Topics

2014 ??? Adopt a... Aether Affirmations Air Alder Altar Animals Ansuz Aphrodite Artemis Ash Astral Astrology August Autumn Back to Basics Banishing Belief Beltane Beth Birch Birds Blessings Blog Milestone Blue Tit Book of Shadows Books Brighid Calcite Celebration Celtic Calendar Centring Chakras Chant Chaos Charge Christmas Colour Magick Communication Correspondence Crone Dark Side Darkness December Deity Desire Development Divinity Doreen Valiente Drama Dreaming Droolage Duir Earth Ego Elder Elements Elm Elves Energy Eostre Esbat Ethics Exercises Fairies Fairytales Fearn Feasting February Fehu Feminism Feoh Fertility Financial Fire Fledging Flight Friendship Full Moon Fun Future Blog Plans Gaia Gemini God & Goddess Goddess Gort Grounding Haiku Haul Hawthorn Hazel Healing Hecate Holly How to... Huath Ideas Imbolc In Memory of... Inanna Incense Inner Strength Inspirational People Invocation Ishtar Ivy January Joey Morris Journal July June Jupiter Karma Kore Lammas Lateness Life Litha Loki Loss Love Love Magick Loyalty Luck Luis Lynx Mabon Magick Magickal Name Maiden Manifestation Manners March Masculinity May Meditation Money Moon Phase Moon Sign Morality Mother Earth Movement Muin My Path My Poetry Nature New Page New Year New Years Day Ngetal Nion Norse November Oak October Odin Opportunities Oracle Deck Tab Pagan Path Patience Persephone Phrases Plans Poetry Power Practice Properity Protection Quick Reference Raido Rant Recipe Recommendation Reed Reflecting on... Reflection Resourced Respect Ritual Rooster Rowan Ruis Rune Interpretation Rune Magick Runes SAve the Earth Sabbat Activities Saille Samhain Sami Scrying Seasonal Sekhmet Self-Exploration Self-Expression Self-Improvement September Shadow Work Shiann Raven Moon Signs & Symbols Silver RavenWolf Sodalite Soul Spell Spell Spin Spirit Spiritual Richness Spring Springwatch Strength Summer Sun Sign Sunshine Morning Rae Swords Suit Sylphs Talisman Tarot The Green Man Thor Thought Thunder Thurisaz Time Tinne TipToeChick Totem Travel Trees Tribute Trust Universal Energy Update Ur Uruz Vine Vision Quest Visualisation Wands Waning Moon Water Waxing Moon Wealth Weather Wheel of the Year Wicca Willow Winter Witch-2-Watch Witchcraft Wittering On Words of Power Year and a Day YouTube Yule Zeus
Showing posts with label Sabbats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sabbats. Show all posts

Saturday, 24 October 2015

Sabbat Discovery - Samhain (Part 3)

Samhain Ritual Ideas
Clear old & negative energy
Honour the God & Goddess
Celebrating the Cycle of Life & Death
A Samhain Feast
Hnouring the Harvest’s End
Honouring the Ancestors
Animal Rites
Ancestor Meditation






My Samhain
As the Celtic New Year, I consider Samhain the most auspicious Sabbat for clearing old energies from my altar. I perform grounding on my altar once a year, at Samhain… I sweep the area with a besom made of Reed and create a circle of dried elderberries before my workings. I will be writing a feature on elderberries when I begin my Apothecary posts in the new year but at Samhain they are a potent accompaniment to my magicks.

After my workings I use the broom to sweep the elderberries out of circle and use them to make into my All Hallows Incense; this is an incense I will only burn on All Hallows Day to complete my Samhain rites. It hasn’t been included in this post as it is a personal blend and some things I keep private and sacred to my Book of Shadows.

Sabbat Discovery - Samhain (Part 2)



Samhain   Yule   Imbolc   Ostara   Beltane   Litha   Lammas   Mabon
Samhain Deities
Death is rarely so apparent than it is at Samhain. The skies have gone grey, the earth is brittle and cold, and the fields have been picked of the last crops. Winter looms on the horizon, and as the Wheel of the Year turns once more, the boundary between our world and the spirit world becomes fragile and thin. In cultures all over the world, the spirit of Death has been honoured at this time of the year; some of the deities who represent death and the dying of the earth.
The Lord at Samhain
The God is awaiting rebirth.

The Sun God
The Sun has descended into the realm of the Underworld; the forces of the underworld were in the ascendancy. The Lord of the Underworld, unfettered from the control of the sun, now walks the earth and with him travels all those other creatures from the abode of the dead. Ghosts, fairies and a host of other non-descript creatures go with him.

The Holly King & the Oak King
Many people consider Samhain the Oak King’s death. However, many celebrate it as his death and rebirth. It is not a rebirth. He is dead until the Winter Solstice! This is a time for darkness to reign. The days get shorter and the nights grow longer. This is a time for us to withdraw and hide in solitude. This is why the ‘holiday season’ can be very difficult for many to endure as we start celebrations before the Winter Solstice. At this point the Oak King, and all light, is dead and we must retreat to the Holly King’s realm, underworld, to be reborn.




The Lady at Samhain
The Goddess is at rest.

Mother Earth 
We transition from October to November when the Wheel turns to Samhain. The earth is wilting and cold winds are encroaching. It is time for Mother Earth to rest and restore – to hibernate until Imbolc.

Whilst the land is enveloped by the approach of Winter, and the veil which conceals Summerland thins, Mother Earth sleeps, dreaming of the abundance of Spring when she is reborn from mulch of autumns past.







This is by no means a complete list of deities associated with Samhain but they are certainly the more prominent ones and I urge you to research the more obscure and less known. I adore the energies of Samhain and that is largely because of these divine beings; deities associated with the Underworld, those that correspond to darkness, death and decay; they embody the essence of late autumn. Never shy away from this apparent ending because the beauty it holds is spectacular… our Northern hemisphere is aglow with autumnal splendour as the Gods and Goddesses of our various cultures and pantheons display their colours and wield their powers over the seasons. Rejoice in them, glory in them and don’t forget to jump in the puddles!!!!

Sabbat Discovery – Samhain (Part 3)

Sabbat Discovery - Samhain (Part 1)

Samhain   Yule   Imbolc   Ostara   Beltane   Litha   Lammas   Mabon
Observed: Sunset 31st October – Sunset 1st November

The Celtic New Year

This Gaelic festival marks the end of the harvest and the beginning of winter.

Associated with: All Saints' Day; Hallowe'en; All Hallow's Day; Calan Gaeaf; Shadowfest


Samhain is known by most as Hallowe’en, but for Wiccans and other Pagans it is considered a Sabbat to honour the ancestors who came before us. It is an auspicious time to contact the spirit world because the veil between this world and the next is at its thinnest during these days of darkening skies and chilling winds…. so cast your circles, light your candles and take full advantage of the cleared mists that so annoyingly separate us from the unseen ones.

In Wicca
Wiccans celebrate a variation of Samhain as one of the yearly Sabbats of the Wheel of the Year. It is deemed by most Wiccans to be the most important of the four ‘greater Sabbats’. Samahin is seen by some Wiccans as a time to celebrate the lives of those who have passed on from this world and often involves paying respect and homage to ancestors, family members, elders of the faith; the opposite point of the wheel to the spring festival of Beltane, which Wiccans celebrate as a festival of light and fertility.

Wiccans believe that at Samhain, the veil between this world and the afterlife is at its thinnest point of the whole year, making it easier to communicate with those who have left this world.

Traditions
Wearing costumes and masks (or ‘guising’) may have been another way to befuddle, ward off or even represent the  harmful spirits and fairies. Guising or mumming was common at winter festivals in general but was particularly appropriate to a night upon which supernatural being were said to be amongst us. Before the 20th century, guising at Samhain was done in parts of Ireland, Mann, the Scottish Highlands and islands, and Wales. In Ireland, costumes were sometimes worn by those who went about before nightfall collecting for a Samhain feast.

Guising and pranks at All Saints isn’t thought to have reached England until the 20th century, though mumming had been done at other festivals. At the time of mass transatlantic Irish and Scottish immigration, which popularised Halloween in North America, brought with it the strong tradition of guising and pranks from the Celtic lands. Trick-or-treating may have come from the custom of going door-to-door collecting food for Samhain feasts, fuel for Samhain bonfires and/or offerings for the spirits and fairies. Alternatively, it may have come from the English All Saints/All Souls custom of collecting soul-cakes.

Samhain was once and to Pagan paths still is one of the four main festivals of the Gaelic calender; traditionally, a time to take stock of the herds and food supplies; cattle were brought down to the winter pastures. It was also the time to choose which animals would be slaughtered for people to survive the winter. This custom is still observed by many who farm and will raise livestock because it is when meat will keep since the freeze has come and also since summer grass is gone and free foraging is no longer possible.
As with the other three Gaelic seasonal festivals, there is evidence that bonfires were lit on hilltops at Samhain which is one of my favourite places to visit in a Samhain meditation... the chill breeze through my hair at altitude as smoke curls and twists through the air, weaving around and between a coven of witches as they chant and cast into the fire.

Beings and soulds from the Otherworld were said to come into our world at Samhain. It is still the custom in some areas to set a place at the Samhain feast for the souls of the dead and to tell tales of one’s forebears. However, the souls of thankful kin could return to bestow blessings just as easily as that of a murdered person could return to wreak revenge.
Another belief of Samhain is that those mischievious fairies would steal humans and so fairy mounds were said to be avoided. People took steps to warn off these harmful spirits and fairies – they would stay near to home or if forced to walk in the darkness, turned their clothing inside out or carried iron or salt to keep the fairies at bay. Offerings of food were left at the door for firies to dissuade the fairies wrath and keep you in their favour during the coming year.