I am an occult hobbyist as
well as a Pagan religionist. In fact my entry into Neopaganism was entirely
through the ‘occult’ reading of the 60s and 70s, in which ‘witchcraft’ made the
short walk from academic study of medieval beliefs to modern Pagan worship and
spellcraft. Worship and spellcraft – those two things were never far apart in
my understanding of how this stuff works. To call and speak to a deity is to
use a spell of invocation. Traditional Paganisms and surviving polytheisms freely
combine simple devotional worship with esoteric specialized spiritual
practices. The latter are what I understand as ‘magic’.
So I
read widely in modern occult literature, as well as in the anthropology and
archaeology of ancient religion. I hope to learn from ancient religions the
models and methods that sustained those spiritual patterns for millennia, and
which ought to work for modern folks as well. From modern occult literature I hope
to learn the technical details of how to successfully connect with the spirit
and spiritual worlds. The
classics I read as a new student are now being well-supplemented by new
material from the current generations of magicians.
Modern
occultism seems to be trending in directions compatible with traditional
animism and polytheism. Many modern students are approaching magic from the
assumption that a multitude of spirits inhabit the spiritual world, and that
both spirituality and practical magic grow from relationships with those
beings. The thinking is moving far beyond the spirit-catalogs of early-modern
grimoires, driven by both ‘shamanism’ and by reference to such surviving
systems as the post-West-African sects of the New World. By gaining a
vantage-point from outside the west, magicians are discerning the spiritist and
animist base beneath the heavy layers of Christianization in western magic. In
application, we see magicians creating methods of building relationship with
spirits, employing styles of conjuring and esoteric practice that draw on
ancient and traditional European sources while learning from living systems.
Here
are three publications that illustrate the trend, and which provide a great
deal of practical guidance as well as useful modeling for your ongoing magical
practice. They all are products of the ‘occult’ community more than of the
Neopagan, and each has a particular focus, but all of them offer many lessons
and clues for anyone seeking to develop a practice in modern magic.
Holy Daimon - Frater
Acher; Scarlet Imprint, 2018
Students of western
occultism are likely to be familiar with the concept which turn-of-the-20th-century
occultism called “the Holy Guardian Angel”. The notion proceeds most directly
from the famous “Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage” – an early-modern
treatise of mystical and ritual magic. In the hands of that culture the HGA
(often so-called) resembled a Roman Catholic or Anglican Angel of the common
type. Pagan students may be less familiar with recent research which
demonstrates that the conjuring of and communion with a personal spirit-ally who
connected the magician with the divine is a technique traceable to the very earliest
remnants of Pagan magic available to us.
The
front section of Frater Acher’s book summarizes quite a lot of legwork on the
topic. He describes the place of ‘supernatural assistant’ or ‘personal daimon’
beings in three Indo-European (mostly) cultures – the Chaldeans, the Zoroastrian
Persians, and the Greeks. He teases out both the thread that intends to conjure
a ‘familiar’ or ‘supernatural assistant’, and that which seeks contact with an
appointed agent of divine wisdom. Both of these threads are spun together in
the notion of the HGA. Students with a solid foundation in ancient cultures
will be shown some unusual by-ways, seldom examined by mainstream mythography.
The second
section of the book is the author’s journal of the magical working by which
they established formal contact with their Holy Daimon. His process is a
retreat similar to that recommended in the famous Book of Sacred Magic –
several months of increasingly monastic withdrawal from common life and company
(including, it seems, his wife) and formal purification, invocation, and
mystical meditation. He recounts both his interior process and some practical
details of how he managed the retreat.
The
third section amounts to the author’s mystical and spiritual understandings,
and advice to students. The stages of the work are listed as “trust; joy;
darkness; encounter”. The chapter provides a suggestive map of the author’s
understanding of the psycho-spiritual process of the work. There is precious
little formal thought about mystical and spiritual internal process in context
of western occultism – nice to read some, whatever one thinks of the
assertions.
If this
book does no more than inform on the lore of the Holy Daimon, it is worth the (original)
price (watch for paperback re-issues, or buy the e-editions). If it inspires
some to undertake the spiritual work it describes, so much the better.
Living Spirits: A Guide to Magic in a World of Spirits -
BJ
Swain; independently published, 2019
This
book may be the most paradigmatic text I have yet seen of the sort of New Magic
I’m discussing. It combines modern understandings of grimoire magic,
familiarity with traditional Wiccan and Neopagan forms; world magic and Spiritism,
and modern Pagan reconstruction, polytheism and animism. It does so in a
well-ordered outline, packed with detail both scholastic and experiential. Can
you tell I like it?
The book begins without apology by
addressing spirits as essentially objective beings with which the magician
builds relationship. The author uses the European Grimoires of the
Solomonic family as a default for
discussion, and early chapters directly address the vocabulary and methods of
that school. However this runs parallel with discussion of the devotional
approach to spirits, and the author generally rejects coercive or oppositional
approaches to the spirits, even if conjuring those that old books call ‘demons’.
As to that, the author provides ongoing discussion of the nature and
classification of spirits, without attempting any organized hierarchy or chart.
Chapters discuss work with
Ancestors, and with elementals and ‘nature spirits’. There is a chapter on the
idea of intermediary spirits or ‘gatekeepers’, about which the author reaches an
interesting conclusion based on grimoire spirit-charts. The Holy Guardian Angel
gets a discussion, which pairs well with the above book. Chapters discuss other
categories of spirits that have traditionally been conjured by magicians,
including a chapter of ‘Fairy’ conjuration. The author focuses mainly on what
felt to me like a Pagan sensibility, but does not limit himself to
pre-Christian forms. Be prepared to encounter discussion of traditional
Christian ritual and magical forms as well.
The ‘theory’ chapters in the front
of the book also include a few full ritual scripts –for conjuring the
gatekeepers to send a spirit for your will; a rite to install a devotional
image; and a necromantic rite based on the tale of Tiresias. These are
presented in such a way as to be adaptable to a variety of framing rites and
ritual styles.
The theory chapters end about halfway through the book’s 390+ pages, and the remainder is filled with a spellbook using techniques referenced in the text. This begins with spells and talismans drawn from grimoire tradition, including seven planetary talismans. The section on ‘Southern Conjure’ (a nicely culturally-neutral designation…) applies the book’s ideas on spirits to several central techniques of traditional spellcraft. The ritual section concludes with two group-rituals, including a formula for a scrying-by-conjuration group rite.
Whether you’re a devotional Pagan interested in magical arts, or an occultist seeking to build relationship with spirits, this book provides a solid modern guide.
The theory chapters end about halfway through the book’s 390+ pages, and the remainder is filled with a spellbook using techniques referenced in the text. This begins with spells and talismans drawn from grimoire tradition, including seven planetary talismans. The section on ‘Southern Conjure’ (a nicely culturally-neutral designation…) applies the book’s ideas on spirits to several central techniques of traditional spellcraft. The ritual section concludes with two group-rituals, including a formula for a scrying-by-conjuration group rite.
Whether you’re a devotional Pagan interested in magical arts, or an occultist seeking to build relationship with spirits, this book provides a solid modern guide.
Ferocious – A Folk Tantric Manual on the Sapta Matrika Cult;
Theion Publishing 2019
Far
from being the ‘Yoga of Sacred Sex’, or whatever, traditional Tantra in India
offers systems of worship, meditation and ritual magic comparable to the best
efforts of western magicians. Tantra is one of the trunks of the great tree of
Indic religions often called “Hinduism”. It is often secret, often
transgressive, but always present even if in the background of Dharmic
spiritual work. While ‘Tantra Yoga’ may be presented in a high-minded way by
some teachers, in popular culture ‘a tantra’ is often ‘a grimoire’ or spellbook
– a popular manual intended to allow householders to use its magic. The authors
describe this book as an effort to produce such a manual in English.
This
book lists no personal author – rather it presents itself as the result of a
circle of Tantric practitioners. It is an eminently practical book, undecorated
by elevated prose, with which a student could begin a practice with the spirits
it presents. Unfortunately for some readers it is available only in a quality
hardback edition, for some tens of dollars. The edition is lovely in fact – my habit
is to try to spend such money only on quality editions of information I find
truly valuable – in this case I got a win.
The
book opens with chapters introducing and contextualizing the Tantric tradition. The spirits of this
text – the Seven Mothers – exemplify Tantric moral ambiguity – they are
wrathful goddesses, some fearsome in form, some beautiful. The book discusses
the place and meaning of wrathful entities, and the work of Tantra as something
stranger than the common devotions of religion.
The
authors are at pains to discuss the cross-cultural and open nature of tantric
practice, and of the Sapta Matrika cults in particular. Acknowledging the
concern for cultural misappropriation, they point out that the work they
described is, within Indic culture, open to all regardless of caste, social
position, gender or ethnic heritage. It requires no initiations, and the
mantras circulate freely in written form. It is clear that the authors have
been careful to offer material that is legitimately available to all readers.
The
chapter on ritual forms and practice offers a good general introduction with
some details specific to the tradition. Once again, familiarity with the
previous book in this review would help students set up the kind of practice
that is taught in this.
The
bulk of the book is given to the descriptions of the Seven Mothers. These
tantric goddesses present an interesting study in how polytheism expresses
itself in practice. In Tantric metaphysics the male aspects of deities are
accompanied by their ‘shakti’ – a womanly expression who is considered the ‘active
force’ of the deity – the power that actually acts in the world. For that
reason such shaktis are often invoked by magicians. So here we find Aindri, the
Shakti of Indra; Vaishnavi, that of Vishnu; even Brahmi, the Shakti of Brahma.
Some of the Seven have freestanding cults, while others occur mainly in the set
of seven. Some are ‘acceptable’ to mainstream religion, others far less so. The
text often ventures into interesting discussions of how these figures express
apparently ‘other’ deities, and about the distinction/bond between a Shakti and
the various ‘wives’ of the gods.
Each of
the Seven is introduced in detail, with lore and discussion of how she is
worshiped/worked-with in the traditional setting. Notes are provided on proper specific
symbolism and ritual customs. Four mantras are provided for each – a simple
name-mantra, a slightly longer offering mantra, a ‘Gayatri’ mantra in the
proper 24-syllable metre, and one more. This last Mantra is called a ‘dhyanam’
mantra, meaning ‘for meditation’, and it is a formal description of the visualization
of the Matrika. This is one of the most clear examples I have seen for the
formalization of a visualized image of a spirit in ceremony.
I have
been dipping into Tantric studies for some while. ‘Ferocious’ is one the most
clear and straightforward introductions to practical Tantra I have yet seen.
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