Samhain means 'summer's end', for now nights lengthen, winter begins, and
we work with the positive aspects of the dark tides. In the increasing starlight and moonlight, we hone our divinatory and
psychic skills. Many Craft traditions, and the ancient Celts, consider this New Year's Eve. It is the one night when the veil
that separates our world from the next is at its thinnest, allowing the dead to return to the world of the living, to be welcomed
and feasted by their kin. The Christian religion adopted this theme as 'All Saints Day' or 'All Hallows Day' (November 1st),
celebrating the eve as 'All Hallows Eve' or 'Halloween'. The alternative date of November 6th ('Martinmas'
or 'Old Hallows') is sometimes employed by some Covens and solitary practitioners.
'Yule' means 'wheel', for now the wheel of the year has reached a turning point,
with the longest night of the year. This is the seedpoint of the solar year, mid-winter, time of greatest darkness when we
seek within ourselves to comprehend our true nature. In virtually all Pagan religions, this is the night the Great Mother
Goddess gives birth to the baby Sun God, because from this day forward, the days begin to lengthen, light is waxing. The Christian
religion adopted this theme as the birthday of Jesus, calling it 'Christmas'. The alternative fixed calendar date of December
25th (called 'Old Yule' by some Covens) occurs because, before various calendar changes, that was the date of the solstice.
Actually, this holiday is most usually celebrated beginning at sundown on February
1, continuing through the day of February 2. 'Imbolc' means 'in the belly (of the Mother)' because that is where seeds are
beginning to stir. It is Spring. Another name for the holiday is 'Oimelc', meaning 'milk of ewes', since it is lambing season.
It was especially sacred to the Celtic Fire Goddess, Brigit, patron of smithcraft, healing (midwifery), and poetry. A Coven's
High Priestess may wear a crown of lights (candles) to symbolize the return of the Goddess to her Maiden aspect, just as the
Sun God has reached puberty. Weather lore associated with this sabbat is retained by the folk holiday of 'Groundhog's Day'.
The Christian religion adopted a number of these themes, as follows. February 1 became 'St. Brigit's Day', and February 2
became 'Candlemas', the day to make and bless candles for the liturgical year. The 'Feast of the Purification of the Blessed
Virgin Mary' adapts the Maiden Goddess theme. The alternative date of February 14 ( 'Old Candlemas', Christianized as 'Valentine's
Day') is employed by some Covens.
As Spring reaches its midpoint, night and day stand in perfect balance, with light
on the increase. The young Sun God now celebrates a hierogamy (sacred marriage) with the young Maiden Goddess, who conceives.
In nine months, she will again become the Great Mother. It is a time of great fertility, new growth, and newborn animals.
The next full moon (a time of increased births) is called the 'Ostara' and is sacred to Eostre, Saxon lunar goddess of fertility
(from whence we get the word 'eostrogen'), whose two symbols were the egg and the rabbit. The Christian religion adopted these
emblems for 'Easter', celebrated the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox. The theme of the conception
of the Goddess was adapted as the 'Feast of the Annunciation', occuring on the alternative fixed calendar date of March 25
('Old Lady Day'), the earlier date of the equinox. 'Lady Day' may also refer to other goddesses (such as Venus and Aphrodite),
many of whom has festivals celebrated at this time. (The name 'Ostara' is incorrectly assigned to this holiday by some modern
traditions of Wicca.)
'Beltane' means 'fire of Bel', Belinos being one name for the Sun God, whose coronation
feast we now celebrate. As summer begins, weather becomes warmer, and the plant world blossoms, an exuberant mood prevails.
It is a time of unabashed sexuality and promiscuity. Young people spend the entire night in the woods 'a-maying', and dance
around the phallic Maypole the next morning. Older married couples may remove their wedding rings (and the restrictions they
imply) for this one night. May morning is a magical time for 'wild' water (dew, flowing streams, and springs) which is collected
and used to bathe in for beauty, or to drink for health. The Christian religion had only a poor substitute for the life-affirming
Maypole -- namely, the death-affirming cross. Hence, in the Christian calendar, this was celebrated as 'Roodmas'. In Germany,
it was the feast of Saint Walpurga, or 'Walpurgisnacht'. An alternative date around May 5 (Old Beltaine), when the sun reaches
15 degrees Taurus, is sometimes employed by Covens. (The name 'Lady Day' is incorrectly assigned to this holiday by some modern
traditions of Wicca.)
Although the name 'Litha' is not well attested, it may come from Saxon tradition
-- the opposite of 'Yule'. On this longest day of the year, light and life are abundant. At mid-summer, the Sun God has reached
the moment of his greatest strength. Seated on his greenwood throne, he is also lord of the forests, and his face is seen
in church architecture peering from countless foliate masks. The Christian religion converted this day of Jack-in-the-Green
to the Feast of St. John the Baptist, often portraying him in rustic attire, sometimes with horns and cloven feet (like the
Greek god Pan)! Midsummer Night's Eve is also special for adherents of the Faerie faith. The alternative fixed calendar date
of June 25 (Old Litha) is sometimes employed by Covens. (The name 'Beltaine' is sometimes incorrectly assigned to this holiday
by some modern traditions of Wicca, even though 'Beltaine' is the Gaelic word for 'May'.)
'Lughnassad' means 'the funeral games of Lugh', referring to Lugh, the Irish sun
god. However, the funeral is not his own, but the funeral games he hosts in honor of his foster-mother Tailte. For that reason,
the traditional Tailtean craft fairs and Tailtean marriages (which last for a year and a day) are celebrated at this time.
As autumn begins, the Sun God enters his old age, but is not yet dead. It is also a celebration of the first harvest. The
Christian religion adopted this theme and called it 'Lammas', meaning 'loaf- mass', a time when newly baked loaves of bread
are placed on the altar. An alternative date around August 5 (Old Lammas), when the sun reaches 15 degrees Leo, is sometimes
employed by Covens.
In many mythologies, this is the day the Sun God, the God of Light, is killed by
his rival and dark twin, the God of Darkness -- who was born at Midsummer, reached puberty at Lammas, and lives a mirror-image
life of the Sun God. From this mid-Autumn day forward, darkness will be greater than light, just as night becomes longer than
day. So it is a festival of sacrifice, including that of the Sun God in his aspect of Spirit of the Fields, John Barleycorn
-- for this is the final grain harvest. The Christian religion adopted it as 'Michaelmas', celebrated on the alternative date
September 25, the old equinox date (Old Harvest Home). (The Welsh word 'Mabon', meaning 'son', is used by some Witches for
the name of this holiday, although such usage is recent and not attested historically.)
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