Covenant of the Blue Moon

Covenant of the Blue Moon Where Pagans can get their spiritual needs taken care of. A safe place for families to come and celebrate our Spirituality!

05/24/2026

Black Lava meets Tiger's Eye!

05/24/2026

🌀 Goddesses Around the World - PERU: The Moon Goddess is honored as Mama Quilla.

👉 She was the older sister and wife of Inti, daughter of Viracocha and mother of Manco Cápac and Mama Ocllo, mythical founders of the Inca empire and culture. She was the goddess of marriage and the menstrual cycle, and considered a defender of women. She was also important for the Inca calendar.

👉 Myths surrounding Mama Quilla include that she cried tears of silver and that lunar eclipses were caused when she was being attacked by an animal. She was envisaged in the form of a beautiful woman and her temples were served by dedicated priestesses.

👉 Mama Quilla was known as "Mother Of The Moon", and was goddess of the moon. According to Father Bernabé Cobo, writing in the mid-sixteenth century, the Moon was worshipped because of her "admirable beauty" and the "benefits she bestows upon the world". She was important for calculating the passage of time and the calendar, because many rituals were based upon the lunar calendar and adjusted to match the solar year. She also oversaw marriage, women's menstrual cycles and was deemed the protector of women in general.
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🙏 Thank you for your interest in The Temple of the Goddess! )O( As well as our Sacred Sites Journeys to Sacred Places of the Goddess ➡ Our next SSJ to PERU is A Spiritual Journey and Shamanic Retreat at Machu Picchu, Cusco & The Sacred Valley of the Incas, November 5- 16, 2026 with your Page Admins Andrea Mikana-Pinkham, Director of Sacred Sites Journeys and Mark Amaru Pinkham - Author of Conversations with The Great Goddess. Lake Titicaca Extension: Nov 16th - 20th.

💥 After 30+ years in business, this will be our last journey to PERU! We're only taking 10 peopleand the group is filling 👉 http://www.sacredsitesjourneys.com/Peru-Nov2026/Peru-Nov2026.htm

ART https://www.etsy.com/listing/1694614772/mama-quilla-download-digital-art-instant

- To receive our regular posts, please visit our Page and Like it. If you Like and/or comment on our posts, FB will then deliver more of them to your news feed. Thanks! And Goddess Bless! )O(

05/24/2026

In case you were wondering what to do with your pennies....
05/16/2026

In case you were wondering what to do with your pennies....

🪙✨ three pennies under your welcome mat = luck, prosperity & good vibes walking through your door every single day

try it and thank us later 😌🌿

Open 11am-7pm
✨🔮✨Sparkle is available for walk in readings 11am-630pm✨🔮✨

05/12/2026

The Green Man
Unearthing the Roots of a Timeless Nature Deity

Carved into ancient cathedrals, peeking from foliage in stone reliefs, or symbolized in seasonal festivals, the mysterious figure of the Green Man has captivated minds for centuries. Though often associated with medieval Europe, the Green Man’s roots run far deeper, branching into pagan mythologies across numerous cultures. This verdant archetype represents the eternal cycle of life, death, and rebirth—embodied through the thriving power of nature itself.

The Green Man is most commonly depicted as a male face composed of, or surrounded by, leaves and vines. His mouth may spew foliage, his eyes peer from bark-like brows, and his entire being seems to emerge from the earth itself. While he has no fixed mythology, the Green Man symbolizes the life force of nature—fertility, vegetation, regeneration, and the untamed wild.

Rather than being a single god, the Green Man is more of a mythic archetype, a cross-cultural symbol that embodies humanity’s spiritual connection to the natural world.

Although the term “Green Man” was popularized in the 20th century (by Lady Raglan in 1939), the concept predates medieval Christian Europe by thousands of years.

In Celtic paganism, nature spirits and forest deities like Cernunnos, the antlered god of the wild, were revered as guardians of the forests and animals. While not leafy-faced, Cernunnos shares the Green Man’s domain—untamed nature, fertility, and seasonal cycles. The May Day celebrations (Beltane) celebrated the renewal of spring and likely drew upon Green Man-like figures in their rituals.

The Greek god Pan and the Roman Silvanus echo Green Man traits—horned, woodland entities tied to rustic wilderness and fertility. The Dionysian mysteries, which honored the god of vine and rebirth, also reflected the verdant, chaotic life force that the Green Man represents.

In Mesopotamian mythology, the Sumerian god Dumuzi and his cyclical death and resurrection as a vegetation god parallels the Green Man motif. In Hinduism, Pashupati—“Lord of Animals”—shares symbolic ground, while tree spirits (yakshas) in Indian tradition embody the sacredness of plant life.

Strangely, some of the richest collections of Green Man imagery appear not in pagan temples but in Gothic churches and cathedrals. Why would Christian architects incorporate a pagan symbol?
The medieval mind often blended older nature motifs with newer religious teachings. The Green Man, embedded in stone carvings or wooden beams, may have symbolized:

• The resurrection and cyclical rebirth (a parallel to Christ’s resurrection).
• A reminder of man’s link to the earth and mortality.
• A spiritual echo of pre-Christian belief systems coexisting with Christian doctrine.

From Notre-Dame in Paris to tiny parish churches in England, Green Men remain hidden in plain sight—watching from the eaves like ancient guardians of forgotten wisdom.

At his core, the Green Man is about renewal and transformation. His leafy face is not just a decoration; it embodies:

• 🌱 Rebirth – As trees bud anew each spring, so does life emerge from apparent death.
• 🍃 Fertility – He represents the procreative forces of the land.
• 🌿 Nature’s Wildness – Unpredictable, lush, and free from human control.
• 🍂 Mortality and Decay – Just as green leaves fall in autumn, life cycles onward.

He reminds us that nature gives, takes, and renews—unceasingly.
The Green Man lives on in seasonal rituals across Europe, especially in May Day and Midsummer celebrations:

• Jack in the Green – A May Day figure in British folk tradition, covered in foliage and danced through the streets to welcome spring.
• The Wicker Man – A modern symbol (and horror icon) echoing ancient fertility rituals.
• Modern Paganism & Wicca – Neopagan traditions often honor the Green Man as a deity of the forest and divine masculine.
He also appears in fantasy fiction, environmental activism, and art—offering a deep-rooted symbol for those who seek harmony with nature.

A God Without a Name, A Spirit Without an End. The Green Man is not one god, nor bound to one pantheon. He is a universal archetype—an ancient echo of humanity’s sacred bond with the green world. In every leaf-carved cathedral cornice, every Maypole dance, and every rewilding movement, his face returns. In a world increasingly distanced from nature, the Green Man stands as a verdant reminder: we are not apart from the earth, but of it.

Source: The Archeologist

Happy Mother's Day
05/09/2026

Happy Mother's Day

Awesome!
05/08/2026

Awesome!

05/04/2026

✨YOU HAVE A NEW MESSAGE FROM THE UNIVERSE TODAY✨ Check our work at healingenergytools.com

02/17/2026

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