But the difference is that in prayer, one is pleading to an external deity to effect the desired change. In magic, the appeal is generally to a deified archtype within one’s self.
Sorry, Eutychus55, but Cazarcasm seemed to imply a vast difference between prayer and magic or magick. I don’t want to get into this, because I’d only end up talking about my own belief system, and this isn’t the place for that.
When praying for inner strength to get over a crisis, and you then feel that inner strength – are you truly only crediting the higher power, or yourself? There are deep pagan roots to much of what established religion decrees today.
Anyway – as a community, we shouldn’t be calling each other “stupid” or way worse just because we have different belief systems. Actually, I believe we all see paths to the same truth, whatever that may be. This is basically why I oppose the OP.
I’m sorry, but if someone makes the claim “I can perform magic!”, and when asked to prove it, starts praying, I’m gonna call “Fraud!”. You know what the public’s general peception of magic is, so playing games with the definition is dishonest to both yourself and others. You cannot pretend that most people are using “a form of prayer” as a common definition.
Magik with a k designates that it’s a Wicca/Pagan religious activity vs. magic tricks like pull a rabbit from a hat.
Magik is performed in rituals and worship. Magik is a viewpoint or state of mind.
A common spell is changing your perspective of life from my life sucks to my life is great. When your life improves the changes come from the energy you put in your life “magik”
Levitation and throwing fireballs are not examples of magik but are examples of magic… the David Copperfield type.
Magik in a group is where several people put their collective energy into a ritual or spell. The feeling of focusing together is akin to a rock concert.
Is this close?
Can we then determine that, when a group of people get together to perform “magick” and nothing happens, it’s the real thing? And if anything out of the ordinary happens, it’s that fake stage “magic”?
Ok, and if that group gets together, performs some type of spell to bring good fortune upon one person, and good things happen to that person, can you prove that it didn’t work? note, I have no idea about any Wiccan cermemonies here, just speaking my thoughts.
So if someone does a ritual that is supposed to bring happiness, or ensure fertility or something, and what they were trying for happens, how is that explained? Coincidence? Is that a scientific theory now? That if science can’t absolutly prove or disprove something, that it must be coincidental? Random chance? Fine then, prove to me exactlly how chance works.
What I want to know is this:
if Majyk/Magik/Majik/Majgyck = Prayer
then #1) Why use the term? The vast majority of people who hear “Majyck” don’t think of it meaning “prayer” and it only serves to hamper communication.
#2) If you don’t mean Majyck = Prayer and instead mean that you can really, literally create Bigby’s Crushing Fist spell or Mordankind’s Faithful Hound spell or a 3d6 Fireball or a 2d8 Cure Serious Wounds spell, then I believe you are subject to the same level of disbelief that Christians who believe that they can pray people healthy or “Psychic Surgeons” who pull out tumors.
#3) Why do people say “It’ll come back to you 3 times 3 times 3.”? Why not just say: It’ll come back to you 27 times? (or if you mean 3^3^3, 729 times?)
Again, the scientific method has a way of dealing with the issue you’ve brought up.
If everybody gets together and prays, to the benefit of person A, for fertility and three weeks later that person gets pregnant what does it mean?
Scientifically, nothing. How does science separate correlation from coincidence? Through repetition, double blind testing, and isolation of variables.
Most people see B following A (pregnancy following a fertility prayer/spell, if such a thing exists) and assume that A caused B. Science says “hey, A may have caused B and here is how we can test it, such that we can be sure that A really has that effect.”
90% of the ailments treated with homeopathy improve within three weeks. Pretty strong proof of efficacy, eh? Except that 90% of ailments not treated at all improve within three weeks.
If all magick/prayer is, is a focusing of your mind on a specific issue (self improvement, healing) then it seems to me you’ve taken spirituality and defined it down to pop psychology.
I don’t know as many Wiccans as you all but the ones I have met do not feel that their magick is only a form of prayer, or focus. They have all believed that somewhere are powerful magickians that CAN cast fireballs or affect the physical reality around them, they just don’t know how to do it themselves.
But if you believe magick is a force only in the mental realm and not in the physical realm then I have no beef with it. I don’t consider the ability to control your own thoughts and emotions to be magical but you may. It is when someone starts saying that other people’s thoughts and physical reality can be altered by this force that I’m going to strenuously demand proof.
Disclaimer: I am not a Wiccan (IANAW?), and whether you decide my response is snide or joshing is completely up to you.
But it also makes those involved feel more important. “Prayer” indicates beseeching a power much larger than you to do something. “Majick” indicates personal power and a sense of control.
For the same reason Lincoln used “four score and seven” rather than “87”; it sounds better, and is more evocative of the imagery- in Lincoln’s case, Biblical imagery.
I had a long post almost finished when the gremlins got it. Here is a short version.
Magick is not prayer, I am comparing it to prayer. We perform spells/rituals to acheive the same kind of goals as a Christian in prayer does. Do Christians pray for fireballs? no. I don’t perform splells for fireballs either. I perform spells to focus my energy on improving my life, as a Christian would pray to Jesus for help with their life. I know that scientifically, it is BS, but emotionally it works for me, ok? I can’t prove anything. I am not asking you to believe anything. I am simply explaining my personal religious beliefs by using a common tool, comparison. An apple is similar to a pear, but it is an apple. My magick is similar to prayer, but it is a magick spell. I call it what it is. I am comparing it to prayer.
I had to write a four page report on thta my senior year of high school. I only made a C and it pissed me off. I really went through a lot of effort and thought I found a lot of hidden meanins and all sorts of cool stuff. DAMN YOU ENGLISH TEACHER!!!
Hey, Hastur? I’ve got no beef with your beliefs. If you can perform magick, that’s great. But I am shocked and appalled at the hypocrisy you’ve shown by this statement. When Czarcasm indicated he actually lived in Portland, you wimped out big-time, rather than back up the statement you made.
Yeah, I know, it makes a huge difference in your life what I think. That action on your part, however, was JDT-like in its ridiculousness. Geez, man. Don’t say things you can’t back up. It ruins your whole argument.