For the natural polytheist, whose gods arise in and from the natural material world. .. Our gods not only have transcendent eyes and metaphysical hands. They have antlers and feathers, hooves and scales, fangs and horns and wings and fins and claws. They are in the lands we strip for veins of precious ore. They are in the waters we poison. - Alison Leigh Lilly, "Anatomy of a God John Halstead
About This Quote

The natural polytheist is someone who has no belief in a supernatural or metaphysical force. However, many polytheists do believe that the natural world is the home of deities. These gods are often depicted as animals, monsters, or other symbols of nature. Polytheism is the belief in more than one deity. The polytheist believes that each religion or religion group around the world has their own unique way of worshiping their gods.

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  1. …stand at the foot of a mountain and you may be impressed by how much greater it is than you in degree, how alien it is from you in kind. Climb that mountain and confront limits of endurance beyond which you thought yourself incapable, feel...

  2. For the natural polytheist who finds her gods in the rivers and mountains, in the deep-rooted giants looming above the canopy and in the tiny creatures that move beneath them, ecology gives us a glimpse into a kind of living anatomy of the divine, a...

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  5. I sing to you of the deities of the Dictyostelidal slime molds, sexless and strange, at once a thousand voices and one song united. I sing to you of hard times when the wood has rotted away and the sun bakes the earth, and while...

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