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Mairwen
May 26th, 2001, 01:11 PM
I got this about 5 years ago from one of the old Pagan BBS's:


The Threefold Goddess by Eileen

In a message dated 7/30/00 6:58:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
jahrling@catskill.net writes:

The Threefold Goddess

To understand the concept of Goddess requires more than the ability to visualize God as a woman. The Goddess concept is built
around the myth and mystery of the relationship between God and Goddess, and beneath that, and part of it, Her Threefold Aspect ... Maiden, Mother and Crone.

One of the oldest recognized Goddess forms is the first Greek
Goddess - Gaia, the Earth Mother; the Universal Womb; Mother of All. The most ancient Goddesses were most often Earth and Mother Goddesses. The were worshipped and revered as bearers of life ... fat, healthy, pregnant and fruitful. As the Goddess concept developed, then came the Harvest Goddesses, who were also Earth Goddesses. Understand that this was a time when people did not even understand the basic mechanics of procreation. Life was very sacred and mystical indeed!

Gradually, myth and mystery developed and revealed themselves, creating the legend which we honor in the modern
Wiccan Craft.

We recognize the Goddess as the mother of all, including her
Mighty Consort, the God. To Her he is Lover and Son, and together they form the Ultimate, the Omniverse, the Dragon,
the Mystery.

Now that is a pretty tough concept all things considered.

Especially in our society as it sounds rather incestuous. From a
mundane perspective, it gets worse as the Wheel of the Year Turns, and the Oak and Holly Kings battle ... eternal rivals and
sacrificial mates.

In the pages that follow, we will explore the Goddess foundation
concepts and try to reach an understanding of the basis of the
Mystery.

I don't want to get off into all the names of all the Goddesses
in all the mythology in all of history. While that is certainly a
noble endeavor, it is not the objective here. What I do want to do is look at the Goddess, in whole and in part, and see just who and what she is.

First and foremost, the Goddess is the symbol of the Cycle of
Everlasting. She is constant, ever present, ever changing, and yet always the same. She could be compared in that respect to the oceans.

As a part of that, she is that from which we have come, and to
which we will return. She is the Universal Mother, the Cosmic Womb. While those are largely symbolic images, as opposed to literal ones, they are important to bear in mind about any aspect
of the Goddess. She never harms, she is Mother.

One of the most difficult throwback mentalities to dispell in a
student is the difference between "dark and light" and "bad and good". Societally, and often religiously, we are trained to see bad and dark and evil as being the same. Hence, we are also taught to hate and fear our own mortality. All too often I see practicing Wiccans, who ought to *know* better, fall back on these concepts
when trying to explain or understand a concept.

The Goddess is dark, she is light, she is birth, she is death, and she rejoices in all things. With death comes joy, for with death
comes renewal. With life comes joy, for with life comes promise.
With growth comes joy for with growth comes wisdom. Sorrow and fear are not a part of her, not the way we feel those emotions. She is incapable of sorrow without joy, she fears nothing, because fear is not real. It is a creation of the mind.

Whether you see the Goddess as a Warrior Queen, or like the Good Witch of the North in the Wizard of Oz, she is the Goddess. And she has many parts and facets which defy comprehension
as "One". She simply IS, and in that, can be whatever you need her to be in order to establish a relationship with her. But none of that changes what she IS.

"I greet thee in the many names of the Threefold Goddess and her Mighty Consort. Athe, malkuth, ve-guburah, ve-gedulah, le-olam, Amen. Blessed Be."

So here, at the Circle Door, greeted by the High Priest or Priestess we first see mentioned the Threefold Goddess. Full-sized covens have three priestesses who take the specific roles of Maiden, Mother and Crone, the High Priestess being Mother.

The Threefold Goddess however is NOT three entities, she is one.
Her aspects represent Enchantment, Ripeness and Wisdom.

Taking first things first is usually best, so we shall start with a look at one side of the Maiden.

Quoting "The Myth of the Goddess" as found in Gardenarian Wicca
(Gerald B. Gardner, The Meaning of Witchcraft, Aquarian Press, London, 1959.):

Now Aradia had never loved, but she would solve all the
Mysteries, even the Mystery of Death; and so she journeyed to the Nether Lands.

The Guardians of the Portals challenged her, "Strip off thy
garments, lay aside thy jewels; for naught may ye bring with ye into this our land."

So she laid down her garments and her jewels and was bound, as were all who enter the Realms of Death the Mighty One. Such was her beauty that Death himself knelt and kissed her feet,
saying, "Blessed by thy feet that have brought thee in these ways. Abide with me, let me place my cold hand on thy heart." She replied "I love thee not. Why dost thou cause all things that I love and take delight in to fade and die?"

"Lady," replied Death, "it is Age and Fate, against which I am helpless. Age causes all things to wither, but when men die at the end of time I give them rest and peace, and strength so that they may return. But thou, thou art lovely. Return not; abide with me."

But she answered, "I love thee not."

Then said Death, "An' thou receive not my hand on thy heart thou must receive Death's scourge."

"It is Fate; better so", she said, and she knelt, and Death
scourged her and she cried "I feel the pangs of love."

And Death said, "Blessed be" and gave her the Fivefold Kiss,
saying "Thus only may ye attain joy and knowledge."

And he taught her all the Mysteries. And they loved and were
one, and he taught her all the Magicks.

For there are three great events in the life of Man: Love, Death and Resurrection in a new body, and Magick controls them all. For to fulfill love you must return again at the same time and place
as the loved one, and you must remember and love them again. But to be reborn you must die, and be ready for a new body; and to die you must be born; and without love you may not be born.
And these be all the Magicks.


So there in the Gardnerian Myth of the Goddess we have her
Maiden aspect, seeking, searching and opening herself to the
mysteries. But it is well to remember that the Goddess herself is a mystery, and the primary gift of the Goddess is intuitive Wisdom.

Beltaine (Bealtain) is the only Sabbat where the Goddess is
entirely devoted to the Maiden. Here, she revels in the enchantment, in the joy of coming into fullness and mating with
the God. Here, she is maiden bride and we can most easily understand that facet of the Maiden aspect. I should probably note here that some see this festival as maiden turning into mother, with the maiden being in full at Candlemas, but I do not agree with that.

Youth, newness, innocence and beauty are fundamental facets of
the Maiden aspect. But beneath those are seeking, and love, and love of seeking. There is more to understand of the Maiden
though. Enchantment does not end with maidenhood, it is
simply the beginning of the Mystery of Life, for that, above all, is what the Goddess stands for.

In Circle, in the Balanced Universe, the Maiden takes her place in the East. In examining this most comfortable quarter, you learn
more about the Maiden Aspect. East (Air) rules the free mind and
intellect. It is the place to seek the ability to learn and to open
spiritually, to open your mind and find answers. It is a masculine
quarter, ruled by intellect, and analytical logic, but she brings to it an intuition which is required to use these to best advantage.

"The river is flowing, flowing and growing,
the river is flowing back to the sea.
Mother carry me, a child I will always be.
Mother carry me, back to the sea."

This Circle chant, sung in joy, sung in sorrow, is a cry to the
Mother Aspect for comfort and warmth, a power chant calling upon the steady power and fullness of the Mother and a plea for guidance. While the Earth Mother, and the fully aspected Goddess are placed North in the Earth quarter, the Mother aspect alone belongs in the west.

Comfort and love rule here. Emotions, sorrow, joy, tears, these
belong to the ripeness of the Mother. Caring and loving for all her children, watching in pain and pride as they struggle to gain their own, knowing full well she could reach out and do it for them, but being both bound and desirous to let them do it for
themselves.

There is a considerable difference, as you might have interpreted
from the above, between the Earth Mother and the Mother Aspect of the Goddess. That is why we've started with her quarter, because it reveals the limitations of the Aspect.

The Mother aspect is ripeness, the ancient bearing of fruit, child and grain. She represents emotion and sexuality. The Goddess in that aspect is most of the altar (as discussed in the Great Rite lesson.) It is interesting to note the practice in numerous ancient cultures of lovemaking or outright sex magick in cornfields to help
make the corn grow.

The Dark Mother should also be placed here, although culturally, I
have a tendancy to think of the Dark Mother as more in keeping the Crone Aspect. It is a bit of work to see the Dark Mother in the West, to separate Dark Mother from Crone, but it is worthwile. If you have any background with the tarot I would suggest you take it in that context, it is beyond the scope of this text.

Our exploration of the Goddess and her Aspects brings us now to
the Crone. For me, the Crone is the most fascinating of the Aspects of the Goddess. Partly I suppose because she is the most mysterious and paradoxical.

"Blessed Goddess, old and wise, open mine, thy child's, eyes.
Speak to me in whispered tones that I may know the rune of Crones."

With life and growth comes age and wisdom, and the Crone is this in part. She holds fire and power, which wisely used can be of great benefit, but hold great danger for the unaware. Hers are the secrets of death and of life, and the mystery beyond the
mystery.

Part of the pleasure in knowing the Crone aspect is that while,
unlike the fully aspected Goddess, she is not also Maiden and Mother, she does retain the experiences of both those Aspects in order to be Crone. The Crone, wizened though she is, must still
be able to reach into herself and recall the innocent joys and high
passions of the Maiden and the love and warmth of the Mother.

To be Crone and to not have forgotten, to still be able to experience Maiden and Mother is, to me, very appealing. More importantly, to be comfortable in that Aspect, where you have truth and knowledge but have left youth and physical beauty behind, and to still _feel_ youth and beauty without being desirous of them is an admirable quality.

Crone is the least paralleled Aspect of the Goddess to our human
society. We discard our old and wise, not understanding their value as teachers and models, and fearing their appearance as a reminder of our own mortality.

Knowing Crone is a door we much each open for ourselves for to know and love her is to cast aside a great many of our cultural and societal malteachings.

While the individual Aspects of Threefold Goddess are certainly
valid concepts and paths to knowing Goddess, I should caution that most mythological Goddess figures are composite Goddesses. Earth Mother Goddess figures are fully aspected Goddess by definition because they represent the full cycle of the Wheel. Most other Goddess figures can be classified as having a dominant (or operative) aspect and recessive (promised, or in some cases past) aspect. Future and past should not be taken literally, mythological Goddess figures are always whatever they
are eternally, they do not tend to change (ie age).

Maiden Goddesses possessing their operative in the Huntress or
Warrior aspects most often have a promise of Crone. Maiden Goddesses expressing their dominance in beauty and/or love
usually have their recessive aspect as Mother. For example, Athena is a Maiden Goddess with Crone attributes (the combination produces many Mother-type qualities, and this results in the Crone aspected Maiden being the most complete of the Mythological Goddesses, with the exception of Earth Mother Goddesses.) Aphrodite is of course a Maiden Goddess with
Mother attributes.

Similarly, Dark Mother Goddess figures mostly find their promise in
Crone and Light Mother figures their recessive in Maiden. Crone
recessives work the same way, although sometimes it takes a bit of close examination to find the "hidden" aspect.

One should note that this is not a formula, rather a tool to
assist in examining and understanding Goddess figures and creating one's own personal spiritual link with Goddess. It is also a useful consideration when invoking a specific Goddess with
purpose in ritual.

The purpose of this course has been to open avenues of approach in discovering and developing a relationship with Goddess. For me personally, I do not "believe" in the reality of
mythological Goddess figures as they were presented, but I do believe they are a valid way to establish communication with Goddess. I also believe Goddess will appear in whatever form we are most ready to accept.

The real Goddess, by my belief (and this is personal, not trad) is an entity beyond my comprehension, perhaps composed of light
(could 5000 sci-fi films be wrong?), most assuredly unlike anything I could ever imagine in true form. However, I do find mythological Goddess figures highly useful for ritual, and of some help in my personal relationship with Goddess. I hope you will too.

Mairwen
May 26th, 2001, 01:12 PM
Sorry for the mess this file is in. I tried fixing it. Really! 8O :elf:

loopy
May 26th, 2001, 11:24 PM
What mess? :) That was a great read, very informative. :) Thank you for taking the time to share.

it gets worse as the Wheel of the Year Turns, and the Oak and Holly Kings
battle ... eternal rivals and
sacrificial mates.

Anyone know where I could find more information on that? I don't believe I've heard of it until today. If I have, it's buried in my subconscious. :)

Mairwen
May 26th, 2001, 11:57 PM
They battle twice each year ~ once at Yule and again at the Summer Solstice ~ over who gets to control the next six months.

loopy
May 26th, 2001, 11:59 PM
Thank you. :D

Emerald Sky
May 27th, 2001, 10:14 PM
Thanks for that Mairwen! That was a very interesting essay! :)

*NeraViolet*
June 15th, 2003, 02:45 PM
Thanks for that. It was an enjoyable read.

moonmorgan
June 15th, 2003, 06:07 PM
Very nice, thanks!

lovepoet
June 15th, 2003, 11:47 PM
For Oak & Holly King material:

Eight Sabbats for Witches - Janet & Stewart Farrar
(The Witches Bible Compleat also by Janet &Stewart Farrar also has the same text)

And *their* main source for this material:
The White Goddess - Robert Graves
& also The Greek Myths - Robert Graves

lovepoet
June 15th, 2003, 11:49 PM
Mairwen, it's not completely clear to me where your quoted posts ends, are the last words yours?

Ben Trismegistus
June 16th, 2003, 11:53 AM
Out of curiosity, does anyone know which culture first developed the specific concept of the Triple Goddess? Specifically referring to them as Maiden, Mother, Crone? I'd always assumed it was the ancient Greeks or the Celts, but it's just as possible that it's a modern idea based on an ancient one. Does anyone know?

The only portion of this article I disagree with is the following sentence:


One of the oldest recognized Goddess forms is the first Greek
Goddess - Gaia, the Earth Mother; the Universal Womb; Mother of All.

Of course there are recognized Goddess forms that predate the Greeks by many thousands of years.

The following is an excerpt on the history of Goddess worship from themystica.com:

Goddess worship dates back to Paleolithic times. Many anthropologists speculate the first "God " or gods of the peoples were feminine. This coincides with ancient creation myths and beliefs that creation was achieved through self-fertilization. Within the concept of creation the participation of the male principle was not known or recognized yet. The Goddess was believed to have created the universe by herself alone.

From this belief came the agricultural religions. It was thought that the gods only prospered by the beneficence and wisdom which the Goddess showered on them. Evidence appears to indicate most ancient tribes and cultures were matriarchal.

Although this maybe true, there seems to be little evidence that the feminine portions of these societies held themselves superior over their male counterparts. Generally Goddess worship had been balanced by the honoring of both the male and female Deities. This is illustrated by the belief in and the observance of the sacred marriage of the Sky God and Earth Mother in many global societies.

Among the first human images discovered are the "Venus figures," nude female figures having exaggerated sexual parts that date back to the Cro-Magnons of the Upper Paleolithic period between 35,000 and 10,000 BC.

In southern France is the Venus of Laussel which is carved in basrelief in a rock shelter. This appears once to have been a hunting shrine which dates to around 19,000 BC. In this carving the woman is painted red, perhaps to suggest blood, and holds a bison horn in one hand.

Also in Cro-Magnon cave paintings women are depicted giving birth. "A naked Goddess appears to have been the patroness of the hunt to mammoth hunters in the Pyrenees and was also protectress of the hearth and lady of the wild things."

Other female figurines were discovered dating back to the proto-Neolithic period of ca, 9000 - 7000 BC, the Middle Neolithic period of ca. 6000 - 5000 BC, and the Higher Neolithic period of ca. 4500 - 3500 BC. Some of these figurines were decorated as if they had been objects of worship. In black Africa were discovered cave images of the Horned Goddess (later Isis, ca. 7000 - 6000 BC). The Black Goddess images appeared to represent a bisexual, self-fertilizing woman.

During the predynastic Egyptian period, prior to 3110 BC, the Goddess was known as Ta-Urt (Great One) and was portrayed as a pregnant hippopotamus stand on her hind legs.

The Halaf culture around the Tigris River, ca. 5000 - 4000 BC, had Goddess figurines associated with the cow, serpent, humped ox, sheep, goat, pig, bull, dove and double ax. These things were known to the people and became symbols representing the Goddess.

In the Sumerian civilization, ca. 4000 BC, the princesses or queens of cities were associated with the Goddess. A king was associated with God.

ladyhawke
September 25th, 2003, 06:52 PM
Mairwen I thought you did a beautiful job on the triple goddess. blessing ladyhawke

Angharad Goldenhand
September 26th, 2003, 09:34 AM
Yes - it's a purely modern idea, started by Graves, and taken up by many neo-pagan faiths.

There are ancient triple Goddesses in the sense of groups of Goddesses who are connected in some way, but not the maiden/mother/crone triplicity.

Mnemosyne
September 26th, 2003, 09:59 PM
Yes - it's a purely modern idea, started by Graves, and taken up by many neo-pagan faiths.

There are ancient triple Goddesses in the sense of groups of Goddesses who are connected in some way, but not the maiden/mother/crone triplicity.

Yeah, that's what I was thinking. Graves brought up that point in the Witches Goddess. From my understanding, the ancients did not see the triple goddess in the same light. We use ancient goddesses to fit into the categories of the maiden, mother and crone.

Just like Angharad Goldenhand stated, the ancients did have triple goddess. In Celtic myth, there is the Morrigan. In Greek myth, there are the Three Fates and the Three Graces.

was
February 26th, 2004, 09:53 AM
the god also has 3 faces the hunter the warrior the sage...cheers!!! :floating:

RubyRose
February 26th, 2004, 09:40 PM
Interesting read. Thanks.

~water_lilly~
August 7th, 2007, 04:36 AM
Thankyou so much for this post. It was incredibly informative and has given me such an insight into the Goddess. I am incredibly ecited about my journey with her, thankyou for helping.

raven grimassi
August 7th, 2007, 12:36 PM
Out of curiosity, does anyone know which culture first developed the specific concept of the Triple Goddess? Specifically referring to them as Maiden, Mother, Crone? I'd always assumed it was the ancient Greeks or the Celts, but it's just as possible that it's a modern idea based on an ancient one. Does anyone know?.

In all my research to date I have not found the term "maiden-mother-crone" in connection with a triformis goddess in ancient times. However, it may simply be that it was not necessary to state the obvious and so we do not find written references to maiden-mother-crone (we just find their natures).

I think what supports a triformis goddess reflecting the attributes of "maiden -mother-crone" in ancient times is the concept itself (a long-standing tradition that continues into modern times). Such a triplicity does exist in the classic Three Fates. It can also be found in the ancient writings of Lucan who refers to a triformis goddess of Witches (where a case can be made for a maiden-mother-crone figure concept).

Scholar F.A. Paley notes, in his The Epics of Hesiod, the comments of two scholars (Goettling & Hermann) regarding the ages of the Fates and their representation of the three stages of humanlife:

“Goettling describes an ancient terra-cotta group preserved at Rome in which the three Fates are represented differing in stature, Clotho being the tallest, Lachesis the next, and Atropos the shortest. He further supposes, with Hermann, that the greater age and decrepitude of Atropos is indicated”. (the editor notes: “Did these goddesses severally represent three stages of human life, viz. maturity, middle age, and old age?”) - page 145

Whatever is being said here, I think the reference to the appearance of Atropos as a hag figure is noteworthy. This is a beginning point for assigning ages to the three Fates.

Archaeologist Alexander Murray, in his Handbook on World Mythology, writes of the Fates in their Greek and Roman names:

“…three Moaerae (or Parcae) answering respectively the three stages of human life – birth, years, and death”

“The names of the three sisters were Klotho, Lachesis and Atropos. To express the influence which they were believed to exercise on human life from birth to death, they were conceived as occupied in spinning a thread of gold, silver and wool…the youngest, put the wool round the spindle, Lachesis spun it, and Atropos, the eldest, cut if off, when a man had to die.”

In this text we have Klotho described as the youngest, which we can now add to Atropos the “decrepit”. This leaves us with Lachesis. In the Dialogues of Plato (B. Jowett, Oxford Clarendon Press) we read:

“…Clotho now and then assisting with a touch of her right hand the motion of the outer circle or whorl of the spindle, and Atropos with her left hand touching and guiding the inner ones, and Lachesis laying hold of either in the turn, first with one hand and then with the other” - page 515

In this we see Lachesis in the middle position, between the youthful Clotho and the decrepit Atropos, strongly suggesting that Lachesis is the middle phase of life. Add to this the fact that only Lachesis is dressed in the prescribed attire of a matron in Roman culture.

I have attached images of the Fates (dating from the 2nd century ce) and Lachesis is in the middle. I have included the illustration from Murray's book, where positions are set differently but the basic symbolism remains the same. I have yet to find the terra-cotta images referred to by Gottling & Hermann.

*Rasenna*
August 7th, 2007, 10:51 PM
In all my research to date I have not found the term "maiden-mother-crone" in connection with a triformis goddess in ancient times. However, it may simply be that it was not necessary to state the obvious and so we do not find written references to maiden-mother-crone (we just find their natures).

I think what supports a triformis goddess reflecting the attributes of "maiden -mother-crone" in ancient times is the concept itself (a long-standing tradition that continues into modern times). Such a triplicity does exist in the classic Three Fates. It can also be found in the ancient writings of Lucan who refers to a triformis goddess of Witches (where a case can be made for a maiden-mother-crone figure concept).

Ironically the argument is a bit silly itself. A "maiden-mother-crone" concept can exist without that label, but the label can't exist without the concept behind it. So there doesn't have to be an ancient term or phrase for the maiden-mother-crone triple image in order for there to have been one.