Cernunnos - The Horned God
Cernunnos
is a horned god found in Celtic mythology. He is connected with male
animals, particularly the stag in rut, and this has led him to be
associated with fertility and vegetation. Depictions of Cernunnos are
found in many... parts of the British Isles and western Europe. He is
often portrayed with a beard and wild, shaggy hair -- he is, after all,
the lord of the forest.
With his mighty antlers, Cernunnos is a
protector of the forest and master of the hunt. He is a god of
vegetation and trees in his aspect as the Green Man, and a god of lust
and fertility when connected with Pan, the Greek satyr. In some
traditions, he is seen as a god of death and dying, and takes time to
comfort the dead by singing to them on their way to the spirit world.
In some traditions of Wicca, the cycle of seasons follows the
relationship between the Horned God -- Cernunnos -- and the Goddess.
During the fall, the Horned God dies, as the vegetation and land goes
dormant, and in the spring, at Imbolc, he is resurrected to impregnate
the fertile goddess of the land. However, this relationship is a
relatively new Neopagan concept, and there is no scholarly evidence to
indicate that ancient peoples might have celebrated this "marriage" of
the Horned God and a mother goddess.
Because of his horns (and the
occasional depiction of a large, erect phallus) Cernunnos has often been
misinterpreted by fundamentalists as a symbol of Satan. Certainly, at
times, the Christian church has pointed to the Pagan following of
Cernunnos as "devil worship." This is in part due to nineteenth century
paintings of Satan which included large, ram-like horns much like those
of Cernunnos.
Today, many Pagan and Wiccan traditions honor
Cernunnos as an aspect of the God, the embodiment of masculine energy
and fertility and power.
We celebrate and honor Cernunnos as the
Green Man in spring and summer, the light half of the year, and as the
Dark One or the Dark God in autumn and winter, the dark half of the
year. He appears in spring as the young Son, child of the Goddess,
embodiment of the budding, growing, greening world. In summer He is the
Green Man, vibrant, pulsing with life essence, the consort of the Green
Lady Goddess. But, it is in autumn, the dying time, that perhaps we see
the Horned God most clearly. He is the sacrificed one, who, wounded unto
death begins his journey to the Underworld, returning to the Earth from
which he was born and where the seeds of light released from his
decaying body will quicken Her womb with a new Son/Sun once again.
The path to Cernunnos is both through the natural world: seeking out the
wild places and a deep understanding of the processes of growth,
bounty, decay, rest, and rebirth, and through Otherworld journeys to the
Middleworld forest of which he is guardian. One may experience this
both actually and symbolically by following the path that disappears
over the horizon into the distance and moves away from the "civilized"
world and into the heart of the Wild Wood.
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