Greetings! 


Winter Solstice, is also known as midwinter.  This, the longest night of the 
year, is the time when the Goddess gives birth to the new spark of hope, the 
Sun Child --- light of the world --- which was conceived during the rites of 
Ostara (Spring's midpoint).  

The season is for celebrating the rebirth of the sun (son).  The Sun God, who 
dies at Samhain (Halloween), is reborn from the Maiden aspect of the Pagan holy 
trinity: Maiden, Mother, Crone.  The notion of "hoping" for a return of the 
summer light seems strange in modern times, but the originators of these 
traditions did not have the scientific sophistication of contemporary times.  
The waxing and waning of sunlight was a mystery.

This is one of the three holy days that feel supremely comfortable to Pagans 
because they are celebrated by the culture at large with many of the Pagan 
customs and conventions in place.  The reds and greens, the lights, the tree, 
the garlands, the song, the feast, the drink... All Pagan as can be.  Practices 
of the season such as gift giving, tree decoration, the hanging of greenery in 
the home, kissing under the mistletoe and the burning of a Yule log are all 
unmistakably Pagan.  The old Pagan ways are the template over which some 
religious traditions (patterns) have laid claim to the season.

The most common tradition still in existence from times of old is probably the 
Yule tree.  Stringing rosebuds, cinnamon sticks and berry garlands are all 
Pagan traditions, used for keeping the wood spirits warm during the cold winter 
months.  Bells were hung in the limbs so they would 
ring when spirits passed by.


Merry Yule to All!


Love,
Marsha


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