A
Pleasing Offering
[January 2006]
"Why
do you worry so much?" a friend asked after my ramblings
on researching and writing a daily rite. "Offering is
offering, right? I don't think the gods care so much about
what's offered as they do about the attitude it's offered
in."
"I
know that," I said, brushing it off before going
right back to puzzling over a daily rite.
I didn't
really think about it till much later. In a way, my friend
was right. What need have gods for chocolate and shiny things?
There's a deeper reason behind ritual, offerings, and the
apparent pickiness of some deities over what they're offered.
It's not that Anpu really can't stand fish, or absolutely
adores rum, though that may be partially the case. The core
reason is the concept of sacrifice.
An offering
is many things. It's a sacrifice, a form of worship, recognition
of the roles the gods play in human lives. It's a form of
prayer. In kemetic practice, it's also communion, a shared
meal and shared time.
The value
of an offering is what the offerer puts into it.
It'd be
easy to offer Anpu money. It'd be a sacrifice - I don't earn
a lot, and there's all sorts of items and trips and outings
I would love to spend it on instead. Yet I don't offer Anpu
money. Why not? Because it'd be easy. It requires no thought,
effort, or time on my part. It's a sacrifice, but not a sacrifice
of self.
Jesus
knew the value of offering. The story of the widow and her
two copper coins illustrates it perfectly. She offered only
two small coins, and Jesus noted that she offered more than
the sacks of gold given to the temple by the rich men, saying
"All these people gave their gifts out of their wealth;
but she out of her poverty put in all she had to live on."
She was saying with her offering that she trusted her God
enough to give him all she had. Her sacrifice was a gesture
of trust, a sacrifice of self, not of convenience. It's a
case of money being a valuable offering. In my situation,
my living expenses, schooling, and books are all paid for
by grants and scholarships - I don't need money to survive.
Giving money would be giving "out of my wealth",
to use the biblical phrasing.
I
also don't offer money because Anpu doesn't ask for it. A
pleasing offering-gift is one that shows the giver listened
to what the recipient wanted. I don't know if Anpu really
likes rum chocolate or honeycomb, but it's what he told me
he wanted, so I bought it for him. Offering him only the money
that those items cost would have been a lifeless offering;
giving him the items showed I took the time to listen and
cared enough to follow through.
Time
and effort is another part of offering. I fold origami; never
tried giving any to Anpu, but I'll use this as an example
anyway. I could fold a sloppy, half-assed flapping crane out
of notebook paper. It would take me three minutes. Yet even
if Anpu decided he wanted origami, I don't think he'd like
it. I'd probably get the "What the hell is this?"
look. However, I could also hunt around and find a store with
colorful, high-quality origamiy paper and then take my time
folding the crane, making the creases precise and sharp. I'd
likely get a much more favorable reaction from that,
because it took time and effort and I put my best into making
it.
An
offering must also be from the offerer. I missed
having tea with Anpu one day. A coworker bought me a cup of
chai tea because we were all frazzled and she wanted to apologize
for snapping at me. My reaction was something along the lines
of Ooh! I can use this for tea with Anpu! But the
instant I started my ritual routine, I got the spiritual equivalent
of a wrist-slap and a stern look. 'That was a gift to
you. You neither bought it nor made it, and
it was intended for you. You will not
offer that.' Oops. I must have looked a bit shamefaced
as I set the cup down and apologized to the Jackal.
Another
story to go with the above point: During the Yule of honeycomb
and rum chocolates, I had originally bought nothing to offer
to Anpu. I suppose somewhere in my mind was the idea that
I'd offer him something of the ritual feast. (I was clearly
not thinking.) I accompanied my boyfriend to a wonderful Italian
grocery so he could pick up mead, and I halted at the door
as a thought occured to me. "Crap - Anpu's gonna want
something."
"Of
course I do. You weren't going to give me someone else's offering,
were you?"
So
I got him Holland gouda cheese and Amish honeycomb honey and
rum chocolates, and he was very pleased, bouncing about as
Yinepu, the Divine Child. It was a good Yule, and I learned
a lesson about offering.
Every
time I've given (or tried giving, or thought about
giving) an offering of convenience, I've gotten an unfavorable
response. There was the Yule incident as described above.
There was the sushi, given because it was what was in the
fridge and hey, I like it, maybe Anpu would too. His distaste
probably came less from some dislike for sushi and more from
the fact that I didn't check if he'd like it or not, I didn't
listen, and I put no effort of my own into it. It's possible
that there will be more incidents in the future, because I
can be lazy or rushed at times and will grab for what's convenient.
That's not a sacrifice. It's a lifeless offering.
Finally
there's the component of offerings I believe to be most important
in kemetic practice: communion. Sacrifice is different when
it's practically a requirement to use the offering. In other
religions, you are truly giving up any food (and usually any
items) offered. They're burnt, thrown out for animals and
plants, tossed in a well, or otherwise disposed of. With kemetism,
the idea is that the gods consume the offering's essence,
its ka, and the offering's khat or physical
part is consumed by the offerer or someone close to them.
If you offer food, you get to eat it. If you offer ink, you
get to use it. Indeed, you must consume or use said
items. There's no possibility of going hungry because you
offered a slab of meat and bread.
Therefore,
communion gains importance. A hasty thoughtless offering,
given without meditation or time or thought, is a poor offering.
Offered food becomes a shared meal. Offered items become shared
actions. When someone gives the offering, she should be spending
time with the netjer, her thoughts on the one offered to,
open and listening and sharing her heart.
To me,
daily ritual is a time of fellowship with Anpu, the time when
I get to sit down and have a one-on-one chat with the Jackal.
It's a time of reverence, yes; but more than that, it's a
time of closeness. Sure, I can chat with Anpu any time, but
it's usually like talking on the phone. Ritual is when we
meet face-to-face.
So what
do I see as the necessary components of an offering? I believe
a pleasing offering is one that is a sacrifice of self rather
than convenience; it comes from having listened and cared
enough to comply with what's wanted; it's an offering that
took time and sincere effort to provide; one that is offered
in mindfulness and openness to communion and communication.
In
the end, a pleasing offering is one of the heart, however
that may manifest. It all sums up to sincerity.
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