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Those who dwell...among the beauties and mysteries of the earth
are
never alone or weary of life. . . Those who contemplate the beauty
of the earth find reserves of strength that will endure as long as
life lasts. The more clearly we can focus our attention on
the
wonders and realities of the universe about us,
the less taste we
shall have for destruction.
Rachel Carson |
NEWSFLASH: Vatican Attacks Pantheism &
Avatar Movie
The Vatican appears to be launching an all-fronts attack on
Pantheism. Vatican media slammed the movie Avatar for promoting
Pantheism, and Pope Benedict XVI attacked Pantheism twice in six
months!
View WPM Press release
Read our Vatican
response page |
Is
this Earth your true spiritual home?
Are you searching for a path that focuses on this Earth
rather than some imaginary beyond, that makes saving the planet its
focus
not saving your eternal soul, that respects individual choice rather
than
pushing prejudice down people's throats, that values reason rather than
fanaticism?
Do you find it impossible to believe in
supernatural beings, and difficult to conceive of anything more worthy
of
reverence than the beauty of Nature or the power of the Universe?
Do you feel a deep sense of peace and belonging and
wonder in the midst of Nature, in a forest, by the ocean, or on a
mountain
top? Are you speechless with awe when you look up at the sky on a clear
moonless night and see the Milky Way strewn with stars as thick as sand
on a
beach? When you see breakers crashing on a rocky shore, or
hear wind rustling in a poplar's leaves, are you uplifted by the energy
and
creativity of existence?
If you answered yes to these questions, then
you
will feel thoroughly at home in the World Pantheist Movement.
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Live, love, laugh, play, rejoice, celebrate.
Explore, discover, question, dare, understand, wonder, reflect.
Create, care, conserve, nurture. Share, help, hug, heal, inspire.
These are just some of the ways we feel about
life. Do you?
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Famous Pantheists
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Albert Einstein
A
knowledge of the existence of something we cannot penetrate, of the
manifestations of the profoundest reason and the most radiant
beauty - it is this knowledge and this emotion that constitute
the
truly religious attitude; in this sense, and this alone, I am a
deeply religious man.
The World as I See It

Margaret Atwood
god is not the voice in the
whirlwind
god is the whirlwind |
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Mikhail
Gorbachev
I believe in the cosmos.
All of us are linked to the cosmos.
So nature is my god. To me, nature is sacred. Trees are my
temples
and forests
are
my cathedrals.
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Sitting
Bull
Every seed is awakened
and
so is all animal life.
It is through this mysterious power that
we too have our being
and we therefore yield
to our animal neighbours
the same right as ourselves, to inhabit
this land.
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Stephen Hawking
Larry King:
Do you believe in God?
Stephen Hawking:
Yes, if by God is meant the embodiment of the law of the
universe.
Larry King Live, December 25, 1999
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Carl
Sagan
A
religion old
or new, that stressed the magnificence of the universe as revealed
by modern science,
might be able to draw forth reserves of reverence and awe
hardly
tapped by the conventional faiths.
Sooner or later, such a religion will emerge.
Pale Blue Dot
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Henry
David
Thoreau
We are enabled to apprehend at all what is sublime and noble
only by
the perpetual instilling and drenching
of the reality that surrounds us. We can never have
enough of nature. |
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Towards a naturalistic spirituality
In the WPM we revere and care
for
Nature, we accept
this life as our only life, and this earth as our only paradise, if we
look
after it. We revel in the beauty of Nature and the night sky, and are
full
of wonder at their mystery and power.
By spirituality and spiritual we don't
mean any
kind of supernatural or non-physical activity - we use the terms in a
wider
sense. We mean that part of our lives that relates to our deeper
emotions
and aesthetic responses towards Nature and the wider Universe - to our
sense
of our place in these, and to the ethics that these feelings imply.
We take the real Universe and Nature as
our starting and finishing point, not some
preconceived idea of God. We feel a profound wonder and awe for these,
similar to the reverence that believers in more conventional gods feel
towards their deity, but without anthropomorphic worship or belief that
Nature
has a mind or personality that we can influence through prayer or
ritual.
Our ethics are humanistic and green, our
metaphysics
naturalist and scientific. To these we add the emotional and aesthetic
dimensions which
humans need to cope with life's challenges and to embrace life's joys,
and to motivate
their concern for Nature and human welfare.
Our beliefs and values reconcile
spirituality and
rationality, emotion and values and environmental concern with science
and
respect for evidence. They are summarized in our
Belief Statement, which
embodies the following basic principles:
- Reverence, awe, wonder and a feeling of belonging to Nature and
the wider Universe.
- Respect and active care for the rights of all humans and other
living beings.
- Celebration or our lives in our bodies on this beautiful earth
as
a joy and a privilege.
- Realism - acceptance that the external world exists
independently
of human consciousness or perception.
- Strong naturalism - without belief in supernatural realms,
afterlives, beings or forces.
- Respect for reason, evidence and the scientific method as our
best ways of understanding nature and the Universe.
- Promotion of religious tolerance, freedom of religion and
complete separation of state and religion.
If you want to see why other people have chosen this
spiritual approach, then check Members'
Voices.
Why do we need a spirituality of
Nature?
Most people have a sense
that
there is something greater than the self or than the human race. And
indeed
there is. It's the planet, and at a broader level the entire Universe.
The WPM's
naturalistic reverence for Nature can satisfy the need for a feeling of
belonging to a greater whole, without sacrificing
logic or respect for evidence and science. As one member put it, it is
spirituality without absurdity.
- It does not require faith in miracles, invisible entities
or
supernatural powers.
- It accepts and affirms life joyously. It does not regard
this life
as a waiting room or a staging post on the way to a better existence
after death.
- It has a healthy and positive attitude to sex and life in
the body.
- It teaches reverence and love and active concern for
Nature. Nature
was not created for us to use or abuse - Nature created us, we are an
inseparable part of her, and we have a duty of care towards her.
- It enthusiastically embraces the picture of a vast,
creative and
often violent Universe revealed by the Hubble Space Telescope. We need
a
spirituality in keeping with this new knowledge, not one that seeks to
deny or explain away parts of it.
- It does not simply co-exist uncomfortably with science: it
fully
embraces science as part of the human exploration of the awesome
Universe. However, this does not mean we believe that science can
answer
all questions, nor that we endorse all modern technologies regardless
of
their impact on Nature.

So why an organization?
Most people also have a deep need to belong to a
community - this is perhaps the main reason why people join or stick
with
religions they may privately doubt. The WPM aims to provide a spiritual
and
social "home base" for people who love Nature and the Universe
but do
not believe in supernatural entities. A home base that provides the
community support of local groups, and facilitators to help celebrate
natural weddings, funerals and other special occasions in the style
that
people really want. A base where you can share your beliefs and your
enthusiasms without fear of being ostracized or considered an outsider.
The WPM
Belief Statement is not a requirement of
membership but simply a notice on our door, to show what we are about
so
people can decide if it suits them or not.

Our aims
The major aims of the movement are:
- To promote the values of environmental concern
and human rights.
- To sponsor Nature conservation activities and help members
to
conserve Nature
- To make earth-honoring life-affirming naturalistic
beliefs
widely available as a spiritual option and a rational alternative to
traditional religions.
- To build up membership in localities and promote the
formation of
local groups.
- To create a network of celebrants for Nature and
life-oriented
child dedications, weddings, and funerals.
- To promote an expanding presence for these beliefs and
values on
the Internet and in other media of all types.
- To assist in the research and publication of books and
other media
related to these beliefs and values.

If you join the WPM you will be joining a young, rapidly
growing and dynamic group
with an expanding range of activities. We have several lively mailing
lists,
with over 1300 members from more than 80 countries in five
continents,
and all 50 US states. We also have regional and specialized e-mail
lists and Web bulletin boards.
There have been many local meetings of
members right
across the USA and in other parts of the world, where people have found
a
rare level of fellowship and stimulation. Two of the major benefits,
members
find, are gaining new like-minded friends and finding support for your
own
beliefs and attitudes to life and Nature.
Check us out by exploring the links on the
left:
find out our beliefs, organization and suggested practices, visit our
bulletin board, join the WPM.
 How
we relate to closely allied
beliefs
The
core of what we stand for is our beliefs (see the belief
statement). For convenience,
we use the name pantheism because it has a long and venerable history.
But
our beliefs are entirely naturalistic, and compatible with atheism,
humanism and naturalism.
Also with those forms of
paganism that see magic and the gods as symbols rather than realities.
We
offer a home to all forms of naturalistic spirituality - scientific
pantheism,
religious humanism, religious naturalism, positive atheism, deep
ecology,
philosophical Taoism, modern Stoicism, Gaia religion, also Western
forms of
Buddhism that celebrate Nature and everyday life, and to those in
Unitarian
Universalism who do not believe in supernatural beings.
You are completely free to adopt the terms and
practices
you prefer. Most of us avoid "god-language" and the sizeable minority
who use it do so metaphorically.
Please explore our pages. Check out the highlights on the
left pane,
and browse the drop-down menu top left. If you have a question,
email us at
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a t p a n t h e i s m d o t n e t |