![]() ![]() Modern Witchcraft is like the American first cousin to a proper, respectable British family which were steeped in tradition. That being said, here is how I see what I do in context to Wiccan Witchcraft that I’ve encountered and studied thus far: A Silly Analogy: So each witch you meet, and each book you pick up, can speak for that individual and author alone. Radically sovereign and willful, the lot of us. There is no agreed-upon definition for much of anything pertaining to the Craft, which is how we like it. ![]() There are no globally recognized authorities, nor governing bodies to ask. There is nothing centralized about witchcraft – no official bi-laws to reference. To even broach the subject in a public forum is to strike the match for your own witch-burning. This inevitably leads to the question, what is the difference between British Traditional Wiccan Witchcraft and what I call Modern Witchcraft? So I choose a different name for what I do. Their apples and my pears are not the same thing – close, but not enough. As it happens, I also know my praxis and religious paradigm are very different from both Cunningham’s and Gardner’s Wicca at this point. ![]()
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