
The Goddess Garden
Degree System
All degree systems should be
intuitive. Many Covens and groups develop curriculum and testing as part of their
system. We are no different. However, sometimes you just know when it is time.
Particularly in the higher degrees, where it is not so much what you know that
is in question, but who you are and where you are on your path. You should
always listen to your gut instinct. This applies to moving ahead or staying
where you are. There is no shame in admitting that you are not ready to move on
yet.
You don’t have to belong to a Coven to participate
in a Degree system, which is why we host a Working Circle. A good deal of the
Witches who we know and respect, have learned from Solitaries.
Just because you are not in a Coven does not exclude you from the degree system.
No one ever stops learning.
The ancient Mystery religions were not only
Initiatory, they also had levels of Initiation. Sometimes these were
distinguished as the Lesser Mysteries and the Greater Mysteries, as with the
Eleusinian Mysteries. Sometimes these levels of Initiation were designated as
different Degrees as in the Mysteries of Isis, which had Three Degrees or
Grades, and the Mithraic Mysteries, which had seven (some scholars claim six,
others claim eight) Grades or Degrees.
In 1931, in her book The God Of The Witches,
archeologist Dr. Margaret Murray wrote about three different admission
ceremonies in organized Witchcraft: the first publicly before the assembly as a
member; the second privately as a Priest or Priestess; and the third, also
privately, as an officer of a Coven. In 1731, in an old French book about
Witchcraft, its author Boissier wrote that there were three "marks"
bestowed on witches at three different times.
In 1584, in his book The Discoverie Of Witchcraft,
Reginald Scott also described three levels of admission, saying like Murray that
the first was "public" before the assembly of witches, while the
second and third were in private with the leader, whether called the
"Devil" or the "Magister" - in other words, the High Priest.
And in the records of the Sentences of the Inquisition there is a Confession of
certain Witches who were burnt in the city of Lisbon, A.D. 1559, which states
that "no one can be a bruja [a Spanish and Portuguese word usually
translated as "witch"] without going through the degrees of feiticeyra
and alcoviteyra."
All of this evidence indicates that, like the
ancient Mysteries, the medieval Witch cult also had a concept of levels or
Degrees of Initiation; and that like the Mysteries of Isis there were three such
Degrees or Grades of Initiation, although the specific conceptions and details
may have varied from region to region. And in traditional Wicca today there are
also Three Degrees or Grades of Initiation.
Now, Wicca is often described as a non-hierarchical
religion. In fact, many claim this to be one of its great strengths as a
spiritual system, because it calls for individual participation in the ritual
observances of the group rather than passive observation, and because it
recognizes the individual's ability and responsibility for her/his own spiritual
progress.
And yet traditional Wicca has Three Degrees of Initiation, and a
system of Coven leadership that seems to bear many of the hallmarks of a
hierarchical organization.
In order to resolve this apparent contradiction, we
must first mention another ancestor of traditional Wicca, as we have it today,
besides the original "Witch cult," and that ancestor is Masonry; for
Gerald Gardner, and other members of the Coven into which he claimed to have
been Initiated, were Co-Masons (a branch of Masonry which admits women as well
as men). Masons, who like Wiccans also refer to themselves as members of a
"Craft," claim descent from the ancient Mysteries through various
persons and organizations. Whether this is a physical fact (and there is some
supporting evidence) or not, the claim to spiritual inheritance and descent is
unarguable; and it is also true that the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and
various Rosicrucian occult orders were founded by people that were Freemasons,
whatever other claims of "authority" and "lineage" they may
have made. Whatever and however many additional degrees any of the various
Masonic "Rites" or branches may have, the initial Three Degrees -
called the Craft Degrees - are those of "Entered Apprentice,"
"Fellow Craftsman," and "Master Mason," and those titles
reflect the origins of Masonic structure in the guild system of the Middle Ages.
The guild systems were established by workers in
particular crafts or trades in order to uphold standards and protect the
members. After a period of trial apprenticeship in which the candidate
demonstrated sufficient ability to be accepted for training, that candidate
would be accepted into the guild as an Entered Apprentice, and would work under
the direction of a Master Craftsman in exchange for further instruction in their
craft. When apprentices had acquired a good working knowledge of the craft, they
would be advanced to the rank of Journeyman, meaning someone qualified to do a
"journey" or "day's work" without the need of direct
immediate supervision by a Master; such a person was a recognized "Fellow
Craftsman," which explains the Masonic title.
Margaret Murray distinguished between "ritual
witchcraft," the religious aspect, and "operative witchcraft,"
the practical techniques of the witches' craft; in other words, between the
Witch's religion and the Witch's craft. Hence the distinction between
the (lower
case) witch, who practices witchcraft, and the (upper case) Witch, who practices
witchcraft as an integral part of their religious and spiritual path, and for
whom the Witch's Craft includes performance of religious rites and functions, or
"priestcraft", as well. But in any case, the point is that Wicca is
both a religious, as well as a magickal Craft, and that the Three Degrees of
traditional Wicca reflect that fact.
So in the First Degree Initiation into Wicca (when
you have successfully completed the first degree) the
postulant (dedicate or witching in Goddess Garden Group) is consecrated as a
Priestess and Witch, who is trained in the techniques of the basics of
magickal arts, and is responsible for her/his own spiritual life, and who
participates in the religious rites and spiritual life of the group. That
training in the techniques is thru formal online or realtime classes and emailed
information shares. The First Degree Initiate is the equivalent of the Entered
Apprentice of Masonry or of the medieval guilds.
In the elevation to Second Degree, the Witch is
consecrated as a "High Priestess
and "Witch Queen". Since, in
other Wiccan lineages, the formal title of "Witch
Queen" cannot be used until one has hived off an autonomous daughter-Coven
from one's own (of course under close supervision and mentoring of the mother
coven). In keeping with that tradition, we honor that by inducting the
student into a mentoring program to help begin to teach other students by
learning to responsibly tend a teaching list on Goddess Garden , thus fulfilling
that they have attained sufficient proficiency in the Craft that they can share
in the responsibility for the religious and spiritual life of the group,
although they need not have a specific call to teach, or lead a Coven, they must
at least be capable of sharing what they themselves have learned should the need
arise.
In the Elevation to Second Degree, the Initiation
ritual calls for the Initiator to "will all her Power unto" the
new Second Degree High Priestess. There are three important aspects to that
act, the first of which is that it connects to the folklore belief that Witches
cannot die until they pass on their Power; this should not be understood as
meaning they won't die if they do not pass it on, but that they should not: that
is, that they have a duty to preserve the life of the Craft by making sure the
knowledge and Power is not lost. The second aspect is that the Initiator does
not lose the Power she passes on, but shares it; just as a candle loses
nothing by lighting another candle, it only passes on the flame, which both hold
equally. This important rite of passage can not be relayed thru books. As such, the Second Degree is obviously the equivalent of the
Journeyman of the medieval guilds or the Fellow Craftsman of Masonry.
Only the Third Degree Student (with 100% vote of
approval from the Council of Elders) and above has the Authority to Initiate or to found a
Coven and then to Initiate others into it in Goddess Garden Group. They also may
start to teach classes under the Goddess Garden network. There are two
reasons for this: the first is that it is the Third Degree which corresponds to
the Master Craftsman of a craft guild. The second reason, which does much to
explain the necessary level of mastery required, is that while Wicca's aims, as
an Initiatory Path, of personal spiritual growth and self-transformation apply
to all three Degrees, at Second Degree the process all-too-frequently involves
the manifestation of many negative aspects of one's character, as these rise to
the surface to be confronted and transformed. This means that very often
Initiates of the Second Degree seem to be regressing, rather than progressing,
as that process goes on.
The elevation to Third Degree involves the Great
Rite, the Sacred Marriage of the Goddess and the God and Sacred Kiss. The significance of
symbolically using the Great
Rite to elevate to the Third Degree is that in successfully performing that
multi-level union with another, the Initiate demonstrates sufficient knowledge,
skill, and experience to undertake the work of performing that union within
herself and the initiator reminds herself that all are equal in order to be
balanced. We remind ourselves to remain grounded, humble and to always
treat our sisters with respect. Third Degree is that of a person in the process of achieving
Spiritual Individuality for which the work of the preceding Degrees has been the
necessary preparation and laid the necessary foundations. It does not mean the
completion of the work of self-transformation that is so much the focus of
Second Degree, but mastery of the methods involved in that work; and as such,
elevation to Third Degree recognizes one as having sufficiently mastered the
Craft that one is able to undertake the responsibility of guiding others on the
Path that one is walking independently, and with full Authority as a Wisewoman
or Elder of the Wicca.
Some of the older lines of traditional Wicca hold to
a tradition, which they date to the times of Persecution, that the first
exposure to Wiccan ritual should be the ritual of Initiation itself; but in some
lines of traditional Wicca, a modification has been added to the basic system of
Three Degrees in the form of a preliminary "Outer Grade" during which
the postulant receives instruction in preparation for actual Initiation, much
like the Novitiate period in Christianity and some other religions where a
postulant takes First Vows (in Goddess Garden this is called a Witchling) as a Novice and
then, having proved their vocation and aptitude during their time in the
Novitiate, they at last take Final Vows and become a full member of the group as
a Dedicate. A candidate for Initiation makes those First Vows in the Rite of
Dedication, after which the new Dedicate undertakes a period of preliminary
study and practice as a postulant, a period that corresponds with the
"trial apprenticeship" of the medieval guilds and the Novitiate of a
Catholic religious Order.