Where do modern witchcraft beliefs and practices come from?

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I have seen more than one exorcist write that the enemy has many people fooled into thinking these things are harmless. That’s what he wants- to operate undetected. Intentions are important to put things in context under certain circumstances - e.g. Assessing whether or not we commited a mortal sin. Under other circumstances, the intention or belief does not change the intrinsic nature of the thing.
 
Additionally, Christian prayer is not about power and manipulation. It’s about praise, thanksgiving, and mercy. The servant is humble before the will of the Lord and trusts in Him
 
I don’t think anyone said it was harmless. But they are legitimately practiced beliefs systems, just as Christianity or Judaism are. They are simply different, just like Shinto or Jainism would be to most Westerners.
I totally agree. I don’t understand why people are uncomfortable with this faith tradition and its practitioners as opposed to others around the world. Have people ever been to the Parliament of World’s Religions? Pagans are quite active.

parliamentofreligions.org/content/pagan-response-parliament
 
Yes, that’s correct in many ways - think of ‘spell’ as ‘prayer’ - when one prays for something, essentially it’s the same thing as a petition spell. Pray for healing, same as healing spell, etc.
No, not correct. Christian prayer is different from “spell” in other religious traditions just as mattp0625 pointed out. It is wrong to generalize Christian prayer as a “petition spell”. Christians don’t pray just to have a petition with God, they pray to thank, to praise God and what is emphasized in Christian prayer - to repent for one’s sins and to recognize the humility of one’s sinful self. Furthermore, in Christianity, you cannot appeal or change God’s mind but you pray based on His will and what He desires.
The methodology may be a little different, but the basic premise is the same.

“Burning white sage” is no different than burning incense (actually incense is used as well), talking to a spirit guide is no different than talking to a ‘guardian angel’ - there are plenty of parallels.
The use of incense in Eastern Orthodox and Catholic liturgies is symbolic and as a reminder not that it has any real effect. And there is no such thing as “talking to a guardian angel” in Christianity, it does not exist.
Candles are used in churches just as they are used in many pagan celebrations.
Though the understanding of the symbol and representation of the candles and their role in the ceremony might be different.
A sacred oil is not much different than a “potion”. The list goes on.
The use of the Chrism again in Catholic and Eastern Orthodox celebration of Sacraments is of a symbolic nature and as a visible sign of the transmission of the gifts and Holy Spirit. It is understood that it is not the chrism that transmits grace and the gifts of the Holy Spirit but only a sign and symbol of the actual transmission.
When you get right down to it, there’s not a lot of difference - same intents, slightly different way of effecting them.
No, not. There are a multitude of differences and each religious tradition is different from one another. Hence, we study religions so we will not be ignorant.
 
I totally agree. I don’t understand why people are uncomfortable with this faith tradition and its practitioners as opposed to others around the world. Have people ever been to the Parliament of World’s Religions? Pagans are quite active.

parliamentofreligions.org/content/pagan-response-parliament
It’s probably a remnant of the Satanic ritual abuse moral panic in the 1980s. A lot of Catholics and Protestant confuse Wicca with Satanism, either by ignorance or by intentional belief even though Wicca is very different to Satanism. It does not help that some of the images and practices in Wicca are similar to the common conception of Satanism in popular culture, such as the Wiccan pentagram being mistakenly identified with the Satanic inverted pentagram.
 
It’s probably a remnant of the Satanic ritual abuse moral panic in the 1980s. A lot of Catholics and Protestant confuse Wicca with Satanism, either by ignorance or by intentional belief even though Wicca is very different to Satanism. It does not help that some of the images and practices in Wicca are similar to the common conception of Satanism in popular culture, such as the Wiccan pentagram being mistakenly identified with the Satanic inverted pentagram.
Consider the possibility that the source of its “power” (for lack of a better word) is the same, but it is wrapped up in a different name and disguised with different bells and whistles.

Sacramentals, such as blessed candles or holy water, do carry the blessings of the church, but this is far removed from a potion or spell in both form and substance. Jesus gave the church it’s authority to grant blessings, administer sacraments, etc.

The enemy can take the form of an angel or human spirit in order to deceive. It is a similar concept here.
 
But to non-Catholics many of our sacramentals, sacraments, and rites/uses might just appear so similar to an ‘outsider.’ I think that’s what I personally was trying to say.

And after all, there are only so many material things in the world that humans can use to engage in any ritual or prayer or what have you, regardless of religion. So there is bound to be overlap. The Rituale Romanum in Latin with etchings looks just as exotic and mysterious to an outsider as a witches grimoire might.
Example:

Buddhist rosaires and chotkis
Celtic crosses and stone piles in Ireland and stone heaps in Tibet
Confucian ancestor ritual in Korea and the Tridentine Mass
A Bible in Arabic and a Quran
Kissing icons and kissing statues of Krishna

I am not saying these things are the same. I am saying to outsiders, our things may appear similar to other faiths, even witch or pagan practices.
 
No, not correct. Christian prayer is different from “spell” in other religious traditions just as mattp0625 pointed out. It is wrong to generalize Christian prayer as a “petition spell”. Christians don’t pray just to have a petition with God, they pray to thank, to praise God and what is emphasized in Christian prayer - to repent for one’s sins and to recognize the humility of one’s sinful self. Furthermore, in Christianity, you cannot appeal or change God’s mind but you pray based on His will and what He desires.

The use of incense in Eastern Orthodox and Catholic liturgies is symbolic and as a reminder not that it has any real effect. And there is no such thing as “talking to a guardian angel” in Christianity, it does not exist.

Though the understanding of the symbol and representation of the candles and their role in the ceremony might be different.

The use of the Chrism again in Catholic and Eastern Orthodox celebration of Sacraments is of a symbolic nature and as a visible sign of the transmission of the gifts and Holy Spirit. It is understood that it is not the chrism that transmits grace and the gifts of the Holy Spirit but only a sign and symbol of the actual transmission.

No, not. There are a multitude of differences and each religious tradition is different from one another. Hence, we study religions so we will not be ignorant.
Correct - pagans pray to thank and praise as well. The concept of ‘sin’ is different. Neither does one appeal or change the mind of a non-Christian deity; ones prays based on the will of the god(s).

I don’t believe it is symbolic - it’s original intent was to carry the prayers to God as the smoke rises. Talking was a bad choice of words - many people, I don’t want to use the word pray, as that’s not correct, but ‘ask’, perhaps, their or their child’s guardian angel to watch over them, etc. Not done in all Christian traditions, but done in some.

Yes - that’s true - candles may play different roles in different traditions, however, I might argue that the underlying symbology here is to represent ‘eternal light’ / presence of the deity.

For many pagans, this is the same intention oils serve; they are symbolic. The symbolism may be different, but they are used in the same way (the will of the deity works through the symbol of the oil).

What I mean is that the basic elements of religions are essentially very similar; there’s really not that much difference - same “tools” are used, if you will, the same intents, sometimes the “tools” are are used the same way, sometimes slightly different. Sometimes the way of effecting the intent of the prayer (be it petition, thanks, praise, etc.) is slightly different as well, but the intent is the same. Christians do not pray any differently than anyone else with respect to intent - methodology may differ from belief to belief.
 
Consider the possibility that the source of its “power” (for lack of a better word) is the same, but it is wrapped up in a different name and disguised with different bells and whistles.

Sacramentals, such as blessed candles or holy water, do carry the blessings of the church, but this is far removed from a potion or spell in both form and substance. Jesus gave the church it’s authority to grant blessings, administer sacraments, etc.

The enemy can take the form of an angel or human spirit in order to deceive. It is a similar concept here.
These kind of discussion is not really helpful in academic or scholarly contexts. Personally, I believe the same and I disagree personally with the beliefs of the Wicca but the OP is trying to discuss things from a sociological, academic viewpoint not in a confessional, theological one.

And using this rhetoric to Wicca is not special as we can use such rhetoric to all non-Christian and non-Abrahamic religions as well. Even in Abrahamic ones. It is for example recently circulating in Protestant circles that the Allah of Islam is a different deity from the Judeo-Christian God.
But to non-Catholics many of our sacramentals, sacraments, and rites/uses might just appear so similar to an ‘outsider.’ I think that’s what I personally was trying to say.

And after all, there are only so many material things in the world that humans can use to engage in any ritual or prayer or what have you, regardless of religion. So there is bound to be overlap. The Rituale Romanum in Latin with etchings looks just as exotic and mysterious to an outsider as a witches grimoire might.
Example:

Buddhist rosaires and chotkis
Celtic crosses and stone piles in Ireland and stone heaps in Tibet
Confucian ancestor ritual in Korea and the Tridentine Mass
A Bible in Arabic and a Quran
Kissing icons and kissing statues of Krishna

I am not saying these things are the same. I am saying to outsiders, our things may appear similar to other faiths, even witch or pagan practices.
I agree with this that several things in religions might be similar to the uninformed but they are only superficial similarities and only appear on the surface. With study all religions are different and contradict each other.

As you are talking about material things, it might be either because of practical purposes or multiple development. Candles are practical to use for light. There is no better portable way to keep track of prayers than a prayer rope. Megalithic monuments are found anywhere in the world. There is no better place to write teachings than in a book and kissing is somehow a gesture of affection in most cultures. Or it might be because multiple religions were influenced or based from a few or a single source.

A previous poster also told of Cardinal Ratzinger or previous Pope Benedict XVI’s work The Truth and Tolerance which interprets world religion as proof of man’s “longing for God”.
 
religioustolerance.org has some excellent information on the topic.

A lot depends on what area of witchcraft you’re talking about. Wicca is quite new as a school of thought, but it pulls from centuries old traditions. It’s what can be called modern reconstruction. Things like Kemeticism (revival of the ancient Egyptian religion) and modern Druidcraft fit there too; essentially, they aren’t a continuation of the original faith. For example, we have no way of knowing every aspect of the ancient Egyptian religion, but Kemetics can take what we do know from historians, archaeology, etc. and integrate it into their own practice.

Silver RavenWolf put it quite well:
“Wicca, as you practice the religion today, is a new religion, barely fifty years old. The techniques you use at present are not entirely what your elders practiced even thirty years ago. Of course, threads of ‘what was’ weave through the tapestry of ‘what is now.’ …in no way can we replicate to perfection the precise circumstances of environment, society, culture, religion and magick a hundred years ago, or a thousand. Why would we want to ? The idea is to go forward with the knowledge of the past, tempered by the tools of our own age.”
 
I don’t believe it is symbolic - it’s original intent was to carry the prayers to God as the smoke rises. Talking was a bad choice of words - many people, I don’t want to use the word pray, as that’s not correct, but ‘ask’, perhaps, their or their child’s guardian angel to watch over them, etc. Not done in all Christian traditions, but done in some.
Simply not. The incense is symbolic in Catholic and Orthodox liturgy as a representation of the prayers being put forward to God. It is understood that the incense does not affect the transmission of the prayer.

Correct, we ask the guardian angels to pray for us, not to pray to them. That is an important distinction. Guardian angels are believed in Catholicism and as far as I know, Eastern Orthodoxy as well but largely ignored and not given emphasis in Protestantism.
Yes - that’s true - candles may play different roles in different traditions, however, I might argue that the underlying symbology here is to represent ‘eternal light’ / presence of the deity.
Partly correct. Catholic liturgy is rich in candles and has diverse symbolism - used in votive candles, Paschal, liturgical, et cetera.
For many pagans, this is the same intention oils serve; they are symbolic. The symbolism may be different, but they are used in the same way (the will of the deity works through the symbol of the oil).
No, not, the will of God does not work through the chrism. Rather, the chrism is a visible sign and representation of the will of God, the infusion of grace and the Holy Spirit’s gifts.
What I mean is that the basic elements of religions are essentially very similar; there’s really not that much difference - same “tools” are used, if you will, the same intents, sometimes the “tools” are are used the same way, sometimes slightly different. Sometimes the way of effecting the intent of the prayer (be it petition, thanks, praise, etc.) is slightly different as well, but the intent is the same. Christians do not pray any differently than anyone else with respect to intent - methodology may differ from belief to belief.
I will contend your opinion that basic elements of religions are similar - yes, I agree with you that there might be a lot of superficial similarities in the material aspect of our religious traditions, but if we analyze closely, virtually all religions contradict especially in their theology and doctrine.

Even in the material aspects we have discussed, there are differences as the context and framework for our religious material cultures are different. I suspect that you belong to a different religious tradition which could be Neopagan. I doubt that you believe the Sacraments established by Jesus Christ and their effect, the infusion of grace of God through the sacraments, their importance in salvation, the liturgy as the most proper form of worship to God. Hence, even in material aspects we understand them differently in our religions.

I also contend you on “intent” of prayers. I noticed that the stark difference of Christian prayer to prayers of other religious traditions is that Christian prayer gives emphasis on humility and the forgiveness and repentance of sin. We believe that we are sinners who sin everyday, in humility we repent and ask God for forgiveness. It is worth noting that in Eastern religions, the devotion and worship aspect of prayer is discarded and they only do petition.

I understand that you are more of an accepting attitude towards other religions and hence you like to point out the similarities. But on further observation and analysis, we will see that all religions have vast differences and contrast each other. I believe that we must be prepared to recognize these differences.
 
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