Have you ever wondered about the origins of the holidays you celebrate? Many of them are Pagan in nature and have evolved with the times. Read on and find out more!
Beltane 2024 is a Gaelic pagan holiday celebrating the season of Spring and the renewal of life. Let go of the old and usher in the new.
Planning to celebrate the seasons and honor Mother Earth with the Wheel of the Year? Learn more about the history and significance of the eight pagan holidays.
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What is Norse Paganism? A question that many have asked, from believer to scholar, and all of them have a slightly different answer. In short, it is modern people adopting the religious practices of ancient Scandinavia and it's European territories.
Valentine's Day is a time to celebrate romance and love and kissy-face fealty. But the ancient Romans had bloodier, drunker and more naked notions to mark the occasion.
Another great way to bring magic into every day is by combining spells and rituals with the days of the week. Each day of the week has colors, crystals, and herbs associated with it as well as a ruling planet.
The Nordic religion was the primary belief system in Scandanavian and Germanic countries before the spread of Christianity. We know about this faith due to oral histories, written accounts, artwork, and archaeological excavations. The Norse religion thrives today. As with many modern pagan religion
Rodnovery, also known as Slavic Native Faith, is one of the lesser-known modern pagan religions. It is a modern revival of the pre-Christian Slavic polytheistic religion and is now considered a new religious movement.
What is Norse Paganism? A question that many have asked, from believer to scholar, and all of them have a slightly different answer. In short, it is modern people adopting the religious practices of ancient Scandinavia and it's European territories.
Sigrblot or Sumarsdag celebrates the first day of summer according to the Old Icelandic calendar. This Norse holiday was a time to celebrate planting and make sacrifices to Odin for blessings on summer travels and raids.
The Pagan Origins of Christmas
Hey there! 👋🏼 I'm Helga. Certified western astrologer and tarot researcher based in Montenegro.
Neo-paganism is one of the fastest growing religions in the world. Its focus is on a nature-based relationship between people and the environment. Pagan traditions are earth-based. Pagan rituals remind people they a part of the natural environment not apart from it. During a pagan ritual, the participants call on the ancient deities and reconnect with the changing of the seasons.
Ostara page 2 - Pagan Wiccan Holiday Information
Slavic pagan holidays are still practiced today in Slavic countries and around the world. Popular holidays include Koleda, Kupala Night and many more.
Another great way to bring magic into every day is by combining spells and rituals with the days of the week. Each day of the week has colors, crystals, and herbs associated with it as well as a ruling planet.
Interested to know about Wicca? It would be a good idea to familiarize yourself with the Wiccan holidays and the Wheel of the Year!
Imbolg - Pagan / Wiccan Holiday information page 1
>I would strongly encourage everyone to read the interview with Professor Ronald Hutton by Caroline Tully over at Necropolis Now.Therein, Hutton commits himself to four positions that, at least …
The Pagan Origin Of Easter Easter is a day that is honored by nearly all of contemporary Christianity and is currently being used to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The holiday often involves a church service at sunrise, a feast which includes an "Easter Ham", decorated eggs and stories about rabbits. Those who love truth learn to ask questions, and many questions must be asked regarding the holiday of Easter. Is it truly the day when Jesus arose from the dead? Where did all of the strange customs come from, which have nothing to do with the resurrection of our Saviour? Why the Easter bunny? Why the Easter eggs? The first thing we must understand is that professing Christians were not the only ones who celebrated a festival called "Easter." "Ishtar", which is pronounced "Easter" was a day that commemorated the resurrection of one of the Babylonian gods called, "Tammuz", who was believed to be the only begotten son of the moon-goddess and the sun-god. The Easter tradition originates from ancient Nimrod, who was the grandson of one of Noah's sons, Ham. Ham had a son named Cush who married a woman named Semiramis. Cush and Semiramis then had a son named "Nimrod." After the death of his father, Cush, Nimrod married his own mother, Semiramis, and became a powerful King. The Bible tells of Nimrod, in Genesis 10:8-10: "And Cush begat Nimrod: he began to be a mighty one in the earth. He was a mighty hunter before the Lord: wherefore it is said, even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord. And the beginning of his kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad,and Calneh, in the land of Shinar." Nimrod is the one that lead the people to build the tower of Babylon. The Book of Jasher (mentioned in the Old Testament) tells the story that Nimrod wore the garments that God made for Adam and Eve. These garments gave him supernatural power so that he became known as a "god-man" to the people. Semiramis, his wife and mother, became the powerful Queen of ancient Babylon. Nimrod was eventually killed by his enemy, Esau. Nimrod's body was cut in pieces and sent to various parts of the kingdom. Semiramis had all of the parts gathered, except for one part that could not be found. That missing part was his reproductive organ. Semiramis claimed that Nimrod could not come back to life without it and told the people of Babylon that Nimrod had ascended to the sun and was now to be called "Baal", the sun god. Queen Semiramis also proclaimed that Baal would be present on earth in the form of a flame, whether candle or lamp, when used in worship. Semiramis also set herself up as a goddess, claiming that she was immaculately conceived. She taught that the moon was a goddess that went through a 28 day cycle and ovulated when full. She further claimed that she came down from the moon in a giant moon egg that fell into the Euphrates River. This was to have happened at the time of the first full moon after the spring equinox. Semiramis became known as "Ishtar" which is pronounced "Easter", and her moon egg became known as "Ishtar's" egg." Ishtar soon became pregnant and claimed that it was the rays of the sun-god Baal that caused her to conceive. The son that she brought forth was named Tammuz. Tammuz was noted to be especially fond of rabbits, and they became sacred in the ancient religion, because Tammuz was believed to be the son of the sun-god, Baal. Tammuz, like his supposed father, became a hunter. The day came when Tammuz was killed by a wild pig. Queen Ishtar told the people that Tammuz was now ascended to his father, Baal, and that the two of them would be with the worshippers in the sacred candle or lamp flame as Father, Son and Spirit. Ishtar, who was now worshipped as the "Mother of God and Queen of Heaven", continued to build her mystery religion. The queen told the worshippers that when Tammuz was killed by the wild pig, some of his blood fell on the stump of an evergreen tree, and the stump grew into a full new tree overnight. This made the evergreen tree sacred by the blood of Tammuz. She also proclaimed a forty day period of time of sorrow each year prior to the anniversary of the death of Tammuz. During this time, no meat was to be eaten. Worshippers were to meditate upon the sacred mysteries of Baal and Tammuz, and to make the sign of the "T" in front of their hearts as they worshipped. They also ate sacred cakes with the marking of a "T" or cross on the top. Every year, on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox, a celebration was made. It was Ishtar's Sunday and was celebrated with rabbits and eggs. Ishtar also proclaimed that because Tammuz was killed by a pig, that a pig must be eaten on that Sunday. Ezekiel speaks of this practice, the mourning for Tammuz: Ezekiel 8:14 14 Then he brought me to the entrance to the north gate of the house of the LORD, and I saw women sitting there, mourning for Tammuz. 15 He said to me, "Do you see this, son of man? You will see things that are even more detestable than this." The truth is that Easter has nothing whatsoever to do with the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ and is "detestable" in the eyes of Lord. We also know that Easter can be as much as three weeks away from the Passover, because the pagan holiday is always set as the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox. Some have wondered why the word "Easter" is in the the King James Bible. It is because Acts, chapter 12, tells us that it was the evil King Herod, who was planning to celebrate Easter, and not the followers of Yeshua. The true Passover and pagan Easter sometimes coincide, but in some years, they are a great distance apart. We know that the Bible tells us in John 4:24, "God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth." The truth is that the forty days of Lent, eggs, rabbits,hot cross buns and the Easter ham have everything to do with the ancient pagan religion of Mystery Babylon.These are all antichrist activities! Satan is a master deceiver, and has filled the lives of well-meaning, professing Christians with idolatry. These things bring the wrath of God upon children of disobedience, who try to make pagan customs of Baal worship Christian. You must answer for your activities and for what you teach your children. These customs of Easter honor Baal, who is also Satan, and is still worshipped as the "Rising Sun" and his house is the "House of the Rising Sun." How many churches have "sunrise services" on Ishtar's day and face the rising sun in the East? How many will use colored eggs and rabbit stories, as they did in ancient Babylon. These things are no joke, any more than Judgement day is a joke. These are the last days, and it is time to repent, come out and be separate. David J. Meyer
Learn all about Ireland's Celtic holidays and how to celebrate them here. There are eight special sacred days in Ireland that date back to the ancient Celtic world.
This great date of the Celtic calendar hailed the return of the summer, the fertility of the land and the protection of all living things from troubling forces.
Combine the passion of a roaring bonfire with the fertility of spring deities, and you've got a recipe for a great Beltane ritual.
On December 25 every year, all people around the world enjoy Christmas beyond the borders and religions. However, do you know Christmas is not the birthday of Jesus Christ? On the contrary, it was the date of a pagan festival in Rome for celebrating “the birth of Sun-god.” Indeed, Christmas itself was superimposed over the […]