(March 20-23)
"This is the time of the Spring's return; the joyful time, the seed time, when
life bursts forth from the Earth and the chains of winter are broken. Light and dark are equal; it is a time of balance, when
all the elements within us must be brought into a new harmony. The Prince of the Sun stretches out his hand, and Kore, the
Dark Maiden, returns from the Land of the Dead, cloaked in fresh rain, with the sweet scent of desire on her breath. Where
They step, the wild flowers appear; as They dance, despair turns to hope, sorrow to joy, want to abundance. May our hearts
open with the spring! Blessed Be!"
Eostar, or the Spring Equinox, is the time when day and night are in balance,
with the light mastering the darkness. It is basically a Solar festival, and a newcomer to the Old Religion in Celtic and
Teutonic Europe. In the past, the Equinoxes were never observed in Britain. Yet they are now a genuine part of modern Pagan
tradition, even if their seeds blew in from the Mediterranean, and germinated during the period of the underground centuries.
The problem which faces most witches today, is deciding how to celebrate this
Sabbat. The fact is that, many themes associated with the Spring Equinox overlap other Sabbats. For example, the death and
resurrection theme, and the sacrificial mating theme.
In Mediterranean Lands, the death and resurrection theme had strong links with
the Spring Equinox. The grim festival of the Phrygian Goddess, Cybele was celebrated at this time. Associated with her was
the vegetation God, Attis. The Spring festival, which took place between March 22-25, mourned the death of Attis, and rejoiced
over his resurrection. This was done by the priests of Cybele, castrating themselves as an offering to the Goddess. It is
interesting to note, that one of Cybele's symbols is a crescent Moon, shown in perpetual union with the Sun, again, emphasizing
the night and day balance.
In Rome, the rites of Cybele took place on the very spot where St.Peter now stands
in the Vatican. In fact, the local Christians used to celebrate the death and resurrection of Christ, in the very places where
Attis worship took place. In days of old, bitter quarrels took place between the Christians and the pagans about whose God
was the prototype, and which was the imitation.
Easter, Jesus's willing death, decent into Hell and resurrection can be seen as
the Christian version of the sacrificial mating theme. In one sense, 'Hell' can be seen as the collective unconscious, the
feminine aspect, the Goddess, into whom the sacrificed God is plunged as a necessary prelude to rebirth.
In classical and pre-classical times, spring was the season for another form of
sacrificial mating, namely, the 'hieros gamos', or sacred marriage. In this, the woman identified herself with the Goddess,
and the man sank himself into the Goddess. Through the woman, the man gave up his masculinity to the Goddess, without destroying
it. He would emerge from the experience spiritually revitalized. The Great Rite, whether actual or symbolic, is the witches
hieros gamos.
In the North, where spring comes later, the aspects of the sacrificial mating
really belongs to Bealtaine. Thus, Eostar gives up it's human-fertility aspect to the Greater Sabbat, and retains it's vegetation-fertility
aspect. In the Mediterranean, the Equinox is a time for sprouting, and in the North, it is a time for sowing.
As a Solar festival, Eostar must share with the Greater Sabbats the eternal theme
of fire and light. In is interesting to note that this theme has survived strongly in Easter folklore. In many parts of Europe,
Easter bonfires are lit on hilltop sites. The fire to light the bonfires is obtained from the priests. It is believed that
as far as the light shines, the land will be fruitful, and the homes secure. People jump the dying embers, and cattle are
driven over them.
Another interesting point to note, is that the Christian Easter falls anywhere
between Eostar and Bealtaine. In fact, the name Easter comes from the Teutonic Goddess Eostre, also called Ostara. Many witches
call the Spring Equinox by these names.