Please read the article: Celts,
Karma and Reincarnation
http://www.summerlands.com/crossroads/library/celts_and_karma.html
Submit your Answers to the following Questions
to the Mystery School
with the subject line: Celts Karma answers from ________
your magikal name
1. Describe in general the Celtic world of the spirit.
What other cultural group is this most like?
2. Name at least two stories that support a Celtic belief
in reincarnation. How are they similar?
3. How does Celtic thought on reincarnation differ form
other beliefs on reincarnation?
4. Who are some of the notables who linked the Druids
to Pythagoras? And when did they write/work?
5. How could the concept of Karma manifest itself in Celtic
thought? Explain.
6. Was the Celtic honor/morality code only rooted in Christianity?
Explain, give examples.
7. What is one example of Celtic belief regarding a connection
between the spirit and the body? Explain.
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Celts, Karma and Reincarnation
Recent discussions about the concept of reincarnation
among the Celtic people and the Druids as compared to the teachings
of Pythagoras have sparked insights for me that should have been
obvious. The first of these insights is that the Celts believed
in a world of the spirit. This belief means, among other things,
that the Celts believed that spirits could exist in this world
by inhabiting the bodies of people, of animals, of plants, of
trees and even manifest themselves as the spirits of places (wells,
brughs, caves, stones, rivers, ponds, and fields). This migration
of spirit between worlds, places, animals and people was a reflection
of the communal nature of Celtic life. A belief in spiritual migration
and transmigration does not rule out the Celt's most common spiritual
belief, the belief that there is a life in another world after
death in this one. Before I cover these additional topics in Celtic/Druidic
spiritual belief, let me cite some examples from Celtic literature
concerning these matters.
In the tales that lead to the "Tain Bó Cuailgne"
is the story of the two swineherds, Friuch and Rucht, "The Quarrel
of the Two Pig-keepers and how the Bulls were Begotten." These
two men got into a contest as to who had greater Magical power.
This led them to shapechange into a variety of forms over periods
of years. First they were birds of prey and they fought and quarreled.
Next, they were men again. Then they went through a series of
changes that included being: water creatures, stags, warriors,
phantoms, and dragons, until they finally became worms. One worm
fell into the spring of the river Cronn in Cuailnge, where a cow
belonging to Dáire mac Fiachna swallowed it. This cow gave
birth to Dub, the great, dark bull of Cuailnge. The other worm
suffered a similar fate in the wellspring of Garad, located in
Connacht, where a cow belonging to Medb and Aillill drank it.
It became Finnbennach, the white-horned bull of Ai Pain. The exploits
surrounding these two great creatures is another story, for another
time, to be found in the Táin Bó Cuailgne itself.
It is a primary example of how spirit flowed between people, places,
animals, and even objects.
Celtic Beliefs in Spirit
Another common belief in the continuity of spirit,
was for the spirit of the departed to enter into stones or trees.
This is often told about two lovers who die, have a tree spring
from their graves and eventually re-unite with one another as
intertwined branches, wooden objects, or even Ogham staves. The
story of Baile and Aillinn is one such tale. These two lovers
became a Yew and an Apple tree after their deaths. Eventually
Ogham staves were made from their woods. When the staves were
presented to the king at Tara, they sprang together and were kept
in the treasure room from that day forward. The fate of Deirdre
and Naoise is another tale of ill-fated love. Two pines grew from
their graves, intertwining together, never to be parted. To this
very day, Celtic people hold trees sacred, especially those that
grow from a grave.
The Celtic belief that spirit could inhabit a place,
is found in the common feeling regarding graveyards and passage
graves. These places are known to contain ghosts and spirits.
Many stones are said to be Druids and others who have been changed
to that state by Magick. The "sleeping king" or "warrior band"
idea is another example of how the Land itself contains the spirit
of people. This idea that famous warriors will awaken in the hour
of need is the essence of spirit being stored within the Land
itself. Foundation sacrifices were also known to have occurred
where a person willingly gave their spirit to a structure or to
a place, to become its guardian. This belief in the connection
between spirit, person and place is still alive today in the belief
that the last soul to die is the guardian of the graveyard. It
is also intertwined with the Celtic belief that the soul must
revisit the three sods (soils) before passing through the doorway
to the Otherworld: the place of birth, the place of baptism and
the "sod of death".
Even in their art, Celts reflected their ideas that
spirit was an interconnected weaving of all things together in
a tapestry of life. Nowhere is this more evident than in the art
of Celtic knotwork. Knotwork is a symbol of the interconnection
between destiny, the Three Worlds and the human soul. This belief
in interconnection also shows up in the Magical practices of "taking
a measure" and the tying of knots in cords and threads. There
are also practices that center around the "cord of life" (which
is the umbilical cord itself) and how it should be honored and
guarded, but that is a thread for another day.
This brief introduction has attempted to present
an idea of the Celtic beliefs in the interconnectivity of life,
of the connection to the land, of the soul's journeys through
many forms and bodies, of the doorway of death, and the various
forms of reincarnation available to the spirit. It has only touched
upon the surface of the topic, which is mentioned in a vast number
of tales, beliefs, and traditions. All of these works demonstrate
the Celtic belief in the reincarnation of the spirit in its many
forms.
Other Lives
Allusions to the Celts having believed in another
life have sometimes been interpreted to mean that they embraced
the concept of "karma" (whatever that is). There is a body of
evidence to support a Celtic belief in re-incarnation as well
as another life after death. This belief takes many forms. Some
of these forms are noted as being a transmigration of the soul.
Stories contain instances of shapeshifting. Instances exist that
tell of Otherworldly experiences. Lives are said to be gifts from
the Sidhe. Reincarnations are manifestations and gifts of the
gods, while other cases are considered to manifest as a common
spirit returning along family lines. Of course, there are also
the stories about those that sleep and do not die (awaiting a
call), and the magicians that live backwards in time like Merlin,
as well as warriors who are resurrected with and without a soul.
There may be other instances of Otherworldly life or reincarnation
in Celtic tradition, but these seem to be the most often cited.
The writings of the Poseidonian and Alexandrian Schools
of history, as well as Caesar, support the possibility that the
Druids generally practiced and taught a belief in reincarnation.
Instances also occur in the insular literature that can be taken
to mean that reincarnation was thought to have occurred in the
case of exceptional people. There are also mentions of a belief
in a spirit that passed from one member of a family to another
that occurs in the tales and survived in Celtic folk practice.
Much more definitive evidence or a skillful documented research
effort on a level of at least a Ph.D. dissertation should be attempted
before the evidence can be said to be substantial. This does not
mean that evidence does not exist (however scanty that it is).
"How Cúchulainn was Begotten"
There are references to a belief in reincarnation
among the Celts and Druids to be found in traditional writings.
These references seem to be characteristic of a common Indo-European
spiritual belief. It seems to have been a universally held concept
until relatively recently. An example of a belief in reincarnation
can be found in Thomas Kinsella's translation of the story of
"How Cúchulainn was Begotten."
"The men of Ulster pressed on until they reached
Brug on the Boann river, and night overtook them there. It snowed
heavily upon them, and Conchobor told his people to unyoke the
chariots and start looking for a shelter. Conall and Bricriu searched
about and found a solitary house, newly built. They went up to
it and found a couple there and were made welcome. But when they
returned to their people, Bricriu said it was useless to go there
unless they brought their own food and set the table themselves
that even so it would be meager enough. Nevertheless, they
went there with all of their chariots, and crowded with difficulty
into the house. Soon they found the door to the store-room, and
by their usual mealtime the men of Ulster were drunk with their
welcome and in good humour.
Later the man of the house told them his wife was
in her birth-pangs in the store-room. Deichtine went in to her
and helped her to bear a son. At the same time, a mare at the
door of the house gave birth to two foals. The Ulstermen took
charge of the baby boy and gave him the foals as a present, and
Deichtine nursed him.
When morning came there was nothing to be seen eastward
from the Brugh no house, no birds only their own
horses, the baby and the foals. They went back to Emain and reared
the baby until he was a boy.
He caught an illness then, and died. And they made
a lamentation for him, and Deichtine's grief was great at the
loss of her foster son. She came home from lamenting him and grew
thirsty and asked for a drink, and the drink was brought in a
cup. She set it to her lips to drink from it and a tiny creature
slipped into her mouth with the liquid. As she took the cup from
her lips she swallowed the creature and it vanished.
She slept that night and dreamed that a man came
toward her and spoke to her, saying she would bear a child by
him that it was he who had brought her to the Brug to sleep
with her there, that the boy she had reared was his, that he was
again planted in her womb and was to be called Se/tanta, that
he himself was Lug mac Etnenn, and that the foals should be reared
with the boy."
This is clearly reincarnation along family lines.
The above story about Cú Chulainn is a translation of an
eighth century tale, "Compert Con Culainn," as found in Lebor
na hUidre and other ancient manuscripts. Another work that mentions
this type of reincarnation is "Compert Mongain" (where Mongan
is born through the actions of Manannán, and as a reincarnation
of Fionn). The story of how Daogas was begotten of himself is
the third example of this form of reincarnation to be found in
Irish writings. It is to be found in a story translated on page
135, Volume II of the Ossianic Society Transactions. The examples
of Finn being the reincarnation of Cumhal or of Mongan being the
incarnation of Manannán seem to support this belief. Who
has not heard the expression, "a chip off the old block?"
The men of Ulster desired to have Cúchualinn
married so that he would be assured of having progeny. They wished
that he could be reincarnated to them again, but were thwarted
in their desires when he killed his only son as recounted in another
tale about him. The evidence for this belief in the men of Ulster
is based on this passage out of "Tochmarc Emire," where it was
said:
"There was the danger besides that Cúchulainn
might die young and leave no son, which would be tragic: they
knew it was only out of Cúchulainn himself that the like
of him might come again, For this reason also he should have a
woman."
"Cauldron of Poesy"
This idea is also echoed in the teaching attributed
to Amergin in the "Cauldron of Poesy" materials:
"Where is the root of poetry in a person; in the
body or in the soul? They say it is in the soul, for the body
does nothing without the soul. Others say it is in the body where
the arts are learned, passed through the bodies of our ancestors.
It is said this is the seat of what remains over the root of poetry;
and the good knowledge in every person's ancestry comes not into
everyone, but comes into every other person." - translation by
Erynn Laurie
The Filidh Amergin is talking about a skill being
passed along family lines in an almost instinctive manner. He
also ascribes certain knowledge and awareness to come from the
soul through heightened spiritual experiences. Here we are touching
the edges of what I believe to be an ancient and valid Celtic
belief in a reincarnation that occurs within families. Cormac
of Caisheal seems to be echoing this concept in his glossary:
The tuirgen is "...the birth that passes from every
nature to another... a transitory birth which has traversed all
nature from Adam and goes through every wonderful time down to
the world's doom."
Diodorus seems to be saying the same thing of Druidic
belief: "... the souls of men are immortal, and that after a definite
number of years they live a second life when the soul passes to
another body..."
Caesar is also echoing this idea when he says that
the Druids teach, "...souls do not suffer death, but after death
pass from one to another..."
The Druids' beliefs and teachings about the soul
indicate that the essence of a person was not thought to die at
the death of the body, but to live on. I think that the tale of
"How Cúchualinn was Begotten" clearly shows one possibility
for what can happen to a soul after death: i.e. it is reborn into
another body. This is exactly what the Druids were said to have
taught in the quotation by Diodorus and in the writings of Ammianus
Marcellinus:
They "..were of loftier intellect, and bound by the
rules of brotherhood as decreed by Pythagoras's authority, exalted
by investigations of deep and serious study, and despising human
affairs, declared souls to be immortal."
The Alexandrian School
The soul does not have to reincarnate in this world
but can stay in the Otherworld. The life into which one is reborn
appears to be tied to fate and the will of the gods. The Alexandrian
School of ancient historians considered the Druids to be philosophers
who followed the ways of Pythagoras, though I suspect this association
by them to be because both schools of philosophy taught the belief
of reincarnation. I do not think that the Druids were Pythagorean,
nor do I think that Pythagoras was a Druid. Here are some of the
historians that seem to have held this belief (as provided in
an email source):
Hippolytus - (circa 170 - 236 CE) Christian author
writing in Greek, of whose work only fragments remain, claimed
that the Druids had adopted the teachings of Pythagoras
Clement of Alexandria - (circa 150 - 211/216 CE)
Athenian known also as Titus Flavius Clement, a Greek theologian,
founder and head of the Christian school of Alexandria, also believed
the Druids learned from Pythagoras. Wrote on the topic of Druids
as philosophers
Cyril of Alexandria - (archbishop of Alexandria in
412 - 444 CE) Quotes the same passages that Clement did from Polyhistor's
book on Pythagoras, holding that the Druids learned their knowledge
from Pythagoras. Also wrote about the Druids as philosophers
Timaeus of Tauromenion - (circa 356 - 260 BCE) Sicilian
Greek writer whose work was extensively used by Diogenese Laertius
and Clement of Alexandria
Polyhistor - (born circa 105 BCE) Alexander Cornelius
Polyhistor, Greek who wrote of the Druids as philosophers and
was the main source on Pythagoras:
"The Pythagorean doctrine prevails among the Gauls'
teaching that the souls of men are immortal, and that after a
fixed number of years they will enter into another body."
Timagenes - (circa mid-first century BCE) Alexandrian
who is cited by Diodorus Siculus as an authority on Druids, also
quoted in the works of Ammianus Marcellinus. He wrote around the
same time as Polyhistor. He gives the earliest mention of the
Druids being the historians of the Celts. Truly belongs to the
Posidonius School
Multiple Incarnations
Additional information that seems to indicate the
occurrence of multiple incarnations are to be found in the tales
surrounding Fintan, Tuan Mac Carrel, and Gwion Bach, as well as
the lament of the Hag of Beara. Beyond this I have also seen such
beliefs in reincarnation expressed as an on-going Celtic tradition
in the _Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries_ by W. Y. Evans-Wentz.
If the concept of Karma existed among the Celts,
it might have manifested itself in the principle of repaying debts,
whether incurred in one life or another:
"They lent sums of money to each other which are
repayable in the next world, so firmly are they convinced that
the souls of men are immortal." - Valerius Maximus -
Such debts would have reflected on the honor of oneself
and ones family. The obligation to repay them went beyond
lives and lifetimes.
"Contracts were sometimes composed with provision
for payment in future lives, and there was full expectation of
payment, for the Celts were firm believers in reincarnation of
some sort. Reincarnation as descendants in the family line seems
to have been a Celtic belief, and so your grandchildren (who may
well be you reborn) might pay back your neighbor's grandchildren
at the completion of a contract's term of agreement. Most contracts
were also sealed with a material forfeiture in the event of failure
to fulfill the contract. The loyalty and trust of family was essential
in the making of any contracts, because failure to fulfill a contract
obligated your tuath to pay your debts if you could not."
- Erynn Laurie on Nemeton-L
Debts of behavior and morality might also have required
repayment, but Im not certain they were considered to be
sins as defined in modern dictionaries. If the Celts had a concept
similar to sin, it probably did not occur until after they embraced
Christianity. The Early Irish Penitentials and Rules (of monasteries)
detailed the actions necessary for repayment and restitution for
"sinful" behaviors. There does seem to be earlier evidence that
pre-Christian Irish Celts thought that one could be dishonored
and redeemed through actions and payments (hence the concepts
of eraic and honor price in the Brehon Laws). Modern concepts
of Karma seem to have developed in the East from a bedrock of
earlier beliefs that were similar to those of the Celts. The Buddhist
idea of Karma owes much to its Vedic and Hindu roots. Those roots
are branches of the Indo-European tradition to the Euro-Indian
tradition (depending on which culture you think more greatly influenced
the other). I tend to view the relative mix of such Indo-European
beliefs as a cyclical affair that has flowed back and forth over
the aeons. Celts don't have Karma per se, they have debts, honor,
and obligations (none of which vanish at the end of a lifetime).
In this belief in continuity of obligation, I also see a belief
in the continuance of spirit.
The idea that a person's power could be obtained
through the possession of their head (and hence their soul) is
another indicator of the Celtic belief in the connection between
the soul and the body, and hence in the manner that ones
spirit was passed or supported by the other.
Other Lives
I don't think that these ancient beliefs exactly
mirrored modern New Age thought or even Hindu practice and belief.
I do think that such episodes as those of Fintan, Tuan Mac Carrel
and Taliesin allude to the ability of one's spirit to connect
with other lives across the boundaries between lives. These connections
may not mean that a person has actually lived before but they
can mean that a person's spirit is able, through trance, to experience
other lives in other times. Isaac Bonewits states this clearly
in "Some Notes on Indo-European Paleopaganism and its Clergy,"
(c) 1984 P. E. I. Bonewits, reprinted from "The Druids' Progress"
#1:
"There are definite indications that the Indo-European
clergy held certain polytheological and mystical opinions in common,
although only the vaguest outlines are known at this point. There
was a belief in reincarnation (with time spent between lives in
an Other World very similar to the Earthly one), in the sacredness
of particular trees, in the continuing relationship between mortals,
ancestors and deities, and naturally in the standard laws of magic
(see Real Magic)."
Experiences of reincarnation and memories of past
lives are frequently reported by the general public, though the
objective substantiation of such previous lives and their experiences
is not well documented in scholarly literature. Recent studies
in Near Death Experiences (NDE) that have appeared in medical
journals seem to support objective evidence of an afterlife and
the ability of souls to return to physical bodies. My own mystical
experiences support the idea that spirit has many corporal existences,
though my mental disciplines and natural skepticism require further
investigation and validation to completely establish and document
this process.
The Afterlife
The afterlife seems to be much like this one. It
is a dream state, at times vivid, at other times, very remote.
Whenever I have experienced being killed within a dream, it generally
results in the following consequences:
Another dream occurs,
I become the person that killed me in the dream,
I do not die but lose interest in the dream anyway,
I become something else within the dream,
I wake up and realize that I've been dreaming.
Why should being awake, dying or being killed in
this life be much different from the experiences of our dream
lives? In my own experiences with death in this life, I have seen
that it is not too different from dreams or the illusions of life.
This seems to be the same question that the ancient Druids asked
themselves about realities. Their teachings about this mystery
are best discovered through the experiences of imbas and pathworking.
There are tales in the Mabinogion that seem to demonstrate a kinship
between dreaming and life, especially in regards to death being
a temporary condition.
In the tale of Gronw Pebyr and Blodeuwedd, Llew was
tricked into revealing how he could be killed:
He must be both within and without a house at the
same time, neither on horseback nor on foot, and could only be
slain by a spear that took an entire year to be made.
When Llew was killed in the only way that he could
be killed in this life according to the tale, he became an eagle
almost instantaneously (even though he was a wounded eagle). He
cheated death by having his spirit go from one body to another.
Gwydion found him in an oak tree and cured him through his powers
of Draíocht. Lugh was immediately transformed into a person
again. He was clearly killed by the spear of Gronw Pebyr and restored
to life after being dead by Gwydion (in the transmigrated form
of an eagle)?. This tale is clearly about life, death, re-incarnation
and the ability of Draíocht to transform between states
of being. Such tales as this and the two swineherds of the gods
are all about states of being and lessons of life. The lesson
in this tale seems to be that life and death go through many transformations,
yet one never really dies. We change in many ways and can even
become a part of the Land itself (as well as a part of its legends).
Final Thoughts and Musings
In some of the tales we have discussed, it is clear
that exceptional people were thought to have been reborn. In other
tales, transformations occurred through a variety of animal types.
The soul and spirit have been described by Celtic tradition as
going from one life and body to another in tales and in teachings
as reported by the Classical historians of ancient times. Indo-European
traditions also teach much the same thing, with notable survivals
of this belief among the Gnostics and the Hindus in modern times.
Personal experiences and the beliefs and experiences of others
tend to support a continuity of spirit as well. The sleeping warrior
or king is another example of a sustained after life and continuity
of the self that has not been detailed in this discussion but
it should be familiar to all from the tales of Merlin, Arthur
or those of the Fianna. Who is to say what we experience after
death? What people among us have visited the Otherworldly realms?
Where are our Draiothe that we can discover the mysteries of the
soul? It is in these questions and our answers to them that we
will find our truth and we will experience our own rebirth.
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