Green Egg
The Green Egg is a prominent Neopagan magazine, serving as a vital periodical for the Church of All Worlds since 1968. It has been recognized as a significant publication within American religious studies, chronicling the evolution of contemporary pagan thought and practice.
Where the word comes from
The term "Green Egg" is a modern coinage, originating with the Church of All Worlds in the late 1960s. It does not derive from ancient languages but rather signifies a symbol of new life and potential, akin to an egg from which life emerges, imbued with the vitality of nature.
In depth
Green Egg is a Neopagan magazine published by the Church of All Worlds intermittently since 1968. The Encyclopedia of American Religions described it as a significant periodical.
How different paths see it
What it means today
In the sprawling, often fragmented spiritual landscape of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, periodicals like the Green Egg emerge as vital conduits of shared experience and evolving thought. Blavatsky, in her own prolific writing, understood the power of the printed word to disseminate esoteric knowledge, to create communities of seekers across geographical divides. The Green Egg, as a Neopagan magazine, embodies this principle, acting as a hearth for a nascent tradition. Its designation, a "Green Egg," is itself a potent symbol. The color green, universally associated with growth, fertility, and the vital force of nature, speaks to the very essence of paganism, a spiritual path deeply rooted in the earth's cycles. The egg, a primordial symbol of creation and potential, suggests the nascent state of the movement it chronicles, a promise of unfolding life and spiritual rebirth.
Mircea Eliade, in his explorations of the sacred and the profane, would likely see in such a publication a modern manifestation of the ritualistic gathering, a space where shared beliefs are reinforced and new myths are forged. It is a place where the "sacred" is not confined to ancient texts but is actively being created and experienced through contemporary practice and reflection. The magazine becomes a repository for the evolving "perennial philosophy," as Aldous Huxley termed it, adapting ancient wisdom to the modern psyche. It allows for the cross-pollination of ideas, the sharing of personal revelations, and the articulation of a communal worldview, akin to how Sufi gatherings or Buddhist sanghas foster spiritual coherence. The act of reading and contributing to such a publication is itself a form of spiritual practice, a participation in the collective consciousness of a spiritual lineage, shaping and being shaped by its ongoing narrative.
RELATED_TERMS: Neopaganism, Esotericism, Periodical, Symbolism, Collective Consciousness, Spiritual Community, Emergence, Vitalism
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