Deities and Pantheons; Part 2 – Incorporating deities on your altar

THE DEITIES AND YOUR ALTAR

Representation of the deities varies. Most commonly, a designated candle is used to represent the Goddess and God. The colors vary as well, usually based on tradition; they have been represented by gold, red, or yellow for the God and white, silver or black for the Goddess. The candles can be presented in specific shapes such as a representation of a deity (i.e. a human form or another form representing the deity).

The placement of the candles also varies by tradition. Sometimes they are kept together at the northern point of the altar, other times the Goddess candle is kept at the left and the God at the right. There is also a recognition of altar tools as representations (e.g. The God is associated with the wand and the cauldron is associated with the Goddess) that are placed in their respective places. 

When invoking the God and Goddess to join your circle, this should be done verbally in the same manner you would invoke the elements. You may make their invocation long and elaborately formal or keep it pleasant and conversationally short. Always thank the deities for their presence in your circle, especially before closing.

CORRESPONDENCES

The God

  1. Altar Tools
    1. Censer (incence burner)
    2. Wand
    3. Athame
    4. Boline
  2. Candle Colors
    1. Gold
    2. Red
    3. Orange
    4. Yellow
    5. Green
  3. Images and Symbols
    1. Crescent moon on top of a circle
  4. Offerings
    1. Bread
    2. Basil
    3. Clover
    4. Pine needles
    5. Fruit

The Horned God

  1. Altar Tools
    1. Bloodstone
    2. Green Tourmaline
    3. Tiger’s Eye
  2. Candle Colors
    1. Green
    2. Gold
  3. Images and Symbols
    1. Horns
    2. Spears
    3. Arrows
    4. Swords
  4. Offerings
    1. Cheese
    2. Pine cones
    3. Nettles

The Sun God

  1. Altar Tools
    1. Sunstone
    2. Citrine
    3. Carnelian
  2. Candle colors
    1. Red
    2. Orange
    3. Yellow
  3. Inages and symbols
    1. Sun
    2. Flames
  4. Offerings
    1. Sunflower seeds
    2. Petals

The Goddess

  1. Altar Tools
    1. Cuop
    2. Pentacle
    3. Bell
    4. Cauldron
  2. Candle Colors
    1. Black
    2. White
    3. Silver
    4. Green
  3. Images and symbols
    1. Circle flanked by two crescent moons
  4. Offerings
    1. White or purple flowers
    2. Chamomile
    3. Hibiscus
    4. Olive oil

The Maiden

  1. Altar tools
    1. Clear quartz
    2. Rose quartz
    3. Amethyst
  2. Candle colors
    1. White
    2. Pink
  3. Images and symbols
    1. Waxing moon
    2. Owl
    3. Deer
  4. Offerings
    1. Pink flowers white wine

The Mother

  1. Altar tools
    1. Bloodstone
    2. Rose quartz
    3. Garnet
  2. Candle colors
    1. Red
  3. Images and symbols
    1. Full moon
    2. Cauldron
  4. Offerings
    1. Roses
    2. Milk
    3. Honey

The Crone

  1. Altar tools
    1. Jet
    2. Onyx
    3. Obsidian
  2. Candle colors
    1. Black
  3. Images and symbols
    1. Waning moon
    2. Lantern
    3. Key
  4. Offerings
    1. Red wine
    2. Apples 

Holidays in April

4/28

Floralia

The Floralia was a festival in ancient Roman religious practice in honor of the goddess Flora, held April 27 during the Republican era, or April 28 in the Julian calendar. The festival included Ludi Florae, the “Games of Flora” which lasted for six days under the empire.

4/30

Walpurgisnacht

Walpurgisnacht has become a sort of Halloween party in Germany today. Up in the Harz Mountains, bonfires are lit, and thousands of people dressed in Witch, Warlock, or Devil costumes come from all over to dance and celebrate on a plateau called the Hexentanzplatz near the town of Thale.

Walpurgis Night (30 April, annually) is a modern-day European and Scandinavian festival derived from the merging of the ancient pagan celebration of Beltane with the commemoration of the canonization of the Christian Saint Walpurga (l. c. 710 – c. 777 CE).

In Germany, Hexennacht (‘Witches’ Night’), the night from 30 April to 1 May, is the night when witches are reputed to hold a large celebration on the Brocken and await the arrival of spring and is held on the same night as Saint Walpurgis Night (Sankt Walpurgisnacht). 

Every year I like to suggest a listen to one of my favorite songs for this holiday. Click the embedded link and enjoy!

Deities and Pantheons Series; Part 1

In Wicca, the gods and goddesses play different roles depending on the type of witch and how they practice. For someone who follows Wicca to the letter, the God and Goddess are the supreme deities. However, for a more eclectic witch, the more ancient gods that pre-date Wicca play a role as patrons or something to that effect.

The number of gods and goddesses from other pagan cultures is astronomical. There would be no way to cover them all. If you are looking for a patron god or goddess, my recommendation would be to absorb and notice the signs around you and try to make a deduction from those. Do some research and find the corresponding deity. You will know when you find them. 

Divinity was not always a remarkable, out of place thing. Long before any religions we know today existed, divinity was an experience found day to day. Early humans saw the divine in the trees, rocks, streams, and earth all around. There was no perceived veil between the spirit world and the physical world, therefore there was nothing supernatural. 

In some of these early cultures, every being, living or inanimate, had its own soul, while in others, everything was a product of the same divine source. Historians and anthropologists refer to these cultural beliefs as animism and pantheism, respectively. What is interesting is that even though religion has developed and changed, the same overlap of ancient cultures still exists in today’s societies. 

There is no record of when the first deities began to be worshipped. The earliest documentation is on deities worshipped for common physical aspects of earth and basic necessities; the sky, sun, bodies of water, safety, shelter, food, etc. Anu, a sumerian god of the sky is one of the earliest examples. 

As human settlements became more permanent with the developments in agriculture, and life became more complex, gods and goddesses began to appear in relation to more scholarly and artistic pursuits. 

Not all deities were held to the same levels of equality and importance, either. Some were worshipped or prayed to for luck in wars, successful harvests, health, and other important aspects of everyday living. Others, however, were simply seen as guardians or inhabitants of small, specific locations like a stream, a grove of trees, or a mountain. 

Many gods were specific to a certain locality while others, like the Roman, Germanic, and Celtic tribes spread their deities with their influence across continents. The celtic sun god Belenus in one of the oldest and most widely known in Europe. In ancient Mesopotamia, the Goddess spread across time and locality to Greek civilization to become Aphrodite. 

By the time Christianity began to gain foothold, several thousands of Gods were known throughout the world. In some places like Japan, Africa and Native America, these gods and goddesses are still honored today. However, in the western world, christianity stamped out the majority of pagan deities in favor of their monotheistic, all knowing one “God”. 

The God

The God is the masculine polarity in Wicca. He is most often portrayed as the Horned God or the Sun God. As mentioned above, you can see how he is portrayed into images and representations that are basics for human survival; in this case, fauna (food) and sun (warmth, light).

In Wicca, specifically Gardnerian Wicca (named after founder Gerald Gardner), the God is not only the Horned God, pictured in a horned headdress or physically possessing horns, but he is also a god of fertility and a god of the hunt. Both still considered essentials for human survival. Gardner portrayed him as the balance between humans and animals and a representation of how humans should interact with nature.

The Horned God’s Image, as well as his image as a Sun God, is reflected through time and culture in varying forms and with various names that we will cover as we continue to explore pantheons.

The Goddess

The feminine polarity in Wicca, the Goddess is associated with the emotional and intuitive realms of the universe; a direct counter to the ‘action-oriented’ qualities of the God. She is associated with the moon and the Earth, itself. She tends the lands, the forests, crops, and fields, and carries them with her cycles of the seasons; through death and regrowth into glorious new life. 

The Triple Goddess

The appreciation and worship of the Triple Goddess can be attributed to the poet, Robert Cochrane. Through his work The White Goddess: a Historical Grammar of Poetic Myth, he explained the idea of a White Goddess who represented birth, love and death and further proclaimed her worship through many cultures. She went by many names and could be traced back to pre-Christianity in Europe and the Middle East. 

In Celtic lore, she went by Bridgid with her three domains of healing, poetry and smithcraft. In greece, she was known as Hera, representing girl, woman, and widow. In Wicca, she represents the Maiden, Mother and Crone. These represent the three phases of a woman’s life in terms of her ability to reproduce; before she is able, during her child bearing years, and after her body can no longer bear children. These phases are also seen to represent the moon phases with the full moon, waning moon, and new moon (dark). 

In some traditions, the moon phases are the primary representation in the worship of the Triple Moon Goddess, while others keep her representation more Earth related and simply refer to her as the triple goddess. 

The Maiden

She is the youthful phase of the woman and the crescent to waxing phase of the moon. She is associated with growth, Springtime, innocence, youth, independence, and self-confidence. 

Her domains are art, creativity, beauty, intelligence, exploration, discovery, and self-expression.

She is associated with dawn, sunrise, fresh potential, and new life.

She is often represented by Artemis, Persephone, Freya, and Rhiannon.

The Mother

SHe is the transformation of the Maiden. She is the changing of spring to summer and can be seen as foliage grows lush with life, flora grows and shares it’s beauty, and newborn animals grown into maturity. 

She is associated with midday, manifestation, adulthood, responsibility, nurturing, and life, caring for all creation. She is considered to be the most powerful of the three forms in many Wiccan traditions and is often referred to as Mother Goddess, as started by Gardner’s original coven. 

She can be seen being represented by Badb, Danu, Demeter, Selene, Ceres and others.

The Crone

She is the earth and moon waning, the flora wilting in preparation for winter. She has finished her duties of motherhood and comes into her power. She is the wise one, ruling over transformations, visions, prophecies, guidance, aging, and endings.

She is associated with dusk, the dark of night, death, rebirth, past lives, wisdom, and the furthest reaches of outer space. She has been a feared divinity throughout history, however her role is pivotal. Without death, there can be no new life. 

She has been represented by ancient goddesses of the underworld, Baba Yaga, Morrigan, Cailleach Bear, and Hecate.

Next in the series we will discuss the wheel of the year and the role deities play in them as well as variations in Wiccan tradition and the relation between deities and the altar. We will also take a look at how to represent the main deities covered in this portion on your altar.

Holidays 2021

3/1/2021

MATRONALIA

In ancient Roman religion, the Matronalia was a festival celebrating Juno Lucina, the goddess of childbirth, and of motherhood and women in general. In the original Roman calendar traditionally thought to have been established by Romulus, it was the first day of the year.

See past posts on Matronalia for more information.

3/17/2021

ST. PATRICK’S DAY

St. Patrick’s Day is celebrated annually on March 17, the anniversary of his death in the fifth century. The Irish have observed this day as a religious holiday for over 1,000 years. On St. Patrick’s Day, which falls during the Christian season of Lent, Irish families would traditionally attend church in the morning and celebrate in the afternoon. Lenten prohibitions against the consumption of meat were waived and people would dance, drink and feast–on the traditional meal of Irish bacon and cabbage.

Saint Patrick, who lived during the fifth century, is the patron saint of Ireland and its national apostle. Born in Roman Britain, he was kidnapped and brought to Ireland as a slave at the age of 16. He later escaped, but returned to Ireland and was credited with bringing Christianity to its people.

In traditional lore, people often say that St. Patrick drove the snakes from Ireland. Many have come to translate that as St. Patrick assisted in the catholic takeover of Ireland, driving out the druids and being hailed as a hero.

See St. Patricks Day from March 2020 for more info.

3/20/2021

OSTARA

A point of perfect balance on the journey through the Wheel of the Year. Night and day are of equal length and in perfect equilibrium – dark and light, masculine and feminine, inner and outer, in balance. But the year is now waxing and at this moment light defeats the dark. The natural world is coming alive, the Sun is gaining in strength and the days are becoming longer and warmer. The gentle whispered promise of Imbolc is fulfilled in the evident and abundant fertility of the Earth at Ostara. It is time for the hopes of Imbolc to become action. The energy is expansive and exuberant. It is the first day of Spring! Ostara takes its name after the Germanic goddess, Eostre/Ostara, who was traditionally honoured in the month of April with festivals to celebrate fertility, renewal and re-birth. It was from Eostre that the Christian celebration of Easter evolved, and indeed the naming of the hormone Eostrogen, essential to women’s fertility. The Goddess Ostara has the shoulders and head of a hare.

See past posts on Ostara for more information and holiday ideas.

February Full Moon 2/27

The month of February is a time for spiritual purification and initiation. Take time to cleanse and purify yourself, your home, sacred space and property.  Work spells for growth, healing, and self-love. Accept responsibility for past mistakes, forgive and make future plans

  •  Herbs – Balm of Gilead, hyssop, myrrh, sage, spikenard
  •  Colors – Light blue, violet
  •  Flowers – Wisteria, heliotrope
  •  Scents – Musk, mimosa
  •  Stones – Amethyst, jasper, rock crystal
  •  Trees – Rowan, laurel, cedar
  •  Animals – Otter, unicorn
  •  Birds – Eagle, chickadee
  •  God/dess – Brigid, Juno, Kuan Yin, Diana, Demeter, Persephone, Aphrodite

Gentle Healing Spell

You Need:

  • A white candle – white represents cleansing and purity and will help bring you peace
  • A  green candle – green is used for prosperity, abundance and healing, particularly physical healing. 
  • A blue candle – blue represents protection, serenity and good fortune. It works particularly well for healing when combined with a purple candle. 
  • A purple candle – this will help you access your spiritual power, which will help aid your healing spell. Purple is a powerhouse candle and will help make a powerful healing spell. 
  • A cleansed clear quartz or amethyst. You can choose which you prefer here because both stones are seen as master healers. If you’re not sure how to cleanse your crystals, check out this post we wrote about how to cleanse your crystals. 
  • A photo of the person you want to perform the healing spell for. If you don’t have a photo, write their name onto a piece of paper instead. I prefer not to do this spell for groups of people and try to focus on just one person instead, trying to cast it for more than one tends to dilute the power of the spell. 
  • Cinnamon oil
  • Eucalyptus oil
  • Mint oil – All three of these oils provide powerful healing energies and cinnamon will boost the magickal power of your spell. If you want to know more about these particular plants, check out our Botanical Witchepidia. 
  • A lighter or matches
  • A large fire-proof plate or vessel
  1. Gather all your ingredients together and find yourself a quiet spot to work in.
  2. Sit down comfortably with your ingredients in front of you.
  3. Place your photo (or written name) in the centre of your fire-proof plate.
  4. Take your crystal in both hands and briefly warm it. While doing this, imagine that you’re imparting healing, loving energy into the crystal. 
  5. Gently place the crystal on top of the photo or name.
  6. Anoint each of your candles with a drop of each oil.
  7. Take the candles and place them evenly around the photo and crystal. They should form a protective circle around the photo (it’s hard to form a circle with 4 things but you get the drift). I like to melt the wax on the bottom on my candle a little and then stick it to the fire-proof plate so it stays upright. 
  8. Light each candle
  9. Look into the candle flames and imagine them forming a fiery, protective circle around your loved one to keep them safe and strong. Imagine the flames transforming all of the negative energy in their body into glowing, pure white, healing light. 
  10. Keeping this thought in mind, close your eyes and imagine this healing light flowing through the crystal into your loved one. Think about them being healthy and vital, filled with energy and glowing with wellness. Imagine their smiling face looking at you with love and kindness and think about how happy you are that they are feeling good and that their body is capable and strong. Of course, if you are completing this spell for yourself, imagine how good you feel in your own body and think about your limbs being supple, strong and endlessly capable. Imagine light filling every part of your or their bodies, and flushing out anything bad in their system. Imagine their lungs flooded with healing light, their hearts lit with gentle healing energy and their minds fast and alert. 
  11. If there is a specific type of healing that you are aiming for here, now is the time to direct that healing energy to that particular ailment. Let’s say you want to heal a migraine, imagine flooding your head with this healing light and it forcing all signs of the migraine out of your body. The same thing if you are aiming to heal back-pain or a flu. Imagine the light strongly and decisively forcing pain and illness out and being replaced by clean, healthy white light. The stronger and longer you can focus, the more likely your spell is to work. 
  12. When you feel you’ve sent as much healing energy as you can, slowly open your eyes and come back to yourself. Say:

“With this spell, I send healing light, energy and protection to (say name here). Send this magical energy and vitality through their/my body and let it cleanse them of their ailments. So Mote it Be”.

  1. Let your candles burn to nothing if you can, or snuff them out and bury any remnants outside or dispose of them away from your home.
  2. Repeat this spell as often as you want, for as many people as you want to heal.

February Holidays Recap

Imbolic

Imbolc, in the Celtic seasonal calendar marks the beginning of the lambing season and signals the beginning of Spring and the stirrings of new life. It is Feile Brighde, the ‘quickening of the year’. The original word Imbolg means ‘in the belly’. All is pregnant and expectant – and only just visible if at all, like the gentle curve of a ‘just-showing’ pregnancy. It is the promise of renewal, of hidden potential, of earth awakening and life-force stirring. Here is hope. We welcome the growth of the returning light and witness Life’s insatiable appetite for rebirth.

It is time to let go of the past and to look to the future, clearing out the old, making both outer and inner space for new beginnings. This can be done in numerous ways, from spring cleaning your home to clearing the mind and heart to allow inspiration to enter for the new cycle. (‘Spring cleaning was originally a nature ritual’ – Doreen Valiente). It’s a good time for wish-making or making a dedication.

Imbolc is traditionally the great festival and honouring of Brigid (Brighid, Bride, Brigit), so loved as a pagan Goddess that her worship was woven into the Christian church as St Bridget. She is a Goddess of healing, poetry and smithcraft. She is a Goddess of Fire, of the Sun and of the Hearth. She brings fertility to the land and its people and is closely connected to midwives and new-born babies. She is the Triple Goddess, but at Imbolc she is in her Maiden aspect.

Ideas for Your Altar

Decorate your altar with snowdrops, swan feathers, a Brigid Cross, a Bridey Doll, white and green candles.

Make A Brigid Cross

Brigid Crosses are traditionally made from reeds but can be made from several alternatives so long as they are pliable. Here in Glastonbury we have often used willow which grows plentifully on the Somerset Levels and also because of its symbolism. It needs a long soaking and is perhaps not the easiest to work with but makes a wonderful cross. Go for a walk, see what you can find in the hedgerows and on the river banks, use straws or even cut long strips of paper.

Begin by bending your reeds and hooking them into each other as in the first figure and follow the diagram. When it is the size you want it to be you will need to tie the four ends, the four quarters – with string, thread, ribbon etc. Decorate the completed cross with ribbons and swan feathers if you have them – whatever is meaningful for you.

Plant Seeds

Seeds are completely magical – pure potential! Plant each one as representing your hopes, ideas and dreams.

Bake A Cake

Or make a seed cake to share, seeds are full of possibilities. Tie it with silver, or white, or green, or any combination of ribbon.

Simple Seed Cake

You need:

  • Flour 300gms/10oz
  • A pinch of salt
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • Butter 125gms/4oz
  • caraway seeds 25gms/1oz
  • sugar 175gms/6oz
  • Two eggs, beaten
  • Four tablespoons of water
  1. Set the oven to 400F/200C and grease and line a 6 inch cake tin.
  2. Sieve the flour, salt and baking powder into your cauldron or a large bowl and then rub in the butter.
  3. As you do this think of family and friends, think of the small personal things that you would have them benefit from as Spring flows into their lives.
  4. Visualise light flowing into the mixture, fire of truth and illumination, if you wish, use a rhyme.
  5. Stir in the seeds and sugar and then the eggs, mix with just enough water to give a mix that softly drops off your spoon.
  6. Stir in patience for the coming Spring, this is still a time of waiting.
  7. pour the mixture into the prepared tin and bake for one hour, then reduce the temperature to 375F/175C and cook for a further half to one hour until the cake is golden brown and well risen. leave this one to cool in its tin,

A simple stirring rhyme, using your wooden spoon, might go like this:

Continuous motion, May all things flow, Circles of magic, Let the power grow, Elements mixing, Accept my plea, As I wish, So mote it be.

Some of the symbols attributed to Brigid are:

  • The Snowdrop. The first gift of Spring in the bleakness of Winter.
  • The Swan. The swan mates for life and represents loyalty, fidelity and faithfulness. Swan feathers are a powerful amulet.
  • The Flame. Imbolc is a Fire Festival and fire of all kinds is associated with Brigid – the fire of creativity, the protective hearth fire, and her fire wheel – the Brigid Cross, which heralds her as a Sun Goddess.
  • Brigid’s Cross. This is a traditional fire wheel symbol – found at the hearths of homes throughout Ireland and beyond as a symbol of protection. A customer in the shop recounted finding a hearth in Ireland, in recent years, adorned with over 200 Brigid Crosses – 200 years in the life of a hearth and a family, overlit and protected by Brigid.
  • Brigid Doll. A very old tradition involved the making of a Brigid doll which can be included in ceremony and/or placed in ‘Bride’s Bed’ to bring fertility and good fortune to the home.
  • The Serpent. In Celtic mythology Brigid was associated with an awakening hibernating serpent which emerged from its lair at Imbolc. Traditionally serpents were associated with creativity and inspiration – the powerful Kundalini energy of the Eastern Mysteries. Paths of earth energy were called serpent paths and at Imbolc they are stirred from their slumber.
  • Sheep. Brigid’s festival is at the beginning of lambing – eat ewe’s milk cheese!

Imbolc Colours: White and silver for purity, green for the fresh burst of life.

Herbs of Imbolc

  • Blackberry: Sacred to Brigid, the leaves and berries are used to attract prosperity and healing. A Goddess plant, belonging to the planetary sphere of Venus.
  • Coltsfoot: Coltsfoot or ‘sponnc’ (Gaelic) is a herb associated with Brigid. A herb of Venus, moves emotional and physical stagnation and is used magically to engender love and to bring peace.
  • Ginger: revitalises and stimulates the ‘fire within’ – helps alignment with the rise of Kundalini serpent energy at this time of year!

Trees of Imbolc

  • Rowan: Luis, or the Rowan, is the tree usually assigned to this time of year in the Celtic (Ogham) Tree Alphabet. It has long associations with the Maiden aspect of the Triple Goddess. It is also known as the ‘Quickening Tree’ and is associated with serpents. Traditionally it protects and wards of evil. A sprig of Rowan can be put near the door of your home (we have a whole tree), or a sprig worn for protection. Rowan berries have a tiny five-pointed star on the bottom reminiscent of the pentagram.
  • Willow: The fourth tree in the Celtic Tree alphabet – S Saille, is also long associated with the Maiden aspect of the Triple Goddess. Willow is the great ‘shape shifter’ of consciousness and emotion and symbolises feminine energy and the lunar cycle. Its branches are flexible – expressing movement and change rather than resistance. It is a tree of enchantment and dreaming, enhancing the confidence to follow one’s intuition, and inspires leaps of imagination.

Lupercalia

Lupercalia was an ancient pagan festival held each year in Rome on February 15. Although Valentine’s Day shares its name with a martyred Christian saint, some historians believe the holiday is actually an offshoot of Lupercalia. Unlike Valentine’s Day, however, Lupercalia was a bloody, violent and sexually-charged celebration awash with animal sacrifice, random matchmaking and coupling in the hopes of warding off evil spirits and infertility.

Romulus and Remus

No one knows the exact origin of Lupercalia, but it has been traced back as far as the 6th century B.C.

According to Roman legend, the ancient King Amulius ordered Romulus and Remus—his twin nephews and founders of Rome—to be thrown into the Tiber River to drown in retribution for their mother’s broken vow of celibacy.

A servant took pity on them, however, and placed them inside a basket on the river instead. The river-god carried the basket and the brothers downriver to a wild fig tree where it became caught in the branches. The brothers were then rescued and cared for by a she-wolf in a den at the base of Palatine Hill where Rome was founded.

The twins were later adopted by a shepherd and his wife and learned their father’s trade. After killing the uncle who’d ordered their death, they found the cave den of the she-wolf who’d nurtured them and named it Lupercal.

It’s thought Lupercalia took place to honor the she-wolf and please the Roman fertility god Lupercus.

Ritual Sacrifice

Lupercalia rituals took place in a few places: Lupercal cave, on Palatine Hill and within the Roman open-air, public meeting place called the Comitium. The festival began at Lupercal cave with the sacrifice of one or more male goats—a representation of sexuality—and a dog.

The sacrifices were performed by Luperci, a group of Roman priests. Afterwards, the foreheads of two naked Luperci were smeared with the animals’ blood using the bloody, sacrificial knife. The blood was then removed with a piece of milk-soaked wool as the Luperci laughed.

Feast of Lupercal

In Ancient Rome, feasting began after the ritual sacrifice. When the feast of Lupercal was over, the Luperci cut strips, also called thongs or februa, of goat hide from the newly-sacrificed goats.

They then ran naked or nearly-naked around Palantine whipping any woman within striking distance with the thongs. Many women welcomed the lashes and even bared their skin to receive the fertility rite; it’s open to speculation what the lashes represented.

During Lupercalia, the men randomly chose a woman’s name from a jar to be coupled with them for the duration of the festival. Often, the couple stayed together until the following year’s festival. Many fell in love and married.

Over time, nakedness during Lupercalia lost popularity. The festival became more chaste, if still undignified, and women were whipped on their hands by fully-clothed men.

In Plutarch’s Life of Julius Caesar, Caesar famously refuses a golden crown presented to him by Mark Antony during the feast of Lupercalia.

Parentalia

The festival, which began at noon on February 13 and culminated on February 21, was essentially a private celebration of the rites of deceased family members. It was gradually extended, however, to incorporate the dead in general. During the days of the festival, all temples were closed and no weddings could be performed. On the last day a public ceremony, the Feralia, was held, during which offerings and gifts were placed at the graves and the anniversary of the funeral feast was celebrated.

Authors Note

A Quick Note: 

Greetings, all. I will be attempting a new format for the information I share that will hopefully assist in the decrease in the amount of reading and increase the information shared each month. As some are aware, every month I would share every holiday as an individual post. 

To ease my time, and yours, I will be condensing the holidays to a single post intended to be a refresher. Questions are always welcome for clarification on subject matter. However, since each holiday in the Pagan Calendar has been covered more than once, you may also search the posts to find the original, full detail ones for information,

With this in mind, I will hopefully be able to use my spare time to cover other topics of interest, suggestions always welcome.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Blessed Be.

Full Moon 1/28/2021

In January, the nights are long and dark, and many of us are trying to stay warm under a blanket of snow as the Cold Moon approaches (in some cultures, the Cold Moon is the name given to December’s moon, instead). Some of the native tribes of North America called this time the Wolf Moon, because this was when the wolves were howling, hungry, outside lodges where people stayed warm within. Other groups referred to it as the Snow Moon, for obvious reasons.

This time of year, we’re all feeling a bit slow and “off” as our bodies adjust to chillier temperatures. It’s easy to just lie on the couch watching Netflix and eating comfort food when it’s cold and gloomy outside, and making any kind of magical effort can seem like a real challenge right now.

Correspondences:

  • Colors: Black and white, silver
  • Gemstones: Hematite
  • Trees: Birch, Hazel
  • Gods: Inanna, Freyja
  • Herbs: Thistle, nuts and seeds, marjoram
  • Element: Air

Cold Moon Magic

This is a good time to work on magic related to protection, both physical and spiritual. Use this time to develop your inner self, and advance spiritually, becoming closer to the higher aspects of your deities. Take the time in your busy schedule to meditate and think about what it is you really want out of life, and whether you’re showing people your true self.

January is also a great time to work on full moon magic – after all, the nights are long and dark, and in some areas the moon itself is the only source of light. Put aside your lethargy, and focus some energy on developing your intuition and wisdom.

Finally, for many people, winter is a season of simplification. Set aside everything you don’t need, and try a minimalist approach instead. On a mundane level, try doing a thorough cleaning of your physical space – get rid of the clutter. On a spiritual and emotional level, try to do the same thing – teach your mind to let go of the things that are creating excess baggage for your spirit and soul.

January Holidays

Thorrablot 1/14/21

Thorrablot was a sacrificial midwinter festival offered to the gods in pagan Iceland of the past. It was abolished during the Christianization of Iceland, but resurrected in the 19th century as a midwinter celebration that continues to be celebrated to this day. The timing for the festival coincides with the month of Thorri, according to the old Icelandic calendar, which begins on the first Friday after January 19th (the 13th week of winter). 

Origins of the name “Thorri” are unclear but it is most likely derived from Norwegian king Thorri Snærsson, or Thor the God of Thunder in the old Nordic religion.

On this occasion, locals come together to eat, drink and be merry. Customary, the menu consists of unusual culinary delicacies, known as traditional Icelandic food. These will include rotten shark’s meat (hákarl), boiled sheep’s head, (svið) and congealed sheep’s blood wrapped in a ram’s stomach (blóðmör)! This is traditionally washed down with some Brennivin – also known as Black Death – a potent schnapps made from potato and caraway.

After the Thorrablot dinner traditional songs, games and story telling are accompanied by dancing and in true Icelandic style continue until the early hours of the morning! If you fail to receive a personal invitation to a family feast, local restaurants will often add Thorrablot colour and taste to their menus.

Sementivae 1/24/21

The festival was celebrated by the approval of priests or local officials, who granted permission most years.  When Sementivae was celebrated, it had two halves.  The first portion, from 24th through 26th of Januarius saluted the Goddess, Tellus, the personification of Mother Earth and Ceres, the produce or cereal Goddess.  The second half commemorated either Goddess, according to regional preferences.  The second portion of Sementivae began on the 2nd of Februarius.

Both halves of Sementivae were festivals that celebrated the season for the sowing of croplands with seeds. Tellus is the Goddess of primary interest today at the start of the first half of Sementivae.  Depending upon which area of the Roman territories, Tellus was also known by other names.  She was often equated with Cybele.

1/30/21-2/2/21 Februalia

Because of the association with fire as a method of purification, at some point the celebration of Februalia became associated with Vesta, a hearth goddess much like the Celtic Brighid. Not only that, February 2 is also considered the day of Juno Februa, the mother of war god Mars. There is a reference to this purification holiday in Ovid’s Fasti, in which he says,

“In short, anything used to cleanse our bodies went by that name [of februa] in the time of our unshorn forefathers. The month is called after these things, because the Luperci purify the whole ground with strips of hide, which are their instruments of cleansing…”

Cicero wrote that the name Vesta comes from the Greeks, who called her Hestia. Because her power extended over altars and hearths, all prayers and all sacrifices ended with Vesta.

Februalia was a month-long period of sacrifice and atonement, involving offerings to the gods, prayer, and sacrifices. If you were a wealthy Roman who didn’t have to go out and work, you could literally spend the entire month of February in prayer and meditation, atoning for your misdeeds during the other eleven months of the year.

If you’re a modern Pagan who would like to observe Februalia as part of your spiritual journey, there are a number of ways you can do so. Consider this a time of purging and cleansing–do a thorough pre-Spring cleaning, where you get rid of all of the things that no longer bring you joy and happiness. Take an “out with the old, in with the new” approach, and eliminate the excess stuff that’s cluttering your life, both physically and emotionally.

If you’re someone who has a hard time letting go of things, rather than just throwing stuff out, rehome it to friends who will show it some love. This is a good way to eliminate clothes that no longer fit, books you don’t plan to read again, or household goods that don’t do anything but gather dust. 

You can also take some time to honor the goddess Vesta in her role as a deity of home, hearth, and domestic life as a way of celebrating Februalia. Make offerings of wine, honey, milk, olive oil, or fresh fruit as you begin rituals. Light a fire in Vesta’s honor, and as you sit before it, offer her a prayer, chant, or song that you wrote yourself. If you can’t light a fire, it’s okay to keep a candle burning to celebrate Vesta–just be sure to extinguish it when you’re finished. Spend some time on domestic crafts, such as cooking and baking, weaving, needle arts, or woodworking.

1/31/21- Up Helly Aa

The main celebration of Up Helly Aa takes place in Lerwick but there are 12 smaller local versions too all over the Shetland Isles.

The first official Up Helly Aa took place in Lerwick, Shetland’s main town, in 1881.

Up Helly Aa (meaning Up Holy Day) is a huge spectacle, a celebration of Shetland history, and a demonstration of islanders’ skills. It harks back to Shetland’s Viking heritage. As well as the main event there is a junior version, just for kids, which takes place on the same day.

The events last all day and involve a series of marches and visits, ending in a torch-lit procession and the burning of a Viking longship. It’s an event most of the local community takes part in, with loads of volunteers spending hours each winter getting ready for the big event and building the huge Viking longship that is at the centre of the festival.

Much of the preparations are done in strictest secrecy. The biggest secret of all is what the head of the festival, the Guizer Jarl, will wear and which character from the Norse Sagas – or stories from Norse history – he’ll represent.

On the evening of Up Helly Aa almost 1,000 warriors or ‘guizers’, some in full Viking dress, parade in groups, known as ‘squads’, wearing helmets and carrying shields and swords. Each guizer carries a fencing post, covered with sacking material soaked in paraffin.

In Lerwick, at 7.30pm, a firework explodes over the town hall.

The torches are lit, the band strikes up and the blazing procession begins, snaking through the streets with the Guizer Jarl standing proudly at the helm of his replica longship, or ‘galley’.

It takes half an hour for the Jarl’s squad of Vikings to drag him to the burning site, through a crowd of 5,000 spectators or more.

The Jarl leaves his ship, to a crescendo of cheers. A bugle call sounds, and then the torches are hurled into the galley.

As the blaze destroys the shipbuilders’ work, the crowd sings the song The Norseman’s Home.

1/31/21-Disablot

The female spirits known as the Disir (pronounced “DEE-sir;” Old Norse dísir, Old Saxon idisi) are one of the most enigmatic and vexing groups of beings in the mythology and religion of the pre-Christian Norse and other Germanic peoples.

It’s impossible to cleanly separate the Disir from other kinds of spiritual beings recognized by the ancient Germanic peoples.

For example, the Valkyries, female helping-spirits of the god Odin, are referred to as “Odin’s Disir” (Herjans dísir) in one Old Norse poem. The Disir, like the Valkyries, are depicted as being at times warlike, and at other times nourishing and protective.

The Disir are often portrayed as being tutelary (guardian) spirits of a particular person, group, or location. Such portrayals never seek to distinguish them from other tutelary spirits such as the fylgjur, hamingjur, and especially the land spirits. The land spirits, known in Old Norse as landvættir, are sometimes, when female, even called Landdísir in certain literary sources and place-names in Iceland and Norway.[3] As that example indicates, even the names for these kinds of beings are often used interchangeably with one another.

The Disir are often depicted as the spirits of dead female ancestors, which suggests a considerable degree of overlap with the elves, who are often characterized likewise.

At some point in the winter – the exact timing differed widely across the Germanic lands – a festival was held in honor of the Disir. In Norway and Iceland, this festival was known as the dísablót, “sacrifice to the Disir,” and took place at the beginning of winter. It could be held in either a private house or a formal temple, depending on the availability of the latter. From the name of the festival, we can infer that a sacrifice was its principal ritual act, and literary sources add that a lavish banquet (which probably followed the sacrifice) was another central part of the event. In Sweden, the Disting or dísaþing (“Disir-Assembly”) was held at the beginning of February, and unfortunately the sources have even less to tell us about what transpired there than they do in the case of the dísablót.

The Anglo-Saxon counterpart to the dísablót and dísaþing seems to have been the modraniht (“Mother’s Night”), which took place around New Year’s and is probably connected to the continental Germanic and Celtic “matron” cult. The “matrons” are female spirits who are very much like the Disir and Valkyries and every bit as varied – fertility spirits, guardian spirits, warriors, etc.

In other instances in Old Norse literature, the word dís, the singular form of dísir, is used as a generic term for “goddess” or even simply “woman.”

What are we to gather from all of this apparent confusion? Who and what exactly are the Disir?

It must be borne in mind that the pre-Christian mythology and religion of the Norse and other Germanic peoples were never systematized or codified. There was never any established doctrine on what a dís – or anything else, for that matter – is. It should therefore come as no surprise that we find so much confusion and contradiction in the sources themselves, both between texts and within a single text – and, of course, instead of “confusion” and “contradiction,” we could just as aptly say “dynamism” and “vitality.” When the religion in question was a living tradition, it went through countless different permutations across time and space, as all living traditions do, and the Germanic peoples themselves apparently never felt any particular need to restrain that process the way that certain other religions have often done.

Who and what were the Disir? The answer depends on which text – or, in other words, which person, group, place, and/or time – you choose to consult. The only common element in the above portrayals is that the Disir are always female. They seem to have been thought of as some sort of nominally distinct group of spiritual beings – just distinct enough to have a festival in their honor, but still indistinct enough to be impossible to really differentiate from females of other types of spiritual beings. The rest was entirely up to interpretation.

Pagan Pantheons

There are literally thousands of different deities out there in the Universe, and which ones you choose to honor will often depend significantly upon what pantheon your spiritual path follows. However, many modern Pagans and Wiccans describe themselves as eclectic, which means they may honor a god of one tradition beside a goddess of another. In some cases, we may choose to ask a deity for assistance in magical workings or in problem solving. Regardless, at some point, you’re going to have to sit and sort them all out. If you don’t have a specific, written tradition, then how do you know which gods to call upon? Here are a few tips on Working With Deity.

Each Month, My hope is to delve into a specific Pantheon in detail with popular deities worshipped from each cultural background, appropriate offerings, etc.

Appropriate Worship and Why It Matters

One issue that comes up often for people learning about Pagan and Wiccan spirituality is the concept of appropriate worship. There tends to be some question about what, exactly, is the right offering to make to the gods or goddesses of one’s tradition, and how we should honor them when making those offerings. Let’s talk about the concept of Appropriate Worship. Keep in mind that the idea of right or appropriate worship is not about someone telling you what’s “right or wrong.” It is simply the concept that one should take the time to do things–including worship and offerings–in a way that is conducive to the demands and needs of the god or goddess in question.

Making Offerings to the Gods

In many Pagan and Wiccan traditions, it’s not uncommon to make some sort of offering or sacrifice to the gods. Bear in mind that despite the reciprocal nature of our relationship with the divine, it’s not a matter of “I’m offering you this stuff so you’ll grant my wish.” It’s more along the lines of “I honor you and respect you, so I’m giving you this stuff to show you how much I appreciate your intervention on my behalf.” So the question arises, then, of what to offer them? Different types of deities seem to respond best to Different Kinds of Offerings.

Pagan Prayer: Why Bother?

Our ancestors prayed to their gods, long ago. Their pleas and offerings are documented in the hieroglyphs that adorn the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs, in the carvings and inscriptions left for us to read by the philosophers and teachers of ancient Greece and Rome. Information about man’s need to connect with the Divine comes to us from China, India, and all over the globe. Let’s look at the Role of Prayer in Modern Paganism. Prayer is a very personal thing. You can do it out loud or silently, in a church or backyard or forest or at a kitchen table. Pray when you need to, and say what you wish to say. Chances are good that someone is listening.

Celtic Deities

Wondering about some of the major deities of the ancient Celtic world? Although the Celts consisted of societies all over the British Isles and parts of Europe, some of their gods and goddesses have become a part of modern Pagan practice. Here are some of the Deities Honored by the Celts.

Egyptian Deities

The gods and goddesses of ancient Egypt were a complex group of beings and ideas. As the culture evolved, so did many of the deities and what they represented. Here are some of the best-known Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt.

Greek Deities

The ancient Greeks honored a wide variety of gods, and many are still worshiped today by Hellenic Pagans. For the Greeks, much like many other ancient cultures, the deities were a part of daily life, not merely something to be chatted with in times of need. Here are some of the most important Gods and Goddesses of the Ancient Greeks.

Norse Deities

The Norse culture honored a wide variety of gods, and many are still worshipped today by Asatruar and Heathens. For the Norse and Germanic societies, much like many other ancient cultures, the deities were a part of daily life, not merely something to be chatted with in times of need. 

Pagan Deities By Type

Many Pagan deities are associated with various aspects of the human experience, such as love, death, marriage, fertility, healing, war, and so forth. Still others are connected to different phases of the agricultural cycle, the moon, and the sun. Read more about the different Types of Pagan Deities, so you can figure out which ones you’d like to try working with, depending on your personality and your magical goals.