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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Pre-Christian European & Mediterranean religions > Ancient Celtic religion
Scottish Witchcraft is an introduction and guide to the magickal
folk traditions of the Highlands of Scotland. Author Barbara
Meiklejohn-Free, a Scottish hereditary witch, takes you on a
journey through her own spiritual awakening into the craft and
shares the ins and outs of incorporating these ancient magical
traditions into your own life. Discover the secrets to divination,
scrying, faerie magic, and communicating with ancestors. Explore
herb and plant lore, Scottish folk traditions, and magic rituals
for your specific needs. Filled with inspiring anecdotes, craft
history, and step-by-step instructions, this book will help you
begin a new chapter of spiritual discovery.
They may be coated in layers of myth and pious anecdote but dig
deep enough and the pioneering leaders of Celtic Christianity are
revealed as reassuringly human individuals, responding to their
faith by deliberately living on the edges of society. From the
goddess-nun Brigid and absent-minded Cainnech to severe ascetics
such as Columbanus and Baldred, together they demonstrate a close
connection with the natural world, an astonishing self-discipline
and, above all, a rigorous commitment to what it meant to be
'pilgrims for Christ'. Establishing a network of influential
monastic communities, they travelled from the territories of the
Atlantic seaboard - Ireland, Wales and Cornwall - across Scotland,
the north of England and deep into continental Europe, transforming
the religious experience of all they encountered.
Leading spiritual teacher John Philip Newell reveals how Celtic
spirituality, listening to the sacred around us and inside of us,
can help to heal the earth, overcome our conflicts and reconnect
with ourselves. Sacred Earth, Sacred Soul offers a new spiritual
foundation for our lives, once centered on encouragement,guidance
and hope for creating a better world. Sharing the long hidden
tradition of Celtic Christianity, explaining how this earth-based
spirituality can help us rediscover the natural rhythms of life and
deepen our spiritual connection with God, with each other and with
the earth. Newell introduces some of Celtic Christianity's leading
practitioners, both saints and pioneers of faith, whose timeless
wisdom is more necessary than ever, including: Pelagius, who shows
us how to look beyond sin to affirm our sacredness as part of all
God's creation and courageously stands up for our principles in the
face of oppression. Brigid of Kildare, who illuminates the
interrelationship of all things and reminds us of the power of the
sacred feminine to overcome those seeking to control us. John Muir,
who encourages us to see the holiness and beauty of wilderness and
what we must do to protect these gifts. Teilhard de Chardin, who
inspires us to see how science, faith, and our future tell one
universal story that beings with sacredness.
In the ancient realm of the Celts, the seer was a person who opened
a window to reveal a complete view of the cosmos, in which the
otherworld and the everyday world interconnect. This was the
essence of true perception and wisdom, known as glefiosa, or
'bright knowledge'. For the seer, the babbling of the stream, the
swaying of treetops in the wind, the hunting and foraging of
animals are all brimful of deeper meaning. The Art of Celtic
Seership shows how to connect with this visionary wisdom, nurture
it in ourselves and harness it to live in harmony with each other
and with the earth, and to bring profound insight and understanding
to our day-to-day existence. It describes the tools and techniques
of the druids, bards and seers of old, and explains how we too can
draw inspiration from the natural world and open ourselves to
developing our prophetic and visionary powers. Practical exercises
include calling upon your ancestors, working with your dreams,
cultivating a connection with the faery folk, experimenting with
trance states, entering into the consciousness of the stones, trees
and other natural features around you, asking a question of the
universe and listening to the reply and reading omens and signs in
the symbols you encounter through the day.
Containing Ireland's most popular prayers and blessings, this book
is packed full of inspirational words to take comfort in. In turn
these words provide us with hope, joy and solace. This little book,
designed to fit in the smallest bag or pocket, will bring those old
words back to life, reminding us that poetic lines and wise sayings
can wrap around you like a hug, making the world seem a better
place for a while.
By the author of Celtic Prayers from Iona In Celtic tradition, the
"Book of Creation" is where we "read" what the Creator has said to
us. J. Philip Newell here reflects on the seven days of creation in
Genesis, using them as a guide to the practice of Celtic
spirituality. Each day explores a different aspect of creation as a
manifestation of God, revealing divine presence at the heart of
everyday life. Newell begins by tracing the history of Celtic
spirituality and how it clashed with Rome, then he goes on to draw
from a rich and diverse selection of Celtic sources on creation:
Eriugena, Pelagius, the Carmina Gadelica, novelist George
MacDonald, poet Kenneth White, and Iona Community founder George
MacLeod. Newell also includes meditation exercises that may be used
by either individuals or groups. Newell is quickly becoming one of
today's most authoritative and inspirational voices on Celtic
spirituality. His book is perfect for prayer groups, seasonal
parish programs, small faith communities, religious communities,
spiritual seekers, anyone of Celtic heritage, and anyone interested
in creation spirituality.
Harness the mythic power of the Celtic goddesses, gods, heroes and
heroines to aid your spiritual quests and magical goals. This book
explains how to use creative ritual and pathworking to align
yourself with the energy of these archetypes, whose potent images
live deep within your psyche. The book begins with an overview of
49 different types of Celtic Paganism followed today, then gives
specific instructions for evoking and invoking the energy of the
Celtic patheon to channel it toward magickal and spiritual goals
and into esbat, sabbat and life transition rituals. Three detailed
pathworking texts will take the reader on an inner journey where
they will join forces with the archetypal images of Cuchulain,
Queen Maeve and Merlin the Magician to bring their energies
directly into the reader's life. The last half of the book clearly
details the energies of over 300 Celtic deities and mythic figures
to evoke or invoke the appropriate deity to attain a specific goal.
The book should help solitary pagans who seek to expand the
boundaries of their practice to form working partnerships with the
divine.
The mystery, magic and myth of Manannan. The sea is a powerful,
driving force for many people, a source of sustenance as well as
danger. It is no surprise that Manannan, the Celtic God of the sea,
should be an important figure but one who is also as ambiguous as
the element he is associated with: a trickster, a magic worker, an
advisor and a warrior. In this book you will get to know the many
faces of Manannan, called the son of the ocean, and learn of his
important place in mythology and the pivotal role he plays in many
events. 'This highly intelligent but accessible book belongs on the
shelves and nightstands of lovers of Celtic myth.' Courtney Weber,
author of Brigid: History, Mystery, and Magic of the Celtic Goddess
Environmental arts therapy and the Tree of life guides us through
the Celtic calendar to explore the relationship between the feeling
experience of the human heart and the turning year. Practical,
poetic, innovative and magical, it invites us to make environmental
art and ritual a vital and healing part of our lives once again and
teaches us how to take the personal issues that bind and oppress us
out into Nature where they can be met, confronted and transformed.
Get to know the Good God of Ireland through mythology, history, and
modern worship. The Dagda is one of the most well-known of the
Irish Gods, a king of the Tuatha De Danann and mediator between the
Gods and mortals after the Gaels came to Ireland. A popular God
among Irish and Celtic pagans, the Dagda is a powerful figure who
reaches out to us from myth and memory. For those seeking to honor
him today finding information can be difficult or confusing. Pagan
Portals - the Dagda offers a place to begin untangling the complex
history of this deity.
We change and develop 'the past' with narrative, and we create 'the
future' by re-mixing the stored elements in order to continue it
onwards. All the verbal tenses cluster around the same mighty
place, the same source of narrative and mythic significance. The
people had a name for this place: the Well of Urdhr, Anglo-Saxon
wyrd, one of three Norns of fate, Urdhr, Verdhandi and Skuld, who
cluster around the Well. These Norns are mighty beings, beyond and
above the gods, in the sense that they are eternal and know the
fates, the rise and fall of the gods themselves. They are watchers
of the Well and helpers to the Tree. The Tree, which contains all
the worlds in present time, all the branches of the Now, is
nourished at its roots by the Well's waters. 'Bright From the Well'
consists of five stories plus five essays and a rune-poem. The
stories revolve around themes from Norse myth - the marriage of
Frey and Gerd, the story of how Gullveig-Heidh reveals her powers
to the gods, a modern take on the social-origins myth Rig's Tale,
Loki attending a pagan pub moot and the Ragnarok seen through the
eyes of an ancient shaman. The essays include examination of the
Norse creation or origins story, of the magician in or against the
world and a chaoist's magical experiences looked at from the
standpoint of Northern magic.' Dave Lee coaches breathwork, writes
fiction and non-fiction, blends incenses and oils, creates music
and collage.
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God at Home
(Paperback)
Sylvia Diamond; Illustrated by Elizabeth Diamond
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R370
Discovery Miles 3 700
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Good foundations are essential for any building to survive - and
for families too. In God at Home, we will find inspirational people
who, despite hardship and frequent alienation from the surrounding
culture, not only survived but thrived, sharing love, light and
hope in their communities and heralding a golden age of faith, art
and learning. Each chapter focuses on a different Celtic Saint with
reflections and experiences from modern family life. There are also
suggestions for families to discuss, create or do together. We
explore simple ways in which Christian homes today can also
flourish and be beacons of light for others.
The primary aim of New Directions in Celtic Studies is to focus on
contemporary issues and to promote interdisciplinary approaches
within the subject. Written by international scholars and
practitioners in fields such as folklore, ethnomusicology, art
history, religious studies, tourism and education, the book brings
together in one volume a wide range of perspectives. It responds to
the recent questioning of the viability of the notion of
'Celticity' and the idea of Celtic Studies as a discipline and
points to a renewed vitality in the subject. New Directions in
Celtic Studies is divided into four sections: popular culture and
representation; commodities and Celtic lifestyles; contemporary
Celtic identity and the Celtic diaspora; Celtic praxis.
Brigid of Kildare, Ireland, is uniquely venerated as both a goddess
and a saint throughout Ireland, Europe and the USA. Often referred
to as Mary of the Gael and considered the second most important
saint in Ireland after St Patrick, her widespread popularity has
led to the creation of more traditional activities than any other
saint; some of which survive to this day. As a result of original
historical and archaeological research Brian Wright provides a
fascinating insight into this unique and mysterious figure. This
book uncovers for the first time when and by whom the goddess was
'conceived' and evidence that St Brigid was a real person. It also
explains how she 'became' a saint, her historical links with the
unification of Ireland under a High King in the first century and
discusses in depth her first documented visit to England in AD 488.
Today, Brigid remains strongly connected with the fertility of
crops, animals and humans and is celebrated throughout the world
via the continuation of customs, ceremonies and relics with origins
dating back to pre-Christian times. Using a combination of early
Celtic history, archaeology, tradition and folklore from Ireland,
Britain and other countries, this comprehensive study unravels the
mystery of a goddess and saint previously complicated by the
passage of time.
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