Friday, February 16, 2007
I've been very busy with my metal work business. I'm quite literally grinding away!
Check out my website...www.triskeleforge.com
I've been doing some interesting reading recently. Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein. This book apparently inspired the Church of All Worlds. It is funny to read about a possible future from 40 some odd years ago. It's interesting to be in a place where you can say, "Actually they've made it to the moon and nope they haven't put any colonies up there...and they've sent a butt-load of probes to Mars but there's nobody up there!" Just the same, it's an interesting read...I keep imagining that it would make a great movie.
Oh, and have you seen The Secret yet? Heard about it on Oprah? It is a video that praises the power of positive thought and the Law of Attraction (just one of the laws that most Witches are familiar with) which can be harnessed to bring greater prosperity, happiness and health. There are parts that make me raise an eyebrow, but for the most part it has helped me to set myself to thinking more positively. When it comes down to it, positive thought is its own reward! I may write about this again.
Anyhow, that's all for now.
BB,
--J.
Friday, November 03, 2006
Happy Samhain to you all!
Ummm...that is if there are any readers of this blog.
I know, I know...I haven't posted anything for nearly a year...Truth be told, I haven't taken the time to write!
I've also been around the spiritual map a few times...most recent points of focus and interest have been Druidry and Vedanta, but you know it was something I read in a Yoga magazine that got me to thinking about my lack of commitment to any one spiritual tradition or practise. It basically told the story of two spiritual seekers...one is engrossed in and committed to the work set out for him in his guru's fields while the other grows bored thinking that there is better teaching to be found elsewhere. Eventually the bored one finds his life to be meaningless and learns of a great teacher who has helped many on the Path...this great teacher is the one who chose to stay and continue with his labours. My life, though, has not been without its Witchy points, chants and spells are practically a daily occurence in my life. The trouble is in determining whether I am Wiccan or not, there is no question about whether I'm a Witch or not.
Well, I think I have broken the long dry spell. I will take more time to write!
Who is the cat? He is Bran, familiar and friend. I have learned so much about animal communication from him.
Check out Wild Hunt blog linked in the left column. Now, that's a blog!
Blessed Be,
JumpinSpider
Saturday, December 03, 2005
Wednesday, September 14, 2005
Toward Wiccan Apologetics
So in wondering and wandering I came across this site:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apologetics
It provides a much sounder definition for apologetics and it really gets me to thinking. How well are we, as Witches, armed to defend our own positions against the "onslaught" of the Christian apologists? It could be a rippingly fun exercise to explore the arguments against Wicca that can be found on a host of Christian apologetic web pages:
http://www.thechristiandefense.com/ftopic2735.html&sid=494a2df12b48a1e8fdca8ae0e7bfb752
http://contenderministries.org/wicca.php
http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/2003/0305bt.asp
Some fairly stimulating reading to be sure...;^)
BB
--J.
Saturday, August 20, 2005
Is a male Witch a Warlock?
I have felt for some time that the term Warlock to refer to a male Witch may have some value. For years I have taken the position offered by most Wiccans like Stewart Farrar who says in "Eight Sabbats for Witches":
"But `warlock', in the sense of `a male witch',
is Scottish Late Middle English and entirely
derogatory; its root means `traitor, enemy,
devil'; and if the very few modern male witches
who call themselves warlocks realized its
origin, they would join the majority and
share the title `witch' with their sisters."
I have felt for some time that there may be a connection between the term "ergi" which is used to refer to a male sorcerer who has an effeminate or "receptive" nature and warlock which refers to the traitor or oath-breaker. Perhaps this is one who has turned away from "manly" things who has turned his back on the warrior's lodge to embark on a pursuit of the "womanly" mysteries--of magick, divination, healing, and mediumship. Just a thought...
Check out these links to learn more...
http://www.ladyoftheearth.com/witch/warlock.txt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergi
Sunday, August 07, 2005
Where have all the male Witches gone?
So where are the men in modern Wicca? Don't get me wrong, I absolutely adore the company of women...I definitely would not consider myself to be a "man's man". I simply find I'm most at home in the company of women. Being raised by a single mother may have something to do with that. I still wonder, though, why it is that Wicca and Witchcraft attract more women than men. After all, if it weren't for the efforts of men in the 20th century, modern Wicca may well not exist!
Gerald Gardner, Alex Sanders, Robert Cochrane, Evan John Jones, Raymond Buckland, Paul Huson, Stewart Farrar, Gavin Frost, Scott Cunningham, Robin Skelton too name just a few are men who have contributed greatly to the growth of Modern Witchcraft and the movement toward "Goddess Religion" and yet (it seems) men are now less attracted than they once were. In fact, many of the new covens coming out of the 1950s and 60s were mostly men!
I think that the efforts of women like Z. Budapest and Starhawk have contributed greatly to the empowerment of women and the spread of "Goddess Religion" but I think that in the broader movement there has been a loss of the balance that, to me, is one of the central themes of Wicca.
For all one may celebrate the works of Starhawk there seems to be hardly much mention of her own teacher, a man by the name of Victor Anderson--a person who apparently was not always in agreement with her politics!
So again, I wonder where the men are? And particularly the straight men? I mean there are many all women covens--especially where I live, but all men covens, which are much fewer and far between, are usually comprised of gay men...not that I have a problem with this as straight men and gay men should be quite comfortable working together, as straight women and lesbians are certainly comfortable working together. My main concern is that Wiccan and Pagan society, while trying its best to encourage diversity seems to have left the straight male out of this society of diversity. Is this due to an inherent misandry existing in Wicca today? Is it because the straight male is the embodiment of the evil patriarchal paradigm? Or is it merely poor publicity which has left the average straight guy with the sense that there is no place for him in Wicca and Witchcraft?
Hmmm...makes me think I may have to take matters into my own hands and host an information meeting for men who are interested in Wicca, but perhaps don't bother to pursue it because they feel it is for women only...I pray to Lady and Lord that the balance be restored!
Blessed Be!
Friday, July 29, 2005
Triumph of the Moon
Okay, so what do I think? Is modern Witchcraft a survival of ancient Pagan practices? Was the Witchcraft of the Burning Times such a survival? Could it be said that the Cunning Men and Women of the 18th and 19th centuries were Witches? Well, if you read this work by Prof. Ronald Hutton you may be unpleasantly surprised...
When I was first coming to an understanding of what Witchcraft is I believed what most folks of the time, who cared about such matters, believed: I believed in the “Murray hypothesis”…that the Witchcraft of the Burning Times was a Pagan survival and that the Devil that Witches were supposed to worship was actually an ancient pre-historic god. With the work of people like Ronald Hutton we realize that this is not necessarily the case. We learn that modern Witchcraft and the modern Witch religion, Wicca, is more likely the invention of people like Gerald Gardner.
What one may be surprised to learn in this book is that this fact does not invalidate Wicca and the modern practice of Witchcraft. What it does do is acknowledge the many influences on this “New Religious Movement.” We learn of the influences of Classicism/romanticism, of Naturalism, of Folklore, and of the Ceremonial Magickal tradition. We also learn of the many people involved in the shaping of modern Witchcraft.
I think personally that it could be said that it doesn’t really matter that so many of the earlier ideas about the origins of Wicca and Witchcraft are not “true” for every religious movement has its own origin myths. Folks like Robert Graves and Robin Skelton have written of the value of "Poetic Truth". I think the truths of modern Wicca and Paganism in general are very much poetic truths.
Also, any argument that Wicca is an invalid religion because it is “made up” does not hold water for me…all religions, after all, are made up.
I find it interesting how Prof. Hutton, who is English, explores the English roots of modern Witchcraft (he says that Wicca is the only religion that England has given the world!!). It’s interesting how he talks of the influence of the “California Cosmology” and how it compares to British Witchcraft. I found it particularly interesting that early modern Witchcraft was founded by fairly conservative, although definitely eccentric, individuals…as compared to the very left leaning liberalism of the California influences like Starhawk, and Z. Budapest.
I highly recommend this book…I intend to occasionally post notes to this blog about the various people and publications he mentions in this book. I will now view the Wind in the Willows with different eyes. :^)
Good Reading!