𓂀 The Kemetic Path
Kemetic Paganism
The religion of ancient Egypt — the netjeru, the sacred rites of temple and home, and the wheel of the Egyptian calendar — as the Pyramid Texts, the Book of the Dead(Budge), and the great hymns preserve it, and as Kemetic practitioners keep it today.
Kemetic religion — rooted in the ancient Egyptian word Kemet (the Black Land, named for the fertile Nile soil) — centred on ma'at: truth, balance, and cosmic order. The netjeru (gods) were not distant rulers but living forces woven through nature, kingship, and daily life. The Pyramid Texts, inscribed in the burial chambers of Old Kingdom pharaohs from Dynasty V onward, are the oldest religious corpus in the world, preserving spells and hymns that guided the dead king into the Field of Reeds.
The Book of the Dead (ancient Egyptian: Reu Nu Pert Em Hru, "Book of Coming Forth by Day") — compiled and translated in the standard edition by E. A. Wallis Budge — extends this tradition into the New Kingdom, offering spells, vignettes, and the weighing of the heart before Osiris and the forty-two assessors. These two texts form the scriptural spine of Kemetic practice today, alongside the Coffin Texts and the great hymns to Ra and Osiris.
Modern Kemetic practitioners draw on the same canon: daily senut (shrine devotion), the offering of heka (sacred magic), and the feast days of the Egyptian sacred calendar — Wep Ronpet (New Year), the Mysteries of Osiris, and the festival of Opet. Every page on this path cites the ancient sources by name.
The Gods
The Netjeru
All 22 Egyptian gods — myths, offerings, and worship, cited to the sources.
The Rites
Senut & Heka
9 complete ritual guides — materials, words, and steps.
The Year
The Sacred Calendar
Festival days and holy seasons of the Egyptian year.
The Library
Primary Texts
The Pyramid Texts, Book of the Dead, and the Kemetic source corpus, fully readable.




