It’s a new year,
and Florida is experiencing quite the cold front. Perhaps nothing by New England standards, but
the chill in the air, the novelty of seeing my breath as puffy clouds of steam
when we have gone hiking brings back memories of other cold January nights
making offerings to the Morrigan shortly after the new secular year. January 7th as a Feast Day to the
Morrigan is undeniably modern. As far as I can
tell the date can be traced back to Edain McCoy, who mentioned it in one of her
books. There isn’t really an explanation
as to why she picked that date. Perhaps
there was a reason, perhaps not. In the
end though I don’t think it actually matters.
What I do find interesting is how we establish traditions where there
are none. Whether something has been lost to time or the deity one worships
never had a sacred day or feast day connected to them, how do we go about making
one? And should we?
There are many days
you can connect to the Great Queen and her mythology. Samhain usually being the
most important one I honor Her on, but certainly not the only one. But even with Samhain one must ask
themselves when is the correct time to celebrate? Oct 31st? Or Old Samhain, which
thanks to the adoption of the Gregorian calendar moved the day the ancients
would have celebrated to somewhere around Nov 12th . As modern practitioners we like things to be on an infallible
schedule, one we can always rely on, but that isn’t always the case. Even Newgrange with the sun’s light hitting
the inner chamber on the winter solstice can be misleading. Because while we can figure out the exact day
of the solstice via all the convenience of modern technology, the sun actually
shines into the passage tomb for several days around the solstice. That begs the questions, which day or days
did the ancient Irish celebrate or hold sacred? Which is the right day to honor? Well the answer is simple. There is no right answer.
Perhaps in the end
all that matters is our intentions, our reverence for the Gods, that makes a
holy day sacred. In more ways then one
the yearly three days of the Morrigan’s Call Retreat have become Feast Days in
honor of her. Our main focus for the
entire weekend is The Morrigan, connecting to her, making offerings, coming together in
her honor. As we approach those days each
year I feel her stirring, pacing, readying for those who gather. And I think of how our ancestors gathered to honor the Gods at different times, traveling perhaps long distances to honor sacred days, not unlike what we are doing in today's world with different Pagan festivals and events. They may not fall on a holiday of the Wheel of the Year but in many ways we have create our own new sacred times. And I think no matter how long The Morrigan's Call event
goes on those days will remain sacred to her.
The second weekend of June will always be a time I must make offerings, call to her in ritual, because
now she expects it. We have given those days to her, perhaps as much as some of us have
given her January 7th to her, making it sacred with offerings and
intentions and the dedication of returning and continuing the practice year
after year.
Perhaps we should create
more modern Feast Days to our Gods, and in the case of the retreat perhaps some
of us have already create some without realizing it. A Feast Day or holy day doesn’t have to be
ancient for you to make it valid. So if
your Gods don’t have holy days that are remembered or recognized create your
own. And if someone else celebrates that day alongside you, great. If not, that is ok too.
So even though I
know its not ancient, tomorrow I will pour whiskey, speak prayers, and wander
into the wild places of the area I now live and honor the Queen. And its
fitting in a way that as far as the weather predictions go, tomorrow will be
the last day of chilly weather in my tropical home (at least the 40 and below kind). A mirror to other days where I walked through
snow drifts to honor her. For whatever reason on those past Feast Days feeling
it was important to make my offerings outside, feeling the cold and sting in
the air. Letting it be a reminder that cold and struggles can be
weathered. That winter and difficult times
yields eventually to spring. And even
here in Florida with mostly eternal summer, by my New England standards, there
are reminders, days kissed with frost to remind me that her blessings come on
the edge of a blade.