Halloween
stems from the grand tradition of the Celtic New Year. What started as a folk
festival celebrated by small groups in rural areas has come to be the second
largest holiday of today. There are multitudinous reasons including modern
marketing but I think it satisfies a basic human need, to let your “wild side”
out, to be free and more connected with the ancient ways. This is the time when the veil between worlds
is thinnest and you can commune with the other side, with elders and the spirit
world. It is important to honor the ancestors during this major sabbat and
acknowledge what transpired in the passing year as well as set intentions for
the coming year.
This is the ideal time to invite your circle; the
ideal number for your “coven” is 13. Gather powdered incense, salt, a loaf of
bread, goblets for wine, and three candles to represent the triple goddess for
altar offerings. Ideally on an outdoor stone
altar, pour the powdered incense into a pentagram star shape. Let go of old
sorrows, angers and anything not befitting of new beginnings in this New Year
Bring only your best to this auspicious occasion.
Light the candles and say:
In honor of the Triple
Goddess on this sacred night of Samhain,
All the ancient ones
From time before time
To those behind the
veil.
Rap the altar three times and light the incense. Say this
blessing aloud:
For this bread, wine,
and salt,
We ask the blessings
of Mother, Maiden and Crone,
And the gods who guard
the Gate of the World.
Sprinkle salt over the bread, eat the bread and drink the
wine.
Each of the celebrants should
come to the altar repeating the bread and wine blessing. After this, be seated
and everyone in turn should name those on the other side and offer thanks to
ancestors and deities. This can and should take a long time as we owe much to
loved ones on the other side.
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