Hi! Long story short I’ve been getting signals that a deity has been reaching out to me & I just figured out that it’s probably Hermes: I unexpectedly got a post office job, got randomly put in a seminar about homelessness, ive been invited to travel abroad to visit friends. So like. Not very subtle. I was wondering how one goes about worshipping Hermes?

Hello and welcome my friend! I’m glad you found your way to this humble lil shrine.

My advice is always to start slow. Read and expand on the things about Hermes that grab you, such as the aspects that pertain to your job and activism. Ask questions and look for the “signs” pointing to the answers. (His unsubtlety and sheer cheekiness really helps when it comes to that, and He always makes it fun!)

There’s a lot of excellent resources in the tags, so I’m going to tag some to this post ♥️

Hellenic Polytheism Start Pack

temples-wreathed-in-laurel:

Greek Pagan Basics: How to Write a Prayer

hearthfirehandworks:

When it comes to prayer, there aren’t a lot of rules. Prayer can be as simple, direct and informal as talking to the gods, off the cuff, in a time of need or just because you feel like it. Prayer can also be something you plan and prepare for, whether by making use of the many existing historical or modern prayers to the gods and reading or memorizing them, or by writing your own modern prayers.

You do not have to write your own prayers–it is not a requirement of worshipping the gods. But if you feel called to do it, it can be a wonderful and meaningful way to connect with deity. And while the act of prayer is not an offering, the work you put into creating it can itself be a gift to the gods.

The idea of writing your own prayers to the gods can be intimidating. You look at the readily available surviving texts, the Homeric Hymns, the Orphic Hymns, and they are so beautiful. If that’s the standard, how can we ever attain it?

But it isn’t the standard. It never was. Not all historical hymns were the Homeric hymns. Not all hymns were high art. (And certainly not all prayers were hymns, although the two terms have a lot of overlap in meaning. I usually use the term “prayer” to refer to my own writings, in part because it feels more like I’m focusing on function.)

The Homeric hymns and similar pieces were often performed at festivals and in competitions. The beauty of these hymns, while not separate from their religious significance, is not solely related to their liturgical function. Many of the hymns actually used in ritual were more to the point–more focused on that function. Few of these works survive, and those that do are of widely varying literary quality. (I personally, as a writer of my own prayers, find this idea quite comforting. :))

The Rhetoric of Prayer

I will admit it, I write a lot of prayers of praise and prayers of thanks. I don’t often pray for something and if I do it’s usually pretty informal. (I suspect that says at least as much about my life as it does about my theology.) But many of the same techniques can be used just as effectively in prayers of supplication.

Reciprocity. Like most Indo-European cultures, the ancient Greeks had a view of relationship that included “a gift for a gift.” This does not mean that you are buying friendship–rather, it emphasizes the give-and-take that is a part of any healthy relationship.

A prayer of supplication might include a reminder of past relationship, which can be either a mention of blessings the god has granted you in the past, or a mention of offerings or other services you have provided the god. It can also mention a gift being given at the same time this prayer is being made. Or it can include a promise of future gifts and services. In all cases, it is a statement of relationship.

Myth. Mythic references can refer in general to the greatness of the god, or can be used to point specifically toward the theme of the prayer. For example, a prayer to Aphrodite to bring love into your life might mention the story of Pygmalion and Galatea as an example of the goddess’ greatness. It goes without saying that these mythic references should be positive ones–you might use stories from the Iliad in a prayer praising Athena, but probably not in one for Ares.

History. Since we lack a large and thriving worship community, for concrete examples I sometimes refer back to the power and prestige a god enjoyed in the distant past. If you are asking Apollo for divinatory help, a mention of his oracular prowess at Delphi would be appropriate; if you are asking his help in health matters, the role he took at ancient healing temples would be more to the point.

Style. Historically, some sorts of prayer were believed particularly appropriate to certain gods. The dignified paean was Apollo’s, while the livelier dithyramb was for Dionysos. For a modern writer, you may want to keep in mind the rhythm of the words and metre when writing.

Voice. While a hymn or prayer of praise may be written in the third person, all the better to tell a good story, a prayer that asks for something is most often written in the second person, thus providing a direct, personal message from the writer/speaker to the god.

The Elements of Prayer

Although there is no precise and standard form that all historic prayers followed, there are a few guidelines, things that a number of prayers tended to have in common. Generally Greek prayers included three parts, each providing a different function.

Invocation. First of all, you need to get the god’s attention, and to get the interaction off on the right foot. Call to the god by name, including words of praise (pro tip, all the gods are beautiful, all the gods are mighty :)) and by the use of descriptive words and phrases. Referring to Asklepios as “son of Apollo” underlines the sort of healing power he comes from. Referring to Apollo as “swift-shooting” has a different meaning than referring to him as “sweet-singing,” although both emphasize his power and skill.

Note that there is nothing wrong with using an epithet you’ve seen in historical texts, “ox-eyed Hera” and “thundering Zeus” were common phrases and had all the more meaning because they were known and understood by all.

Argument. Here you give reasons why the god should look favorably on your request. (See Reciprocityabove.) You can also include reasons based on something other than personal relationship–for example, asking for help in matters of love from Aphrodite, or in matters of justice from Zeus, because those are among their respective realms. This is where you make your case.

Request. Finally you ask the god to look kindly on your request, to grant you their blessings and gifts.

Example:
Invocation: Grey-eyed Athena, daughter of thundering Zeus,
Argument: if ever I have poured out sweet wine for you,
Request: look kindly on me and grant me your wisdom.

The Act of Prayer

It was traditional to stand while praying, with arms raised toward the heavens.

If praying to a chthonic deity, it would be appropriate to kneel (placing yourself symbolically closer to their realm), or to focus your attention toward the earth in some other way.

(It is more than appropriate, by the way, to sing hymns, as was often done historically, if this is something you feel drawn to do. A performance, again, is work that is a gift to the gods.)

Hellenic Polytheism

af-art:

For those of you that want to know more about Hellenism, here are some of the tumblrs I’m following and rebloging on @medusa-must-live:

If you know another HP tumblr, please, reblog and tag them! 

Thanks for tagging me! ♥️

wolvesinthebay:

tuiliel:

twilight-blossom:

autistic-zuko:

bisexualmorgana:

So I found this cool website for learning ancient languages

go wild

holy fuck

I just did a quick perusal of the Coptic resources on this site, and it has all the resources I’ve personally found worthwhile and then some. These are resources that took me months, if not years, to discover and compile. I am thoroughly impressed. The other languages featured on the site are:

  • Akkadian
  • Arabic
  • Aramaic
  • Church Slavonic
  • Egyptian (hieroglyphics and Demotic)
  • Elamite
  • Ethiopic (Ge’ez)
  • Etruscan
  • Gaulish
  • Georgian
  • Gothic
  • Greek
  • Hebrew
  • Hittite
  • Latin
  • Mayan (various related languages/dialects)
  • Old Chinese
  • Old English
  • Old French
  • Old Frisian
  • Old High German
  • Old Irish
  • Old Norse
  • Old Persian
  • Old Turkic
  • Sanskrit
  • Sumerian
  • Syriac
  • Ugaritic

For the love of all the gods, if you ever wanted to learn any of these languages, use this site.

Likely helpful for various recon-oriented polytheists.

@meerkat-mode

E-Shrines of Pagan Tumblr

hellenicappalachia:

this is your 6-month-or-whatever reminder, pagan tag, that I keep a master list of e-shrines. If yours is not linked here, please send me a message and let me know!


(This list is very much in progress. Some were taken from tumblr userlettuceentertainu’s list, which is now kind of out of date. i also wanted to make it organized because I’m picky that way)

This list is the same on as on lettuceentertainu, but slightly more out of date.

This one is also very out of date.

These are organized very roughly by religion/geographical area/time period, and then by alphabetical order by the name of the deity the shrine is devoted to. The version of the name used is the one used in the shrine, for example Hecate vs Hekate. I do not know well the differences between Rokkatru, Heathenry, and Norse Polytheism, for example, so Germanic and Norse deities are grouped under one heading. I apologize if I have done anything offensive in this organization, and if I have PLEASE let me know. I can’t guarantee these are all active, but as of 9/22/14 they exist.

@shipping-the-gods I saw you getting e-shrine asks and thought this might eb of interest.

Hellenic Polytheism (Ouranic and Khthonic deities)

A set of e-shrines to the Olympians, plus Haides, Persephone, and Hekate, maintained bypieandhotdogs.

A set of 13 e-shrines, maintained by iamidae.

Athena, Dionysos, Artemis

Zeus, Hera, Hades, Persephone, Poseidon, Amphitrite

Keep reading

odiko-ptino:

daemontiger:

odiko-ptino:

Free course on Greek literature through Harvard!

I was browsing my local university and they linked to a program that Harvard does… one of those MOOC massive online courses, where they teach it for free and it’s mostly self paced, you download or stream the lectures.

This one is on Greek heroes;

I’m gonna sign up! If you sign up too, let me know so we can compare notes 😀 it starts on August 15 but I’m not sure if there’s a deadline to sign up.

https://www.edx.org/course/the-ancient-greek-hero

I’m too dumm to figure out how to embed links so here ya go lol

I hope this is available to those outside of the US.

I believe it is… It doesn’t explicitly say, but further down on the page it says this course is free and available to students of any level of previous studies, any age, any culture, and “any geographic location” … which SHOULD hopefully mean outside the US too 😊

(If it’s not, I’d be happy to try to share the info somehow ❤️)

Do you have any recommendations for blogs like yours that are for Ares or other gods? Thanks xx – beginner anon

Hey again!

Sorry, I don’t know of any active Ares shrines. Though I do have a sideblog @eshrine-for-introverted-worship that has an Ares tag, as well as tags for the other Theoi. I also have an Apollo e-shrine @songbird-of-apollon that has a tag system.

I’m not sure what’s going on in the Tumblr world but I’ve noticed a decline in active eshrines; there’s mostly witch-centric blogs with occasional deity posts.

Hellenism Resources

pomegranateandivy:

This is by no means a complete list, it’s just a collection of some sites, articles, and books I’ve found online that are interesting or useful.

  1. Ancient Greek Cults:A Guide by Jennifer Larson
  2. Aristotle on Religion by Mor Segev
  3. Brutality of Citizen Wives, The by Mary E. Naples, M.A.

  4. Collection of Greek Ritual Norms
  5. Dionysus and His Cult and Worship; a Gender Study by

    Leah Hatch

     

  6. Divine Appetites and Animal Sacrifice by Mat Carbon
  7. Greek Philosophy and Religion by Gábor Betegh

  8. Harvard’s Center for Hellenic Studies- Classical Inquires page 
  9. Harvard’s Center for Hellenic Studies-Library
  10. Harvard’s Center for Hellenic Studies- Research Bulletin
  11. Homer’s Gods, Plato’s Gods by Dr. Garrett 

  12. Households, Families, and Religion by Matthew Dillon
  13. Human Transgression–Divine Retribution by

    Aslak Rostad  

  14. Imagining the Afterlife by Radcliffe Edmonds

  15. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

  16. Introduction to Inner Purity and Pollution in Ancient Greek Religion by Andrej Pertovic
  17. Meaning of Reciprocity in Ancient Greek Religion, The by A. Koutoupas
  18. Mortal and Divine In Early Greek Etymology  by Shaul Tor
  19. Oracular Functioning and Architecture of Five Ancient Apollo Temples Through Archaeoastronomy: Novel Approach and Interpretation by Belen Martin Castro, Ioannis Liritzis, and Anne Nyquist
  20. Pausanias’ Descriptions of Greece

  21. Personal Religion in Ancient Greece by Emily Whitmore

  22. Plato’s Writings

  23. Pythagoreans, Orphism and Greek Religion by Gábor Betegh

  24. Recovering the Past: The Origins of Greek Heroes and Hero Cult by Jorge Bravo

  25. Rethinking Aphrodite as a Goddess at Work by Gabriella Pironti
  26. Sacred and the Profane, The by Mircea Eliade
  27. Theoi.com
  28. Theoi.com- Library
  29. Theophoric Names and the History of Greek Religion by Robert Parker

  30. Unraveling the Eleusinian Mysteries by Mary E. Naples, M.A .

dandthegods:

sweetbabybluejay:

dandthegods:

Opened my statues yesterday and set up my altar. Sooooo amazing and worth it 🙂 thank the gods they all got here safe!

Where did you purchase your statues, i need them all rn

@sweetbabybluejay

@french-psyche
(Sorry it’s so long)

Dionysus: https://www.etsy.com/listing/498860004/dionysus-sculpture-statue-ancient-greek

Asclepius: https://www.etsy.com/listing/493683338/asclepius-sculpture-statue-ancient-greek

Hades: https://www.etsy.com/listing/475475568/hades-pluto-greek-god-of-underworld

Dodekatheon: https://www.etsy.com/listing/498636434/on-sale-olympians-sculpture-set

*note: these are the lowest priced items I’ve found. There are other options that I’ll link to. These next ones will be more expensive*

Aged alabaster:
Hades: https://www.etsy.com/listing/466815197/hades-pluto-underworld-king-of-the-dead

Dodekatheon: https://www.etsy.com/listing/240117127/12-olympian-gods-set-statues-greek

Dionysus: https://www.etsy.com/listing/507148955/dionysus-sculpture-ancient-greek-god-of

Asclepius: https://www.etsy.com/listing/523709538/asclepius-god-of-healing-medicine-greek

*note: I don’t know how big a difference the aging colouring between the two sellers I’ve linked is. So if you want to get a cohesively looking set, I’d go with one seller over the other or find ones that look similar in their pictures to get accurate matching. I’m a perfectionist so I did that*

Painted:
Dodekatheon: https://www.etsy.com/listing/260849412/12-olympian-gods-set-statues-greek

Hades: https://www.etsy.com/listing/494419034/hades-pluto-greek-god-of-underworld

Dionysus: https://www.etsy.com/listing/267720502/dionysus-dionysos-greek-statue-ecstasy

*notes: These are the only painted ones I’ve found and they are the most expensive (hand painted you know). It might be worth saving for and getting.*

– the first links are the exact ones I bought and luckily right now they are the same price. In total for all 15 statues it cost me 210$ (that’s 14$ per statue). But if you go with others obviously it’ll have a price difference. All the ones I used ship from Greece and it only took around two weeks for them to ship to America. Hope all this helped! Message me if you have any further questions!!–