A seventh
characteristic of the Celts, reflected in their ecclesiology and spirituality,
was their profound appreciation of the spoken and written word; that is, of
storytelling. They knew first hand that stories feed the soul the way food
feeds the body. As a result, they had many types of storytellersfrom the
seanchai, the humblest teller of tales around the hearth in the home, to the
fili, the learned bard at the courts of the Irish kings, to the monastic scribe
seated with his quill pen in a cold scriptorium transcribing on vellum the
stories of the saints. The responsibility of all of these storytellers was to
remember and narrate the great sagas of their tribal and spiritual ancestors
whom they considered, even if long dead, intimate members of their families.
The stories and legends they told were about both secular heroes and honoured
saints, mortal and immortal beings who had strange visions, made voyages to
other worlds, endured great hardships for tribe and gospel, and travelled in
companies of friends. Whenever and wherever they were told, these stories about
their heroes were perhaps the clearest expression of the Celts' religious
beliefs, values, and spirituality.
Celtic spirituality,
a spirituality which has a future, precisely because it has much to teach our
contemporary world. In Ireland, where the purest forms of Celtic life survived,
since the armies of Rome never conquered it, the social system consisted of three
main classes: the landowning aristocracy who were the tribal kings and their
retinues of warriors, families and relatives; the serfs, some of whom were
free, while others were slaves taken in battle or, like the youthful St.
Patrick, kidnapped from foreign shores; and, finally, but not least, the
scholars and artists called the aes dana, Gaelic for "people of
learning" or "of poetry." This latter group included poets,
historians, experts in genealogy, lawyers, physicians, skilled craftsmen, and
the story-tellers themselves, the bards. Many of these aes dana were druids and
druidesses, advisers to the kings and teachers of the tribes. In fact, the
highest position [ollam] of the druids was equal to that of the king, a
position of spiritual authority that was eventually replaced by the monastic
leader or Christian bishop when the pagan Celts had been baptized. All of these
aes dana in Ireland were held in high esteem and had the privilege, as did the
aristocracy, of travelling anywhere without permission. This respect and the
freedom which went with it reveals how much Celtic society valued people of
learning, of poetry, and of artistic skills, considering them as essential as
any king or warrior to the well being of their society, culture, and spirituality.
guess you know about Wikipedia....a quote from the free encyclopedia - "They shut their doors and windows for a day’s time, and lay in the dark with a stone upon their belly, and their plaids about their heads and eyes, and thus they pumped their brains for rhetorical encomiums."
ReplyDeleteand behind the doors are big speakers