for your blog/site/business

December 17, 2007

Yule Incense

Filed under: Incense, Recipes, Sabbats/Holidays/Events, Yule-Winter Solstice — Loki @ 9:25 am

Yule Incense

Recipe by Scott Cunningham
2 parts Frankincense
2 parts Pine needles or resin
1 part Cedar
1 part Juniper berries
Mix and smolder at Wiccan rites on Yule (on or around December 21st), or during the winter months to cleanse the home and to attune with the forces of nature amid the cold days and nights.
(The above recipe for “Yule Incense” is directly quoted from Scott Cunningham’s book: “The Complete Book of Incense, Oils & Brews”, page 100, Llewellyn Publications, 1992.)
Oil For sabbath: See OILS

Yule Oil - Put in soap or annoint candles
4 drops pine
3 drops cedarwood
3 drops cinnamon
2 drops frankincense
2 drops juniper

Add a pinch of dried pine needles from your tree with garnet, green tourmaline, and clear quartz crystals. A great Yule tree smell with the hint of log fires and spicy pomanders!

March 6, 2007

Ancient Ancestors Incense

Filed under: Incense, Recipes — Loki @ 12:11 pm

Ancient Ancestors Incense
(to honor those that have passed on)

1 tablespoon anise seed
1 tablespoon ground pine needles
1 teaspoon sage
1 teaspoon thyme
1 teaspoon rosemary
1 teaspoon fennel seed
1 teaspoon basil
1 teaspoon almond extract

-by Ronald Rhodes

February 26, 2007

Altar Purification Incense

Filed under: Incense, Recipes — Loki @ 8:03 am

Altar Purification Incense

 

4 parts Frankincense
2 parts Myrrh
1 part Cinnamon

Burn as a general incense on the altar to purify the area

April 1, 2006

Intercessory Prayer Has No Major Effect on Recovery

Filed under: Group Rituals, Incense, National, Politics — Loki @ 7:21 am

This study has brough much conterversey in the Religious community.  I found it interesting.  My experience in Spiritual matters has brought me to the opposite conclusion of the studies findings but I enjoy watching the religious community getting a little defensive.-L

Study: Intercessory Prayer Has No Major Effect on Recovery
By Adelle M. Banks

Religion News Service
A major study of Christian intercessory prayer for cardiac patients has found no significant effect on reducing complications but patients who knew they were receiving the prayer had a slightly higher rate of complications.

The study comes after at least five previous studies that found varying results. Three did not report success with intercessory prayer but two did.

The latest study, released Thursday (March 30), was the most extensive. It involved 1,802 coronary artery bypass graft surgery patients from six hospitals who were divided into three groups: 604 received intercessory prayer after learning they might or might not be prayed for by others; 597 did not receive prayer after being told they might or might not receive it; 601 received intercessory prayer after learning they would receive it.

Investigators found that complications occurred in 52 percent of the first group, 51 percent of the second group and 59 percent in the third group.

“Our trial cannot be generalized to all forms of intercessory prayer,” cautioned Dr. Charles F. Bethea, a principal investigator from Integris Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma City, in a teleconference with reporters on Thursday. “But the role of awareness needs careful further study.”

He said it is possible that patients’ knowledge that they were the subject of intercessory prayer “might have induced a form of performance anxiety or made them feel doubtful about their outcome.”

The Rev. Dean Marek, director of chaplain services at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., said another possible cause for the different results is that patients who were prayed for “thought they were home free and discounted the traumatic effect that surgery has upon the body, so were ill-prepared for it.”

The study, to be published Tuesday (April 4) in The American Heart Journal, analyzed patients between January 1998 and November 2000. Two Catholic groups and one Protestant group were given patients’ first name and the first initial of their last name and asked to pray for them for two straight weeks, starting the night before the scheduled surgery.

The groups were faxed the names of the patients and asked to include the phrase “for a successful surgery with a quick, healthy recovery and no complications” to their usual prayers.

The study team also included participants from the Mind/Body Medical Institute in Chestnut Hill, Mass., Baptist Memorial Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.; Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston; St. Joseph’s Hospital in Tampa, Fla.; and Washington Hospital Center in the District of Columbia.

February 27, 2006

Earth Incense (Elemental)

Filed under: Incense, Recipes — Loki @ 3:15 pm

Earth Incense (Elemental)

 

This is a good incense to burn when working with the element of Earth.

Ingredients:

2 Parts Pine resin or needles
1 Part Patchouli
1 pinch finely powdered salt
few drops Cypress Oil


Burn on Charcoal

February 22, 2006

Ostara Spring Sabbat Incense

Filed under: Incense, Ostara-Spring Equinox, Recipes — Loki @ 2:29 pm

Ostara Spring Sabbat Incense

  • 3 parts Frankincense
  • 2 parts Sandalwood
  • 1 part Benzoin
  • 1 part Cinnamon
  • a few drops Patchouli oil

Burn on charcoal during spring and summer Sabbat rituals.

December 26, 2005

Yule Incense

Filed under: Incense, Recipes, Yule-Winter Solstice — Loki @ 2:18 pm

2 parts frankincense
2 parts pine needles or resin
1 part cedar
1 part juniper berries

This is a great Yule incense recipe. It smells great for the holidays or in ritual.

Grind ingredients and burn in a brazier on charcol.

Loki