Posts Tagged ‘grove members’

The Dublin Irish Festival: 327!

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

It is exceedingly rare that any religious functionary can point to a ritual and say, “Yes, even from my point of view, that rite was virtually flawless.”

But today, I can point to such a rite.

Today, we honoured the lady of the land, Tailtiu, at the Dublin Irish Festival. The sheer magnitude of the rite can best be described in numbers:

  • Attendance: 327, at least
  • Donations: $200.08 (given to St. Brigid’s charities)

Other important things to note:

  • The Dublin Irish Festival is the second largest Irish Festival in the world, drawing over 100,000 attendees each year. (.pdf about this year’s festival)
  • Our service occurred concurrently with Gaelic Masses, Protestant services, and Interdenominational services. At no time did anyone suggest that we fell under the “interdenominational” category. We worked on a stage, were listed in the schedule, and were provided all the amenities provided to other faiths at the festival.
  • Many people we had never met commented about how great it was that there was finally a Pagan representative event at the festival, and that this was a “missing piece” in their religious and cultural experience at the festival.
  • Exactly zero people commented that we shouldn’t be there.

But the most important thing? The Cranes showed up.

I don’t mean that we arrived at the site, or that we came and did our usual ritual; no, our Grove reached deeply within themselves, cradled the fire of piety in their hands, and brought it forth to show the world, kindling it in the hearts of others as they did so.

The commitment that the Grove (and many friends of the Grove, official and unofficial) showed to this ritual was inspiring and moving. Those with parts attended rehearsals, wrote their parts well in advance, memorized them, and took constructive criticism without taking offense. Those without parts brought friends and family to the ritual, advertised heavily among the community, participated fully in the rite, and helped lead others when we decided to forgo our usual extended pre-ritual briefing. Then there are those who went to Dublin, unasked by us, because they felt that we were the best representatives of the Pagan community to do this thing and who supported us every step of the way.

From start to finish, the ritual flowed as easily as water flows downhill. Nervousness was overcome and joy is what was presented to the Folk. In short, the ritual was as close to flawless as we could have asked for, thanks to the work and love the Cranes put into it.

Sure, there were little things that weren’t perfect: this being our first time working with microphones, we didn’t all get right up to them when we started; the layout of the site was a bit awkward for dispersing the Waters of Life; and the goddess we honoured in the rite had her name spelled wrong in the program. But honestly, there’s nothing in the litany of “little things” that makes anything add up to anything close to “a real problem.” In hindsight, enumerating them seems more like nit-picking than anything else.

Near the end of the ritual, we called for omens, as we always do. Our omens in this rite were as follows:

What Blessing do the Ancestors have for us?
Duir, The Oak – Strength

What Blessings do the Spirits of Nature Have for us?
Oir, The Spindle Tree – The Blessings of our Home and Hearth

What Blessings do the Shining Ones have for us?
Ur, The Heather – The Blessings of the Homelands

Taken together these might suggest “The Kindreds remind us that true and lasting Strength flows from the sacred hearth of the Home, and from the sacred soil of our Homelands”

Good omens, indeed, for a ritual such as this. They were, in fact, ideal.

This rite wrapped up our eighth year of High Day rituals (we have seen 64 total High Days as a Grove). Our next rite, Autumnal Equinox, begins our progression to our ninth anniversary. The Cranes have come far from two guys reading scripts in the darkness.

This is Isaac’s Vision, come to life.

I am immensely proud of the Cranes, and I am not ashamed to admit it.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Anagantios, the stay-at-home month

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

Written 2/18/2010, posted 2/21/2010

I watched the Anagantios moon set in the west as I drove home, reflecting on the day. Awake at 3:30 AM and out the door by 5 AM, I began the ritual that has come to mean so much to me over the years: our “Stay-At-Home Moon” ritual, in which the Grove Priest travels from member house to member house, lighting the flame of our Grove’s devotion and illuminating and warming the home in this frigid month.

This year I was able to bring Rev. James “Seamus” Dillard with me, as he is now also a Grove Priest. The company and help was invaluable to me today, and it helped me to know that our future as a growing Grove would include secure traditions like this one, where our members can have a day when they can request that a Priest come to their house and bless it, and our membership numbers will not outgrow the availability of our Grove Priests.

What is so special about this moon to me is that I get to spend time not only with Grove members I know well in their own homes, but I often get to see members, new and old, that I either haven’t had a chance to connect with or that I have sorely missed over the time they have been away.

It is very special to me to spend that time with the members who ask me into their homes. The 212 miles traveled today were priceless to me in terms of joy and fulfillment.

But, for now, it is the end of a very long day; it is time for me to do a final house blessing (my own) and to fall asleep in preparation for tomorrow.

But I do so with the vision of that Anagantios moon gracefully setting to the west, and good conversation bringing a smile to my lips.

    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Bringing the Light In: Imbolc 2010

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

As we have done for so many years, since our first Imbolc rite in Jenni’s apartment (where we drew a whopping 23 people!), 46 people came together to honour Brigando, read a poem, light 20 candles, and do work in preparation for the time ahead.

As we like to do, we mixed up the parts a bit, and brought new members and friends into the mix for this ritual. This ritual has not changed much since the first year we worked it, and many of the elements are exactly the same from that first year. This is a special rite to many of us, often marking an anniversary of first attendance for so many of our friends.

This evening’s ritual lasted a full hour and a half, which was a bit longer than usual. But, by the end, we had done much work and received many blessings. These are the omens from the rite:

Are our offerings accepted?Ngetal, the broom: Cleansing and healing. The offerings are accepted indeed.

What do the Powers offer in return?Oir, the spindle: Hearth and home. They offer us the blessings of fellowship with those close to us and the joy of family.

What further needs to the Powers have of us?Emancoll, the witchhazel: Powerful magics. We are to work our will in the world through these blessings.

Taken together, these omens indicate that through cleansing and healing, we will find joy in one another and our families. Through this, we will work powerful magics as we move through the world.

These are good omens, indeed, and they played perfectly into the work of the evening.

We began our work by providing each person some time with a brideog, brought around the circle by two children in our midst. During this, we actually managed to sing a song that was done in rounds, something our Grove has actually never managed before. After that, we brought out the healing blanket that we had begun at last Imbolc: our Grove Artisan, Ravenna had led the final effort to put it together, and we re-blessed the blanket with the energy of those present. Following that, we presented a new book, created by Joe, to the folk, noting that the book we have been using since Yule of 2006 is now almost out of pages.

This rite was a beautiful synthesis between what we have done in the past and what we will do in the future. It spoke very much to the work we do today and the history we have yet to make.

Every ritual, I am more and more proud of this Grove. Tonight was certainly no exception.

Hail to the Cranes.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Voices, like streams, flow together forever

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

As our Grove prepares to put out another edition of The Fire on Our Hearth (or, as it is affectionately known, “FooH“), it’s clear that this Grove has come a long way in just the past year since we originally released it.

At our last business meeting, our secretary revealed that we had hit thirty members. While that alone is very impressive to me, what has impressed me more is the way those members seem to have found a home with us, and how our voice is amplified and changed when their voice joins ours.

I can’t begin to describe how these new members have helped to shape the Grove. While it is likely true that new members are most likely to be the ones who volunteer early in their tenure, many of these have thrown themselves whole-heartedly into the work. It hasn’t been manual labour or monetary donations, either: one new member has even been hard at work on a song about Teutates, the “God of the Tribe.”

When I see things like this within the Grove, I realize that the things we have built have meaning. More importantly, they have a meaning that others can truly understand, experience, and embrace. We call Teutates “architect” and “builder” along with “gardener” for a reason.

Over the years, many members have come and gone (and some have since returned), but what we have found is that, unlike the physical presence of the person, their voice becomes entwined with ours, as many streams join to become a river which flows to the sea. Even now, in our liturgy, prayers, and business meetings, I can hear the voices of those who have gone before, and I can savor the sound of new voices joining and playing in the currents and eddies of this Grove.

It greatly excites me that we will be releasing a new version of this book, and the voice of this Grove will reach new heights and depths, helped along by the voices of so many new people.

Catch it on sale soon. . .
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Opening the Ancestor Box

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

In a tradition we began in 2004, our Grove keeps a box on the altar at all our rituals. Within this box are mementos of our Ancestors: the ones we remember, the ones we may not know as well as we’d like, and the ones that above all, we love.

The act of keeping this box has brought us closer as a Grove, too: the box is taken home by the person in charge of the next ritual, and devotions are done to the Ancestors of our Grove by that person for the six weeks or so until the next High Day. This has helped us to maintain the connection each of us feels toward the Grove as a whole, as we find our shared Ancestors helping us and moving with us through the years.

This year, we opened the ancestor box with some new Grove Members and Friends of the Grove at our last Druid Moon of our Grove’s year: Cantlos, the Song Moon.

It’s hard to describe what happened that night, with each of us gathered around the box, telling stories of our ancestors and explaining why we felt such kinship with them. Harder still to describe is what each of us went through as we remembered our own ancestors, and what happened to each person when the Ancestors of the Grove spoke to them individually.

Tears of joy and sorrow are hard to separate sometimes, but the knowledge that we remember those who went before stirs our hearts each time we re-open this box.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

A week off, a week on

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

This weekend, much of the Grove is away at the Earth Warrior’s Festival in southwestern Ohio, and preliminary reports say that the festival has gone very well. I, however, am taking a week off.

One of the joys of having a Grove full of individuals as committed to it as the members of Three Cranes are is that you do not need to do everything on your own. Every so often, a time will come along where you can sit back, relax, and know that your Grove is representing themselves well without you.

It’s been six years in the making, but I know that the members of this Grove stand tall within it, which means that sometimes, I can take a breather and know that the gardening goes on.

Thank you, Grovemates. You guys make it all worth it.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

A Year of Druid Moons

Sunday, August 10th, 2008

This week, we celebrated the Druid Moon of Elembivios, “the many-sided-moon.” This moon was the one-year anniversary of our work with the 6th Night moons, and (because it fell on a Thursday) also a business meeting.

It’s somewhat strange to group ritual and business together sometimes, especially when things are a bit pressing. With Summerland coming up and our Grove helping The 6th Night Grove, ADF, sponsor the festival this year, there was no way around doing both.

However, this worked out just fine: we came away with a couple of new member applicants, too, and approved one new Friend of the Grove!

At this ritual, we often celebrate the many facets of our lives, and the many ways that our Grove serves each of us. We were also fortunate to welcome a new member into our Grove that evening, and show the mystery that is Three Cranes to another long-time Friend.

There are exciting things going on in ADF these days: the Vice Archdruid called us in the middle of our meeting and had some excellent news! As always, we look forward to how things will turn out in the coming days!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Revisiting the Past

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

The Grove has been recording our rituals, omens, and reactions for a full year now in a new book, called the Book of Three Cranes. This book details many things, and with Samhian and our fifth year anniversary, it seemed appropriate for me to go back over the book and review the past year. So, I sat down to transcribe it to place it on the Three Cranes Website. Here is what I wrote about that experience:

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Every so often, you make a mistake. You think, at first, that you are just transcribing a year worth of rituals. You think that you are merely copying what people wrote down a month ago, six months ago, or a year ago. You think that there are no surprises in the past, that there wasn’t anything that you missed.

And then you realize that you’re not just copying something down. You aren’t just rehashing the past, or repeating someone’s words.

No, you’re reliving the past. There is the first ritual Nick led. Here is where Bonnie first came to a Three Cranes rite. These three ritual omens spoke the same words to us from the Kindreds at three different times. There is a joy described, a sorrow felt, and a smile of pleasure at a ritual well-run or a mistake that’s a thousand times more amusing an hour later.

In this year of rituals, we celebrated our fifth anniversary. We began to talk about how we pray with a good fire. We shared laughter and pain, and expressed deep faith in each other. We filled 58 pages with good omens, changes in ritual style, criticisms and compliments. We showed pride in the canned goods and toys we collected, and we wrote blessings to the Grove and the community.

The voices of the People of Three Cranes came through, loud and clear.

And the future will have those voices to guide them, a strong vision to follow, and a standard of fellowship to live up to.

As I wrote on our fifth anniversary:

Guided by Garanus,
We make sacrifice to the Kindreds,
We pray with a good fire.
Blessings on the People of Three Cranes.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler