Question:
Know anything about Wicca?
nurdburd13
2006-05-02 14:01:16 UTC
I want to study Wicca; I was brought up Christian but I feel like there may be more to the world/universe than what Christian doctrine has to offer. Is there a good place to start?
Eighteen answers:
Lady of the Pink
2006-05-02 14:56:24 UTC
The important thing to remember is that when seeking information about any religion, always try deriving it from someone who belongs to that religion, and has for a significant amount of time (so they know their way around the doctrine). Usually (but not always), people who do not belong to a particular religion give invalid or inaccurate information (most likely derived from authorities of their own faith), and people who claim to have once been a part of it are the ones who usually spread the worst rumors and talk the most trash about it.



If I don't get my information directly from someone who's a part of the religion, I get it from a well researched, nonbiased source. I prefer this one: http://www.religioustolerance.org/



I would be happy to answer any specific questions you have to the best of my ability if you would like to contact me through the link in my profile. Otherwise, this is Religioustolerance.org's menu on Wicca: http://www.religioustolerance.org/witchcra.htm



Here are some other wonderful online references for Wicca:



http://www.witchvox.com/

http://www.glasstemple.com/

http://www.bewitchingways.com/main.htm
sparky52881
2006-05-02 14:44:36 UTC
We're not evil, we don't worship the devil, we don't open ourselves up to demonic influences, and we don't put hexes on anyone.



The ignorance!



But, anyway, there are tons of books out there. I recommend Starhawk's "The Spiral Dance." It's sort of a basic overview (I say "sort of" because it is from the point of view of a particular school, but it still has a lot of the basics). There are lots of others, too.



A good way to get to know what Wicca is about is to research covens in your area. Actually go and talk to Wiccans. Even if you decide that this is not the path for you, it would be a good experience.



Good luck. You may contact me if you have any specific questions.
Skate Rat Betty
2006-05-02 14:04:50 UTC
You don't need to follow any organized religion, if you don't want to. As long as you are comfortable with the setup, you and your "Higher Power" can have a relationship just fine without involving anyone else.

But as far as Wicca goes, I experimented with it too, in High School. An easy way to find out is to talk to a practicing Wiccan. Find a local store that is into that realm of things and ask one of the older women to give you some info. You can always do research online or at the library, but I found that actually speaking to a Wiccan helped me to define what I was in search of, and better clarify my wishes...
Mad Hatter
2006-05-02 21:00:51 UTC
This is a really good question as there is a lot of information on Wicca out there, but not all of it is useful or even logical.



I can't really recommend going to mainstream bookstores such as Borders or Barnes and Noble for great books on Wiccan spirituality. Their stock usually consists on little spell books without much in depth material on the religion itself. Occasionally you can find something useful though and most of the books are geared towards beginners.



As for websites, I find http://wicca.timerift.net to be an extremely informative site which urges the viewer to really think logically about the religion and not buy into the fad form of Wicca. The material may seem a bit scathing, especially to someone who is just starting out, but it is one of the most sensible websites I have found on the subject. It also provides a great list of recommended literature.



If you have any additional questions, please feel free to contact me.
Licinius
2006-05-02 14:55:29 UTC
You'll want to start out by giving yourself an overview of Witchcraft and the greater Pagan Community. If you're not afraid to read something scholarly I would recommend Chas Clifton's anthology "The Paganism Reader." It contains a lot of really good original source material concerning both ancient and modern witchcraft. I would also suggest taking a look at "Progressive Witchcraft" by Janet Farrar and Gavin Bone as well as "Witch Crafting" by Phyllis Curott. They both offer a really good overview of contemporary Witchcraft and Wiccan practices.



After you've gotten your feet wet exploring those kinds of materials you'll want to see what's going on in the Pagan/Witch community. Go to Witchvox and see what's going on in your area. You may be totally shocked to know how big the Pagan community is in your area. Browse through some of the articles on the website and see what strikes you as interesting.



I totally recommend looking for New Age/Occult bookstores in your area. If you have such a thing they are the most valuable resource in the community. Go there, browse the bookshelves, talk to the people who work there, and get comfortable with things.



On top of all that you can do searches for groups on both Witchvox and on Yahoo Groups. There are hundreds of yahoo groups for Witches out there. If the community sounds interesting see if you can lurk on their list for a while and find out what they're like.



Hope that helps.
2006-05-02 14:09:59 UTC
It's the Ronald McDonald of modern magic. Corporate as all Hell. Now, this is a New Age practice that obviously has a PR team. It's like some Hippie looked for a Magic Art that HAS been around for a while and then tried to figure out ways to make it appeal to as many small females as humanly possible (the only males that claim to be Wiccan (from a long line of Wiccans) are desperate for friends). See how it's all cute and cuddly? I want a Wiccan Lover that has real big knockers and wears a sweeping white dress made of silk so sheer that I can see her body.



She'll have long hair and comfort me with song after my long arduous days of administering beatdowns to the unworthy. From time to time she'll amuse me with her precious little magic feats, and her fat white cat Azrael. And, let me tell you, when time comes to get in the sack...... HHHHHHOOOOOWWWWWWEEEEE!!!!!!!!!
2006-05-02 19:43:32 UTC
I can give you some good links to start with and a few book suggestions. ALso feel free to email me specific questions.



Also, don't listen to people who say we are Satanists. They are just burnt out Christians with nothing better to do than pick on our religion. ALso they leave really long annoying posts that ramble on about Bible quotes and how we use Satanic symbols. What they don't tell you is that Pagans used them way before the Christians thought of Satan. So they can't be Satanic. Besides, Pagans don't acknowledge absolute evil. Goes against the laws of nature.
?
2016-09-26 07:31:18 UTC
people have already presented up ots of web sites, so i'm in simple terms upload a rapid warning right here... the Sweep sequence is fictional and can be recognized as such. that's meant to entertain, no longer prepare people approximately Wicca. there is coaching in that sequence that has no longer something to do with Wicca in the genuine international.
glory2glory76
2006-05-02 14:10:38 UTC
If you get beyond Christian Doctrine and go to God instead of a belief system, you may find your answers. God is All Powerful, All knowing and All loving. The lack of Power displayed in the church, and is very evident in the bible, is what is causing you to stray.



Church is boring and nothing is happening. Your heart cries out for the true and living God...not just for a religion and belief system. Don't seek again for another system. Seek God Himself who is not far off and is a rewarder of them who diligently seek Him. In Him is truth and all your heart is seeking. He created you that you may know Him...not to be a christian.



This is the heart of God and the reason Christ came. That you may know Him.
bargainmomma
2006-05-02 14:03:56 UTC
I think you should read about what ex wiccans have experienced first and why they quit.

If you were brought up Christian then you know that you can only follow one God or Satan/the world. You are playing with fire, literally, if you pursue this.
yojoewanna
2006-05-02 14:05:46 UTC
Bargainmomma is insane. Go to a Unity church & ask them for materials on Wicca, they will be pleased to assist you.
april.may
2006-05-02 14:06:17 UTC
Hopefully, you will do plenty of research before you start to practice [if you decide to].



Go to your local bookstore and find intro/beginners books.



To comprehend what it is go here > http://www.religioustolerance.org/wic_intr.htm



Also check this place out>

http://www.glasstemple.com/basics/index.php?conjure=introfaq



Hope these help.



Er...About that answer below that says it will come back ten-fold - It won't. Three-fold, yes, but not ten-fold.
jedimaster_46545
2006-05-02 14:05:32 UTC
start at Barnes & Nobels and get the Wiccan guide for dummies or its like...



it will have basic information, so after you read it, if you are still interested, look up some covens in your area and go for a visit...
smdglvr
2006-05-02 14:08:00 UTC
i used to know a girl that practiced wicca.her dad was a warlock, she used to brag that she could put spells on people and stuff. well guess what???if you try that on a christian it will come back on you 10 fold.you can't do that to good people ,only bad ones.
cutewitch
2006-05-02 14:11:42 UTC
easy...you may have some beginners info in the internet, or you can buy books, borders have a great variety of wiccan books.



bargainmomma ---> are you stupid, or something ?
emily brooks
2006-05-02 14:09:20 UTC
wicca is witchcraft and witchcraft is damned
jondeertractors
2006-05-02 14:05:42 UTC
no i dont
whitingke
2006-05-02 14:20:52 UTC
Yes i do. Wiccan is a form of Paganistic occult with many satanic symbols such as the triangle and inversed seal of solomon symbols which bear identical resemblence to the church of satan websites logo. if you go into paganism you will open yourself up to demonic influences and spirits. this is why Leviticus 19 verse 31 states : "Give no regard to mediums and familiar spirits; do not seek after them, to be defiled by them." if you really what me to tell you more details regarding this topic mail me i would first suggest that you watch this video of an ex-satanist telling you the truth on the occult:



http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3553879445882834497&q=CONSPIRACY&pl=true



its on google and its free and if you are serious about changing then you might want to watch this first. obviously i cannnot make you but i would like to sharpen your discernment first.- i used to be athesist.



the similarities between satanism and wicca



Satanism and the History of Wicca

by Diane Vera



Copyright © 1992, 1994, 1996 by Diane Vera. All rights reserved.





In their attempts to dissociate themselves from Satanism, Wiccans have tended to distort their own history. Wicca and Satanism are indeed very distinct religious categories. But there are some intimate historical ties between the two, as even some Wiccan scholars are finally starting to admit. See, for example, Aidan Kelly's book Crafting the Art of Magic (pp.21-22, 25-26, and 176).



Wicca is not "the Old Religion", though it does draw inspiration from various old religions. Wicca as we now know it is derived from 19th-century occult philosophy -- including literary Satanic philosophy, among others -- projected onto a non-Christian Goddess and God, plus some de-Christianized Golden Dawn style ceremonial magick, plus assorted turn-of-the-century British folklore, more recently re-shaped by neo-Pagan scholarship and by modern feminist and ecological concerns. At least several different sides of Wicca's convoluted family tree can be traced to 19th-century literary Satanism, some forms of which had more in common with present-day Wicca than with present-day Satanism.



The prime example of literary Satanism that strongly influenced Wicca, especially feminist Wicca, is the book La Sorciere by the 19th-century French historian Jules Michelet (published in English by Citadel Press under the title Satanism and Witchcraft). Michelet's ideas, as paraphrased by feminist writers such as Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English in their booklet Witches, Midwives, and Nurses: A History of Women Healers (Feminist Press, 1973), have played an important role today's women's health movement. (At least Ehrenreich and English were honest enough to list Michelet in their bibliography.) See especially Michelet's introduction. Michelet was, as far as I know, the literary origin of today's feminist image of the Witch as a healer. Among other things, he theorized that the witchhunts were used by the emerging male medical profession to wipe out their peasant female competition.



According to Jeffrey B. Russell in A History of Witchcraft, pre-feminist classical Wicca also drew lots of inspiration indirectly from Michelet. Michelet was a major source of inspiration to Margaret Murray, Charles G. Leland, and Sir James Frazer, whom most knowledgeable Wiccans do recognize as influential. (Russell points this out, yet neglects to inform the reader that Michelet's book is full of passionate, sympathetic depictions of Satan as well as of the medieval witches. Russell too perpetuates the false counter-myth that Wicca Has Nothing To Do With Satanism.)



I'll leave it to folks more scholarly than myself to debate just how indebted Murray and Leland were to Michelet. In any case, the Italian witch mythology Leland presented in Aradia: Gospel of the Witches (originally published 1899), one of Wicca's major sources, contains some diabolical-witchcraft elements of its own. The very first paragraph reads:



Diana greatly loved her brother Lucifer, the god of the Sun and of the Moon, the god of Light, who was so proud of his beauty, and who for his pride was driven from Paradise.



Wiccans usually argue that "Lucifer" is not the Christian Devil but is just "the god of the Sun and of the Moon". (I too distinguish between Satan and Lucifer, as do many occultists.) Yet the statement that Lucifer was "driven from Paradise" for his "pride" is clearly a reference to Christianity's Devil myth. Aradia contains a mix of mythologies.



Wiccans are correct to say that their Horned God is not Satan. But it isn't historically true that the Christian image of Satan is a re-interpretation of the Wiccan God. On the contrary, the modern Wiccan concept of the Horned God has its literary origin in a Paganized re-interpretation of medieval Christian Devil imagery (as in Margaret Murray's and earlier writings). It's true that medieval Christian Devil imagery, in turn, incorporates distorted versions of many ancient Gods (not all of whom were Horned, e.g. the trident comes from Poseidon/Neptune). But the Wiccan image of its Horned God is not a direct continuation of any ancient religion, and at least one key aspect does come from no source other than the medieval Christian Devil concept as manifest in the witchhunts. The idea of a Horned God associated specifically with witchcraft is derived from the Christian witchhunts, and from no previous source. In pre-Christian European religion, there were Goddesses associated with witchcraft, e.g. Hecate; but Pan and other horned male Gods were not associated with witchcraft, as far as I know. Much of Wicca's self-image is based on the Paganized re-interpretation of alleged Devil-worship, rather than on actual ancient religion. Much of Wicca's terminology and imagery, e.g. the words "witch", "coven", and "sabbat", are used because of the Wiccan myth that Wicca is the survival of an underground medieval religion that was the target of the witchhunts. (Regardless of the linguistic origin of the words themselves, this constellation of terms comes from the witchhunts.) The related idea that modern Wiccans too are in continual danger of being confused with Satanists is at least partly a self-fulfilling prophecy. Far fewer people would confuse modern Wicca with Satanism if Wicca didn't use so many witchhunt-derived words and other trappings popularly associated with diabolical witchcraft.



My point here is not that Wiccans shouldn't use the words "witch", "coven", and "sabbat". My point is that if they do use these and other diabolical-witchcraft trappings, they should accept responsibility for the consequences. For example, when explaining that Wicca Is Not Satanism, they should acknowledge the main real reason for the confusion: that modern Wiccans have chosen to identify with the victims of European witchhunts and have chosen their terminology accordingly. Wiccans certainly should not blame Satanists for Wicca's own public-relations difficulties, as some Wiccans do. It also bothers me when Wiccans, in an attempt to distance themselves from Satanism, perpetuate popular misconceptions about Satanism, e.g. saying "We're not Satanists!" in a tone which implies you think Satanists are monsters, or saying "We're not Satanists!" in the same breath as saying "We don't sacrifice babies." (The latter point can be made separately and is an obvious corollary of the Wiccan Rede and/or the Threefold Law.)



Back to Wicca's history. Besides Murray, Leland, and other writers on witchcraft, another of Wicca's main sources is Aleister Crowley. Many knowledgeable Wiccans (e.g. the Farrars and Doreen Valiente) do realize that Gardner's rituals were heavily based on Crowley's rituals, though they tend to overstate the "Crowley was not a Satanist" disclaimer.



Crowley was not a Satanist per se, but he definitely was into Satanic symbolism, in addition to the zillion other things he was into. In some defensive neo-Pagan writings (e.g. the Church of All Worlds booklet "Witchcraft, Satanism, and Occult Crime: Who's Who and What's What"), it is claimed that Crowley was neither a Satanist nor a Pagan but was just into Judaeo-Christian ceremonial magick. In fact, Crowley was very eclectic. Even Golden Dawn ceremonial magick included not only Qabalah and the medieval Christian grimoires, but also Egyptian deities, Greek deities, and Yoga. Crowley emphasized the Egyptian elements, downplayed the Christian elements, and added plenty of other things to the mix, including Satanic imagery galore (such as his invocation of Satan in Liber Samekh, not to mention his constant references to himself as "the Beast 666"). Some will insist that Crowley's Satanic symbolism was merely a joke; but Crowley's attitudes were well within the 19th-century Satanic literary tradition. (In most of the more sophisticated forms of Satanism, the name "Satan" is understood in an ironic sense.) Others will explain that most of Crowley's Satanic symbolism can be re-interpreted in Pagan terms, but this too is true of many forms of Satanism.



There's also a possibility that Wicca borrowed ideas from writings about actual Satanists living in the late-19th or early-20th century. In Crafting the Art of Magic, Aidan Kelly says Gerald Gardner drew key concepts from the description of Ozark folk witchcraft, including folk Satanism, in the 1947 book Ozark Superstition by Vance Randolph. I'll admit that Kelly's conclusions have been challenged by other historically-knowledgeable Wiccans.



Of course, if Gardner was influenced by Randolph's account, Gardner would probably have assumed that the Satanic folk witches were "really" Pagans whom Randolph misrepresented as Satanists. But Gardner's assumption wouldn't necessarily have been correct. An unlettered folk-witch would be far more likely to be either (1) a Satanist or (2) a devout though unorthodox Christian than to have preserved an ancient Pagan religion intact. Various Pagan customs have certainly survived, but this is very different from the intact survival of a Pagan religion, for which there is very little evidence. (For a critique of alleged evidence for Pagan survival, see A Razor for a Goat by Elliot Rose. Regarding a possible medieval witch-cult very different from what Murray hypothesized, see The Night Battles by Carlo Ginzburg. Regarding contemporary hereditary witches, many of whom are Christian, see Bluenose Magic by Helen Creighton. For an example of a decidedly non-Pagan grimoire that is very popular among European folk witches today, see The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses, available in some botanicas.)



Some forms of Wicca may have been influenced by Satanists more directly than via Murray, Leland, Crowley, Ehrenreich/English, and possibly Randolph. Two possible examples:





Historically-knowledgeable Wiccans have debated what role, if any, was played in the development of modern Wiccan by a 19th-century English farm laborer named George Pickingill who was reputed to be a witch. Aidan Kelly, who does not believe Pickingill contributed anything to Wicca, describes Pickingill as "a garden-variety folk-magic witch and a home-grown Satanist." The assertion that Pickingill did play a major role was originally made by "Lugh" in a newsletter called The Wiccan in 1974. "Lugh", who claimed to be a hereditary witch, described Pickingill as "the world's greatest living authority on Witchcraft, Satanism, and Black Magic" (quoted by Doreen Valiente in Rebirth of Witchcraft).





Starhawk was initiated by Victor Anderson, who once belonged to a coven whose form of witchcraft included a form of "literature-based Satanism" (or at least a religion closely akin to "literature-based Satanism"); or so says Kelly, based on research by Valerie Voigt. [Postscript, November 2002: Kelly's statements are quite likely not accurate. See update.]



Whether or not Kelly is correct about Victor Anderson, and whether or not Pickingill had anything to do with Wicca, it shouldn't be considered unlikely that some traditions of Wicca originated as forms of Satanism and then gradually grew away from Satanism. To this day, there are occultists who start out as Satanists and eventually become Wiccans or other types of neo-Pagans. It would be very odd if such people's understanding of Wicca was not at all influenced by their previous experience with Satanism.



Theistic forms of Satanism have a natural tendency to give birth to new, non-Satanic religions. If you reject Christian theology (as nearly all intelligent Satanists do), but if you nonetheless venerate Satan as a real being or force (not just a symbol as in LaVey Satanism), then the question inevitably arises: Who and what is "Satan"? Different forms of Satanism have different answers to this question. One of the easier answers is to re-interpret Satan as a pre-Christian deity, usually either Set or Pan. However, once you equate Satan with a specific ancient deity, you have taken the first step away from Satanism. You are no longer venerating Satan per se; you are now venerating a Pagan deity with Satanic overtones. And then, once you develop your Paganized belief system further, the Satanic overtones will eventually seem less and less important. Such has apparently been the case with the Temple of Set, an offshoot of LaVey's Church of Satan. (Setians disagree on whether to call themselves "Satanists".) It seems not at all unlikely that some forms of Wicca, with all its diabolical-witchcraft trappings, would have a similar origin. A group of theistic Satanists who equated Satan with Pan, as some Satanists do, would very likely tend to evolve in a Wicca-like direction.



More about Wicca's diabolical-witchcraft trappings. Wicca's self-image is based on the records of witchhunts, re-interpreting the alleged activities of accused diabolical witches as the worship of a Pagan "Horned God". Wicca thus makes a new use of the same source material that Satanists have been using for centuries.



An interesting question is: Why reconstruct an "Old Religion" this way, rather than just going back to the records of actual old religions? Other forms of neo-Paganism, e.g. Asatru and neo-Druidism, which do base themselves more on what's known about actual ancient religions, are far less likely than Wicca to be confused with Satanism by outsiders. Why do Wiccans insist on using words like "witch" and "coven" when they could easily use other, more respectable-sounding words?



Despite Wicca's diabolical-witchcraft trappings, or perhaps partly because of those trappings, Wicca has more popular appeal than any other form of neo-Paganism. Certainly Wicca's hot-button terminology has helped Wicca get lots more publicity than it otherwise could. Wiccan spokespeople sometimes bemoan the fact that newspapers interview them only at Halloween, but most small religious sects don't get nearly so much free publicity at any time of the year, not even on Halloween. And, judging by the way some Wiccans keep repeating "We're Not Satanists!" far more often than they actually get accused of being Satanists, it seems logical to suspect that at least some of them are using words and images popularly associated with Satanism as a way to attract attention, and/or because they themselves enjoy feeling naughty. (I've actually heard some Wiccans say that if the word "witch" ever became too respectable, it would lose some of its power.)



Modern Satanists have long felt that the basis of Wicca's appeal lies in the paradoxical (some would say hypocritical) combination of Wicca's Satanic connotations and the denial of same. Thus, Satanists tend to regard Wicca as a ripoff of Satanism.



I personally don't regard Wicca as a ripoff. In my opinion, Wiccans' use of witchhunt-derived trappings is neither more nor less legitimate than the use of those same trappings by Satanists. And Wicca, as a religion, does have much more substance to it than just its deliberately-adopted superficial resemblances to diabolical witchcraft.



But I'm very irritated by those endless "Wicca Has Nothing To Do With Satanism!" disclaimers. I wouldn't mind if Wiccans merely said that Wicca is not Satanism (at least if they said it without repeating it unnecessarily). It's true that Wicca is not Satanism, but it isn't historically true that Wicca "has nothing to do with" Satanism. Nor is it true that Wicca has nothing in common with Satanism. Some forms of Wicca and neo-Paganism have a lot in common with (some forms of) Satanism.



Oddly enough, of the many Wicca-based forms of neo-Paganism, one of the most "Satanic" (in terms of 19th-century literary Satanism) is feminist Goddess religion, despite its frequent omission of even the "Horned God". See, for example, some of Mary Daly's writings. When it comes to inverting and parodying Christian symbolism, Daly's wordplay does it better than an old-fashioned Black Mass. Daly also reclaims and venerates almost every demonized female category conceivable, from Furies to Hags. And let's not forget the many feminists who venerate Lilith, a Jewish folkloric near-equivalent of the Christian Satan. Lilith never made it to the status of a full-fledged anti-god, but otherwise her myth is almost identical to the Christian Satan myth: banished for her pride, she became a dreaded demon and was even blamed for people's sins, especially sexual ones. To be fair, I should mention that not all feminist Goddess-worshippers are into either Mary Daly's writings or the veneration of Lilith. But the feminist counterculture, because it is a counterculture, tends generally to include an extra dose of demon-reclamation beyond what is found in classical Wicca, e.g. magazine titles like Sinister Wisdom. All these parallels to Satanism reflect the quintessentially Satanic central theme of some forms of feminist Goddess religion: self-liberation from a socially-imposed mainstream "spiritual" order -- even though Goddess religion is in other ways quite "un-Satanic" by the standards of most modern Satanists.



One of the earliest feminist writers on religion had a much friendlier attitude toward Satanism than is common today. As far as I know, the very first feminist writer on witchcraft and Goddess religion was 19th-century womens's suffrage leader Matilda Joslyn Gage. Her book Woman, Church, and State contains an enthusiastic depiction of a medieval peasant Black Mass, based on Michelet's account.



I hope today's Wiccans and feminist Goddess-worshippers will stop fearing to recognize that, just as Christianity borrowed heavily from Greek mystery religion yet is a very different religion from the Greek mysteries, so too Wicca and feminist Goddess religion have drawn lots of inspiration from Satanism, though they are very different religions. Kelly's honesty is refreshing. If today's Satanists are sometimes nasty to Wiccans, well, how would you react to a bunch of people who went out of their way to deny their own roots, just so they could disown you?



What's especially annoying is the way many Wiccans claim the word "Witchcraft" as a name for their own religion, defining not only "Wicca" but also "Witchcraft" as a religion distinct from Satanism. Excuse me, but witchcraft is not a religion. There are witches all over the world, in many different cultures. They don't all belong to one religion. A witch can be any religion. One of my great-grandfathers was a "water witch" who told people where to dig wells. He was a devout Christian. If a Christian can be a witch, then so can a Satanist. There have been both Christians and Satanists calling themselves witches long before today's Wiccans came along. (See Randolph's and Creighton's books, for example.) So I really wish Wiccans would stop using the word "witchcraft" as a name for their own specific religion. I don't object to Wiccans calling themselves witches, but I do object to the idea that all true witches are Wiccan (or at least Pagan) and that, therefore, Satanists can't be witches.



Wiccans are welcome to call their specific religion "Wicca", an archaic word that they themselves resurrected. Another good name for their specific religion is "Neo-Pagan Witchcraft", a phrase suggesting that their religion is a subcategory of witchcraft, not witchcraft as a whole. Thus, it's accurate to say, "Neo-Pagan Witchcraft is not Satanism", whereas it's misleading to say, "witchcraft (in general) is not Satanism".



It would also be nice if Wiccans would stop making inaccurate pronouncements on what Satanism is, such as, "Satanism is a form of Christianity" or "To be a Satanist, you must believe in the Christian God".



if you want more detailed analysis this webpage is the best with a short video on symbology:



http://www.planetquo.com/-Horns-Across-The-Water-Satanism-In-America-And-Britain



let me know what you decide my friend... i can give you literature on Christian stuff so you won't view it as boring. alternatively go to an evangelistic church that plays indy music and has a strong youth contingent...


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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