Wiccan
Ethics And The Wiccan Rede
By
David Piper, Sat 21 May 94 12:16
Part I: What Sayeth The Rede?
The
"archaically
worded"
construction "An
it harm none, do what ye will,"
rendered into modern English is literally, "if
it doesn't harm anyone, do what you want."
Many
modern Wiccans "reverse"
the construction, however, taking the first part and putting it after
the second to read: "Do
what ye will an it harm none,"
or in modern English "Do
what you want if it doesn't harm anyone."
Many
people give the word "an"
or
"if"
a value of "so
long as"
- which is acceptable substitution, because it doesn't alter the
meaning of the Rede itself. However they then proceed to read "so
long as"
as "only
if,"
and that is completely
different,
because the Rede has ceased to be a "wise
counsel"
[anyone checked the meaning of "rede"
in the dictionary lately?] and become an injunction: prohibitive
commandment, rather than permissive advice.
In
other words, the original archaic construction actually says "if
it is not going to hurt anyone, it is ok to do"
- this is not
the same as "if
it hurts anyone it is not
ok to do."
What
is the significance of the change? A larger one than you might see,
at first glance.
The
"actual
construction Rede,"
or AC Rede, says it is ok to do something that won't harm anyone, but
it does
not say anything
about those things which do cause harm, except to set an ethical
standard of
harmlessness
as the criteria to judge by.
The
"modern
reconstruction Rede"
or MR Rede, explicitly says that any and all actions that cause harm
are forbidden.
The
two constructions do not
mean the same thing at all. And it should be obvious that this has
implications on our thinking, and discussions of the possibility of "obeying"
the Rede.
Most
of you will have heard or read, as I have, people saying the Rede is
something to strive to live by, even though mundane reality makes it
very difficult, if not impossible, to do so to the letter. This
is only true of the MR Rede, not the AC Rede!
As examples, they cite situations such as self-defense; *this
violates the MR Rede*. Period. But it does not
violate the AC Rede. Period.
Earlier,
I stated that the AC Rede does not rule on actions that do cause
harm - and this is true. It only rules on those actions which do not,
by saying that they are acceptable. This is relevant to "victimless
crimes"
for example - civil "crimes"
may in fact be "ethical,"
by the judgment of the AC Rede.
What
the AC Rede does
do, in terms of actions that cause harm, is state an ethical value by
which an individual must judge the results of her/his actions before
acting. In other words, by stating that a harmless action is ethical,
the AC Rede sets harmlessness as the criteria for evaluation. Acting
to prevent greater harm - but in the process causing lesser harm -
may then be ethical, if there is no harmless, or more harmless,
method of preventing that greater harm - because not
acting to prevent harm is to cause
it, by an act of omission
rather than commission.
In
short the difference between the AC Rede, and the MR Rede, is that
the AC Rede is a perfectly - obeyable ethical standard, but the MR
Rede is not, as so many people have pointed out. Do we take as our
ethical standard a "counsel"
which can be obeyed, or one which necessitates
rationalizing in some instances?
Which is truer to the Wicca, and to the real Rede?
"rede (red), v., reded, reding, n. Chiefly Brit. Dial. -v.t. 1. To councel; advise. 2. To explain. -n. 3. councel; advice. 4. a plan; scheme. 5. a tle;story. [ME rede(n), OE rædan]" (from Random House College Dictionary, Revised Edition)
Part II: "Do good, an it be safe..." (from the Ordains)
The
MR Rede is the most common interpretation in Wicca today; so much
so, that not only do many Wiccans not realize there's a difference in
the two constructions, but they deny
it when it is pointed out to them, holding firmly to the MR Rede as
what the original has always meant.
At
first the change of language was only an attempt to bring the
language up from archaic, to modern English; but in doing so -
especially with the public relations campaign, to convince people
that Wiccans are "not
black magick/not devil worship/not evil nasty curse-casters"
the "harmlessness"
aspect of the Rede was stressed, over the personal responsibility
aspect. And in essence Wiccans became the victims of their own PR campaign.
An
additional result is the injunction that one may never work magick
for others, even to heal, without their knowledge and consent. Of
course, we are allowed by this injunction to ask "Can
I pray for you?" as
a means of obtaining the consent. From "a
love spell aimed at one particular person is unethical because it
violates their will only to serve our lust"
we've moved to an extreme: to the prohibitive injunction against ever
doing any magick for another without permission, since it violates
their free will. Does anyone really
believe the Gods will judge them ill, for attempting to heal someone?
What
of the case of an unconscious accident victim and family unavailable
to ask - are we forbidden to work? No, of course we're not - but we do
have to accept the karmic consequences of such acts. Do you really
think that a neurotic who uses an illness as a crutch wouldn't be
better healed of that neurosis as well as the illness? Of course that
may call up some karma if the person isn't strong enough to give up
that crutch yet. Once again the real criteria is personal
responsibility
and consideration of the consequences of one's actions before
one acts rather than the "thou
shalt not"
prohibitive commandment.
There
is however another reason for the "prohibitive
form"
of these redes - one which has some validity. The teacher bears a
karmic responsibility for the student. There was a group whose
teaching was, "No
magick may be done for another, even to heal, without their consent;
any exceptions may be decided only by the High Priestess and the High Priest."
The point of this is that a student is not yet experienced enough,
not yet wise enough (since wisdom is the harvest we reap of our
experience and knowledge), to have that kind of decision, and the
resulting karmic burden, left to rest fully upon her/his shoulders -
hence, some teachers and some Trads do not allow neophytes to have
responsibility for that kind of decision-making.
It
is far better, however, to teach a student the essential importance
of personal responsibility, the need to look ahead for possible
consequences before they act, than to lay "thou
shalt not's"
upon them despite Wicca's insistance that we have none.
I
received a comment about the last sentence in part I, paragraph 3,
that said "Ack!
Welcome to the One Wiccan Commandment! Any 'thou shalt nots' lurking around?"
Food for thought, my fellow Wiccans! Food for thought!
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