Archive for category Ritual
EarthHouse Midsummer Gather Memories – 2011
Posted by Jack Green in News & Reviews, Ritual, Sabbatts & Celebrations on July 24, 2011
EarthHouse Project’s 11th Annual
Midsummer Gather for 2011
Litha 34,255 S.W.R.
By Rev. Jack Green of Hollow Hills Coven
If you like Labyrinths or home brewed mead this is the place to be. If you don’t mind camping in drizzle and lots of earwigs visiting while you’re hanging out with a bunch of pagans and singing, drumming and dancing around a roaring fire, then this is it. Jenny Green and I left Paganistan for the Blue River and Eagle Cave on Dyad 19, the 19th day of Dyad Moon (that’s Sunday, June 19th in the Roman calendar.) It took about 5 hours to get to the campsite. We had done our Esbat, our Full Moon rite the night before (Saturday) but the Full Moon was on Dyad 15, Wednesday June 15th three days before. It’s always on the 14th or 15th day of the Moon when you start the day count at New Moon so we circle on the nearest Saturday.
The Campsite and it's History
Eagle Cave is in Southern Wisconsin (An Ojibwe word) in what was Dakota Country around 1600, then Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) Country by 1800. By 1860, what was left of the First Nations after the wars and the plagues were all pretty much rounded up and corralled onto the various reservations. The Nearest Reservation is the Ho-Chunk Rez about 70 miles almost due north. Despite Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s modern depredations the names of the land itself still tell the story. The old native tribes are now numbered with our spiritual ancestors and our future allies for though we are only Second Nations here we are the First Nations reborn in the Old Country: Europe.

Practicing the Abbot's Bromley Horn Dance
Settling in at the Campsite
Once there, we set up our camp. It had been a while since we had been camping and it took a bit to get my woodland legs back. Fortunately, the EarthHouse registration packet included a list of things to bring. Unfortunately, we got there just as the opening ritual had begun, so we waited until the gate was again open. Then we pitched our new tent and borrowed a tarp for our sheltered area. The brand new tent was larger than we thought so we used two tarps underneath rather than just one as planned. The community fire was already going and the first night’s drumming had begun by the time we finished our set up. This is the same overall site as the old Pagan Spirit Gatherings I had attended in 1988 and 1996 and it was just as hilly so my legs and ankles got a good work out. While finding a relatively level spot for the tent was tricky, it was possible.
Jenny and I attended some workshops together and others separately to better cover our bases, but we couldn’t see everything we wanted to. Read the rest of this entry »
Ritual Blessings and Blunders
Northern Dawn Slates Guest Ritualists for 2010
Posted by admin in News & Reviews, Ritual on January 12, 2010
This article was forwarded to us, and we thought we'd share . . .
For the past 27 years, one of NordCoG’s major goals has been to serve both our gods and our community by providing incisive public ritual four times a year.
But lately it’s become clear that something has changed. Attendance at rituals is down, and increasingly it feels as though we’ve lost the creative edge we once had.
So this year, we’re trying something new.
Under the overall artistic direction of veteran liturgist Steven Posch, Northern Dawn has invited several of our most gifted local ritualists—Paul Rucker, Stephanie Fox, Robin Grimm, and Magenta Griffith—to create our roster of rites for 2010.
In preparation for each sabbat, one of our guest artists will work with community volunteers to craft and enact the ritual. This should not only provide us with some topnotch ritual, but will give us all an opportunity to work alongside, and learn from, some of our community’s most creative and experienced priests and priestesses. Read the rest of this entry »
Happy Samhain Everyone!
Posted by Jane Hansen in News & Reviews, Ritual on October 31, 2009
Just thought we'd post a note to celebrate the season. If you are looking for a place to celebrate at, believe it or not, there is an article at the TC Daily Planet which gives a bit of a rundown. They interviewed Eye of Horus owner Thraicie Hawkner and Wiccan astrologist Teri Parsley Starnes. They also list a few open Samhain events in a sidebar. Here is the article in full:
Note that the Sorgitzak Ritual will be in the gallery at the Eye and they request you call 612-872-1292 to RSVP due to limited space. If you just show up, you may not be able to participate. If this is too late of a notice for you, remember that, day in and day out, the best source for local events is the Twin Cities Pagans group. You can hook up with them in two places. You can
Sacred Harvest Fest 2009
Posted by JRob Zetelumen in Art & Culture, Ritual on October 26, 2009
Sacred Harvest Festival is an annual Pagan festival which takes place about 10 miles north of Albert Lea. It is the largest Pagan camping festival in Minnesota, and one of the largest family friendly Pagan camping festivals in the nation. This year it was attended by 287 people (not bad for this economy). Before the festival there were rumors about political stuff and changes with the organizing committee, but at the festivals the organizers seemed to be familiar faces from festivals past and everything seemed to run as well as it ever did. Every year at SHF has its own mood. This year was extremely laid back. People tended to be calm, quiet and relaxed. However there were moments when the trickster spirits were on the loose, mostly with people who participated in the Sacred Hunt.
The Sacred Hunt is an intense ritual for all involved. Hunters fast all day, go to a sweat before sunrise, go without sleep, and dedicate themselves to achieving complete exhaustion before the ritual so as to attain the needed altered state of consciousness for this magickal working. They are watched over by Villagers who aid them in their hunt. They are energized by drummers. The sacred space is protected by guardians. It is an intensely powerful ritual. Everyone who goes through the ritual experiences profound personal transformation. Read the rest of this entry »
MCoW/WiCoM Reunite for Lammas
Posted by JRob Zetelumen in News & Reviews, Ritual on October 26, 2009
After 20 years, the Minnesota Church of Wicca (MCoW) and the Wiccan Church of Minnesota (WiCoM) came together to perform a ritual. What follows is a first hand description of how this happened and why it is significant from the people who were there.
According to Aurora, WiCoM May Queen, “WiCoM was at Sacred Paths Center holding one of it’s quarterly moots. MCOW happened to be meeting at Sacred Paths Center at the same time. Toward the end of the WiCoM moot, during discussions about ritual, someone suggested we do a joint ritual with MCOW.”
Lou Gastuch (“MomHen”) General Representative (“GenRep”) for WiCoM said, “MCoW was meeting in one of the small rooms at SPC at the same time that WiCoM was meeting in the Great Room. WiCoM was trying to figure out what to do for Lammas and we presumed that MCoW was doing the same thing.”
Paul the WiCoM Greenman said, “[Aurora] stated that she thought it was high time to do something about the schism. We had heard not that long ago from Dr. Murphy [Pizza] that both groups were loath to speak ill of the other and were in fact quite complimentary about each other’s organization. [Aurora] felt we should move toward healing the rift between us.”
Aurora continues, “I decided there was no time like the present and dragged the Green Man along with me over to the room where MCoW was meeting. We proposed a joint Lammas ritual and [Faerie Ariel], Iden, and Aura enthusiastically agreed.”
Aayleen of MCoW said of her reaction, “It was a definite YES, absolutely no hesitation.”
A sentiment which according to Lou was mirrored by WiCoM, “The motion passed unanimously”. And her reaction? “By all the Gods, yes!”
Faerie Ariel from MNCoW agrees, “All of the people in our group were absolutely ecstatic at the idea and of course we agreed. We all knew that this was the beginning of a new era for our Pagan community. A time to put the past behind us and to focus on the present for the sake of all Pagan groups. MCoW now uses the slogan: ‘Together For The Pagan Community’ and we can thank WiCoM for the inspiration.”
Everyone seems to agree that working together was a generally positive experience.
Aurora said, “Planning this ritual was an uplifting experience. Pieces just fell into place. Both groups seemed to come to the table with the same outlook on many aspects. [snip] Iden of MCOW wrote a ritual and brought it to the planning session but he was very open to changing what was down on paper. Much of the planning was rearranging his beautiful prose. The planning did not feel like there were two groups at the table whose agendas each had to be accommodated. It really felt more like there were seven individuals at the table who were all committed to planning a ritual together. We all used our best manners and listened to the reaction of all six of the other individuals when we proposed an idea.”
Faerie Ariel said, “Working with WiCoM is like working with good friends for the same cause. A cause that is so desperately needed in our Pagan community. This is only the first step in our journey to bringing our Pagan community together. We can also thank Sacred Paths Center for having a perfect location for all Pagan groups to be able to come together. Without Sacred Paths Center all of this may never have happened.”
Lou described the process as, “No different from any other large ritual committee: discussions on focus, tone, props, etc. MCoW brought one of their Lammas rituals and as a group we moved things around and adjusted as necessary for scale. We did have some miscues at ritual time, but nothing we couldn’t deal with.”
Aayleen said, “Actually, it was quite good. There were only a few small details that were a bit thorny, but for the most part, every one got along well. We found we had much more in common than we thought.”
So it happened that for the first time since the split of Minnesota Church of the Wicca and the Wiccan Church of Minnesota in 1987 that the two groups planned and held a joint Ritual together. 53 people gathered to participate in this historic ritual, August first, 2009 at the Sacred Paths Center. Wiccan rituals tend to emphasis unity and balance. The coming together of these two groups for this ritual made those parts of the ritual far more profound.
Asked about the significance of this ritual, Lou said, “In my opinion, it is a sign of the maturation of the Twin Cities Pagan community. MCoW dates back to at least 1977, which is only about a dozen years after Wicca, per se, was introduced to the US. If we arbitrarily use either the Witches’ Council in 1974 or Gnosticon in 1971 as its ‘birth’ then the Twin Cities Pagan community was still in its infancy. [snip] I consider cooperation to be another sign of maturity. [snip] It gives me GREAT hope for our future.”
Faerie Ariel said, “I see the future as MNCoW and WiCoM doing many more Rituals together. I cannot think of any reasons not to as we work very well together, each group supporting and inspiring the other and working”
Aayleen said, “I believe this was a very significant event because younger members of the community will see that cooperation is the key to the future of Paganistan. Coming together without homogenizing is a very positive thing. I think some of the ‘old guard’ are a bit concerned about that, but Wicca and Paganism in general are constantly evolving.”
Aurora said “This joint effort demonstrated to the Pagan community that two groups, even groups with hard feelings in their past, can work together toward a common goal. I think it shows that the Pagan community is growing and developing skills. We’re becoming more savvy. Other, more established communities have known for some time that today’s adversary can be tomorrow’s ally. I am thinking of usually opposed interest groups that close ranks and work together to help pass legislation of importance to both groups. These groups have learned how to disagree while leaving the door open for future cooperation. Pagan groups are learning this skill as well.”
The original schism is legendary, even the subject of scholarly research, and seems to have happened due to disagreements about filing paperwork. According to Thraicie of the Eye of Horus, “Some paperwork needed to be re-filed with the government, in order to keep the church ‘official’, and accounting was not as clear as it should have been. The MCoW leadership was resistant to the changes that needed to be made, so a certain percentage of the membership decided to hive off, and create a new church. I remember thinking that ‘Minnesota Church of the Wicca’ and ‘The Wiccan Church of Minnesota’ sounded a bit like a Monty Python skit, but this was the name we were best able to agree to. After WiCoM was formed, MCoW did get all the proper paperwork re-filed [snip], so we got two great organizations out of the deal.”





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