https://www.hdwallpaper.nu/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/160061.jpg
One thing about living a life guided by Spirit is that i get the urges to type or research often. This blog does concern a topic that i have covered more than once. It is strange to circle back around to obsessions the way that i do until i remember that "we are a circle within a circle" @ https://youtu.be/EQQWwFnk198
https://media.giphy.com/media/N8fA7xqtOsOn6/giphy.gif
Anyway, from this Pagan's persepctive monotheism has wrecked on Us and Mother Earth since its inception so that i am taking advantage of this time when i won't be burned or tortured to express Satan from my view. There are different forms of Spirits, depending on which Energy that we tend to focus on so that we can choose which Form of Lucifer that we associate with. Thought forms are constructs of the mind's power that exist on astral, and the more Folks that feed energy to said thought form, the stronger it is. The Power of the Planets that feed the gods feeds these thought forms too
Declaring Sovereignty from the Collective Unconscious and Conscious as well as Their Thought Forms+++ @ http://citedinfo.blogspot.com/2018/01/declaring-sovereignty-from-collective.html discusses this subject in greater detail. The "powers that be" have used their Occult knowledge to make many thought forms who help with an agenda that is negative for Mother Earth, and Her Children. What is lucifer, shining the light back into their eyes, and i choose Pan as my horned deity will be presented in this blog.
What is Lucifer???
Declaring Sovereignty from the Collective Unconscious and Conscious as well as Their Thought Forms+++ @ http://citedinfo.blogspot.com/2018/01/declaring-sovereignty-from-collective.html discusses this subject in greater detail. The "powers that be" have used their Occult knowledge to make many thought forms who help with an agenda that is negative for Mother Earth, and Her Children. What is lucifer, shining the light back into their eyes, and i choose Pan as my horned deity will be presented in this blog.
What is Lucifer???
Google says that it is
"1. another name for Satan.
2. literary the planet Venus when it rises in the morning.!!!
3. archaic a match struck by rubbing it on a rough surface.
Origin
Old English, from Latin, ‘light-bringing, morning star,’ from lux, luc- ‘light’ + -fer ‘bearing."’https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1RNJN_enUS760US760&ei=1-6QWt_-NMTGsAXX55fQCQ&q=Luciferdefinition&oq=Luciferdefinition&gs_l=psy-ab.3..0i10k1l5.11522.14505.0.14814.10.10.0.0.0.0.77.655.10.10.0....0...1c.1.64.psy-ab..0.10.649...0.0.AnrSn8lICwc
2. literary the planet Venus when it rises in the morning.!!!
3. archaic a match struck by rubbing it on a rough surface.
Origin
Old English, from Latin, ‘light-bringing, morning star,’ from lux, luc- ‘light’ + -fer ‘bearing."’https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1RNJN_enUS760US760&ei=1-6QWt_-NMTGsAXX55fQCQ&q=Luciferdefinition&oq=Luciferdefinition&gs_l=psy-ab.3..0i10k1l5.11522.14505.0.14814.10.10.0.0.0.0.77.655.10.10.0....0...1c.1.64.psy-ab..0.10.649...0.0.AnrSn8lICwc
Vexen Crabtree (2014) did some great research and created a great article that looks at "satan" from around the world and different beliefs called "Satan and The Devil in World Religions" She tells us that "most people equate Lucifer with Satan because of the mistakes of a large number of enthusiastic Christian writers, relying upon, as they were, a mistranslation and misunderstanding of a verse from the Bible. Popular poems, stories and (nowadays) the film industry, are all compelled towards continuing the association due to a lack of theological knowledge and academic fact-checking. Lucifer is not Satan".
Her article is linked @ http://www.humanreligions.info/satan.html
Her article is linked @ http://www.humanreligions.info/satan.html
Shining the Light Back Into Their Eyes
It seems that humanity has been " blinded by the light"
https://youtu.be/uozMTmEjxHc because Lucifer worship is weaved into Christianity as those who made it are Luciferians. They tell us that all of darkness or lower dimensions is evil because they wish to blind Us with their light. I bid thee come out of the glare, and look at who's really shining that light in Your eyes I'll give You a hint, if they are telling You others are bad just because they are in lower dimensions or aren't goode because they aren't just like You then they don't truly understand LOVE. For example, my Dark Guides or Eguns from the Lower Realms caught from hatred and anger will still go attack those entities of light around the organized baby fuckers. Y'all don't see them kids from rituals on astral as i have for 3 years now.the Biggest Trick that "Satan" Ever Pulled Is Convincing the World that it's "God"? & Sacrificial Rituals with Children @ http://citedinfo.blogspot.com/2017/06/the-biggest-trick-that-satan-ever.html
andThe Misunderstood Dark Side @ http://citedinfo.blogspot.com/2017/06/the-misunderstood-dark-side.html
go into further detail about this subject.
Sometimes when i try to sleep or clean my Eguns tell me who's thinking bad shit abt me because of something i have posted, and this happened after i posted that i am Luciferian after receiving my second inbox comment about Jesus. "Let me be clear", Luciferian/Left Hand Path means You believe that You are Your own god to create Your own reality. Wanting our own reality doesn't make us evil hell, fuck ,shit... the Devil is a Creation of the Vatican used to control people while Lucifer is the Bringer of Knowledge or Light Bearer. So please stop hating us Luciferians because You don't understand Lucifer .
If we choose to send our energy to positive aspects of deities, whether they are thought forms or not, we draw positives effects into our lives, and visa~versa if we choose the negative version. There are those who worship the Goode Side of Lucifer, and then there are those who may do horrible things to kids in the name of Lucifer for power The meanings of these words have been changed, and demonizing Lucifer puts bad energy where there should be goode.
Demon is from the Greek word daimon which means knowledge. Lucifer is from the Latin word which mean Light Bearer which is also known as the Morning Star. Satan is from the Hebrew word which means adversary or questioner. Devil is from the Greek word diabolos or accuser.
the Left Hand Path is not Evil, in of Itself @ http://citedinfo.blogspot.com/2017/06/the-left-hand-path-is-not-evil-in-of.html
has more information about the Left Hand Path
has more information about the Left Hand Path
Kundalinis Rising @ http://citedinfo.blogspot.com/2017/03/kundalinis-rising.html
https://media.giphy.com/media/yCRiIFxh9ZXZ6/giphy.gif
Annunaki's Brotherhood of the Snake @ http://citedinfo.blogspot.com/2018/01/annunakis-brotherhood-of-snake.html
traces the Serpents back to Enki and Enlil for those interested in history.
http://img02.deviantart.net/346c/i/2013/163/c/8/pan___god_of_nature_by_sinmadison-d5ubgf9.jpg
I Choose Pan As My Horned Deity
Google definitions, as featured in this blog's first section, are the ones claiming that Lucifer is Satan, and that is what made me feel like Pan is appropriate for this article.
Wikipedia tells Us that Pan was "in ancient Greek religion and mythology, Pan (/pæn/;[1] Ancient Greek: Πάν, Pan) is the god of the wild, shepherds and flocks, nature of mountain wilds, rustic music and impromptus, and companion of the nymphs.[2] He has the hindquarters, legs, and horns of a goat, in the same manner as a faun or satyr. With his homeland in rustic Arcadia, he is also recognized as the god of fields, groves, and wooded glens; because of this, Pan is connected to fertility and the season of spring. The ancient Greeks also considered Pan to be the god of theatrical criticism.[3] The word panic ultimately derives from the god's name.
The worship of Pan began in Arcadia which was always the principal seat of his worship. Arcadia was a district of mountain people, culturally separated from other Greeks. Arcadian hunters used to scourge the statue of the god if they had been disappointed in the chase.[11]
Being a rustic god, Pan was not worshipped in temples or other built edifices, but in natural settings, usually caves or grottoes such as the one on the north slope of the Acropolis of Athens. These are often referred to as the Cave of Pan. The only exceptions are the Temple of Pan on the Neda River gorge in the southwestern Peloponnese – the ruins of which survive to this day – and the Temple of Pan at Apollonopolis Magna in ancient Egypt.[12] In the 4th century BC Pan was depicted on the coinage of Pantikapaion.[13]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_(god)
Being a rustic god, Pan was not worshipped in temples or other built edifices, but in natural settings, usually caves or grottoes such as the one on the north slope of the Acropolis of Athens. These are often referred to as the Cave of Pan. The only exceptions are the Temple of Pan on the Neda River gorge in the southwestern Peloponnese – the ruins of which survive to this day – and the Temple of Pan at Apollonopolis Magna in ancient Egypt.[12] In the 4th century BC Pan was depicted on the coinage of Pantikapaion.[13]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_(god)
Manly Palmer Hall tells Us that
"Satan is not a spirit of destruction. There is no essential evil in the universe. Our present form of the devil is merely derived from the Greek nature god Pan.
As Goethe says, Mephistopheles, or Satan, 'is part of the power that still works for good while ever scheming ill.' Satan is really karma, but he is more than that. He is the temptation from which arises strength. When the Mysteries were celebrated in ancient Egypt, there was an evil spirit called Typhon or Set who brought about the death of the good Osiris. It is the red Set that has given us our concept of the devil; but Set was nothing but the material world, the ground of man’s temptation, and also the environment in which he gains immortality through self-discipline. Therefore, Set, or Satan is divine opportunity; the world into which we come in ignorance but from which we depart in wisdom."
"i'm the laughter in the Forest...i'm the happy horny One" are the words that feel when i think of Pan from the song
Call Me Satan by Omnia @ https://youtu.be/S3-Yh-nrTps
http://orig02.deviantart.net/f8b2/f/2013/228/3/8/the_god_pan_and_the_satyrs_by_rebenke-d6ie0ae.jpgThere is even a great TV show called Lucifer that captures the fun and loving side of horned type deities. The Lucifer that i connect with is a loving Fatherly type energy that is separate from Pan, but there are many forms all deities on the astral plane.
http://hdqwalls.com/wallpapers/lucifer-season-2-2016-ap.jpg
For more information on horned deities a source in the Sect of the Horned god tell us that "10. Satan / The Devil, 1200 CE: Satan’s most notorious deeds are; refusing to worship God, tempting Adam and Eve with the forbidden fruit, reproducing with humans to create a race of giants, and marshalling an army of demons to try and overthrow heaven. Ultimately his rebellion failed, and he was cast into a bottomless pit for punishment. Images of Satan as a horned devil do not appear until the 12th century where medieval artists began to depict him with more bestial features. This may be due to the Christian nation studying other heretical religions such as Greek, Norse and Celtic paganism. All these cultures had an ‘amorous’ deity as it’s godhead (e.g. Cernunnos, Shiva and Freyr) who practiced a hedonistic lifestyle, unbefitting to Christian values. As such, the horned god may have been adapted into the images of Satan based on his own indiscretions of fornicating with humans, and challenging the legitimacy of the ‘one and only god’"
https://www.facebook.com/HumanOdyssey/photos/a.949364031855847.1073741844.178971832228408/1183018405157074/?type=3&theater
Since i have lost vital information before i will go ahead and copy this article
"Human Odyssey
Many pagans revere a male fertility figure known as the ‘Horned God’. This mythical being can be found in similar guises throughout the world. He has many names, and typically represents strength, passion, and male potency. He is considered to possess a dual nature, that of summer and winter. These twin aspects are said to represent the ever-changing cycle of life, death and rebirth.
This article, ‘Reconstructing the Horned God’ will focus on his summer aspect, which is associated with health, virility and abundance. The following article, ‘Reconstructing the Green Man’ will focus on his winter aspect, which encompasses death, resurrection and renewal.
In order to reconstruct his persona, we will need to look back at his most famous incarnations throughout history, and then draw upon all the parallels that link his function, story and personality across world culture. Our first encounter with this mythical being can be dated back as far as the Stone Age, when our ancestors began to migrate into the European continent.
1. The Sorcerer 12,000 BCE: The oldest image of a horned figure can be found in the Trois-Freres cavern in France. It depicts a stag standing upright upon human legs. Many scholars believe the figure is that of a shaman, who is performing a sacred dance to increase the yield of animals on a coming hunt. The motif of a therianthropic being (half human, half beast), is a common trait found on most depictions of the horned god, emphasizing a union between divine masculinity and untamed nature.
2. Rudra / Shiva 3300 BCE: Archaeologists discovered some seals in the Indus Valley which depict a horned figure seated in a lotus position. Scholars believe it is an early epithet of Shiva the destroyer. This Hindu god has two personas; an ascetic, abstaining from worldly pursuits, and a hedonist, embracing all carnal pleasures. His passionate side is personified by the lingam (a phallic statue), which embodies his raw, sexual power. Shiva is often portrayed in an animal skin with a cobra necklace, a symbol of renewal. This can be seen as an analogy to his cosmic role as destroyer, where he annihilates the universe every 12,000 years to make way for a new one.
3. Khnum / Banebdjedet, 2686 BCE: Khnum is one of the oldest gods of Egypt, who was worshipped as far back as the Predynastic Period (6000 - 3150 BCE). He had a human body and a ram’s head, the horns of which symbolised potency and virility. Khnum was therefore regarded as the lord of fertility, who brought the waters of the Nile to Egypt. The annual floods brought life to its surroundings, as well as masses of silt and clay. The Egyptians believed the Khnum created humans by mixing this clay with the life-giving waters of the Nile, and then sculpting them on a potter's wheel. A similar story can be found in ancient Mesopotamia.
This article, ‘Reconstructing the Horned God’ will focus on his summer aspect, which is associated with health, virility and abundance. The following article, ‘Reconstructing the Green Man’ will focus on his winter aspect, which encompasses death, resurrection and renewal.
In order to reconstruct his persona, we will need to look back at his most famous incarnations throughout history, and then draw upon all the parallels that link his function, story and personality across world culture. Our first encounter with this mythical being can be dated back as far as the Stone Age, when our ancestors began to migrate into the European continent.
1. The Sorcerer 12,000 BCE: The oldest image of a horned figure can be found in the Trois-Freres cavern in France. It depicts a stag standing upright upon human legs. Many scholars believe the figure is that of a shaman, who is performing a sacred dance to increase the yield of animals on a coming hunt. The motif of a therianthropic being (half human, half beast), is a common trait found on most depictions of the horned god, emphasizing a union between divine masculinity and untamed nature.
2. Rudra / Shiva 3300 BCE: Archaeologists discovered some seals in the Indus Valley which depict a horned figure seated in a lotus position. Scholars believe it is an early epithet of Shiva the destroyer. This Hindu god has two personas; an ascetic, abstaining from worldly pursuits, and a hedonist, embracing all carnal pleasures. His passionate side is personified by the lingam (a phallic statue), which embodies his raw, sexual power. Shiva is often portrayed in an animal skin with a cobra necklace, a symbol of renewal. This can be seen as an analogy to his cosmic role as destroyer, where he annihilates the universe every 12,000 years to make way for a new one.
3. Khnum / Banebdjedet, 2686 BCE: Khnum is one of the oldest gods of Egypt, who was worshipped as far back as the Predynastic Period (6000 - 3150 BCE). He had a human body and a ram’s head, the horns of which symbolised potency and virility. Khnum was therefore regarded as the lord of fertility, who brought the waters of the Nile to Egypt. The annual floods brought life to its surroundings, as well as masses of silt and clay. The Egyptians believed the Khnum created humans by mixing this clay with the life-giving waters of the Nile, and then sculpting them on a potter's wheel. A similar story can be found in ancient Mesopotamia.
4. Enki / Ea, 2350 BCE: Enki is the Sumerian god of water and wisdom. He is a trickster, gifted with great intelligence and a mastery of magic. Iconography depicts him as a bearded man wearing a horned cap, with flowing streams running off his shoulders, emphasizing his association with life-giving water. His name means 'Lord of the Earth' and his symbols are the fish and the goat, both associated with fertility. He is famously depicted in epics of Sumerian myth as the creator of the world and progenitor of humanity. Just like Khnum, he used clay to form the first lineage of humans.
5. Pan/Faunus, 500 BCE: Pan is the Greek deity of pastures and herds. He is half man and half goat, with hairy legs, a horned scalp and a goatee beard. His cult is centred around Arcadia where he lived the woodlands, hills and mountains. He could often be found dancing through the forests of Greece, playing his panpipes which he is credited with inventing. He is the lusty leader of the satyrs (woodland deities), and continually chases the nymphs of Greece for sexual union. During many Greek rituals, his essence is invoked for fertility of the flocks and for an abundant hunt.
6. Cernunnos, 100 BCE : Cernunnos can be found throughout the Celtic lands, and was regarded as the guardian of the Otherworld. In his early days, he was worshipped as a fertility god, but as time progressed he also became associated with wealth and prosperity. He was such an important deity to the Celts, that his image and reputation became a major target for the early Christian church. It is his image that is believed to have been adopted for their mythos of the Devil or the ‘false god’.
7. Freyr, 6th Century CE: Freyr is the Norse god of fertility who belongs to the Vanir tribe. He is associated with kingship and virility, and bestows prosperity upon his followers. Those who worshipped him were rewarded with fertility, health, and abundance. Although Freyr was never depicted with horns upon his head, he did use a stag’s antler as a weapon to slay the giant Beli, and in his final battle against the fire giant Surt. His virility was often symbolized by wooden idols which depicted him with an enormous, erect phallus. These effigies were often thrown into bogs, lakes, and rivers as water was regarded as a doorway to the other world.
8. Kokopelli is a fertility deity, venerated by some Native American cultures in the S.W. United States. He is depicted as a humpbacked flute player (often with feathers or horn like protrusions on his head). He is the patron of childbirth, commerce, agriculture and music. Kokopelli's flute-playing is said to chase away the coldness of winter, and to bring about the warmth of summer. He tends to wild game animals throughout the year, and is often depicted with animal companions such as rams and deer. He is also commonly found sun-bathing with snakes. He travelled far and wide across the wilderness, and was regarded as a master trader of goods and information. Many regarded him as a story teller, who had the gift of language and music to convey his tales.
9. Veles / Volos, 10th Century CE: Veles is a Slavic god of the forest. He is often depicted as a hairy being with the horns of a bull and a great, woolly beard. Many regard him as the lord of beasts (both domesticated and wild), and his main function was to protect the cattle of Slavic tribes. He is also the patron of the harvest, wealth, music, magic and trickery. Veles is associated with the motif of the serpent, which is a symbol renewal, as evidenced by the shedding of its skin. This link to life and death links him with the underworld, where he is not just regarded as shepherd to cattle, but also as a guide of human souls too.
10. Satan / The Devil, 1200 CE: Satan’s most notorious deeds are; refusing to worship God, tempting Adam and Eve with the forbidden fruit, reproducing with humans to create a race of giants, and marshalling an army of demons to try and overthrow heaven. Ultimately his rebellion failed, and he was cast into a bottomless pit for punishment. Images of Satan as a horned devil do not appear until the 12th century where medieval artists began to depict him with more bestial features. This may be due to the Christian nation studying other heretical religions such as Greek, Norse and Celtic paganism. All these cultures had an ‘amorous’ deity as it’s godhead (e.g. Cernunnos, Shiva and Freyr) who practiced a hedonistic lifestyle, unbefitting to Christian values. As such, the horned god may have been adapted into the images of Satan based on his own indiscretions of fornicating with humans, and challenging the legitimacy of the ‘one and only god’.
5. Pan/Faunus, 500 BCE: Pan is the Greek deity of pastures and herds. He is half man and half goat, with hairy legs, a horned scalp and a goatee beard. His cult is centred around Arcadia where he lived the woodlands, hills and mountains. He could often be found dancing through the forests of Greece, playing his panpipes which he is credited with inventing. He is the lusty leader of the satyrs (woodland deities), and continually chases the nymphs of Greece for sexual union. During many Greek rituals, his essence is invoked for fertility of the flocks and for an abundant hunt.
6. Cernunnos, 100 BCE : Cernunnos can be found throughout the Celtic lands, and was regarded as the guardian of the Otherworld. In his early days, he was worshipped as a fertility god, but as time progressed he also became associated with wealth and prosperity. He was such an important deity to the Celts, that his image and reputation became a major target for the early Christian church. It is his image that is believed to have been adopted for their mythos of the Devil or the ‘false god’.
7. Freyr, 6th Century CE: Freyr is the Norse god of fertility who belongs to the Vanir tribe. He is associated with kingship and virility, and bestows prosperity upon his followers. Those who worshipped him were rewarded with fertility, health, and abundance. Although Freyr was never depicted with horns upon his head, he did use a stag’s antler as a weapon to slay the giant Beli, and in his final battle against the fire giant Surt. His virility was often symbolized by wooden idols which depicted him with an enormous, erect phallus. These effigies were often thrown into bogs, lakes, and rivers as water was regarded as a doorway to the other world.
8. Kokopelli is a fertility deity, venerated by some Native American cultures in the S.W. United States. He is depicted as a humpbacked flute player (often with feathers or horn like protrusions on his head). He is the patron of childbirth, commerce, agriculture and music. Kokopelli's flute-playing is said to chase away the coldness of winter, and to bring about the warmth of summer. He tends to wild game animals throughout the year, and is often depicted with animal companions such as rams and deer. He is also commonly found sun-bathing with snakes. He travelled far and wide across the wilderness, and was regarded as a master trader of goods and information. Many regarded him as a story teller, who had the gift of language and music to convey his tales.
9. Veles / Volos, 10th Century CE: Veles is a Slavic god of the forest. He is often depicted as a hairy being with the horns of a bull and a great, woolly beard. Many regard him as the lord of beasts (both domesticated and wild), and his main function was to protect the cattle of Slavic tribes. He is also the patron of the harvest, wealth, music, magic and trickery. Veles is associated with the motif of the serpent, which is a symbol renewal, as evidenced by the shedding of its skin. This link to life and death links him with the underworld, where he is not just regarded as shepherd to cattle, but also as a guide of human souls too.
10. Satan / The Devil, 1200 CE: Satan’s most notorious deeds are; refusing to worship God, tempting Adam and Eve with the forbidden fruit, reproducing with humans to create a race of giants, and marshalling an army of demons to try and overthrow heaven. Ultimately his rebellion failed, and he was cast into a bottomless pit for punishment. Images of Satan as a horned devil do not appear until the 12th century where medieval artists began to depict him with more bestial features. This may be due to the Christian nation studying other heretical religions such as Greek, Norse and Celtic paganism. All these cultures had an ‘amorous’ deity as it’s godhead (e.g. Cernunnos, Shiva and Freyr) who practiced a hedonistic lifestyle, unbefitting to Christian values. As such, the horned god may have been adapted into the images of Satan based on his own indiscretions of fornicating with humans, and challenging the legitimacy of the ‘one and only god’.
11. Herne the Hunter, 1597 CE: Herne the Hunter is often depicted as an antlered giant, and is rumoured to live in the forests of Windsor Great Park. His longevity is owed to the cult of Cernunnos, who was also a provider of wealth and prosperity to the tribe (similar to the legend of Robin Hood). Some suggest that Herne was the father to Robin of Loxley; which is probably more an association since Herne is a much older figure in legend and myth.
12. The Old One, 19th Century CE: In traditional Wicca, the Horned God is often referred to as 'The Old One'. He is viewed as the masculine side of divinity, being both equal and opposite to the Goddess. For Wiccans, the Horned God is the personification of living energy in animals and humans. He is associated with the wilderness, virility and the hunt. He is revered for guiding the souls of the dead to the underworld. Some believe that The Horned God is an Under-god, a mediator between an unknowable supreme deity and the people. Wiccans believe that the Horned God, as Lord of Death, is their 'comforter and consoler' after death and before reincarnation; and that he rules the Underworld or Summerland where the souls of the dead reside as they await rebirth.
RECONSTRUCTING THE HORNED GOD
He resides over sacred body of water (which links to other world's)
He is the embodiment of summer, health, fertility and abundance
He is a trickster god, gifted with wit, intelligence, and divine magic
He is often depicted with a large phallus, a symbol of his virility
He plays a flute, and can be heard playing it in the wilderness
He creates humans from clay or dust, mixed with god’s blood
He is often pictured sitting, adopting a contemplative persona
Other times he is depicted dancing and frolicking to his music
He is often depicted with a snake, which represents renewal
He wears a horned crown, typically from a ram, bull or stag
He represents the cycle of nature; birth, life and death
He wears beast skins and lives in the wilderness
He is a shepard to all beasts, including humans"
................................................................................
RESOURCES
Masks of Misrule, The Horned God, by Nigel Jackson
The History and Origins of Satan, by Lucas Sweeney
The Life of Adam and Eve
The Book of Enoch
12. The Old One, 19th Century CE: In traditional Wicca, the Horned God is often referred to as 'The Old One'. He is viewed as the masculine side of divinity, being both equal and opposite to the Goddess. For Wiccans, the Horned God is the personification of living energy in animals and humans. He is associated with the wilderness, virility and the hunt. He is revered for guiding the souls of the dead to the underworld. Some believe that The Horned God is an Under-god, a mediator between an unknowable supreme deity and the people. Wiccans believe that the Horned God, as Lord of Death, is their 'comforter and consoler' after death and before reincarnation; and that he rules the Underworld or Summerland where the souls of the dead reside as they await rebirth.
RECONSTRUCTING THE HORNED GOD
He resides over sacred body of water (which links to other world's)
He is the embodiment of summer, health, fertility and abundance
He is a trickster god, gifted with wit, intelligence, and divine magic
He is often depicted with a large phallus, a symbol of his virility
He plays a flute, and can be heard playing it in the wilderness
He creates humans from clay or dust, mixed with god’s blood
He is often pictured sitting, adopting a contemplative persona
Other times he is depicted dancing and frolicking to his music
He is often depicted with a snake, which represents renewal
He wears a horned crown, typically from a ram, bull or stag
He represents the cycle of nature; birth, life and death
He wears beast skins and lives in the wilderness
He is a shepard to all beasts, including humans"
................................................................................
RESOURCES
Masks of Misrule, The Horned God, by Nigel Jackson
The History and Origins of Satan, by Lucas Sweeney
The Life of Adam and Eve
The Book of Enoch
Weird how "satan" just pops up later to be associated with Lucifer. Anyway, we are all free to choose our Path, and i am not attempting to force my Path onto anyone. My objective is to show Folks the way that i see what is behind the Veil of the Occult that has been weaved to keep mankind from evolving.
Thank You for reading my blog :)
http://orig09.deviantart.net/7a97/f/2007/061/0/f/blessed_be_dragon_by_rawhide84.jpg
No comments:
Post a Comment