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I. GODDESS RELIGIONS IN THE OLD WORLD
A. Gravettian-Aurignacian
Cultures (25000 BC-15000 BC)
1. The Upper-Paleolithic period, though
most of its sites have been found in Europe, is the conjectural
foundation of the religion of the Goddess as it emerged in
the later Neolithic Age of the Near East.
a. There have been numerous studies of
Paleolithic cultures, explorations of sites occupied by these
people, and the apparent rites connected with the disposal
of their dead.
b. In these Upper-Paleolithic societies,
the concept of the creator of all human life may have been
formulated by the clan's mage of women, who were their most
ancient primal ancestors.
(1) It is believed that the mother was
regarded as the sole parent of children in this culture.
(2) Ancestor worship appears to have been
the basis of sacred rituals and ancestry is believed to have
been reckoned through the matriline.
(a) The beginnings of Roman religion were
basedon survivals of the Etruscan culture and ancestor worship
was the earliest form of religion in Rome.
(b) Even today, the Jewish people determine
who is and is not a Jew through the matriline.
2. The most tangible evidence supporting
the theory that these cultures worshipped a Goddess is the
numerous sculptures of women found throughout most of Europe
and the Near East. Some of these sculptures date as far back
as 25,000 BC.
a. These small female figurines, made of
stone, bone, and clay, most of which are seemingly pregnant,
have been found throughout the widespread Gravettian-Aurignacian
sites in areas as far apart as Spain, France, Germany, Austria,
and Russia.
(1) These sites and figurines appear to
span a period of at least 10,000 years.
3. Johannes Maringer, in his book 'The
Gods of Prehistoric Man' says- "It appears highly probable
then that the female figurines were idols of a Great Mother
cult, practiced by the non-nomadic Aurignacian mammoth hunters
who inhabited the immense Eurasian territories that extended
from Southern France to Lake Baikal in Siberia."
a. It was from this Lake Baikal area in
Siberia that tribes are believed to have migrated across a
great land bridge to North America about this time period,
and formed the nucleus of what was to become the race of American
Indians.
(1) This tends to support the observation
that European witchcraft and American Indian shamanism have
similar roots.
B. The
Roots of Western Civilization
1. Western Civilization began in Mesopotamia
and the Nile Valley, where it traveled into Palestine and
Greece.
a. From Greece civilization traveled to
Rome,and as the Roman Empire grew it spread to Spain, France,
Germany and England.
2. Mesopotamia ( 3500 BC - 539 BC )
a. Mesopotamia ("the land between
the rivers") is the name used to describe the region
between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, the southern area
of which is mostly lowlying swampland and marshes.
(1) The fertile lands of Mesopotamia lie
between the desert and the mountains. The northern part has
regular rainfall while the southern part, stretching down
to the Arabian Gulf, suffers dry scorching summers from May
to October.
(a) In what is now the southern part of
Iraq, Sumer existed as one of the world's first civilizations.
b. Between 2800 and 2400 BC the city-states
of Sumer were at their strongest and wealthiest.
(1) The Goddess was worshipped under various
names which were epithets, or characterizing phrases, such
as 'Queen of Heaven' and 'Lady of the High Places'. The name
of the city or town that She was the patroness for, was often
attached to Her title making Her name even more specific.
(a) An example of this is the temple erected
about 3000 BC in the city-state of Uruk which was dedicated
to the Queen of Heaven of Erech.
(b) This city was made a major power and
rival to its sister city Ur by Gilgamesh's son.
c. About 2350 BC an ambitious king, named
Sargon, attacked Sumer, and made it part of his huge Empire.
His capitol of Agade
gave us the name by which Sargons empire is known- the Akkadian
Empire.
(1) The Akkadian Empire was the first successful
attempt to unite a huge area under the rule of one man. It
eventually gained supremacy in about 1900 BC and gradually
superseded the Summerians as the cultural and political leaders
of the region.
(a) The Akkadian language of the Babylonians
became the international language of the Near East, just as
French would become the language of diplomacy thousands of
years later.
(b) The new Babylonian culture incorporated
the Sumerian religion, and the Sumerian language was adopted
as the language of the liturgy much as Latin is used as the
language of liturgy for Roman Catholics.
(c) The sumerian Goddess, under the names
Inanna, Eriskegan and Irnini, evolved into the great Babylonian
Goddess Ishtar.
d. Approximately 1600 BC Babylon was sacked
by an Indo-European people known as the Hittites who came
from Anatolia, off to the northwest.
(1) During the confusion that ensued, the
Kassites seized the throne of Babylon and ruled peacefully
for 400 years.
(a) Ishtar's power waned as the Babylonians
were influenced by the warlike Hittites and Her temples were
taken over by a male-dominated priesthood, which called the
Goddess Tiamat and wrote stories of how their god Marduk had
killed Her in the struggle for control of the region.
e. In the centuries following 1103 BC the
Assyrians rose to power and expanded into most of Mesopotamia
from their homeland which lay between the cities of Asher
and Nineveh on the Tigrus River.
(1) In the eighth century, the Assyrians
conquered most of Syria, Palestine, Phoenicia and had invaded
Egypt as far as Thebes (Luxor) before the Egyptians drove
them back.
(a) Looking to legitimize their new empire,
they 'married' their god Asher to Ishtar, whose followers
had secretly kept Her worship alive.
(b) The joining of Ashur with Ishtar produced
a son named Ninurta, and this is the first formally recorded
triad of Goddess, Consort, and Divine Child in the Near East.
(2) From 631 to 539 BC much inter-city
warfare occurred as the Assyrian empire fell apart.
(a) In 539 BC Nabonius, the last king of
Babylonia, surrendered to Cyrus II of Persia who was busy
building the greatest empire ever attempted.
3. Anatolia
a. Anatolia, which is also called Asia
Minor, is a broad peninsula jutting westward from the Asian
continent itself. To the north lies the Black Sea, to the
south the easternmost part of the Mediterranean. At the entrance
to the Black Sea are the Dardanelles and it is here that Asia
comes closest to the continent of Europe. Not surprisingly,
Anatolia has always been the main link between the Orient
and the Occident.
b. In Neolithic Anatolia (present day Turkey)
the Great Goddess was worshiped in the shrines of Catal Huyuk
around 6500 BC.
c. Anatolia was invaded sometime before
2000 BC by the Indo- Europeans and a group of them settled
in a part of Anatolia known as Hatti. The invaders and local
people came to be known collectively as the Hittites.
(1) These are the same Hittites who sacked
Babylonia in 1600 BC and suppressed the worship of Ishtar
in favor of their god Marduk.
d. Most of the references to the Goddess
in the literature and texts of Anatolia alluded to the older
Hattian deities despite the fact that the only records allowed
to survive were written after the conquest of Anatolia by
the Indo-Europeans.
(1) One of the most important female deities
to survive was the Sun Goddess Arinna. After the conquest
she was assigned a husband who was symbolized as a storm god.
(a) At the time of the Hittite invasions
of other lands, many of the people who were Goddess-worshippers
may have fled to the west. The renowned temple of the Goddess
in the city of Ephesus was the target of the apostle Paul's
zealous missionary efforts (Acts 19:27). This temple remained
active until 380 AD.
4. Crete
a. The Aegean Sea is an area of the Mediterranean,
lying between the mainland of Greece and the western coast
of Anatolia. The Aegean Sea is dotted with a great number
of mountainous islands and the largest of these is Crete,
which is just about 60 miles southeast of Greece.
(1) Crete was the society that is most
repeatedly thought to have been matrilineal and possibly matriarchal
from Neolithic times to the Dorian invasion.
(a) Reverance of the double headed ax as
a symbol of the Mother Goddess and a reverence for the sexual
vitality of bulls were two notable aspects of Crete's early
culture.
(b) Bull leaping is thought to have been
the origin of
Spain's bullfighting, although in Crete the bull was never
harmed.
(2) After viewing the artifacts and murals
at Knossos, the Archaeological Museum at Iraklion and other
museums in Crete, there is little doubt that the principal
sacred being on Crete for several millenia was the Goddess
and that women acted as Her clergy.
5. Egypt (3100 to 30 BC)
a. Egypt is a hot, desert land divided
by the fertile valley of the Nile river. Hardly any rain falls
there and the summers are scorching hot. Even today, most
of Egypt is arid desert.
(1) The Cultivation, a strip of land on
each side of the Nile river, is one of the most fertile stretches
of land in the world.
(a) Although the Cultivation is only 12
1/2 miles wide, it runs for about 620 miles from Aswan in
the south to the broad farmlands of the delta where the Nile
empties into the Mediterranean.
b. In prehistoric Egypt, the Goddess held
sway in Upper Egypt (the south) as Nekhebt and She was depicted
in the form of a vulture.
(1) The people of Lower Egypt, including
the northern delta region, worshipped the Goddess as Ua Zit
(Great Serpent) and depictions of Her show Her as a cobra.
c. From about 3000 BC onward the Goddess
was said to have existed when nothing else had been created.
(1) She was known as Nut, Net, or Nit which
was probably derived from Nekhebt.
(a) According to Egyptian mythology, it
was the Goddess who first put Ra, the sun god, in the sky.
(b) Other texts of Egypt tell of the Goddess
as Hathor in this role as creatrix of existence, explaining
that She took form as a serpent at the time.
d. In Egypt the concept of the Goddess
always remained vital. Eventually the Goddess evolved into
a more composite Goddess known as Isis.
(1) Isis (Au Set) incorporated the aspects
of both Ua Zit and Hathor. Isis was also closely associated
with the Goddess as
Nut, who was mythologically recorded as Her Mother; in paintings
Isis wears the wings of Nekhebt.
(a) Isis was also associated with another
triad which
included Her husband, Osiris, and their son Horus.
(b) Isis' cult was introduced into Rome
and the last temple
of Isis was closed in 394 AD by Theodosios.
6. Canaan (8000 - 63 BC)
a. The biblical land of Canaan, the 'land
of milk and honey' was an area about 90 miles wide running
north and south along the eastern coast of the Mediterranean.
(1) In modern times the region includes
the states of Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, and part of Syria.
The area made up of Jordan and Israel used to be known as
Palestine.
b. Images of the Goddess, some dating back
as far as 7000 BC, offer silent testimony to the most ancient
worship of the Queen of Heaven in the land that is most often
remembered today as the homeland of Judaism and Christianity.
(1) In exploring the influence and importance
of the worship of the Goddess in Canaan in biblical times,
we find that as Ashtoreth, Asherah, Astarte, Attoret, Anath,
or simply as Elat or Baalat, she was the principal deity of
such great Canaanite cities as Tyre, Sidon, Ascalon, Beth
Anath, Aphaca, Byblos, and Ashtoreth Karnaim.
c. In Egypt, the Hebrews had known the
worship of the Goddess as Isis or Hathor. For four generations
they had been living in a land where women held a very high
status and the matrilineal descent system continued to function
at most periods.
(1) Judging from the number of Hebrews
who emerged from Egypt in the Exodus, as compared with the
family of the the twelve sons who supposedly entered it four
generations earlier, it seems likely that a great number of
those Hebrews known as Israelites may actually have been Egyptians,
Canaanites, Semitic nomads and other Goddess-worshipping peoples
who had joined together in Egypt.
d. Archaeological records and artifacts
reveal that the religion of the Goddess still flourished in
many of the cities of Canaan even after the Hebrews invaded
it and claimed it as their own on the authority that their
god had given it to them.
(1) And just to the east, all most at their
doorstep was Babylon, where the temples of Ishtar were still
going strong.
7. Persia (3000 - 331 BC)
a. Throughout its early history Iran was
often invaded by nomadic peoples.
(1) Some came through the Elbruz mountains
east of the Caspian Sea.
(a) Others, like the Medes and Persians,
entered Iran through the Caucasus mountains in the Northwest.
b. By the 9th century BC the most powerful
group in Iran was the Medes, who kept the Persians as their
servants.
(1) In 612 BC the Medes, together with
the Babylonians, captured Nineveh, Ashur, and Kalhu, which
were in the heart of the Assyrian empire.
(a) The Assyrian empire collapsed and its
vast territories were divided between the Medes and the Babylonians.
c. About 550 BC the king of the Persians
led a revolt against the Medes and from that point on the
Persians, led by their King Cyrus the Great, ruled over Iran.
(1) Cyrus captured Babylon and gained control
of the whole former Babylonian empire.
(a) Virtually all of western Asia was now under Persian rule.
(2) The nest two kings extended Persian
rule to Egypt in the south and to the borders of India in
the east.
(a) Egypt revolted later and won its independence
for a short time, but was forced back into the empire just
in time to be part of the prize won by Alexander the Great
of Macedonia when he conquered the Persian empire in 331 BC.
II. PEOMAGOGIC HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSAL
GODDESS RELIGION
A. Definition
of Poemagogic
1. Term coined by Anton Ehrenzweig
a. The special function of inducing and
symbolizing the ego's creativity.
(1) It has a dreamlike 'slippery' quality.
(a) One aspect slips into another just
like a dream.
B. Legend
of the Universal Goddess
1. The craft is a religion which has an
unbroken tradition that dates back to Paleolithic times (approximately
35,000 years).
a. As the last ice age retreated the tribe
of nomadic hunters worshipped the Goddess of the Wild Things
and Fertility and the
God of the Hunt.
(1) Semi-permanent homes were set up in
caves carved out by the glaciers.
(a) Shamans and Shamanka conducted rites
within hard to reach portions of the caves, which were painted
with scenes of the hunt, magical symbols and the tribes totem
animals.
2. The transition from Hunter-Gatherers
to agriculturists was reflected in the change of the 'Lady
of the Wild Things and Fertility' to the 'Barley Mother' and
the 'God of the Hunt' to the 'Lord of the Grain'.
a. The importance of the phases of the
moon and the sun was reflected in the rituals that evolved
around sowing, reaping, and letting out to pasture.
3. Villages grew into towns and cities
and society changed from tribal to communal to urban.
a. Paintings on the plastered walls of
shrines depicted the Goddess giving birth to the Divine Child
- Her son, consort and seed.
(1) The Divine Child was expected to take
a special interest in the city dwellers, just as His Mother
and Father had taken an interest in the people who lived away
from the cities.
b. Mathematics, astronomy, poetry, music,
medicine, and the understanding of the workings of the human
mind, developed side by side with the lore of the deeper mysteries.
4. Far to the east, nomadic tribes devoted
themselves to the arts of war and conquest.
a. Wave after wave of invasion swept over
Europe from the Bronze Age onward.
(1) Warrior gods drove the Goddess' people
out from the fertile lowlands and the fine temples, into the
hills and high mountains, where they became known as the Sidhe,
the Picts or Pixies, and the Fair Folk or the Fairies.
b. The mythological cycle of Goddess and
Consort, Mother and Child, which had held sway for 30,000
years was changed to conform to the values of the conquering
patriarchies.
(1) In Canaan, Yahweh fought a bloody battle
to ensure that his followers had "no other gods before
me."
(a) The Goddess was given a masculine name
and assigned the role of a false god.
(b) Along with the suppression of the Goddess,
women lost most of the rights they had previously enjoyed.
(2) In Greece, the Goddess in Her many
aspects, was "married" to the new gods resulting
in the Olympic Pantheon.
(a) The Titans, who the Olympians displaced
were more in touch with the primal aspects of the Goddess.
(3) The victorious Celts in Gaul and the
British Isles, adopted many features of the Old Religion and
incorporated them into the Druidic Mysteries.
(a) The Faerie, breeding cattle in the
stony hills and living in turf-covered round huts preserved
the Craft.
(b) They celebrated the eight feasts of
the Wheel of the Year with wild processions on horseback,
singing and chanting along the way and lighting ritual bonfires
on the mountaintops.
(c) It was said that the invaders often
joined in the revels and many rural families, along with some
royalty, could claim to have Faerie blood.
(d) The College of the Druids and the Poetic
Colleges of Ireland and Wales were said to have preserved
many of the old mysteries.
5. In the late 1400's the Catholic Church
attempted to obliterate its competitors, and the followers
of the Old Religion were forced to 'go underground.'
a. They broke up into small groups called
Covens and, isolated from each other, formed what would later
be known as the Family Traditions.
(1) Inevitably, parts of the Craft were
forgotten or lost and what survives today is fragmentary.
6. After nearly five centuries of persecution
and terror, came the Age of Disbelief.
a. Memory of the True Craft had faded as
non-members who could remember how they once had met openly
died and those who came after never knew of them.
(1) All that was left were the hideous
stereotypes which were ludicrous, laughable or just plain
tragic.
7. With the repeal of the last Witchcraft
Act in England in 1954, the Craft started to re-emerge as
an alternative to a world that viewed the planet as a resource
to be exploited.
III THE ARCHETYPE OF THE GODDESS
A. The
Craft has always been a religion of poetry, not theology.
1. The myths, legends, and teachings are
recognized as metaphors for 'That which cannot be told'; the
absolute reality our minds can never completely express because
of the limitations placed on it through biology.
a. The mysteries of the absolute can never
be explained - only felt or intuited.
b. Symbols and ritual acts are used to
trigger unusual states of awareness in which insights that
go beyond words are revealed.
(1) When the phrase 'secrets that cannot
be told' is used, it is not a matter of oaths taken or the
threat of penalties that might be imposed.
(a) The true meaning is that the inner
knowledge literally cannot be expressed in words.
(b) It can only be conveyed by experience
and no one can legislate what insight another person may draw
from any given experience.
(c) This is why the Craft is not a spectator
religion, where you can refuse to put any effort in and gain
anything meaningful for your own development.
(d) This is also why entrenched priesthoods
foster the belief that non-priests must go through a hierarchy
of priests, heads of churches, and eventually through chosen
prophets and sons of the deity in order to receive special
attention by the deity.
B. The
primary symbol for 'that which cannot be told' in the Craft
is the Mother Goddess. She has an infinite number of aspects
and thousands of names because She is the reality behind many
metaphors for the creation of the universe.
1. Unlike patriarchal systems, the Craft
sees the Goddess as giving birth to the world rather than
creating it out of nothing.
a. The fertile Lands were made from Her
Flesh, the Waters from Her own bodily Fluids, the Mountains
from Her Bones, and the Winds from Her own Breath.
(1) The Goddess does not rule the world,
She IS the world and since She gave birth to us all, we have
the potential to reconnect with the spirit of Her in all Her
magnificent diversity.
(2) Religion for us, then is a matter of
relinking with the divine within and with Her outer manifestations
in all the human and natural world.
(a) One of the basic beliefs that the Craft
is founded upon is what Stewart Farrar call the 'Theory of
Levels', which recognizes that reality exists and operates
on many planes.
(b) A simplified but generally accepted
list would be - physical, etherical, astral, mental and spiritual.
(c) It is recognized that each of these
levels has its own laws and that these laws, while special
to their own levels, are compatible with each other and their
mutual resonance governs the interaction between the levels.
(d) The point of this excursion into the
esoterica of how the universe works, is to point out that
we do not separate our physical existence from our spiritual
existence. In the Craft, spirit and flesh are joined together
and physical aspects of being human such as sex are not considered
'dirty ' or 'sinful'.
C. The
importance of the Craft for women, is a direct outgrowth in
the decline of Goddess religions and the rise of God dominated
religions.
1. Male images of divinity are characterized
in both western and eastern religions today, and women are
thus deprived of religious models and spiritual systems that
can speak to female needs and experience.
a. In the extremes of male dominated religions,
women are not encouraged to explore their own strengths and
realizations.
(1) They are taught to submit to male authority,
to identify masculine perceptions as their spiritual ideals,
to deny their bodies and sexuality, and to fit their insights
into a male mold, no matter how ludicrus that may seem.
2. The image of the Goddess inspires women
to see themselves in a very different light.
a. As Daughters of the Goddess, they are
divine, their bodies are sacred, and the changing phases of
their lives are holy.
(1) Their aggression is healthy, and their
anger can be purifying.
(a) Their power to create and nurture as
well as their ability to limit and to destroy, when necessary,
is seen as the very force that sustains all life.
(2) Through the Goddess, women can discover
their strengths, enlighten their minds, own their bodies and
celebrate their emotions.
(a) They can move beyond narrow constricting
roles and become whole people.
3. For women, the Goddess is the symbol
of the inmost self and the beneficent, nurturing, liberating
power within all women.
a. The cosmos is modelled on the female
body, which is sacred.
(1) All phases of life are sacred and age
is a blessing, not a curse.
(a) The Goddess does not limit women to
their bodies. She awakens their minds and spirits and emotions.
(b) Through Her, they can know the power
of anger and aggression, as well as the power of love.
D. The
Image of the Goddess has a great deal to offer men as well
as women.
1. Men are also oppressed in a God ruled,
patriarchal society.
a. Men are encouraged to identify with
a model that no human being can possibly live up to.
(1) Men are expected to be mini-rulers
of their own very narrow universes.
(a) Men are internally split between a
spiritual self, that is supposed to conquer their baser animal
instincts, and their emotional selves.
(b) They are at war with themselves. In
the west, they are expected to overcome the tendency to sin,
while in the east they must suppress the desires of the ego.
(c) Needless to say, no man comes away
from this type of struggle undamaged.
2. Every male who is raised by a mother,
will from birth carry within him a strong feminine imprint.
a. This is so, because women give birth
to males, nurture them at their breast, and in our culture,
are primarily responsible for their care until they reach
adolescence.
(1) The symbol of the Goddess allows men
to experience and integrate the feminine side of their nature
without danger of losing those feelings which are the touchstone
of their masculinity.
(a) The Goddess becomes: the mother who
will never abandon her child: refuse to nurture him when he
is feeling his most vulnerable: tempers her justice with compassion
and understanding, all these in ways not always possible in
human women and other men.
3. For a man, the Goddess is his own hidden
Female self, as well as being the Universal Life force.
a. She embodies all the qualities society
teaches him not to recognize in himself.
(1) His first experience with Her may therefore
be somewhat stereotypical, in that She appears as the cosmic
lover, the gentle nurturer, the eternally desired Other, or
the Muse. All that he is not.
(a) As he becomes more whole and becomes
aware of his own 'female' qualities, She seems to change,
to show him a new face. Always holding up a mirror, She shows
what may seem ungraspable to him.
(b) He may chase Her forever and She will
elude him, but through the attempt, he will grow until he
too learns to find Her within.
IV THE ARCHETYPE OF THE HORNED GOD
A. The
Horned God is born of a Virgin Mother
1. He is a model of male power that is
free from father-son rivalry or 'Oedipal' conflicts.
a. He has no father, because He is his
own father.
(1) As He grows and passes through the
changes on the Wheel, He remains in relationship with the
prime nurturing force of the Goddess.
(a) His power is drawn directly from the
Goddess and He participates in life through Her.
2. The Horned God represents powerful,
positive male qualities that derive from deeper sources than
the stereotypical violence and emotional crippling of men
present in our society.
a. When a man strives to emulate the God,
he is free to be wild without being cruel, angry without being
violent, sexual without being coercive, spiritual without
being unsexed, and able to truly love.
3. For men the God is the image of inner
power, and of a potency that is more than merely sexual.
a. He is the undivided Self, in which mind
is not split from the body, nor spirit from flesh.
(1) United, both can function at the peak
of creative and emotional power.
b. Men are not subservient or relegated
to second class spiritual citizenship on the Craft.
(1) But neither are they automatically
elevated to a higher status than women, as they are in other
religions.
(a) Men in the Craft must interact with
strong, empowered women who do not pretend to be anything
less than what they are.
(b) Many men find this prospect disconcerting
at first.
4. For women raised in our present culture,
the God begins as a symbol of all those qualities that have
been identified as male, and that they, as women, have not
been allowed or encouraged to own.
a. The symbol of the God, like that of
the Goddess, is both internal and external. (1) Through meditation
and ritual a woman invokes the God and creates his image within
herself.
(a) In this way she connects with those
qualities that she may lack.
(2) As her understanding moves beyond culturally
imposed limitations her image of the God changes and deepens.
(a) He becomes the Creation, which is not
simply a replica of oneself, but something different and of
a different order.
(b) True Creation implies separation as
the very act of birth is a relinquishment or letting go. (c)
Through the God, women know this power within themselves,
and so, like the Goddess, the God can empower women.
5. In the Craft, the cosmos is no longer
modeled on external male control.
a. The hierarchy is dissolved and the heavenly
chain of command is broken.
(1) The "divinely revealed" texts
are seen as poetry not the "word of God."
(a) Instead, a man must connect with the
Goddess who is immanent in the world, in nature, in women,
and in his own feelings.
(b) She is immanent in everything that
childhood religions taught needed to be overcome, transcended,
and conquered, in order to be loved by 'God'.
b. The very aspects of the Craft that seem
threatening also hold out to men a new and vibrant spiritual
possibility: that of wholeness, connection, and freedom.
(1) Men of courage find relationships with
strong powerful women exhilarating and they welcome the chance
to know the Female within the self.
(a) They enjoy the chance to grow beyond
their culturally imposed limitations and become whole.
c. Within Covens, women and men can experience
group support and the affection of other women and men.
(1) They can interact in situations that
are not competitive or antagonistic.
(a) Men in Covens can become true friends
with other men, without giving up any part of themselves,
or subjecting themselves to derision or ridicule.
V. ETHICS AND VALUES SHARED BY MOST MEMBERS
OF THE CRAFT
A. The
ethics of the Craft are more positive than negative.
1. Rather than being exhorted with a plethora
of "thou shall nots" the Craft is guided by principles
more along the lines of "blessed be they who...."
a. The Craft is a joyous creed; it is also
a socially and ecologically responsible one. Witches delight
in the world and their involvement in it on all levels.
(1) They enjoy their minds, their psyches,
their bodies, their senses and sensitivities; and they delight
in relating, on all these planes, with their fellow creatures
and the Earth Herself.
2. Wiccans believe in a joyful balance
of all human functions.
a. This outlook is perfectly expressed
in the Charge of the Goddess, which is an integral part of
most of the rituals of all witches.
(1) "Let My worship be within the
heart that rejoices; for behold, all acts of love and pleasure
are My rituals, and therefore let there be beauty and strength,
power and compassion, honor and humility, mirth and reverence
within you."
(a) This provides a model of a balanced
ethic which presents eight qualities that are positive and
not restrictive.
(b) Compassion means empathy, not condescension;
humility means a realistic appraisal of your own stage of
development; reverence means a sense of wonder.
(c) The Wiccan is always conscious that
compassion must be partnered with power, humility with honor,
and reverence with mirth.
3. Love of life in all its forms, is the
basic ethic of the Craft.
a. We are bound to honor and respect all
living things and to serve the Life Force.
(1) It has been said that we all serve
the Goddess, even if only as compost.
4. Witchcraft recognizes that life feeds
on life.
a. We must kill in order to survive, but
life is never taken needlessly, never squandered or wasted.
(1) To ensure the survival of the species,
females are not hunted as game, for they share the sacred
bond of motherhood with the Goddess.
(a) Serving the Life Force also means working
to preserve the diversity of natural life, preventing the
poisoning of the environment and the destruction of species.
5. The World is seen as the manifestation
of the Goddess
a. What happens in the World is important
because the Goddess is directly affected.
(1) While the seasons of the year renew
the Goddess, She needs the participation of Her creations
to keep the cycle going.
(a) This is the real function of the Sabbats.
They reinforce the ties between humankind and the Planet that
gives us life.
(b) Unlike other gods, that allow humanity
to exist at their sufferance, the Goddess needs us just as
much as we need Her, and we are partners in the pageant of
Life.
6. Justice is seen as an inner sense that
each act brings about consequences that must be faced responsibly.
a. This is based on the belief that all
things are interdependent and interrelated.
(1) Therefore, we are all mutually responsible
because an act that harms anyone harms us all.
(a) This is summed up in the form of a
law known as Karma, which dictates that all actions bring
about changes.
(2) There is a saying in the Craft that
illustrates the effects of Karma known as the 'Threefold Law
of Return'
(a) 'Whatever is sent out is returned three
times over.'
(b) It is a sort of amplified 'Golden Rule'
7. Honor is a guiding principle of the
Craft.
a. It is an inner sense of pride and self
respect
(1) Refusing to do anything which would
make you ashamed of yourself strengthens your magical will
and leads to the self respect that comes from setting your
own course, guided by your own inner sense of right or wrong.
(a) This makes you rightfully proud of
past accomplishments and encourages you to stay the course.
b. The Goddess is honored in oneself and
in others.
(1) Women are respected and valued for
all their human qualities.
(a) The Self, one's individuality and unique
way of being, is highly valued.
(2) Like Nature, the Goddess loves diversity.
(a) Oneness is attained not through losing
the Self, but through realizing the Self's potential.
8. Self development and the full realizatin
of one's unique yet many aspected potential is a moral duty
for a witch.
a. Life is seen as a gift from the Goddess
and it is up to us to push the evolution to mankin
(1) If suffering exists, it is not our task to reconcile ourselves
to it.
(a) We must work for change in all ways
at hand.
b. That which helps this evolution to come
about is seen as good and desirable while actions that thwart
it are to be avoided because each of us is a factor in the
cosmic evolutionary process.
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