The Old Ways

Kemetic Tradition

Kemetic

keh-MET-ik (from Egyptian: Kmt, 'the black land')

The adjective describing the religion, culture, and practice of ancient Egypt — derived from Kemet ('the Black Land,' the Egyptian name for Egypt), and used by modern practitioners to identify themselves as followers of the ancient Egyptian religious tradition.

Kemetic is the adjective drawn from Kemet (Egyptian Kmt, “the black land” — referring to the dark, fertile Nile silt that made Egypt habitable, as distinct from the red desert on either side) and is used today to describe both ancient Egyptian religion and its modern reconstructionist revival. The word grounds the tradition in Egyptian self-understanding: the ancient Egyptians called their homeland Kemet, and to practice Kemetically is to honor that origin, that geography, and that continuous thread of religious wisdom spanning three thousand years.

What makes a religion Kemetic

Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt by Breasted provides the most comprehensive modern account of the Egyptian religious tradition across its historical phases — from the Predynastic period through the Greco-Roman era. What is continuous across this vast span: the centrality of Ma’at as cosmic and ethical principle; the veneration of a diverse, syncretizable pantheon of Netjeru; the practice of offering, prayer, and daily maintenance of the divine relationship; the sophisticated theology of the soul (Ka, Ba, Akh) and its afterlife; and the use of heka (sacred speech) as the medium by which human ritual participates in divine reality.

Modern Kemetic practice

Contemporary Kemetic practice takes two primary forms. Kemetic Orthodoxy (the House of Netjer, founded by Tamara Siuda in 1988) is a revivalist religious organization that practices a reconstructed form of ancient Egyptian religion with formal liturgy, a priestly hierarchy, and a calendar of festivals drawn from historical sources. Kemetic reconstructionism is a broader, less formally organized approach in which individual practitioners research the ancient tradition and adapt it for modern personal practice, drawing primarily on the primary texts (Book of the Dead, Pyramid Texts, the historical funerary and temple literature).

The texts as foundation

Both approaches draw heavily on the corpus of ancient texts. The Book of the Dead, the Pyramid Texts, the wisdom literature (Maxims of Ptahhotep, Wisdom of the Egyptians), the magical papyri (Egyptian Magic, Demotic Magical Papyrus of London and Leiden), and the mythological collections (Legends of the Gods, Ancient Egyptian Legends) together form the textual backbone of modern Kemetic practice. The advantage over some other revival traditions is the extraordinary richness and extent of the surviving primary source material — more is preserved from ancient Egypt than from almost any other ancient religion.

Kemetic practice today

The essentials: establish a per-netjer (personal shrine), perform the senut (daily offering ritual), work with the Netjeru most relevant to your life and practice, study the primary texts, observe the ethical demands of Ma’at (including regular work with the Negative Confessions), and maintain the Akhu (blessed ancestors). The Wisdom of the Egyptians by Budge captures the spirit of this tradition: wisdom acquired through daily relationship with the divine, expressed through concrete ritual action and ethical living.

Related Terms

Kemetic

Duat

The Egyptian underworld — the realm of cosmic transformation through which Ra navigates each night in his barque and through which every human soul travels after death on the way to judgment and the Field of Reeds.

Kemetic

Heka

The Egyptian principle of sacred, creative speech and magic — a primordial cosmic force older than the gods themselves, by which the universe was spoken into being and by which correctly spoken words carry genuine transformative power.

Kemetic

Isfet

The Egyptian cosmic principle of chaos, falsehood, injustice, and disorder — the permanent opponent of Ma'at, embodied in the serpent Apep, and increased in the world by every act of violence, deception, and oppression.

Kemetic

Ma'at

The foundational Egyptian cosmic principle of truth, justice, balance, and right order — simultaneously a goddess and the invisible structure of the universe, the ethical standard against which every human heart is weighed at death.

Kemetic

Ma'at (goddess)

The Egyptian goddess personifying truth, justice, and cosmic order — her ostrich feather is the standard against which every human heart is weighed at death, and her presence sustains the universe.

Kemetic

Netjer

The Egyptian word for 'god' or 'divine force' — a theologically complex term describing divine reality as multiple, overlapping, and capable of merging, with no single Netjer monopolizing divine power.

Kemetic

Osiris

The Egyptian god of resurrection, the afterlife, and divine kingship — first king of Egypt, murdered and dismembered by Set, restored by Isis, and made eternal judge of the dead in the Duat.

Kemetic

Per-Netjer

The Egyptian term meaning 'house of the god' — referring to both the great state temples of ancient Egypt and, in modern Kemetic practice, the personal home shrine where the daily senut ritual is performed.

Kemetic

Ra

The self-created supreme solar deity of ancient Egypt, who sails the solar barque across the sky each day and through the underworld each night to be reborn as Khepri at dawn.

Kemetic

Senut

The Kemetic daily shrine ritual — a morning practice of purification, opening the shrine, presenting offerings, speaking prayer, and closing, adapting the ancient Egyptian daily temple rite for personal devotional practice.