Wheel of the Year
The Pagan seasonal cycle is often called the Wheel of the Year. Almost all Pagans celebrate a cycle of eight festivals, which are spaced every six or seven weeks through the year and divide the wheel into eight segments.
Four of the festivals have Celtic origins and are known by their Celtic names, Imbolc, Beltane, Lughnasadh and Samhain.
The Romans slaughtered the Druids because the Druids practiced human sacrifice.
I don't know if it's the same group.
Imbolc was celebrated all across Ireland, Scotland, and the Isle of Man, with each region having slightly different variations in name and customs. Wales also had a remarkably similar version of the festival known as Gwyl Fair y Canhwyllau. After the onset of Christianity in Ireland, the festival was tied in with a celebration of Saint Bridget, and transformed from a pagan one into a Christian one. Christians used Brigid as the focal point of their celebrations to smooth the transition, as Imbolc had previously been associated with a goddess of a very similar name, Brighid. Essentially, Bridget and Brighid were the same person! As with all Celtic festivals, Imbolc involved a host of unique customs and rituals to welcome the spring, say farewell to the winter, ward against evil and promote health and wellbeing.
Lughnasadh or Lughnasa (/ˈluːnəsə/ LOO-nə-sə) is a Gaelic festival marking the beginning of the harvest season. Historically, it was widely observed throughout Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man. In Modern Irish it is called Lúnasa, in Scottish Gaelic: Lùnastal, and in Manx: Luanistyn. Traditionally it is held on 1 August, or about halfway between the summer solstice and autumn equinox. But, in recent centuries some of the celebrations shifted to the Sundays nearest this date.
The Romans slaughtered the Druids because the Druids practiced human sacrifice.
I don't know if it's the same group.
Maybe.
But the Druids were composed of Celtic nobility, and it was they who controlled the trade of Irish gold and Tin out of the British isles. The Celtic nobility that survived was those that chose to cooperate with the Romans.
It is interesting to note that Boudicca chose to make her stand at the place where the new Roman trade road intersected with the old that the Celts used for trade between Ireland and the North Sea region. Her hereditary rights that were violated by the Romans might have had to do with more than just land.
*edit*
Concerning trade in post-Roman England, it is also interesting to note that several centuries later when the great Heathen Army made peace with Alfred the Great, the territories were dvided along that very same Roman trade road.
And what about those neo-pagan festivals?
They were into stone circles and the like and I used to enjoy pointing out that all Neolithic monuments are pre-Celtic.
Indeed thea are!
Real witches really like this:
Translation: Peter Fox - Schuttel deinen Speck lyrics + English translation (Version #3)
I think Rumpel is a pagan wannabe...or maybe he's the real deal, trying to persuade others to join him...
Even dabbling is unwise.
Even dabbling is unwise.
Yep, flirting with paganism/demonism is beyond dangerous...it is not innocent fun because it exposes a person to demonic influence and Revelation 21:8 tells us where they'll end up...they're no better than murderers and the sexually immoral...
"But as for the cowards and those without faith and those who are disgusting in their filth and murderers and the sexually immoral and those practicing spiritism and idolaters and all the liars, their portion will be in the lake that burns with fire and sulfur. This means the second death.”
Why? It doesn't matter which god or gods you believe in.
There was good reason to warn the people of Ephesus to put on the whole armor of God.
You're right; if you're an atheist, it doesn't.