Wednesday, November 7, 2012

More thoughts about Power



Blessings, Courageous Ones!

I continually contemplate what Power means to me as a High Priestess.  What does power look like and how is it experienced in the Sisterhood of the Moon?  In which situations do I use power where it is acceptable?  Where do I use it where it is not?  How can I bring more power-with to myself and within my relationships with Circle-Sisters?

I agree with Michel Foucault’s definition of power demonstrating these qualities:

1.    Asserts itself through truth/knowledge claims;
2.    Emerges within a social context and meaning; and
3.    Is neither positive nor negative until it is deployed and perceived.

On page 87 of Ethics & Professional Practice for Neopagan Clergy, Dr. Katie MacDowell writes regarding truth/knowledge claims:

When we apply this to religion, two specific issues emerge:
1.    Knowledge authority that is implied or explicitly claimed by the priest/ess;
2.    Truth claims about the specific tradition’s beliefs on how the universe works, who’s in charge, and how we should lead our lives based [on this]

As High Priestess, my knowledge authority is implied.  Women who come to the Sisterhood know I am the Leader, and therefore have authority over what happens within our community—this is the social context and meaning.  I do not have authority over the personal lives of my Circle-Sisters, or over their personal cosmology/spirituality—nor do I want to—although I always share the beliefs and foundations of the Sisterhood of the Moon Tradition so that women know what framework we are operating within.  It is my intention to be completely transparent as to what the Tradition’s beliefs are, how the power structure is set up, and how I choose to lead my own life based on these beliefs and structures.

I agree with Dr. MacDowell that marrying Foucault’s definition of power with Rosabeth Moss Kanter’s can be helpful in truly grasping what power means in the social/spiritual construct.  On page 82, MacDowell provides Kanter’s definition of power as:
           
The ability to achieve and mobilize social and material resources through the assertion and utilization of truth claims and social position (both creating authority) to meet one’s goals.

Dr. MacDowell, on pages 88-89, goes on to list the typical sources of power for a Priestess:

·         The right to define, alter, and create theological beliefs;
·         The capacity to accept or decline members for worship;
·         The right to officiate all ritual/liturgical elements of worship;
·         The capacity to remove any member or lower-leveled clergy from office or the   worship group;
·         The ability to set the tone for the dynamics between members;
·         The ability to determine who is qualified for initiation or teaching and who is not;
·         Access to mystery or hidden/non-public knowledge adherents do not have;
·         Access to financial reimbursement for time, teaching, and counseling;
·         Legal recognition of authority conferred by title to oversee marriage and death  rites, as well as participate in pastoral care; and
·         Ego resources, such as a sense of greater control and capacity conferred through holding the other power resources as well as in the role of being sought out by other members for help, guidance, or teaching.
           
Power is a privilege, and as High Priestess I am privileged to exercise my authority and power. Without Circle-Sisters to accept my claim to this power, however, there is no community to lead.  This is an Agreement we have all willingly entered into and this power is established because I say it is so:  I have done the work, been granted Ordination within my Tradition, and started and tended to the cauldron of my circle.  Any women can come to me for training and Initiation and/or Ordination within the Sisterhood of the Moon, as long as she is willing to do the work within the structure of our particular community and the belief system therein.  Currently, even though I often go to my Sacred Council for advice, I am the sole Priestess, and the final decision-maker in all cases.  As Rev. Ava Park teaches, as I am the Queen of the Realm of the Sisterhood, I have the right and responsibility to make any and all decisions.  The ultimate goal I hold for all women in my community is self-empowerment.

Regarding the process of inclusion and exclusion and how it relates to power in our particular Dianic community, I am always in process with myself around this.  As Dr. MacDowell writes on page 85:

…exclusion does occur and it is the clergy’s responsibility to continuously assess:
·         Who is being excluded and who is being included?
·         For what reasons is the exclusion occurring?
·         Are such practices potentially beneficial to the community and in what ways?
·         How are such practices harmful to the community and in what ways?
·         Are such justifications for the exclusion in keeping with the ethics of the faith?

The feminist Dianic Tradition of Z Budapest intentionally excludes men from our group spiritual practices.  This is not because we are against men, or do not honor them; in fact, most of my Circle-Sisters, including myself, are married to or partnered with men, live in households with them, raise children with them, and maintain close, deep, and abiding friendships with them.  Our Dianic Tradition was founded for women to practice our spirituality solely with other women as a way of reclaiming power and self-empowerment through discussing and ritualizing the Blood Mysteries, and in developing closer relationships with other women and the Goddess.  This is not a commentary on how others choose to practice their spirituality or embrace and create their own personal cosmology.  There is inherent exclusion in this particular Dianic Tradition that I do not believe is harmful to men who are excluded.  On a different note, I continue a deep personal inquiry into the position of the Dianic Tradition on transgender women, and whether this is harmful or to our trans-Sisters and ethically, to the Sisterhood of the Moon.

Finally, a note on “power-over” and “power-with” as it relates to this specific chapter in Dr. MacDowell’s book.  “Power-over” exists in my circle because there is a hierarchical structure in our community.  I am the primary authority figure, although I strive to share “power-with” with all Circle-Sisters who wish it:  I encourage women to help shape our community, to give input on what they would like to see and participate in, to help us establish and develop those things that will best serve our members.  I see our emerging Sisterhood of the Moon Tradition as a hybrid between typical authoritative hierarchies and consensus-based communities.  To my best ability, I maintain a benevolent authority within our circle.

I would love to hear about how you experience and utilize power as a Leader, and I invite you to “follow” this blog so you receive notification via email for each of my new posts.

Blessed be,
Lady Jesamyn Angelica
High Priestess, Sisterhood of the Moon










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