MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
Magick's MirrorContains "mature" content, but not necessarily adult.[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Messages  
  General  
  RITUALS  
  ESBATS  
  MEDITATIONS  
  Experiment posts  
  �?�?�?�?�?�?/A>  
  Pictures  
  Faery Ring  
  Lyceum pictures  
  Pictures to use on sites  
  My Witchy Friends & Family  
    
    
  Links  
  �?�?�?�?�?�?/A>  
  Sabbats  
  Sabbat Essays  
  First Degree  
  Second Degree  
  Third Degree  
  Assignments L&S2  
  Assignment of the Month  
  L&S Member Files  
  Shielding Class  
  Reiki  
  Magickal Tools  
  Magick of Herbs  
  Archieves  
  Kindred Love  
  DEDICATION RITES  
  CRAFTING  
  ♫Majyk's Musings  
  The Wiccan Month  
  Mirror Chat  
  Losing with Jill  
  What Time Is It?  
  Sacred Circle Chat Rooms  
  Chat Room Help  
  CLIP ART  
  Edible Flowers  
  Craft Ideas  
  L&S Retreats  
  Faery Ring Stuff  
  A Grimoire Online  
  TAROT  
  Crystal Healing  
  L & S Retreat  
  Majyk's Mini Mall  
  Majykal Shoppe  
  Chamber Spa  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Second Degree : The Levels of Recognition
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 2 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameLadyMajykWhisperingOwl  (Original Message)Sent: 12/12/2006 5:26 AM

The Levels of Recognition

There are five levels of recognition, each culminated by a ceremony which marks it -- a rite of passage celebrating its achievement. The first level is dedication; a person who wishes to study with the Gaia Tradition and has been accepted by a coven or grove as a student is dedicated as part of the group. The next three levels recognize and celebrate the attainment by an individual of succeeding stages in her personal growth. These are called simply the first, second, and third degrees. The fifth level, usually attained between the first and second degrees, is bonding to a coven.

A course of preparation and study is laid out for each of the five levels. Dedication requires only that the candiate make an informed committment to the Wiccan path and the Gaia Tradition. Training for the first degree is usually in the form of a series of classes for a small number of students at one time. For the advanced degrees, the preparation is individual: the candidate reads assigned readings, studies or masters a set of specific topics, and acquires required skills. A prospect for coven bonding prepares by taking a set of steps to make sure that s/he is emotionally mature enough to work in harmony with the current members of the coven, folloiwng the objectives of the Gaia Tradition. An experienced teacher is assigned to the candidate to work with him/her as the course of preparation is followed.

Dedication

This is the first level through which one who aspires to the Gaia Tradition passes. It requires no knowledge of the Craft, just a heart dedicated to the God and Goddess and to the study of Wicca as understood by the Gaia Tradition. It means that the candidate is committed to Wicca, the Gaia Tradition, and the coven, and also that the coven is commited to guiding the candidate's progress in Wicca as appropriate.

After a person has visited at least one ritual and one class by a community (a grove or coven), and has decided in her heart that both Wicca and the Gaia Tradition are her path, s/he may request dedication into that community.

When such a request is made, each member talks with the candidate enough to satisfy herself that the candidate understands and is serious about both the commitment to Wicca and the choice of the Gaia tradition. Once that is done, the community votes on whether to accept the candidate. If the candidate is accepted, the ritual of dedication is held at the next public ritual by the community.

The First Degree -- Witch

A candidate for the first degree undergoes the three kinds of training listed below. The teacher for this degree is a second-degree witch who concentrated on teaching during his/her preparation for the second degree or a third-degree priestess or priest.

  • First, the student goes through a course of study that covers Paganism, Wicca in general, and the Gaia Tradition specifically. In the course of study, the student receives classes in Wiccan teachings and reads appropriate chapters of the Book of Shadows.

  • The second part of the study covers the basics of our understandings of the four worthies: the self, the community, the Earth, and the Divine. We teach how to care for and nurture oneself physically, mentally, spiritually, and emotionally; how to be an active and supportive member of one's grove or coven community, as well as of the political communities in which s/he lives; how to work in support of actions and policies that respect and honor the Earth, rather than pillaging her; and how to celebrate the presence of the Divine in our lives.

    One book is assigned for reading in each of these four areas:
    • The Self -- The 22 {Non-Negotiable} Laws of Wellness by Greg Anderson
    • The Community -- Obedience to Authority by Stanley Milgram
    • The Earth -- If You Love This Planet by Helen Caldicott
    • The Divine -- The Spiral Dance by Starhawk

  • The third part of the training for the first degree is not given by the tradition; it is the training offered by the social services agencies in the area of the coven <NOBR>--</NOBR> such as rape crisis centers, battered women's centers, Planned Parenthood, or some other healing agency. To be admitted to the first degree within the Gaia Tradition, a candidate must either (a) have taken such a course and have participated, or be participating, in the program of the agency, or (b) have formally studied a healing or service discipline and have practiced, or be practicing, that discipline in service to others.

The objectives of the first-degree training are (a) to give the student a fundamental understanding of Wiccan history, philosophy, rituals, and ethics; (b) to give her the information and guidance to make an intelligent and informed decision that Wicca, whether of the Gaia Tradition or not, is her spiritual path; (c) to introduce her to the four worthies and their importance in our lives; and (d) give her the knowledge and skills to be a good representative of Wicca and Paganism in the world at large. We sometimes call the first degree the "license to (really start to) learn."

The first-degree initiation ceremony centers around recognizing that the initiate has finished the preparation to become a witch, and celebrating this accomplishment by a "rite of passage" symbolizing his/her symbolic death and rebirth. The ceremony gives the initiate the means to openly pledge him/herself to the Four Worthies, conveys to him/her some new insights into the craft, and ends, as all good Pagan ceremonies do, in a feast of celebration.

Coven Bonding

Coven bonding is not a level of recognition, but it is included here to give a complete description of the steps through which a person normally progresses. It is the process by which a witch becomes a member of a Gaia coven.

The preparation for this step includes a more detailed introduction to Gaia Wicca than was given for the first degree. It also includes training in spiritual sexuality and conflict relolution. Procedures are followed to allow the prospect and the coven to evaluate each other, to make sure that the prospect (a) is in accord with our goal of bringing the Goddess back into society, (b) is committed to actively working to nurture the four worthies in his life, and (c) can work as a member of the coven in perfect love and perfect trust with its other members.

The period of preparation should last at least three months after the request is made, to allow time for everyone to learn enough to make an effective evaluation. The teacher for the coven bonding step is a second-degree member of the coven, of the opposite gender if at all possible. Coven-bonding training is always one-to-one. During this time, the candidate must spend at least two sessions of at least two hours each in soul-level interaction with each current member of the coven, and must actively participate in all coven and/or grove events which s/he is allowed to attend.

The coven bonding ceremony itself offers one last trial, of both the prospect and the coven, so that both can reassure themselves that the bond should be formed. If both the prospect and the coven agree that it should, the ceremony then creates and cements a bond among them that is lasting, intimate, and sure.

The Second Degree -- Adept

The Gaia Tradition's work for the second degree, like that for the first degree, has three parts, listed below. Training is one-to-one at this level. The teacher for this degree is either a second-degree witch who has completed the work in the skill area on which the student chooses to work or a third-degree priest/ess.

  • First, the student receives more training about each of the four worthies. A second book is assigned for each of them; the student reads and discusses those books and their implications for her life with her teacher. The books are:
    • The Self -- Reclaiming our Health by John Robbins
    • The Community -- The Chalice and the Blade by Riane Eisler
    • The Earth -- An Inconvenient Truth by Albert Gore
    • The Divine -- A Witch's Bible by Janet & Stewart Farrar

    The student also creates positive tools that will help her live her life in a way that supports, enhances, and empowers herself, her community, the Earth, and the Goddess and God.

  • Next, the student is given a fundamental knowledge of the arts and skills associated with witchcraft. As discussed earlier in this chapter, we group these skills into four areas: leadership, healing, teaching, and magickal working. As an example of the kind of work required, in the leadership area the student must create and lead, with help as needed, an inner ritual for a Sabbat and one special ritual whose purpose is selected by the student.

  • Finally, the student selects one of the four skill areas to "major" in. S/he does in-depth research and work in that area, to the point where s/he is competent to be a leader, healer, teacher, or magician without assistance. A list of books is assigned for the specific area, in addition to practical exercises and discussions with the teacher.

The objectives of second-degree training are to give the person the knowledge, skills, and experience to (a) be an effective representative of Wicca and the Gaia Tradition to the public at large; (b) participate fully in the public and private life of the coven; and (c) be an effective practitioner of the skill area chosen for second degree study. In addition, with the second degree a person is eligible for election to be the coven's High Priest or Priestess, as appropriate.

The second-degree initiation ceremony is designed to make the candidate re-evaluate her assumptions about herself, her place in the community, her life on this earth, and her relationship with the Goddess and God. It then offers the chance for the candidate to rebuild or adjust her attitudes where s/he discovers it to be appropriate, and for the coven to celebrate the candidate and her achievement in reaching this level.

The Third Degree -- Priest/ess

Those who wish to work towards the third degree must gain mastery in all four of the skill areas, so the study concentrates on the three skill areas that were not studied for the second degree. Only when a person can be an effective practitioner of all four skill areas is that person ready to receive the third degree in the Gaia Tradition, and become a full Priest or Priestess of the Craft.

The purpose of the third degree is to "certify" to Wiccans everywhere that the holder of the degree is completely ready and fully competent to independently form and lead a new Wiccan community (or take on the independent leadership of an existing Wiccan community), and to train new people into all levels of recognition.

The course of study for the third degree consists of these elements:

  • A third book is assigned for each of the four Worthies; the student reads and discusses those books and their implications for his or her life with the teacher. The books are:
    • The Self -- Radical Honesty: How to Transform Your Life by Telling the Truth by Brad Blanton
    • The Community -- Webs of Power: Notes from the Global Uprising by Starhawk
    • The Earth -- Sacred Land, Sacred Sex: Rapture of the Deep by Dolores LaChapelle
    • The Divine -- The Witches' Goddess and The Witches' God by Janet and Stewart Farrar

  • The student serves as the Coven's High Priestess or Priest for one full quarter, taking responsibility for all aspects of running the coven. This includes taking complete responsibility for teaching (though s/he may use other people, for example second-degree students, to teach some of the classes); ritual leadership (including recruiting people for ritual roles and supplying the bread, wine, etc., for the ritual); and any other needs that may come up during the quarter.

  • The student studies the three skill areas that s/he did not cover in the study for the second degree. Because a student is encouraged to do the second degree in the skill area of most interest to him or her, and in order to make it possible to obtain the third degree in the standard "year and a day," the other three areas are studied in less detail than the second-degree area.

The third-degree initiation ceremony has certain elements that are common to all Wiccan third-degree initiations, but it also contains a section that the candidate him/herself has written. This part includes such things as the oath that the candidate takes about his/her future in Wicca and the form that s/he wishes to use for the Great Rite that is a part of the third-degree ceremony. I wil



First  Previous  2 of 2  Next  Last 
Reply
 Message 2 of 2 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameLadyMajykWhisperingOwlSent: 12/12/2006 5:29 AM

Initiations

There are two concepts I need to explain first so that you understand how different covens are related to each other: Tradition and Lineage. A Tradition of Wicca refers to a way of doing things, a body of rituals and other material, that is common to a family of covens. Examples are Gardnerian (the tradition founded by Gerald Gardner), Alexandrian (the tradition founded by Alex Sanders), Dianic (Z Budapest), Faerie (Victor Anderson), Blue Star (Tzipora Katz), etc. As individual covens grow and evolve, the changes they make may either stretch and expand the Tradition they belong to, or the differences may build up to the point that the coven breaks away from its original Tradition to found a new Tradition. Lineage is the 'family tree' of where our initiations come from, not only our immediate initators, but who initiated them, and who initiated the 'grandparents', and so on as far back as we can figure it out. Covens of closely related lineage tend to be more similar than covens that are more distantly related, and even covens that have branched off to form a new Tradition still tend to show recognizable traces of the other Traditions in their lineage.

This is all to put some context around Initiations and what they mean; when someone is initiated into a coven, they are also being initiated into the coven's Tradition and into the coven's Lineage.

So, for my coven, Spawn Far, a coven in the Du Bandia Grassail lineage with a tradition derived from Alexandrian Tradition, the structure of our initiations is:

Dedication - This ceremony confers membership in the coven. It's basically a statement of intent, that the Dedicant intends to stick around and learn how we do things, and that we intend to accept the Dedicant into our coven and teach them what we know.

This used to be much less formal; when I took over the coven nine years ago, if someone showed up for three rituals in a row, we'd start to think of them as a member of the coven. But as time goes by and the core members of the coven grow more experienced and more tight-knit, it takes longer before a newcomer can really fit into the group; so we've added a formal Dedication ceremony, and we've extended the amount of time a person has to attend our rituals before we accept them into the coven. Also, more of our rituals are restricted to members of the coven only (though we will make exceptions for Elders from other covens, if we know them well enough).

Initiation (First Degree) - The Initiation actually serves a number of purposes. For one thing, it marks a point in a person's training where we believe they know all the basics of our rituals and can pull their own weight in the coven. It also formally links the person into our initiatory Lineage - we see this as our spiritual ancestry, and it has magical implications for us as well as establishing a cultural network of relationships within our 'extended family'.

The ritual itself is very similar to the Initiation Ritual used by other Alexandrian covens; we have been very conservative with the Initiation because it is a link into the Tradition we derive from. In addition to the standard ritual (which has been published in Janet & Stewart Farrar's book _The Witches' Way_), there is a secret portion of the ritual. The details of the secret portion are relatively unimportant, but it is important that part of the ritual should be a surprise. This is because the effect of the ritual depends on the initiate not knowing exactly what's going to happen - because the Wiccan Initiation is also partly patterned after ancient Mystery Initiations (like Eleusis), and is intended to bring about a spiritual transformation in the initiate.

Elder Initiation (Second Degree) - The basic requirement for this rank is that the person should be capable, not only of practicing our Tradition, but also of teaching it. The Second Degree confers the authority to initiate other people into our lineage. We expect Elders to be able to start their own covens, should they choose to do so; and as long as they choose to stay active in our coven, we expect them to help out with leadership tasks (such as teaching, keeping an eye on potential safety issues during rituals, providing a certain amount of support, setting a good example, etc.).

Other covens in Traditions similar to ours split this into two different grades: Second Degree and Third Degree, where Third Degree is given when a person actually starts their own coven. We feel that the difference between someone who *is* leading a coven and someone who *could* lead a coven is a difference of office, not of rank, so we combined the two higher initiations.

The ritual we use for the Second Degree is also quite different from the Alexandrian rituals; we require more action from the Initiate during the ritual (they are proving their abilities, not only to us but to themselves as well), and we use different meditative techniques than the standard rituals do (this is partly a matter of taste). Details vary from one initiation to the next - we customize the ritual for each individual to some extent.

Back to the Nature of Wicca