Lunar Deities: Honoring the Moon in Pagan Pantheons 🌙
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The Moon has always felt like an old friend to witches and pagans—mysterious, watchful, and full of shifting faces and secrets. Across cultures, people have seen the Moon not just as a light in the sky, but as a living deity with a name, a story, and a presence you can call into ritual.
In this post, we’ll explore how different pagan pantheons understand lunar deities, how modern witches connect them to the Triple Moon and divine feminine (and masculine) currents, and simple ways you can honor them in your own practice—with a special focus on jewelry and ritual tools you can wear, charge, and work with.
What is a lunar deity?
A lunar deity is any god or goddess who embodies the Moon, rules over it, or is closely linked to its phases, tides, cycles, and mysteries. Some are literally the Moon itself in myth; others are associated with moonlight, night, intuition, dreams, or magic.
Lunar deities can be male or female, and in many cultures they are paired with a solar deity of the opposite sex—sun and moon balancing each other in a cosmic dance. For witches and modern pagans, these deities often become allies for intuition, psychic work, dream magick, emotional healing, and cyclical transformation.
Greek lunar trinity: Selene, Artemis, Hecate
Ancient Greece gives us one of the richest “lunar lineups” and deeply influences how modern witches talk about moon goddesses today.
Selene – The Moon personified
Selene is the Greek Titaness who is the Moon itself, often shown driving a shining chariot across the night sky. She’s especially linked with the full moon, luminous intuition, romantic longing, and the gentle, watchful presence of Mother Moon.Artemis – Crescent huntress and protector
Artemis, twin sister of Apollo, is goddess of the hunt, wild places, and protector of women and children, and later became associated with the waxing crescent moon. Many modern devotees feel her as the fierce, independent Maiden energy—free, untamed, and deeply connected to animals and forests.Hecate – Witch-queen of crossroads and the dark moon
Hecate is a goddess of magic, witchcraft, liminal spaces, and the night, often depicted with torches at the crossroads and linked to the dark/new moon. In modern pagan practice, she’s a powerful patroness of witches, spirit work, and shadow magick, guiding us through endings, banishings, and rebirth.
Many contemporary witches experience these three as a kind of lunar triad—full, waxing, and dark moon; mother, maiden, and wise witch—each holding a different face of lunar power.
Roman, Norse, and Egyptian moon powers
While Greek deities are popular in modern witchcraft, the Moon shines through many other pantheons too.
Luna (Roman)
Luna is the Roman counterpart of Selene, a goddess who personifies the Moon and was honored in state festivals and private cults alike. Her imagery—crescent crown, serene face, flowing robes—still inspires modern moon altar art and devotional jewelry.Máni (Norse)
In Norse myth, Máni is a male lunar god who guides the Moon’s path through the sky, paired with his sister Sól, the sun goddess. Their names echo in weekday names like “Monday” (“Moon’s day”), reminding us how deeply moon-worship is woven into everyday life.Thoth and Khonsu (Egyptian)
In Egypt, the Moon is linked with several deities, especially Thoth and Khonsu. Thoth, god of wisdom, writing, and measurement, is closely tied to the lunar calendar and the reckoning of time. Khonsu, whose name means “traveler,” is a moon god associated with night journeys, fertility, and the passage of time as the Moon moves across the sky.
These stories remind us that lunar deities can be scribes, travelers, healers, warriors, and guardians—not just gentle goddesses of romance.
The Moon in Wicca and modern paganism
Modern Wicca and many neo-pagan paths treat the Moon as one of the primary faces of the Divine, especially in her Triple Goddess form.
The Moon’s phases map beautifully onto the cycle of the witch’s life and work:
Waxing: intention-setting, attraction, new beginnings.
Full: power, manifestation, divination, celebration.
Waning: banishing, release, shadow work.
Dark/New: rest, reset, deep magic and mystery.
Ceremonies timed to the lunar calendar—Esbats—are a key part of many Wiccan and witchcraft practices, often dedicated to a lunar goddess or to the Moon itself as a living presence. Devotees might call on names like Selene, Artemis, Hecate, Diana, Luna, Máni, or a personal moon spirit, depending on their path and pantheon.
Choosing a lunar deity to work with
You don’t have to work with every moon deity at once—in fact, depth with one or two will often feel more meaningful than trying to honor an entire cosmic directory.
Here are some intuitive “paths” you might resonate with:
If you feel drawn to witchcraft, crossroads, and liminal spaces, Hecate may feel like a natural patroness of your magic.
If your heart belongs to forests, animals, and fierce independence, Artemis might be your perfect lunar guide.
If you crave a gentle, maternal, full-moon presence, Selene or Luna may call to you as Mother Moon.
If you are fascinated by Norse cosmology or masculine lunar energy, Máni offers a powerful alternative to purely feminine lunar archetypes.
If your practice is rooted in Egyptian symbolism, writing, or timing, Thoth or Khonsu can be potent allies for divination, journaling, and ceremonial work.
Let your dreams, synchronicities, and emotional responses to their myths guide you. Notice which names keep appearing… on your feed, in your readings, in the jewelry you’re drawn to wear.
Ritual ways to honor lunar deities
You don’t need a huge temple to honor a lunar deity—your altar, body, and nighttime sky are more than enough.
Here are some simple approaches:
Create a dedicated moon altar
Place images or symbols of your chosen deity—crescent moons, torches, bows, owls, keys, cats, ravens, runes, or script-like symbols for deities of writing. Add a moon-phase shelf, candles, crystals like moonstone and selenite, and a chalice of water to mirror the reflective nature of lunar light.Time your workings to the Moon
Offer prayers to Selene, Luna, or your chosen deity at the full moon; leave offerings and petitions for Hecate at the dark moon; or hunt intentions under a waxing crescent with Artemis. Esbats can include divination, dream journaling, anointing jewelry, and charging spell jars under moonlight.Moon devotion through journaling and study
If you’re drawn to deities like Thoth or Khonsu, keeping a dedicated moon grimoire—tracking phases, dreams, and rituals—can be a devotional act. Write letters to your lunar deity, record omens, and note how your energy shifts with each phase.
Wearing the Moon: jewelry as devotion
For many modern witches, wearing lunar jewelry turns every day into living ritual. Moon symbols against your skin become tiny, portable altars—always within your aura, always tuned to your intention.
Some ideas for devotional wear:
Crescent moon and Triple Moon jewelry
Crescent moons and Triple Moon symbols (waxing–full–waning) are classic signatures of lunar devotion and the Wiccan Triple Goddess. Wearing them close to the heart—in necklaces, chokers, and pendants—can be a way of saying “I walk in rhythm with the Moon” wherever you go.
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Hecate, Artemis, and Selene-inspired pieces
Keys, torches, and triple-formed motifs can echo Hecate’s energy; bows, antlers, and stag details connect to Artemis; soft crescent crowns and luminous gemstones resonate with Selene or Luna. Choosing a piece that matches your patron deity turns it into both an offering and a talisman. Crystals for lunar magick
Moonstone and selenite are especially associated with Selene and the full moon, often used to enhance intuition, dream work, and emotional healing. Wearing crystal pendants or rings and charging them under the Moon before ritual can deepen your connection.
At MoonChildWorld, many of our witchy, Wiccan, and pagan pieces—crescent moon chokers, Triple Moon amulets, Hecate and lunar goddess designs—are crafted to feel like spell tools you can wear, not just accessories. When you pick a piece that sings the name of your lunar deity, you’re essentially choosing a companion for your path.
A simple lunar deity devotion you can try
Here’s a gentle practice you can adapt to your path and pantheon:
Choose the phase that matches your intention (waxing for beginnings, full for power, waning for release, dark for deep magic).
Cleanse your space and jewelry with incense, smoke, sound, or visualization.
Light a candle in a color aligned with your deity—silver or white for Selene/Luna, black or deep purple for Hecate, green or white for Artemis, etc.
Call your deity by name, reciting a short prayer or even just speaking from the heart about why you’ve come.
Hold or wear your lunar jewelry, asking that it be blessed as a talisman of your relationship with this deity. Visualize moonlight flowing into it.
Make a promise—to honor the Moon by observing her phases, listening to your intuition, or returning each month for devotion.
Close with gratitude, snuffing the candle and either wearing your jewelry or placing it upon your altar until the next moon.
Over time, that piece of jewelry stops being “just pretty” and becomes a deep, familiar link between you, the Moon above, and the deity who walks beside you.
Wherever you are on your path—baby witch learning the phases, seasoned pagan with a long-standing deity relationship, or gothic moon-lover drawn by aesthetics first—the Moon is always there, changing yet constant. Each lunar deity offers a different doorway into that mystery; your job is simply to notice which door glows when you look up at the night sky.