Yule is the Anglo-Saxon word for the festival of the Winter Solstice. It comes
from the original 'Iul' meaning 'wheel'. In the old Almanacs, the symbol of a wheel was used to mark Yuletide. The idea behind
this is that the year turns like a wheel, The Great Wheel of the Zodiac, The Wheel of Life, of which the spokes are the old
ritual occasions. The winter solstice, the rebirth of the Sun, is a particularly important turning point.
According to the Bardic Tradition, the winter solstice was called 'Alban Arthan'
by the Druids. It was then that the Chief Druid cut the sacred mistletoe from the Oak, a custom that still lingers with our
use of mistletoe for Christmas decoration.
It is interesting to note that Mistletoe is usually banned from churches at Christmas,
because of it's Pagan association. However, at one time, there used to be a different tradition at York Minister. Stukeley,
an eighteenth-century writer noted that on Christmas Eve, they carried Mistletoe to the High Altar in the church and proclaimed
a universal liberty and pardon to all sorts of criminals and wrongdoers.
The idea of holding a festival at the winter solstice, to celebrate the rebirth
of the Sun was so universal in the ancient world, that the Christians adapted it. No one really knows for sure when Christ
was born, but by holding this feast at midwinter, Christ was mystically identified with the Sun.
The Romans celebrated the winter solstice with a festival called Saturnalia. The
winter solstice takes place when the Sun enters the Sign of Capricorn, and Saturn, the ruler of Capricorn, was also supposed
to be the ruler of the far off Golden age of the past when the world was happy and fruitful. At this time of the year, the
Romans decked their houses with boughs of evergreen trees and bushes. People gave each other presents, and all normal business
was suspended and social distinctions were forgotten. Servants and slaves were given a feast by their masters who waited the
tables.
The Pagan Saxons celebrated the feast of Yule with plenty of ale and blazing fires,
of which our Yule log is the last relic. The Yule log is actually an indoor equivalent of the outdoor bonfire of Midwinter
Eve. There used to be an old custom of saving a piece of the Yule log, 'for luck' to kindle the next year's blaze.
The evergreens for Yuletide decorations were holly, ivy, mistletoe, bay, rosemary,
and the green branches of the box tree. By Candlemas, all these had to be gathered up and burnt, or hobgoblins would haunt
the house. In other words, by the time a new tide of life had started to flow, people had to get rid of the past and look
to the future. Spring-cleaning was originally a nature ritual.
Yule marks the death and re-birth of the Sun God. It also marks the vanquishing
of the Holly King, God of the waning year, by the Oak King, God of the waxing year. Old mumming plays, which still exist in
some places as part of the Yuletide festivities, are linked with the rebirth of the Sun. Saint George in shining armor, comes
to do battle with the dark faced 'Turkish Knight'. Saint George is the Sun, slaying the powers of darkness. However, the victor
immediately proclaims that he has slain his brother. Dark and Light, winter and summer are complementary to each other. So
on comes the mysterious 'Doctor' with his magical bottle who revives the slain man. There is much rejoicing and all ends well.
Another version of the Oak/Holly King theme, is the ritual hunting and killing
of a Wren. The Wren, little King of the Waning Year, is killed by the Robin Redbreast, King of the Waxing Year. The Robin
finds the Wren hiding in an Ivy bush (or as in some parts of Ireland - a holly bush).
At Yule, the Goddess shows her Life-in-Death aspect. At this season, she is the
leprous-white lady, Queen of the cold darkness, yet, this is her moment of giving birth to the child of Promise, the Son-Lover
who will refertilize her and bring back light and warmth to her kingdom.
The Winter Solstice rebirth and the Goddess's part in it, were portrayed in ancient
Egypt by a ritual in which Isis circled the shrine of Osiris seven times, to represent her mourning for him and her wanderings
in search of the scattered parts of his body. For the festival, people decorated the outside of their houses with oil-lamps
that burned all night. At midnight, the priests emerged from an inner shrine crying, "The Virgin has brought forth! The light
is waxing!" and showed the image of a baby to the worshippers.
Lamps burning all night at Midwinter, survive in Ireland and elsewhere, as the
single candle burning in the window at Christmas Eve, lit by the youngest in the house - a symbol of mircocosmic welcome to
the Marcosm.
Whatever the form or name of Yuletide celebration, it is a festive time of year
throughout the world. With the rebirth of the Sun, the giver of warmth, life and light, people had something to be genuinely
happy about.