The Truth About Witchcraft
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About this ebook
Dispelling the many myths and misunderstandings that surround Witchcraft, this convenient guide shows how to work with timeless rituals and natural energies in order to create positive changes in your life. Whether you want to learn about the Goddess and the God or the special holidays known as sabbats and esbats, you will discover these answers and much more in Scott Cunningham's Truth About Witchcraft.
Scott Cunningham
Scott Cunningham practiced magic actively for over twenty years. He was the author of more than fifty books covering both fiction and non-fiction subject matter; sixteen of his titles are published by Llewellyn Publications. Scott's books reflect a broad range of interests within the New Age sphere, where he was very highly regarded. His seminal work, Wicca: A Guide for the Solitary Practitioner, is one of the most successful books on Wicca ever published. He passed from this life on March 28, 1993, after a long illness.
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Reviews for The Truth About Witchcraft
72 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Sep 21, 2018
This was the book I showed my family when I came out of the broom closet. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 11, 2010
Another good book from Scott Cunningham. Though this book was written back in 1988 it still continues to try and brake down the myths and misconnections of Wicca and modern day witchcraft. This book also goes into a nice general detail about Wicca and its practices, beliefs, and philosophies. A good book over all. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Dec 19, 2005
From Keira. Not really my thing.
Book preview
The Truth About Witchcraft - Scott Cunningham
About the Author
Scott Cunningham was born in Royal Oak, Michigan on June 27, 1956. He learned about Wicca while still in high school and practiced elemental magic for twenty years. He experienced, researched, then wrote about what he learned in his magical training. Scott is credited with writing more than thirty books (both fiction and non-fiction). He passed from this incarnation on March 28, 1993, but his work and his words live on.
SCOTT
CUNNINGHAM
THE TRUTH
ABOUT
WITCHCRAFT
Copyright Information
The Truth About Witchcraft Today. Copyright © 2020 by Scott Cunningham
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd., except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
As the purchaser of this e-book, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. The text may not be otherwise reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or recorded on any other storage device in any form or by any means.
Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.
Photography is used for illustrative purposes only. The persons depicted may not endorse or represent the book’s subject.
First e-book edition © 2023
E-book ISBN: 9780738779331
SECOND EDITION
First Printing, 2020
This book was originally published in 1988 as The Truth About Witchcraft Today.
Cover design: Shira Atakpu
Llewellyn Publications is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cunningham, Scott 1956-1993 The truth about witchcraft today (Llewellyn’s new-age series)
This book was first published in a briefer form in 1987 under the title: The truth about witchcraft.
Bibliography: p.
1. Witchcraft. I. Cunningham, Scott, 1956-1993
Truth about witchcraft. II. Title. III. Series. BF1566.C85 1988 133.4’3 88-45197
ISBN 13: 978-0-7387-6560-0 ISBN 10: 0738765600
Llewellyn Publications does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business arrangements between our authors and the public.
Any Internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific reference will continue or be maintained. Please refer to the publisher’s website for links to current author websites.
Llewellyn Publications
Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
2143 Wooddale Drive
Woodbury, MN 55125
www.llewellyn.com
Manufactured in the United States of America
Other Books by Scott Cunningham
The Complete Book of Incense, Oils and Brews Cunningham’s Encyclopedia of Crystal, Gem and Metal Magic
Cunningham’s Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs Cunningham’s Encyclopedia of Wicca in the Kitchen (formerly The Magic in Food)
Divination for Beginners
Dreaming the Divine (formerly Sacred Sleep)
Earth, Air, Fire & Water Earth Power
Hawaiian Magic & Spirituality Magical Aromatherapy: the Power of Scent
Magical Herbalism The Magical Household
Spell Craft: Creating Magical Objects The Truth About Herb Magic
Wicca
Biography
Whispers of the Moon
by David Harrington and deTraci Regula
Video
Herb Magic
Note:
This book first appeared as a 32-page pamphlet published by Llewellyn in 1987 under the title The Truth About Witchcraft. Because it appeared as a Llewellyn Educational Guide, I wasn’t credited with writing it. After it was released, it was decided that I’d write a larger version of it. You now have it in your hands.
In this greatly expanded book we11 look at the reality of folk magic and Wicca—known to the outside world as Witchcraft. Its purpose is not to proselytize, but to discount centuries of negative propaganda and to shed some light on these still obscure subjects.
It’s my hope that The Truth About Witchcraft Today will do its part in halting at least some of the persecution, which continues today, by those who don’t understand other forms of religion and ways of life.
To all who read these words:
Bless and Blessed Be!
Table Of Contents
Preface
Introduction
PART I: Folk Magic
Chapter One:
The Magic Of The People
Chapter Two:
The Spell
Chapter Three:
Tools Of Power
Chapter Four:
Harm None
Chapter Five:
Other Forms Of Magic
Chapter Six:
Simple Folk Magic Rituals
PART II: Wicca
Chapter Seven:
The Religion Of Wicca
Chapter Eight:
The Goddess And The God:
The Divine Aspects Of Wicca
Chapter Nine:
Initiation
Chapter Ten:
Wiccan Traditions
Chapter Eleven:
Ritual Tools
Chapter Twelve:
Circles And Altars
Chapter Thirteen:
Days Of Power: Sabbats And Esbats
Chapter Fourteen
Wiccan Magic
Chapter Fifteen:
Nudity, Sex, And Wicca
Chapter Sixteen:
Dangers And Troubles
Chapter Seventeen:
A Wiccan Ritual
PART III: A Summary
Chapter Eighteen
Consciousness Rises
Chapter Nineteen:
Toward The Light
Glossary
Annotated Bibliography
Preface
Words have power. Printed words, indeed, can arouse the most potent emotions. They can excite joy, passion, peace, and rage within their readers.
For many people, ignorance is bliss. Any presentation of information contrary to their personal beliefs is heard as a cry for warfare. Censorship and book burnings are their weapons. The deaths
of such battles are of the mind, of freedom of thought and expression-and especially of freedom of religion.
The book you’re about to read will probably be viewed by some as a weapon against reason, an intellectual step backward, an audience with-as they put it-the Devil.
It is no such thing.
Rather, this book is an introduction to Witchcraft, perhaps the least understood practice of our time. Witchcraft isn’t a cauldron of human sacrifice, drugs, orgies and Devil-worship. Nor does it describe a supernatural world filled with unearthly dealings with demons.
As you will discover, Witchcraft is a way of life for hundreds of thousands—perhaps millions—of well adjusted rational adults who simply share a view of nature that is different from that of the majority. Witchcraft is both a religion and a form of magic.
[contents]
Witchcraft isn’t anti-Christianity or anti-religion. In its earliest forms, it predates all present-day religions. For centuries it has been the scapegoat for the dominant religion of the Western world, a convenient answer to the ills of human life; but its adherents are not, and never were, linked in any way with the Christian summation of evil.
This book is an attempt to correct centuries of misleading, slanderous, and perverse propaganda. It is also an attempt to create a truth-based image of Witchcraft and its practitioners in the popular mind.
It isn’t proselytizing, for Witchcraft isn’t suited to everyone’s tastes. It isn’t an occult cookbook,
a ritual manual, or an expose of dark secrets. Quite simply, this is a look at the world of Witchcraft as it is today.
I’ve written it as a practitioner, an observer, and a researcher. From this triune viewpoint, I hope to present a balanced picture of these little-known practices.
The lies have been told. It’s time for the truth.
Scott Cunningham San Diego, California
May 10, 1988
[contents]
Introduction
Night. The curtains in the upper-class home are drawn against prying eyes. Candles gleam in the living room. Incense smoke swirls. Robed figures, chanting in a long-dead language, whirl around a rustic wooden table. On it, between the candles, sit sacred images: a robust Goddess wearing a crescent Moon on Her forehead, a God holding a spear in His upraised hand.
All movement stops. A woman standing near the altar says:
In this sacred space and time We call now the Old Ones:
The Goddess of the Moon, of seas and rivers;
The God of the rayed Sun, of valleys and forests:
Draw near us during this, our circle. This is Witchcraft.
Two thousand miles away, a fifteen-year-old girl affixes a green candle onto a Polaroid photo of a friend. In the darkened room she lights the candle. She closes her eyes. Within her mind, she visualizes a glowing purple light surrounding her boyfriend’s broken arm. She chants an impassioned healing incantation.
This, too, is Witchcraft.
These examples sum up Witchcraft. It is a religion known as Wicca. It is also the practice of folk magic. Thanks to a centuries-long smear campaign, the average person thinks that Witchcraft consists of Satanic worship, orgies, and drug use. They falsely believe Witches to practice a mishmash of Devil worship, unsavory rituals, cruelty, and human sacrifice. Persons who practice such atrocities certainly do exist: murderers, psychotics, and those frustrated by the religion into which they were born. But these people aren’t Witches, and they don’t practice Witchcraft.
It isn’t surprising that such false beliefs exist, for they’ve been reinforced by literature, the fine arts, motion pictures, television, and tens of thousands of hours of virulent sermons. Though the facts have been readily available for the past twenty years or so, they’ve been largely suppressed, ridiculed, or ignored.
As is often the case, the truth about Witchcraft is far less tantalizing than the lies. It doesn’t lend itself as readily to talk shows as Satanism and rarely creates headline news.
But it is there.
Folk Magic
Folk magic is just that-the magic of the people. Long ago, practicing simple magical rituals was as normal as eating or sleeping. Magic was a part of daily existence. To question its effectiveness, or indeed its necessity, was tantamount to a 20th-century person questioning whether the Earth is round.
Though times have changed, contemporary practitioners of folk magic accept the same principles and perform rituals similar to those of bygone eras.
Folk magicians don’t use supernatural powers. They’re not out to control the world. They aren’t dangerous or evil. They simply sense and utilize natural energies which have not yet been quantified, codified, and accepted into the hallowed halls of science.
These energies spring from the Earth itself, not from demons or Satan. They’re present within stones, colors, and herbs, as well as within our own bodies. Through timeless rituals, folk magicians rouse, release, and direct these energies for the purpose of creating positive, specific, needed change.
To the atheist, using these energies is no more absurd than the act of praying. To the materialist, this practice overlooks the monetary value of the Earth. To the Christian, who has been taught to dominate and subdue
the Earth, such intimate connection with nature and its tangible effects is dangerous, evil.
All three viewpoints are, perhaps, correct to their holders-but not to folk magicians. Once again, folk magicians have bypassed traditional, orthodox religion that states that power is in the hands of God
and His priests, saints, and earthly representatives. They have gone further than the materialists in recognizing the qualities of nature. And they-in common with many others-simply don’t worry what atheists think.
Folk magicians are persons who, unsatisfied by religious or physically based creeds, have investigated the Earth and its treasures. They’ve gone within themselves to sense the mystic powers of the human body and to feel its connections with the Earth.
And they have discovered that magic works.
Wicca
Wicca is a contemporary religion. Its practitioners revere the Goddess and God as the creators of the universe-as tangible, conscious beings. Though in general Wiccans don’t subscribe to one specific form, they accept reincarnation and magic, revere the Earth as a manifestation of the Goddess and God, and meet for religious ceremony at times appointed by the Moon and Sun.
Wicca is nonproselytizing. It is life-affirming, not death-dealing. It has its own set of myths, religious objects, rituals, and laws, many of which bear little resemblance to those of other present-day religions. Wiccans may be female or male, of any age or race.
They may meet in groups of up to fifty or more, in cozy covens of thirteen or less, or may worship the Goddess and God alone. Though most speak English, they may call the Deities in Spanish, French, Welsh, Swedish, Scottish Gaelic, German, Dutch, and in many other languages. As
