Wicca Wiki
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religion, rather than its practitioners. Practitioners of Wicca are now called "wiccans".
 
religion, rather than its practitioners. Practitioners of Wicca are now called "wiccans".
   
  +
The following are the beliefs, rules, and practices of Wicca:
==Initiations==
 
As a [[mystery tradition]] practice, [[initiation]] is a key value of Wicca. Someone becomes wiccan through experiencing an initiation, and later [[elevation]]s promote a
 
practitioner within the priesthood.
 
 
The fertility-cult nature of wiccan practice is evident in many aspects of their rituals, and combines with the mystery tradition aspect of their practice in initiation being
 
performed upon men by women and upon women by men. An exception to this rule is that a man may initiate his son and a woman may initiate her daughter, which
 
clearly reflects fertility in a different way (by reflecting that fact of procreation rather, in initiating their own offspring, rather than reflecting the means of procreation in being
 
cross-gender).
 
 
Most wiccan groups claim an initiatory lineage to the [[New Forest Coven]] in southern England.
 
   
 
==Beliefs==
 
==Beliefs==
   
====<i><b>Goddess and God</b></i>====
+
====<i><b>The Goddess and The God</b></i>====
 
Wiccans believe in a moon goddess and a horned male god.
 
Wiccans believe in a moon goddess and a horned male god.
 
In the original [[Gardnerian Wicca]], the goddess is Aradia (a character from the 1899 book <i>Aradia</i>) and the horned male god is Cernunnos (a celtic pagan deity).
 
In the original [[Gardnerian Wicca]], the goddess is Aradia (a character from the 1899 book <i>Aradia</i>) and the horned male god is Cernunnos (a celtic pagan deity).
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The Gardnerian and Alexandrian [[books of shadows]] (the original books that describe the religion of Wicca) state that wiccans should worship the gods.
 
The Gardnerian and Alexandrian [[books of shadows]] (the original books that describe the religion of Wicca) state that wiccans should worship the gods.
 
However, some wiccans do not worship the gods, but rather describe their relationship with the gods as "working with" him/her.
 
However, some wiccans do not worship the gods, but rather describe their relationship with the gods as "working with" him/her.
  +
  +
====<i><b>The Watchtowers and their Lords</b></i>====
  +
Wiccans believe that there are multiple supernatural 'watchtowers', of an unspecified quantity, in each of the four cardinal directions
  +
(north, south, east, and west), and that those watchtowers are manned by powerful but unspecified supernatural beings,
  +
who are referred to as 'lords' or 'mighty ones'. Those lords are believed to bear witness to the wiccan rituals.
   
 
====<i><b>Reincarnation</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>Reincarnation</b></i>====
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====<i><b>The Wiccan Laws</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>The Wiccan Laws</b></i>====
The wiccan laws are various rules (they are not actual laws, as they are not enforced by a government)
+
The wiccan laws are various rules (they are not actual laws, as they are not enforced by a government) that were created by Gerald Gardner,
that are written in the Gardnerian and Alexandrian [[books of shadows]], and in [[Ye Bok of ye Art Magical]] which preceded them.
+
and are written in the Gardnerian and Alexandrian [[books of shadows]], and in [[Ye Bok of ye Art Magical]] which preceded them.
 
Wiccans are expected to follow these rules to some extent, but some of the rules are anachronistic, applying to the time when
 
Wiccans are expected to follow these rules to some extent, but some of the rules are anachronistic, applying to the time when
 
witches were hunted, interrogated, tortured, and killed, or at least considered criminal, so some of such rules are disregarded by most wiccans.
 
witches were hunted, interrogated, tortured, and killed, or at least considered criminal, so some of such rules are disregarded by most wiccans.
  +
The vast majority of the wiccan laws were written by Gerald Gardner, and some of them were written by Alex Sanders.
 
  +
For more information, see the article <b>[[wiccan laws]]</b>.
The wiccan laws written by Gerald Gardner contain the precursor to the wiccan rede.
 
   
 
====<i><b>The Wiccan Rede</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>The Wiccan Rede</b></i>====
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====<i><b>Diet</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>Diet</b></i>====
 
Wicca does not have any explicit dietary restrictions, but many wiccans are vegetarians as a result of applying the wiccan rede to animals.
 
Wicca does not have any explicit dietary restrictions, but many wiccans are vegetarians as a result of applying the wiccan rede to animals.
  +
  +
====<i><b>The Rule of Threefold Return</b></i>====
  +
The rule of threefold return states that a witch should return three times the good that another person does to them,
  +
and return three times the bad that another person does to them. In other words, it is three times reward and three times revenge.
  +
That rule blatantly contradicts the wiccan rede, as well as the statement 'harm none' that repeatedly appears in Gerald Gardner's wiccan laws.
  +
It especially contradicts sentences from the Gardnerian wiccan laws that state:
  +
<br>"So it is ordained that none shall use the art in any way to harm any, however much they have injured us.", and
  +
<br>"No one, however great an injury or injustice they receive, may use the art in any way to do ill or harm any.".
  +
<br>Those statements are also present in the Alexandrian wiccan laws 108 and 109.
  +
<br>It is likely that the rule of threefold return was invented by the [[New Forest Coven]] rather than Gerald Gardner,
  +
<br>which would explain why it contradicts Gardner's wiccan laws and wiccan rede.
  +
  +
The rule of threefold return was first mentioned in chapter 17 of Gerald Gardner's 1949 book <i>High Magic's Aid</i>,
  +
<br>and in the second-degree initiation ritual which is described in Gardner's book of shadows.
  +
<br>The wording of the rule in <i>High Magic's Aid</i> and in Gardner's book of shadows is identical, and in both cases it applies to scourgings.
  +
That wording is: "Learn, in witchcraft, thou must ever return triple. As I scourged thee, so thou must scourge me, but triple.
  +
... But mark well, when thou receivest good, so equally art bound to return good threefold."
  +
  +
In 1986, Raymond Buckland published the book <i>Buckland's Complete Book of Witchcraft</i>,
  +
<br>in which he falsely portrayed the rule of threefold return as being a karmic law of the universe rather than a rule of conduct.
  +
That false threefold rule states that whatever good or bad a person does to others will karmicly return to them threefold.
  +
Due to the popularity of Buckland's book, his lie about the threefold rule became widely believed.
   
 
==Practices==
 
==Practices==
   
 
====<i><b>Rituals</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>Rituals</b></i>====
Rituals play a very important role in the beliefs of wiccans, as it is closely tied to the mystery aspects of the religion.
+
Rituals play a very important role in Wicca.
 
<br>The wiccan rituals include the initiation and elevation rituals, the sabbat rituals, and the esbat rituals.
 
<br>The wiccan rituals include the initiation and elevation rituals, the sabbat rituals, and the esbat rituals.
   
====<i><b>Ritual Tools</b></i>====
+
====<i><b>Ritual Objects</b></i>====
Ritual tools are a major aspect of wiccan rituals.
+
Ritual objects, which are often called "tools" in Wicca, are a major aspect of wiccan rituals.
 
<br>Information on this subject is at the article <b>[[ritual tools]]</b>.
 
<br>Information on this subject is at the article <b>[[ritual tools]]</b>.
   
====<i><b>Magic</b></i>====
+
====<i><b>Initiations</b></i>====
  +
Wicca has three levels of initiation: the first-degree initiation, the second-degree initiation, and the third-degree initiation.
Although some self-identified wiccans claim not to practice magic, those of a more traditional background and training will argue against this as it has traditionally been
 
  +
The second- and third-degree initiations are sometimes alternatively called '[[elevation]]s', though that term was not used in early Wicca.
seen as a fundamental aspect of practice and necessary for development.
 
  +
<br>In the first-degree initiation, the initiate is given the title of 'priest(ess) and witch'.
  +
<br>In the second-degree initiation, the initiate is given the title of 'high priest(ess) and magus (for males) / witch queen (for females)'.
  +
<br>In the third-degree initiation, the initiate is not given a new title.
  +
  +
Because Wicca emphasizes gender polarity, a person may be initiated only by a member of the opposite gender.
  +
<br>The only exception to this rule is that a parent may initiate their child, regardless of the gender of the parent and the child.
  +
 
Most wiccan groups claim an initiatory lineage to the [[New Forest Coven]] on the southern coast of England,
  +
<br>and the subsequent Bricket Wood Coven north of London.
   
 
====<i><b>Sabbats</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>Sabbats</b></i>====
Wiccans celebrate 8 holy festivals, called sabbats, throughout the year. Different sects may emphasize certain aspects of these celebrations depending upon which
+
Wiccans celebrate 8 holidays, called [[sabbats]].
  +
<br>The sabbats are spaced at approximately equal intervals throughout the year.
pantheon of gods and goddesses they work with.
 
  +
  +
In order, those 8 sabbats are as follows, going by their original names:
  +
<br>1. febuary eve, 2. the spring equinox, 3. may eve, 4. the summer solstice,
  +
<br>5. august eve, 6. the autumn equinox, 7. november eve, 8. the winter solstice.
  +
  +
Some time in the 1950s, Gerald Gardner renamed febuary eve to Candlemass,
  +
<br>renamed august eve to Lammas, and renamed november eve to Halloween.
  +
  +
Other, later wiccans have made additional alterations to the sabbat names.
   
 
====<i><b>Esbats</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>Esbats</b></i>====
 
In addition to the sabbats, there are group rituals called esbats, which may be done on any day, but are preferentially done during a full moon, in which case they are
 
In addition to the sabbats, there are group rituals called esbats, which may be done on any day, but are preferentially done during a full moon, in which case they are
 
called 'full moon esbats'.
 
called 'full moon esbats'.
  +
 
====<i><b>Magic</b></i>====
 
Although some self-identified wiccans claim not to practice magic, those of a more traditional background and training will argue against this as it has traditionally been
 
seen as a fundamental aspect of practice and necessary for development.
   
 
====<i><b>Dress</b></i>====
 
====<i><b>Dress</b></i>====
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There are several different sects of Wicca.
 
There are several different sects of Wicca.
 
<br>The original and oldest sect of Wicca is [[Gardnerian Wicca]], which was created by Gerald Gardner in or around 1946,
 
<br>The original and oldest sect of Wicca is [[Gardnerian Wicca]], which was created by Gerald Gardner in or around 1946,
<br>and underwent modifications during the 1950s, in large part due to Doreen Valiente.
+
and underwent modifications during the 1950s, in large part due to Doreen Valiente.
 
<br>The second-oldest sect of Wicca is [[Alexandrian Wicca]], which was created by Alex Sanders starting in the mid 1960s,
 
<br>The second-oldest sect of Wicca is [[Alexandrian Wicca]], which was created by Alex Sanders starting in the mid 1960s,
<br>and does not deviate much from the original Gardnerian Wicca.
+
and does not deviate much from the original Gardnerian Wicca.
 
<br>Various new wiccan sects were created during the 1970s, including Dianic Wicca in 1971, Algard Wicca in 1972,
 
<br>Various new wiccan sects were created during the 1970s, including Dianic Wicca in 1971, Algard Wicca in 1972,
 
<br>Seax-Wica in 1973, Blue Star Wicca in 1975, and Odyssean Wicca in 1979.
 
<br>Seax-Wica in 1973, Blue Star Wicca in 1975, and Odyssean Wicca in 1979.
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==Elements taken from other sources==
 
==Elements taken from other sources==
 
Wicca is a highly syncretic religion that combines elements from several different sources.
 
Wicca is a highly syncretic religion that combines elements from several different sources.
  +
<br>Those sources include, but are not limited to:
<br>Those sources are: the two witch-related books by Margaret Murray (<i>The Witch Cult in Western Europe</i> and <i>The God of the Witches</i>),
 
<br>the book <i>Aradia</i> by Charles Leland, The Druid Order, a poem by Rudyard Kipling, the fiction books of H.P. Lovecraft, the [[Key of Solomon]],
+
<br>the two witch-related books by Margaret Murray (<i>The Witch Cult in Western Europe</i> and <i>The God of the Witches</i>),
  +
<br>the book <i>Aradia</i> by Charles Leland, the black mass, The Druid Order, the [[Key of Solomon]], Freemasonry,
<br>Freemasonry, the [[Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]], Aleister Crowley, and BDSM practices.
+
<br>the [[Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]], Aleister Crowley, and BDSM practices.
 
====<b>Elements taken from Margaret Murray's books and <i>Aradia</i></b>====
 
The goddess name Aradia was taken from the aforementioned book of the same name.
 
<br>The usage of the male god name Cernunnos was taken from chapter 1 of the book <i>The God of the Witches</i>.
 
<br>Gerald Gardner's book <i>High Magic's Aid</i> states that the witches worshipped the horned male god Janicot (which is an alleged basque deity).
 
<br>The god name Janicot was likewise taken from chapter 1 of <i>The God of the Witches</i>.
 
 
The words 'sabbat' and 'esbat' were taken from <i>The Witch Cult in Western Europe</i>.
 
<br>'Sabbat' is the french spelling of 'sabbath'.
 
 
The wiccan practice of having thirteen people in a coven, consisting of one leader and twelve subordinates,
 
<br>was taken from chapter 7 part 2 of <i>The Witch Cult in Western Europe</i>.
 
<br>That is in turn an imitation of the arrangement of Jesus and his twelve disciples.
 
 
The wiccan practice of 'cakes and wine' is loosely based upon the book <i>Aradia</i>, which states that the witches drank wine,
 
<br>and ate cakes made of meal, honey, and salt that were shaped like crescent moons.
 
 
====<b>Elements taken from The Druid Order and Rudyard Kipling</b>====
 
One of the four original wiccan sabbat rituals, May Eve, incorporates the recitation of part of one of Rudyard Kipling's poems, <i>A Tree Song</i>.
 
 
Four of the eight wiccan sabbats are the two solstice sabbats and the two equinox sabbats. Those four sabbats are taken from The Druid Order.
 
<br>Gardner added those four sabbats to the four other sabbats in the 1950s, after members of his coven asked him to add more sabbat rituals,
 
<br>so that there is less time between them. The use of a cauldron in 3 of the 4 solstice and equinox sabbats was likewise taken from The Druid Order.
 
 
====<b>Elements taken from H.P. Lovecraft</b>====
 
In the wiccan ritual recitations, there is an unusual phrase that appears multiple times, which clashes with the other aspects of wiccan belief.
 
<br>That phrase is "the dread lords of the outer spaces" and variants of that phrase.
 
<br>That phrase is based upon the fiction books of H.P. Lovecraft, wherein there is a realm called 'the outer spaces',
 
<br>wherein dwell fearsome god-like beings.
 
 
====<b>Elements taken from the Key of Solomon</b>====
 
The black-handled knife, the word '[[athame]]', and the white-handled knife were taken from chapter 8 of book 2 of the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>The word '[[bolline]]' (which came to refer to the white-handled knife) was taken from part of a book by A.E. Waite that was about the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>Most of the other eight Gardnerian ritual tools, all except the scourge, were likewise taken from the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>The sword and the wand were taken from the same chapter as the two knives- chapter 8 of book 2.
 
<br>The Key of Solomon has a large section that is devoted exclusively to depicting and describing specific pentacles.
 
<br>The typical wiccan pentacle, which has a pentagram on it, is based upon the 'second pentacle of Venus' and
 
<br>the 'first pentacle of Mercury' from that section.
 
<br>Similarly, the older occult group called the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn based their own pentacle, which has a hexagram on it,
 
<br>upon the 'the second pentacle of Mars' from that same section.
 
 
The wiccan practice of consecrating water, consecrating salt, and then putting the salt into the water,
 
<br>was taken from chapter 5 of book 2 of the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>The wiccan consecration recitations for the water and the salt are almost identical to those in the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>The wiccan practice of consecrating candles was taken from chapter 12 of book 2 of the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>The wiccan consecration recitation for the candles is almost identical to the consecration recitation for incense
 
<br>in chapter 10 of book 2 of the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>The wiccan practice of inscribing candles with the white-handled knife is based upon chapter 10 of book 2 of the Key of Solomon,
 
<br>in which candles are inscribed with a dagger or a burin (aka bolino).
 
 
The wiccan [[circle]], with its three concentric rings, and casting by a sword or black-handled knife, was taken from chapter 9 of book 2 of the Key of Solomon.
 
<br>The wiccan practice of showing the pentacle to the four cardinal directions was taken from chapter 13 of book 2 of the Key of Solomon.
 
 
====<b>Elements taken from Freemasonry, the Golden Dawn, and Crowley</b>====
 
The three-degree system of advancement and initiation was taken from Freemasonry.
 
<br>The use of eight objects that are called 'tools' was taken from english Freemasonry,
 
<br>though Freemasonry uses actual tools, whereas in Wicca the word 'tools' is a misnomer.
 
<br>The phrase 'the craft', which is used many times in the wiccan laws, was also taken from Freemasonry.
 
<br>The wiccan practice of tying a rope around an initiate's neck, with rope hanging down the front called a 'cable tow',
 
<br>and tying that cable tow to a ring on the altar so as to force the initiate to kneel and bend over forward,
 
<br>was taken from the initiations of Freemasonry.
 
 
The wiccan initiation practice of having a blindfold (aka hoodwink) on the postulant throughout much of the initiation ritual
 
<br>was taken from either Crowley's book Liber 671, or from the initiation ritual of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn,
 
<br>from which Crowley took the idea, or from the initiation ritual of Freemasonry, from which the Golden Dawn took the idea.
 
 
The wiccan initiation practice of poking a sword into the postulant, and telling the postulant to have no fear in one's heart,
 
<br>was taken from the initiation ritual of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.
 
 
The wiccan ritual practice of calling upon the "lords of the watchtowers" of the four cardinal directions was taken from
 
<br>the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, which had a ritual of calling upon the "angels of the watchtower" of the four cardinal directions.
 
   
  +
A full list of all of the specific elements of Wicca that were taken from other sources is at:
The wiccan ritual practice of circumambulating three times was taken from the Golden Dawn,
 
  +
<br>www.occult-reference.0catch.com/about_wicca.html
<br>which employed it in several of their rituals.
 
<br>The wiccan use of the terms 'deosil' and 'widdershins' was also taken from the Golden Dawn.
 
<br>The wiccan preference for deosil movement was also taken from the Golden Dawn.
 
   
  +
<b>Update:</b>
The use of the word 'magus' was taken from the writings of Aleister Crowley.
 
  +
<br>The NSA (National Security-violating Agency) used its DDoS'ing system called QUANTUM to perma-DDoS the entire 0catch webspace website
<br>The use of a scourge was also taken from the writings of Aleister Crowley.
 
  +
out of existence, as well as the wikifarm website referata.com on which a back-up file of about-wicca.html was located.
<br>Crowley in turn got the general idea of using a scourge from the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, to which he belonged.
 
  +
You can tell that those sites are under a DDoS attack because they over-tax your CPU when you try to access them.
<br>The scourging of the butt in the wiccan initiation and elevation rituals was taken from
 
  +
Consequently, the file about_wicca.html has been combined into a very large html file that contains all of the
<br>the self-initiation ritual in Crowley's book Liber 671 vel Pyramidos.
 
  +
html files that were at occult-reference.0catch.com, and which contains page-jumps to the specific files.
<br>The use of knells on a bell in the 1st-degree initiation ritual and the 2nd-degree elevation ritual was likewise taken from
 
  +
That combined html file is located at:
<br>the self-initiation ritual in Liber 671.
 
  +
<br>upload.run/byigqp
  +
<br>-That file will be auto-deleted in two years after its upload.
  +
<br>It was uploaded on August 22nd 2020, and will therefore be auto-deleted on August 22nd 2022.
   
The wiccan 'spiral dance', also called the 'meeting dance', which is performed on the May Eve and August Eve sabbats,
 
<br>is loosely based upon a dance that is likewise named the 'spiral dance' that was invented by Aleister Crowley.
 
<br>Crowley's spiral dance is described in his book Liber 5 vel Reguli, and also mentioned four times in his book Liber 671.
 
<br>Both the Crowleyan spiral dance and the wiccan spiral dance involve moving in an inward spiral or an outward spiral,
 
<br>but both versions of the dance have their own unique characteristics, so the wiccan dance is not an exact copy of the Crowleyan predecessor.
 
   
  +
[[Category:Wicca]]
====<b>BDSM elements</b>====
 
Various elements of the wiccan initiation rituals are also present in BDSM (bondage / dominance / sadism / masochism) practices.
 
<br>Gerald Gardner cherry-picked elements from other sources, and added his own additional elements, to satisfy his BDSM desires.
 
<br>Those BDSM elements in the initiation rituals are: having the postulant strip naked, blindfolding the postulant,
 
<br>binding the postulant's wrists behind their back, tying a cord around the postulant's neck and pulling them around by that cord
 
<br>(taken from Freemasonry), tying the neck cord down so as to force the postulant to kneel and bend over forward (taken from Freemasonry),
 
<br>and whipping (aka scourging) the postulant on their bare butt (taken from Crowley, but changed from self-scourging to
 
<br>interpersonal scourging, to make it more BDSM).
 

Revision as of 11:12, 23 August 2020

Wicca is a neo-pagan religion that was created by the New Forest Coven, Gerald Gardner, and to a lesser extent Doreen Valiente.

In its original form in the New Forest Coven, the word "wica" was a plural term that applied to the members of the coven, and was not a term used to denote the religion or practices. It wasn't until 1959, with the publication of Gerald Gardner's book The Meaning of Witchcraft, that the term "wicca" became popularized, and shortly thereafter it started to be used as the name of the religion, rather than its practitioners. Practitioners of Wicca are now called "wiccans".

The following are the beliefs, rules, and practices of Wicca:

Beliefs

The Goddess and The God

Wiccans believe in a moon goddess and a horned male god. In the original Gardnerian Wicca, the goddess is Aradia (a character from the 1899 book Aradia) and the horned male god is Cernunnos (a celtic pagan deity). In Alexandrian Wicca, Aradia is replaced with Cerridwen (a mythological witch, who was never considered a deity prior to Wicca). The Gardnerian and Alexandrian books of shadows (the original books that describe the religion of Wicca) state that wiccans should worship the gods. However, some wiccans do not worship the gods, but rather describe their relationship with the gods as "working with" him/her.

The Watchtowers and their Lords

Wiccans believe that there are multiple supernatural 'watchtowers', of an unspecified quantity, in each of the four cardinal directions (north, south, east, and west), and that those watchtowers are manned by powerful but unspecified supernatural beings, who are referred to as 'lords' or 'mighty ones'. Those lords are believed to bear witness to the wiccan rituals.

Reincarnation

Wiccans believe in reincarnation. The recitations in various wiccan rituals state that after death, people become reborn into new bodies.

Rules

The Wiccan Laws

The wiccan laws are various rules (they are not actual laws, as they are not enforced by a government) that were created by Gerald Gardner, and are written in the Gardnerian and Alexandrian books of shadows, and in Ye Bok of ye Art Magical which preceded them. Wiccans are expected to follow these rules to some extent, but some of the rules are anachronistic, applying to the time when witches were hunted, interrogated, tortured, and killed, or at least considered criminal, so some of such rules are disregarded by most wiccans.

For more information, see the article wiccan laws.

The Wiccan Rede

The central ethical principle of Wicca is the wiccan rede. The wiccan rede is: "if it harms none, do what you will".
For more information, see the article wiccan rede.

Diet

Wicca does not have any explicit dietary restrictions, but many wiccans are vegetarians as a result of applying the wiccan rede to animals.

The Rule of Threefold Return

The rule of threefold return states that a witch should return three times the good that another person does to them, and return three times the bad that another person does to them. In other words, it is three times reward and three times revenge. That rule blatantly contradicts the wiccan rede, as well as the statement 'harm none' that repeatedly appears in Gerald Gardner's wiccan laws. It especially contradicts sentences from the Gardnerian wiccan laws that state:
"So it is ordained that none shall use the art in any way to harm any, however much they have injured us.", and
"No one, however great an injury or injustice they receive, may use the art in any way to do ill or harm any.".
Those statements are also present in the Alexandrian wiccan laws 108 and 109.
It is likely that the rule of threefold return was invented by the New Forest Coven rather than Gerald Gardner,
which would explain why it contradicts Gardner's wiccan laws and wiccan rede.

The rule of threefold return was first mentioned in chapter 17 of Gerald Gardner's 1949 book High Magic's Aid,
and in the second-degree initiation ritual which is described in Gardner's book of shadows.
The wording of the rule in High Magic's Aid and in Gardner's book of shadows is identical, and in both cases it applies to scourgings. That wording is: "Learn, in witchcraft, thou must ever return triple. As I scourged thee, so thou must scourge me, but triple. ... But mark well, when thou receivest good, so equally art bound to return good threefold."

In 1986, Raymond Buckland published the book Buckland's Complete Book of Witchcraft,
in which he falsely portrayed the rule of threefold return as being a karmic law of the universe rather than a rule of conduct. That false threefold rule states that whatever good or bad a person does to others will karmicly return to them threefold. Due to the popularity of Buckland's book, his lie about the threefold rule became widely believed.

Practices

Rituals

Rituals play a very important role in Wicca.
The wiccan rituals include the initiation and elevation rituals, the sabbat rituals, and the esbat rituals.

Ritual Objects

Ritual objects, which are often called "tools" in Wicca, are a major aspect of wiccan rituals.
Information on this subject is at the article ritual tools.

Initiations

Wicca has three levels of initiation: the first-degree initiation, the second-degree initiation, and the third-degree initiation. The second- and third-degree initiations are sometimes alternatively called 'elevations', though that term was not used in early Wicca.
In the first-degree initiation, the initiate is given the title of 'priest(ess) and witch'.
In the second-degree initiation, the initiate is given the title of 'high priest(ess) and magus (for males) / witch queen (for females)'.
In the third-degree initiation, the initiate is not given a new title.

Because Wicca emphasizes gender polarity, a person may be initiated only by a member of the opposite gender.
The only exception to this rule is that a parent may initiate their child, regardless of the gender of the parent and the child.

Most wiccan groups claim an initiatory lineage to the New Forest Coven on the southern coast of England,
and the subsequent Bricket Wood Coven north of London.

Sabbats

Wiccans celebrate 8 holidays, called sabbats.
The sabbats are spaced at approximately equal intervals throughout the year.

In order, those 8 sabbats are as follows, going by their original names:
1. febuary eve, 2. the spring equinox, 3. may eve, 4. the summer solstice,
5. august eve, 6. the autumn equinox, 7. november eve, 8. the winter solstice.

Some time in the 1950s, Gerald Gardner renamed febuary eve to Candlemass,
renamed august eve to Lammas, and renamed november eve to Halloween.

Other, later wiccans have made additional alterations to the sabbat names.

Esbats

In addition to the sabbats, there are group rituals called esbats, which may be done on any day, but are preferentially done during a full moon, in which case they are called 'full moon esbats'.

Magic

Although some self-identified wiccans claim not to practice magic, those of a more traditional background and training will argue against this as it has traditionally been seen as a fundamental aspect of practice and necessary for development.

Dress

Wiccans are permitted to wear any form of clothing, but for ritual practice it is important to have robes worn only for this occasion as part of the shift into a magical state. It is also more traditional for rituals to be performed without clothing, known as being skyclad, which has an important symbolic meaning and other spiritual benefits when working within a coven.

Sects

There are several different sects of Wicca.
The original and oldest sect of Wicca is Gardnerian Wicca, which was created by Gerald Gardner in or around 1946, and underwent modifications during the 1950s, in large part due to Doreen Valiente.
The second-oldest sect of Wicca is Alexandrian Wicca, which was created by Alex Sanders starting in the mid 1960s, and does not deviate much from the original Gardnerian Wicca.
Various new wiccan sects were created during the 1970s, including Dianic Wicca in 1971, Algard Wicca in 1972,
Seax-Wica in 1973, Blue Star Wicca in 1975, and Odyssean Wicca in 1979.

Elements taken from other sources

Wicca is a highly syncretic religion that combines elements from several different sources.
Those sources include, but are not limited to:
the two witch-related books by Margaret Murray (The Witch Cult in Western Europe and The God of the Witches),
the book Aradia by Charles Leland, the black mass, The Druid Order, the Key of Solomon, Freemasonry,
the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Aleister Crowley, and BDSM practices.

A full list of all of the specific elements of Wicca that were taken from other sources is at:
www.occult-reference.0catch.com/about_wicca.html

Update:
The NSA (National Security-violating Agency) used its DDoS'ing system called QUANTUM to perma-DDoS the entire 0catch webspace website out of existence, as well as the wikifarm website referata.com on which a back-up file of about-wicca.html was located. You can tell that those sites are under a DDoS attack because they over-tax your CPU when you try to access them. Consequently, the file about_wicca.html has been combined into a very large html file that contains all of the html files that were at occult-reference.0catch.com, and which contains page-jumps to the specific files. That combined html file is located at:
upload.run/byigqp
-That file will be auto-deleted in two years after its upload.
It was uploaded on August 22nd 2020, and will therefore be auto-deleted on August 22nd 2022.