Green witchcraft is not a formal tradition in the sense of Gardnerian Wicca, Dianic Wicca, Feri Tradition, or other established forms. When we use the phrase “the green witch tradition,”we do not refer to an unbroken line of initiates or an established body of lore. Instead, we are ref...
“The men wear trousers, mantle, and a cap of steel; they are curious about their horses tending to witchcraft; they have no saddles, but strangely fashioned pads, their horses are for the most part unshod behind: they use axes,staves, broadswords, and darts.”[3] ...
My one complaint about this home is how difficult it is to garden successfully. We live on the West side of a wooded hillside. I do have thriving hedge roses, rosa rugosa, in red and white. Hostas. One tenacious chokecherry and one stubborn blueberry bush. The rest of my green friends...
1 John 2:27 But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him. Satan will never aga...
The book includes a substantial and helpful treatment of medieval and early-modern views about the devil, witchcraft, and demons. I was fascinated to learn that the topic of miraculous levitations became a proxy for the battle between the Roman Catholic church and the new fledgling but energetic...
Traditionally, the hearth is the center of all home life, and therefore is an integral part of hedge witchcraft.[7] Today, many hedge witches may call upon hearth goddesses, like the Greek goddess Hestia, to invoke peace and safety into the home. Hedge witches may use a traditional firepl...