Showing posts with label crysal magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crysal magic. Show all posts

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Extending the Magickal Tool Set



As a competent witch or pagan, you will know how to wield the basic magickal tool set, which can be grouped under the four Elements, a practice that was started with the Golden Dawn and the promotion of the magickal use of the Tarot. The four suits of the Tarot have become the four Element tools in the practice of magick, which are Wands, Cups, Swords and Pentacles. It doesn’t matter that this is a recently contrived organization, since it seems to work very well in classifying the types and use of magickal tools. Grimoires and magickal books from the Renaissance proposed the use of quite a large array of different tools, and all of them required not only special characters and symbols etched on the handles and even the blades, but each had to be consecrated in a special way. The tools used for magick in those times were purely functional and served no greater symbolic purpose - yet they all had to be consecrated in some manner. Still, I believe that the Golden Dawn system of classifying the archetypal four tools seems like a good idea, since it simplifies the number of tools and extends their symbolic quality to a powerful archetypal level.

For the archetypal magickal tool set, then, we are left with just four categories (the four Elements), and within those categories we can group more than one tool. Let’s very briefly look over these tools and analyze their qualities and their use in ritual magick.

Fire - Wand - A wand is one of three pointers that a magician can use, and it is a classical tool in the annals of ritual and ceremonial magick. A wand is usually made of wood (although a number of other materials have been used) and is terminated with some kind of knob or shaped tip; it can also be double terminated. The length of a wand varies, since it should be measured according to the length of the magician’s forearm, which is from the elbow to the palm of the hand. There are a number of recommendations as to what kind of wood should be used, the proper planetary hour it should be cut down or carved, and what kind of magickal characters should be engraved on it. I leave all of these aesthetic considerations to the owner, since the embellishment of the wand is a personal and artistic preference. The wand is used to call and summon gods, goddesses and amicable spirits through the artifice of drawing invoking spirals and magnetically attracting them down. Most witches would not want to invoke their Deities using a steel blade because that would be disrespectful or even threatening - just as it’s bad manners to point a blade at a fellow practitioner.

Water - Cup/Chalice - A cup or chalice is used to contain liquid sacraments, either consecrated salt water, which is used to make sacred space, or consecrated wine or ale. The cup was typically not a tool in most of the old grimoires (except a few, where it was used to capture blood from a sacrifice), since it serves a more liturgical than magickal purpose. A cup or chalice can be made out wood, ceramics, precious metals (silver or gold), or even pewter, brass or bronze. Typically, witches and pagans might have two separate chalices - one for the salt water, and the other for wine or ale. Since salt is highly corrosive, a ceramic or non-ferrous metal would be used to hold the salt-water or lustral water, and a more elegant one can be used to hold the wine or ale. The archetypal qualities of the cup are that it is female, a container or holder, and has the magickal ability to transform common liquids into sacraments though a process likened to transubstantiation. Analogues of the chalice are the cauldron, sacred well and an alembic (alchemical vessel).

Air - Dagger/Sword - A dagger is a very useful and practical tool, so it usually comes in a pair - one for magickal and the other for mundane use. Some traditional witches have differentiated between these two bladed tools by giving them different colored handles - one black, and the other, white. The black handled dagger is called the Athame, but it is still a basic magickal blade that is used to draw lines of force and to “cut” or differentiate between things and domains. A magickal dagger is, in a word, a kind of spirit knife and another magickal pointer. It’s twin is a plain or white handled knife that is used to engrave or cut things that are used exclusively for magickal purposes.  The sword is basically a large black handled magickal dagger, which means that its functions are enlarged over that of the dagger. A sword is used to ward the sacred space, charge the magick circle, to draw lines of force or points of the circle together. Both the black handled dagger and the sword are consecrated and used only for magickal purposes, but the white handled knife is kept sharp and used as a utility blade. In most cases, the ceremonial blades are kept dull so that they will not accidentally harm the magician or one of the attendees.

Earth - Pentacle or Paten - A pentacle is a round flat disk shaped tool, usually metal, but it can also be ceramic or wood. It often has a pentacle (pentagram in a circle) inscribed on its face. The pentacle or paten is used to charge and bless food, such as bread, salt, fruit, or other sacraments. It varies in size, depending on its use, but often, it is placed on the altar so that the chalice is resting on it, creating a sacramental unit. Often, I place a small mound of sea salt on the paten underneath the chalice, which is filled with spring water, as a preparation for the circle consecration rite. The paten or pentacle can also be held in the hands on its edge, so that the face (with the pentacle) is fully displayed before the wielder. When used in this manner, the paten projects a powerful sacramental force of earth-based energies, which can be used for healing or blessings.

Another way of looking at the four Elemental tools is to compare them to the four basic representations of the Grail, where the wand/staff becomes the lance, but the rest are represented as they currently exist - sword to sword, chalice to chalice and paten to dish. There are other analogues in Celtic and Germanic paganism as well, so it would seem that these four archetypal tools are quite useful and represent a rich source of symbolic correspondences.  If we are to add additional tools, they would need to fit into this already determined matrix, or allow it to be properly and rationally expanded. This is exactly what I intend to do. I will begin by first adding a new category, a fifth cell, to the matrix for Spirit.

Spirit - Crystal or Stone - The quality of Spirit has some particular correspondences associated with it, and these are determined by the definition that Spirit is the unique joining of the previous four elements, producing a synthesis which is also their source. The crystal is uniquely qualified to fill this position, and has many useful and important magickal properties. 

Crystals come in many different sizes, shapes, either naturally occurring or man-made; they have the variable qualities of hardness, cleavage, optical properties (clear, opaque, translucent, colored) and electrical conductivity. Some crystals have quite unique electrical qualities, such as quartz, which demonstrates piezoelectric phenomena (where mechanical stress produces electricity). Other crystals, such as germanium or silicon carbide, are used as semiconducting rectifiers, such as what has been used in the various layers of a computer chip. Crystals also exhibit the qualities of resonance and oscillation when a small current of electricity is passed through them (an anti piezoelectric effect). Thus, from a purely metaphysical perspective, crystals receive and store, unleash and vibrate or oscillate; these qualities make them uniquely useful in a magickal context.

The basic magickal premise of crystal magick is that a crystal can capture and contain the etheric or fusion-like energy that is produced in a magickal ritual. This is particularly true when the ritual magician bases all of her workings on the prismatic ritual structure of the magnetic spiral vortex. Vibrating patterns of magickal energy trace patterns within the crystal, and it can hold that energy indefinitely, or that same energy can be retrieved by the will of the magician. Multiple ritual workings can accumulate etheric energy in a crystal so that over time it will contain all of the workings that are performed in its presence.

So a crystal can act as a kind of memory receptacle, holding the energy until it’s needed or discharged by the magician. From a magickal perspective, crystals can be natural (hopefully, ethically harvested) or man-made. Each crystal has a unique magickal effect depending on its shape, size, clarity, color, facet characteristics and whether it is natural, manufactured, or made from molded and polished leaded crystal glass. All of these crystal types are useful in ritual magick, and the only arbiter is the esthetic sensibilities of the magician. Cleaning a crystal in salt water will clear it of all influences, yet anointing it with oil or sacrament does just the opposite - empowering and emphasizing a certain event.

A magick stone is any unique and eye-catching rock that one might discover, either in a store that specializes in such mineral products, or perhaps even on the ground while one is hiking. The stone can be rough, smoothed and polished, and of any shape, size or color. Less common rocks have more esthetic appeal, or they can be stones that are retrieved from a location that is significant to the magician. Because light is not usually able to pass through an opaque rock, it’s uses in magick are much more limited than crystals.

Crystals have the following qualities:

Collectors of magickal power - not only do they collect the light frequencies of discrete magickal workings, they can store them almost indefinitely, allowing the magician to retrieve either part or the full energy signature of a specific spell performed in its midst.

Emitters of magickal power - crystals not only collect magickal power, but they also can transmit that power as well.

Processors of magickal power - multiple magickal workings stored in a crystal can be condensed averaged, summed and even multiplied.

The basic temple arrangement uses three crystals in the typical magickal working. These are:

1. Base Crystal or Collector - This is a large crystal, usually natural and consisting of many terminated points. Can be clear, smokey quartz, or of any color, as long as it retains some clarity, allowing light to pass through it. The collector crystal is kept either on or at the foot of the main altar. The collector is used as a kind of recording system for any and all magickal rituals performed in the temple. It can recall any part of any ritual performed, recall a series of rituals in a working, or process the magickal power collected.

2. Controller or Transformation Crystal - This is small crystal that is worn around the magician’s neck on a necklace. The controller is a crystal that records the impression and energies associated with the individual magician. The controller can draw and direct power from the collector into itself for the magician to use at any given moment, regardless of the actual physical distance between them. The controller can be worn underneath a shirt or blouse when the magician is in the mundane world, allowing him/her to access and project magickal power from the temple complex while far outside of its normal influence. When used during an evocation, it is called the crystal of transformation, since it assists the wearer to fully experience the domain of the spirit that is invoked.

3. Transmutar - This is a small crystal that is affixed to the end of a wand. The transmutar wand is a hybrid tool, an amalgamation of a wand and dagger. The transmutar wand can draw power into itself, and disperse it to the controller or the collector, or both. The transmutar wand is also a powerful emitter, channeling magickal power into itself and amplifying it into the temple confines. Because of its obvious nature, a transmutar wand is usually used in a temple or a grove, but it can be hidden on the person of the magician and used in the mundane world. The transmutar wand is the tool that is used by the magician to access the base crystal, recall previous energy structures, and either re-emit them into the magick circle, condense them with other structures or even erase them. How this is done is through a process of sensitive touch and focused visualization. Sometimes it helps to have a very bright LED light source with a very narrow focus to aid this process. Strobe lights and black lights can also be used to access the contents of a crystal. Once a magician is able to readily sense, touch and visualize the magickal energies stored in a crystal, it then becomes a natural part of his or her regimen.

Another tool is the Stang, used by traditional (non-Gardnerian) witches as a marker or sign for the immanent presence of the Deity as personified by nature. The Stang is literally a pole surmounted by horns, or horn like tines on a bifurcated pitch fork. Other embellishments can be added to the Stang to dress it up, but the essential characteristics are the pole crowned by horns. There are many mythic elements that can be attributed to the Stang, and these overlap the attributes of the staff, such as the World Tree, Ladder of Lights, or the World Pillar. However, the Stang, as I use it, acts as a placeholder for the Divine, symbolizing that at this spot, the emergence of Spirit and the ascent of human endeavor meet and merge into one. The Stang, like the staff, is usually held by the wielder, but it can be erected to stand on its own, either in the magick circle, grove, or in some sacred precinct.

Finally, let us consider the architecture of the temple or the grove. The simplest construction will have a central altar and some kind of a boundary, such as a circle or other demarcation. A grove can be embellished, but it usually functions better if it is unencumbered. A temple is a very different matter, though, and often is quite embellished.

Depending on the ritual structures that the magician will deploy, the indoor temple can become quite complex. Simple workings don’t require much in the way of furniture, but if one is going to employ the ritual structures of the extended energy theory of magick, then a more elaborate layout is required.

Eight Point Circle - To fully deploy the eight point magick circle, then the magician will need to somehow mark those eight points. I am, of course, referring to the four cardinal directions and the in-between points, or angles. My solution is to place small tables at each of the eight points and place on them an oil lamp. The cardinal directions are marked with colored glass lamp covers, and the angles are left plain. One of the altars in the four cardinal directions can act as the main altar, and another can act as the focus for the shrine. A shrine is an altar that houses the statues of the gods and goddess, which are used in the personal spiritual cult of the magician. Other sacred objects may be placed on this altar as well - it should act as the spiritual focus of the temple. In the center of the temple can be another small table that functions as a central altar. I use a portable table in the center of my temple, one that can be easily disassembled and taken down.

We have now gone over the four basic magickal tools and have shown that these may be extended to include other tools, all of which are used in the simple additional ritual structures that assist one in graduating from a basic wiccan or pagan magickal practice, to one that is more aligned to the complex workings of the ritual magician. Certainly, there are other more complex tools and techniques in my repertoire, but these should suffice to allow the basic practitioner to advance the next levels of ritual practice.

Frater Barrabbas

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Art of Ritual Magic - Basic Structures and Considerations

Unlike the Golden Dawn system of magic and its offshoots, such as the inspiration for Thelemic magic, the magical system used in the Order of the Gnostic Star is based on a synthesis of ideas found in Wicca and Neopaganism. Ritual ideas from the Golden Dawn were used to extend this lore, but one should not equate use with sameness. This is ostensibly where the practice of ritual magic diverges from classical modern ceremonial magic. Ritual magic uses a magic circle in its rites, whether they are performed in a temple or in an outside grove. Ritual magic also makes extensive use of meditation techniques and other methods culled from the teachings of Hatha, Pranayama, Mantra and Mandala (Yantra)Yogas, and also Franz Bardon. The purpose of these meditation techniques is to master the operations of mind control, to assume deep states of trance and to project pranic energies directly into magical operations.

The use of a magic circle is to establish a focus and a boundary for the energies and operations performed within it. The boundary separates the workers from the mundane world. All that is contained within the circle is considered sacred, and what is without is profane. The boundary is also porous, since individuals and entities may be brought in or allowed to leave during magical operations. Ceremonial magic uses a magic circle for Goetic magic, and it is errected for the sole purpose of protecting the workers from the demonic entities evoked. Traditional Golden Dawn magic did not incorporate a magic circle for its rites, but it did use an enclosed space decorated with talismans and magical signatures, called the Vault of the Adepti.

Perhaps the most important difference between ceremonial magic and ritual magic is the great importance placed on assuming the godhead and performing ritual magic in that guise, and its utter lack in the works and rites of ceremonial magic. The ceremonial magician engages in a great amount of pious religious works and observances, and after a suitable period of preparation and atonement, performs magic as the surrogate representative of the Deity, and not as the person of that entity. The ritual magician also engages in a great deal of devotion, too. However, the ritual magician performs devotions and religious liturgies not to woo or placate a distant or aloof Deity, but to prepare for the invocation and direct assumption of that being. A ritual magician also has the option of blessing substances while assuming the Godhead, and can make use of sacraments so produced - for communion or magical uses.

A ceremonial magician temporarily borrows the perquisites and prerogatives of the Deity to perform magical operations, while the ritual magician performs magic after having directly assumed the spirit of the Deity into his being. There couldn’t be a more striking difference between these two traditions, and they represent a kind of schism in the ideal world of the practice of magic. Of course, these distinctions are based on a pure theory of magic and represent ideals that are not readily observable in the real world. In the real world, magic is practiced in a number of variations, where some Thelemic magicians are more aligned to ritual magic than practitioners of Wicca and Neopaganism, some of whom have taken a rather Christian perspective on Godhead assumption, and have abandoned it for more pious forms of worship.

Ritual magic, as practiced by the Order also makes use of the three Mysteries to build and practice magic in a structured and disciplined manner. These three mysteries are associated with the natural phenomena of the Moon, Sun and the periodic transformation of the Self. A vortex and a gateway is used to establish these mysteries, and these special practices are also used to guide the performance of liturgical as well as magical workings.

The Lunar Mysteries are very much involved with the practice of earth based or talismanic magic, to aid the ritual magician and his fellow workers or clients (family, lovers and friends). The Solar Mysteries are used to divide the year and mark the changing of the seasons, so sacralizing the world with an earth-based spiritual perspective, as well celebrating mile-stones for individuals or groups.

The Mysteries of the Self are represented by period and also profound changes that occur in the practitioner. These can be guided and deliberately brought on by various ritual practices and workings, and they may also spontaneously occur, characterizing that a magician lives a life of continual transcendental transformation. The ritual magician can celebrate or commemorate these occurrences with initiation rituals and ceremonies. However, the Major Arcana of the Tarot is the key and lends its themes to the cycle of initiation used by the ritual magician.

Tarot and Qabbalah are extremely important to ritual magic, as they are to classical ceremonial magic. In ritual magic, the magician is continually crafting the repertoire of rituals, so there is a need for an expertise in Notariqon and Temurah. These are used to build up and explode formula acronyms, to find formula letter substitutions, and to craft sigils, characters and symbolic magical links. The Qabbalah also provides an extensive system of tables of correspondences, which are used to qualify and gather together certain symbology to be used in rituals. The Tarot also lends its symbology and imagery to the building and developing of a magical system. Tarot cards are used for both passive inquiry as well as active resolution. To the ritual magician, a deep knowledge and understanding of the Qabbalah and the Tarot are required for developing new magical rituals, ceremonies and workings, and determining new directives and spiritual goals. One could also include a knowledge of yoga, astrology, alchemy, and forms of sacred sexuality.

Finally, ritual magic makes extensive use of the “energy” theory of magic to build up energy based structures that emulate in their design sacred geometry. Such energy structures are prismatic geometric shapes, seen as dimly perceived auric lines of force. The repertoire of these structures is limited to the four watchtowers, angles, and the three points in the center of the circle. So these structures consist of lines of force, pylons, trigons, circles, squares, pentagons, hexagons, septagons, octagons, spheres, cubes, pyramids, tetrahedrons, hexahedrons, and inner star-form talismans using the septagram, eneagram, undecigram and the quintedecagon. Ritual magic also uses crystals as energy collectors and emitters, solid fluid condensors, magical statues of various godheads and mythic creatures, and various sacramental substances and fetishes.

In the case of crystals, there are three types used in ritual magic. The first is used as a collector, kept either on or at the foot of the main altar (this is usually a large crystal), the second is used as a controller, and is worn around the magician’s neck. The third is used in a wand, creating a crystal tipped wand that is also known as the trasmutar wand. These three crystals are bound together and work as a single tool. The collector collects and recalls the magical energies used in all rituals performed before it, the controller necklace is used to empower the magician at all times while wearing it, and the transmutar wand directs the powers so deployed. All of these devices and tools make use of a very detailed and elaborate energy theory of magic. The energy theory of magic is equally important to the spirit theory of magic, and in fact they are powerfully blended into a single discipline of ritual magic.


A Generic Ritual Pattern

The generic ritual pattern consists of various ritual actions that are performed at various points in the magic circle. As we have established previously, there are eleven of these points. A ritual pattern consists of the following actions being performed using a grouping of these various circle points to form basic geometric shapes, such as those itemized above.

The ritual actions are to be performed at any of the eleven points in the magic circle (4 WTs, 4 Angles, UP, MP & IP) - device can be drawn with dagger or transmutar wand.

At the periphery of the circle -

• Vibrate a formula letter
• Draw devices (device plus invoking spiral)
• Project colored energy into device
• Intone Keyword
• Express Keyword formula declamation


At the center of the circle -

• Vibrate a formula letter (optional)
• Draw devices (device plus invoking spiral)
• Project colored energy into device
• Intone Keyword (optional)
• Express Keyword formula declamation (optional)

• Draws all circle points together using sword or transmutar wand - so creating the geometric prismatic shape using visualized colored lines of force. Ritual geometric shapes have their ground in the center of the circle.

• Reiterates Keywords (to associated circle points)
• Declaims Notariqon formula - letters of the Keywords are extracted and assembled to form a magical word or formula.
• Expresses ideal associated with the formula assembled word.

The above ritual draws all of the parts of the magical geometric shape into union, giving the final form a magical word or formula that acts as a powerful unifier for the whole rite. Each of the Keywords and their declamations are pulled together to create a new word that represents their semantic union. This ritual mechanism is comparable to the Golden Dawn ritual of the Analysis of the Keyword, but its use is to unite all of the ritual components into a powerful kind of synopsis. Words that are chosen to fashion Keywords and Word Formulas can be of any language, and are typically English, Latin, Hebrew, Greek, Enochian, Egyptian, Classical Arabic, or even the mysterious Verba Ignota of the old grimoires.


Devices used in Ritual Magic

There is quite a large repertoire of devices that can be employed in the above generic ritual pattern. I have listed sixteen, but the actual number is probably indeterminable.

Magical Device - Basic Use

Lines of Force: Connecting points to form prismatic geometry
4 Spirals (invoke, seal, banish, unseal): Empowering device, form of resonator
Pylon and Double Pylon: Polarized lines of force - fusion line of force
Equal Arm Cross: Union of all forces
Rose Cross: Solar Powers of Deity - Electric Energy
Rose Ankh: Lunar Powers of Deity - Magnetic Energy
Iron Cross: Martial Powers of Deity
Swastika - left and right: Cosmic Solar Powers - Light and Dark
Trapezoidal Cross: Generates Alternative Reality
Inverted Rose Ankh: Orb of Terrestrial Power
Pentagram: Generates Element Energy - Ascending Godhead
Inverted Pentagram: Generates Element Energy - Descending Sacrament
Lesser Hexagram (3 forms): Symbolizes the three Astrological Qualities
Hexagram (joined triangles): Symbolizes Union of Archetypal Male & Female
Octagram (4 claw version): Draws powers from all points and seals it in place
Pentagramic Cross/Ankh: Generates sacralized energy from Godhead


In addition, the ritual magic used by the Order also has a special ritual structure that is known as an inner ring, or a magic circle within a magic circle. The inner ring is drawn (often with a deosil arc), the opening portal gesture is made, and therein is placed one of the four talismanic paintings. These specially constructed large rectangular talismans (3 by 2 feet) are made of wood that is painted with a flat background (often black), and upon that background a star-form is illustrated in vibrating colors. There are four difference star-forms, and these are the Septagram, Eneagram, Undecigram and the Quintedecagon. An Octagram star-form can also be used (to signify the Lunation Cycle, among other things).

The star-forms have the following uses.

Septagram - to invoke one or all of the Planetary Intelligences
Octagram - to invoke one or all of the Lunation Types (optional)
Enegram - to invoke one of the ten Sephiroth of the Qabbalah
Undecigram - to invoke one of the twelve Zodiacs, also used to forge a combination of a shaped Element power and one of the seven virtues - could also be used to invoke one of the Seniors or Talismanic Elemental.
Quintedecagon - symbolized the fusion of the Octagon and the Septagram - the invocation vortex of magickal evocation.

This should give you an idea of how this system of Ritual Magic works, as it is practiced in the Order of the Gnostic Star. There are other variations of these techniques used in the more advanced and complex ritual workings that the Order has adopted and made use of - yet these should suffice to give anyone a clear idea of how ritual magic is used in the Order.

Frater Barrabbas Tiresius