(a basic replacement for 'smudging')
Pagan social-media conversations often circle back to the
use of herbal smoke for cleansing material spaces, and ‘banishing bad vibes’.
In my summary opinion the notion of ‘sage-ing’ or ‘smudging’ has reached the
level of superstition, in which people imitate gestures without understanding,
seeking an effect. This trend has bumped-up against efforts by native peoples
to preserve their own ways, and prevent their dilution by misappropriation.
Recent internet notices have warned us against depriving native people of
revenue and recognition in our sources of specific plants, and reminded us that
merely imitating a picture of a ritual action does not mean we’re actually
doing it.
When I was coming up in
the craft in the 1970s we never spoke of ‘smudging’. The first time I saw the
‘shell-and-fan’ set-up was probably in the mid-80s, at a festival. Traditional western magic performs cleansing
of space with a dual approach, using water and fire. That is how I learned to
clear a space, whether casting a circle or giving a basic cleansing to a house.
Water-and-fire cleansing is also used in western magic to cleanse and pre-bless
objects used in magical ritual, whether the ‘tools’, or the physical basis of
talismans, charm-bags, etc. While each of these symbols deserves a full
research-report, let me say a little about the traditions surrounding ritual
fire and water:
Ritual Water
The central symbol of
cleansing in Euro spiritual ritual is water. The work of finding, bearing, and
protecting safe water sources is always central to the lives of early people,
and such matters make their way from the mundane into the sacred in a variety
of customs. Evidence for the use of specially-dedicated water and water-sources
extends as far back as written sources allow.
In the Greek Magical
Papyri of the turn of the first millennium ritual water is gathered from
different sources for different intentions. So for work with celestial gods,
and various blessings one might collect rain-water, while for Underworld work,
fertility, etc water from underground springs is preferred. For modern
practitioners this offers a chance to consider the sources of water in your
region, and to pay direct attention to weather as a concern in magic.
If you choose to bring
water directly from a natural source, try to choose places where you can gather
clean, clear water. Water pure enough to drink seems to have been the basic
standard for traditional ritual water, and great care was taken to insure its
cleanliness and purity. There is no reason to avoid using the tap water from
most modern water-systems – ritual water is always formally consecrated.
The summary of the method of making
ritual water is to bring pure water, add some further agent of purification,
and speak intention over the water. The added element is often salt, though
some Celtoids have the custom of ‘silvering’ water – silver has active
anti-microbial properties, so that’s cool.
The western traditions of ritual magic (what is often called the ‘Solomonic’
style) use this basic formula with its usual lengthy ritual recitations.
There’s a very complete set of such consecrations at the Digital Ambler.
A simple working consecration is given below.
Fire and Smoke
Fire and Smoke
Ritual flame is the
traditional center of much Euro-Pagan ritual. In archaic forms the central fire
receives the offerings of the people, and may represent the very presence of
divine power. Its lore emphasizes ritual purity, spiritual power and the Right
Order of wholeness and wellness.
Among Indic ritual
traditions the fire retains most of this archaic power, and stands at the
center of what remains of Vedic ritual. In Persian religion (‘Zoroastrianism’)
the fire becomes the only idol, the very image of the divine. In Hellenic and
Roman religion the sacrificial fire consumed the portion of the offerings given
to the gods, and was treated as a deity.
Ritual fire has the same
emphasis on ‘purity’ as does ritual water. Fire can be employed to burn trash,
cleanse illness, even consume corpses. Ritual fire is to be made with clean,
dry materials, carefully laid, with no unintentional or incidental contents. It
receives equally-pure offerings of food, oil, etc.
In many traditional
cultures the ritual fire is connected directly to the hearth-fire. Hearth-fire
is kept burning perpetually, the spark carefully preserved over each night, for
months at a time. Hearth fire was, in many places, renewed annually or
bi-annually, to allow for cleaning and purity. In such cases the hearth was
extinguished, and new fire brought into the home from one of the blessed ritual
fires. For the rest of the year all ritual fire was lit, in turn, from a
hearth-fire.
Some sects of modern
Paganism are attempting to establish the keeping of a perpetual tended flame in
homes. The old 20th century dodge was to bless the ‘pilot light’ of
a gas stove. (If you don’t know what that it, it’s because the tech has largely
passed away, and I don’t think anyone blesses their piezo…). On modern Pagan
shrines and altars a flame can be kept in a succession of seven-day candles, in
an oil-lamp, or even a gas fireplace or lamp. Such a light is carefully kept
through the year, and ritually snuffed and re-lit in a sacred occasion – often at
Spring Equinox or Beltaine. In the many circumstances where a ritual fire
cannot be lit from a good hearth-fire, then custom calls for a proper
incantation recited over proper fuels, and lit at a proper moment.
Blessing by Smoke
The central formula of
cleansing by water and incense is that it is the water which first rinses away pollution,
and the incense smoke which then confers blessing on the clean thing or place.
In ancient days bad smells were associated, not unreasonably, with ritual and
physical uncleanliness, and smells themselves were considered to transmit
disease. Thus perfumes were used to drive off such impurity, and to fill the
air of a ritual space with scents attractive to good influences, especially those
proper to the rite at hand. Thus it was ordinary to clean a room with water and
brush, and then to burn pleasant woods, etc, in the hearth, even in cultures
that didn’t use ‘incense’ as such. Both Gaelic and Scandinavian cultures
preserve very little trace of the use of formulated incense for either religion
or household perfume, but might burn boughs of pine, or apple, or juniper to
scent their rooms, especially after sickness.
In
ritual magic of the late classical and medieval days evil spirits, as such,
were banished by the burning of ill-smelling smokes. No sense of ‘opposites’
involved – burning asafetida and pepper will drive most beings out of a room.
Resorting to such measures today would be for the most extreme matters, I
suppose.
At the core of this formula, I
think, it is the sacred power of the spark of ritual fire that serves to bless and
purify, much more than the effect of any specific herb. Of course there are a
variety of herbs used for banishing ill in European tradition, lists are easy to find Any combination can be burned on charcoal (maybe mixed with some nice
frankincense) to good effect. If you find yourself unable to use smoke in an
apartment or public space simply blessing a candle or (more dramatically) a
fire in a bowl will be fully in keeping with the core symbolism of the work.
Even the light of an electric candle can serve, especially if the space is dark
enough for the light to be visible.
Refer
to the ‘digital Ambler’ link above for the full Solomonic version of the
consecration of Fire. For small ritual fires a simple prayer or charm is the
usual method.
• It is usual to arrange a token
ritual hearth indoors. This is easily done by placing a circle of candles
around an incense-burner, allowing incense offerings to be made in the center
of the symbolic flames.
• Such a Fire should be lit with a proper charm or
incantation, such as the one given below.
Purification By Water
and Fire:
These simple customs can be used to spiritually cleanse a
house, a room, or a person or object. Choose a proper place for the altar – at your
home shrine if you keep one. For cleansing a house consider starting at the
highest reachable point and working downward and out the doors. In a single
room an altar might be on the eastern wall or at an eastern window. In any case
the simple tools can be arranged as needed, with consideration as to beauty and
harmony.
• Bring clean water, and a little salt.
• Prepare a fire, whether a true wood fire or a ring of candles surrounding a
censer. If you are clearing a space, be sure the censer can be easily lifted and
moved. If purifying an object the censer can be stationary. Have a good supply
of incense – enough to last for the whole area you intend to bless.
Druidic arrangement in detail |
• On an experiential note, if I am not using herbal incense on charcoal I have
come to prefer good, fresh cone incense – Indian brands are usually nice and
oily. Cones can be lit at the tip, and will often burn with an open flame for a
minute or three, making a dramatic visual and a literal magnification of the
ritual fire before snuffing into fragrant smoke. Setting such a cone on
charcoal insures the cake will light, as well.
• As a performance note, a full house cleansing will benefit from having two
operators – one for water, one for fire. In this way the elements can move
through the house together. It is entirely reasonable for a single operator to
do the two phases sequentially, but takes more time.
• With all arranged in the chosen starting-place, take up the salt, and conjure
the water, saying:
The water is poured into the vessel,
and/or the full vessel is raised, saying:
Here we bring the Waters of the Land,
Clean from the deep, borne by the pure,
So that everything it touches may be made pure.
Let this Vessel be the Spring of the Deep for our rite, from which we draw
purification.
On Land (add a tiny pinch of salt)
Beneath the Sky (add a
tiny pinch of salt)
And within the Sea (add a
tiny pinch of salt)
Let the Water make pure the earth,
make pure this (place),
Make it whole and Holy, and free from every ill.
• Light the incense, preferably from
an altar-candle or fire and as the initial flame rises, conjure it, saying:
I kindle this fire
In the presence of all the spirits
Upon the Land, within the Sea, Beneath the Sky
At the Center of Worlds
I kindle this fire in Wisdom
I kindle this fire in Love
I kindle this fire in Power
To be the Light of the Heavens upon this Earth.
To be a Fire of Welcome to all of good-will
And a blessing to all beings.
So be it!
(• The above is a ‘long form’ for
consecrating the Water and Fire. It is best for new students and beginners to
us the long form, paying full attention to the intent of the words. When you
have some experience, it can be more convenient to use a short for, such as:
• Salt the water, light the flame, and recite three times:
The Fire, The Well, The Sacred Tree
Flow and flame and grow in me
In Land, Sea and Sky
Below and on high
Let the Water be blessed and the Fire be hallowed.)
• The elements having been blessed,
we can use them to purify objects or spaces. In Pagan ritual preparation the
space in which ritual is about to be done is cleaned with water and fire. Objects
which are being dedicated to sacred work are cleansed, and the materials which
are used for talismans, as well. Such things can simply be sprinkled with the
blessed water, and held in the smoke of the fire or incense.
• The work can be supported by proper visualizations – see the water rinsing
away a layer of dirt to reveal shining; see the fire sparkle on and within the
item.
• To cleanse a space, start at one corner or position in a room, and go sunwise
around the space (right shoulder to the center), first with the water, and then
with the smoke.
• To cleanse a house thoroughly start at the highest room in use and cleanse each
room in turn, finally cleansing the front door. Doors and windows can be
specifically cleansed around their frames.
• For a single-story house one might start at the front door and go sun-wise
through the place, cleansing each room in turn.
• It is traditional to speak one’s intention aloud. If you wish you might speak
to the work without script, politely instructing (don’t ask – tell) all
inharmonious influences to depart. It is also traditional to repeat a charm.
• In our Druidic ritual, we incant, simply:
By the might of the Water and the light of
the Fire, this (place/thing/etc) is made whole and holy.
And slightly more detailed:
Fire and Water, Earth and Sky,
Rooted deep and crowned high,
Ill be gone and good draw nigh,
Fire and Water, Earth and Sky
• If cleansing a house, the elements
might be returned to the original altar, or taken out the final door and spilled/extinguished
at the boundary of the property. Sometimes it is proper to take the live
elements out the door and work the edges of the property itself, though often
this is impractical.
• When finished return to the original Altar or work-spot, and envision the
whole work, solid and complete. Conclude with an affirmation of success and
blessing, such as
The Blessing of the Holy Ones
Be on me and mine
My Blessing on all beings
And peace to thee and thine.
The Fire, the Well, the sacred Tree
Flow and flame and grow in me.
Thus do I affirm the work of the wise!
4 comments:
May I suggest that there should be two candles, one to each side of the consecrated area, rather than three. This seems to be the notion in Irish, at least, ritual forms. This seems to encompass the sacred area as the space between the holy fires. (The general idea can be seen in, for example, the Beltane fires between which cattle were driven to purify and bless them.)
All quite reasonable, esp from an irish perspective. In more usual geometry 3 is the minimum needed to define an area... and I have a Druidic affection for the number.
Do you have a suggestion on cleansing a home with a basement?
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