Wednesday, 6 March 2013
wicca means
The word "witch"
derives from the Old English "wicca" (m) or "wicce" (f); the original meaning of
the word is still debated, but most people think it meant either wisdom, or to
change and to shape. Pagan means a "country dweller", but is now used to refer
to followers of non-Judeo-Christian, nature-based religions, which use the
deities of the pre-Christian world. Pagan religions don't expect you to follow
any one belief system - they are free of all dogma. Some people may literally
believe in the gods and goddesses envoked, others see them as a poetic way of
embodying whatever they do believe in, be it the importance of the earth and
nature, whatever power or force may lie behind the universe, or just a way of
entering a state of consciousness where you become more in tune with yourself.
Pagan religions generally respect the earth and the natural powers in the
universe, and the celebrations are based around the natural cycles of the year.
Pagan rituals are no stranger, and certainly no more dangerous, than the rituals
carried out in most Christian churches. Pagan religions, particularly Wicca,
tend to emphasize the Goddess, and are very free of rules and hierachies, so
they hold a great appeal for feminists and free-thinkers who are looking to
explore their spiritual side. Paganism, and particularly Witchcraft, suffers
from a great deal of prejudice from the uninformed, and from fundamentalist
followers of other religions. The early Christian church turned Pagan deities
into the devil, and the more narrowminded Christians still sometimes believe
that Witches and Pagans are devil-worshippers. We are not. We don't believe in
the devil. We have our own moral codes (the Wiccan Rede states than Wiccans
should "harm none"), and our religion celebrates life and love.
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