.html

Date: 2007-06-07 11:44 pm (UTC)
ext_36983: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bradhicks.livejournal.com
Honestly, as someone who was more or less there when CUUPS began, I've never thought that it was a good fit. And the local Unitarian churches both threw out CUUPS years ago. Come on, I think we all know what the issues are here. One is that Pagans, having their own issues that preclude them from any kind of organizational structure secure enough to build real churches or temples of their own were, frankly, parasitic on the UUs. It got to be a real hot-button issue in the local UU congregations that the Pagans expected preferential access to the church property while not actually donating anything to the church or attending (in all but the smallest numbers) any of the church's non-Pagan events. Nor is that at all surprising; the level of "fit" between the historical theology of Neopagan Witchcraft and the historical theology of the UUA is pretty loose, at best.

Pagans can have temples any time they're willing to organize their own church-buying, church-sustaining organizations, commit the necessary financial resources, and buy their own churches. Your average new church gets started by fewer than 10 wage earners, 4 to 6 of them taking out second mortgages to raise the down payment and all 10 or so of them pledging 1% to 2% of their gross income to cover the payments. All that stops Pagans from doing so is lack of will and lack of trust in each other. Trying to short-circuit that progress by parasitising other bodies, up to and including attempts to take them over from within, are neither ethical nor helpful.

Date: 2007-06-08 03:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kallisti.livejournal.com
I was never a fan of the set-up...and I liked it even less when a group at the local UU church tried to form a CUUPs, and the other members of the congregation freaked because there were "witches" in their midst. If it had been a good fit, and the UUs were as open as a group as I was led to believe, then I though it wouldn't be a problem.

I am more worried, personally, about a friend of mine that had found a path to ministry *and* being pagan through the UU system. I hope this will not adversely affect her hope to go through the full ministry training.

I agree with you about the temple thing. Too many pagans are enamoured with the "were part of an ancient religion" going back to the dawn of time, and complaining about Christians stole all our things. We are never going to go back to a mythical "golden age", and have to realize that we have to make do with today's society, and build a system of worshipping The Gods as part of our society today. I though ADF have a system, but upon learning that the whole Indo-European cultural thing is a fairly old concept, and used to be called Aryan Culture, and thus was the basis of many bits of nastiness has led me to abandon ADF as long as they claim IE "foundation myth".

What is needed is a eyes wide open attempt at taking the best of the past and today, and creating something that will work *today*.

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