About the Sabbats
by Judy Harrow
The word "religion" means "re-connection." What has been severed? What
connections need to be re-woven? How does our particular set of
religious
practices help us reconnect what was wrongfully and tragically torn
apart?
Each Sabbat is a multivocal symbol. Sometimes you'll see the
word "symbol"
used to mean by definition a multivocal statement, as contrasted with
"sign"
a word, phrase or picture that has one simple and commonly understood
meaning.
Thus is the Wheel of the Year taken as a whole (a multivocal
meta-symbol?).
Multivocal symbols mean many things -- there is no one right and true
interpretation
-- but normally the set of meanings is interrelated, a cluster of
associations
branching from some common point. The Wheel of the Year, as we
celebrate
it, has associations both with the seasonal cycle of Nature and the
normal
developmental phases of human life. Thus it connects them.
- Modern technology mediates and cushions the impact that
Nature's cycles
make on our lives. Most of us are warm in winter, cool in summer, have
steady and reliable access to light and to food. We are safer and far
more
comfortable, but our awareness of Nature is no longer inherent in our
lives.
We have to work much harder to stay in contact with Her. This work is
utterly
essential. Even though it's not as immediately apparent, our lives are
still wholly dependent on Hers. People and institutions that have lost
conscious awareness of that connection are daily putting Her life and
ours
at significant risk.
- The Sabbats were originally about the changing of the
seasons. But the
seasons change differently in different bio-regions. For example, one
of
my friends is eloquent and adamant that the Greek festivals speak
better
to her than the Celtic because the seasonal cycle in Southern
California
is much more like it is in Greece, an alternation of dry and rainy.
Here
in the Northeast, things are pretty similar to the way they are in
Ireland.
If we work with myth systems that grew up
where we live, or in a place
much like where we live, our ritual work will help us notice and stay
connected
with the local climate and ecology. One of the core goals of geocentric
religion is to increase our conscious contact with Nature. That means
that
not all Protean covens will be working with the same myths or symbols,
nor even necessarily with the classic Wiccan Wheel of the Year,
although certainly all our students should be familiar with it. - The
Sabbats, as multivocal symbols, are not only
about the Earth's
seasonal cycle. There are cycles and changes within human lives as
well.
Some of those are fairly universal and predictable, and so they are
like
the seasonal cycle, while others are more personal and idiosyncratic.
Humans
have a need for "passage rituals," in which we mark, honor and
integrate
our own changes. Partly we celebrate them when they happen: a coming of
age, a handfasting. But by also celebrating the cycle in an ongoing
way,
by mapping the human life cycle onto the Wheel of the Year, we tell
ourselves
several important things:
- We are part of Nature. Our lives reflect the life of the
Earth, and Hers
reflects ours.
- We are part of the human community. There is a certain
similarity in the
broad outlines of our lives, basic experiences that all or almost all
of
us share. So even if we are not at that particular point in our own
personal
life, by remembering or anticipating the common passages, we
contemplate
our common humanity.
- We have a chance to anticipate and prepare for changes
yet to come. Specifically,
I think that many years of celebrating Samhain cuts through the general
culture's denial of death, and allows us to enter later life with
something
more like equanimity.
- We have a chance to re-examine the issues of life stages
already behind
us, and perhaps to come to new insights and better integrations.
So, the Wheel of the Year is an effective metaphor for
understanding
life, a valid part of our psychospiritual path. The Sabbats place us on
the Earth, in the human community, and on the time-lines of our own
lives.
The seasonal cycle is inherently sacred and is also the Great Model,
the
framework for celebrating the longer cycle of human life. Thus we
connect
the two, as we so desperately need to do. Although this may sound very
modern, it is identical with the very ancient Celtic understanding that
religion is about negotiating and maintaining right relationship
between
Land and Tribe.
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