Heresies
Lately, even I have gotten pissed off. I suppose it was bound to happen sooner or later.
I tried to hide in the realms of chaos magic to avoid the inevitable. But here goes…
Thanks to Wicca-lite and other spurious New Age junk, the entire Neo-Pagan witch-identified
community is infected with some foul and pernicious life-sucking saccharine crap peddled by
a new wave of writers who are trying to capitalize on the search for "Feel-Good-So-Long-As-Nothing-Has-To-Really-Change."
This is pathetic and those who buy such crap may be doing so at their own peril.
(Yes. Peril. As in the case of those blokes who bought and read all of Carlos Castaneda’s
books, declared themselves shamans, and then went and died because they attempted to
replicate what he wrote. Or the time I introduced someone to the beings known in Irish Gaelic
tradition as the ‘Noble Host’ (i.e. ‘faeries’) and told them not to mess around with them and
to please use my services and experience, freely offered, to guide them. We won’t here get
into the disaster that person underwent because they were heedless.) Yes, peril. Not
necessarily something as drastic as the above parenthetical examples. Perhaps only the peril
of wasted time, money, and effort.
Let’s start with the negative; with detracting some of these filthy lies some people use to lure the
newbies into their malodorous fluffy bunny schemes, while taking their money. I will do so
by topic. Also in each topic where relevant, I will put forth some suggestions about
approaching Witchcraft to make your practice work for you, based on how I have made my
practice work for me.
1) The use and practice of magic can make your life better if you put your heart to it.
No it won’t. Magic isn't a bag of easy fix-it miracles, pal, no matter what those
slacksucking hoors say. Magic [like many other aesthetic fields of practice] can be a difficult art to learn and practice and can
result in about as many, if not more problems, then anything else. If you find yourself
to be the sort of person that multiplies your own daily problems and then allows yourself
to become mystified by them, stay away from magic. If your heart can't even be into
your own daily life, how could you suppose that you could put your heart into magic? If you
just want an escape, watch a video or something.
I know what you’re saying. You’re saying "That’s not me." And that’s because that is you,
slick. How can you imagine yourself solving any problems magically if you can’t even
effectively live your life? The most effective magic users are that way because they are effective and decent human beings first off. Find your heart first before you decide you can put it to
something.
2) The Gods and Goddesses really do care about you, if you just let them into your life.
No they don’t. If you accept the premise that they really exist as entities in their own right, why would you assume that they care about you? After all, all sorts of more-powerful-than-you people exist too, but can you say they care about you? Use a little common sense. You may actually want to approach such beings as you would other people. Try getting to know them first. Maybe after they get to know you, they’ll start caring about you, but it goes both ways. This thing called Wicca, or any of its Neo-Pagan derivatives, isn’t some spirituality of passive acceptance-letting-the-gods-do-it-for-you here. This is about your life and what you are going to do about it.
3) All one needs to do to become a witch is to declare oneself a witch.
No you don’t. If you disagree, how about you trying the same sort of thing in a
different religion, say, Judaism. Go on ahead. Declare yourself a rabbi. Or why don’t you
just call yourself a ‘shaman’ or a ‘spiritual warrior’ and truck on down to the local Native
Reservation and see how you are received? Being a witch (or a big ‘W’ Witch, if you prefer)
requires long hours of dedication, commitment, and practice over a period of months and
years. And then you have to prove that you are who you say. So pony up, or go find something
else to pose as. And besides, calling yourself a witch, while it may impress your
goth-friends, will get you no points in today’s society. Hell. Others may call you a witch,
but that still means little and says less about who you are as a person. You have to do the work.
4) Witchcraft is a religion of nature.
Bullshit. Most Neo-Pagans who call themselves witches live in or around modern cities. While it is good to be connected to natural rhythms and such, what does any of that matter in the long run, if you still drive gas-guzzling vehicles out from the city to get to your nature retreats? What good does claiming that you venerate nature, when you still pollute the planet? Besides, Witchcraft has always been getting the shit done and about gods and goddesses, some of them about as far from ‘natural’ as instant coffee. Witchcraft is a path among many Neo-Pagan paths. Neo-Paganism is a group of religions. Period. Some of them venerate nature or natural forces. And some of them have other concerns.
Don’t get me wrong. I personally am concerned with nature and the colossal fuck up our species is hell bent on creating through its abuse of the planet for a few pathetic comforts and some entertainment. But I am not deluded enough to suggest to myself that paying respect to natural forces is going to change the society in which I live. Nor am I deluded enough to think that practicing a form of Neo-Pagan Witchcraft is going to help redress the environmental wrongs. The environmental situation is a bit more complex and needs attention and action on so many fronts. A religion, even it was ‘nature-based’, would not be enough to redress the problems.
But the main reason I object to Witchcraft being called a nature religion (in case you survived my tortured attempts to explain myself above) is because the phrases ‘nature religion’ and ‘religion of nature’ mean absolutely fuck all. And we don’t venerate nature. If we do anything to-or-about nature, we venerate life together with it. There’s a difference. And nature is simply what’s around you. Not some bullshit stereotypical fantasy about primeval forests and agrarian revelries. My own altar contains various found objects that you would find on any city street. My own magical practices utilize many supposedly ‘mundane’ and technological objects that you’d never guess could be used for such purposes. I don’t go in for all that pseudo-agrarian folksy stuff. Nor do I go in for all that damned fake-feathers and crystal-type pseudo-tribal junk either.
5) Humans need mystery in their life.
No they don’t. Mystery is simply another hoo-hah to be gathered on any path of spirituality. Or art, as well. But most people don’t want mystery, because frankly, they don’t need it. If you feel you need it, so be it. Either learn some spiritual path and then walk it, or learn some art and then practice it. But don’t assume everyone is really like you deep down inside.
By all gods! If everyone needed mystery, we’d all be mystics or poets or artists. Some people are just not interested in things they can’t explain via cold or hot or even lukewarm logic. There’s nothing wrong with this. I believe the problem here is one of semantics…i.e. Some of you out there assume that mystery equates with ‘meaning’ or ‘depth’ in terms of quality of life. But that is simply an assumption. I am sure that an investment banker is just as enthralled with her trade or profession as a mage is with certain occult practices. Hell. Some investment bankers, or mechanics, or police, or football players, or engine-lathe operators may even show up at your next coven meeting to become ‘dedicated’. But that doesn’t mean that all people need mystery. It just means that some people don’t find ‘meaning’ or ‘depth’ in what they are doing and are searching for it in other places. Likewise, many people who adhere to Wicca, Witchcraft, or some of the other Neo-Pagan traditions, because they feel they needed some mystery, will then discover otherwise and move on to other things. This, again, is not such a bad thing in and of itself. We each have to find what is meaningful for us, and it is not necessarily mystery.
I myself, love mystery. I love occult lore. I love magical experiments…you know, crossing the abyss,
meeting and getting past the inner demons/judges, the shadow, astral projection,
spiritual allies, divination and a whole lot of other strange things…but then again, maybe
I am just a little weird. But I don’t expect anyone else to be interested in any of it.
Not even mystery. And you’d never know it just by looking at me. That’s right. Aside from my
recent couple of years of wearing a pentacle openly, nothing on me could give anyone who
didn’t know me well a clue as to what I have been up to as far as magic and mystery are
concerned. Another practitioner of magic might, if they ‘read’ me well, but that’s about it.
(Okay, I have hit you over the head enough times on this already. If you don’t get it yet, I’ll beat you with a frozen trout, you silly slacksucker!)
6) Witchcraft is the Old Religion.
By now you should know that it isn’t. The ‘Old Religion’ for you, if you are into Wicca, Witchcraft, or any other Neo-Pagan paths, is most likely Christianity if it isn’t secular humanism or the non-religion of atheism. Period. Sure there were Pagans around before Christianity, but you know something, they could be just as patriarchal and nasty as anyone else was. (The exception being the medieval and early modern Church, which was truly a horror show and until the rise of the Nazis in the 1930’s and 40’s had the first place prize of being the nastiest institution ever devised by humankind. The Nazi’s, I should add, were supported and endorsed by both the Roman Catholic Church and the German Protestant congregations). And while the practice of the ancient mind-science known as magic has been around for thousands of years, and could possibly predate human language, Wicca, modern Neo-Pagan Witchcraft, and other similar paths which accept and incorporate magic, are modern creations. Thus, the practice of small ‘w’ witchcraft has been around for about as long as we humans have, but that’s not to be confused with Wicca or big ‘W’ Witchcraft as modern Neo-Pagan paths. While it is a beautiful and useful myth, trying to bring a sense of continuity that stretches back beyond the current hell hole of a society, it is only an elaborate fantasy. All who attempt to ‘revive’ old forms of Pagan religions need to remember that. Which brings me to my next heresy…
7) The Burning Times were a period when the Church persecuted the Secret Pagan adherents known as ‘witches’ and killed millions of them.
A lot of conjecture has been written about this phenomenon known as the Great Witch Hunt,
which started during the early modern period of Western Europe. Most people now accept that
there could not have been a total of nine million people executed for the crime of witchcraft
by Church authorities. The actual total is more likely 50,000 people, though some scholars
posit several thousand more. As horrible as that is, it is nothing compared to the
numbers of people killed in the fighting between Catholic and Protestant movements in
Northern Europe, the numbers of Christians deemed ‘heretics’ and then executed by the
Church (about one million Cathars in southern France, among others), or the numbers of
people killed in Ireland during England’s military campaigns to subdue its people.
Europe at that time was a nasty and violent place, (worse than any of today’s global
third-world hell holes); so nasty and violent, that even the first several thousand ‘settlers’
of North America were transported indentured servants/slaves, not pilgrims.
(And I won’t even get into the European Christians’ violent treatment and genocide against
the Native nations.)
The main truth of the so-called ‘Burning Times’ is that none of the people executed
for the crime of ‘witchcraft’ were actual Witches in today’s modern Neo-Pagan sense of the
word. Many of them were skilled in using ‘witchcraft’/folk magic—i.e. what would now be called birth-control and contraception—and healing. Some of them were probably a little too loud with their free-thinking. But most of them would have thought of themselves as some type of Christian. If you are going to identify with just this one group of victims of oppression, and yet ignore all the others, you are ignoring the full dimensions of the atrocities inflicted upon the people of Western Europe by the dominance of Christianity.
Looking at the causes for the Witch Hunt, we have the usual suspects. Greed: Many ‘witch-hunters’ benefited from the expropriation of material wealth from accused witches. Competition: The Church and much of the European elite were absolutely scandalized that there were people (mostly women) who had knowledge that did not come from either Church or Authority. Also, everyone was a bit paranoid about heretics and the like, especially after the schism between Protestants and Catholics. So Christian and secular authorities alike were interested in gaining an upper hand before the situation got out of control. Malice: A good way at getting back at someone who was not liked or someone who didn’t do what you wished was to accuse them of witchcraft (especially those ‘uppity’ women who believed that they could be independent of men). Hysteria: Once witch roasting started, everyone wanted to get in on the fun, if only to prove that they themselves weren’t witches or heretics. And remember that the Great Witch Hunt really took off as a movement during the violent fighting that occurred after the Protestants split from the Catholics. So there was a lot of anxiety for people to prove how loyal they were to their local authorities who themselves were anxious to not be accused.
The most glaring yet often ignored reason is the relatively low population of European peasantry in the early modern period due to the demographic disaster of the Black Plague. (Between 1348-9 alone, one third of the population died.) The relatively lax sexual codes of the medieval period allowed a certain leniency for birth control as the peasant population had recourse to very efficient methods of contraception, contrary to what many modern people believe. (People of modern industrialized nations have assumed wrongly that effective contraception wasn’t possible until the advent of modern medicine, in plain ignorance of pre-modern European societies.) The Church and other elite populations of Europe were seeking to repopulate their lands with serfs, and as mercantilism became common more people were needed to work the mills, etc. They needed a surplus poor population to keep labor costs low. They found ample justification for the suppression of birth control methods in old-time Christian doctrine which forbade it. Thus, the people (mostly women) who held native medical knowledge of contraception and abortion were persecuted. Europe subsequently experienced the greatest population explosion of any place on earth in the next few hundred years. (It also became the most violent, miserable, and poverty-wracked area of the world. It stayed that way for some time. It even exported this misery to other places of the world.)
The ‘true Burning Times’, at least referring specifically to the destruction of Pagan religions and societies, did occur during the first thousand years of the Church’s expansion. Read up on your Greek and Roman history to see what Christianity did to the Pagans in what was left of classical Europe. Hundreds of temples and centers of learning were destroyed. Paganism was legally banned on the pain of death. The collapse of the Roman Empire in the west halted some of the destruction for a while (incidentally, it was a bunch of Pagan Germanic invaders who finally put a stop to the ritual slaughter in the Coliseum which the Christians had allowed to continue when they took over the Roman government) but the Church eventually won out over its rivals and proceeded in its ‘conquest’ over the rest of Western Europe. By the end of the eleventh century, the native Paganism of most of Western Europe had been eradicated. In Greece (the Byzantine Empire) the last Pagan Hellenic temples were destroyed in the 800’s CE.
Either: The Burning Times account needs to be reworked to include all of the victims of Christianity in Europe, and subsequently in places Europeans conquered, whether Pagan in the earlier periods, or as ‘heretics’ in the latter periods. Or: The account, if only meant to specifically refer to Pagans, needs to be back dated to the 4th through the 12th centuries CE. I favor the former revision which includes all victims of Christian intolerance over the past 1600 years (Pagans, Jews, Christian heretics and free-thinkers, Africans, Native Americans, Gnostics, Muslims, atheists, etc.) since I am a human being first of all. Maybe: Some synthesis of both.
8) What you send out always comes back to you.
No it doesn’t. Some people get more than others. Some people actually send out bad shit and do bad things to others to get more than their fare share and never suffer the return. You think I am bullshitting you? Look around. Try sending out vibes or spells of love and happiness. It might make you feel better, and if you’re smart it will make you do better. The inverse thing with badness. But just because you sent it out doesn’t mean it will come back to you. Otherwise, everyone on this planet would have been struck by lightning a long time ago. Many rich people today would be victims of freak horrible lifelong illnesses in retribution for their ill-gotten gains. All that talk of karma and whatnot is absolute phooey. If your ethical system is based on such childish nonsense, you need to kick your own ass twenty-three times, because your only motivation for doing something good in this world is that you will get it back. And sometimes you need to smite others for trying to pull shit on you, or for being evil assholes. Which brings me to my next bit…
9) Hexes and curses are bad for you. Don’t do them.
Again. Bullshit. While it is generally not a good idea to go around your daily life trapped in feeling spiteful and angry all the time, those feelings are there for a reason…to get you off your ass and do something about the situation. If it means hexing or cursing. So be it. Spit the shit out and be done with it. Worry none about it beyond the more usual ‘did-I-get-it-right?’ speculations afterwards. (i.e. When hexing, like other methods of gaining balance/justice, you need to make sure it is proper redress, and that the shit won’t fly back to you or blow up in your face. Much like in non-magical methods of redress or getting balance.) In this sort of activity, my only ethic really, is that it is wrong to intentionally harm others, except when it would be a greater harm to refrain from doing so. Some people do need a ‘persuasion’, if you will, that their activities which harm you should be discontinued and you should feel no wrong in doing the persuading. If you feel your ability isn’t up to doing such a thing, then find someone who can do so. Us occultists, especially those of us who identify ourselves as Witches do tend to stick up for each other and look out for one another, when we’re not arguing about all of our silly terms.
10) Witches need to use magical tools (athames, etc.) and follow the correct rituals.
Do you believe that? Hah, sucker! Go ahead and spend all your money on books to find the
right rituals, or on seminars to find the proper way to pose as a witch, or on expensive
altars and paraphernalia. If that’s what you want. But remember, the point of a witch is to
get things done, not what tools/rituals they use. A lot of the paraphernalia associated with
the real practice of Witchcraft has nothing to do with the late-Romantic era occult revival
junk anyway. It is simply whatever is available to you at the moment. Period.
Now, some of you Wiccans will object and point out that Wiccans will need some ritual items for basic practice. This is true depending on one's tradition, but if you really need to, you can pretty much do most of the rituals without any tools. Remember the point of the tools in the first place.
No one should feel like they have to run out and spend money they don't have. Save your money for your food and your bills. The tools are of secondary importance. Besides, you can always ask others to help you acquire things if you feel you really need them. Wiccans are not as cheapskated as some make them out to be.
So, no. You don’t have to memorize long lists of correspondences and tortuous kabbalah-like meander, unless that sort of thing appeals to you. Hell. Some people say that a good way to study magic is to take a look at quantum physics. There may be something to that. But anyway, if you are the witch you say you are than all you really need is your mind-body and whatever else gets the job done.
If you want to change the four elements around to fit something more useful to your own circumstances, do so. This goes for any other ritual practices. Or you can invent your own. I use my own correspondences in my own work and practice and you should use your own too. The ‘traditional’ rituals, tools, and correspondences are just that…traditional…bound to a specific time, place, and group of people. While it’s good to know where things came from, it is better to modify them to suit your own needs.
11) Witchcraft is an ancient Celtic religion/system?
No it isn’t. Never was and never has been. Even the elements of modern Neo-Pagan witchcraft that can be traced to before the present era have nothing to do with ancient Celtic culture (nor modern Celtic cultures either). And no matter what Robert Graves (and other more spurious recent writers) wrote about Celtic beliefs, he was completely wrong by choosing to ignore both native cultural evidence and native experts, preferring instead to lean towards conjecture and fantasy in his writings. (Graves at least admits to this much.) One thing that irks me so much about this issue is that, as a modern pan-Celtic nationalist, I get slammed when I try to point this out to people who are under assumptions which amount to little more than stereotypes and cultural caricatures. Those people who have slammed myself and other Celtic cultural exponents say that we Celtic nationalists are being ‘purists’ or whatever else the ‘you-are-a-no-good-shit-and-I-refuse-to-listen-to-you-no-matter-what’ phrase is today. Taking a bunch of Celtic deities and/or Celtic names and pasting them onto a modern system like Wicca, or Neo-Pagan Witchcraft derivatives of Wicca, does not make the system ‘Celtic’. (Especially since the Celtic conception of their native deities doesn’t match what modern Neo-Pagans call ‘pantheons’ when describing their approach to deities.) I could write a book on just this one issue.
Now, the Celts have always had people who could be described loosely in English as witches, but that has been in the Celtic cultural milieu which is still largely Christian and has been for the last several hundred years. (Before Christianity had displaced or destroyed the native spiritual learning, people who were recognized as having abilities that ‘witches’ are claimed to have had would receive a formal and exacting education to become a part of the professional classes.) Also, a large body of native magical and occult lore has survived to the modern times within Celtic contexts. A lot of that occult lore is folk magic and traditional methods of healing (which were extensively practiced in Celtic societies struggling for survival right up to modern times); some of it is part of the eclectic Hermetic-influenced occult systems of Europe; and much of the rest derives from the remnants of the older Pagan times. But none of it comes close to Wicca, or the modern Neo-Pagan Witchcraft derivatives of Wicca.
As a descendent of Celtic peoples and their cultural values (who has also learned and reclaimed an ability to speak, use, and cultivate Celtic languages), despite the massive destruction and assimilation of Celtic societies and population groups by both the English and French nation states (a process that is still ongoing as I write this), I identify strongly with both the Celtic Nationalist movements and the modern attempts at reconstructing or reviving native Celtic spirituality. Thus, I adhere to a position of mistrust towards those people who, for whatever reason, claim to be using Celtic cultural and/or spiritual props and terminology in ignorance of both the actual Celtic realities and the modern situations.
Before you go taking things from other cultures and such, you may wish to actually inform yourself of the various realities and systems of knowledge that those cultures have experienced and are experiencing. If only so you don’t look like some well-off Anglo ass who feels they have the right to take anything from any culture they wish.
12) Witchcraft is a group/coven based practice-spirituality?
Nope again. While Wicca and many of its Neo-Pagan derivatives initially started out as a small-group based movement, solitary practitioners make up the majority of the people who consider themselves Wiccans or Witches or both. It is really beneficial to have a group of people who share your practice, but you also need to do your own work.
Myself, I am a little of both actually. I have been taught by both individuals and groups, but I mostly practice by myself. I do maintain a personal distinction between the sort of stuff I do and practice for myself and the more ‘formal’ coven style so I can maintain a sense of ease in either situation. For myself, beyond my daily magical hygiene practices which have stood me well for years, anything goes. When I participate with others in ritual, I tend to stick to the more ‘traditional’ forms and practices so that all of us participants have a common ground of understanding.
But on the other side of the coin, you can’t just read a bunch of books and then imagine yourself to be a solitary either. You need to actually practice it and engage with the world and society around you at some point in your life. That means, yep, participating with others’ lives at some point. Otherwise, go join a monastery.
13) Wicca, or Witchcraft traditions based on Wicca, or even Neo-Pagan traditions are the fastest growing tendencies of religion today?
Not exactly. Here I open up another can of worms. While the number of people identifying themselves as Wiccan is growing spectacularly, and subsequently the other Neo-Pagan traditions are growing exponentially as well, let’s look more closely at this. In terms of percentages, yes, Wicca holds its place as the fastest growing religion. In terms of numbers, however, the fastest growing religious trends are, sadly, the intolerant types of both Christianity and Islam. It is important to notice this distinction, because the rapid expansion of intolerant strains of Christianity and Islam have the possibility to adversely affect all of our futures.
According to the latest statistics, people who call themselves Wiccan make up around 750,000 to one million and could very well double in the next few years. While this makes for some dizzying never before imagined changes to be expected for all of us who are either Wiccan or from one of the Wiccan based Neo-Pagan Witchcraft traditions, these numbers pale in comparison to the rise of intolerant Christian and Islamic numbers. Just in North America alone, there are over 40 million Christians who identify themselves as fundamentalists. And their numbers continue to grow, even though other more mainstream and moderate Christian tendencies seem to be slowly declining. Islam, as a whole, is probably the world’s most rapidly expanding religion, projected to have over one billion adherents soon. And while it is hard to get reliable estimates about the numbers of those adherents who are of the more radical intolerant variety, it is clear that they are growing rapidly due to the political and social situations in areas long considered Muslim. My own numbers may be outdated, even as of this writing, so research for yourselves online. I only point out these two religions in contrast to both show that Wicca is not the world’s fastest growing religion and to simultaneously shock you out of ignorance because the two aforementioned intolerant strains of religion can and may have an immediate impact on your life.
14) The Pentagram, as a symbol of wisdom and magic, goes back thousands of years?
*The sound of another can of worms being opened.*
By all Gods and Their Mother Eris! The pentagram-five-pointed-star-thing is an ancient
symbol, in as much as other ubiquitous human symbols such as crosses, circles, spirals,
and squares are. But was it really considered a ‘magical’ symbol throughout all this time?
No.
Some ancient Greeks used it as a symbol of wisdom and such (and it was considered by some to
be a symbol of Hygeia [/hoo-gay-yah/] "wholeness" which was also the name of a goddess), and perhaps that was the
inspiration for the early modern occultists and magical orders to adopt it as one of their
own symbols. There is also some evidence that the ancient kingdom of Israel used it in
addition to their more usual Star of David (hexagram) symbol. (Despite ancient Israel’s
usage of the hexagram, it wasn’t really used as the symbol of Judaism until the 1800’s.)
All we really know and can prove definitively is that some time during the renaissance in
Europe, the pentagram, like its hexagram sister, became adopted by some magical/occult groups
as a symbol of human spiritual dimensions. And that’s about it. Later occult reformers and
Hermetic types added the elemental correspondences as we know them today. The Free Masons
incorporated it into their own system. Eliphas Levi, just before the Romantic period,
synthesized the inverse version of it into the general European occult mix. Aleister Crowley
continued the process of synthesizing and refining its value. Then Gerald Gardner,
the founder of Wicca, put the finishing touches on what we today think of as the pentagram.
But don’t forget that even Christians used the pentagram at various points in history as well.
(It was allegedly a symbol of the Knights Templar, but so was the skull-and-crossbones black
flag, another symbol used much later by the Free Masons.) So the only thing that is clear
about it, is that it has meant a lot of different things to a lot of different people at
various points in history.
That said, whether upright, or inverse, it is today used as a magical symbol and that is all fine and good. Just be aware of assuming that the way you feel about it or use it, is the way it has always been, no matter which author’s words you may have read. This is because, contrary to what many believe, Gerald Gardner wasn’t the last to modify it. There have been many others; some of them masquerading as quantum physicists.
Another thing that irks me about the pentagram issue is that some of you
Wicca-lite adherents assume that to invert the pentagram means something evil or satanic. While some Satanists do use an inverse pentagram as a symbol, they got the idea from
the Hermetic Baphomet idea which was nothing like the modern Satanic idea. Also, an inverted pentagram is used as a Masonic symbol and it is also used by the US government for medals of honor.
Alexandrian traditions of Wicca also have used it to symbolize the "2nd Degree" of initiation. The original occult idea of the inverted pentagram was to symbolize spirit 'descending' into matter.
As a modern symbol, the interwoven-lines pentagram, when surrounded by a circle, is the most ubiquitous symbol of Wiccan and most other Neo-Pagan Witchcraft traditions. In this case, many call it a pentacle, since it resembles closely the pentacle designed for use
on altars. Oddly enough, much like the ancient Greek conception, Wiccans tend to see this as a symbol of balance and wholeness. As a modern religious symbol, it may or may not have anything to do with occult magic. That depends upon the individual.
Summary
There are more such lies and distortions. But I can’t think of them in my present state of vexation. And I have already run out of hot air. My long-windedness can only go so far. I am not a politician for bobsake! The situation has gotten out of hand. I don’t even wear my own pentacle openly anymore so I don’t have to put up with both the fluffy nonsense and the stupid preconceptions. I have no truck with such frou-frou-ness and I don’t want anyone else even thinking that I do.
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