uropean Paganism is growing so it's about time we discussed it as a serious option for Europe's future.
There is still no formal pagan religion in modern Europe which aims to preserve Europe and it's people. We must stomp out the tree-hugging, multicultural loving wicca-style movements before they gain any real recognition as "pagans".
All post-Christian European societies held pagan beliefs with very similar traditions - link showing how most of the main European pagan beliefs worshiped the same Gods. burzum.org/eng/library/paganism19.shtml
Jack Donovan touches on the subject of Norse Paganism and how it is truly intertwined with masculinity; something of which Europe is in desperate need. jack-donovan.com/axis/2014/12/way-men-gods-runes/
Next you can select particular studies that you fancy the most after you've covered all the main topics in regards to our history and tradition/folkways: mega.nz/#F!AE5yjIqB!y7Vdxdb5pbNsi2O3zyq9KQ
After things like Sagga's & Edda's in regards to Asatru its a good idea to look at the Havamal. Aftewards look at the Saxo-Grammaticus and Heimskringla. The links there have basically EVERYTHING that was in the site: Temple of Our Heathen Gods.
Jeremiah Phillips
What is Asatru?
Asatru is a native European religion - one developed by the Germanic peoples from the very essence of their soul, rather than imposed from without.
Perhaps the best way to understand Asatru is to compare it with the more familiar American Indian spirituality. Both are tribal. Both honor the ancestors, and both have much to teach us about our connection with the natural world around us. Both offer a noble set of values. Most relevant to the point we are trying to make, the Germanic Way and the Way of the American Indian are both native religions - the indigenous religions of specific peoples.
When we see that Asatru is a native religion, it becomes clear that this is not some "pagan" religion we have arbitrarily adopted, nor is it some New Age fantasy, nor is it a whim or passing fad. Asatru has ancient roots - our roots. It is the spiritual path of our Germanic ancestors, and as such it deserves to be taken seriously.
Asatru honors the Holy Powers - the Gods and Goddesses. It does so using the names by which they were called in ancient times. The Vikings were among the last of the European cultures to be stripped of their ancient beliefs, so followers of Asatru often call the Holy Powers by their Norse names, such as Odin, Thor, Freya, and so forth. This does not mean that modern followers of the Germanic Way dress or act like Vikings, run around in horned helmets, wear bearskins on their shoulders, or pretend that they live a thousand years in the past. Modern-day Asafolk, like modern-day American Indians, drive automobiles, use computers, and dress like ordinary people.
In short, Asatru is not some strange cult, nor something we have taken up casually, nor a historical hobby group. It is a native religion of a large and important part of the Earth's population - the peoples of Europe.
In the hour of the fading sun Old songs can be heard Over the moors in the ash and oak Where the spirits heed their words
The lone hymns that were weaved and spun Before the age of fern Felt on the air by the hands of those Whose crying hearts still yearn
Orphic rites of the mystic Communion with the Gods
The heart is pulled in rapture By the currents of the ocean The fragrance of cedar passes By lantern lit devotion
The pulse of the clamoring drum Mimic the flames growing faster As the spirits of night listen And the owls surrounding answer
Jeremiah Cook
pagan niggers will defend this
Jason Smith
top left was created by pagans. What is the final solution to the christcuck question?
Samuel Stewart
Christianity was invented by a shitskin jew who lived in the Middle East
The true religion of Europeans is Paganism
Christians raped, killed, tortured, and forcibly converted millions of our ancestors in the Middle Ages
If you worship the religion that murdered your ancestors and held Europe back hundreds of years intellectually then you basically a huge cuck
Wyatt Perez
>WHAT ARE THE BASIC BELIEFS OF ASATRU?
We believe in an underlying, all-pervading divine energy or essence which is generally hidden from us, and which is beyond our immediate understanding. We further believe that this spiritual reality is interdependent with us - that we affect it, and it affects us.
We believe that this underlying divinity expresses itself to us in the forms of the Gods and Goddesses. Stories about these deities are like a sort of code, the mysterious "language" through which the divine reality speaks to us.
We believe in standards of behavior which are consistent with these spiritual truths and harmonious with our deepest being.
>HOW DOES ASATRU DIFFER FROM OTHER RELIGIONS?
Asatru is unlike the better-known religions in many ways. Some of these are:
We are polytheistic. That is, we believe in a number of deities, including Goddesses as well as Gods. We do not accept the idea of "original sin", the notion that we are tainted from birth and intrinsically bad, as does Christianity. Thus, we do not need "saving".
The Middle Eastern religions teach either a hatred of other religions or a duty to convert others, often by force. They have often practiced these beliefs with cruel brutality.
We do not claim to be a universal religion or a faith for all of humankind. In fact, we don't think such a thing is possible or desirable. The different branches of humanity have different ways of looking at the world, each of which is valid for them. It is only right that they have different religions, which of course they do.
Lincoln Lewis
>DOES ASATRU HAVE A HOLY BOOK, LIKE THE BIBLE?
No. There are written sources which are useful to us because they contain much of our sacred lore in the form of myths and examples of right conduct, but we do not accept them as infallible or inspired documents. Any religion which does this is deceiving its members about the purity and precision of the written word. The various competing factions of Middle Eastern religions are proof of this. Their conflicting interpretations can not all be correct!
There are two real sources of holy truth, and neither expresses itself to us in words. One is the universe around us, which is a manifestation of the underlying divine essence. The other is the universe within us, passed down from our ancestors as instinct, emotion, innate predispositions, and perhaps even racial memory. By combining these sources of internal and external wisdom with the literature left us by our ancestors, we arrive at religious truths. This living spiritual guidance is better than any dusty, dogmatic "holy book", whose writings are often so ambiguous that even clerical scholars disagree and whose interpretations change with the politics of the times.
Lucas Turner
Stop being divisive. Jews have made our society unnatural, and paganism, although I am against it, is far more natural than most of this kiked hell’s cape. We have one enemy.
David Watson
>WHERE DID THE UNIVERSE COME FROM, ACCORDING TO ASATRU?
Our myths describe the beginning of the universe as the unfolding of a natural process, rather than one requiring supernatural intervention. Followers of Asatru need not abandon modern science to retain their religion. The old lore of our people describes the interaction of fire and ice and the development of life from these - but this is symbolic, and we will leave it to our scientists to discover how the universe was born.
>WHAT ARE THE RUNES, AND WHAT DO THEY HAVE TO DO WITH ASATRU?
Runes are ancient Germanic symbols representing various concepts or forces in the universe. Taken together, they express our ancestors' world view. Their meanings are intimately connected with the teachings of Asatru. Our myths tell how Odin, father of the Gods, won them through painful ordeal so that Gods and humans alike might benefit from their wisdom.