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"The Romantic Resumé (e-mail) course helped me clarify what it is that I truly seek in a romantic relationship and what I bring to it. It asked questions that I hadn't thought to ask. I definitely recommend this course to others!"
- Karen, North Carolina
by
Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway
by
Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway
Are you seeking your Soul Mate? The Romantic Resumé email course by acclaimed author Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway can help you get clarity to draw in your beloved. Start this 30-day project this month.
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Goddess ~ Goddesses
Discovering the Goddess: A Path to Healing, Spirituality and Joy
Discover the Goddess and how her wisdom and power can help heal, inspire and uplift you, your relationships and the world. In this 13 lesson healing journey, you will: Explore the history of the Goddess; Meet Her in many forms, and by many names; Practice healing rituals and exercises; Enter the sacred circle of her love and protection to meditate, and plan your life's dreams...
"There are thousands of
Goddesses,
from so many of the world's traditions, known by different
names and images, which represent the feminine aspects of divinity and also aspects of our
humanity... Their images, energy and just the mere concept of female divinity can heal us,
empower us, instruct us and help us find our way on life's rocky path."
From
A Goddess Is A Girl's Best Friend
(Perigee Books, December 2002)
Celebrating and Giving Thanks To Our Divine Mother
By Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway
Author of
A Goddess Is A Girl's Best Friend
As we stand poised on the threshold of a changing world this Thanksgiving, it seems a fitting time to remember and acknowledge the Divine Mother
Goddess
who helped bring forth the world. She was long considered the Creatrix of all that is - the sustainer of all life - the nurturer who from her body, the earth, provided nourishment and bounty for all.
We are at a point in history that calls both women and men to celebrate - and elevate -- the energy of the feminine, along with the masculine. Spiritual law tells us that in order to find balance in our world and be whole and complete unto ourselves, we must embrace both the masculine and feminine aspects of ourselves. Acknowledging and embracing both our Divine Parents can help us on that journey.
Who is the Goddess?
Goddess
History dates back to the earliest civilizations. It's well documented that ancient societies
worshiped feminine forms of God -- typically as mother, earth, nature, and the Holy Spirit, or
as deities who personified feminine attributes. Our earliest ancestors saw the Divine Feminine
as the source of all that is and they depended on her to sustain their very lives. Her power
was expressed in the image and stories of literally thousands of
Goddesses
from cultures around the world.
Although many historians and archeologists place the heyday of Goddess worship 35,000 to 5,000 years ago, the feminine divine was actively worshipped in some cultures just 2000 years ago. Egyptian pharaoh Cleopatra worshipped mother Goddess Isis, and saw herself as a divine
female in human form - only 36 years before the birth of Jesus Christ. Her beloved Julius Caesar, during his rein, erected temples to the Roman Goddess Venus, paying tribute to her as both a love Goddess and a mother Goddess, known as Venus Genetrix.
Ancient
Goddesses
were treated with the reverence modern religious culture now offers to Jesus, God, The Father, Allah, Krishna, and Buddha. And they were called upon for everything from ensuring fertile crops and easy childbirth to attaining wealth, health or, even, a peaceful death.
Worship of the Divine Mother permeated ancient societies. Her temples abounded. Her presence was expressed in the images, and stories that were passed along through many generations. Some of the most
famous Goddesses
- such as Ishtar, Innana and Astarte -- once breathed life into the holy lands of the middle-east
many millennium ago; some of the old temples still stand.
"One person's mythology is another person's religion."
~ Joseph Campbell
As time marched on, many of the early
Goddesses became archetypes for the west.
Nike has her own running shoes and clothing line and Athena's name is on everything from a pheromone product to Greek diner menus. Along with
Venus - a world famous Goddess,
and archetype of love, sexuality and beauty - they have been relegated to "mythology." But, as Joseph Campbell once reminded us, "one person's mythology is another person's religion." The
Goddess
was not a myth to our ancestors.
Many of the world's cultures continue to worship, honor and pray to female deities. The Hindu, Buddhist, Tibetan, Native American, South American and African cultures are among those that always have, and continue to, commune with the Divine Feminine.
Everything Is Male and Female In Nature
The Hindus teach us that it is the creative summary of both the male and female principle that collaborate to create the Divine essence of all that is. And so do the Taoists, who show us the feminine and the masculine principle that feed one another and make up the whole in the symbol of Yin/Yang. Tibetan Buddhist do the same with their most sacred objects, dorje and bell. The bell represents the feminine and the dorje is the male principal. No worship service is ever conducted without use of each, together, one held in each hand. The Gods and Goddesses personified in many traditions also have opposite sex consorts and cohorts who are considered "complements."
In fact, in many systems of belief, you cannot have one without the other. Just as you can't have day without the night, you can't have man without woman, or masculine without feminine.
When we really understand that the Divine nature of all that is contains both the masculine and the feminine principles, it begins to make sense that men and women each contain those Divine principles; that the
energy of the Goddess exists within all of us.
From the highest place of knowing, we do not have to assign a gender to the divine and we do not have to put a name and face on energy so sacred. But in our lives as human beings, with human personalities and beliefs, I truly believe that considering both
God and Goddess
helps us identify the dual (and multifaceted) nature of divinity.
Toward Balance and Peace
As we desperately seek balance and peace on our planet, and in these times of deeply disturbing and frightening world events, many of us are searching for what's been missing in modern life. Could it be we have been bereft of our spiritual link to the The Sacred Feminine -- not instead of, but in addition to, The Sacred Male? We are at a time in history where both women and men are crying out for their divine "Mother" and seeking a spirituality that brings both divine parents to the table, not just one, or the other.
Historically and in the Goddess-friendly religions, The Divine Mother does not discriminate or love only those who worship in Her name. Her energy, presence and possibility are available to any one, of any religion, race, sex, culture, background, belief system. One of the historical hallmarks of the Divine Mother is that by honoring ourselves, our earth and all living things, we honor Her. This kind of reverence does not need to be sorted into a religion or a particular belief system. It is more of a philosophy for living that can inspire us to a spiritual path of balance and peace.
We are all children of
God, and Goddess,
All There Is and we are all feminine and masculine in nature. As above, so below. It is in acknowledging that these qualities exist in all of us that we begin to create and find balance in our relationship to ourselves, to one another, and in the world we live in.
Copyright © 2003 – 2008 Laurie Sue Brockway. All rights reserved.
About the Author
Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway, author of
Wedding Goddess: A Divine Guide to Transforming Wedding Stress into Wedding Bliss
and
A Goddess Is a Girl's Best Friend: A Divine Guide To Finding Love, Success and Happiness
is the creator and instructor of these popular Self-Healing Expressions courses:
Discovering the Goddess: A Path to Healing, Spirituality and Joy
Find Your Spiritual Soul Mate: Transforming Your Romantic Destiny with A Romantic Résumé
What are ways you give thanks to the Goddess? Share with the rest of us.
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