August 2011
2 posts
The Lord's and Lady's prayer
Evocation of the Goddess Priestess: “Blessed Goddess , ancient mother of us all, I evoke you and bid you welcome at our humble gathering. I call upon you now by the name known to my ancestors, Mother Goddess, protector of your children, know that you are welcome here. I am the Great Mother, worshiped by all creation and existent prior to their consciousness, I am the primal female force,...
Aug 14th
The Nature of God
One of the images I have that illustrates my view of God… Imagine,  if you will, a wheel with spokes. The hub of the wheel is God. The tyre is the effect of God. The spokes are what connect what we see and experience, the effect of God, with that which is God. The spoke on the left represents what may be viewed as the “classical” relationship, that of God<->Human. God is a separate...
Aug 5th
June 2011
1 post
The Worth of Belief
How often have you found yourself in a discussion with an fundie of one religion or another, and heard the following phrase, or one like it. “It’s not about belief, It’s about the truth! This is what God says in His holy word. It is absolute truth and anything else is false.” It seems the more absolutist a religion is, the more it’s adherents fear those two...
Jun 11th
May 2011
3 posts
Love Dance of the Lord and Lady
I wrote this article after witnessing the eclipse of June 10th, 2002. I went down to the park this evening, looking to observe an astronomical event of some rarity. An eclipse, even an annular one, is not an event for any Witch to take lightly. The last two eclipses observable from here were both overcast and hidden from mortal view. With the next solar eclipse not due until 2012 and the...
May 18th
An Eye for an Eye: An Historical Perspective
Most people believe that the the phrase “an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth” is a Christian edict, or perhaps more accurately Hebrew. Still others will point to the fact that this rule is contained in the Code of Hammurabi, which predates Hebrew writings. Interestingly enough the phrase is actually older even than that. It originates in Madagascar and is somewhat altered...
May 17th
Witch Word Study
Dear Christians: The etymology of the word “Witch” is quite well known. It is Saxon in origin and originally referred to practitioners of The Celtic, Saxon, and Norse religions. The word is derived from the Saxon word “wicce” (pronounced wit-cha), from which is derived the Old English “Witche”, and the more modern word “Wicca”. These “Witches”were the solitary Village healers and...
May 16th