The Sacred
Feminine is a term we use for the that mysterious source of
all life, the wellspring of creation. The Big SHE. The Feminine
Force that births both male and female forms. The
Circle that contains both yin and yang. The portal between
the worlds. She is by nature indefinable, yet her presence has
been experienced so tangibly by peoples of the Earth from the
beginning of time, that She has been honoured and deified in
many forms.
Within The
GIFT, A Woman's Rite to HerSelf, many women have been moved
by what feels to be a deeply familiar reverence for the Goddess
that appears so tangibly through the weekend, and indeed have
spoken of 'seeing' faces or forms of the Divine Feminine within
each other.
Inspired
by this initiation, for such it is,
I journeyed through those other places and times when the Goddess
was revered and honoured. What I found there, reflecting that
so newly arisen within myself, was so abundant and so relevant
to what I was experiencing in my life that I was startled into
a greater understanding of my capacity as woman.
Her faces
are far too many to be named. This article must of need stay
with but a few, a sketch of a much bigger picture. As such is
this taste offered, a hint at the possibilities.
From the beginning before form to the multitude we see now,
countless aspects of the Divine Feminine have revealed themselves
and come to be considered as different beings. But this is the
paradox; so many so diverse, and yet all are One. This is the
realm of the Feminine. So Anath, known as bloodthirsty and battle
goddess, is also honoured as lover and carrier of divine fertility.
And Aphrodite, whom we think of as personifying golden beauty,
love and desire, in Delphi is named Queen of Tombs.
So
we perceive both dark and light aspects in the One. It is important
to see that these belong together; the aspects do not exist
alone. It is only in our current culture that we create the
separation, take only the bits we like and ignore the rest.
So Inanna is part of Ereshkigal, Medusa is part of Athene, the
Black Madonna is the completion of the Virgin Mary. In life
light and dark are interdependent.
Once people
honoured the moon. It was evident to them that she regulated
their bodies and those of their animals and crops, the rhythms
of fruitfulness and decay. In Africa and the Middle East, as
in Australia today, the sun is not a beneficent life-bringer
but a harsh relentless fire. It is the moon with her soft moist
properties who causes germination and growth. Once known as
the Triple Goddess and still known as Grandmother Moon, She
was seen as a divinity, and as centre and source of all magic
and fertility. Within each month She changes and shifts, waxes
and wanes; from newborn Crescent through Fullness to No Moon
and then after three days of darkness She resurrects anew.
All moon
deities have the three aspects which are also marked as the
three faces of woman; wild nubile Maiden, fecund, gravid full
Mother and ancient horned Crone at the gateway to death. All
women carry them, no matter her age. Change and death are acknowledged
here as an intrinsic part of life necessary for regeneration
and continuance, and both dark and light phases are honoured.
Interestingly, for the ancients there was beauty and magnificence
in the white, the bright, the visible, but the power was in
the black. Nowadays, black has become synonymous with the less
acceptable. We have scapegoated it, polarised it, made it not-Light
and thus evil. We are frightened of the Dark. In the East, however,
black is said to represent the pure energy of formlessness,
the void whence all manifestation arises. Black is the mystery,
where everything is still possible.
Like the
moon, the Feminine is power of dark and light. The Great Mother,
the Triple Goddess is creator and destroyer. She gives life
and takes it away, she is loving and terrible.

Mostof
the familiar forms of the goddess were once associated with
the moon: Demeter, Hera, Isis, Athene, Astarte, Inanna, Brid,
Cerridwen, Rhiannon, Freya, Durga, the Morrigan. All the witches
of all time; Morgan le Fay, Hecate. And all the triples; the
Norns, Erynyes, Fates, Gorgons.
Artemis
is an Old one, from the time of the bear, who is usually thought
of as the huntress who lives wild and alone, virgin sister to
Apollo. But before the sun ruled, she too was the Moon Mother;
the bringer to birth, nurturer of the young, the Many-breasted.
She is kin to all the creatures of the woods and rivers, but
like all Old ones she is also a death bringer whose stags slew
Actaeon, after he spied on her (as Diana) bathing. This is reflected
in the almost identical images of her, one black-faced, one
white.
Central
to the mystery of life's beginnings is the female. The Great
Mother was honoured as she who gives birth, she who makes fertile
the fields and animals, who makes abundant the store houses.
All people depend on this fruitfulness for without it we die.
The earliest images in the world are little female figurines,
perhaps pregnant, but assuredly abundant of breast and body.
The sacred womb was honoured as the power behind all life and
was worshipped in every woman. She was celebrated as the sacred
container of all life. As birther, creator, she is acknowledged
and venerated in these images. The earth was made fertile by
her fecund sexuality which was communally celebrated. "Who
will plough my vulva?" calls Inanna in the old hymns..."Who
will water the holy lap?" The power of the Feminine, embodied
in the sexuality of all women both made the earth grow and was
a power for transformation.
'Shakti'
means life energy. The Bhagavad Gita says, "Without Shakti,
Shiva is nothing." In India, ancient sculptures clearly
express the veneration for her and for all women as her living
embodiment. Temples were built to honour her; she who carries
the sacred art of female sexuality, who can transform though
sex. She has been named sacred prostitute, devadasi, temple
dancer, hierodule. In the Middle East she was honoured as Ishtar.
Some of the most erotic poetry written is the hymns to Inanna
of Sumeria. Aphrodite is the name the Greeks gave her. In Rome
she was Venus. Honoured as Goddess of love and desire she was
still rooted in the natural world. Her symbols are vaginal fish
and lilies, roses, doves, the swan, the pomegranate. Like Freya
and Hathor she is the beautiful golden one, and like Rhiannon,
her Celtic counterpart, she is also Mistress of Death.
In life,
our destiny is woven by the Spinners, the spinsters, like the
Greek Fates or Grandmother Spider. Like all grandmothers and
godmothers, she is Wise one, connected with the moon and magic.
Like Greek Hecate, one of the very few dark goddesses to survive
in the West, she is archetypal crone and thus a witch. As Triple
moon deity, Hecate was patron of midwives and birthing but this
has largely been forgotten. She is known as Queen of the Dead
and guardian of the ways. The crone is the archetype many women
fear, as she carries age, truth and the power of endings. But
she is also Wise one like Medicine woman, the
Dark
Queen like Ereshkigal, the Terrible one like the Celtic Morrigan
and midwife to death like all crones. Indian Kali shows us Her
rage, Coatlicue, her skull belt. In some places she was appeased
by blood sacrifice.
This is
the area of reclamation for women that is often most profound.
When we can truly embody our own Kali/destroyer/terrible one
then we can walk with Her in consciousness and cease projecting
her outwards. We can come to recognise and acknowledge Her as
companion in our lives and ally on our journey.
As Lady
of the Beasts, she appears throughout time. Among her creatures
are the owl, bird of death, the fish, the dog, stag, pig, bull
and of course the serpent. Often these are her consort in shaman
guise. As sacred cow, in India she is Surabhi, in Egypt, Hathor.
As Europa she was tricked by Zeus disguised as her lover, the
bull. She is serpent and lion, she-bear and spider. These are
the old faces of the Great Goddess from prehistory which still
linger on. Many of these aspects have been demonised, like Lilith,
and Medusa with the serpent hair, now called Gorgon.
They
have both become subject of stories told to terrify. Not for
nothing do we fear spiders and snakes. Nowadays we still see
'wild woman' running on the beach, hiking, riding her horse
or feeding her birds. She needs to sniff the wind and talk to
the trees. She listens to her instinctual knowing. The moon's
cycles are felt within her body, she knows when storms are coming.
Isis
is important for us as her name means throne and we are reminded
that a king is king by virtue of her. She is the seat of power,
the throne on which he sits. She is the Divine right by which
he rules. Isis is a precursor for the Madonna who holds her
son on her lap.
Equally
familiar is the Lady of the nurturing breast, sacred vessel,
dispenser of nourishment and wisdom She is also the Ever-open
arms, She who hears the cries of the earth. In her compassionate
aspects such as the Black Madonna, she is is available to all
who call on her..all suffering all pain can be offered to her
and accepted by her. Likewise, Kwan Yin is Lady of Infinite
mercy and Most compassionate One and is the most revered deity
in China and Korea.
In
Tibet her name is Tara, Teacher of Wisdom. These aspects remind
us that all understanding and all wisdom are part of her sway
and the underpinning of all civilisation. Even the early Jews
and Christians acknowledged Wisdom as the Lady, Hockmah and
Sophia.
And
some examples have no image but are just as relevant to our
journey of becoming. Clarissa Pinkola Estes brings to vision
in her writings those such as Skeleton Woman, encouraging us
with her beautiful words to sniff our way back, to re-flesh
ourselves, acknowledge our wild soul. And to stand in awe and
wonder at the sacred dance of La Mariposa, Butterfly Woman,
who pollinates our deepest being.
These
are faces of the Sacred, revered through ages past, who contain
the whole world. And perhaps what we can gain from looking at
the myriad aspects of the Divine Feminine is some recognition
that these energies live within us.
"We
are each Virgin Huntresses, we are each Great mothers,
we are each Death dealers..." Priestess MacFarlane
And we are
Kwan Yin and Medea, compassion and betrayal. All these. Embraced,
they can serve us, disowned they continue to rule us.
She
is seen as many things...Changing one,
She who denotes life death and rebirth.
She is fertile, Fecund one who ruts in the fields,
She is the Terrible one who devours and destroys,
She is the Loving arms and Nurturing breasts
And the sacred Yoni, the Transformative one.

And
at the heart of the Feminine is the Mystery. That which cannot
be known. Before all, after all. The Feminine as ground of being.
The void from which all comes and to which it returns. The sacred
doorway of which we as women are guardian.
It
is through the sacred doorway of the Rite that countless contemporary
women have met themselves in their mystery and it is available
to any woman when she is called.