From: tim@toad.com (Tim Maroney) Subject: Re: Initiation ritual ideas wanted (Wiccan) Date: 20 Aug 93 16:47:05 GMT In article jap@cbnews.cb.att.com (james.a.parker) writes: > I am to be initiated into a coven on Lughnasagh (sp?), and am > looking for initiation rituals and/or ideas. The coven (Full Light, > based at the notorious Salem West in Obetz, OH) is less than two > months old and does not yet have any formal traditions, and our high > priest feels that initiations are a very personal thing, and asked > me what I want. Unfortunately, I am really only familiar with > Buckland's version, and Cunningham's self-dedication. I would like > to get some other ideas to figure out what is "best" for me. That's pretty liberal! Usually there's a real dominance and submission aspect to initiation, where the ritual serves as much to reinforce the authority of the elders as to consecrate the candidate into the sacral order recognized by the group. I highly recommend the book INITIATION by Jean La Fontaine, Penguin Books, 1985, for penetrating insight into the meaning and function of initiations around the world and in our own backyard. Less insightful and highly flawed, but still worthwhile, is Mircea Eliade's RITES AND SYMBOLS OF INITIATION, from Harper Colophon Books, 1975. Neither of these is specifically Wiccan, but remember that Wicca is a process of reclaiming and rejuvenating anthropological and comparative religious research, and turning it into practical ritual for the modern day. I was also quite startled on studying the subject to find out just how similar initiations are around the world and in various times and cultures. The von Gennep three-stage model seems to hold very well, and the roles of things like secret knowledge, sacral order and authority are remarkably consistent. Of course, if you want to check out Wicca specifically, then there's always the Farrars, currently available in A WITCHES' BIBLE from Magickal Childe. The Gardnerian rituals there are worth study, and will make more sense in the light of La Fontaine and Eliade. You should also study the Freemasonic precursors of the Gardnerian rites in DUNCAN'S RITUAL OF FREEMASONRY, which will elucidate the meaning of quite a few of the symbols; and it couldn't hurt to read the Golden Dawn and O.T.O. initiations, in Israel Regardie's THE GOLDEN DAWN from Llewwellyn and Francis King's THE SECRET RITUALS OF THE O.T.O. As other variants on the Freemasonic rituals they should make the whole picture even clearer. Best wishes, and good luck! -- Tim Maroney, Communications and User Interface Engineer FROM THE FOOL FILE: "Those Mayas were sacrificing not only pagan children, but baptized Christian children, for crying out loud! And they were carrying out those sacrifices, those barbarities, with great savagery, without giving the victims the benefit of the humane types of death that the European Church accorded even to heretics and witches during that century, such as burning at the stake." -- Matthew Rosenblatt, rec.arts.books