SABBATS
Sabbats are  holidays. The  year begins after  Samhain according to the Celtic CALENDAR      
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The Goddess gives birth to a son, the God, at Yule. Yule is a time of the greatest darkness and is the shortest day of the year. Since the God is also the Sun, this marks the point of the year when the Sun is reborn as well.Thus, the Wicca light fires or candles to welcome the Sun's  returning light. The Goddess, slumbering through the winter of Her labor, rests after Her delivery. To contemporary Wiccans it is a reminder that the ultimate product of death is rebirth.
Yule (circa December 21)          
YULE RITUAL
Imbolc marks the recovery of the Goddess after giving birth to the God. The lengthening periods of light awaken Her. The God is a young, lusty  boy, but His power is felt in the longer days. Imbolc is also known  as Feast of Torches, Oimelc, Lupercalia and Brigid�s day.
Candlemas ( circa Febuary 2)
Ostara, or Spring Equinox marks the first day of true spring. The Goddess blankets the  Earth with fertility, bursting forth from Her sleep, as the God stretches and grows to maturity. On Ostara the hours of day and   night are equal. Light is overtaking darkness.
Ostara  Sabbat ( march 21)
Beltane marks the emergence of the young God into manhood. Stirred by the energies at  work in nature, He desires the Goddess. They fall in love, lie among  the grasses and blossoms, and unite. The Goddess becomes pregnant of the God. The Wiccans celebrate the symbol of Her fertility in ritual. The flowers and greenery symbolize the Goddess; the May Pole the God. Beltane marks the return of vitality, of passion and hopes consummated.
Beltane    (April 30)
Is also known as  Litha, arrives when the powers of nature reach their highest point.  The Earth is awash in the fertility og the Goddess and God. Midsummer is a classic time for magic of all  kinds.
Summer   Solstice (circa June 21)
Lughnasadh is the time of the first harvest, when the plants of spring wither and drop their fruits or seed for our use as well as to ensure future crops. Mystically, so too does the God lose His strength as the Sun rises farther in the South each day and the nights grow longer. The  Goddess watches in sorrow and joy as She realizes that the God is  dying, and yet lives on inside Her as Her  child.
Lughnasadh   (August 1)
Mabon is the  completion of the harvest begun at Lughnasadh. Once again day and  night are equal, poised as the God prepares to leave His physical  body and begin the great adventure into the unseen, toward renewal  and rebirth of the Goddess. Nature declines, draws back its bounty,  readying for winter and its time of rest The Goddess nods in the weakening sun, though fire burns within Her womb. She feels the presence of the god even as He wanes.
Autumn  Equinox (circa September 21)
At samhain, the Wicca say farewell to the God. This is a temporary farewell. he isn't wrapped in eternal darkness, but readies to be reborn of the Goddess  at Yule. Samhain is a time of reflection, of looking back over the  last year, of coming to terms with the one phenomenon of life which we no control - death. The Wicca feel that on this night the  separation between the physical and spiritual realities is thin. Wiccans remember their ancestors and all those who have gone before.
Samhain  (October 31)
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