Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools

Whilst the use of flagellation for the purposes of purification, punishment or redemptive salvific activity has long been accepted in Christianity, its use in newly emergent religions such as Wicca, where the religious use of pain cannot be sidelined as an historical aberration but must instead be u...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jo Pearson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Donner Institute 2011-01-01
Series:Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67394
id doaj-1d4caa1532974efaaf36cfe176760082
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1d4caa1532974efaaf36cfe1767600822020-11-25T01:14:09ZengDonner InstituteScripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis0582-32262343-49372011-01-012310.30674/scripta.67394Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual toolsJo Pearson0University of WinchesterWhilst the use of flagellation for the purposes of purification, punishment or redemptive salvific activity has long been accepted in Christianity, its use in newly emergent religions such as Wicca, where the religious use of pain cannot be sidelined as an historical aberration but must instead be understood within the context of (post)modern spirituality, has elicited little debate. Whilst purification and, to a far lesser extent, punishment still have their place, in Wicca submission to pain must also be explored in terms of initi­atory ordeal, as well as an opportunity for transcendence and as arousal, sensation, and energy generation. However, voluntary submission to the infliction of pain, especially in order to enable religious/spiritual experience, tends to be regarded as anathema and as such, remains largely hidden, concealed behind a veil of categorisations of sexuality and psychopathology. Whilst acknowledging that BDSM remains taboo amongst most practitioners of Wicca, this 60 year old religion contains within its practices elements of techniques often associated with BDSM, techniques which, though having an established history in the world’s religions, are now being pioneered by a small cohort of priests and priestesses within the ritual framework of a twentieth/twenty-first century religion. This article concentrates on those elements now more or less stripped of their association with medieval Christianity, and more commonly framed within the context/s of BDSM. https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67394RitualPainSufferingSpiritualityWiccaWitchcraft
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jo Pearson
spellingShingle Jo Pearson
Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools
Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
Ritual
Pain
Suffering
Spirituality
Wicca
Witchcraft
author_facet Jo Pearson
author_sort Jo Pearson
title Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools
title_short Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools
title_full Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools
title_fullStr Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools
title_full_unstemmed Embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools
title_sort embracing the lash: pain and ritual as spiritual tools
publisher Donner Institute
series Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
issn 0582-3226
2343-4937
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Whilst the use of flagellation for the purposes of purification, punishment or redemptive salvific activity has long been accepted in Christianity, its use in newly emergent religions such as Wicca, where the religious use of pain cannot be sidelined as an historical aberration but must instead be understood within the context of (post)modern spirituality, has elicited little debate. Whilst purification and, to a far lesser extent, punishment still have their place, in Wicca submission to pain must also be explored in terms of initi­atory ordeal, as well as an opportunity for transcendence and as arousal, sensation, and energy generation. However, voluntary submission to the infliction of pain, especially in order to enable religious/spiritual experience, tends to be regarded as anathema and as such, remains largely hidden, concealed behind a veil of categorisations of sexuality and psychopathology. Whilst acknowledging that BDSM remains taboo amongst most practitioners of Wicca, this 60 year old religion contains within its practices elements of techniques often associated with BDSM, techniques which, though having an established history in the world’s religions, are now being pioneered by a small cohort of priests and priestesses within the ritual framework of a twentieth/twenty-first century religion. This article concentrates on those elements now more or less stripped of their association with medieval Christianity, and more commonly framed within the context/s of BDSM. 
topic Ritual
Pain
Suffering
Spirituality
Wicca
Witchcraft
url https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67394
work_keys_str_mv AT jopearson embracingthelashpainandritualasspiritualtools
_version_ 1725158486373826560