 |
THE
PATH OF PRIEST AND PRIESTESS
Initiation
Into an Ancient Tradition
What
is a priest? What is a priestess? Images of stiff-robed
men who show up in church on Sundays, or of exotically clad
women making offerings to strange, bizarre looking gods
would suggest that they inhabit a world other than our own
and have little impact on our lives.
In
fact, nothing could be further from the truth. To understand
the essence of priest and priestess, we must look beyond
the clichés to reconnect with the inner archetype-the
vortex of power in the depths of our own psyche. Since the
beginning of human history, this archetype found expression
in countless religious traditions. However, since archetypes
are ever evolving, never static, contemporary priests and
priestesses will look nothing like their ancient Indian,
or Sumerian, or Egyptian counterparts. As human society
unfolds, so do archetypes, appearing in ever-new guises.
In fact, priests and priestesses are everywhere in our midst-they
just don't look the way we might expect. Rarely do they
wear special robes, and many of them have no ties with organized
religion. And yet, as we shall see, their contributions
are crucial to our welfare and our very survival. As priests
and priestesses have always done, they serve the spiritual
life of their community and hold open the lines of communication
between the human and the spirit worlds.
Over
the years, I have worked with thousands of people in whom
this archetype has awakened and have formed my own understanding
of what it means to be a priest or a priestess. Here, I
would like to share some of my thoughts with you and above
all, invite you to explore the meaning of this archetype
for you personally. Let me start by telling you the story
of how the priestess awakened in my own life.
It
began with my decision, one dreary night in Birmingham,
England, to go see the performance of a young Indian dancer.
Within no time, I had fallen in love. What affected me so
powerfully were not just the brilliant silk brocade costumes,
the exquisite grace of the dancer's movements and the raw
power with which her bare feet stamped the ground as if
playing a giant drum. It was something else, a compelling
spiritual presence that radiated through the dance, endowing
it with a luminosity that kindled a kindred light within
my soul. By the time I stumbled out of the auditorium I
was determined to learn this art, and learn it in India.
On
the face of it, going to India to study dance seemed insane.
I was not a dancer, nor had I ever studied dance in any
formal way. How could I reconcile this strange desire with
my identity as an intellectual, or think of any sensible
way to justify the journey I was about to embark on? Still,
there it was-some infinitely stubborn, determined force
insisted I must quit my job and go to India-not sometime
in the future, but now. I had received a calling
I could not ignore.
And
so, in June of 1981, I gave up my job at a British university
and boarded a plane to India. I laugh to think that I saw
it as a sabbatical of sorts. I certainly expected my life
to be enriched, but I did not anticipate its total and irreversible
transformation. In fact, I was about to be initiated into
a tradition so old that its origins are shrouded in mystery,
maintained throughout the centuries by priestesses who passed
their knowledge from generation to generation. At the time,
however, I understood none of this. All I knew was that
I was being dragged off to India by some force I couldn't
explain.
After
arriving in India, I happily immersed myself in the study
of what today is called Bharatanatyam. I soon found that
the gestures and poses catapulted me into states of consciousness
that felt ancient, powerful, utterly natural, and strangely
familiar, as if I was merely remembering a language I once
knew but had since forgotten. As I pondered the amazing
power of this dance within my own body I understood why
temple dance is known as a fifth Veda, or sacred scripture.
Unlike the other four Vedas, which form a sort of Hindu
Bible, this fifth Veda is recorded not in words but in the
universal language of movement. Yet, like all true scripture,
it communicates an awareness of unseen dimensions beyond
the visible, tangible world.
Indian
temple dance, I learned, is a relic of a complex, highly
sophisticated but extinct culture. In ancient India, every
major temple supported a number of priestesses who worshipped
the deities through their ritual dances. These women were
known as Devadasis, a word meaning "female servants
of God." As in many other places, these priestesses were
the most highly educated women. Besides dancing, they studied
reading, writing, scripture, mythology, mantras, rituals,
meditation, singing, music, and healing.
Indian
temple dance is one of the most beautiful fruits of the
Tantric tradition. According to Tantric mythology, this
universe is the loveplay of a divine Being which split itself
in two, a male and a female half, so that it might know
the ecstasy of love. All men are splinters of this original
god, all women of the goddess, and through their lovemaking,
God experiences the rapture of reunion. Revered as embodiments
of the goddess, the Devadasis were highly skilled in the
erotic arts, and men vied to make love to them, for to make
love to a Devadasi was to reenact the sacred ritual of creation.
In
the ancient Indian temples, priests and priestesses lived
and worked side by side, sometimes becoming lovers. However,
in the rituals designed to celebrated God's lovemaking with
the world, the priestess seems to have played a very different
role than the priest. Joseph Campbell once said "The male's
job is to relate to life. The female's job is to become
it." And also, "The man's function is to act. The woman's
function is to be." A similar view seems to have prevailed
in ancient India. Priests were defined by their actions-maintaining
the rituals, maintaining the temple compound, and so on.
Priestesses were primarily defined by their female being,
and by their knowledge of the triple mysteries of the physical
body-birth, sex, and death.
With
the advent of patriarchy, the sexual customs of the priestesses
contributed to their downfall. In a culture that valued
female chastity and submissiveness, there was no place for
these non-monogamous, proud, independent priestesses. Gradually,
their tradition deteriorated, and the British eventually
finalized its demise by cutting off financial support to
the temples, defaming the priestesses as prostitutes, and
making their dances illegal, which they remained until India
gained its independence in 1947. Current literature often
refers to the sexual priestesses of ancient India and other
cultures as "sacred prostitutes." An unfortunate misnomer,
this echoes the prude Victorian dismissal of "heathen" priestesses
as prostitutes. In fact, the Devadasis were not prostitutes
but, as their name denotes, servants of divinity.
The
Voice of the Priestess
It
soon became clear to me that going to India was the easy
part. The far more difficult challenge was to integrate
what I had learned into my life in the West. Shortly after
my return from India I started having dreams in which ancient
priestesses demanded that I transmit their consciousness
to a modern Western audience-a daunting task, considering
how radically different our world is from theirs. In my
bewilderment I began dialoguing with these inner figures,
hoping to gain a clearer understanding of their path. The
following is an excerpt from their response to my question,
"How will it benefit people to hear your voices?" Their
words helped me understand that to be a priest or a priestess
one does not need to have a temple, to do rituals, recite
mantras, or dance. The essence of the priest and the priestess
lies less in what they do than in the attitude with
which they do it. They teach us how to perceive the spiritual
within the ordinary, and the sacred within the mundane.
Here's what they said:
Many of you have
forgotten how to listen to the soul, how to speak to it,
how to give it the food it hungers for. Communities, too,
have souls that must be nourished. Most of your communities
are ravaged by spiritual famine. We want to remind you how
to nourish your souls. Within you is a deep well of truth
and peace and strength. We walk among you reminding you
of that place, inspiring you to remember what you already
know. We bring you the gift of sacred sight, so that you
see the light that shines through all beings, animate and
inanimate.
We come from many
places, many times, each one of us bearing her own special
gifts. But there is one thing we all have in common. For
thousands upon thousands of years, we have all joined in
the one practice of performing ordinary worldly acts as
worship. When we pull a baby into the light of the world,
it is worship. When we cradle a dying man in our arms, guiding
his spirit into the embrace of spirit, it is worship. When
we sweep the floor, it is worship. It is worship when we
dance, when we sing, when we light the candles. Weeding
the herb garden, resolving disputes, cooking rice-all these
things and a million more we have practiced, always searching
for the light of the Beloved within each moment, always
questioning-is it here? Yes, it is. And here? Yes, here
too... And here... And here... So that now, we can say to
you with complete assurance that there is nowhere where
Spirit is not to be found.
Now, as you know,
is a time of danger, a time of crisis. Do you really believe
your puny human consciousness can solve the problems you
face? Do you really believe the solutions will come out
of that fraction of your brain that you use? We don't. We
feel concerned. We feel compassion. We feel an urgency.
We are hear to teach you how to commune with spirit in all
its myriad forms, how to align yourself with the greater
whole so that healing can occur on this exquisitely fragile
blue green planet.
The
Four Marks of Contemporary Priests and Priestesses
As
I continued to explore this path, I found that four essential
elements define the path of the contemporary priest or priestess.
These four elements are ordinariness, ecstatic communion
with God's presence in the world, reverence for gender and
sexuality, and commitment to community service.
Ordinariness
The
Devadasis were what you might call "spiritual professionals."
Today, the demarcation between the "ordinary" man or woman
and the professional priest or priestess has vanished. Of
course we still have our spiritual professionals, but the
majority of contemporary priests and priestesses are ordinary
men and women who use lap top computers, wear well-tailored
clothing and follow the stock market. Some have affiliations
with organized religion, but many do not.
The
bad news is that we are on our own, and since our culture
provides little in the way of support and validation for
its priests and priestesses, many struggle to get by. On
the other hand, the good news is that we are free-unbeholden
to any outer authorities, in a way our ancestors never were.
Nobody dictates to us what we are to believe, think, or
do. Instead of allowing outer authorities to disempower
us, we have license to seek the source of authority within.
And though the lack of social acknowledgment and support
can be painful, it also helps prevent the arrogance which
often arises when priests and priestesses form a special
class of their own-a class, so to speak, of professional
mystics. In our times, those who do the work of a priest
or a priestess are rarely made to feel "special," and that
is as it should be. Today, the privilege of expressing the
priest/priestess archetype belongs to all of us.
Because
the work of contemporary priests and priestesses is so interwoven
with their daily lives, it is easy to overlook their presence
and the value of their contributions. Often, the service
and the spiritual nourishment they provide goes unnoticed
and unappreciated. And yet, just as in former times, the
priests and priestesses among us are the guardians and caretakers
of our spiritual life. One gardener communes with plants,
the other does not. One kindergarten teacher honors children
as the wise spirits they are, another treats them as immature,
imperfect adults. For one person, singing is a performance
art, for another, it is a form of prayer. One of my clients
never answers the phone without first reminding himself
to mentally honor the caller as the Buddha, the Christ,
the Holy Mother. Another murmurs blessings into her soups
and stews. Like a weaver brightens her cloth with strands
of golden thread, so priests and priestesses weave small
acts of devotion and prayerful remembrance into their daily
lives.
Many
women feel a natural sense of kinship with this path. Millennia
of motherhood have guided the feminine path towards practices
that could be done anywhere, at any time. If women wanted
to lead a spiritual life, they usually had to find to do
so in the midst of changing diapers and comforting their
children. We all know women whose homes are oases of beauty
and serenity. Intuitively, they sense the healing power
of beauty, and know the sense of peace and well-being that
an ordered, well-appointed environment can create. As the
priestesses of ancient times offered flowers on the altar,
purified the air with incense, and prayed that all who enter
the temple be blessed, so these contemporary women too are
creators and guardians of sacred space.
Ecstatic
Communion
As
contemporary priests and priestesses, we are mystics and
ecstatics who perceive God as an immanent power within
the world-in mountains and rivers, animals and plants, and
within ourselves. The notion of transcendence is alien to
this path-Spirit surrounds us as the air we breathe and
the ground we walk on. The song of a bird, the fragrance
of a rose, and the diamond glint of sunlight on fresh snow
are God's loveletters to us. If God is right here, why transcend
the world? Where would we go, and why?
Just
as a Devadasi felt the goddess moving and acting through
her, so contemporary priests and priestesses honor themselves
as embodiments of the divine. My Catholic clients often
struggle with this idea-it seems heretical to them, even
blasphemous. "I was raised to think of myself sinner," one
woman objected. Yet as I reminded her, Jesus himself always
emphasized each person's innate divinity. "Ye are gods,"
he said, and "To connect with our inner divinity is the
deepest healing we can aspire to. Far from making us arrogant,
any encounter with the divine utterly crushes our arrogance.
At the same time, it heals the wounds of low self-esteem
and banishes the demons of self-doubt, judgment, and shame.
This
emphasis on God's immediate presence, and of God's desire
to make love with us, infuses spiritual life with a great
sense of tenderness, creative play, and deep appreciation
for all the sensuous pleasures life has to offer. Our path
becomes one of ecstasy born of intimacy with the divine.
Reverence
for Gender and Sexuality
We
have become strangely inured to the absence of priestesses
in our churches. Yet in a balanced religion, the ordination
of priests without priestesses, or vice versa, would be
unthinkable, as would the worship of God in only male or
only female form. When God assumes human form, the sacred
couple appears-the One becoming two, male and female, who
in their union celebrate their original oneness.
All
priests and priestesses are lovers-lovers of God, but also
lovers of the world, and of men and women. Regardless of
whether they chose to be sexually active or not, they celebrate
the dance of life through their bodies. The priestess derives
power from her female body, as the priest does from his
male body, and both rejoice in the beauty and the perfection
of what they are separately, and of what they can create
jointly.
Priestesses
are not female priests, any more than priests are male priestesses.
Rather, they follow two different but complementary paths.
Simply put, they differ in the same way men and women differ,
and in the way God's masculine face differs from God's feminine
face. We are talking, here, not about clear-cut, black and
white polarities or clichés ("men are strong and
women are nurturing"), but about a spectrum of tendencies,
within which each individual occupies their own unique place.
Just
thirty years ago, this was a loaded subject to broach, especially
for women, who had been called inferior to men for so long
that they were determined to prove themselves equal in every
respect. Now that women have gained a certain degree of
power, we can explore our differences without fearing they
will be used to prove the supposed superiority of one gender
over the other. We can let go of the unisex myth and acknowledge
the obvious-we are different, yet equal. Once we accept
this fact, we can get on with the exciting and joyous work
of sharing our gifts with one another.
Serving
our Community
Last
but not least, priests and priestesses share a deep commitment
to the welfare of their community. Their work is to guard
its soul, so that its ears stay open to the song of spirit,
its heart to the love of spirit, its eyes to the beauty
of spirit.
One
of the main ways we serve our community is through our daily
work. When we take a job, the inner priest is not interested
in how much money it makes or how much prestige it carries.
His concern is whether this work will nourish his soul,
and the soul of his community. If so, the doctor will feel
awe for the mystery of the life he serves. The mother will
know the value of her efforts, and the cashier will sense
that the thousand daily interactions he has with his customers
matter, and have meaning.
My
hairdresser June is an example of a woman in who is very
much in touch with her inner priestess and who performs
her work as what can only be called an act of worship. She
is quite aware of doing far more than just cutting hair.
"I make people feel better about themselves," she tells
me. "I help them feel beautiful, and cared for." Of course
one might say that she merely caters to people's vanity.
But June knows better. As a priestess, she knows that beauty
is food for the soul. She also knows the healing power of
gentle touch, caring attention, and of a sympathetic listener.
In
India, there is an annual festival day on which everyone
blesses the instruments and tools they use for work. Dentists
bless their drills, clerks bless their typewriters, and
tailors bless their sewing machines. On this day, my dancer
teacher would bless the wooden block and stick on which
she beat out the rhythms for dance practice. In a wonderfully
simple way, this ritual brings home the message that our
work is a form of worship, of prayer, and of spiritual practice.
If the dentist can fill a cavity with as much devotion as
a priest invoking the divine presence, then his work can
bring him the same spiritual fulfillment.
Welcoming
the Priest and Priestess
After
the publication of Aphrodite's Daughters,
I received dozens of letters from readers who wrote about
their own experiences with the priest/priestess within.
Like small, powerful generators, archetypes may lie dormant
until the time is ripe for their resurgence. Today, our
inner priests and priestesses are knocking loudly on the
doors of our psyche, demanding to be recognized, integrated
into our spiritual life. If we listen, they will show us
the way towards a new yet ancient kind of spirituality,
one that is world-affirming and joyful, that does not depend
on the structures of organized religion and does not fragment
our lives and our selves. Today as in ancient times, they
are the gatekeepers to other worlds, and the guardians of
this one.
Jalaja
Bonheim
©
Copyright 2007 by Jalaja Bonheim. All Rights Reserved.
Web Design by Yokum Designs
|
 |
|
|