A DRUID MISSAL-ANY

Midsummer, 39 Y.R.



Midsummer, Summer Solstice, the longest day of the year. On this day the Sun
rises and sets at its most northerly points along the horizon and reaches
its most highest point in the sky of the entire year at Solar Noon (1 p.m.  daylight time).

While there are several Celtic deities who are considered a Sun god or  goddess, in the RDNA tradition it is Belenos who we honor and praise this  Midsummer day.

Belenos, also know as Beli, Belin, or Belinus in Britain, is perhaps  associated with the Phoenician word Ba'al, meaning master. The variant  Belenos is found widely distributed in early inscriptions in Gaul and  northern Italy. Beli Mawr (Great Beli) appears in The Mabinogion as a  powerful king of Britain and ancestor-deity of the Welsh royal line, and may  be identical in origin to Belenos Himself. The ancient name element "Bel-"  (root), is also found in the Latin bellus, meaning bright or brilliant,  beautiful, and all the words subsequently derived from it; in the Goidelic  "bile," meaning sacred tree, and other words of distant origin.

Bel was the young-god counterpart of the old-god Bran, as Jupiter was the  counterpart of Saturn in the Roman pantheon or as Zeus was the to Cronos in  the Greek pantheon. In general the first half of the year may well have been  associated with Bran and the second half with Bel or Belenos.

Caesar's Gaulish Apollo is generally to be taken to be Belenos in His native  guise. Apollo is actually a latecomer to the Greek pantheon, and one of a  variety of theories about His origins is that He was adopted from the Celts.  Both are known as gods of light and of the sun. Both are gods of sacred  springs. In the Shetlands as well as in the Orkneys, the sick visited the  wells which were circled sun-wise before drinking from them. This is another  tribute to Belenos, who like Apollo, is also a healer-god. Water and solar  symbolism are closely linked in healing cults.

Whereas dedications to the Celtic gods in the form of inscribed altars  appear to chiefly recur within one area, a few individual dedications are  distributed widely. Belenos was one deity to be honored in such a way. His  dedications are relatively common and widespread in Celtic Europe,  particularly in southern and central Gaul, North Italy, and Noricum in the  eastern Alps. Ausonius, a Bordeaux poet writing in the later half of the  fourth century A.D. mentions sanctuaries in Acquitaine and writes of  Phoebicius, who had been a temple-priest there.

Belenos is commemorated in place names as well. In England examples include  Billingshurst in Sussex and Billingsgate in London. In France a number of  places bear His name. The high rocky islet off the coast of Normandy  formerly called Tombelaine, which in the slightly altered form of Les  Tombelenes is a reef off Jersey's north coast. Belenos also appears to be  venerated in some parts as St. Bonnet.

It is thus not coincidence that in the liturgy for the Special Order of  Worship for the Summer Solstice it is suggested that the altar fire be  especially large. We welcome Belenos on this day of days asking Him to fill  us with life, and warmth, and light our way as we honor Him with His  element, and enjoy this glorious season before He begins to wend His way  southward again.

Hail Belenos, God of the Sun!
Hail Belenos, Giver of Life!
Hail Belenos, Lord of Light!





News of the Groves


Carleton
Skip Wolcott had his vigil for Third Order last Friday night, 8 June. We  have a good crowd of people who are enthusiastic.  Skip is also Patriarch of  the new Order of Hephasteus (Vulcan) the fire god. Carleton is going on  Summer break until September.



Monument Grove
Regular services have begun on Sunday morning near Georgetown, but no one  has shown up to participate with me, as I restart the Grove (besides a few  passing squirrels and robins). We've undergone a few liturgical changes on  the Order of worship. As listed below:

Vestments:
Due to my wife's mischief, my red and white ribbons are now sewn into an  inseparable loop with knots where they join. These symbolize Beltane and  Samhain. Before starting the ritual, I rotate it once, and then guestimate  the date on the red-ribbon (i.e. June 2 is about 18% past the knot), give it  a kiss and put that spot at the nape of my neck. You can tell the date by  looking at me.

Invocation:
We dance in a circle while singing and then we've added two lines:
"You have no need of names, yet we call on these names."
"We know not all your ways, yet seek to live in harmony with them."



Akita Grove, Japan
Patrick Haneke has produced the ultimate quick and easy ritual for those  tired of schlepping baskets of materials, scripts, and such to the site.  This can be performed anywhere, even in the middle of Wall Street without  drawing too much attention. Pat calls it the "Quick Order", (but other  members of the Grove, call it "Lugh's Loogey Liturgy," "Mannanan's Mucus  Mass," "Sirona's Spit Service," etc.) and it is best done solitarily (as you  'll see).

The Quick Order Liturgy
1. Scratch a sigil at your feet.
2. Whistle or hum something.
3. Ask, "How was that?" Look around you for signs.
4. Say, "Not bad, huh?"
5. Ask, "What is precious to us?"
6. Answer, "Waters."
7. Ask, "Where is the waters?"
8. Answer, "Right here." Pour something (or spit) into your hand.
9. Raise your hand.
10. Say, "Bless these and all waters that give us life."
11. Drink the waters.
12. Say, "Here's the extra." Return the extra to the ground.
13. Think of something clever, or ordain people.
14. Say, "Good bye"
15. Rub away the sigil.
(Estimated time for completion: 2 minutes 12 seconds)




Druid Heart Spirited Grove
Druid Heart Spirited Grove is getting ready for an all night jumping over  the fires of Alban Hefin on June 24th. The sixth night of the New Moon  Mistletoe rite falls on the same night so we will be having two rituals.  Then next we are preparing for an open Druid campout for Gwyl Ifan (  Lugnassah ) on the weekend of Aug. 4th. Anyone who wishes to attend, send me  an e-mail to jbeltain@pacbell.net or a snail mail to Druid Heart Spirit,  1959 Vilas Rd., Cohasset, CA. 95973.

Our stone circle was completed just before the last Beltain which we had  thirty-five attend including my Catholic father who completely enjoyed  himself dancing the May Pole, and made it through the whole ritual! I don't  think that that will be his only Druid ritual he attends I'm almost done  with the book I've been working on for so long. All I have next to do is the  Gaelic pronunciation guide and glossary, and the artwork. I need any other  authors of similar books to read it for me and write any comments back. I  think a good title would be Workbook for a Druid's Healing Ritual.



Duir de Danu Grove of California
The Grove had a ritual for BAPA's (Bay Area Pagan Assemblies) Gaia's  Gateway. The ArchDruid MaDagda did an outstanding job of leading the ritual  and doing his by now renowned Tree of Life Guided Meditation. All the rest  of the evening after the ritual we got compliments on it.    After Stephen Abbott McCauley and his wife Debby moved up to Sacramento and  took the Hazelnut Mother Grove with them, there was a definite vacuum in the  Silicon Valley. Druidically speaking, I was going to put together a Grove I  called Boudiccea's Birch, but MaDagda beat me to the punch with Duir de  Danu. If you know anything about the god Dagda, you know about the ever-full  cauldron of delicious food. MaDagda is a splendid cook, which is welcome to  Druids, we being a chronically famished bunch. Duir de Danu (Oaks of Danu)  had its first ritual for Samhain at Sanborn Park in Los Gatos. It was a  beautiful, but very expensive site. The Grove then sat dormant thru the  Season of Sleep until MaDagda arranged to do the Gaia's Gateway ritual for  the month of May.

MaDagda is also preparing to move from Newark in the East Bay to a house in  Cupertino. Now there will be a place to have Celtic Nights during the Season  of Sleep. MaDagda, Darren (my significant other), and I went up to  Sacramento at least twice to do demo Druid rituals for Sacramento Cross  Traditional Circles, the Sacramento answer to Gaia's Gateway. On the last  Sunday of each month, a different group does a ritual in its tradition. It  is followed by a potluck feast. The people of Gaia's Gateway follow their  rituals with a meeting at Marie Callendar's (a local restaurant famous for  its pies).



Creeks Called Rivers Groves
In early June Creeks Called Rivers had our first ever yardfood potluck. The  idea was to create dishes from the various edible weeds and common plants  here in Midwest suburbia.    Happily, no one was hurt, and we ended up with some surprisingly palatable  fare. We're going to work on making some repeatable recipes, and make them  available on the CCR site. If anyone else out there is interested in  yardfood (or is an accomplished yardfood chef), tell Feck  (feck@theoldreligion.com).

All things considered, things are going well here in Columbus. I finally  bought a house (on Royal Forest Blvd. no less), so Creeks Called Rivers now  has a permanent (if not particularly private) outdoor space.

This evening I sat on my patio and began re-reading Drawing Down the Moon by  fading sun and flickering candle light. I heard the first cricket of the  year. Life is good; and the Reform is, indeed, groovy.



Baccharis Grove
Sometime between Yule and the first service of the New Year in the  electricity went out in the little cabin we rent below the Grove site on the  property of our esteemed posthumous member Emmon. Getting permission from  the estate several weeks ago to have electricity restored, the lawyer for  the estate recommended an electrician, who unfortunately turned out to be a  flake. After three weeks going back and forth, missed appointments, and no  work or estimate done I fire him. Keeping in Emmon's spirit I wanted to look  for an electrician who was a woman (deciding this even before I got a chance  to fire the other fellow). Doing a search on San Francisco Bay area web  sites for a directory of women in business proves futile, so I call the  local feminist bookstore for any leads. The woman on the phone gives me the  name of two woman contractors who would be able to recommend an electrician.  I call number two. She says she is a contractor but is also an electrician.  She is very matter of fact, understands the job, describes what needs to be  done, provides an estimate. Fine, she is hired.

When I call her back to coordinate a time and date I could tell by her voice  that she was of a generation of women in the trades who had to fight to  where she got and is probably in her late 40s to mid 50s. Hmm. I get to  thinking. I've got a copy of Emmon's address book that we used to locate  friends to invite to his memorial Samhain of '99. I get it out and look  under the appropriate place.

This woman's name was there...same number.

I gasp.

And the freaky experience continues. I call the electrician back and tell  her I want to ask her something that might make it easier for her to find  the house and cabin. I ask her if she knew Emmon and she says yes! In fact  she had worked on that very cabin before!! The last time was in '97. She  says that when she heard Emmon died she wanted to get in contact with  someone who knew her, but didn't know how. I guess she has now.

I find it amazing, when being open to otherworldly experiences as Druids  tend to be, how we are at times directed to do something. It validates our  sense of path and connection, and is both awe inspiring and humbling when it  happens.




Arbor Day?

Arbor Day is a nationally celebrated observance that encourages tree  planting and tree care. National Arbor Day is celebrated each year on the  last Friday in April.

The first Arbor Day was celebrated in the state of Nebraska in 1872, in  response to a state proclamation urging settlers and homesteaders in that  prairie state to plant trees that would provide shade, shelter, fruit, fuel,  and beauty for residents of the largely treeless plains.

On that first Arbor Day, more than one million trees were planted in  Nebraska's communities and on its farms. The Arbor Day idea was promoted by  J. Sterling Morton, (possibly a relative of the RDNA's Shirine Morton?)  editor of the Nebraska City News, who later helped the idea spread to  neighboring states and eventually to all of the United States and many other  nations.

Today, Arbor Day celebrations are held in communities all over America, with  the date determined by the best tree-planting times in each area.  Celebrations are held as early as January and February in some southern  states, and as late as May in more northern locations. For information on  the date your state will observe Arbor Day, contact the National Arbor Day  Foundation.




National Tree

It could be that the United States is a country of closet Druids! The Oak  was voted the national tree.

April 27, 2001. The people have selected the oak as their choice for America  's National Tree in a nationwide vote hosted on the Arbor Day Foundation web  site. Results of the Vote for America's National Tree were announced April  27th at a tree planting ceremony on the Capitol Grounds in Washington, D.C.  "The oak is a fine choice to represent all of America's trees, and to  exemplify the importance of trees in our lives," John Rosenow, president of  the Arbor Day Foundation, said. "People of all ages and backgrounds  responded enthusiastically to the vote, which was the first time that the  entire American public has been able to state their pick for a national  emblem."

People were invited to vote for one of 21 candidate trees, based on broad  tree categories (genera) that included the state trees of all 50 states and  the District of Columbia, or to write in any other tree selection. The  redwood, maple, pine, and dogwood rounded out the top five choices.

An oak was planted the same afternoon at Arbor Day Farm in Nebraska City,  Nebraska, the birthplace of Arbor Day in 1872.

"We undertook this vote to remind Americans of just how vital trees are to  us all, and to emphasize the history and grandeur of our trees," Rosenow  said. "By any standard, oak merits the distinction of being named the people  's choice for America's National Tree."

Among the many strong attributes of oak, Rosenow cited its diversity, with  more than 60 species growing in the United States.

"This magnificent tree is significant in sheer numbers alone," he said,  "with oak trees being America's most widespread hardwoods. From the earliest  settlement of our country, oaks have been prized for their shade, beauty,  and lumber.  "Oak's amazing strength and longevity have also made this tree a central  part of our history," he added, "with leaders as diverse as Abraham Lincoln,  William Penn, and Andrew Jackson being associated with them. Another early  'hero' of American history, 'Old Ironsides,' or the USS Constitution, was  famed for repelling British cannonballs thanks to its thick, live oak hull.  The American people have chosen wisely in so honoring the oak."

The Arbor Day Foundation is a million-member, nonprofit education  organization that helps people plant and care for trees.

To print out a poster of the Oak as the National Tree go to:  http://www.arborday.org/NationalTree/NToakPoster_lrg.PDF This 8.5 x 11 inch  image can be printed on a color or a black and white printer.

This information is courtesy of the National Arbor Day Foundation at  http://www.arborday.org or call 402-474-5655 or write 100 Arbor Avenue,  Nebraska City, NE 68410.




Celebrate the Celtic Wheel of Life with Mara Freeman

Mara Freeman, British writer, storyteller, Archdruidess of the Druid Clan of  Dana, an Irish Druid order, faculty member at the University of Creation  Spirituality in Oakland, California, and author of Kindling the Celtic  Spirit offers The Feast of Lughnasa: A One-Day Workshop on the Celtic  Harvest Festival. Sunday, July 29, 10am to 5.30pm, Lotus Heart Center, 530  Sunlit Lane, Santa Cruz.

In this one-day workshop you will:
Learn all about the gods and goddesses who preside at this sacred time.  Find out about Lughnasa customs and traditions of Ireland, Scotland and  Wales from ancient to modern times.  Listen to Celtic myths and legends of the harvest.  We will then take the teachings of this hallowed time into our souls through  ritual, song, meditation and circle dance. Special Guest Linda Carol Risso,  teacher of sacred arts and illustrator of Kindling the Celtic Spirit, will  teach a traditional Lughnasa craft.

The cost is $89.00 per person and craft materials are included in the fee.  Major credit cards are accepted. Call to register: 831 644 9393 or 800 694  1957 (toll-free) or email: events@celticspirit.org

Register early! Space is limited!




Resources Section

Contributed by Alex Stewart, 2nd Order.


"Living off the Land"

Contacts: Yes, we all want that mountain cabin, but we need a little help  from our friends.

Helpful Internet Sites:
Backwoods  Home Magazine www.backwoodshome.com
Country Home Magazine www.countryhomemag.com
Homesteading/Rural Living Site www.yonderway.com
Rural Living Web Magazine www.rural-living.com
Rural Living Canada www.torpw1.netcom.ca//~kenruss/rural.htm
Homesteaders Ring www.mcsi.net/ssp/homesteaders
Back Home Magazine www.backhomemagazine.com

Helpful Books and Magazines:
Readers Digest, Back to Basics: How to Learn and Enjoy Traditional American  Skills, (1987)
Skip Thomsen and Cat Freshwater "The Modern Homestead Manual" (1994)
Countryside and Small Stock Magazine  800-551-5691, (715) 785-7979
Backwoods Home Magazine, PO Box 40, Montague, CA 96064
Back Home Magazine , 119 Third Ave. West, Hendersonville, NC 28792


Calendar

Summer Solstice, when the Sun enters Cancer, will occur on June 21, at 12:38  a.m. PDT. Solstice services will be held on Saturday, June. 24 at Solar  Noon. Please call for carpool arrangements (510) 654-6896. For the social  observance of the Solstice we will be going immediately after the service to AD's house. Regular Druid services will be held at Solar Noon on July 8 and 22. Please call the above number to confirm.

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