OK NOW WHAT?
How These Lessons Came To Be
On Candlemas of 1579 Pisces (1979 AD) the Regent LaVeda, of beloved memory, convened the Correllian Council of Elders for what would prove to be a momentous meeting.
This meeting ended the beloved LaVedaÂs Regency, acclaiming her cousin Krystel High-Correll as the new Head of the Correllian Tradition. The Elders also acclaimed Lady LaVedaÂs son, Donald Lewis-Highcorrell, as Co-Head of Tradition.
Lady KrystelÂs first act as Head of Tradition was to declare the Tradition open to the public and to inaugurate a series of outreach programs. One of these outreach programs was to be a series of correspondence lessons in Correllian Wicca. Lady Krystel entrusted this project to her Co-Head of Tradition, Rev. Donald, who began work on them at once. Lady Krystel, Lady LaVeda, and Lady Gloria -then First Elder of the Tradition- all took part in the compilation of these first lessons.
The draft copy of these lessons was finished and presented to Lady Krystel for her approval by summer of 1586 Pisces (1986 AD), but little was done with them. Proposed revisions were delayed by the passing of key members of the Tradition, as well as the success of other Tradition projects.
By the winter of 1590 Pisces (1990 AD) the revisions had been completed and plans were made to produce both printed and video-taped versions of the lessons. A working partnership was established with Ed Hubbard (who had not yet entered the Tradition) and his company, Psychic Services Incorporated, with a view toward producing and disseminating the material. In January of 1591 Pisces (1991 AD) filming began on the video-taped versions of the lessons, only to be halted when Rev. suffered a serious accident which would leave him bed-ridden for months and in recovery for several years.
During the First PriestÂs illness the lessons were set aside. By the time Rev. Don was able to again turn his attention to the lessons, it was decided that the original materials were outdated, and needed a second revision.
Work began on the revisions in 1597 Pisces (1997 AD), and the first of the revised lessons would be presented to Lady Krystel in 1598 Pisces (1998 AD).
The new lessons were much deeper and more thorough, with a stronger emphasis on the inner nature of Correllian teachings. After twenty years, the Lessons in Correllian Wicca were finally completed, and presented to Lady Krystel early in 1599 Pisces (1999 AD).
The first Correllian cleric to be trained under this system was Cweord, of ChicagoÂs Holy City Temple, who was initiated as a First Degree Priest on November 11, 1599 Pisces (1999 AD). Cweord was the last Correllian initiated in the old century, and it is fitting that he should have been the first to come in under the long awaited lessons.
Some History
Correllian Nativist Wicca was founded by Orpheis Caroline High-Correll in 1479 Pisces (1879 AD). A woman of Scotts-Cherokee ancestry Orpheis Caroline is claimed by some members of the High-Correll family to have been a Scottish Traditional Witch. She was also a practicing psychic, spiritual healer, and herbalist, who spent many years with the traveling circus which she owned with her husband, John Correll.
In creating Correllian Nativist Wicca, Orpheis Caroline drew upon her Native American heritage, as well as ideas of European Witchcraft, Spiritualism, and Hermetic thought.
The early history of the Correllian Tradition is somewhat unclear, with familial and religious structures wholly interconnected. The family followed a very formal, matriarchal and matrilinear structure with its roots in Cherokee custom, from which the current offices of the Correllian tradition derive their form.
Lady Orpheis called the Tradition simply Nativist, and this would remain the TraditionÂs primary designation until the appellation of the term ÂCorrellian Nativist in 1592 Pisces (1992 AD), or as we more commonly call it; Correllian.
Lady Orpheis Nativism was a highly political and deeply synchretic form of Pagan universalism, which stressed the need for the worldÂs Native (Pagan) religions to unite in the face of colonial Christianity.
Whether Correllian Nativism was originally a branch of what would later be called ÂWicca or not is a matter of debate. CorrellianismÂs claim to Wiccan status rests both upon Lady Orpheis claimed Scottish Traditional lineage, and also upon her Aradian lineage, which she acquired in 1504 Pisces (1904 AD) through a student of Charles Leland.
There have been many changes instituted in the Tradition over the years, particularly in the Council of 1579 Pisces (1979 AD) and the Council of 1592 Pisces (1992 AD) both of which struggled with the necessities involved in adapting the Traditions forms to the modern world and to the needs required for a public Tradition.
There follows a discussion of the structure of the Correllian Tradition as it now stands.