Hellenic Fall Equinox Ritual
Offering to the Outsiders: (Yellow) You who are not a part of our right, though
your way are mighty they are not our ways, we give you
this offering and ask that you leave us in peace, Outdwellers, turn from our
grove!
Procession Song: (Bardic) We approach the Sacred Grove with hearts and
minds, flesh and bones, Join us now in ways
of old, we have come home. We have
come home.
Purification of the people (Yellow)
[sprinkle
each person with water of the bowl and rosemary while saying:]
May you be cleansed from the worries of the
world
Welcome (Yellow)
Two Powers Meditation (Yellow- World Tree/Community
merging version)
Consecration of Place and Time
Offering to Hestia: Bright shining fire of hearth, warmth of home and soul, source of human
survival, We call to you Great eldest and youngest Daughter of Cronus and Rhea, Mighty
Hestia, be in our grove!
Offering to Zeus: Loving
King of all the worlds, Father of the gods, hurler of the great lightning
bolts, bringer of life sustaining rain, Mighty
Zeus, be in our grove!
Offering to the Earth Mother: (Yellow) Great Mother, you who gives live to alll
things that dwell upon your land, sea,
and sky, you who bears the green of the land and the
fruit of the sea, Blessed Ge, be in our
grove!
Earth Mother Chant/Ziker:
Chorus:
The river is flowing and
it is growing.
The river is flowing down
to the sea.
Mother Earth carry me,
your child I’ll always be.
Mother Earth carry me down to the sea.
Song:
Her sacred ground we walk
upon, with every step we take.
Her sacred ground we walk
upon, with every step we take.
Chorus
Song”
The Earth is our Mother,
we must take care of her.
The Earth is our Mother,
we must take care of her.
(Repeat three time total)
(Final phrase- Chorus)
Offering to Poetic Inspiration: ( ) … Spirit of Inspiration, be in our grove!
Recreation of the Cosmos and Establishing
Scared Center (Yellow)
Invocation of Gatekeeper: Swift footed messenger of the Gods, traveler between the worlds, mighty
god of magic, Hermes Chthonos, come to our grove!
Invocation of Spirit of the Well: Spirit of the Well, who’s form is every changing, flow about, beneath,
and through us, Let this well be no more a simple well but all wells
and all waters of the seas, and the foundation of all the worlds! Spirit of the
Well, be in our grove!
Invocation of Spirit of the Tree: Spirit of the Tree, who’s body give us the air we breath, grow beneath,
above, and within us, let this tree be no more a simple tree but all trees of all the lands
and the axis of all the worlds! Spirit of the Tree, be in our grove!
Invocation of Spirit of Fire: Spirit of Fire, who’s essence sustains the souls of all shine above,
about, and within us, let the fire be no more a simple fire but all the fires of all
the heavens and the crown of all the worlds! Spirit of the Fire, be in our
grove!
Opening of the Gate: Well,
Tree, Fire
CHORUS
By Fire and by Water, between the Earth and Sky
We stand like the World-Tree rooted deep, crowned high. (repeat once)
By Fire and by Water, between the Earth and Sky
We stand like the World-Tree rooted deep, crowned high. (repeat once)
(Yellow makes offering of silver to well-opens the
gate)
Come we now to the Well, the eye and the mouth of
Earth,
Come we now to the Well, and silver we bring,
Come we now to the Well, the waters of rebirth,
Come we now to the Well, together we sing:
CHORUS
Come we now to the Well, and silver we bring,
Come we now to the Well, the waters of rebirth,
Come we now to the Well, together we sing:
CHORUS
(Yellow makes offering
to the tree-opens the gate)
Gather we at
the Tree, the root & the crown of all,
Gather we at the Tree, Below & above,
Gather we at the Tree, Together we make our call,
Gather we at the Tree, In wisdom & love.
CHORUS
Gather we at the Tree, Below & above,
Gather we at the Tree, Together we make our call,
Gather we at the Tree, In wisdom & love.
CHORUS
(Yellow makes offering to the fire-opens the gate)
We will kindle
a Fire, Bless all, and with harm to none,
We will kindle a Fire, and offering pour,
We will kindle a Fire, A light 'neath the Moon & Sun,
We will kindle a fire, our spirits will soar.
CHORUS (with gusto)
We will kindle a Fire, and offering pour,
We will kindle a Fire, A light 'neath the Moon & Sun,
We will kindle a fire, our spirits will soar.
CHORUS (with gusto)
All: Let the
gates be OPEN!
Let the gates be OPEN!
Let the gates be OPEN!
Chorus
(Yellow): The gates are OPEN!
Kindred Invocations
Offering to Ancestors: (Blue) Might
Dead ancestors to us, those that have come before so that the way was cleared,
welcome to honor you this day, come forth to our fire we
pray! Beloved Ancestors, accept our offering!
Offering to Nature Spirits: (Green) Creatures of fur, feather, flesh and scale,
cousins to us all mortal and spirit alike, you who give so much so that we may live, we come to honor
you this day, come forth to our fire we pray! Spirits of Nature, accept our offering!
Offering to the Gods: (Red) Great
Shining Ones, gods and goddess of all times, you who bring order to the cycles
of the cosmos we come to honor you this day, come forth to
our fire we pray! Mighty gods, accept our offering!
Prayer to the Kindred:
(together either in Greek or English)
Μέσω των προγόνων κερδίζουμε το θάρρος.
Me-saw tawn pro-gon-awn
ker-de-zoome tah thah-rros.
Through ancestors we gain courage.
Μέσω των πνευμάτων φύσης βρίσκουμε την ειρήνη.
Me-saw tawn pnel-mahtawn fus-ais bris-koome tain
hee-rain-ai.
Through nature spirits we find peace.
Μέσω των Θεών μαθαίνουμε τη φρόνηση.
Me-saw tawn the-awn
mah-thigh-noome tai fronai-sai.
Through gods we learn wisdom.
Μέσω του σογιού είμαστε ολόκληροι.
Me-saw too so-gi-oo
hee-maste holo-kler-oy.
Through the kindred we are whole.
Song: (Bardic) Gods
& Dead & Mighty Sidhe, Powers of earth & sky and sea. By fire &
well, by sacred tree, Offerings we make to ye!
Main Rite
Kindred of the Occasion Invocation:
Daughter to the Great Titans Kronos and Rhea,
Earth Goddess par excellence,
She who brings forth the fruits of the earth
And the life sustaining grains of the land,
We Pray!
Goddess who forsake the throne and riches offered to
Her by Her might brother Zeus,
Father of all the Gods,
So that She could live among men upon the earth,
We Pray!
She who taught man the arts of seed and plow
To end the nomadic lives they lead,
Who became the Goddess of planned society.
We Pray!
Great Beloved Goddess Demeter, Mother of Persephone,
We come to honor and praise you!
In Your sadness from the lose of you daughter,
The world suffered bitter winter and death, finding no
relief or joy,
Teaching men that all things end.
With the return of Your Daughter, Persephone,
You allowed life to return to the land sending away
the cold winter of death.
With this You taught man that life once gone returns
anew to the world,
That the eternal soul of all things flows with the
cycle of the land.
Demeter, Goddess of the Eleusinian Mysteries,
We come before You in honor of all Your teachings to
man,
We come before You to ask that You burn away our
impurities
As You once sought to do with Demophon.
Blessed Mysteries of life, death, and life again are
yours,
Great Beloved Demeter.
λαμπρή θεά, δέχεται
την προσφορά μας! (repeat 3
times)
(Lam-prai The-ah, de-ke-tigh
tain pros-por-ah mas!
[Glorious Goddess,
accept our offerings!]
Praise Offerings (a round for each Kindred Invoked, then open to all):
Main Offering (Yellow): [Reading from Homeric Hymns]
I begin with Demeter, the holy goddess with the
beautiful hair.
And her daughter [Persephone] too. The one with
the delicate ankles, whom Hadês seized. She was given away by Zeus, the
loud-thunderer, the one who sees far and wide.
Demeter did not take part in this, she of the
golden double-axe, she who glories in the harvest.
She [Persephone] was having a good time, along
with the daughters of Okeanos, who wear their girdles slung low.
She was picking flowers: roses, crocus, and
beautiful violets. Up and down the soft meadow. Iris blossoms too she
picked, and hyacinth. And the narcissus, which was grown as a lure for the
flower-faced girl by Ge [Earth]. All according to the plans of Zeus. She [Ge]
was doing a favor for the one who receives many guests [Hadês].
It [the narcissus] was a wondrous thing in its
splendor. To look at it gives a sense of holy awe
to the immortal gods as well as mortal humans.
It has a hundred heads growing from the root up.
Its sweet fragrance spread over the wide skies
up above. And the earth below smiled back in all its radiance. So too the
churning mass of the salty sea. She [Persephone] was filled with a sense of
wonder, and she reached out with both hands to take hold of the pretty
plaything. And the earth, full of roads leading every which way, opened up
under her. It happened on the Plain of Nysa. There it was that the
Lord who receives many guests made his lunge.
[Grove members
scream out]
Thereafter, for nine days did the Lady
Demeter wander all over the earth, holding torches ablaze in her hands.
Not once did she take of ambrosia and nectar, sweet to
drink, in her grief, nor did she bathe her skin in water.
[Grove
chants/cries out: Iakch' o Iakche]
But when the tenth bright dawn came upon
her, Hekatê came to her, holding a light ablaze in her hands.
She came with a message, and she spoke up,
saying to her:
“Lady Demeter, bringer of hôrai,
giver of splendid gifts, which one of the gods who dwell in the sky or
which one of mortal humans seized Persephone and brought grief to
your philos thûmos? I heard the sounds, but I did not see with my eyes who
it was. So I quickly came to tell you everything, without error.” So spoke
Hekatê. But she was not answered by the daughter [Demeter] of Rhea with the
beautiful hair. Instead, she [Demeter] joined her [Hekatê] and quickly set out
with her, holding torches ablaze in her hands.
[Grove wonders
around the space holding torches as if searching]
They came to Hêlios, the seeing-eye of gods and men.
They stood in front of his chariot-team, and the resplendent goddess asked this
question:
“Helios! Show me respect
[aidôs], god to goddess, if ever I have pleased your heart
and thûmos in word or deed. It is about the girl born to me, a sweet
young seedling, renowned for her beauty, whose piercing cry I heard resounding
through the boundless aether, as if she were being forced, though I did
not see it with my eyes. I turn to you as one who ranges over all the earth and
sea [pontos] as you look down from the bright aether with your sunbeams: tell
me without error whether you have by any chance seen my philon child,
and who has taken her away from me by force, against her will, and then gone
away? Tell me which one of the gods or mortal humans did it.
So she spoke. And the son of Hyperion answered her
with these words:
“Daughter of Rhea with the beautiful hair,
Queen Demeter! You shall know the answer, for I greatly respect you and
feel sorry for you as you grieve over your child, the one with the delicate
ankles. No one else among all the immortals is responsible [aitios] except the
cloud-gatherer Zeus himself, who gave her to Hadês as his beautiful
wife. So he gave her to his own brother. And he [Hadês], heading for the
misty realms of darkness, seized her as he drove his chariot and as she
screamed out loud. But I urge you, goddess: stop your loud cry of lamentation:
you should not have an anger without bounds, all in vain. It is not unseemly to
have, of all the immortals, such a son-in-law as Hadês, the one who makes
many sêmata.
In her anger at the one who is known for
his dark clouds, the son of Kronos, she shunned the company of gods
and lofty Olympus. She went away, visiting
the cities of humans, with
all their fertile landholdings, shading
over
her appearance, for a long time. Until,
one day, she came to the house of bright-minded Keleos, who was at that
time ruler of Eleusis, fragrant with
incense.
She sat down near the road, sad in her philon heart, at the well called
Parthenion [the Virgin’s Place], where the
people of the polis used to draw water. She sat in the
shade, under the thick growth of an olive tree, looking like
an old woman who had lived through many
years and who is deprived of giving childbirth and of the gifts of
Aphrodite, lover of garlands in the hair.
She was like those nursemaids who belong to kings, administrators
of themistes, and who are guardians of
children in echoing palaces. She was seen by the daughters of Keleos, son
of Eleusinos, who were coming to get water,
easy to draw [from the well], in order to carry it in bronze water-jars
to the phila home of their father. They [the
daughters] stood near her and spoke these winged words:
“Who
are you, and where are you from, old woman, old among old humans? Why has your
path taken you
far away from the polis?
Why have you not drawn near to the palace? There, throughout the shaded
chambers, are women who are as old as you are, and younger
ones too, who would welcome you in word
and in deed.”
So she spoke. And the Lady Goddess spoke with the
following words:
“Phila children! Whoever women you are
among the female kind of humans, I
wish you kharis [‘I wish
you pleasure and happiness from our relationship, starting now’]. I shall tell
you. It is not unseemly, since you ask, for me to tell you alêthea.
Dôsô is my name. It was given to
me by my honored mother.
But that was then. I am from Crete,
having traveled over the wide stretches of sea against my will. Without
my consent, by biâ, by
duress, I was abducted by pirates. After a while, sailing with their swift
ship, they
landed at the harbor of Thorikos. There
the ship was boarded by women of the mainland, many of them.
They [the pirates] started preparing
dinner next to the prow of the beached ship. But my thûmos did not
yearn for food, that delight of the mind.
I stole away and set out to travel over the dark earth of the
mainland, fleeing my arrogant captors.
This way, I stopped them from drawing any benefit from my worth
without having paid the price.
The daughters of Keleos
spoke:
“The
wives of all of these manage the palace. Of these women, not a single one of
them, when they first
look at you, would deprive you of tîmê,
the way you look, and turn you away from the palace. Rather, they
will receive you. For, right now, you look
like the gods. If you wish, wait for us, while we go to the palace
of our father and tell our mother,
Metaneira with the low-slung girdle, all these things from beginning to
end, in the hope that she will tell you to come to our house and not to seek
out the houses of others. She
has a treasured son, growing up in the
well-built palace. He was born late, after many a prayer for the birth
of a son: a great joy to his parents. If
you nourish him to grow till he reaches the crossing-point of life,
coming of age, I can predict that you will
be the envy of any woman who lays eyes on you. That is how
much compensation she [Metaneira] would
give you in return for raising him.”
So they, filling their splendid jars with
water, carried it off, looking magnificent. Swiftly they came to the great
palace of their father, and quickly they
told their mother what they saw and heard. And
she told them quickly
to go and invite her [Demeter] for
whatever wages, no limits, and they, much as deer or heifers in the hôrâ of
spring prance along the meadow, satiating
their dispositions as they graze on the grass, so also they, hitching up
the folds of their lovely dresses, dashed
along the rutted roadway, their hair flowing over their shoulders, looking
like crocus blossoms. Metaneira was seized
by a sense of aidôs, by a holy wonder, by a
blanching fear.
She [Metaneira] yielded to her [Demeter]
the chair on which she was sitting, and she told her to sit down. But
Demeter, the bringer of hôrai,
the giver of splendid gifts, refused to sit down on the splendid chair, but she
stood
there silent, with her beautiful eyes
downcast, until Iambê, the one who knows what is worth caring about
[kednon]
and what is not, set down for her a well-built stool, on top of which she threw
a splendid fleece.
For a long time she sat on the stool,
without uttering a sound, in her sadness. And she made no approach, either by
word or by gesture, to anyone. Unsmiling,
not partaking of food or drink, she sat there, wasting away with
yearning for her daughter with the
low-slung girdle, until Iambê, the
one who knows what is dear and what is not,
started making fun. Making many jokes, she
turned the Holy Lady’s disposition in another direction, making her
smile and laugh and have a merry thûmos.
[Grove tells a few
off color jokes and rude gestures]
Then Metaneira offered her [Demeter] a
cup, having filled it with honey-sweet wine. But
she refused, saying that
it was divinely ordained that she not
drink red wine. Then she [Demeter] ordered her [Metaneira] to mix some
barley and water with delicate pennyroyal, and to give
her [Demeter] that potion to drink.
[Grove passes the kykeon around to drink from as Demeter did]
The Lady known far and wide as Dêô accepted
it, for the sake of the hosia. Then well-girded Metaneira
spoke up in their midst:
“Woman, I wish you kharis [‘I wish you pleasure and happiness
from our relationship, starting now’]. I
speak this way because I think you are
descended not from base parents but
from noble ones. You have the
look of aidôs in your eyes, and the look of kharis,
just as if you were descended from kings, who uphold
the themistes. We humans endure the gifts
the gods give us, even when we are grieving over what has to be.
The yoke has been placed on our neck. But
now that you have come here, there will be as many things that
they give to you as they give to me. Take
this little boy of mine and nourish him. He is late-born, and it was
beyond my expectations that the immortals could have given him to
me. I prayed many times to have him.
If you nourish him to grow till he reaches
the crossing-point of life, coming of age, I can predict that you
will be the envy of any woman who lays
eyes on you. That is how much
compensation I [Metaneira] would
give you in return for raising him.”
Then Demeter, with the beautiful garlands
in her hair, addressed her:
“Woman,
I wish you kharis back, and then some. May the gods give
you good things. With positive
intentions, I will take your little boy as
you tell me to. I will nourish him, and I do not expect that, through
the inadvertence of her nursemaid, he would perish from a pestilence or
from the Undercutter. I know an
antidote that
is far more powerful than the Woodcutter; I know a genuine remedy for the
painful
pestilence.”
Having so spoken, she took the child to
her fragrant bosom, in her
immortal hands. And the mother [Metaneira]
rejoiced in her mind.
[Poppet form is
accepted and cradled in arms]
And thus it came to pass that the splendid
son of bright-minded Keleos, Dêmophôn, who was born to well-girded
Metaneira, was nourished in the palace,
and he grew up like a daimôn, not eating grain, not sucking
from the
breast. But Demeter used to anoint him
with ambrosia, as if he had been born of the goddess, and she would
breathe down her sweet breath on him as
she held him to her bosom. At nights she would conceal him within
the menos of fire, as if he were a smoldering
log, and his philoi parents were kept unaware.
[Place Poppet
form into the Fire]
But
they marveled at how full in bloom he came to be, and to look at him was like
looking at the gods. Now Demeter
would have made him ageless and immortal if it had not been for the
heedlessness of well-girded Metaneira, who
went
spying one night, leaving her own fragrant
bedchamber, and caught sight of it [what Demeter was doing]. She let out a
shriek and struck her two thighs, afraid
for her child. She had made a big mistake in her thûmos.
[Grove shrieks
in terror]
Weeping, she spoke these winged words:
“My child! Demophon! The stranger, this
woman, is making you disappear in a mass of flames!
This is making me weep in lamentation [goos]. This is giving me baneful
anguish!”
Demeter, she of the beautiful garlands in
the hair, became angry at her [Metaneira].
She [Demeter] took her
[Metaneira’s] philos little boy, who had been born
to her mother in the palace, beyond her expectations,
—she took him in her immortal hands
and put him down on the floor, away from her.
“Ignorant humans! Heedless, unable to
recognize in advance the
difference between future good fortune
[aisa]
and future bad. In your heedlessness, you have made a big mistake, a mistake
without remedy. I
swear by the Styx, the witness of oaths that gods make,
as I say this: immortal
and ageless for all
days would
I have made your philos little boy, and I would have
given him tîmê that
is unwilting [a-phthi-
tos].
But now there is no way for him to avoid death and doom. Still, he will have a tîmê that is unwilting
[a-phthi-tos],
for all time, because he had once sat on my knees and slept in my arms. At the
right hôrâ,
every year, the sons of the Eleusinians
will have a war, a terrible battle among each other. They will do so
for all days to come. I am Demeter, the
holder of tîmai. I am the
greatest boon and joy for immortals and
mortals alike. But come! Let a great
temple, with a great altar at its base, be built by the entire dêmos.
Make
it at the foot of the acropolis and its
steep walls. Make it loom over the well of Kallikhoron, on a prominent
hill. And I will myself instruct you in
the sacred rites so that, in the future, you may perform the rituals in
the proper way and thus be pleasing to my noos.”
So saying, the goddess changed her size
and appearance, shedding her old
age, and she was totally enveloped
in beauty. And a lovely fragrance wafted
from her perfumed robes. The radiance of her immortal complexion
shone forth from the goddess.
And thus the
Eleusinian Mysteries were born!
Prayer of Sacrifice-Communion: (Hold Plate of meat, fat and bones
towards the fire)
(Place Fat and Bones into the Fire- Then circle
through those attending so they make take their portion of the Sacred Meal)
Prayer of Sacrifice Libation Hymn: (Pour each out as it is said)
Shining Gods and Goddesses,
We come to you as in times of old, bringing
libations, gifts to honour and soothe:
To you all that have come, to all that heard our
call we give you these gifts;
White milk, sweet to drink from the animal sacred
Hermes, the cow;
(Pour Milk)
Golden honey, the distillation of the bees that
work on sweet Persephone’s blossoms;
(Pour Honey)
Holy water brought from the source a pure spring
domain of the Nymphs;
(Pour Water)
This refreshing, unmixed drink from the ancient
vine, its mother Demeter the Goddess of all growing things, the gift to human
kind from Beloved Dionysus;
(Pour Wine)
And the fragrant fruit of the pale green olive
that lives its abundant life among the leaves and light of Helios, the gift of
Athena to her people;
(Pour Olive Oil)
These gifts we give to you in love and in
respect, in friendship and kinship.
Might Ones accept our offerings!
Taking of the Omen:
Cup Litany:
(Blue) You among the Mighty Dead, ancestors to us
all,
Offerings
we have made, offerings you have received.
We
ask that you bless these Waters so we may share in the wisdom of
Your great
Knowledge!
(All) The gifts of the Ancestors for the people
of the Ancestors!
(Green) You of land, sea, and sky; both mortal and
spirit alike,
You who are
the Nature Spirits,
Offerings we
have made, offerings you have received.
We ask that you bless these Waters so we may
share in the warmth of your Great Kinship!
(All) The gifts of the Nature Spirits for the kin
of the Nature Spirits!
(Red) You among the divine and gods and goddesses
of all time,
Offerings
we have made, offerings you have received.
We
ask that you bless these Waters so we may share in the great Light of
Your Truth!
(All) The gifts of the Gods for the children of
the Gods!
(Yellow) In the name of Me mory,
the preserving shrine.(Well)
In the name of Earth, our common mother.(Tree)
In the name of Truth, the light which has no
beginning and no end.(Fire)
May we never know thirst or need while in
your service. Awen! (Make sign of
ADF sigil over the Waters of Life)
Return
the Waters of the Earth: We return the Water of Life so that the land
will be better for us having been here. Hail great giving Earth! Keep safe always the
sacrifice, keep it ever holy!
End of Rite
Thank deity of occasion:
Thank the Gods: (Red) Might Gods and Goddesses, we of the Ozark Mountain Grove thank you for
being with us. Be with us always in our hearts!
Thank the Nature Spirits: (Green) Blessed Nature Spirits, cousins to us all, mortal and spirit alike, we
of the Ozark Mountain Grove thank you for being with us. Be with us
always in our hearts!
Thank the Ancestors: (Blue) Glorious Ancestors, kin to us all, we of the Ozark Mountain Grove
thank you for being with. Be with us always in our hearts!
Thank the Spirits of Inspiration: ( )
Thank the Earth Mother: (Yellow) Blessed Ge, mother to us all, we of the Ozark Mountain Grove thank you
for being with us. Be with us always in our hearts!
Thank Zeus: (
) Mighty Zeus, King of all the
gods, we of Ozark Mountain Grove thank you for being with us. Be with us always in our hearts!
Thank Hestia: (
) Bright Virgin Hestia, tender of
the sacred flames, we of the Ozark Mountain Grove than you for being with us. Be with us always in our hearts.
Close the Gate: By
the powers of the Kindred, by the powers of three realms, and by the power of
Well, Tree and Fire;
(All) Let the gates be closed!
(All) Let the gates be closed!
(All) LET THE GATES BE CLOSED!
The Gates are closed
Thank Hermes Chthonos: (Facilitator-Yellow) Might Hermes Chthonos, we thank you for
being here at our rite, we ask now that you spend upon your way carrying our prayers
and offerings to the Other Worlds and be with us when next we call!
De-Hallowing
Fire: Let this Fire be no more the Crown of all
the worlds but simply a fire! Spirit of the Fire we thank thee!
Tree: Let this
Tree be no more the Axis of all the worlds but simply a tree! Spirit of the
Tree we thank thee!
Well: Let this Well be no more the foundation of
all the worlds but simply a well! Spirit of the Well we thank thee!
Closing Two Powers Meditation (Yellow)
End of ritual
Song: (Bardic) Walk with wisdom from this hallowed place. Walk
not in sorrow, our roots shall ere embrace. May
strength be
your brother, and honour be your friend, And luck be your lover until we meet
again.
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