Article

Why “Witchcraft”?

by Christopher Penczak, Temple Founder and Sagittarius Lead Minister

Why would someone in this modern day and age, someone of sound mind and body, go around calling themselves a “Witch”? Why would you use that word? Witches are evil, old women out to steal children, eat babies, and cause all manner of illness and strife, right? That is certainly the image many people have of the Witch: the green skinned, hooked-nose, hagged-face woman with a pointed hat riding around on a broom, brought to us most clearly by modern Halloween decorations. Those were exactly my thoughts fifteen years ago, when my first teacher used the “W” word with me. Little did I know then that I would later so strongly identify with the word Witch, and find it so empowering for me and the people in my community, that I would use it to describe myself, too. In fact I found it so important to my spiritual practice, I co-founded an organization called the Temple of Witchcraft.

Since founding our tradition, I’ve realized how difficult it can be to operate in the mainstream world with the word “Witchcraft” in your name. It can be tough when listing religious services in newspapers, working with hospitals and prisons, yet—as a legal church—that is a part of our ministry and outreach. I’ve had several people, people whom I love, admire, and respect working on the fringes of traditional healing—yoga teachers, Reiki masters, and homeopaths—and even they ask: “Why not use another word? Why not call it something else? You’d get more people interested in all the good work you do if you just changed that one word. Have you thought about that?”

We did. Truly. For a short time, we were going to call ourselves the “Temple of Wisdom,” as that name also embodied our principles. We look at Witchcraft as a wisdom tradition. Yet, if we, in this modern and “enlightened” age, don’t take a stand and call ourselves what we really are, who will? It’s much like asking a Christian organization, if Christianity were not so mainstream, to remove “Christ” from their name and teachings and just talk about “love.” While love is at the heart of Christian teachings, for a good Christian, such wisdom comes to us through the figure of Christ. For a Christian to deny him would be akin to following in the footsteps of the apostle who denied Christ on the night he was betrayed. Christians grew as a tradition by living their faith with courage. Can we do any less?

I am a Witch. What I learned from my teachers is Witchcraft. They referred to themselves as Witches, and their teachers before them also called themselves Witches. While we imagine long unbroken lineages of Witch traditions and families stretching through the centuries, popular scholarship now discourages that idea, but the name and identity had to come from somewhere. As modern Witchcraft was just coming out of the shadows, a new vocabulary was growing, and we used it to help introduce ourselves to our family, friends, and the world in a gentler manner.

If someone asked us what we practiced religiously, we would start with the words “Earth Religion.” If they asked questions or expressed an openness, we might use the word “Pagan.” Pagan is now a catch-all term for Earth traditions based upon mostly European cultures. It’s a Latin word used to refer to the people in the rural areas who had not quite converted to Christianity, so they were still pagan. Some Pagans adopt the term in the Christian sense, meaning non-Judeo-Christian-Islamic, or non-monotheistic, and adopt all other cultures into their paganism, including Asian, African and South American cultures.

If the word Pagan didn’t cause any stir, we might then use the word “Wicca.” Wicca is the modern, first legally legally-recognized term for our practices in the United States. For a long time, it was synonymous in our communities with the religion of Witchcraft, as there was not much variety. But Wicca was a less scary word for people outside of our communities, when compared to Witchcraft. Today, Wicca refers to two complimentary, but different streams of teachings. The first is British Traditional Wicca, specifically the traditions known as Gardnerian and Alexandrian Wicca, and their immediate offshoots. Interestingly enough, the founders of those traditions usually spelled it Wica, but it was fairly synonymous with Witchcraft. To be in those traditions, you must be trained and initiated by a qualified teacher or coven who has the authority to initiate. Mostly due to the independent streak of America, Solitary Wicca or Eclectic Wicca grew out of those teachings, but one had no formal training, and anyone could self self-declare or self self-initiate without the blessings of a group or teacher. Information was shared in books, online and through simple, non-hierarchical circles.

If the person we were speaking to was not frightened by the word Wicca, then we said we were a Witch, and what we practiced was Witchcraft. We had laid sufficient groundwork to have a dialogue. But today, we are much more out-of-the-shadows, with wider legal recognition, federally-recognized religious organizations, and even guidelines for military chaplains ministering to Wiccan and Pagan enlisted personnel. While such previous conversations were helpful, we must move forward to be recognized in our communities without apology. We are always happy to speak, to educate, and to work with people, but no other religion has to—or should—apologize for its name. We realize our traditions, theology, and history are different from the vast majority of mainstream traditions currently recognized and that we run the risk of conforming too much to other organizations in order to be better recognized by the public, losing what makes Witchcraft so valuable and special for us in the first place. We don’t worship in vast congregations or have the same ecclesiastical hierarchies. We don’t see the world in the same way. We must preserve, develop, and share our particular viewpoint, and we can’t do that if we are not true to ourselves.

The word Witchcraft is important to me. While we might be not be practicing what our spiritual ancestors did centuries ago, the same can be said of many other religions that have grown and developed. But the identity of the Witch throughout many times and cultures is a part of our cultural inheritance. We are reverent of the Earth and our ancestors, and without a solid foundation in who, what, and where we have been, we cannot hope to forge a future. To divorce ourselves from our past is to lose valuable lessons in areas of religion, society, and power. Without our roots, we’d wither. We’ve managed to survive and regenerate due to the strong roots we have.

To understand the word helps us untangle misconceptions from the past and create a new future within the evolving global society, rather than completely outside it. There will always be something “fringe” or “other” to our tradition, for it is a Mystery Religion that is not for everyone. We do not profess to have the answer for everyone. We simply hold upon open one of many gates into deeper wisdom.

Wicca is actually an old term for a male Witch and wicce for female, and forms the root of our word Witchcraft. While in our mythic view many have translated Wicca as related to the words for wise, the most current etymological understanding is that is relates to terms meaning “to bend or shape” referring to our magick and healing. A wiccan simply means “to practice witchcraft” in Old English. As we trace the etymology back, we enter into trickier waters, as words with such a strong cultural bias as Witchcraft can be distorted. This is the etymology I learned, though admittedly it was from a Witch, so her interest was in furthering a positive image of the Old Religion, as she called it. But such a lineage does help those on the outside to understand how Witches see themselves, even if scholarship proves to be more mythic than factual. The Middle High High German wicken means “to bewitch or divine the future.” It is traced to the Old German wih, meaning “holy.” The Old Normal Norman word ve is most likely related, and it means “temple.” That is one of the reasons why we consider ourselves a temple tradition, and use the name Temple of Witchcraft, even though our temples are just as likely to be roofed by the sky and stars as they are to be physical buildings.

So with that perspective, you can see why restoring the understanding of our tradition and practice as “holy” is so important to me. That is why I use the word Witch to describe myself, and connect to my long line of spiritual ancestors. And that is why I use the name Witchcraft proudly to describe my path. Those who are drawn to our path resonate with the word. It is a beacon that gathers us. When I’ve taught the same material under the banner of Earth Spirituality, it drew fewer and less magickally-inclined individuals. If everyone who identifies with the word were to use it, and be able to speak about it both personally and historically, we’d do well in evolving our culture’s understanding of our path. That is a big part of our mission in the Temple of Witchcraft.

Celebrating the Birthdays of the Gods

by Emily K. Jones

As we approach the end of summer and the advent of the harvest season, I look forward to experiencing one of my favorite and most magickal seasonal celebrations: the birthdays of Osiris, Horus, Set, Isis and Nephthys.  Although I look forward to and honor each of the eight Sabbats on the Wheel of the Year, it is this “extra” Sabbat, the birthday party for my Gods, that has become the most magickal and powerful highlight of my ritual year.

In order to bring their calendar of 12 months consisting of 30 days each into alignment with the length of the solar year, the ancient Egyptians created the epagomenal days, a short month of five days that were the birthdays of the aforementioned Gods and Goddesses.  Every year, I celebrate these birthdays, which on our modern calendar coincide with July 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18.  Since I have started doing this, these five days have come to be my favorite seasonal celebration and I consider this time of year to be at the heart of my spiritual practice.

If you are already working with the Egyptian pantheon or wish to start working with them, I encourage you to take advantage of the opportunity provided by the epagomenal days to bring the magick of these ancient deities into your life.  I suggest that you begin by finding a version of the story of their births that appeals to you.  My favorite version of the births of these Gods and Goddesses is the one written by Normandi Ellis.  This version can be found in both the book Feasts of Light by Normandi Ellis and the book The Passion of Isis and Osiris:  A Gateway to Transcendent Love by Jean Houston.  On July 13, start by reading the entire story and then setting up an altar to honor the deities.  If you have statues of Osiris, Horus, Set, Isis and Nephthys, place them on the altar.  If you do not have statues, you can use pictures, crystals or candles to represent the deities.  My suggested candle or gemstone colors are green for Osiris, yellow or gold for Horus, red for Set, blue for Isis and black for Nephthys.  Once I have the representations of the deities on the altar, I like to cover them with a red scarf to symbolize their presence in the belly of their mother, the Goddess Nut.

On July 14, read the story as far as the birth of Osiris.  You can cast circle and hold a formal ritual each night as you celebrate the birthdays, or if you prefer, you can keep it more informal.  I choose to go the formal ritual route.  I like to read the story out loud.  Remove the scarf from the object on your altar that you have chosen to represent Osiris.  If you have a candle for him, light that candle and welcome him.  Light some incense as an offering to him.  I like to use cedar or Egyptian musk incense, but use whatever scent feels right to you.  You can write your own invocation for him, use a passage from the Book of the Dead or simply let the story invoke him.  I like to have a birthday card for him.  I spend some time focusing on the candle flame and meditating about where and how I work with the energy of Osiris in my life.  Osiris is the benevolent, civilizing ruler, the sacrificed vegetation God and the lord of the dead.  If I have any requests or messages I wish to send to Osiris, I write them down and place the paper with the birthday card.  Once my meditation time is complete, I burn the card and paper in my cauldron with the intent of my birthday message reaching Osiris.  You may also want to ask Osiris if he has any messages for you and then spend some time listening for an answer.  When I am done spending time with Osiris, I extinguish the candle, leaving the Osiris portion of the altar uncovered.

On the following day, July 15, read the part of the birthday story that details the birth of Horus.  Uncover the representation of Horus on your altar, then light a candle and burn some incense for him.  For Horus, I like to use frankincense, sandalwood or lotus incense.  Use whatever form of invocation you prefer to call Horus and welcome him.  Meditate on Horus and his energy.  Horus is the far seeing hawk of gold, a solar God of protection who sees things from his higher perspective as he soars above the earth.  As you did with Osiris, spend some time communing with Horus and then deliver your birthday message to him in whatever manner seems appropriate to you.  After you deliver your message, listen for whatever messages he might have for you.

The birthday celebration on the third night, July 16, is dedicated to Set.  Proceed as you did on the first two nights, casting circle and calling quarters if you wish, then reading the portion of the story concerned with the birth of Set and uncovering his image.  Dragon’s blood is the incense I prefer for offering to Set.  Some people may find it difficult to work with Set, particularly if they do much work with Osiris, Isis or Horus.  Set is the rebel God, the murderer of Osiris who usurps his throne.  If you find it hard to relate to Set, spend some time really thinking about where the energy of the rebel has been a factor in your life.  You might also want to think about what legitimate reasons Set might have had for choosing to rebel.  If, after your meditation, you determine that Set is not a God you are comfortable working with, simply send him a happy birthday wish and let him know that you do not wish to work with him at this time.

The celebration on the fourth day centers on the birth of Isis.  Another name for this celebration is The Night of the Cradle.  For me, July 17 is one of the most joyous and sacred days of the year because it is the birthday of my patron Goddess Isis.  Begin your celebration of this birthday in the same manner you have been using for the previous three birthdays.  Kyphi is the scent that I like to use for Isis, but any incense you associate with the moon, magick and the divine feminine should do.  You can find many lovely invocations to Isis or you could write your own invocation if you are inspired.  Spend as long as you like meditating with Isis.  In my work with her, I have found her to be extremely accessible and compassionate with a lot to say.  She is a Goddess of magick and mystery, a great magician who creates through the power of utterance and a devoted wife and mother.   In addition to the birthday card and message, I like to offer an additional gift to her, such as flowers.

July 18 marks the final day of birthday festivities.  Nephthys is the Goddess born on this day.  As you approach your altar on July 18, the representation of Nephthys is the only one that should still be covered.  Read the story of her birth, then uncover her representation and light her candle and incense.  Jasmine is the scent that I prefer to use for Nephthys.  Nephthys is a Goddess of the shadows, a dark reflection of her bright sister Isis.  Although she is young in age, many people find working with Nephthys very similar to working with the energy of the Crone.  She can be very helpful for engaging in shadow work.  If you spend some time meditating and communing with Nephthys, she will let you know where and how you might benefit from working with her.  After you have delivered your birthday card to Nephthys, you might want to spend some time contemplating all five of these deities.

You can either take down your altar at the close of the epagomenal days, or leave it up for awhile if you intend to continue working with these Gods and Goddesses.  You may find, as I did, that taking time to honor and celebrate the birthdays of Osiris, Horus, Set, Isis and Nephthys helps you build a rich and deep connection to these deities that enriches you and your magickal practice throughout the entire year.

Tarot Invocation

by Emily K. Jones

Come, Fool who inspires us to take the leap of faith,

Come, Magician of Mysteries, bold and bright,

Come, High Priestess of Moon and Magick, gifted with sight,

Come Empress, Abundant Mother, thou radiant queen

Come Emperor, Horned Father, from your forest green,

Come Hierophant with your wise teaching voice,

Come Lovers who call us to make a choice,

Come Chariot that we may chart our own course,

Come Strength which teaches us to access our source,

Come Hermit who shows us how to find the light within,

Come Wheel of Fortune with your ever cycling tales,

Come Justice with your perfectly balanced scales,

Come Hanged Man to show us a different point of view,

Come Death with your transformation that creates anew,

Come Temperance with all the alchemical magic you blend,

Come Devil who encourages us to embrace our shadow as friend,

Come Tower, tearing false foundations away,

Come Star who appears like hope to guide the way,

Come Moon, mysterious beauty who graces the night,

Come Sun who radiates warmth and light,

Come Judgment with your final resounding call,

Come World that we might celebrate our connection to all,

Come suit of Swords, with your gifts of clear insight and the ability to know,

Come suit of Wands, with the fiery passion, courage and energized will you bestow,

Come suit of Cups, to open our hearts and intuitions to your ever abundant flow,

Come suit of Pentacles, with the power to make our dreams manifest and grow,

Come Arcanas, Major and Minor to gift our decks and tools with your energy and power

We ask that you bless, charge and consecrate these items in this magical hour.

From the Editor – Lammas 2010

Welcome to this first issue of The Temple Bell, the official newsletter for The Temple of Witchcraft!  We are very excited to see this newsletter come to fruition, and what better time of year than Lammas, the celebration of the first fruits of harvest!

A blustery hot wind moves through the full and rustling trees in such a way as to make the same sound as the ocean as it breathes back and forth, and the tall stems of queen anne’s lace, thistles and bee balm are doing their heat-wave dance in the empty lots that pass for meadows in the city where I live.  And let me not neglect to mention: the chicory is in bloom – those small blue stars on jagged stalks, harbingers of the Midsummer to Lammas burn and blaze.  Arguably my favorite flowers of the season.

In addition to these wild friends, our porch garden has also erupted with summer’s natural enthusiasm.  The tomato plant is almost as tall as we are, having rocketed its way up from a seedling in what seems like only a little minute, and we harvested an armload of skullcap this weekend to dry for tea.  My intrepid spouse has enterprising visions of growing some potatoes in a five-gallon bucket, and so far it seems to be on task.  The peppers are almost blooming, and the anise hyssop is as big as a house. I’ve been hovering worriedly over the rosebushes, afraid that those first gorgeous blooms were also our last, but I’ve been assured that there will be more before summer’s end (and there’s even a rose hip or two on the way).

Summer is prime woolgathering weather, a time for taking lots of time for sitting on the porch at the cusp of thunderstorms, watching the white and pale periwinkle colored moths wing upwards, where a trick of the light and a moving tree branch makes it seem that they have magically turned into birds flying high above the city buildings.  But it’s not all thunderstorms and iced tea!

Like those green friends in the garden, the Temple Bell writers been hard at work as well, and we have the fruits to show for it.

This first Lammas issue contains a rich variety of articles, interviews, and creative meditations to give you a sense of what the Temple is all about.  In the Founder’s Corner, Christopher Penczak discusses the foundations of the Temple and the theological and practical history that has gone into forming the Temple’s basic architecture. Christopher also discusses the history and use of the Lorica prayers in his article “The Temple Lorica.” For more about the ministries offered by the Temple, check out the Pillars of the Temple section, where you can find excerpts from each of the Temples 12 ministries’ mission statements.  Interviewer Tina Whittle talks with Adam Sartwell of the Temple podcast Voices of the Temple in this first column in the interview series, Reverberations. Emily K. Jones talks about the importance of the epagomenal days to those worshiping the Egyptian gods, and Liz Casper interviews author Raven Grimassi regarding his latest book The Caudron of Memory.  In addition to these great articles, we hope you will also enjoy Raye Snover’s review of  Avalon Within by Jhenah Telyndru, as well as Summer Song from Stevie Grant, a Lammas meditation by Jenna Bernardi, and a Tarot invocation from Emily K. Jones.  An excellent first harvest!  Many reasons to celebrate this first offering from the newsletter team!

Blessings of the season!

Ruby Sara
Editor-in-Chief
Lammas, 2010

Stones in the Foundation

by Christopher Penczak

Ask any contractor, and they’ll tell you that before you start building, you need a plan. You need a blueprint, a pattern for the structure you plan to build. You need a budget and suppliers for all your materials, and you need a great crew. If you’re lacking anything, the final results will not turn out the way you want. The same is true for any magickal endeavor. You need a clear intention about what you are crafting. You need the materials to make it happen. And when working in community, you need a good coven, circle or lodge to support the process and make it happen.

The Temple of Witchcraft is being created with the same care and attention as both a complex construction project and a magickal working to give birth to something new. Like ancient sacred sites and temples as well as modern churches, the geometry and structure of the Temple’s inner workings were planned with great attention to detail. Each has a purpose to uphold in the Temple, even though all structural pieces might not be obvious to the casual observer. I’d like to take this issue’s Founder’s Corner, our first message from the Founders of the Temple, to explain the history, structure and future plans of the Temple.

The Temple of Witchcraft’s seeds began in 1998 in a very casual way. Though I’d like to tell you I had a grand design from the very beginning, when I look at the pattern that has formed, it becomes quite obvious that the clear plan and purpose came from the inner planes. After receiving my initial training in the Cabot Tradition of Witchcraft while in college, I began a career in the Boston music industry. I had shared my experiences in the Craft with a few college friends who had become interested after seeing a positive change in my own life and outlook. We began an informal study group near the Full Moon – simple rituals, past life regression, energy work, and spirit guide meditations. I continued my own education beyond Witchcraft, specifically expanding my healing techniques through shamanism, herbalism and Reiki, as well as exploring more occult cosmology and theology through Qabalah and Theosophy. I began to receive meditations from the Goddess, who instructed me to “teach more.” I continually said no, and found myself at a spiritual impasse in my own personal development. That was the only message I could get. As soon as I agreed, I lost my music industry job three days later and was unemployed. I couldn’t find a job anywhere and contemplated moving to Los Angeles or New York City. But a simple flyer offering meditation classes pointed me in a new direction, and suddenly my informal Moon group asked me for a formal class in Witchcraft. My own mentors in the Craft weren’t teaching, so reluctantly I created my Inner Temple of Witchcraft course based upon my own training. As the classes progressed, the group wanted more and more information, and I found myself going beyond my own Witchcraft training, synthesizing my other occult training through the lens of Witchcraft into a five level system that became known as the Temple of Witchcraft.

Many of those in the initial few classes became the Coven of a New Dawn, and we offered public sabbats in our local community. After teaching the system for a few years, and getting requests from potential students further and further away, I wrote the Temple of Witchcraft series of books and CDs for those who couldn’t attend in person, and as an author I then had the opportunity to travel and teach the system through weekend intensives. Soon little pockets of people working with the system – alone, with me, or in small study groups – began to form. No matter the path, people seek community and identity, and as many lineage based traditions in British Traditional Wicca have specific names associated with their mainstream founders, such as the Gardnerians and Alexandrians, students in the Temple system began to seek a name for their tradition. After a few serious, and thankfully not-so-serious, attempts from students to name themselves Penczakians or Christopherians, those in the core community started to simply refer to it as the Temple Tradition of Witchcraft, and it’s practitioners as Temple Witches. I prefer such an inclusive identity. While named traditions have served their communities well, I think the time of naming new traditions after their founders is over, and we should be looking for identities that embrace the whole community, rather than elevate an individual.

One of the key teachings in the Temple is direct experience. Your authority as a Witch comes directly from your experiences with the gods, spirits and ancestors. While teachers can facilitate this process, and guide you on the journey, you must make contact. This doesn’t denigrate lineage-based traditions, as we do feel that these is a viable methods of initiation, but as we enter a new Aquarian Age, where individuality and lateral relationships are emphasized over hierarchical relationships, we are also seeking new formulas of initiation. In the Temple, the system, community and mentors hold a space where each individual must reach into the heart of the mystery and forge a direct connection to the divine powers of initiation. We use initiation ceremonies with power passed as a connection to community and a boost for such experiences, but if you don’t forge your own connection, any degrees conferred have little true meaning. This allows a system where people can experience the same formula alone, and receive the same inner world initiation even when they cannot attend community in person. Initiates are held by the community of spirits and gods, as well as the community of our Mighty Dead, those priestesses and priests of our past who guide us, much like Saints or Boddisattvas in other traditions. It is really through them that any current is passed.

Since our tradition is not based on the coven method of a High Priestess or High Priest hiving off and teaching a small knit group over a long period of time through elevation in traditional degrees, but rather a system of five mysteries moving through a more circular initiatory experience of the elements, many people who study it, and even attain the final fifth degree, don’t always go on to teach others. Not everyone is called to coven leadership, but there are many that would continue their education and/or serve in ministry; what they lack are models for ministries outside traditional coven leadership. We decided to provide a structure of community leadership that went beyond the coven structure. There are are therefore three main divisions to the Temple – the Mystery School, the Seminary and the Ministerial Church. The Mystery School involves the first four degrees, based on the elements of Fire, Earth, Water and Air, called the oracular, fertility, ecstatic and gnostic mysteries. Basic educational classes also fall under the Mystery School. The Seminary includes the fifth degree, based on Spirit and the mysteries of resurrection and service, and also includes any support classes in ministerial training and counseling. The Ministerial Church is where the ministers and volunteers from all levels serve the community and have the opportunity to put their education into practice.

Based upon the teachings already found in the five levels of the Temple system, we modeled our Ministerial Church after the twelve zodiac archetypes, explored via the journey of the God through the twelve stations of the Sun in fifth degree training. Each of the twelve ministries focuses on outer public work aimed at society as a whole, intermediary work for Pagan communities specifically, and inner magickal work performed by Temple members only. Our areas of ministry cover a wide range, and include Pagan military outreach, self-defense training, environmental education and activism, queer mysteries, women’s mysteries, healing, public ritual, death and dying support, education, artisan support, Pagan prison outreach and rites of passage. This range of ministry provides numerous ways to be involved in the community and gain leadership experience, and offers opportunities for amazing witches to engage in ministries that have nothing to do with traditional coven oriented or teacher/student oriented training.

Our leadership structure has, at its core, three founders who’s job it is to hold the integrity of the Temple’s vision, embodying the forces of Power, Love and Wisdom. The Temple is then led by the Board of Directors based upon the five elements. The Board is supported by an Advisory Council of Lead Ministers, each one heading one of the twelve zodiac ministries. Each Lead Minister is aided by one to three deputy ministers and volunteers for that pillar in the Temple.

As the spiritual body of the Temple has now been formed, our goals turn to the physical body of the Temple: to building our community through events, outreach and education, and to fulfilling our goal of a physical educational center and retreat space where we can gather to deepen our connection to the land. We envision this first of several Temple sites in Southern New Hampshire, where we celebrate, educate and commune. To help fulfill these goals, we are pursuing a wide variety of events and opportunities. Our Mystery School and Seminary are both ongoing and offer both in person and online instruction. We continue to hold Sabbats, Esbats and Women’s Circles in the New Hampshire area regularly. We also plan on having two larger events per year in the coming years – a public convention-style gathering and a smaller nature-based festival – for those actively involved in the Temple. And we plan on working with other Pagan educators and leaders to provide workshops and events beyond the Temple Tradition, to encourage our exposure to a wide variety of voices and views. The first of which will be Raven Grimassi and Stephanie Taylor Grimassi, who will be providing workshops in December. And we have specific events beyond the traditional Sabbats, including a Feast of Hecate every August 13.

While our goals are ambitious, we realize that even though this expression of Witchcraft has been around for more than ten years, we are really still laying the foundation stones of a larger body to outlast us all. We aim to go slowly and steadily, building momentum as we go. I hope this has given seekers, members and the curious a better idea of our Temple, and those who feel called can join us in the Temple of Witchcraft community!

Adam Sartwell: Voice of the Temple

by Tina Whittle

Every month, the Voices of the Temple podcast — the official podcast of the Temple of Witchcraft — provides news, information, interviews, and insights into the greater Temple community.  Hosted by Virgo Minister and Temple Founder Adam Sartwell, Voices of the Temple connects listeners across geographic boundaries, creating a space for fellowship, learning and community. Voices of the Temple is entertaining and educational, but most of all, it’s magickal, creating a sacred space that both literally and figuratively transcends time and place. Listeners can download the program and tune in at their convenience, joining Adam through the entire show, from invocation to devocation, whenever and wherever.

One of the podcast’s regular features is an interview with a Temple lead minister. Conducted by Adam, these interviews explore not only the duties of each ministry as it relates to the larger mission of the Temple, but also provide a portrait of each minister’s personality and spiritual philosophy. Part theological discussion and part personal history, these conversations reveal the heart of the Temple by illuminating how each member serves in his or her own unique capacity. Each voice provides a thread in the tapestry—it’s Adam’s job over the next year to ask the questions that will weave those separate threads into a fully integrated whole.

In this conversation, we explore Adam’s role in Voices of the Temple, how it functions within the Temple, and how it is furthering his own growth as a witch.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThe Temple Bell: Can you tell us a little about yourself?

Adam Sartwell: Well, let’s see. I am one of the founding members of The Temple of Witchcraft, the others being my partners Christopher Penczak and Steve Kenson. I run the Virgo ministry. I grew up in small town Vermont. I have been a witch since I was fifteen years old, and now at thirty-one, I have been practicing for more than half my life.

TB: What does your spiritual practice bring to your role as an interviewer?

AS: I think that it helps that I know about what it means to be a witch, the ups and downs of it. I also think it helps me to ask inspired questions which bring forth a glimpse of the true self of each guest and enlighten listeners in their own practice.

TB: Have you learned anything new about yourself or your spiritual practice during these interviews?

AS: I have learned to have more confidence speaking. It has enlightened me on how my own path has become less about my own journey and more about the journey of the community. It is also a great reminder of the personal practice that helps me BE the magic I want to create. I was solitary for a long time, so community work is a big change.

TB: What role do you see Voices of the Temple playing in this journey, especially as it relates to the mission of the Temple?

AS: One listener came up to me in one of our events. She told me that she loved the podcast because it kept her connected to what was going on with the Temple even though she lives in New York. As the Temple grows and gets its federal non-profit status, our Temple will spread out, and the podcast will help us all keep in touch. It also gives us a chance to meet our ministry leaders, and hopefully in my second year, some craft elders and teachers.

TB: How did the idea for a podcast originate?

AS: Actually, it was something I thought of while listening to Elemental Castings, T. Thorne Coyle’s podcast. I then brought it up to the other founders, and we thought it would be a good idea for the Temple. I then started listening to other Pagan podcasts and chose the elements I liked and added some of my own.

TB: What did you add that makes it yours?

AS: Well, first I noticed how serious people were about Pagan podcasts. I think we forget the Goddess likes to laugh with us.

TB: That’s an excellent point! These podcasts are very light-hearted yet nonetheless profound. Do you find your guests entering into this mindset with you?

AS: Yes. More then one of my guests has said how at ease they were in the interview when they had been nervous before.

TB: Do you have any special techniques, magickal or otherwise, for creating this atmosphere?

AS: We say a prayer before we even turn on the microphone. I also like to clear the space. Though not a magickal technique, in the pre-interview talk, the guest and I go over what is going to happen, what the questions will be, and what the guest is comfortable sharing. So we can both relax and have fun.

TB: And having fun is important, absolutely. I imagine that having that sense of security and safety certainly creates openness. Do you do anything special to prepare yourself?

AS: I like to ground and center, and connect to my Higher Self and ask it to guide my thoughts, words, and deeds to make the podcast the best it can be.

TB: Do you do any research beforehand?

AS: Yes, though I know most of the people I have interviewed so far. Sometimes I look into things that each ministry is doing so I can talk about that with them on the air. I am sure that I will have to do more of that in the second year of the show.

TB: You mentioned before that you wanted to expand into the larger circle of teachers and leaders within the Temple?

AS: Yes. In the second year, I want to expand the podcast to have teachers and elders from the Craft and Pagan community as a whole.

TB: So these teachers and elders would be from other traditions, not just the Temple?

AS: Yes. I think it is important for people to get introduced to the Head Ministers of the Temple, and after that is done, I want to move out into interviewing teachers from other traditions. One of the Temple’s main ideas is that we, as Pagans and Witches, are part of a timeless tradition. Our Mighty Dead, Ascended Masters, Hidden Company — or any other way you want to say it — come from the root traditions of Witchcraft today. So interviewing other traditions enriches our own.

TB: So you’ll be on the other side of the interview table as the Virgo minister soon, right?

AS: Yes, this September. I’m not sure if I should get someone to interview me or if I should interview myself using a funny voice. I do a great Kermit the Frog.

TB: Now THAT would be an interview no one would want to miss!

Catch up with Adam and Voices of the Temple via the Temple of Witchcraft site at www.templeofwitchcraft.org or on iTunes.

Interviewer Tina Whittle is mystery novelist/freelance writer who lives and works in Southeast Georgia. She is a member of the Earth-based Spirituality Group at her local Unitarian-Universalist church, which she attends with her husband and daughter.

Virgo Lead Minister and Temple Founder Adam Sartwell credits his psychic gifts with saving his life as a teen due to a vision of his own demise. A graduate of Johnson State College in Vermont with a degree in Psychology, Adam works with developmentally challenged kids in Massachusetts and lives with his partners in New Hampshire.

The Temple Lorica

by Christopher Penczak

A Lorica Prayer roughly translates to a “breastplate” or “body armor” prayer, an incantation meant to spiritually protect the speaker, like armor would physically protect you from harm. The most famous Lorica is the Prayer of St. Patrick. Though most certainly Celtic, it’s far too Christian for many Witches to appreciate it. But while this most famous example is Christian, Lorica charms can be found in Paganism and western magick. The angelic prayer of the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram can be considered a Lorica.

Before me Raphael
Behind me Gabriel
On my right hand Michael
On my left hand Uriel
For about me flames the pentagrams
And within me shines the six rayed star.

This “girds” you with the power of the archangels on all directions. Magicians envision them facing outward, protection them from all harm. The entire ritual, known as the LBRP for short, is done regularly by Western magicians of the Golden Dawn style, to banish unwanted forces, strengthen the energy body, and evoke the aid of the angelic realm, particularly for daily protection. The root of the angelic part of the ritual most likely comes from a Jewish Prayer, which in turn was inspired by an older Sumerian prayer. 1

In the name of the Lord God of Israel,
may Michael, the protection of God,
be at my right hand;
and Gabriel, the power of God,
at my left;
before me , Uriel the light of God;
behind me Raphael, the healing of God;
and above my head Shekinah El, the presence of God

Notice how this form of the prayer would place the archangels at different quarters than most people are familiar experiencing. The Sumerian Lorica calls upon four gods, not angels, and simply surrounds the reciter of the prayer with them, without verbose descriptions of their function or role.

Shamash before me,
behind me Sin.
Nergal at my right,
Ninil at my left.

In an effort to artistically and magickally incorporate the Temple of Witchcraft’s mythos in more practical magick, we’ve added a Witchcraft specific Lorica Prayer to the first degree training, for those seeking to use something devotional in their daily protection magick. It can be recited as it is, or used as inspiration for forming your own Lorica prayer.

Today I rise through the Blessings of the Two Who Move As One
Through the Love, Power and Wisdom of the Great Spirit
I rise with blessing of life from the Great Mother
I rise with the blessings of strength from the Great Father
And I rise through the blessing of rebirth through the Child of Light 

I gird myself with the heights of the Great Above
With the depths of the Great Below
And with the balance of the Great Between
I stand between the worlds like the Witch’s Tree. 

I gird myself with the golden light of the Sun
With the silver light of the Moon
And with the white light of the stars
For I am a child of the Earth and Starry Heavens 

I gird myself with the powers of Earth and Air
And with the powers of Fire and Water
And the Secret Fire that dwells within all things.
For I am like serpent of spirit and flesh made one.

From the dangers of flesh and spirit
From the dangers of darkness and light
From accident, injury,
From illness or attack,
I am protected. 

Today I gird myself with the Blessings of the Earth
And the Beauty of the Garden
By her Flesh and Blood, Breath and Bone
By the Green of the Land
And the Blue of the Sea
By the Winds of Knowledge
And the Stones of her Body
By the Clouds and Lightning
Nature and I are one. 

Magick before me.
Magick behind me.
Magick above me.
Magick below me.
Magick in my left hand
And magick in my right hand
Magick all around me
And magick within me
For all is magick. 

By the Blessings of the Web and the Wheel
By the Blessings of the Three Rays of Power, Love and Wisdom
And by the Three Wells
By the Three Races of Angel, Faery and Ancestor
By the Three Creatures of Flora, Fauna and Lapis
And by the Four Directions
By the Five Gifts of the Sea People
By the Seven Wanderers of the Heavens
And by the Nine Waves of Creation

All dwell within me.

I am guided
I am protected
I am whole
Blessed be 

In Temple ritual, we often refer to the Lady and Lord as “the Two Who Move as One.” Together they turn the wheels that are the loom of the universe, and weave the web of creation. We emphasize the role of Love, Power and Wisdom in the magickal enlightenment process, seeing the Great Spirit, the creative force, as a Divine Heart, Divine Will and Divine Mind – the three in one. The prayer above recognizes the basic cosmology of the World Tree, or Witch’s Tree, with an overworld above, an underworld below and a middle world between. Within each realm there is a well of mystery and blessing for those who quest for it. We seek harmony with nature, through the Sun, Moon and planets (who together make up the seven wanderers) and the stars, through the four elements and the body of the Earth. We invoke the power of magick that is around us, in us and flows through us, and the mystery that tells us that ultimately we are not separate from magick. We start our training by learning magick. We then perform magick through ritual and rite. We soon realize we are the magick, and while we continue our study and practice, our awareness shifts into the magickal life. In our more extensive cosmology, we teach bout the three spiritual races of the Angels, Faeries and Creatures of Flesh and Blood, and how they are expressed in the plants, animal and stones. Our mystery training explore the mythos of the Sea People and their five gifts, our ritual hallows of blade, wand, cup, stone and crown.

If you wish to be more deeply connected with the collective energy of the Temple, you can recite this prayer regularly, in whole or part, to connect with the principles and powers guiding our Mystery School. Or in turn, use it to inspire an expression of the powers you have already established a relationship with, and call upon daily for guidance and protection.

Temple of Witchcraft
Save Your Cart
Share Your Cart