COVER PAGE GO

EDITORS NOTE GO

  • A Time to Remeber Love
    by Evelyn Rysdyk

THE DAILY PRACTICE GO

  • Healing Our Ancestors - Healing he Earth by Allie Knowlton

ALWAYS IN SEASON GO

  • The Sub is Born by Donna Henes

NOTES FROM THE BIOSPHERE GO

  • Chemical Fertilizer and Herbicide Linked to Infections in Amphibians
  • Wabanaki Natives Work to Stop Asian beetle Theatening Ash Trees
  • Eighteenth-Century African Spirit Bundle Found in Annapolis

INNER REALM / OUTER WORLD GO

  • Seiðr and the Runes Shamanic Oracles of Northern Europe
    by Evelyn Rysdyk

THE GATHERING BASKET GO

  • Winter Fires: Inflammation and Your Healthy Heart by Susan Fekety, CNM

VENTURE OUTSIDE GO

  • Shuar Village by Dave Santillo, Ph.D.

FAMILY FUN / SPIRITED KIDS GO

  • The Scent of Winter!

FOOTPRINTS OF THE ANCIENTS GO

  • God Jul! by Evelyn Rysdyk

RECIPE GO

  • Meaty Chili with Black Beans, Crimini Mushrooms and Green Beans!

SHAMAMA BEAR'S REVIEW GO

  • Honoring The Medicine The Essential Guide to Native American Healing

SPIRIT CRAFTING GO

  • Holiday Gratitude Tree by Heather Harden

READER ENLIGHTENMENTS GO

  • Via Illuminata: A Trip to the Sacred Valley of the Inka Empire by Trish Murray

ECO-EVENTS and EDUCATION GO

  • December Calendar

PREVIOUS ISSUES

  • November 2008 GO
  • October 2008 GO
  • September 2008 GO
  • August 2008 GO
  • July 2008 GO
  • June 2008 GO
  • May 2008 GO
  • April 2008 GO

VISIT SPIRIT LIVING BLOG GO

----------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------


ALWAYS IN SEASON

 

The Sun Is Born
By Mama Donna Henes, Urban Shaman

Wrapped in the dark womb of the weather, it is not difficult to imagine the terrifying prospect of the permanent demise of the sun and the consequent loss of light, the loss of heat. The loss of life. Without the comfort of the familiar cyclical pattern, the approach of each winter with its attendant chiaroscuro would be agonizing. The tension intensified by the chill.

With the death of the sun, the world would be cast back to the state that it occupied before creation, the classical concept of chaos. The black void. The Great Uterine Darkness. It is from this elemental ether that the old creatrix goddesses are said to have brought forth all that is. This sacred spark of creative potential that is contained within the primordial womb is one of humanity's oldest concepts. The visual symbol which represents it, a dot enclosed within the circle, is also extremely ancient. Still in common use today, it is the astronomical notation for the sun. 

Among the most archaic images of the sun is the brilliant radiance that clothes the Great Goddess. The great Mother of the pre-Islamic peoples of Southern Arabia was the sun, Atthar, or Al-Ilat (later to become Allah). In Mesopotamia, She was called Arinna, Queen of Heaven. The Vikings named Her Sol, the old Germanic tribes, Sunna, the Celts, Sul or Sulis. The Goddess Sun was known among the societies of Siberia and North America.

She is Sun Sister to the Inuit, Sun Woman to the Australian Arunta, Akewa to the Toba of Argentina The sun has retained its archaic feminine gender in Northern Europe and Arab nations as well as in Japan. To this day, members of the Japanese royal family trace their shining descent to Amaterasu Omikami, the Heaven Illuminating Goddess.

According to legend, Amaterasu withdrew into a cave to hide from the irritating antics of Her bothersome brother, Susu-wo-no, the Storm God. Her action plunged the world into darkness and the people panicked. They begged, beseeched, implored the Sun Goddess to come back, but to no avail. At last, on the Winter Solstice, Alarming Woman, a sacred clown, succeeded in charming, teasing and finally yanking Her out, as if from an earthy birth canal, and reinstating on Her rightful celestial throne.

Other cultures see the Goddess not as the sun Herself, but as the mother of the sun, the bringer forth, the protector and controller, the guiding light of the sun and its cycles. According to Maori myth, the sun dies each night and returns to the cave/womb of the deep to bathe in the maternal uterine waters of life from which he is re-born each morning. The Hindu Fire God, Agni, is described as "He who swells in the mother."

It is on the Winter Solstice, the day when the light begins to lengthen and re-gain power, that the archetypal Great Mother gave birth to the sun who is Her son. The great Egyptian Mother Goddess, Isis, gave birth to Her son Horus, the Sun God, on the Winter Solstice. On the same day, Leta gave birth to the bright, shining Apollo and Demeter, and the Great Mother Earth Goddess, bore Dionysus. The shortest day was also the birthday of the Invincible Sun in Rome, Dies Natalis Invictis Solis, as well as that of Mithra, the Persian god of light and guardian against evil.

Christ, too, is a luminous son, the latest descendant of the ancient matriarchal mystery of the nativity of the sun/son. Since the gospel does not mention the exact date of His birth, it was not celebrated by the early church. It seems clear that when the church, in the fourth century AD, adopted December 25 as His birthday, it was in order to transfer the heathen devotions honoring the birth of the sun to Him who was called "the sun of righteousness."

The return of the retreating sun, which retrieves us from the dark of night, the pitch of winter, is a microcosmic recreation of the origination of the universe, the first birth of the sun. The Winter Solstice is an anniversary celebration of creation. Since the earliest of human times, it has been both natural and necessary for folks to join together in the warmth and glow of community in order to welcome the return of light to a world that is surrounded by dark. And through the imitative gesture of lighting fires, like so many solar birthday candles, we do our annual part to rekindle the spirit of hope in our hearts.

 - Mama Donna


*****************************************************
Donna Henes is an internationally renowned urban shaman, eco-ceremonialist, award-winning author, syndicated columnist, popular speaker and workshop leader whose joyful celebrations of celestial events have introduced ancient traditional rituals and contemporary ceremonies to millions of people in more than
100 cities since 1972. She has published four books, a CD, an acclaimed quarterly journal and writes a column for UPI (United Press International) Religion and Spirituality Forum. Mama Donna, as she is affectionately called, maintains a ceremonial center, spirit shop,
ritual practice and consultancy in Exotic Brooklyn, NY where she works with individuals, groups, institutions, municipalities and corporations to create meaningful ceremonies for every imaginable occasion.

For information about upcoming events and services contact:

Mama Donna's Tea Garden & Healing Haven
PO Box 380403 
Exotic Brooklyn, New York, NY 11238-0403
Phone: 718/857-1343
Email: CityShaman@aol.com
www.DonnaHenes.net
www.MamaDonnasSpiritShop.com/
www.TheQueenofMySelf.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Henes

http://youtube.com/watch?v=yAR-aIiQ_xE

 

 

 

 

C 2008 Beaver and Bear Publications. All rights reserved. .......................................Submit an Article | Contact | Visit Spirit Passages | Visit Beaver and Bear | Privacy