Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Commentary on the Charge of the Goddess 33: Power and Compassion



Power and Compassion
In his published writings Gardner has much to say about the power utilised by the witches, which he sees as resident in the witches’ bodies, and which can be ‘raised’ by various methods and focussed to effect the witch’s intent.[1] He does not actually identify this power with the Goddess directly, however is clear that he sees the power as a power of creation, and also that he sees the Goddess as the primary power of creation.
The other sense in which the word power is understood is one which can create problems for those trying to understand witchcraft, because of the stereotype of the witch or occultist as a power-hungry deviant who has access to some secret knowledge allowing him adversely to influence events in the world around him. This view reaches its extreme in recurring rumours of occult conspiracies and plots to overturn the world order as we know it. Depending on the viewpoint of the occultist, a dualistic world-view leads to the polarisation of people into solely good or bad magicians, and the purpose of the occultist can be seen as fighting this conspiracy.[2]
The view of power in the Charge is different from this: the new slant on the material taken from Aradia and Crowley combats this polarisation by making it plain that, while the law is not seen as being for all, the power is nonetheless available to anyone who wants it and is willing to learn our Goddess’s way of personal power and dignity. Neither the relentless search for personal power regardless of the cost to others, nor a passive acceptance of whatever happens to you, rationalised as what God wills, is seen as the ideal for the witch. It is significant that the only occurrence of the word power in the Charge is in a context where it is balanced by reference to an opposite virtue, and in the Craft this balance is what is seen as essential.
The balance is essential because of the monistic world view of magic, in which all things are connected and what I do to you I do to myself. The significance of ‘correspondences’ is found in this interrelation of all things. Those who would only live their life in one domain, whether in that of ‘fluffbunny’ white light, or in so-called ‘black’ magic both misunderstand the occult understanding of the world, and, magically, are on a hiding to nothing.
The call to balance, to an individual power not based on dominance over others, has led in the years since the Charge was composed, to criticism by witches of the perceived imbalance in the way power is exercised in the world around us. This has taken the form of ecological and political work for reform and campaigning. This reflects the nature of the counterbalance to power given in the Charge: compassion.
Compassion implies an understanding and empathy for the other, which if the ‘other’ is seen monistically as part of myself and what happens to the other as the counterpart of what happens to myself, cannot have no influence on me. This is a truly subject-subject relationship, in which what happens to you is as important as what happens to me, rather than a subject-object relationship, in which what happens to you is relatively unimportant.
Relationships with others are therefore important for the witch, and witchcraft is not something practised as a hobby in the evenings, but something which can only effect all aspects of life. The compassion practised in practical terms by witches tends not to appear as such – no collecting envelopes come through the door for ‘Wiccan Aid’ – and I do not feel it would be justified to criticise Wiccans for their lack of visible aid to others, since I feel it does happen, but not overtly under a Wiccan banner.
This balance between personal power and compassion for the other, or rather a concern to put right what is seen to be wrong, is perhaps best known in the power dynamic of Starhawk,[3] who identifies three forms of power. The first is the undesirable use of power-over other people: this would equate to the unconcerned acquisition of unlimited personal power, regardless of the consequences to others. The ideal is power-with, where the individual power and autonomy of both sides in the relationship are respected and fostered, and the third sort of power is power-from-within, which equates to the power as described by Gardner. Starhawk sees the use of the magical power-from-within as essential to the wearing-away of power-over, leading to the ideal situation where individuals and institutions have power with others, rather than over them.


[1] Gardner, 2004.
[2] For examples of this see Michael Howard: The Occult Conspiracy. Rider, London, 1989. Stewart Farrar gives an account of Alex Sanders’s psychic searches for ‘black’ magicians in What Witches Do (Third Edition. Robert Hale, London, 1991) and Dion Fortune’s Psychic Self Defense (New Edition. Weiser Books, Boston MA, 2001) is replete with tales both of magicians who have gone off the rails, and of ‘black lodges’ which set out to remain off the rails.
[3] Starhawk: Truth or Dare. Harper and Row, San Francisco, 1990.

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