As a druid, I believe in one god, a god of balance, one side is the universal creator, who designed all, and brought about religions(all religions) as a means of teaching man to treat each other with kindness, and the other half is ruled by destruction, who brings about death and chaos, which is required for order to grow. neither half is evil or good
we don\'t believe in evil, all actions taken apon us in our lives, all things that happen shape us, make us who we are, if we commit a crime, it\'s merely a touch of the destroyers influence on our past, something bad that happened that caused a slight personality flaw
now, although we don\'t believe in evil doesn\'t mean that we don\'t believe in wrong, just because we have these flaws passed along to us in the past doesn\'t mean that we are required to pass them along
our religion is very disorganised, most practice without any connection to the church, I myself am debating joining, I\'m leaning towards staying independent truly
there are three major factions, in our religion, because of the duality nature of our god, order, neutrality and chaos. all are considered equals within the orderwho are below the high priest, although even he has little power among us, we have few rituals, mostly centering around our holy objects, or the four gates (the origin of the winds/points/spirits ritual, although wiccans have claimed for years that they designed that ritual) I am the only druid in the area in which I live, we were also the first to celebrate the solstices and equinoxes.
we also believe in meditative magic, which is where most people come to believe that we\'re quacks,
if you want to learn in more depth what we believe, an excellent source of information is \"The twenty one lessons of merlin\" the authors name slips from my mind at the moment, but it\'s gives an alternate arthurian history, where young arthur meets merlin, who trains him in the way of the druid as guidance in tolerance to make him a good king, every chapter comes with a lesson guide, giving history of the gaelics, history of druids, and lessons in our rituals and beliefs