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Posted on Monday, July 24 - 2006

The Four Elements

Copyright © Selena Fox - Circle Sanctuary Website

Honoring the directions of the Sacred Circle is a widespread spiritual practice in ancient and contemporary Nature wisdom traditions. For many practitioners, honoring the directions is an essential component of all rituals. It is a way to create and to connect with sacred space. It also is a way of communing with Nature. Furthermore, it can be a way of mapping consciousness and viewing life.The Sacred Circle with its directions is called by some, the "Magic Circle," and by others, the "Medicine Wheel." Some traditions emphasize the four compass directions of the Circle. Others work with the four compass points plus a central point representing unity.Some also include two additionaldirections in the center, up and down, to create a Sacred Sphere as well as the Sacred Circle.

Qualities, images, colors, and other symbolic associations with the directions vary from path to path, but the idea of Sacred Circle as a place of balancing, healing, and wholeness extends across traditions. I work with seven directions in my personal spiritual practice, in doing healing and counseling, and in guiding group rituals at Circle Sanctuary and elsewhere. The seven directions are an integral part of my Pagan worldview and provide a framework for understanding and for action. My correspondences of the compass directions and central point with the five Elements of Nature have developed from my work with Wiccan spirituality and contemporary psychology over the past twenty years. My use of the up and down directions emerged from my studiesof multicultural Shamanism and my practice of spiritual environmentalism. While the map of consiousness with its seven directions and Sacred Sphere form works well for me and for others, it is important to note that it is but one of many maps within Paganism today. Traditions vary not only in the number of directions honored, but the correspondences associated with each direction and the order in which the directions are worked with in ritual. It is important that practitioners chart their own maps according to their own traditions, preferences, and experiences. The map I use and present here has evolved over time and continues to evolve. Feel free to adapt it for your own needs. This map provides a framework for attunement with Nature in Her many forms. The Elements are at the compass points and other sacred lifeforms are on thecentral axis. This map......

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Posted on Thursday, May 05 - 2005

This page contains a number of magical alphabets and symbols that you may find useful. Many people use magical alphabets when engraving talismans. Many of these are available as True Type Fonts at Fantasy and Historical Fonts

The Symbolism of the Pentagram

The five points of the pentagram represent the four elements plus spirit. They may be represented with the following colors: Air = Yellow, Water = Blue, Earth = Green, Fire = Red, Spirit = Violet

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Posted on Thursday, July 06 - 2006

Pentacle

Copyright © Witchvox

From around the world and throughout time, Sacred Symbols have been revered by various religions and cultures. Symbolic messages are one way to connect to the sacredness of life and each other.Symbolic images can communicate an essence of their meaning even to people from different cultures and religious faiths. Religious symbols can be appreciated for their adaptive potential, a capacity to discover the core of our inner world, something deeper than anything psychological, something expressible only in symbols.A feeling that there is some hidden power inside of you, stirring in the shadows - capable of bringing Love, Friendship and Protection, ways of tapping into your reservoir of hiddenenergy.

Allowing this energy, which emanates from your being, to infuse you. The challenge of faith is to trust that there is something in us that transcends our mind and its ways of knowing. Faith relies on the depth perception in the Self: intuition, vision, imagination, and corresponds to realities that defy explanation or even logical comprehension. It is important to create rituals that empower, so that we might recognize and celebrate our true strength and talents; and to support us in accepting, honoring and meeting our own physical, emotional and spiritual needs. We all possess the inner resources needed to make changes in our lives. Healing involves turning from isolation to a connection with Spirit. Any consistent use of imagery can improve health and well-being. We can guide our thought processes toinvoke and use various senses: vision, taste, smell, hearing, touch and movement. Imagery provides essential communication links. By surrendering our thoughts, perceptions and patterns to a power greater than us, we enlist the assistance to redesign our lives and manifest a new reality. To stretch our imagination beyond what we’ve known, to reach beyond our comfort zones. When we open ourselves to higher guidance and express the love inherent within us, we cannot help but change for the better. Imagine how you would like your life to be and remind yourself that you can handle anything when you take it one step at a time. Good rituals are essential to our emotional, psychological and spiritual health. They not only help us on a personal basis but also give us a small sense of community, a sense of who we are and where we fit in the schemeof life......

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Posted on Wednesday, July 12 - 2006

The history of the Christian fish symbol: The pre-Christian history of the fish symbol: The fish symbol has been used for millennia worldwide as a religious symbol associated with the Pagan Great Mother Goddess. It is the outline of her vulva. The fish symbol was often drawn by overlapping two very thin crescent moons. One represented the crescent shortly before the new moon; the other shortly after, when the moon is just visible. The Moon is the heavenly body that has long been associated with the Goddess, just as the sun is a symbol of the God. The link between the Goddess and fish was found in various areas of the ancient world: In China, Great Mother Kwan-yin often portrayed in the shape of a fish, In India, the Goddess Kali was called the "fish-eyed one", In Egypt, Isis was called the Great Fish of the Abyss, In Greece the Greek word "delphos" meant both fish and womb.

 The word is derived from the location of the ancient Oracle at Delphi who worshipped the original fish goddess, Themis. The later fish Goddess, Aphrodite Salacia, was worshipped by her followers on her sacred day, Friday. They ate fish and engaging in orgies. From her name comes the English word "salacious" which means lustful or obscene. Also from her name comes the name of our fourth month, April. In later centuries, the Christian church adsorbed this tradition by requiring the faithful to eat fish on Friday - a tradition that was only recently abandoned. In ancient Rome Friday is called "dies veneris" or Day of Venus, the Pagan Goddess of Love. Throughout the Mediterranean, mystery religions used fish, wine and bread for their sacramental meal. In Scandinavia, the Great Goddess was named Freya; fish were eaten in her honor. The 6th day of the week was named "Friday" after her. In the Middle East, the Great Goddess of Ephesus was portrayed as a woman with a fish amulet over her genitals. The fish symbol "was so revered throughout the Roman empire that Christian authorities insisted on taking it over, with extensive revision of myths to deny its earlier female-genital meanings...

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