“Three Initiates” Unveiled: A Critical-Historical Analysis of 12 Proposed Candidates for Authorship of The Kybalion (1908)

By Adam J. Pearson (2024)

The Kybalion: Hermetic Philosophy by “Three Initiates.” First Edition. 1908.

A.1. Introduction: Unveiling The Mind(s) Behind the Doctrine of Mind

Published in 1908, The Kybalion: Hermetic Philosophy by the anonymous “Three Initiates” is undeniably one of the most famous and influential occult texts of all time. This holds true to the chagrin of many occultists who have rightfully questioned its invented frame narrative, divergences from classical Hermeticism, and spurious roots in an imaginary ancient text (Block, 2019; Chapel, 2013; Farrell, 2014). To this point, with his characteristic wit and humor, Sam Block (2019) went so far as to claim that “The Kybalion is a farcical waste of ink, paper, and time, and is not representative of Hermetic philosophy, instead being a work of New Thought dressed up in Egyptomaniacal cosplay. There’s literally everything else better to read than The Kybalion.”

As we shall see, the present study largely agrees with the substance of these critiques. In all fairness to The Kybalion’s faux-legendary origins, however, the legacy of Medieval and Renaissance grimoires attests to the fact that the tendency to attribute fictional origins to esoteric texts is so commonplace in the history of magic as to virtually be a staple of the genre. To offer some well-known examples of this trend, we note, for instance, that the Clavicula Salomonis was attributed to King Solomon, the Grimoire of Pope Honorius to the historical Pope, the Tuba Veneris to John Dee, The Heptameron to Peter d’Abano, and the Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses and Sword of Moses to the biblical Moses despite these figures having nothing to do with their composition (Bailey, 2009; Bailey, 2017; “Dee,” 2001; Pearson, 2018; Peterson, 2005; Peterson, 2018; Skinner, 2013; Stratton-Kent, 2014). The authorial intent behind this fabrication of textual origins was likely to add authoritative weight and prestige to the grimoires so that they would be taken more seriously by the reader. Just as a “master’s guide to boxing” would tend to be taken more seriously if it was attributed to Muhammad Ali rather than revealed to be written by Bob from the local gym, such was the case for the grimoires.

Interestingly, it is worth noting that The Kybalion‘s New Thought-influenced system exerted some surprising influence even on key figures in the 21st century traditional grimoire magic movement. In a striking example, Wolfe, one of the few students of the late Dr. Joseph Lisiewski, explained that after guiding his students through intensive grimoire evocations carried out by-the-book to the finest details, as well as alchemy and other studies, Dr. Lisiewksi ended up teaching them New Thought techniques (WOF 25, 2021). Since Dr. Lisiewski was also a notoriously vociferous critic of New Age practices, this revelation was shocking to this author, but also suggested the prospect that closer investigation of The Kybalion’s New Thought origins might be worthwhile even to grimoire purists. 

On a personal note, The Kybalion holds a certain charming nostalgia for this author as it was one of the first esoteric texts he read as green-horned adolescent. Despite rapidly moving on from the text to explore more traditional materials, the feeling of intrigue first felt when presented with the mysterious anonymity of the “Three Initiates” continued to linger over the following decades. The present study is, in some ways, an informed adult response to that naive teenage curiosity.

For those who may be unfamiliar with the text, The Kybalion presents, in its own words, a series of “seven Hermetic principles,” upon which it claims that “the entire Hermetic philosophy is based,” namely:

1. The Principle of Mentalism

“The All is Mind; the Universe is Mental” (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011).

2. The Principle of Correspondence

“As above, so below; as below, so above.” […] This principle embodies the truth that there is always a correspondence between the laws and phenomena of the various planes of being and life (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011).

3. The Principle of Vibration

“Nothing rests; everything moves; everything vibrates” (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011).

4. The Principle of Polarity

“Everything is dual; everything has poles; everything has its pair of opposites; like and unlike are the same; opposites are identical in nature, but different in degree; extremes meet; all truths are but half-truths; all paradoxes may be reconciled” (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011).

5. The Principle of Rhythm

“Everything flows, out and in; everything has its tides; all things rise and fall; the pendulum-swing manifests in everything; the measure of the swing to the right is the measure of the swing to the left; rhythm compensates” (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011).

6. The Principle of Cause and Effect

“Every cause has its effect; every effect has its cause; everything happens according to law; chance is but a name for law not recognized; there are many planes of causation, but nothing escapes the law” (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011).

7. The Principle of Gender

“Gender is in everything; everything has its masculine and feminine principles; gender manifests on all planes” (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011).

Image of Hermetic magician from Symbola Aurea Mensae (1617) by the 17th century German Alchemist, Michael Maier.

In the present study, we will begin by analyzing The Kybalion’s claims to be of ancient Hermetic origin transmitted by the “Three Initiates.” We will then proceed to critically analyze the evidence for and against the 12 primary candidates that have been proposed as having been members of the enigmatic “Three Initiates” over the past 116 years. 

To this end, while we will respectfully explore traditions shared among occultists, we will predominantly adopt a critical-historical methodological lens. More specifically, in order to evaluate the authorial feasibility of these 12 candidates as rigorously as possible, we will draw on the comprehensive analytical work of Professor Philip Deslippe (2011) and on the historical context of these 12 individuals as well as their geographical, textual, creative, biographical, and authorial circumstances during the period of The Kybalion’s composition. 

The aim of this study is to complement the extensive and valuable work done by Deslippe (2011) and others with additional evidence and insights from later publications in order to arrive at an integrative overview of the subject of Kybalion authorship as presently understood in 2024. Before we meet these mysterious 12 candidates, however, let us briefly investigate The Kybalion‘s claims to ancient roots.

A.2. Is The Kybalion Ancient and Hermetic?: Critically Evaluating The Kybalion’s Self-Claimed Origins

In the Introduction to The Kybalion, the “Three Initiates” claim that the text represents “a work based upon the world-old Hermetic Teachings” which they suggest lie hidden behind all noteworthy ancient philosophies from those of Egypt to the Vedic teachings of India (Deslippe, 2011). To this point, The Kybalion claims that “even the most ancient teachings of India undoubtedly have their roots in the original Hermetic Teachings.” Unfortunately for The Kybalion, there is no evidence that the Hermetic teachings that emerged in the first centuries of the Common Era influenced the development of ancient Indian Vedic thought; indeed, the simple fact of historical chronology makes this impossible since the Vedas were written from 1500 to 500 C.E., long before the first Hermetic texts (Bull, 2015; Ghosh & Ghosh, 2020; Levitt, 2003; Lopez, 2020; Тошов, 2021).

The “Three Initiates” go on to suggest that they are presenting “a compilation of certain Basic Hermetic Doctrines, passed on from teacher to student” that have their roots in an ancient book called The Kybalion, which they claim to be quoting and commenting on in their own work (Deslippe, 2011). We now know that there is no evidence that the proposed “ancient book” which the Three Initiates are quoting ever existed. Indeed, it could not have existed in the form The Kybalion presents because, for instance, as Chapel (2013) notes, the “Principle of Vibration which the aphorisms so heavily emphasize, […] originated in the middle of the 18th century with the British philosopher and medical doctor David Hartley (1705-1757). The commentary on the aphorisms is decidedly of 20th century provenance, referring as it does to works that were not published until the early 1900s” (see also Oberg, 1976).

To be charitable, those who favour “ancient and Hermetic origins” of the principles expounded in The Kybalion point out that some aspects of The Kybalion’s doctrine appear to resonate with ideas in the Corpus Hermeticum (1st-3rd c. CE) and Asclepius 4, such as the idea that the Universe arose from the Divine Mind. Others have claimed that the Principle of Correspondence as having roots in the Tabula Smaragdina or Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus as well as that the word “Kybalion” appears in a French Masonic Memphis-Misraim Rite that allegedly predated the publication of The Kybalion (Mead, 2015; Copenhaver, 1993). We will critically return to this latter point. However, for reasons we will explore in greater depth below in Section H, it seems more likely that The Kybalion integrated inspiration from Hermetic tradition as interpreted by three 19th century works into a mostly New Thought-based framework, rather than chronicling an oral tradition transmitted in unbroken lineage “from Adept to Adept” (Block, 2021; Chapel, 2013; Deslippe, 2011; Dresser, 1919; Farrell, 2014).

In support of this view, Chapel (2013) undertook a thorough comparative analysis between The Kybalion and classical Hermetic texts as well as the corpus of 19th-century New Thought literature and found very little “Hermetic” content in The Kybalion, a point with which Sam Block’s (2019) own analysis of the non-Hermetic elements of The Kybalion agrees. Chapel (2013) suggests that some possibly “Hermetic” aspects of the text could include its Correspondence Principle of “as above, so below,” its Divine Mind-based idealism, and some aspects of its “Principle of Gender” (e.g. Asclepius, 21: “Not only god [is of both sexes]…but all things ensouled and soulless, for it is impossible for any of the things that are to be infertile”) (c.f. Copenhaver, 1993).

To counterbalance this point, however, Chapel (2013) also notes that The Kybalion‘s rather idiosyncratic 147-plane cosmology has nothing to do with classical or Renaissance Hermeticism, nor does its focus on “mental alchemy” of the personal mind rather than Mind (Nous), its lack of emphasis on piety towards an emanative Godhead, its exclusion of the practice of ecstatic absorption [ebaptisanto tou noos] in the Divine Reality, or its anti-theological stance which runs counter to the mystical theology of classical Hermeticism (Chapel, 2013).

Complementing Chapel’s (2013) observations, Sam Block (2021) points out that in classical Hermeticism, the Divine was generally viewed as androgynous or transcending gender (e.g. in Corpus Hermeticum I.9: “The Mind who is god, being androgyne and existing as life and light…”). Indeed in the Corpus Hermeticum, gender only enters into play following an androgynous Age described in 1.18 after which the Godhead splits the previously-androgynous human life into male- and female-gendered beings (Block, 2021). To buttress Chapel’s point about ancient theology (2013), Erik (2016) underscores the significant theological differences between The Kybalion and classical Hermeticism by contrasting The Kybalion‘s anti-theological, pantheistic and unknowable All with the heavily theological classical Hermetic view in which, in Erik’s (2016) words, “full knowledge of God is the ultimate goal of the Initiate.”

Corpus Hermeticum: first Latin edition, by Marsilio Ficino, 1471, at the Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica, Amsterdam.

Moreover, against the claim that the term “Kybalion” has its roots in the Irregular Freemasonic Memphis-Misraim Rite as noted above, Rob Wood (1997) has demonstrated that the word ”Kybalion’‘ was, in fact, interpolated into the Memphis-Misraim Rite after the publication of the 1908 Kybalion. He found 19th century manuscripts of the same rituals–that is, manuscripts earlier than the earliest manuscript of The Kybalion–which did not include the word. This shows that “Kybalion” was added in to the Rite later, likely to draw on the mystique introduced by the Three Initiates’ text. In addition, Wood (1997) observed that the ”Founder of the Rite of Memphis, Marconis de Negre, did not know the term “kybalion,” nor did the Italian General Garibaldi and International Hierophant of Memphis-Mizraim — he united the two rites. The same holds for Seymour, Yarker, Papus, etc.”

Far from being ancient, The Kybalion is incontrovertibly modern, dating to the 20th century after being published in 1908 and written in 1907 in Chicago, as Deslippe (2011) demonstrated through the careful analysis of archival documents. Moreover, as Deslippe (2011) notes, The Kybalion was very much the product of its times as a text that emerged, not from the Ancient Graeco-Egyptian world, but rather from the industrialized, mechanized, capitalistic, and achievement-oriented world of 20th century America that was looking for a secularized, New Age philosophy to fit with its ideals of “manifesting” success (Deslippe, 2011). Indeed, as we noted above, and as Chapel (2013) notes, the “Three Initiates” reference 18th century and 20th century texts that were unknown to ancient authors. The Kybalion’s early 20th-century origins are further evidenced by a number of features of the text, which Deslippe analyzes in detail in his Introduction to The Kybalion: The Definitive Edition (2011), but most conspicuously in The Kybalion‘s frequent references to then-current pseudo-scientific ideas to illustrate its “Principles,” its anti-theological stance, and its New Thought style and approach. As aptly Sam Block (2021) aptly noted, “The Kybalion isn’t so much a rewrite of Hermetic philosophy and ideas into modern language, as it is an injection of New Thought ideas into Hermeticism.”

Marsilio Ficino’s introduction (argumentum) to his Latin translation of the Corpus Hermeticum in a manuscript dedicated to Lorenzo il Magnifico. Manuscript Florence, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Plut. 21.8, fol. 3r.

Furthermore, to buttress the modern origins of the text, Mary K. Greer (2009) found “a major source of The Kybalion’s 7 Laws in an introduction to a translation of Hermetic writings by Anna Kingsford and Edward Maitland called The Virgin of the World of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus (1885),” with which the “Three Initiates” would have been very familiar as we shall see below. Indeed, Greer (2009) discovered that ”in the short introductory essay to The Virgin of the World (1885), called “The Hermetic System and the Significance of its Present Revival,” we find nearly the same seven (unnumbered) laws, doctrines or principles that are found in The Kybalion.” We now know that the ideas in The Kybalion predominantly originated not only in Maitland and Kingsford’s work, but also in two other 19th century texts by Thomas Burgoyne and Florence Huntley, a fascinating point to which we will return in Section H of this study. 

The Kybalion then, seems, to be as charitable as possible to the text, to be a 20th century New Thought reformulation of 19th-century recapitulations of some earlier Hermetic ideas combined with 18th ideas from Hartley and others (e.g. the Principle of Vibration). If The Kybalion contains “Hermetic” content then, this might largely be credited to the research of Kingsford and Maitland, Burgoyne, and Huntley which the “Three Initiates” reinterpreted via New Thought to create the 1908 text. 

A.3. The Question of Authorship: Who were the “Three Initiates”?

Regardless of its modern origins and its Hermeticized New Thought teachings or New Thought-ized “Hermetics,” the intriguing anonymity of the mysterious author(s) of The Kybalion has played a significant role in contributing to its enduring appeal. Who, then, were the “Three Initiates” to whom The Kybalion was legendarily attributed? 

In the sections to follow, we will delve into the complex bouillabaisse of historical fact, precise findings yielded by software-driven textual analysis, oral traditions passed between occultists, and far-ranging speculations that have accrued around the secret identities of the “Three Initiates” over the course of the past 116 years. In the process, we will attempt to draw back the veil of mystery that surrounds the text’s authorship, unveil the identity of its core author, dispel common theories about some alleged contributors to The Kybalion, and explore some surprising influences on the text. In total, we will consider the cases for and against 12 different candidates, but our story begins with a man named William Walker Atkinson (1862 – 1932).

B. The New Thought Initiate: William Walker Atkinson (1862 – 1932), the Lawyerly Law-Giver

Who was the primary mind behind The Kybalion? For years, the “First Initiate’s” identity was hidden in secrecy, misdirection, and false assumptions. However, a major breakthrough in the process of unmasking his identity came in 2011, when Philip Deslippe, Professor of Religious Studies and Historian at U.C. Santa Barbara, ran The Kybalion (1908) and all of William Walker Atkinson’s books through plagiarism-detection software and the analysis concluded, based on objective textual, lexical, and syntactic features, that they were definitively written by the same person (Deslippe, 2011). This ground-breaking research, which applied contemporary digital analytic tools to the study of occult authorship, confirmed beyond all doubt what whispers from occultists had only been able to suggest for decades. See Deslippe’s episode on Forum Borealis in October 2018 for more insight into how he conducted his computer-mediated textual analysis using software at the University of Iowa.

As a result of this research, Deslippe (2011) decisively identified the primary author of The Kybalion as the attorney, merchant, publisher, author, and occultist William Walker Atkinson (1862 – 1932), who was also an American pioneer of the New Thought movement. Indeed, The Kybalion is, in (a) its New Thought-influenced content, (b) its lists of laws so beloved to its attorney author, (c) its diction, lexicon, syntax, and turns of phrase, (d) the circumstances of its production in Chicago in 1907, and (e) its publishing house, definitively the primary production of William Walker Atkinson (Deslippe, 2011).

By way of context, Atkinson was a tremendously prolific author who wrote over 100 books in his lifetime, many, like Kybalion (1908), under pseudonyms as far-ranging as Theron Q. Dumont, Swami Panchadisci, Theodore Sheldon, Magus Incognito, and Yogi Ramacharaka (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011). As Deslippe (2011) notes, all of the supposedly independent authors whose writings are now credited to Atkinson were connected to one another both (a) by their textual features (e.g. word choice, syntax, particular turns of phrase used across texts, etc.) and (b) by being published by houses with shared addresses and (c) in the same magazines. William Walker Atkinson edited all of the magazines in which his pseudonymous authors’ writings appeared, namely, Suggestion (1900–1901), New Thought (1901–1905) and Advanced Thought (1906–1916). These fictional authors first acted as contributors to the periodicals, before diverging into their own book-writing careers—with most of their books being released by publishing houses for which Atkinson worked. This process enabled a cycle of prestige-building for both the magazines and the books; the magazines attracted attention to the pseudonymous authors and Atkinson used “their” books to add credibility to the magazines. 

A 1917 edition of Raja Yoga or Mental Development by “Yogi Ramacharaka,” now known to have been William Walker Atkinson. Notice the emblem of the Triangle with the glowing Sun at its center, placed within a Circle? Compare this symbol with the symbol that appears on the cover of the first edition of The Kybalion from 1908; they are the same! Atkinson likely used the identical symbol in both cases as a coy hint ”for those with eyes to see” that he was the author behind both texts and pseudonymous authors, a kind of pictorial ‘signature.’

For example, Deslippe (2011) notes that Advanced Thought magazine, which was edited by Atkinson, advertised articles by Atkinson and Theron Q. Dumont and had the same address as The Yogi Publishing Society, which published the works attributed to Yogi Ramacharaka. Advanced Thought magazine also printed articles by Swami Bhakta Vishita, but when Vishita’s writings were collected in book form, they were not published by the Yogi Publishing Society. Instead they were published by The Advanced Thought Publishing Co., the same house that released the Theron Q. Dumont books and published Advanced Thought (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011). By crafting different authorial personas and attributing diverse works to them, Atkinson was essentially able to become a roster of multiple pseudonymous authors and ensure a steady stream of content for his periodicals.

Thus, well-practiced in the Kierkegaardian Art of Pseudonymity, Atkinson went on to create the “Three Initiates” as an authorial screen for his writing of The Kybalion. The Kybalion allowed Atkinson to promote his New Thought ideas while capitalizing on the resurgence of popular interest in Hermeticism in 1907-1908 Chicago through the work of groups like W.P. and Myra Phelon’s Hermetic Brotherhood of Atlantis, Luxor, and Elephantae (see Section H for more on this subject). 

Deslippe (2011) further notes that after The Kybalion‘s publication, Atkinson proceeded to revise and rework the framework of the Seven Hermetic Principles which he laid out in The Kybalion in a series of succeeding works via the Seven Laws in his 1909 Arcane Teaching, the Seven Cosmic Principles in his 1918 Secret Doctrine of the Rosicrucians, and The Seven Cosmic Laws in his final work on the subject, The Seven Cosmic Laws, which remained unpublished in Atkinson’s life until its posthumous publication in Deslippe’s Kybalion: The Definitive Edition (2011). The manuscript of The Seven Cosmic Laws was bequeathed to Deslippe by some descendants of William Walker Atkinson himself, who found the text in his estate after the prolific author passed away following complications from a stroke in 1932.

The Kybalion is, therefore, in every way, the brainchild of the mind of William Walker Atkinson, in form, subject matter, style, and structure. Sealing the matter, in 1912, Atkinson himself submitted a biographical entry about himself to the 1912 edition of Who’s Who in America in which he listed The Kybalion as one of his works (Nelson Marquis (Ed.), 1912). It is notable that Atkinson did not include any other co-authors alongside himself for members of the “Three Initiates” in the Who’s Who in America entry.

The case is, therefore, closed for the primary “Initiate” behind The Kybalion. Were there really Second and Third Initiates at all, or was the text simply the work of Atkinson as Deslippe (2011) suspects? To further explore this mystery, let us delve into and critically evaluate the leading theories behind 11 other possible contributors to The Kybalion in light of historical and textural evidence.

C. A Second Initiate?: The Case For and Against Paul Foster Case

Before Deslippe’s software-guided analysis definitively settled the matter, a longstanding theory in the occult community had held that The Kybalion (1908) was co-authored by Golden Dawn Initiate and Builders of the Adytum (BOTA)-founder Paul Foster Case (October 3, 1884 – March 2, 1954).

To this point, Frater R.C. of the Magick Without Fears Podcast reported that Paul Foster Case’s student Arisa Victor told him that Case had told her that he helped William Walker Atkinson with The Kybalion. Moreover, the proponents of the theory that Case was one of the Three Initiates refer to some additional points to connect Case to Atkinson. These authors note that Case was a relative of Atkinson’s wife Margaret Foster Black (1871-1950), was in Chicago in 1907 when Atkinson was writing The Kybalion, and was allegedly spending time with Atkinson around this time (e.g. see Clark, 2013).

In his biography of Paul Foster Case, Dr. Paul Clark (2013) claims that after reading William Walker Atkinson’s The Secret of Mental Magic (published in January, 1907), Case contacted Atkinson. Case had been writing articles for the New Thought magazine for which Atkinson also wrote in 1907-1908 and they likely would have met at one of the publisher-hosted author receptions. As possible evidence of the latter point, Deslippe (2011) unearthed an advertisement from the March 1910 issue of New Thought magazine for one such event: an opening reception hosted by publisher The Library Shelf, which both Case and Atkinson probably attended. Moreover, Clark (2013) states that Case’s successor Ann Davies informed him that Paul Foster Case told her that he worked on The Kybalion with Atkinson and and that Case’s widow Harriet Bullock had independently confirmed the same point to him. Thus, a total of three BOTA-related individuals have claimed Case told them he worked on The Kybalion, namely, Arisa Victor, Harriet Bullock, and Ann Davies.

Moreover, Clark (2013) claims that he found an entry in Paul Foster Case’s personal diaries, which detailed “Atkinson and Case’s decision” to name the book ”The Kybalion” as a synthesis of the words ”Kabbalah” and the Divine Name ”On.” Unfortunately, however, Mr. Clark did not include a scanned copy of this possibly very pivotal entry in the book, so there is no way to verify this claim or prove that the entry dated before the publication of The Kybalion and not afterwards. In any case, Chapel (2013) points out that although “kybalion” takes the form of a Greek noun, it has no meaning in Greek or any other language for that matter, a fact which buttresses the claim that it is a 20th century neologism. There are also no explicit elements of Hebrew Kabbalah or Hermetic Qabalah in the text. As an Adept of the Alpha et Omega Order of the Golden Dawn under Chief Moina Mathers, Case was well-versed in the Kabbalah; it is hard to see why he would call a text ‘Kabbalah-On’ and yet include no Kabbalistic elements in it such as analyses drawing on the Sephiroth, Gematria, Four Worlds, Tree of Life structure, 32 Paths, etc. (Wood, 1997). The Kybalion is simply not a Kabbalistic text as Case would have known.

Drawing of Paul Foster Case by Jane Adams (2012).

In addition, a number of notable criticisms have been raised to question the claim that Case co-wrote The Kybalion. First, when Professor Deslippe’s (2011) ran The Kybalion through the software in comparison to all of Case’s books, the software found no significant similarities in syntax or word choice between the texts at all. In contrast, the full Kybalion text bears the semantic, dictional, and syntactic stamp of Atkinson and the book is, in content as in form, continuous and consistent with his other literary output (“Three Initiates” in Deslippe, 2011). Therefore, the logical inference is that Case could not have done any of the writing of The Kybalion; otherwise, his lexical, semantic, syntactic, or other peculiarities would have appeared in the text and been detected by the software analysis as was the case for Atkinson (Deslippe, 2018).

Second, by process of elimination, it follows from the above that even if Case was involved in the composition of the text, it could have been in little more than a consulting/editing capacity with Atkinson doing all of the writing. Even this is doubtful, however, for as Professor Deslippe (2011) points out, Atkinson would not have needed Case’s help to write The Kybalion, as he was a prolific author already at the time, nor would he have needed Case’s assistance with editing, as Atkinson was already a seasoned editor of multiple magazines in 1907. Moreover, Case was decades younger than Atkinson in 1907 and much less experienced and had also just met Atkinson in 1907; there is no clear reason to suggest Atkinson would have sought out Case’s help after already publishing countless books by himself.

Third, although there is some circumstantial evidence that Case and Atkinson may have attended publishing receptions together in 1907, that Case bore a distant relation to Atkinson’s wife, and that the two may have known each other at the time, there is no concrete evidence (1) that Case worked as Atkinson’s secretary or editor in 1907, or (2) that the two collaborated on any jointly-authored pieces in 1907 let alone on Kybalion (Deslippe, 2011). Circumstantial evidence of the two knowing each other as acquaintances and having spoken at receptions is insufficient grounds to argue that they co-wrote Kybalion, especially since the objective software-based analysis found no linguistic similarities at all to suggest that Case had left any authorial imprint on the text (Deslippe, 2011).

William Walker Atkinson, signature and photograph.

Fourth, authors such as Nick Farrell (2014) have pointed out that the only people who claim that Case told them he worked on The Kybalion were intimates of Case (e.g. Ann Davies) or his other students who had a history of mythologizing Case, motivation to draw on the popular prestige of The Kybalion to aggrandize Case’s reputation and bolster BOTA, and no concrete evidence to substantiate the claim. They have also noted that even if Case did tell them he worked on The Kybalion, he may have been exaggerating as he often had a tendency to do both in his writings and in conversation with other Adepti (e.g. see his letters to Israel Regardie for some of many examples). Others, such as a well-known BOTA Adept whom this author consulted for the purpose of this article and who asked this author not to be quoted by name, have questioned the reliability of Dr. Clark’s claims about the Case-Kybalion connection due to what he called “Dr. Clark’s participation in “myth-building” around Case and the lack of any solid evidence.” As this author is not a BOTA member and has not spoken with Dr. Clark, he cannot comment on this point, although he does respect Dr. Clark’s work on the Fraternity of the Hidden Light (FLO or Fraternitas L.V.X. Occulta).

In any case, criticisms such as the above and the absence of any definitive evidence to the contrary led Professor Deslippe (2011) to favour an Occam’s Razor approach and suggest that The Kybalion was entirely the creation of Atkinson posing as “Three Initiates” in a nod to the Thrice-Great Hermes Trismegistus of Hermetic legend. Similarly, while this author respects BOTA and its members and, like Fox Mulder in the X-Files, “Wants to Believe” that Case had a role in authoring The Kybalion, the evidence in support of such a connection appears circumstantial, tenuous, and insubstantial at best.

D. Other “Initiates?”: Exploring Other Theorized Contributors to the Authorship of The Kybalion

Could any other authors have contributed to The Kybalion? Over the past century since the text’s release, this tantalizing question inspired a flood of fervent theorizing from occultists as they sought the occluded origins of The Kybalion. As a result, many other candidates for members of the “Three Initiates” have been proposed over the years, to which we will now turn in an attempt to critically evaluate the historical evidence for and against their authorial candidacy.

A third candidate for a member of the “Three Initiates” is Elias Gewurz (1875-1947), a Polish-American Theosophist and author of works on the Hermetic Qabalah. The strongest pieces of evidence for the Gewurz theory seem to have been (a) that Gewurz knew William Walter Atkinson from the Theosophical circles they both frequented and, (b) that the Yogi Publication Society, which published many of Atkinson’s works, also published Gewurz’s The Hidden Treasures of Ancient Qabalah among other texts (e.g. his Diary of a Child of Sorrow (1918).

However, the timeline does not work out as Elias Gewurz was in Australia in 1907 when Atkinson was writing The Kybalion. Moreover, the official records of the Archives of the Theosophical Society in America note that Gewurz only appears in the United States in June of 1908 as per Membership Ledger Cards Roll 3, number 01994. In addition, this author was unable able to find any writings of Gewurz written before 1916, certainly none written in America. The earliest identifiable American Gewurz publication was “Comments on the Light of the Path,” which was published in The Messenger in September of 1916, 8 years after Atkinson’s anonymous publication of The Kybalion.

Further problematizing this theory, Deslippe’s (2011) analysis did not find any textual similarities between Gewurz’s writing and The Kybalion. Finally, Gewurz was primarily focused on the Kabbalah, which scarcely enters into the subject matter of The Kybalion at all, as we noted above. Therefore, for textual, contextual, subject matter, and geographical reasons–that is, the problem of Gewurz being in Australia when Atkinson was writing Kybalion in 1907–Gewurz’ candidacy as potential contributor to The Kybalion can be confidently ruled out.

To carry on our investigation, Paul Foster Case’s wife Harriet Case (born in 1885)–not to be confused with his later wife Harriet Bullock Case, whom he married in 1943, long after the release of The Kybalion–has been suggested as a fourth possible contributor to The Kybalion, by some B.O.T.A members. However, there is no apparent imprint of Ms. Case’s thought on the text and, from the little we know of it, no evidence of lexical or syntactic features of her writing (Deslippe, 2011). Moreover, we know that Ms. Case was born in 1885 from no less a source than the 1920 U.S. census itself. Therefore, she was only 22 years old in 1907, when the 45 year-old Atkinson was working on The Kybalion and not a major occultist who would have come into the orbit of Atkinson except, perhaps, via her association with Case.

To be charitable to those who endorse this theory, it is conceivable that Paul Foster Case and Harriet Case might have spent time discussing the foundational ideas of The Kybalion with Atkinson together or perhaps helping with editing, but if Harriet Case exerted any influence on the text, it would have likely been comparatively minor. Furthermore, there is no evidence of any correspondence between Atkinson and Harriet in the period, nor is there any evidence of Harriet Case doing any esoteric writing in 1907 when Atkinson was working on the text. In short, this author has not found any concrete evidence that Ms. Case’s alleged influence on The Kybalion was anything but a highly unlikely conjecture.

Claude Bragdon indicating motifs of sacred geometry.

Claude Bragdon (1866 – 1946) has also been proposed as a fifth possible contributor to The Kybalion. Bragdon was a fascinating individual who applied his mystical understandings of the world, informed largely by Theosophy, to the work of practical architecture. Nor was he an architect of simply local renown; Bragdon enjoyed a national reputation as an architect working in the progressive tradition associated with Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright (Taylor, 2018). 

In addition to being a visionary architect, Bragdon was also an artist, writer, philosopher, and stage designer who worked within the then-innovative tradition of New Stagecraft, a minimalistic approach to stripped-down stage design that aimed to “let plays speak for themselves” (Taylor, 2018). Bragdon’s studies of Theosophy influenced both his set designs and his architecture. Indeed, in both artistic domains, Bragdon aimed to embody a Theosophical notion of Beauty in forms that would advance the spiritual consciousness of their beholders. In 1907-1909, Bragdon was also publishing pamphlets that aimed to spread Theosophy to a broader audience (Bragdon, 1910). Summarizing the above, the great architect-occultist’s autobiography More Lives Than One divides his early existence into four “lives,” all building on each other and often overlapping, that is, architectural life, literary life, theatrical life, and occult life.

Could Bragdon’s “occult life” have included contributing to The Kybalion? Although Bragdon apparently met Paul Foster Case in 1900, it is not clear that he had any extensive communications with William Walker Atkinson, if indeed he had any at all. Moreover, the idea that Bradon was one of the ”Three Initiates” runs into a significant problems of both chronology and geography. While Atkinson was working on The Kybalion in Chicago in 1907, Bragdon was busy in Rochester, New York working on a new building for the First Universalist Church (Ellis, 1994).

As an intriguing side note, Bragdon’s design for the Church in question was a remarkable fusion of Eastern and Western spiritual ideas; he combined Christian notions with Hindu temple design elements (e.g. the Temple as symbolic embodiment of Purusha, or Cosmic Body) and an understanding of Gothic mysticism as interpreted through the work of Rosicrucian Hargrave Jennings. To this point, Bragdon’s 1902 work The Bodily Temple includes a diagram showing the “Symbolism of a Gothic Cathedral” from Hargrave Jennings’ The Rosicrucians (1870):

This diagram is interesting as it factors the balance of “Masculine and Feminine Polarity” into the structure of the Christian cathedral in a way that presages The Kybalion’s “Principle of Gender” and “Principle of Polarity.” However, the mere interest in gender and polarity in Bragdon’s work is not sufficient to suggest that he contributed these ideas to Atkinson’s Kybalion; such ideas were of widespread interest in Theosophical and New Thought circles at the time and recurred in the writings of many of Bragdon’s contemporaries (Deslippe, 2011). Bragdon’s First Universalist Church also notably features a rose window that beams light directly into the center of the cross-structure of the Church; a clear reference to the Rosicrucian emblem of the Rose-Cross, likely also influenced by Jennings’ thoughts on the subject (Ellis, 1994).

The Rose Cross.

In any case, and returning to the focus of the present inquiry, Bragdon was thoroughly occupied with the design and construction of First Universalist Church in 1907 when Atkinson was in another city writing The Kybalion. Moreover, Bragdon’s literary output at the time, like his architectural work, was also focused on the Gothic Cathedral, for in 1907, he was working on his article “The Gothic Spirit” which would go on to be published in Christian Art magazine Volume 2, Number 4 in January of 1908. Furthermore, since there is no evidence of any significant contact between Atkinson and Atkinson in 1907, he can be safely ruled out as a contributor to The Kybalion. The nail in the coffin of the Bragdon theory is that the software-based comparative analysis did not reveal any textural similarities between The Kybalion and any of Bragdon’s works, suggesting that the text does not bear his authorial imprint.

Manly P. Hall in his study towards the end of his life.

Sixth, perhaps the most amusing candidate to be proposed as a contributor to The Kybalion is the famous occult author Manly P. Hall (1901-1990). Unfortunately for this theory, however, when the 45 year-old Atkinson was writing The Kybalion in Chicago in 1907, Hall was not only living in another country, namely Canada, but was also only 8 years old (Sahagun, 2008). Despite Hall’s precociousness, it is hard to fathom how he might have contributed to The Kybalion under such considerable geographic–and dare we say pediatric–constraints.

A seventh candidate, Marie Corelli (1 May 1855 – 21 April 1924), a prolific author of many metaphysical novels was suggested as a possible member of the “Three Initiates” by Art Kunkin (1997). Correlli’s father apparently had some influence in Rosicrucian circles; however, this author has not been able to find any concrete evidence to support Corelli as having had a part in the authorship of The Kybalion and the software-mediated comparative analysis found no textual similarities between any of her works and The Kybalion. Indeed in 1907, when Atkinson was working on The Kybalion, Corelli was hard at work across the ocean from Atkinson in Stratford-Upon-Avon, UK on finishing Delicia & Other Stories, which she would go on to publish that same year. Moreover, there is no evidence of any correspondence between her and Atkinson, so this theorized “Initiate” also appears to have had nothing to do with The Kybalion.

Marie Corelli and Signature, taken in 1906, a year before Atkinson wrote The Kybalion.

Eighth, in addition to the above candidates, Ann Davies, who succeeded Paul Foster Case as head of the B.O.T.A., has been mentioned as a possible member of the “Three Initiates.” Unfortunately, however, she was only born in 1912 – four years after The Kybalion‘ was published. Therefore, unless the unborn Davies telepathically collaborated with Atkinson from the Astral Plane before she was even born, the Ann Davies authorship hypothesis can be safely rejected as historically impossible.

A ninth candidate for a member of the “Three Initiates,” again from the Alpha et Omega Golden Dawn tradition like Michael Whitty (see Section G), is Dion Fortune (6 December 1890 – 6 January 1946). Fortune was a formidable occult figure in the 20th century; besides having gone through the Golden Dawn initiations, she was also a co-founder of the Fraternity of the Inner Light, notable occult author, and novelist. Unfortunately for those who hope to see her as a Kybalion contributor, she was only 17 years old and in the UK when Atkinson was working on The Kybalion in Chicago, USA in 1907.

Furthermore, there is no evidence that the much older Atkinson corresponded with the adolescent Fortune around the time of the writing of the book. Indeed, as noted above, Dion Fortune’s biographer Alan Richardson (2007) notes that Fortune’s family arrived in London in 1906 and were still there the following year. The teenage Fortune had no opportunity to meet the older Atkinson, who was in the USA while she was in the UK. The final coup de grâce to the theory that Fortune contributed to The Kybalion was that the teenage Dion Fortune was not yet interested in Hermetics in 1907, but rather Christian Science. In fact, the only piece of her writing that dates to around this time appeared only in 1908 and was a poem called “Angels” that appeared in Christian Science Journal, Volume 26, April 1908 (Richardson, 2007). For all of these reasons, she, too, can be ruled out as having been one of the “Three Initiates.”

E. The Man Who Knows: A Stage Magician “Initiate”?

Poster for a Magic Show by Claude “Alexander” Conlin.

Our tenth candidate Claude “AlexanderConlin (1880 – August 5, 1954) has the distinction of being the only stage magician among the theorized Kybalion “Initiates.” Besides an illusionist, Alexander was also well-known for being a mentalist, proponent of crystal gazing, and, like Atkinson, a New Thought author.

Who was this elusive worker of stage and mentalist magic? Conlin was born in 1880 to Irish parents in a small town called Alexandria (Forzoni, 2016). From his teenage years, Alexander found himself drawn to magic books, like Hoffman’s Modern Magic (1876) in his local library. Always something of a rebel against the standards of society, Conlin was expelled from high school at the age of 17, fled his home to travel to the East against his parents’ wishes and “found work at the most famous spiritualist resort of Lily Dale, near Cassadaga, New York” (Forzoni, 2016). While there, Conlin soon learned the secrets of the “medium’s'” tricks, from slate-writing to billet-switching, spirit collars, rope ties, and other tricks to “take advantage of the gullible,” in Alexander’s words. 

During this time, Conlin also developed a special interest in the psychology of stage magic and mediumship, that is, how to produce surprising effects by working with the minds and mental illusions of the audience (Charvet, 2007). After a failed attempt to cash in on the Alaskan Gold Rush, in which he allegedly shot gangster Jefferson Randolph ‘Soapy’ Smith, Alexander went on to work as a faro dealer, an assayer of gold, a cashier and a psychic who told prospectors he could help them find gold with his “psychic powers” (Forzoni, 2016).

After a first stage magic performance in 1898 at the tender age of 18, Conlin went on to take up the stage name of “Alexander the Great,” either naming himself after the Macedonian conqueror, his friend Alexander Pericles Pantages, or his home town of Alexandria, according to different accounts (Forzoni, 2016). Alexander began his stage performances in earnest in 1902 in Seattle, performing in Orientalist garb wearing a turban in vaudeville. Forzoni (2016) notes that Conlin’s act was “one of the most successful and profitable acts of its time” and describes Alexander as “a performer who once rigged a stage with underground wires to receive electronic signals in the 1920s, used concealed earpieces under his turban, and hid listening devices in the toilets of theatres to gain vital information to be used later in his shows.”

Beyond his work on the stage, Conlin became notorious for the life of crime and scandal in which he embroiled himself. In addition to an alleged gangster-shooter, as we noted above, the “great Alexander” was also a serial adulterer, having had–according to his eldest son–a total of fourteen marriages, with as many as 3 happening consecutively, unbeknownst to the women involved. Alexander was also a suspected murderer, an alleged money launderer, a grand larcenist, a drug smuggler, and, as a consequence of all of the above, the bearer of a significant FBI dossier (Forzoni, 2016; Charvet, 2007).

Poster for a Magic Show by Claude “Alexander” Conlin.

Could this ambivalent figure on the fringes of society have contributed to The Kybalion? Proponents of this theory have pointed out that Alexander was invested in New Thought, and indeed, in striking violation of the hallowed dictum that “a magician never reveals his tricks,” wrote a massive tome, The Life and Mysteries of the Celebrated Dr. Q (1921), exposing the mechanics behind most of the leading mentalist tricks of his day (Charvet, 2007). As “Dr Q” illustrates, Conlin, like Atkinson, sometimes employed pseudonyms to publish works anonymously; he variously operated under the names of Alexander, C. Alexander, Dr. Q., the Crystal Seer, and the Man Who Knows (Forzoni, 2016).

Unfortunately, however, and similarly to other theories we have considered so far, the Alexander theory runs into logistical problems. While Atkinson was working on The Kybalion in Chicago in 1907, Alexander was in San Francisco with his third wife, the 17 year-old Della Martell (Forzoni, 2016). During this key year, Conlin’s time was absorbed in the enterprise of posing as a psychic to the many San Franciscans who were grieving the loss of loved ones who died in the catastrophic 1906 San Francisco earthquake.

As Odell and Weidenmier (2004) point out in their fascinating article “Real Shock, Monetary Aftershock: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and the Panic of 1907,” the 1906 earthquake substantively impacted the people and economy of the city. Economically, the San Francisco earthquake and fire of April 1906 caused massive damages estimated to be between $350- $500 million, or 1.3 to 1.8 percent of U. S. GNP in 1906, and spurred the United States to create the Federal Reserve system to bring elasticity and stability to the American dollar (Odell & Weidenmier, 2004). The city was also physically devastated by the 8.3 Richter-scale earthquake because most of the buildings in San Francisco at the time were made of wood and the violent tremors ignited fires that devastated countless homes and places of business (Odell & Weidenmier, 2004). In the wake of these conflagrations, 1,500 people lost their lives, leaving many grieving loved ones behind (Commercial and Financial Chronicle, October 19, 1907). When these bereaved individuals yearned to communicate with their dearly departed loved ones, Alexander was happy to swoop in to “help them do so” — for a fee (Forzoni, 2016). 

San Francisco in 1906 in the wake of the earthquake and fire of April, 1906.

In any case, given that there is no evidence that Alexander corresponded with Aktinson in 1907, given the fact that he was busy with other work and personal scandals in a different city across the country from Atkinson, and given that the software-enabled analysis found no evidence of any textual similarities between Alexander’s writing and The Kybalion, the theory of his having contributed to the text can be safely dismissed (Deslippe, 2011; Forzoni, 2016).

Mabel Collins (1851-1927).

F. A Novelist Among the Three?: The Case Against the Mabel Collins Authorship Theory

Eleventh, the novelist Mabel Collins (September 9, 1851 – March 31, 1927) has also been put forward a possible contributor to The Kybalion. Like Atkinson, Collins was active in Theosophical circles, and she was the author of at least 46 books, including Light on the Path (1885), which was popular among Theosophists. Collins certainly had occult interests; indeed, she famously helped Helena Petrova Blavatsky edit the Theosophical journal Lucifer in London and wrote a book entitled The Blossom and the Fruit: A True Story of a Black Magician (1889). Notable books by Collins also include The Blossom and the Fruit (1888), The Idyll of the White Lotus (1890), Morial the Mahatma (1892), Suggestion (1892), The Star Sapphire (1896) and The Story of Sensa (1913). 

During the First World War, Collins wrote a book entitled The Crucible (1915), which helped promote supernatural occurrences on the Western Front; in this fascinating work, she quoted one young officer as saying: “I had the most amazing hallucinations of marching at night, so I was fast asleep, I think. Everyone was reeling about the road and seeing things…. I saw all sorts of things, enormous men walking towards me and lights and chairs and things in the road” (Collins, 1914).

Collins also reported some interesting occult experiences and dramatic clashes with famous 19th-century occult figures like H.P. Blavatsky (1831-1891). For example, Collins told Theosophist A.P. Mabel that she experienced “Egyptian priests crossing her room as she was working” on the Banner of Light (Farnell, 2003). Blavatsky believed that one of her “Hidden Masters”–the hilariously named Master Hilarion–had appeared to Mabel Collins in 1884 and had dictated to her the conclusion of The Idyll of the White Lotus and the whole of Light on the Path.

Collins herself appeared intrigued by this idea at first, as evidenced by a letter she wrote in 1885, in which she expressed belief in Blavatsky’s theory (Farnell, 2003). Collins also worked hard to gain entry into the Esoteric Section of the Theosophical Society, but was only a member for 4 days before Blavatsky expelled her for “treachery and disloyalty.” Her crime? Flirting with reporter Michael Angelo Lane (Farnell, 2003).

After a series of progressively escalating conflicts with Blavatsky, Collins took Blavatsky to court on charges of libel. The two had a dramatic falling-out, which was amplified by Elliot Coues’ defense of Collins and opposition to Blavatsky; the latter battle culminated in a full-page expose of Blavatsky in the New York Sun on July 20th 1890 (Farnell, 2003).

Could Mabell Collins have contributed to The Kybalion? There is no evidence to suggest that she did. Her works bear no syntactic, lexical, or other linguistic connections with The Kybalion. Moreover, as in many of the cases we have considered, the historical circumstances do not align for Atkinson and Collins. For one thing, Collins was not even in the United States, let alone Chicago, either in 1907 when Atkinson was working on The Kybalion or in 1908 when the book was released (Deslippe, 2011; Farnell, 2003). We know this, because during this time, she was in Holloway, London, waging a fervent campaign against vivisection, which is attested by a number of anti-vivisection pamphlets she wrote during this time. This point is also buttressed by letters she wrote in the period to suffragette and activist Charlotte Despard in the same pivotal years (Farnell, 2003). Collins’ collaboration with the suffragette is clearly documented in Collins’ book Despard (1908), which was co-authored with Despard herself, and which the two wrote and published in the period from 1907 to 1908 (Farnell, 2003). Therefore, since there is no textual evidence that Collins contributed to The Kybalion, since she was in a different country at the time, and since she was thoroughly engaged in both extensive activism work and writing Despard, she can be safely ruled out as a possible member of the “Three Initiates.”

Michael Whitty’s (1862-1920) photograph and signature.

G. Another Alpha et Omega (AO) Adept?: Analyzing the Whittyan Authorship Theory

The twelfth and final candidate we will consider in the present study is Michael James Whitty (bef. 1862 – died December 27, 1920 in Los Angeles, California), an Adept from Moina and Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers’ Order of Alpha et Omega. As his Memoriam in an issue of Azoth magazine from 1920 notes, Whitty was the founder and editor of the Azoth magazine; its other main editor was his friend Paul Foster Case, whom we have already discussed. In an interesting commonality with Mabel Collins, H. Kemlett Chambers (1920) notes that Whitty also “addressed legislatures and medical societies in support of movements to mitigate the horrors of unnecessary vivisection by regulating its practice.” Chambers (1920) adds that Whitty also strove “to put an end to deliberate and harmful medical experimentation upon the poorer class of hospital patients; even the interests opposed to those reforms listened with reluctant respect to his arguments.” Whitty, like Bragdon, was a passionate Theosophist; indeed, he was, for a time, elected the President of the New York branch of the Theosphical Society. For Chambers’ heartfelt remarks on Whitty after the passing of his friend, see Azoth Vol. 8 (No. 2)., February, 1921.

The theory that Michael Whitty helped author The Kybalion was intriguing to this author because esteemed occult author and G.H. Frater, Pat Zalewski (1996) stated, in correspondence archived by Levity, that he suspected that Whitty may have been one of the “Three Initiates.” Dan Denlinger (1997) points out that Zalewski’s sources for this claim were Dr. Paul Clark, author of Paul Foster Case: His Life and Works (2013) as well as “a few other BOTA members in New Zealand.” Dr. Clark was trained by BOTA Adept Ann Davies, whom we mentioned above, and who was herself Paul Foster Case’s protégé (Clark, 2013). We have already analyzed the theories surrounding Case and Davies, but what of Whitty?

Those who endorse the theory that Whitty was one of “The Three Initiates” gesture towards a number of interesting points. First, Wood (1997) indicates that Whitty and Case knew each other intimately because both served in the same Chicago Temple of an off-shoot of the post-schism Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Alpha et Omega. 

To quote Wood (1997), “Michael Whitty remained a faithful A.O. member until death, and he was Praemonstrator of Thoth-Hermes Temple No. 9 or Temple No. 8 according to an S.L. MacGregor Mathers minute book from Ahathoor Temple until his death in Los Angeles. Paul Case succeeded Whitty as Praemonstrator of that Temple, but resigned from the office after a few months, and within a year, Case was expelled from the A.O. by Moina Mathers for “trying to cause dissension within the Order.” As a side note of historical interest to this point, this author has read the original letter that Chief Moina Mathers wrote to expel Paul Foster Case from the Alpha et Omega Order, in which she states that Case was being expelled also not only for causing dissension, but also for his disparaging remarks against MacGregor Mathers, his attacks on the Enochian system, and his claim that the RR et AC was not a real Rosicrucian Order.

Second, Clark (2013) states that Case’s widow Harriet Bullock Case told him that Michael Whitty worked with Case and Atkinson on The Kybalion. Unfortunately, however, the Whitty co-authorship hypothesis faces some notable challenges. First, as occult scholar Robert Word (1997) has noted, in 1907, when Atkinson was working on The Kybalion in 1907, (1) Whitty was in Australia, not in America, and, more devastatingly for this theory, (2) Whitty and Atkinson had not yet met. This latter fact was confirmed by occult author and editor Tony DeLuce (2024). Moreover, to be fair to the BOTA perspective, Clark (2013) himself states that he was told by several reliable sources in BOTA that Whitty had not yet met Case in 1907, but only in 1918. 

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is azoth.png

Cover of the February, 1921 edition of Azoth: The Occult Magazine of America (Vol 8., No. 2), featuring an In Memoriam tribute to Michael James Whitty by H. Kellett Chambers.

Indeed, we know that Whitty only moved from Australia to New York after 1908; that is, The Kybalion had already been published when Whitty came to the United States (Denlinger,1997). Moreover, the software-mediated analysis comparing Whitty’s writings with The Kybalion found no stylistic, lexical, or syntactic similarities between The Kybalion and any of Whitty’s writings. Furthermore, there is no evidence of correspondence between Whitty and Atkinson dating to the period when we know Atkinson was working on The Kybalion, since they had not yet met Therefore, it would appear that the Whitty theory can be safely dismissed as historically impossible (given the timeline of when Case met Whitty in 1918), geographically implausible (given the distance between Chicago and Australia), and textually unsupported (given the results of the digital comparative linguistic analysis).

Seal of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor, showing the Sun, Moon, the Four Kerubim, Hexagram, an Ouroboros, and a Serpent in the Letter S.The serpent in the shape of the letter ”S” here is likely derived from the influence of Hargrave Jennings’s book The Rosicrucians: Their Rites and Mysteries in which the author notes that ”the three most celebrated emblems carried in the Greek Mysteries were the Phallus ”I,” the Egg ”O,” and the Serpent ”S,” or otherwise the Phallus, the Umbilicus, and the Serpent.”As Samuel Robinson (2019) notes, Jennings’ book was published in 1870, the same year that Paschal Beverly Randolph founded the Brotherhood of Eulis.Immediately afterwards, the first Grade of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor was named the ”Grade of Eulis.”Jennings and Randolph both influenced the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor’s teachings and symbols. Indeed, Jennings was the teacher of prominent Brotherhood of Luxor member Peter Davidson.Some of these figures will return in Section H of the present analysis given below.

H. Atkinson and The Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor?: Teike Van Baden’s (2022) Analysis of The Kybalion’s Origins in Florence Huntley’s Harmonics of Evolution (1897)

Before we close the present study, there is one final piece of the puzzle of Kybalion authorship that remains to be explored. 11 years after the publication of Professor Deslippe’s study, that is, in 2022, Pansophers contributor Teike Van Baden published a fascinating article entitled “The Kybalion and its Hermetic Brotherhood Origins.” In this article, Van Baden answers an interesting question that has long lingered in the minds of Kybalion researchers: given that there is no evidence that an ancient book called ”The Kybalion’‘ existed, from which sources did Atkinson derive his “Hermetic laws”?

As part of an answer to this question, Van Baden (2022) shared a bombshell revelation that he uncovered when studying the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor’s original documents and the records of Pansophers oral traditions shared within the HBoL, namely, that William Walker Atkinson had in fact been a member of the Chicago section of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor. Even more striking, Van Baden (2022) explained that it was from the Hermetic Brotherhood’s Chicago study circle that Atkinson derived the material that would later form the substantial basis of The Kybalion.

In his analysis, Van Baden (2022) points out that The Kybalion’s ‘‘Hermetic Laws” are largely based on the Laws Florence Huntley provided in her book The Harmonics of Evolution. This text was published in 1897, 11 years before The Kybalion. Huntley was married to her Initiator, John Emmet Richardson; both she and Richardson were members of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor. Van Baden (2022) provides evidence through textual comparison with Huntley’s text that The Kybalion’s Principles of Mentalism, Vibration, Polarity, and Gender all have analogues in Huntley’s Harmonics of Evolution. He adds that The Kybalion’s Principle of Correspondence was expressed in the 1896 book Celestial Dynamics by Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor Secretary Thomas Burgoyne, a book which predated The Kybalion’s publication by 12 years. Of course, Burgoyne’s Celestial Dynamics was itself interpreting the famous maxim from the Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus which says that “quod est superius est sicut quod est inferius, et quod est inferius est sicut quod est superius, ad perpetranda miracula rei unius” (“What is above is like what is below, and what is below is like what is above, to enact the wonders of the One Thing”).

The cover of Thomas Burgoyne’s book The Light of Egypt (1889). Note the similarity of the cover logo to the Seal of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor as shown above.

To synthesize the work of the different researchers we’ve examined so far, Van Baden’s (2022) findings can be illuminatingly integrated with the findings of Mary K. Greer (2009). As we noted above, Greer found that The Kybalion’s 7 Laws were also derived from “an introduction to a translation of Hermetic writings by Anna Kingsford and Edward Maitland called The Virgin of the World of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus (1885).” Indeed, we recall that Greer (2009) discovered that ”in the short introductory essay to The Virgin of the World (1885), called “The Hermetic System and the Significance of its Present Revival,” we find nearly the same seven (unnumbered) laws, doctrines or principles that are found in The Kybalion.” To this point, Richard Smoley (2011) notes the following similarities between The Kybalion and Maitland’s Introduction to The Virgin of the World of Hermes (1885):

“Maitland asserts that consciousness is “the indispensable condition of existence,” and that matter “is a mode of consciousness,” which certainly resonates with The Kybalion’s doctrine of Mentalism. Maitland also mentions “the Law of Correspondence between all planes, or spheres, of existence.” He also speaks of “the doctrine of Karma,” which dictates “the impossibility either of getting good by doing evil, or of escaping the penalty of the latter” – an obvious parallel to The Kybalion’s “Law of Cause and Effect.” In light of these resemblances and The Kybalion’s insistence that it contains the essence of Hermetic teaching, it is very likely that Kingsford and Maitland’s work was at least one of The Kybalion’s sources.”

First Edition of Kingsford and Maitland’s Virgin of the World of Hermes (1885).

As it turns out, in Chicago’s Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor circle, all three of these texts — that is, Kingsford and Maitland’s Virgin of the World of Hermes (1885), Burgoyne’s Celestial Dynamics (1896) and Huntley’s Harmonics of Evolution (1897) — were studied and that Atkinson had access to them (Van Baden, 2022; also verified to this author in correspondence with Van Baden (2024). The Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor’s study of the Virgin of the World of Hermes (1885) was additionally confirmed to this author in correspondence with Pansophers researcher and author Samuel Robinson (2024). 

Indeed, Van Baden (2022) revealed that William Walker Atkinson was studying these texts and involved with the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor’s Chicago circle within the time-frame in which he was writing The Kybalion. While Atkinson was active in Chicago in 1907, a chapter of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor called the Hermetic Brotherhood of Atlantis, Luxor, and Elephantae was operating; the Chicago circle was led by Myra and W.P. Phelon until they passed away in 1896 and 1904 respectively (1907). According to the archives of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor, the Chicago group was still operating under their students in 1907; indeed, Albert Sidney Raleigh, also known as Hach Nactzin El Dorado Can, became head of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Atlantis and kept the Chicago circle going until 1913 (Demarest, 2017). Nancy McKay Gordon (1850-1931) also remained active with the Chicago HBoL group around the same time; she published a series of Twelve Centers of Consciousness lessons and distributed them to the Chicago Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor members between 1900 and 1908, the latter being the year when The Kybalion was published (IAPSOP, 2011). 

The Hermetic Brotherhood’s W.P. and Myra Phelon moved through the same Hermetic and Theosophical circles as Atkinson and also shared his interest in New Thought. Like Atkinson, the Phelons were fellow publishers of occult magazines; the couple published a monthly journal called The Hermetist in Chicago. Atkinson was not only an avid reader of The Hermetist and attended Chicago Theosophical Society events, but even used the term “the Hermetist” in The Kybalion itself. In fact, the word appears a total of 42 times throughout The Kybalion. In The Hermetist magazine, the Phelons promoted and advertised the work of New Thought authors Annie Rix Militz and Ursula Gestefeld. Indeed, as yet another example of just how intertwined the Chicago New Thought, HBoL, and Theosophical communities were, like Atkinson, Annie Rix Militz was a fellow New Thought magazine publisher; she published The Master Mind Magazine, which Atkinson read and which quoted him frequently in both articles and advertisements (e.g. see The Master Mind Vol 8. No. 6, published in 1915). 3 years after the publication of this latter issue of The Master Mind, William Walker Atkinson published a book called Master Mind in 1918 under the pseudonym of Theron Q Dumont. The overlaps and cross-references in this period of Chicago occult literary history are truly dizzying enough to make one’s head spin.

As yet another example of this overlap, Like Atkinson, W. P. and Myra Phelon, as well as many other members of the Chicago Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor, were involved in the Chicago branch of the Theosophical Society. Here, Atkinson met some of the authors he published in his magazines such as Elias Gewurz. Both W.P. and Myra Phelon became members of the Theosophical Society on November 11, 1884; they were active in the Chicago Branch, which Atkinson frequented, and of which Dr. Phelon was the Corresponding Secretary (TSGMR 1875-1942). The Phelons helped to form the Ramayana Theosophical Society on July 27, 1887. Among other texts, the Ramayana group studied Atkinson’s works under the pseudonym of Yogi Ramacharaka, such as his book Raja Yoga, which was itself influenced by the work of Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor member Genevieve Stebbins (Nichols, 2013). 

To this point, Kimberly Nichols (2013) showed that Atkinson drew on Stebbins’ teachings on yogic posture and breathing in her Dynamic Breathing and Harmonic Gymnastics (1892) to write Raja Yoga. Stebbins was a close associate of Thomas Burgoyne and co-founded the Hermetic Brotherhood of Light with him and other HBoL members. As we noted, Burgoyne was the author of The Celestial Dynamics (1896), which influenced Atkinson’s formulation of the Law of Correspondence in The Kybalion (Van Baden, 2022). Like Atkinson, Militz, and W.P. Phelon, Burgoyne was an occult magazine editor; he published The Occult Magazine. In the Ramayana Theosophical Society, W.P. Phelon served as President. The group’s meetings took place at 629 Fulton Street, which also served as W.P. Phelon’s doctor office, the editorial office of The Hermetist, and the business address of the Hermetic Publishing Company (Godwin, 1995; TSGMR, 1875-1942).

As if the Theosophical, New Thought, and Hermetic connections to Atkinson and the HBoL were not yet sufficient, Atkinson’s editorial work also brought him into contact with the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor members in Chicago. Indeed, right before Atkinson became the editor of Herbert A. Parkyn’s magazine Suggestion, there were mentions of ”Hermetic Brothers” attending a Full Moon Meeting of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor published in the Suggestion (Deslippe, 2011). Garrett (2012) indicates that the Phelon group had shortened their name to the Hermetic Brotherhood by this time. Moreover, the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor’s Chicago members and the editors and authors of the Suggestion interacted with Parkyn’s Chicago School of Psychology, of which Atkinson was a student (Deslippe, 2011). The connections in this Chicago esoteric web were tightly-wound indeed.

Thus it was that by the early 1900s, all of the currents of esoteric thought that would find their confluence in Atkinson and result in the creation of The Kybalion (1908) were in place. Besides his love for New Thought and Theosophy, Atkinson’s budding interest in unifying New Thought with “the Hermetic philosophy” attracted him to the Chicago chapter of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor, for the group not only claimed to be custodians of this philosophy, but also to have an initiatory descent from ancient Hermetic Masters (Godwin, 1995; Van Baden, 2022. Like The Kybalion‘s own pretended ancient origins, this “ancient lineage” was undoubtedly fictionalized for prestige. However, the absence of an “authentic ancient lineage” was no impediment to Atkinson, because the 19th century materials the Brotherhood studied were sufficient for his literary purpose; these were the Kingsford and Maitland (1885), Burgoyne (1896) and Huntley (1897) texts that would go on to form the substantial core of The Kybalion (Van Baden, 2022).  

Photography and Signature of Paschal Beverly Randolph.

In summary, what appears clear from the research of Van Baden (2022) within the Pansophers‘ archives of Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor documents, as well as from Greer’s (2009) comparative analyses, is that The Kybalion is essentially a New Thought reformulation of the central principles that Atkinson drew from three 19th century texts that were studied by the Chicago HBoL: Kingsford and Maitland’s Virgin of the World of Hermes (1885), Burgoyne’s Celestial Dynamics (1896) and Huntley’s Harmonics of Evolution (1897). As an addendum, this author was informed both by Samuel Robinson and Teike Van Baden in 2024 that, from the way Atkinson writes, the version of Kingsford and Maitland’s ideas that ended up crystallizing into The Kybalion reflects, not the text directly, but the works as-interpreted by the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor. As per Van Baden (2022), who introduced his article as the first in a series, the Pansophers are planning additional forthcoming publications to further elucidate this point. Interested readers can follow the Pansophers’ website for upcoming updates.

To close this section with an amusing point on the Atkinson-Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor connection, although the HBoL were known for their esoteric sexual energy and sex magic teachings influenced by Paschal Beverly Randolph, Atkinson did not appear pleased with how some members interpreted and applied these teachings. Indeed, in Chapter 2 of The Kybalion (1907), Atkinson warns against ”the many base, pernicious and degrading lustful theories, teachings and practices, which are taught under fanciful titles, and which are a prostitution of the great natural Principle of Gender” (Atkinson and Deslippe, 2011). Although The Kybalion came out 7 years after the Victorian Period ended in 1901, its version of “Hermeticism” would have been very much at home in the period’s infamous prudishness.

First Edition of The Kybalion: Hermetic Philosophy by ”Three Initiates” (1908).

I. The Lone Initiate: Concluding Reflections on the Authorship of The Kybalion

In conclusion, despite the generally theoretical and not practically-oriented nature of the text, the limited nature of its actual Hermetic content, and its spurious origins, The Kybalion (1908) remains an important text in the history of 20th century occultism and the New Thought movement. In this article, we have presented a critical-historical analysis of 12 proposed candidates for members of “The Three Initiates.” As a result of this analysis, we conclude that The Kybalion (1908) was likely the sole work of William Walker Atkinson, with the pseudonym of the “The Three Initiates” having been chosen as a reference to the Thrice-Great Hermes Trismegistus, legendary father of the Hermetic Tradition. While it is possible that Paul Foster Case may have helped edit or discuss ideas with Atkinson, this seems unlikely for the reasons we have presented. The research presented in this article suggests that Atkinson wrote The Kybalion as an attempt to provide a New Thought formulation of Hermetic ideas he drew from his three sources, Kingsford and Maitland’s Virgin of the World of Hermes (1885), Burgoyne’s Celestial Dynamics (1896) and Huntley’s Harmonics of Evolution (1897).

As a final note to close out the present study, Atkinson’s preoccupation with crystalizing and clarifying the “Universal Laws” that govern the spiritual and material worlds according to his understanding of the Principle of Correspondence (“As Above, So Below”) would continue throughout his life. Indeed, shortly before Atkinson suffered a significant stroke and passed away in 1932, he completed his definitive statement on what he took to be the universal laws of nature. This work represents the culmination of the ideas he first articulated in The Kybalion. Entitled The Seven Cosmic Laws and written in 1931 this fascinating work of the mature Atkinson is the final manuscript of William Walker Atkinson. For decades, it remained unpublished until Professor Deslippe received clearance from the Atkinson Estate to publish it in his The Kybalion: The Definitive Edition (2011). Readers with an interest in The Kybalion and New Thought history and how its author understood the cosmic principles he strove to articulate in the original 1908 text would be highly recommended to pick up this work. The 2011 text not only features a fantastic scholarly introduction and definitive text of The Kybalion, but also the complete text of The Seven Cosmic Laws.

In closing, while this author’s esoteric studies ultimately carried him far from The Kybalion since his first time flipping through its mysterious pages as an adolescent, he continues to look fondly on the wide-eyed moments he first spent poring over the cryptic statements of Universal Laws that he first found in this 1908 text. He remains grateful to Atkinson’s text for helping to spark the hunger for the Light of the Hidden Knowledge that would go on to carry this fellow Initiate through the rest of his spiritual and authorial life.

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The Secrets of Healing Oil: Analyzing 17 Conjure Healing Oil Formulas and Psalms and Prayers for Use in Healing

By Frater S.C.F.V.

A. Introduction: Roots of Healing Traditions in Hoodoo, Conjure and Rootwork

The roots of folk expertise in the art of healing through herbs and curios reach back to the earliest emergence of the Hoodoo, Conjure, and Rootwork traditions. As Dr. William Bailey (2012) notes, these traditions were the products of the ingenuity and resilience of American slaves throughout the southeastern United States, especially Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, North and South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, and Arkansas.

On the plantations, African slaves could rarely count on their masters to ensure their health and well-being and had to take their healing into their own hands. As a result, Smith (2019) notes that “men and women known as root doctors or root workers, who had working knowledge of roots and herbs and their various medicinal applications, were the slave community’s chief means of medical care. Slaves were in a unique position to learn about local flora, as they worked closely with it at all times.  The more specialized knowledge of the root doctor, however, usually required not only keen observation of the natural world but also training by an experienced mentor. This mentor was generally an elderly slave, although sometimes he or she might be a Native American who had married into the family or who was part of an Indigenous community that sheltered fugitive slaves.”

Bailey (2019) goes on to cite a former North Carolina slave named John Jackson, who told an interviewer: “You know, they lays a heap o’ stress on edication these days. But edication is one thing, an’ fireside trainin’ is another. We had fireside trainin'” (Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives).

Indeed, historian Sharla M. Fett (2002) notes that, for the first American root doctors, “physical suffering and spiritual outlook were linked in a delicate web of connections, and it was the root doctor’s job not only to provide the proper herbal remedy but to ascertain the source of imbalance.” Thus, from the earliest time, the root doctor’s craft involved proceeding from divinatory or observational “readings” to doing active Rootwork to remedy the illness or issue at hand. Moreover, as Yvonne Chireau (1997) states, on the plantation, root doctoring was not just “a quaint and marginal folk practice”—it was an essential aspect of the community bond (p. 239).”

Smith (2019) adds that “the ministrations of root doctors were often hidden from masters’ eyes—but not always. Sometimes, in fact, whites used their services for their slaves, or even for themselves. In 1729 an elderly slave named Papan was freed by the Virginia government in exchange for a recipe of “Roots and Barks,” which alleviated the effects of various venereal diseases. In 1749 the South Carolina Assembly freed a slave named Caesar in return for his poison and snakebite remedy; another root doctor, Sampson, was manumitted by the same body six years later in return for his rattlesnake bite remedy of “heart snakeroot, polypody, avens root, and rum.”

After the emancipation of American slaves, root doctors continued to operate in a context shaped by continued discrimination, oppression, and disempowerment of the freed slaves. As Smith (2019) indicates about this difficult period, “after emancipation, African Americans continued to utilize the services of root doctors and conjurers. Many lacked access to formally trained medical practitioners or could not afford the expensive costs of their services. Moreover, widespread racial hostility ensured that white doctors often provided inferior treatment to African American patients. Terrifying stories of physical abuse, experimentation, and mutilation circulated widely among African Americans, leading to a general mistrust of the white medical profession. In contrast, the services of root doctors and conjurers were relatively low cost, accessible, and trustworthy.” Moreover, their shared cultural heritage, common experiential background in facing struggles and oppression from white America, and the ability to trust fellow black root doctors to act in their best interests led many emancipated slaves to continue to rely on the expertise of root doctors.

Indeed, to this day, many rootworkers continue to do healing work for people who are struggling with physical and psychological ailments of all kinds. In this article, we will do a deep dive into the confluence of magical herbalism, Psalms, and prayers with curative aims and analyze 17 different formulas for Healing Oil from Hoodoo, Conjure, and Rootwork. Thereafter, I will share my own formula, which I have successfully used in my own healing work in the hopes of making this knowledge more accessible and helping to spread healing work more broadly to those who cannot afford to purchase such Oils.

Rosemary Oil.

B. Curative Herbal Synergies: An Analysis of 17 Hoodoo Healing Oil Formulas

In order to obtain a visceral sense of what makes an effective Healing Oil, we must start by exploring the wide assortment of herbs and curios that rootworkers have opted to include in their formulas for healing of various kinds. The Healing Oils we will consider here vary in their focus; some focus on physical ailments, others, on emotional and mental health issues, and still others focused on the impacts of crossed conditions on health. By analyzing the occult virtues of different herbs and roots as traditionally used, we will attempt to unpack the structure and functions of the Oils made by drawing them together.

First, among the most well-known and commonly used Healing Oils on the market is cat yronwode’s Healing Oil in the Lucky Mojo shop. Unfortunately, however, Miss cat’s website does not indicate which herbs the formula includes. However, as one possible clue, the Lucky Mojo catalogue does mention that the herb Woodruff or Master of the Woods is used “for mastery, strength, and control over adversaries, also used to prepare a healing oil.” The rationale here is likely that the Woodruff provides “mastery” over the causes of the illness in order to essentially “command health.” Master Root can similarly be used for the same purpose.

Woodruff.

In addition, more candidates for herbs useful in a Hoodoo Healing Oil can be gleaned from yronwode’s (2002) Hoodoo Herb and Root Magic: A Materia Magica of African American Conjure. For instance, she states that Althaea, which literally means “Healer” is used “for medical and spiritual healing, to soothe, comfort, and bring in spiritual assistance” (p. 28). Interestingly, Miss cat named her daughter Althaea and it would be hard to imagine that she didn’t include this Herb in her Healing Oil given its use in a versatile range of healing work types from physical to emotional and even spiritual healing.

Althaea.

Angelica is another likely candidate herb for inclusion in a Healing Oil, given that yronwode (2002) describes it as “a powerful guardian and healer, said to enhance female power, protect children, ward off evil, and improve health and family matters.” Similarly, Golden Seal is used in Mojos because it is a “powerful guardian and healer” (p. 104). Myrrh could also be a helpful ally in aHealing Oil due to its rich scent and tendency to “be peaceful, healing, relaxing, and protective” (p. 138). Queen’s Root can be used to promote harmony and peace and is sometimes used in Peace Water; if illness is interpreted as “disrupting the peace of the body,” as in the classical Doctrine of Humors from Ancient and Renaissance medicine, then it could in theory be used in a Healing Oil also (p. 160).

Standing out from many other herbs, Self-Heal is the healing herb par excellence; it is used in a wide variety of healing works, often alongside Angelica and Sandalwood (p. 180). I recently had the occasion to ritually gather a fairly sizable harvest of Self-Heal, to dry it, and grind it myself and it will play a key role in my own Healing Oil formula, as we shall see.

Self-Heal.

From the perspective of healing illnesses caused by curses, crossed conditions, or jinxes, yronwode (2002) notes that Bitter Weed can be used specifically in a Healing Oil blend that is designed to address “a jinx that takes the form of an unnatural illness” and the plant is also astringent, diuretic, and tonic (p. 48). Similarly, Boneset “opposes unnatural illness” and is often used in combination with Angelica and Devil’s Shoe Lace, although mainly in a Mojo Bag context, to ward off “jinxing illnesses” (p. 57). Burdock and Calamus are also sometimes used in the context of clearing curses that express as illness (p. 63). As a tea, Boneset can additionally be used for coughs and colds as an herbal medicine.

Boneset Herb.

In addition, Miss Cat (2002) writes that Buckeye “is said to prevent rheumatism, arthritis, and headache and to aid male vigor” and that Chestnut and Horse Chestnut are used in a like manner (p. 60).

To cite a few related examples, Willow bark is sometimes made into a tea that is drunk and rubbed into the head to treat headaches. Fig root and leaves are also regarded as “curative” in the context of “magical poisoning,” and used in spiritual baths for this purpose, with the bath water thrown towards the sunrise (p. 95).  Some rootworkers equivalently use Garlic to ward off illness caused by Malefica or evil magic thrown against the target (e.g. using Four Thieves Vinegar, in which it is an ingredient).

Antique French bottle of Four Thieves Vinegar.

Similarly, because of its ability to protect and clear up health matters, Rue can also be used in magical healing; it is sometimes burned on charcoal with Verbena, Mistletoe, and Benzoin to take off jinxes affecting health (p. 170). In contrast, for an outside perspective, though, one of my Espiritista friends cautions against using Rue to wash the body as he says it is “harsh to the Spirit Body, like paint thinner.” I leave the decision on this subject up to the individual practitioner, but simply share this to provide a balanced cross-traditional perspective.

Dried Rue.

Another herb that can be used for both healing and repelling evil would be Asafoetida or Devil’s Dung, which is praised for its healing properties worldwide; for instance, people in India both use it as a supplement and cook with it, lauding its properties to stimulate the brain and lower blood pressure. In the Medieval period in Europe, some folks wore Asafoetida gum on a string around their neck to “ward off disease” and in Hoodoo it is also used to repel evil. Moreover, it’s worth noting that Asafoetida contains Sulphur compounds and Sulphur is used both to ward and to do baneful work in Hoodoo.

Personally, smelling Asafoetida makes me nauseous–there’s a reason it’s called “Devil’s Dung”!–so it is not the healing herb for me and I wouldn’t bring it within 10 feet of a Healing Oil.  However, folks who love it might want to consider including it in their personal work.

Asafoetida powder.

In addition, from a preventive health standpoint, Coriander could be a candidate for Healing Oil in the context of its use to “prevent illness;” it can be carried in a Mojo hand with Flax seeds, Angelica, Devil’s Shoe String, and Golden Seal root for this purpose. Dill is similarly used, “to ward off disease,” especially alongside Flax seeds and Angelica (p. 85). Furthermore, as a boost to health, Grains of Paradise are sometimes brewed into a tea, which is drunk in the morning, although they can also be used in uncrossing work for illness brought on by baneful magic (p. 107).

Another preventive healing herb is Life Everlasting, which is used to promote longevity (p. 125). Plantain is said to protect against fever, or be used to cure a fever (p. 156). Sampson Snake Root is used to grant fortitude and strength, which could extend to health as well (p. 175). Squaw Vine was traditionally used in Indigenous medicine to address “medical conditions relating to the health of women’s reproductive systems, particularly during pregnancy and at childbirth” and entered Hoodoo as a magical aid to protect the health of unborn children (p. 192). A final preventive herb of note is Ten Bark, which is used to ward off diseases and unnatural illness (p. 198).

As a second example, Art of the Root (2021) offers a Healing Oil that focuses on healing emotional pain, grieving, and other forms of psychological suffering; their formula for “Healing Oil includes lavender, thyme, allspice, eucalyptus, and other healing-related herbs and oils.” To help enrich my understanding of their approach, I cross-referenced their other healing products in search of more insights into their rationale. For instance, they offer a Healing Candle fixed with “lavender, thyme, violet, chamomile, and an array of others” alongside, interestingly, powdered Charoite and Quartz as these “clarity” minerals are sometimes used in healing work with the rationale that they ‘clarify the body by cleansing out sickness.’ Their Healing Bath Wash includes “allspice, lavender, eucalyptus, and thyme essential oils.” The same herbal ingredients are included in their Healing Soap and Healing Bath Salts.

As we analyze the Art of the Root (2002) formula, we find, first, that it includes Lavender, which can be used in many ways in Rootwork. Lavender, in Hoodoo, is often combined with Rose and Red Clover in to promote love, but Lavender in a bath can be used to bring luck or even power. The idea here might be to include it to promote emotional healing as it can help with healing the wounds left from relationships that did not turn out as we had hoped. Similarly, Violet is used in Hoodoo to heal heart-break, much like Lavender, and is also included in this Oil.

Lavender.

Thyme is often used to promote good health, so its role in this Oil is clear. In addition, it can also be used to heal insomnia. Since this formula aims to help ease emotional pain, which can disrupt sleep, perhaps this somnolent aspect of the herb is another reason it was included.

In Rootwork, Allspice is usually used to “spice up” money, luck, fortune, and business; however, yronwode (2002) points out that Allspice can also help relieve mental tension and ease the mind. It was likely included in this formula based on this latter tradition.

Continuing on with our analysis, Chamomile is mainly used to treat insomnia, calm stomachs, and promote relaxation and stress-relief, and is likely used in this way here. However, it’s worth noting that Chamomile in Hoodoo can also be used for uncrossing, so it is helpful as a gentler herb to help eliminate crossed-conditions intended to cause ill-health.

Chamomile.

Lastly, Eucalyptus is helpful for driving off evil, uncrossing Malefica, and calming the mind with its pacifying scent. Therefore, the Art of the Root‘s Healing Oil formula appears to mainly address emotional healing and soothe the heart and mind, with Thyme also functioning as a more “generalist” herb here. This would be a good formula to explore if the primary issues to be treated are emotional and psychological. As another possibility to include in a similar formula, it is worth noting that Marjoram also helps with assuaging grief and sorrow and could work in this capacity here as well.

Eucalyptus.

Third, and in contrast to the primary emotional focus of the last Oil, Elle Duvall (2022) states that she designed her Healing Oil to support both physical and mental healing. She includes “mint and peony” within an almond carrier oil in her formula. Mint is often used in uncrossing work in Rootwork, as well as to purify and to grant mental strength in times of adversity. As yronwode (2002) notes, “Peony is a long-lived garden plant with a beautiful flower; its root is said to have a great deal of power to protect against misfortune, bolster health, break jinxes and draw good fortune” (p. 144). The Mint-Peony combination, then, is mainly centered on uncrossing and bolstering health.

Fourth, Dr. E (2022) at Conjure Doctor uses a variety of herbs in his Healing Oil formula, some of which include “eucalyptus, mint and other health-promoting herbs.” As we’ve seen, both Eucalyptus and Mint are apotropaic and uncrossing and their combination helps calm and strengthen the mind. However, since Dr. E. omits mention of his other herbs here, we do not know if he included other herbs or curios with the virtue of helping to heal physical or somatic issues.

Commonly combined: Mint, Lavender, and Eucalyptus.

Fifth, Harry (2018) uses a simple three-herb Healing Oil, which includes “rosemary, juniper, and sandalwood.” By way of rationale, he states that “The combination of rosemary and juniper create a healing effect. (. . . ) Rosemary more specifically in Conjure is cleansing, wards off illness, and promotes peace and good dreams. In Hoodoo, Juniper is believed to foster sexual virility, especially in men; it would likely be best used in a healing formula for men to treat sexual dysfunction, weakened male nature, or low libido.” Harry (2018) adds that “Sandalwood is used for purification and the removal of negative energies;” since sickness is “negative” to the body, the principle is extended to using Sandalwood to cleanse the body of sources of illness. Yronwode (2002) notes that Sandalwood adds power to incense mixtures, and is used for health, safety, and peace. Thus, by combining this trifecta of herbs, we obtain a basic healing formula for uncrossing, warding illness, possibly promoting sexual vitality, and conducing to peace of mind.

Juniper berries.

Sixth through eighth, the anonymous Rootworker (2022) from Hoodoo Conjure generously shares not one, but three Healing Oil formulas, which are as given follows:

Hoodoo Conjure Healing Oil #1
4 drops Rosemary
2 drops Juniper
1 drop Sandalwood

As we note, this formula is exactly the same as Harry (2018)’s healing above, so we will not analyze it in detail except to say that what this version contributes are proportions. This addition is helpful, because it reveals that, at least in the estimation of the Anonymous Rootworker (2022), the primary driver here is meant to be Rosemary with Juniper and Sandalwood playing a supportive role. This makes sense with the logics we’ve considered thus far, and as a basic Healing Oil, this would likely be helpful; however, as we shall see, I favour a more intensive and holistic approach covering many areas of healing to make the Oil useful in a wide variety of situations of healing of body, mind, and spirit. In this respect, this formula would benefit from further expansion. The use of Juniper is also a little too specific in the Hoodoo context for a general Healing Oil in my humble opinion, which is why I would save it for oils specializing in targeting male sexual health and leave it out of my general Healing Oil.

However, in all fairness to this formula and to Harry’s version (2018), Juniper, in Ancient magic was apparently linked to a much broader range of healing uses. Even today, some herbalists claim that it can used in massages for rheumatism pain, treats coughs, relieves the liver and bile, lowers blood sugar, and helps cure acne, although. However, I have no experience with these uses and cannot speak to them.

Sandalwood.

Hoodoo Conjure Healing Oil #2
3 drops Eucalyptus
1 drop Niaouli
1 drop Palmarosa
1 drop Spearmint

In this second formula, Mint and Eucalyptus recur, both to heal crossed conditions and to bring peace and strength of mind. In addition, we find two new ingredients: Niaouli and Palmarosa. Niaouli does not appear to be commonly used in Hoodoo; indeed, yronwode’s (2002) Hoodoo herbal compendium omits it entirely. However, according to Andrew (2018), in homeopathic herbalism, it is sometimes used to calm the mind, treat acne, relieve pain, soothe UTIs when its essential oil is included in a bath, and many other applications, suggesting its possible versatility as a healing herb. Palmarosa is another “mind-soothing” herb like Allspice, Chamomile, and Lavender. Some folks, like Dr. E. also use it for “uplifting” people who are feeling lethargic and low-energy. Thus, the cumulative effect of this herb’s Spirits appears to be to uncross, soothe and strengthen the mind, and bring general mental and bodily healing.

Palmarosa.


Hoodoo Conjure Healing Oil #3
In 1/2 oz of base oil (jojoba, almond, grape seed ,etc.)
5 drops Lavender oil 5 drops Camphor oil
5 drops Eucalyptus oil
5 drops Orange oil
3 drops Rosemary oil
2 drops Pine oil
4 drops Sandalwood oil

This third Healing Oil from the same Anonymous Rootworker also draws on Lavender and Eucalyptus like the other formulas we’ve seen. Here, they function to sooth the mind and the body, heal emotional wounds, and improve our luck in health matters. Interestingly, Orange Oil occurs here for the first time; Orange in Hoodoo is often used for luck and marriage, but also has the effect of “enlivening” the spirit, which can be another aid to those who struggle with exhaustion, lethargy, reduced motivation, and low-energy states. Rosemary and Sandalwood also recur, with Rosemary helping to bring peace to the mind, improve sleep, and bring good dreams while Sandalwood functions to add power to the other herbs and bring peace and general health to body, mind, and spirit. My Espiritista friend adds that in Espiritismo, Rosemary is seen as both cleansing and nourishing, and it can play both roles in this formula. Camphor is also used for cleansing and serves that role here.

Pine needles.

Lastly about this formula, a new ingredient that it includes is Pine, which, in Rootwork, is sometimes used for money work–indeed Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa links it to Jupiter, which rules money–but it can also be used for cleansing and improving mood to be more “jovial.” Taken together, this formula’s herbs collaborate to cleanse and calm the mind and spirit, bring general holistic healing to the body, enliven energy, lighten our mood, and improve sleep. As such, it appears to be a fairly well-rounded and versatile formula.

Ninth through eleventh, my Hoodoo, Conjure, and Rootwork teacher Aaron Davis kindly gave me permission to include three additional Healing Oil recipes in this analysis. These recipes come from different sources he has studied over the years and include the following:

Red Carnation.

Healing Oil #1 from Aaron Davis (drawing on Cunningham)
Sandalo chips,
Red carnation petals,
Romero leaves,
*sit in sun 7 days. Frater S.C.F.V’s Note: Tony Morgan adds “in a green jar” here.

This first Healing Oil draws, Aaron says, on Scott Cunningham’s work rather than on Hoodoo proper. Here, we find Sandalo (Sandalwood) recurring to add synergistic power and promote peace of mind and general health. To this, this formula adds Romero (Rosemary) to ward off illness and promote peace and good dreams. This herb can be a solid complement to Sandalwood as we saw in the first and third Conjure Rootwork Healing Oils.

However, what this spell brings in which is new to what we’ve analyzed so far is Red Carnation. Red Carnation grants healing and vitality and is a more energetic option than say, the White Carnation which is often used in Nourishing baths in both Espiritismo and Rootwork. Taken together, this Healing Oil draws on the illness-warding power of Rosemary alongside the peace of mind that this herb yields when combined with Sandalwood sparked up with the vitality rom the Red Carnation. It’s a simple, but solid approach. The final instruction to let the oil sit in the Sun, both to infuse it with healing “light” from the Sun–indeed the Lucidarium grimoire links the Sun to the Archangel of Healing Raphael and the Greeks linked it to Apollo– and also to help the scents and essences develop and mature as they combine into the Oil.

Fresh rosemary.

Healing Oil #2 from Aaron Davis Use a ratio of:
4 parts romero,
2 parts juniper,
1 part sandalo (sandalwood)

This Healing Oil recipe is the same as Harry’s (2018), as it uses Rosemary, Juniper, and Sandalwood, and uses the same proportions as Hoodoo Conjure‘s Healing Oil #2, which suggests either it was borrowed from Conjure Rootwork or both Aaron and Hoodoo Conjure drew this formula from a common source. The same comments as above, therefore, apply here.

Healing Oil #3 from Aaron Davis Use a ratio of:
3 parts eucalyptus,
1 part niaouli,
1 part palmarosa,
1 part spearmint

This third Oil from Aaron is identical to the Conjure Rootwork Oil #3 above, so the same comments apply. It’s worth noting that in his current work, Aaron does not use any of these three oils, but one drawn from his Palo Mayombe practice, which will not be shared here out of respect for his wishes and obligations within Palo. All the same, his input is much-appreciated here for providing some confirmations from another rootworker.

Twelfth, in her Little Book of Rootwork, Paris Ajana (2022) includes the following formula to “promote a healthy lifestyle and help recovery from injury or illness:”

Sacred Healing Oil

  • 1 cup jojoba carrier oil
  • ½ cup vitamin E oil
  • 10 drops rosemary essential oil
  • 20 drops sage essential oil
  • 15 drops thyme essential oil

Ajana’s “Sacred Healing Oil” is likely augmented into “Sacredness” by the addition of, not just Rosemary and Thyme as we have seen, but also Sage. Sage is known to popular New Age culture as a “smudging” herb and cleansing and purifying; however, in Rootwork it is often used to give strength and do reversal work (yronwood, 2002). Here, the idea might be to cleanse out sickness and grant strength in combination with both the general health and sleep aid from Thyme and the illness-warding and peace-granting powers of Rosemary. We also note that Vitamin E is used here; this is a wise addition to any homemade essential oil because it helps prevent its herbal constituents from going rancid for a longer period of time, thereby improving its preservation and shelf-life. I learned from cat yronwode that all Lucky Mojo condition oils include it and I include it in all of my homemade oils as well.

Thirteenth, in her Conjure Cookbook (2010), Miss Talia Fenix provides the following formula for a Healing Oil:

Healing Oil (“Especially used for mental healing and relief, but also for recovery from illnesses”):

  • Frankincense
  • Benzoin
  • Rosemary
  • Rose
  • Lavender
  • Mint
  • Lemongrass
  • Cinnamon
  • Rue

At 9 herbal constituents, this is one of the most elaborate formulas we’ve seen so far–although, in defense of the other formulas, simpler doesn’t necessarily mean worse when it comes to Rootwork.

Here, we see a return of Rosemary adding health, protection, and peace, Rose and Lavender adding floral sweetness, health and peace of mind and the soothing of emotional wounds, Rue bringing in heavy-duty cleansing of any malefica that may be tethering illness to crossed conditions, and Mint to purify and uncross as well as to add strength to cope with the illness.

In contrast to other recipes which use Myrrh or Sandalwood as the resin component, however, here we find Frankincense and Benzoin thus employed. Frankincense is a good all-purpose incense for consecration, intensification (“power-boosting”), and peaceful sleep. Here, it appears to be added to boost the power of the overall blend, add its aroma, and heal sleep issues. As for Benzoin, it is another herb used for good luck and peace of mind, so it serves a role here in healing mental health symptoms and promoting a healthy mental state.

Two other new additions in Miss Fenix’s (2010) formula are Cinnamon–for its ability to “heat up” and “energize” health–and Lemongrass. Lemongrass is most often used as a component in the famous Van Van Oil, which is ingenious here, because Miss Fenix is deploying it to clear “obstacles” to health, almost like a road-opener, while also conferring success in healing and good luck in healing more rapidly.

Fourteenth, rootworker Commaticus Lee (2019) shares the following “Resurrection and Healing Oil” recipe at Hoodoo Central:

  • Rose of Jericho
  • Aloe Vera
  • Orange Peel
  • Cinnamon
  • Mugwort
  • Ginger
  • Frankincense

This formula brings in some familiar herbs we’ve seen already, such as Frankincense for consecration, intensification (“power-boosting”), and peaceful sleep; Cinnamon, to “heat up” and energize health, not to mention its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties; and Orange for “enlivening” the spirit as an aid to those who struggle with exhaustion, lethargy, reduced motivation, and low-energy states. These three “vitality-boosting” herbs also tie into the “Resurrection” theme of this oil, as they help to, as it were, ‘raise energy as it from the dead.’ Another herb that serves a similar function here is Ginger; Ginger is often seen as providing “fiery protection” in Rootwork; for instance, many include it in their formulas for Fiery Wall of Protection Oil. Here, the aim seems to be to “fire up” healing and burn away illness, thereby helping to yield protection from sickness symptoms.

Further augmenting the “Resurrectional” aim of this formula, Commaticus Lee (2019) also includes Rose of Jericho. Rose of Jericho is the primary herb to symbolize resurrection because of its ability to return to thriving greenery from a dessicated state via the simple addition of water. Cat yronwode (2002) notes that the Rose can be kept in a place of business and watered every Friday with Psalms to “resurrect” business and wealth. I’ve also seen rootworkers anoint candles or statues (e.g. of Archangels) with its water to “wake them up” for magical work.

Next, we find a perhaps surprising addition: Mugwort. Mugwort is more typically used to help safe travel or to increase psychic abilities in Hoodoo (ywonrode, 2002). However, another use of the herb is in cleansing scrying tools (e.g. I bathed my black mirror in Mugwort as part of preparing it for magical use). So, “cleansing” the body of illness might be a magical implication of Mugwort in a Healing Oil, as it appears to be used here.

Finally, Commaticus Lee’s (2019) formula also includes Aloe Vera, which is lauded among herbalists for a variety of healing properties, such as its glycoproteins which reduce pain and inflammation, its antibacterial properties, and its adaptogenic ability to boost the body’s natural adaptation to illness. Its scent is also regarded as soothing by many, at least those who are not so unfortunate as to be allergic to it!

Taken together, the different elements of Commaticus’s (2019) Healing Oil appear to aim to help (1) “resurrect” energy and vitality, stirring up healing, and “burning off” illness magically, (2) cleanse the body of illness, while improving sleep, and (3) foster and promote adaptation and ‘bouncing back’ from illness. It’s an intelligent approach that hinges on the synergies of plants of similar types (e.g. “fiery “booster” herbs like Ginger, Cinnamon, etc.) eliding with different but complementary herbs of resurrection and generalized healing (e.g. Rose of Jericho and Aloe Vera).

Fifteenth, rootworker Brandon Lee (2018) shares the following Healing Oil formula, also at Hoodoo Central:

  • Balm of Gilead
  • Angelica
  • Essence of Rose of Jericho

Here, Angelica and Rose of Jericho recur, for their benevolent, angelic associations and ability to resurrect health and vitality from illness and exhaustion. However, we also find Balm of Gilead used for healing for the first time. This is a very interesting addition because Balm of Gilead is often used for its “soothing” qualities, such as to soothe the pain of arguments, a broken heart, or problems in love or friendship (yronwode, 2002). Here, then, it appears to function as a source of soothing and comfort from the pain and unpleasantness of illness or emotional mental “ill-health.”

Taken together, these three herbs produce a Healing Oil that, unlike the fiery Oil of Commaticus Lee (2019), aim to provide a soothing, blessing, and gently revivifying effect. I see this formula being useful in healing emotional pain, working through bereavement, or providing comfort in times of sadness or spiritual doubt.

Sixteenth, worker Nathan Burkeen (2018) shares this interesting combination of herbs in conjunction with a Healing Oil:

  • Rosemary,
  • Thyme,
  • Mint,
  • Mullein,
  • Chamomile
  • Bay.

Rosemary recurs here to ward off illness, crossed conditions, and aid sleep. Thyme recurs for general health and sleep promotion as well. Mint also helps with uncrossing, protection, and strengthening the person. Chamomile is a third uncrossing herb, which also helps soothe, promote sleep, and calm. Bay grants victory in the healing and/or uncrossing work. A final interesting addition here is Mullein, which is used here to protect the person by controlling the illness.

Taken as a unit, Nathan’s (2018) formula appears to function not only to promote health and soothe, but also address any potential crossed conditions that mighty be reinforcing the pain or physical or mental illness. This is a clever combined approach that seems like it would be effective in such work.

St. Joseph’s Oratory in Montreal, Canada.

Seventeenth, and finally, for our purposes, I must pay homage to the local Christian folk practices here in my home city of Montréal and mention the Healing Oil of St. Joseph and Saint Brother André. To the right of the vast structure of St. Joseph’s Oratory here in Montréal, there is a tiny chapel where Saint Brother André not only lived and preached, but is reputed to have also healed many.

Indeed, crutches adorn the walls of the chapel from people allegedly healed here. His method? According to the official website of St. Joseph’s Oratory (2022), Saint Brother André “was inspired by a devotion that he heard was already being practiced in France. He took a bit of oil from a lamp that was burning in front of a statue of Saint Joseph. He offered it to sick people telling them to rub it on their aching body and to pray to Saint Joseph for relief. This tradition continues today at Saint Joseph’s Oratory of Montréal. A basin containing ordinary vegetable oil is fixed in front of a statue of Saint Joseph, and a wick, floating on the surface, burns night and day as a kind of perpetual votive lamp. The oil is then put in bottles and made available to pilgrims.”

Vegetable Oil with floating wicks burning before the statue of Saint Joseph at St. Joseph’s Oratory, Montreal, Canada.

What could be more simple than a recipe of only 1 ingredient, and that, the lowest-cost ingredient of all, vegetable oil? If all of the other recipes in this article appear too intimidating or inaccessible, I suggest trying out this simple formula or ordering some from the Oratory itself. As an added bonus, Oil ordered from the Oratory is blessed by a Catholic Priest before shipping.

C. 11 Keys to Magical Healing: My Personal Healing Oil Formula

Having analyzed the above formulas, reflected on their herbs individually and in combination, and consulted with my Spirits, here is the formula I decided to use in my own practice. With18 being my personal lucky number, sharing this formula as the 18th Healing Oil in this article feels both apt and auspicious.

This Healing Oil formula is both complex and multidimensional; accordingly, it uses no less than 11-herbs in combination with Olive Oil as a foundation or carrying oil as well as Vitamin E to preserve the oil and add antioxidant health benefits:

  • Olive Oil (as a base carrying oil and the Biblical classic herb for anointing oils).
  • Self-Heal (assists in magical work to heal all physical and psychological conditions).
  • Althaea or Marshmallow (helps with physical, mental, and spiritual healing, and draws spiritual assistance, synergizing with Angelica).
  • Eucalyptus (for its powers to heal, protect, and soothe mind, body, and spirit).
  • Sandalwood (to add power to the effect of the other herbs and promote health of body and peace of mind).
  • Thyme (for general health and to help with sleep).
  • Mint (for purification, strength to cope with illness, and uncrossing in case of crossed conditions being linked to the illness).
  • Angelica (to promote benevolent and Angelic assistance in the healing work; to be used alongside prayers requesting Angelic support, e.g. from Michael, Raphael, etc).
  • Lemongrass (to clear obstacles to healing and grant smooth and successful healing).
  • Orange Peel (to add enlivening energy to balance out the lethargy and low motivation that can come with depression and different forms of illness, heal emotional pain, and increase health vitality).
  • Rosemary (to ward off illness and promote peace of mind and good dreams).
  • Lavender (to soothe emotional wounds and generate comfort and soothing quality, alongside the Eucalyptus and Sandalwood to balance out the vitality of the Lemongrass and Orange Peel).
  • Vitamin E (as a preservative for the oil and for its health benefits as an antioxidant).

Tip: If you want to tweak this formula slightly to also promote longevity, consider adding Life Everlasting with Myrrh, a common Incense used in healing work, to bring the total to 13 herbs and keep the traditional odd number of ingredients.


Important Note: Legally, I must add that the above formula and the information in this article are provided for entertainment purposes only. Personally, I see healing magic as a complement and accompaniment to scientific and medical treatment, not as a replacement thereof. Therefore, I always recommend people to first consult a doctor and then use healing magic on the side to support the work doctors, medication, etc. This is the approach of holistic healing, which draws on all relevant sources to obtain an optimal end, specifically (1) medical science, (2) herbalism, and (3) spiritual means.

Some esotericists also swear by mineral alchemical treatments (e.g. imbibing metals that were put through different alchemical procedures) as an aid to healing. However, I recommend extreme caution in this regard because some mineral formulas can cause more health problems than they heal. I’ve known people who took such formulas and ended up poisoned and admitted to hospital. This should likely be avoided in most cases.

Personally, I find the three means given above sufficient for my purposes and my work. My experience has also shown that unfortunately, in healing work, we can make no guarantees; different people respond differently to different workings and the Spirits may achieve different results with different ailments.

To this point, I’ve seen some healings that are complete and appear nothing short of miraculous. However, other healing work has proven to be a “slow burn” that took time and sometimes my work failed entirely because the issues were too severe (e.g. in the case of stage 4 palliative cancer). In addition, sometimes, more than one working is needed on an issue and there are limits to what can be done in some cases (e.g. some palliative illnesses). So, it is important to balance remaining open to the miraculous while also being compassionate and fair to ourselves if things do not work out as planned, as is sometimes the case.


D. Invoking the Healing of God: Psalms and Prayers for Healing Work

While working with a Healing Formula like one of those given above, whether in the form of a Healing Oil, Healing Sachet Powder, Healing Fixed Candle (e.g. blue or white in Conjure, orange or multi-colour for Mercury in grimoire work), Healing Floor Wash, or working on a person by proxy via a Poppet or Doll Baby, many Psalms and prayers can be used to add spiritual power to the working.

First, for Psalms, we can include the following depending on the type of ailment we are looking to heal:

  • Psalm 3 can be used for relief from a severe headache or from back pain. Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says to write the first 8 verses and and Holy Name on parchment then wear as necklace; pray over target with psalm and this prayer “Lord of the world may it please Thee to be my physician and helper. Heal me and relieve me from severe headache/backache because I can find help only with Thee, and only with Thee is counsel and action to be found. Amen!”
  • Psalm 4 can be used to help heal insomnia and sleep disorders. Laremy (2001) says to “recite psalm before bed, then meditate on the following, “The Lord’s presence is my sanctuary, his company is my strength, knowing this I will peacefully sleep and be safe.” I suggest making a chamomile tea, reciting Psalm 4 over it and asking the Chamomile Spirit to help soothe your mind and bring sleep, and then going to bed. A small bag of Thyme under the pillow can also help with sleep issues.
  • Psalm 6 and Psalm 12 can be used for work on healing diseases of the eye.
  • Psalm 9 can be used for work to heal male children. Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says to write psalm on parchment with new pen, hang around patient’s neck. After, repeat Psalm with reverence, then say this prayer “All merciful Father, may it please thee to take away from this child the pains from which he suffers, release him during his life from all plagues, injury and danger. Amen.”
  • Psalm 15 can be used to provide relief from depression; Laremy (2001) recommends the target to “pray psalm, pronounce the Holy Name “Lali” over a new pot filled with well water; bathe body of sufferer and repeat prayer during the bath, “May it be Your will, Oh God, to restore the senses of this individual who has been grievously plagued by the devil. Enlighten his mind for the sake of Your Hole Name. Amen.”
  • Psalm 16 can be used both for work to help decrease symptoms of depression for work to reduce pain.
  • Psalm 18 and Psalm 89 can both be used if you plan to anoint the sick with Healing Oil as part of the spell as anointing the sick is a theme of this Psalm. A base of prayed-over Olive Oil or Vegetable Oil–as in St. Brother André’s approach–is a solid base for a Healing Oil. Similarly, Laremy (2001) says to “fill small flask with olive oil and water, pray 18th psalm over it reverently; anoint all limbs and pray over patient.” In the Bible, Olive Oil is commonly used to anoint both the sick and Kings like David (1 Samuel 16).
Image from a Medieval Psalter.
  • Psalm 19 can be used in healing or preventive health work relating to childbirth for both the mother and baby.
  • Similarly, Psalms 127 and 128 are used to ensure a smooth, fortunate, and uncomplicated pregnancy.
  • Psalm 27 can be used in many types of healing work; it is versatile and general.
  • Psalm 30 can be used for work to facilitate recovery from very severe illnesses or help with coping with chronic diseases when recovery is not possible.
  • Psalm 31 can be used for treating chronic stress, stress at work, and anxiety; Laremy (2001) says to “burn a light blue Candle, fill a tub with warm water and previous mix/boiled combo of Flor del Mar, Sea Water, Ache de Santo, and Kolonia 1800; sit in tub and contemplate Psalm 31 to relieve tension.” Psalm 39 also helps relieve mental tension.
  • Psalm 36, according to Robert Laremy (2001), can be used to improve memory; he says to “anoint forehead and temples with Memory Oil and pray psalm with yellow Candle.” By extension, this Psalm can be used to help slow the progression of dementia, Alzheimer’s Disease, Korsakoff’s Syndrome, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, and other issues involving memory losses. Were I to use this with such patients, I would anoint their forehead first with a cross of Memory Oil then with a cross of Healing Oil then with a cross of Blessing Oil while reciting the Psalm for a triple-effect.
  • Psalm 43 can be used to help someone psychologically and spiritually to cope with a difficult situation; in other words, it heals by granting courage and resilience to cope. Psalm 118 is a good follow-up to Psalm 43 to help with finding solutions while coping.
  • Psalm 46 can be used to heal relationship issues and bring couples closer together. It can also be used to call a ‘fortress’ of healing around the ill, seeking refuge in God.
  • Psalm 49 and Psalm 50 also used for work on serious illnesses, but also, more specifically, on work to speed recovery from fevers and contagious diseases. In addition, Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says that Psalm 49 can also be used for inherited illnesses that run in the family and instructs the sick person to “with new felt pen, write 49th psalm and first 6 verses of psalm 50 on parchment; hang around neck with silk string.”
  • Psalm 58 and Psalm 147 can be used in work to help people heal from bites from wild animals (e.g. snake bites). Laremy (2001) also recommends that people who are at risk of dog bites “copy first three verses on parchment and carry to prevent bites.”
  • Psalm 67 is useful for work on al kinds of illnesses; also, for fever.
Initials from the beginning of psalms in the St. Albans Psalter.
  • Psalm 69 and Psalm 101 can be used to help people who are striving to find healing from addictions of all kinds.
  • Psalm 71 can be used to heal mental anguish, guilt, bereavement, and depression under the principle that these are a “mental prison” from which the patient needs assistance to break out.
  • Psalm 77 is useful for many purposes ranging from chronic illnesses to recovering from malnutrition and dehydration.
  • Psalm 84 is useful for all kinds of bodily healing and specifically when there are symptoms that cause unusual odors (e.g. boils, sores, etc.).
  • Psalm 87 can be used as a preliminary “cleansing” prayer before healing work, especially work done to heal relationships between people in a community. It is usefully followed up with Psalm 96 and 97 to heal family relationships and bring harmony back to a community in which there has been a split.
  • Psalm 89 can be, according to Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook, read day and night while focusing attention and healing energy on the affected body part that needs healing until it is healed.
  • Psalm 90 is useful for blessing all work of the hands; as such, it is useful in work to ensure good results from surgery and supporting recovery after surgery. Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says it can also be used to help someone who is trying to emerge from depression.
  • Psalm 98 is useful for healing rifts between two families who previously got along but have turned against one another.
  • Psalms 105, 106, and 107 are useful for healing work to address recurrent illnesses that flare up or return, especially if linked to recurrent fevers. They are best used all together as a trio, as they compound each other’s power and work synergistically.
  • Psalm 117 can be used in work to treat depression; Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says to read Psalm 117 every morning and evening by light of white Candle and adds that this Psalm “may have been read by Jesus at Last Supper the mystically strengthen the disciples for what was to come” so it can be used for granting psychological fortitude as well.
Psalm 110 from a Medieval Psalter.
  • Psalm 125 can also be used to grant fortitude and mental strength to those needing healing from a feeling of being weaker than they are; pray Psalm 125 over a Sampson Snake Root anointed with Healing Oil and have them carry it.
  • Psalm 119 is the longest Psalm in the Psalter; it has 22 sections that cover all human problems and can be used if doing healing work in a complicated situation with many causes and factors involved (e.g. not just illness in the body, but poor housing, lack of finances to address the problems, poor access to doctors, etc.).
  • Psalm 127, as noted above, can be used in preventive health work to ensure the health of a newborn baby. Anoint a Mojo bag with Healing Oil with some Personal Concerns of the baby and give it to the mother to carry on her person or sew into the crib cushioning. Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says to – write psalm on paper, cover with white chalk; fold small and place in red mojo with camphor square and gold. Make one for each child, attach with safety pin inside clothes worn by child (e.g. jacket).
  • Psalm 126 is used for work to help support a grieving mother after the death of a child or a miscarriage and to help pray for the next child to live.
  • Psalm 129 is used in prayers for a long, healthy life; it is best used for the herb Life Everlasting.
  • Psalm 142 is useful in many types of healing work from recovery from an injury, to restoring health after a sickness, to alleviating pain, and even to work on psychological pain and depression. Similarly, Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says to pray this Psalm when overwhelmed with confusion or melancholy. After psalm say “David prayed this psalm as he pondered in a cave, so I hope and pray the Lord will save my mind.” Psalm 60 is related; it helps prevent injuries.
  • Psalm 143 can be used alongside Psalm 142 for injuries affecting the arms, legs, hands, or feet, and to alleviate pain.
  • Psalm 144 is especially useful for mending a broken arm, but also, by extension, healing and recovering from fractures in all bones in the body.
  • Psalm 146 is useful for healing after incurring a wound of any kind and also battlefield wounds for soldiers or wounds from fighting for fighters. Robert Laremy’s (2001) The Psalm Workbook says this can also be used for people who struggle with hunger and want to heal this aspect.
  • Psalm 147 can be used to grant peace of mind, and healing from bereavement, depression, and anxiety. This is another prayer that invokes a “fortress of healing” around the people to be healed.
  • Psalm 150 can be used to give thanks and glorify Adonai Rapha, the Lord of Healing, after all successful healing work.
Page from the Chludov Psalter (9th century).

Second, for prayers to include in healing work, the possibilities are nearly endless. Indeed, within a folk Christian framework, whether that be African American Conjure, Rootwork, Hoodoo, or one of the many European Christian folk magics, a wide range of prayers can be employed.

A useful Divine Name, for those who draw on Hebrew from the Torah or Old Testament and Kabbalistic sources in their work is “ADONAI RAPHA” (אֲדֹנָי רָפָא), which means “Lord of Healing.” This Name of Power can be integrated into prayers and invocations for healing, inscribed on healing talismans or carved into Candles invoking the healing of God in their burnings.

In terms of specific traditional prayers, the most logical choice among Archangels with whom to work healing is Archangel Raphael, whose name literally means “the Healing of God” — compare with the Divine name given above.

In addition, Sam Block (2020) of The Digital Ambler formulated a prayer based on the Chaplet of Raphael to include in healing work. It goes as follows:

“In the name of God, the Holy, the Light, the All-Knowing, the All-Aware!
Holy, holy, holy, Lord, God of Hosts, Heaven and Earth are full of your glory,
and your glory is known to us through your glorious angel Raphael.
Holy, mighty, and wondrous is your angel Raphael!
O Raphael the Healer, angel restoring us to health!
O Raphael the Guide, angel giving us Light on the way!
O Raphael the Companion, angel accompanying us to joy!
Divine physician, heavenly scientist, celestial traveler,
it is upon you we call, to you we lift our hands seeking succor!
When all hope is lost, Raphael, you give us hope.
When all health is lost, Raphael, you give us health.
When all love is lost, Raphael, you give us love.
When all life is lost, Raphael, you give us life.
When all seems lost, Raphael, you turn back the tide
of darkness, of sorrow, of misery and misfortune
and restore us to a whole, hale, happy and holy life.

In every trial, holy Raphael, stand for us!
Be our advocate in Heaven at the end of days!
Be our support in every problem we face!
Be our sight in every dark night we see!
Be our healer in every illness we suffer!
Be our leader in every journey we undertake!
Be our strength in every battle we join!
May God send upon you peace, holy Raphael,
and upon your wings, may you send peace upon us all.

Amen.”

Icon of Raphael given in Sam Block’s article “Three Prayers for Times of Healing and Disease.”

Sam Block (2020) also includes two creative prayers drawing on Islamic sources to use in healing work. The interested can read these in his informative article on the subject of prayers for times of healing and disease. One involves using a tasbih (set of Islamic prayer beads); a similar practice could be adapted for use with a Christian Chaplet or Rosary.

To broaden our toolkit of prayers to add into healing work even further, my dear friend Agostino Taumaturgo (2018) in his excellent My New Everyday Prayer Book provides the following Catholic prayers for use in healing work.

I would combine the appropriate prayers with relevant Psalms and use Healing Oil in combination with Candle work and Incense Offerings (e.g. Myrrh, Sandalwood, Benzoin, or a Healing Incense blend) as needed depending on the issue:

  1. Prayer for Healing
    Dear Lord of Mercy and Father of Comfort: to you I turn for help in
    times of weakness and need. I ask you to be with your servant during
    this illness, because I know you send out your Word and heal. I thus
    ask you to send your healing Word to your servant, and in the name
    of Jesus to drive out all infirmity and sickness from this body.
    I ask you to turn this weakness into strength, suffering into
    compassion, sorrow into joy, and pain into comfort for others. May
    your servant trust in your goodness and hope in your faithfulness,
    even in the middle of this suffering. Let him (her) be filled with
    patience and joy in your presence as he (she) waits for your healing
    touch. Restore your servant to full health, dear Lord. Remove all fear
    and doubt from his (her) heart by the power of your Holy Spirit, and
    may you, O Lord, be glorified through his (her) life.
    As you heal and renew your servant, Lord, may he (she) bless and
    praise you. I pray for this in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
    
  2. For Healing
    Lord, you invite all who are burdened to come to you. Allow your
    healing hand to heal me. Touch my soul with your compassion for
    others. Touch my heart with your courage and infinite love for all.
    Touch my mind with your wisdom, that my mouth may always
    proclaim your praise. Teach me to reach out to you in my need, and
    help me to lead others to you by my example. Most loving Heart of
    Jesus, bring me health in body and spirit that I may serve you with all
    my strength. Touch gently this life which you have created, now and
    forever. Amen.
    
  3. Prayer for Healing
    Lord, look upon me with eyes of mercy, may your healing hand rest
    upon me, may your life-giving powers flow into every cell of my body
    and into the depths of my soul, cleansing, purifying, restoring me to
    wholeness and strength for service in your Kingdom. Amen.
    
  4. Renew My Mind, Body and Soul
    Lord, I come before you today in need of your healing hand. In you
    all things are possible. Hold my heart within yours, and renew my
    mind, body, and soul
    I am lost, but I am singing. You gave us life, and you also give us
    the gift of infinite joy. Give me the strength to move forward on the
    path you’ve laid out for me. Guide me towards better health, and give
    me the wisdom to identify those you’ve placed around me to help me
    get better.
    In your name I pray, Amen.
    
  5. Prayer when Health Is Failing
    Sweet Heart of Jesus, my health is failing, and I am hurting.
    Thank you for my body, which is a great and marvelous gift and a
    temple where the Holy Spirit chooses to dwell.
    I offer up my current suffering for (Name), accepting whatever
    you permit to happen to me.
    I believe in your healing power and claim your promises of peace,
    help in all my afflictions, and the grace of final perseverance. Help
    me to resist all fear, and hide me, Lord, in the haven of your precious
    heart. Give me the strength to accept this current state of my health
    with joy, holy resignation, and lively hope for the future. Amen.
    
  6. A Prayer against Disease
    Lord, your scripture says that you heal all diseases and whoever
    believes in you will not perish but have eternal life. Strengthen your
    servant, Lord, in this time of illness. Sustain him (her) as he (she) lays
    sick in his (her) bed. When you were on earth, you did all things good
    and healed all kinds of sickness.
    You healed those who had diseases. You died and rose for our
    sins that we may have eternal life. I believe in my heart that you are
    here with us today and that with your most holy power will remove
    all sicknesses and evils that roam the earth. Let it be done in your
    glory, Lord.
    We praise and glorify your name, O Lord, for you live and reign
    forever and ever. Amen.
Agostino’s wonderful book, which is useful for folk Catholic magical work of many kinds, My New Everyday Prayer Book.

In addition, Agostino (2018) also provides the following prayers for the sick and dying. I have successfully used Prayer 454 and Prayer 455 in particular in my own work:

  1. Prayer for the Sick
    Almighty and eternal God, you are the everlasting health of those
    who believe in you. Hear us for your sick servant, (Name), for whom
    we implore the aid of your tender mercy, that being restored to
    bodily health, he/she may give thanks to you in your Church.
    Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
    
  2. Another Prayer for the Sick
    Dear Jesus, Divine Physician and Healer of the sick, we turn to You
    in this time of illness. O dearest Comforter of the Troubled, alleviate
    our worry and sorrow with Your gentle love, and grant us the grace
    and strength to accept this burden.
    Dear God, we place our worries in Your hands. We ask that You
    restore Your servant to health again.
    Above all, grant us the grace to acknowledge Your holy will and
    know that whatsoever You do, You do for the love of us. Amen.
    
  3. Prayer for Those On Medication
    Gracious God, You have given us many healing remedies that are a
    benefit to us when we are sick. Through the miraculous intercession
    of St. Anthony, we ask Your blessing upon the medication prescribed
    for (mention name) so that he/she may experience healing, and be
    restored to full health in mind and body. Amen.
    
  4. For Someone Who Is Addicted
    Lord, my heart is filled with concern for (Name), who is addicted.
    You know and see the disorder and chaos that the addiction is
    causing, and your heart grieves over the distortion of personality and
    danger to the soul that results when someone is in the throes of
    addiction.
    I pray that you will please give me the wisdom and spiritual
    fortitude to detach with love and trust in your tender mercies
    and that you will give (Name) the humility and strength to seek
    recovery. I ask this through the saving grace of your Sacred Heart.
    Amen.
    
  5. Prayer Before Surgery
    Loving Father, I entrust myself to your care this day; guide with
    wisdom and skill the minds and hands of the medical people who
    minister in your Name, and grant that every cause of illness be
    removed, I may be restored to soundness of health and learn to live
    in more perfect harmony with you and with those around me.
    Through Jesus Christ. Amen.
    Into your hands, I commend my body and my soul. Amen.

Prayer After Surgery
Blessed Savior, I thank you that this operation is safely past, and now
I rest in your abiding presence, relaxing every tension, releasing every
care and anxiety, receiving more and more of your healing life into
every part of my being. In moments of pain I turn to you for
strength, in times of loneliness I feel your loving nearness. Grant that
your life and love and joy may flow through me for the healing of
others in your name. Amen.

As if these were not enough, Agostino (2018) also includes prayers for health professionals such as doctors, nurses, and medical Social Workers such as myself:

  1. Prayer for Doctors and Nurses
    O merciful Father, who have wonderfully fashioned man in your own
    image, and have made his body to be a temple of the Holy Spirit,
    sanctify, we pray you, our doctors and nurses and all those whom you
    have called to study and practice the arts of healing the sick and the
    prevention of disease and pain. Strengthen them in body and soul,
    and bless their work, that they may give comfort to those for whose
    salvation your Son became Man, lived on this earth, healed the sick,
    and suffered and died on the Cross. Amen.
    
  2. A Nurse’s Prayer #1
    Dear Lord, please give me strength, To face the day ahead.
    Dear Lord, please give me courage, As I approach each hurting bed.
    Dear Lord, please give me wisdom With every word I speak.
    Dear Lord, please give me patience, As I comfort the sick and weak.
    Dear Lord, Please give me assurance, As the day slips into night.
    That I have done the best I can, That I have done what’s right.
    560
    
  3. A Nurse’s Prayer #2
    Be my voice to the deaf. Be my faith where there is doubt. Be my
    hope where there is despair. Be my light where there is darkness. Be
    my joy where there is sadness. Be me in the world.
    Be my eyes to the blind. Be my consolation to those who need to be
    consoled. Be my understanding to those who need to be understood.
    Be my healing to those who need to healed. Be my love to those who
    need love. Be my forgiveness to those who need to be forgiven. Be
    my death to those who need me. Be me in the world.
    
  4. A Nurse’s Prayer #3
    When I falter, give me courage. When I tire, renew my strength.
    When I weaken because I’m human, inspire me on to greater length.
    If doctors and patients become demanding, and days are too short
    for all my duty: help me remember I chose to serve, to do so with
    grace, and spiritual beauty. In humility, Lord, I labor long hours, and
    though I sometimes may fret; my mission is mercy. Abide with me,
    that I may never forget.
  5. Prayer for a Sick Person Near Death
    Almighty and Everlasting God, preserver of souls, who dost correct
    those whom Thou dost love, and for their betterment dost tenderly
    chastise those whom Thou dost receive, we call upon Thee, O Lord,
    to grant Thy healing, that the soul of Thy servant, (Name), at the hour
    of its departure from the body, may by the hands of Thy holy Angels
    be presented without spot unto Thee. Amen.
    
  6. Offering for the Dying
    O My God, I offer Thee all the holy Masses which will be said this
    day throughout the whole world for poor sinners who are now in
    their death agony and who will die this day. May the Precious Blood
    of our Savior Jesus Christ obtain for them mercy. Amen.
    
  7. To Be Said by the Dying Person, or by Another for Him or Her
    V. We adore Thee, O Christ, and we bless Thee.
    R. For by Thy holy Cross Thou hast redeemed the world.
    O GOD, Who for the redemption of the world didst vouchsafe to
    be born, to be circumcised, to be rejected by the Jews, to be betrayed
    with a kiss by the traitor Judas, to be bound with cords, to be led as
    an innocent Lamb to the slaughter, and in the sight of Annas,
    Caiphas, Pilate, and Herod, to be treated with indignity, to be accused
    by false witnesses, to be afflicted with scourges and reproaches, to be
    spit upon, to be crowned with thorns, to be beaten with blows, to be
    struck with a reed, to have Thy face veiled, to be stripped of Thy
    garments, to be nailed to the Cross and raised high thereon, to be
    ranked among thieves, to be offered gall and vinegar to drink, and to
    be pierced with a lance: Do Thou, O Lord, by these Thy most holy
    pains, which I, though unworthy, now call to mind, and by Thy holy
    Cross and death, deliver me (or this Thy servant, Name) from the
    pains of Hell, and vouchsafe to lead me (or name the person) whither
    Thou didst lead the good thief who was crucified with Thee. Who,
    with the Father and the Holy Ghost, livest and reignest forever and
    ever. Amen.
  1. Prayer for the Dying
    Most merciful Jesus, lover of souls, I pray you by the agony of your
    most sacred heart, and by the sorrows of your Immaculate mother, to
    wash in your most Precious Blood the sinners of the world who are
    now in their agony, and who will die today.
    Heart of Jesus, once in agony, have mercy on the dying.
    Jesus, Mary and Joseph, I give you my heart and my soul. Assist me
    in my last agony, and grant that I may breath forth my soul in peace
    with you. Amen.

Moreover, in another wonderful section of his book, which Agostino (2018) generously gives away for free on his website, but which I purchased in hardcover to support his hard work, concerns prayers with the assistance or intercession of the Angels.

If we are using Angelica in a Healing Oil or other Healing formula, as I would suggest, then we can also integrate Angelic invocations and prayers. One possible way of doing this is through the Litany of All the Angels, which Agostino gives as follows:

  1. Litany of All the Angels
    Lord, have mercy.
    Christ, have mercy.
    Lord, have mercy.
    Christ, hear us.
    Christ, graciously hear us.
    God, Father of Heaven, have mercy on us.
    God the Son, Redeemer of the world, have mercy on us.
    God the Holy Ghost, have mercy
    Holy Trinity, one God, have mercy
    Holy Mary, pray for us.
    Holy Mother of God, pray for us.
    Holy Queen of the Angels, pray for us.
    Holy Michael, pray for us.
    Holy Gabriel, pray for us.
    Holy Raphael, pray for us.
    Holy Uriel, pray for us.
    Holy Metatron, pray for us.
    Holy Raziel, pray for us.
    Holy Cassiel, pray for us.
    Holy Sachiel, pray for us.
    Holy Camaël, pray for us.
    Holy Anaël, pray for us.
    Holy Sandalphon, pray for us.
    All ye holy Archangels and Angels of the Planets, pray for us.
    459
    – Prayers and Devotions to the Angels and Archangels –
    Holy Sharhiel, pray for us.
    Holy Araziel, pray for us.
    Holy Sarayel, pray for us.
    Holy Pakiel, pray for us.
    Holy Sharatiel, pray for us.
    Holy Shelathiel, pray for us.
    Holy Chedeqiel, pray for us.
    Holy Saitzel, pray for us.
    Holy Saritiel, pray for us.
    Holy Sameqiel, pray for us.
    Holy Tsakmiqiel, pray for us.
    Holy Vakabiel, pray for us.
    All ye holy Angels of the Zodiacal signs, pray for us.
    Holy Hassan, pray for us.
    Holy Aral, pray for us.
    Holy Thaliahad, pray for us.
    Holy Phorlakh, pray for us.
    All ye Holy Angels of the Elements, pray for us.
    Holy Seraphim, pray for us.
    Holy Cherubim, pray for us.
    Holy Thrones, pray for us.
    Holy Dominations, pray for us.
    Holy Powers, pray for us.
    Holy Virtues, pray for us.
    Holy Principalities, pray for us.
    Holy Archangels, pray for us.
    Holy Angels, pray for us.
    All ye Holy Orders of Angels, pray for us.
    All ye Holy Angels and Archangels, intercede for us.
    All ye Holy angels and Archangels, bless the Lord forever.
    Lamb of God, Who takest away the sins of the world,
    spare us, O Lord.
    Lamb of God, Who takest away the sins of the world,
    hear us, O Lord.
    Lamb of God, Who takest away the sins of the world,
    have mercy on us.
    Our Father (inaudibly until)
    V. And lead us not into temptation.
    R. But deliver us from evil.
    V. Pray for us, all ye Holy Angels and Archangels.
    R. And intercede for us in the sight of the Lord Almighty.
    Let us pray. Almighty God, Who givest graces according to Thy good
    pleasure, vouchsafe, we beseech Thee, through the intercession of
    Thy blessed Archangel N., to grant us peace in our days, victory over
    all enemies and impediments in our paths, protection from the snares
    of the adversary, and to grant our prayers. To send also Thine holy
    Angel from the heavens, that he may assist towards the manifestation
    of those same petitions, that the world, seeing Thy glory, may glorify
    and magnify Thee always and everywhere, more and more. Through
    our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in
    the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, world without end. R. Amen.”

He also provides the following prayer, useful in all Angelic work; we need only add the healing petition at the end:

Prayer to the Holy Angels
Bless the Lord, all you his Angels, you who are mighty in strength
and do his will. Intercede for me at the throne of God, and by your
unceasing watchfulness protect me in every danger of soul and body.
Obtain for me the grace of final perseverance, so that after this life I
may be admitted to your glorious company and may sing with you
the praises of God for all eternity.
O all you holy Angels and Archangels, Thrones and
Dominations, Principalities, Powers and Virtues of heaven, Cherubim
and Seraphim, and especially you, my dear Guardian Angel, intercede for me and obtain for me the special favor I now ask (here mention your healing intention). Amen.”

A final section of prayers from Agostino’s (2018) work which are relevant to the healing purposes of this article are some of the prayers to and with Archangel Raphael that he includes, namely:

  1. Collect on the Feast of St. Raphael
    “O God, you sent the blessed archangel Raphael to accompany your
    servant Tobias on his journey. Grant that we, your servants, may also
    be guarded by him always and strengthened by his assistance.
    Through Jesus Christ your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with
    you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, forever and ever. Amen.”

2. Archangel St. Raphael Prayer for Healing
“Glorious Archangel St. Raphael, great prince of the heavenly court,
you are illustrious for your gifts of wisdom and grace. You are a guide
of those who journey by land or sea or air, consoler of the afflicted,
and refuge of sinners. I beg you, assist me in all my needs and in all
the sufferings of this life, as once you helped the young Tobias on his
travels. Because you are the “medicine of God” I humbly pray you to
heal the many infirmities of my soul and the ills that afflict my body.
I especially ask of you the favor (here mention your healing intention), and
the great grace of purity to prepare me to be the temple of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.”

3. Saint Raphael Prayer
“Blessed Saint Raphael, Archangel, we beseech thee to help us in all
our needs and trials of this life, as thou, through the power of God,
didst restore sight and give guidance to the elder Tobit. We humbly
seek thine aid and intercession, that our souls may be healed, our
bodies protected from all ills, and that through divine grace we may
be made fit to dwell in the eternal Glory of God in heaven. Amen.”

4. Novena to St. Raphael the Archangel

Frater S.C.F.V’s Note: I would use an Orange, White or Light Blue Novena Candle for this purpose. Puncture 7 thin holes in the top and anoint with Healing Oil as well as some of the herbs from the Oil if you have any on-hand. Use a consecrated Chalk Marker to write the name of the person to be healed on the glass of the candle. Write your petition on a petition paper and place it under the candle. Light the candle each night while praying the following prayer for 9 nights in addition to relevant Psalms from the list above, depending on the issue to be healed:


“Recite one Our Father, one Hail Mary and one Glory Be.
Glorious Archangel St. Raphael, great prince of the heavenly court,
you are illustrious for your gifts of wisdom and grace. You are a guide
of those who journey by land or sea or air, consoler of the afflicted,
and refuge of sinners. – Recite one Glory Be.
We ask you to assist (person to be healed) in all his/her needs and in all the
sufferings of this life, as once you helped the young Tobias on his
travels. Because you are the medicine of God,” we humbly pray you
to heal the many infirmities of his/her soul and the ills that afflict
his/her body. – Recite one Glory Be.
We especially ask of you the favor, the intersession of conversion of
heart and the great grace of purity, to prepare (name), to be the temple
of the Holy Spirit. Amen. – Recite one Glory Be.
St. Raphael, of the glorious seven who stand before the throne of
Him who lives and reigns, Angel of health, the Lord has filled your
hand with balm from heaven to soothe or cure our pains. Heal or
cure the victim of disease. And guide our steps when doubtful of our
ways. May God hear and answer our prayer according to His holy will
and for His greater glory. We ask this through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.

E. Anointing Pentacles for the Warding of Illness: An Example of Using Healing Oil with a Solomonic Pentacle

How can the Healing Oil we’ve explored in this article be used by magicians versed in Solomonic grimoire magic in combination with Solomonic seals with healing virtues? The answer, as in most things in magic, is that we have options.

First, a grimoire-Purist approach would be to follow the grimoire procedure for making the Pentacle to the letter, and then integrate the Conjure Healing Oil by anointing the Pentacle with it after this is completed. For this purpose, we could, for instance consecrate either the Second Pentacle of Mars from the Key of Solomon or the Jupiter Health Pentacle from the Veritable Key of Solomon.

According to Joseph H. Peterson’s edition of the Key of Solomon (2018), the Second Pentacle of Mars “serveth with great success against all kinds of diseases, if it be applied unto the afflicted part:”

Figure 26, from Harl. 3981, fol. 77v. Credit to Joseph H. Peterson.

About this Pentacle, Peterson (2018) includes the following interest ing editorial notes:

“The letter Hé, in the angles of the hexagram. Within the same the names IHVH, IHShVH Yeheshuah (the mystic Hebrew name for Joshua or Jesus, formed of the ordinary IHVH with the letter Sh placed therein as emblematical of the spirit), and Elohim. Around it is the sentence, John i. 4:— ‘In him was life, and the life was the light of man.’ This may be adduced as an argument of the greater antiquity of the first few mystical verses of the Gospel of St. John. -SLM. This pentacle is in Harley 3981, but is not found in M276, Ad. 10862, Sl. 3091, L1202, K288, Aub24, or W. The verse reads “In ipso vita erat et vita erat lux hominum.” -JHP.”

Another example of a Pentacle suitable for healing would be the Jupiter Health Pentacle from the Veritable Key of Solomon (MS Wellcome 4670) — see Practical Occult‘s version of it for an example, shown below in zoomed-in cropping (Chicosky, 2021):

Jupiter Health Pentacle from the Veritable Key of Solomon (MS Wellcome 4670). Credit to Practical Occult.

About this latter pentacle, Alison Chicosky (2021) notes that the effect of Jupiterian influence in this Pentacle seems to “manifest in pain reduction, light regeneration, metabolic changes, ”feeling good” when worn, and securing “a healing sleep.”

Second, if we do not wish to take a grimoire-Purist approach, we could also employ a folk magical approach and use a stripped-down methodology as was historically done since the 20th century by African American rootworkers. As yronwode (2019) notes in her brief history of Hoodoo, Conjure, and Rootwork:

The African aspects of hoodoo — foot track magic, crossroads magic, laying down tricks, ritual sweeping and floor washing, and ritual bathing — have been well documented by folklorists interested in exploring what are called “African survivals” in American Black culture. What is less well recognized is the evidence that hoodoo practice during the 20th century (and arguably in the late 19th century as well), was greatly admixed with European folk-magic, Mediaeval conjuration, Jewish Kabbalism, Allan Kardecian Spiritism, and even a smattering of Hindu mysticism.”

In historical context, it is worth noting that when grimoire elements were included in Hoodoo, 20th century American rootworkers often dispensed with the extensive ritual tools and ceremonial procedures and simply worked with the Seals themselves (yronwode, 2019).

One way to integrate them could be to draw them onto a plate–such as Balthazar’s dedicated plate for this purpose, which he calls the Tablet of Lights, and which I also use in my work–and do candle work with candles anointed with Healing Oil over them. I’ve done workings like this with great success.

However, I also carry health Pentacles, which were made following the strict grimoire procedures by myself or others like Alison, which can be anointed with the combination of Fiery Wall of Protection and Healing Oil. In addition, I have an amulet bearing the Names and Seals of the 7 Heptameron/Lucidarium Archangels and 7 Olympic Spirits, which I also anoint with Fiery Wall of Protection and Healing Oil and wear over my heart.

Finally, such Pentacles can be included in a Healing Mojo Hand (e.g. a light blue flannel bag containing things like dirt from a hospital, some of the herbs noted above, personal concerns of the person to be healed (e.g. hair or nails), a petition paper with their full name written 7 times with HEALTH AND WELL-BEING written 7 times over it, a John the Conqueror Root anointed with Healing Oil and Fiery Wall of Protection Oil, Angelica, and a St. Raphael the Archangel Charm on the outside).

F. Healing by Tea, Bath, and Soup: Three Final Homestyle Folk Magic Techniques for Use in Healing Work

Another series of techniques that are worth including in the discussion of Healing Oil and healing magical methods and belong to the domain of Christian folk magic. When I was sick recently with a bad cold, I made the following Spiritual Bath to Aid Healing and Sleep, my personal formula, which features a combination of Herbs to foster both conditions along with Angelica to be included along with prayers requesting Angelic help:

Spiritual Bath to Aid Healing and Sleep

  • Chamomile
  • Self-heal
  • Althaea
  • Angelica
  • Thyme
  • Mint
  • Rosemary
  • Lavender
  • Honey

How To Perform a Pour-Over Style Spiritual Bath (a folk Catholic method taught to me by an Espiritista):

  1. Place the herbs or curios to be used in the spiritual bath into a coffee filter at the bottom of a white bucket, never used for any other purpose. As you add each herb, speak to its spirit and ask it what role you want it to serve in the bath such as cleansing, uncrossing, or healing (e.g. “Angelica, please assist with drawing in Angelic assistance that this bath might prove successful and empowered by their aid…”). The roles of the other herbs can be easily figured out if you review the section analyzing the herbal formulas in this article.
  2. Pray to God to assist in the work you are trying to do with the bath. Pray appropriate Psalms over the bath to empower it and add sacredness to it (e.g. Psalms 49 and 50 for this bath).
  3. Set up a second basin or plastic bin to catch some of the bath water. Stand in this. When you feel your bath herbs have steeped enough, remove the coffee filter full of herbs. If needed, add a little more hot water to the basin.
  4. Now, while praying Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be continuously, proceed to take some of the water from the basin in your two hands and rub it into the bath of your neck. Rub HARD.
  5. Take some of the water and rub it into your forehead.
  6. Then take more water and rub it into your right armpit.
  7. Then left armpit.
  8. Then take water in your hand again and start to rub from your neck down on the front of your body. Flick out at your waist.
  9. Then do the same on right side from the armpit down, flicking our at waist.
  10. Then do the same on left side from the armpit down, flicking our at waist.
  11. Then intensely rub water along your whole left arm from shoulder to the tip of your hand, flicking out past your fingers.
  12. Then your left arm.
  13. Then your right leg, starting from the hip and moving down to flick out at your toes.
  14. Then your left leg.
  15. Now pour half the remaining water over the front of your body from your neck down.
  16. Next, pour the other half down your back from the neck down.
  17. Now sit and let yourself air dry.
  18. To finish the work, take a cup of the bathwater from the basin you were standing in and set it aside. Pour the remaining water in the basin down each sink, toilet, and bathtub in your house; I learned this method from cat yronwode.
  19. Finally, take that last cup of water, go out your back door, toss it over your left shoulder and go back inside without looking back. I do it on my balcony. This technique was taught to me by my Rootwork teacher Aaron Davis.

I also like to make a chamomile tea to go with this Spiritual Bath. As noted above, I prayed Psalms 49 and 50 over the tea and bath, while they both steeped together. I drank the tea, performed the bath, and went to bed immediately after air-drying. This combination was very helpful along with a candle working done to foster healing the next day, which proved very successful.

As another Rootwork tip for healing work, when people are sick, many of us make them chicken noodle soup. We can get creative and add a magical twist to this folk practice; if we include Rosemary, Thyme, and Basil in the soup, we can then pray Psalm 49 and Psalm 50 over them and request that the one who consumes the soup be made healed and whole. I did this as well in combination of the tea and spiritual bath above, for a multi-pronged approach, alongside wearing a Pentacle anointed with the Healing Oil.

D. Healing on the Shoulders of Giants: Final Thoughts on Extending the Light of the Spiritual Healing Tradition

The call of healing has long resounded through the history of spiritual work from its earliest incipience. Indeed, the world’s heritage of healing ranges far and wide, from the medicines of Indigenous Elders, whose descendants went on to influence the methods of Hoodoo alongside African healing traditions to Ancient Greek prayers to Asklēpiós, and Egyptian invocations of Sekhmet to make war on illness. On the African continent, the ancestral homeland of American slaves, prayers and songs of healing had long rung out to !Xu in the South, Sonzwaphi among the Zulu, and Aja among the Yoruba. Invocations of health rose up by campfires and by trees calling for the grace of Obalúayé, the power of Erinlẹ, or the herbal wisdom of Ọsanyìn. The Aztecs called to Ixtlilton and Patecatl; the Celts invoked Airmed, Lugh, and Ianuaria; the Chinese supplicated Bao Sheng Da Di, Shennong Da Di, and He Xiangu; and the Etruscans praised the healing of Fufluns and Menrva. The litanies of spirits of healing go on and on from Vaidyanatha, Dhanvantari, and Mariamman in India to Eeyeekalduk and Pinga among the Inuit, Sukunahikona in Japan, and Eir in the Norse lands.

When the Root Doctors among the American slaves were denied the “privilege” of medical attention, they reclaimed healing power for themselves with the Herbs and roots at their disposal. The rootworkers that descended from them knew the Bible well and used it to fuel their work; they called on the God of Psalm 107, who “sent out His word and healed” and Psalm 147, “who heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” Like the European Rosicrucians, they too saw in Christ a Master Healer of the Oppressed and the Downtrodden and called upon him to help them work the roots to healing. We today who strive to continue this work stand on the shoulders of these giants, with gratitude, humility, and the same compassion that drove their hands to work and lips to prayer. My hope is that this article will provide some useful ideas to those in search of Herbs, Roots, and Formulas to continue the work of spiritual healing today.

May health, blessing, and goodness follow you in every work of your hands and every prayer of your lips. Amen!

E. References

Ajana, P. (2022). Little Book of Rootwork. New York, NY: Ulysses Press.

Andrew (2018). “14 Provent Benefits of Niaouli Essential Oil.” Healthy Focus. Retrieved 2022-08-31 from https://healthyfocus.org/niaouli-essential-oil/

Anonymous. (2022). “Hoodoo Condition Oil Recipes.” Hoodoo Conjure. Retrieved 2022-08-28 from http://hoodoo-conjure.com/port-doc/Oil-Recipes.pdf

Bailey, W. (2012). “Hoodoo – A General Summary of the Tradition.” Hoodoo Conjure. Retrieved 2022-08-28 from http://www.blog.hoodoo-conjure.com/hoodoo-a-general-summary-of-the-tradition/

Block, S. (2020). “Three Prayers for Times of Healing and Disease.” The Digital Ambler. Retrieved 2022-08-28 from https://digitalambler.com/2020/03/17/three-prayers-for-times-of-illness-and-disease/

Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writer’s Project, 1936–1938. Manuscript Division, Library of CongressSouth Carolina Narratives, vol. 14, part 3. Available from http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/snhtml/snhome.html.

Chicosky, A. (2021). “Solomonic Health Pentacles: A Comparison.” Practical Occult Newsletter. Retrieved 2022-08-29 from https://practicaloccult.com/solomonic-health-pentacles-a-comparison/

Chireau, Yvonne. (1997). “Conjure and Christianity in the Nineteenth Century: Religious Elements in African American Magic.” Religion and American Culture 7, no. 2 (1997): 225-246.

Duvall, E. (2022). “Healing Oil.” Working With Spirits. Retrieved 2022-08-28 from https://workingwithspirits.com/shop/ols/products/healing-oil-to-promote-healing-physically-and-mentally

Dr. E. (2022). “Healing Oil.” Conjure Doctor. Retrieved 2022-08-28 from https://conjuredoctor.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=185

Fenix, T. (2010). Conjure Cookbook: Making Magic With Oils, Incense, Powders and Baths. Bolton, On: Amazon.

Fett, S.M. (2002). Working Cures: Healing, Health, and Power on Southern Slave Plantations. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Laremy, R. (2001) The Psalm Workbook: Work With the Psalms to Empower, Enrich and Enhance Your Life. Original Publications: Amazon.

Peterson, J. H. (2018). The Key of Solomon the King. Esoteric Archives. Accessed August 15, 2018 from http://www.esotericarchives.com/solomon/ksol2.htm

Saint Joseph’s Oratory (2022). “St. Joseph’s Oil – A Gesture of Faith.” Saint Joseph’s Oratory. Retrieved 2022-09-13 from https://www.saint-joseph.org/en/spirituality/saint-joseph/saint-joseph-oil/

Smith, T. D. (2019). “Root Doctors.” Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2022-08-28 from https://www.encyclopedia.com/humanities/applied-and-social-sciences-magazines/root-doctors

The Art of the Root (2021). Healing Oil. Retrieved 2022-08-28 from https://artoftheroot.com/products/healing-oil-for-hoodoo-voodoo-wicca-pagan-rituals

Yronwode, C. (2002). Hoodoo Herb and Root Magic: A Materia Magica of African American Conjure. Forestville, California: Lucky Mojo Curio Co.

Yronwode, C. (2019). Hoodoo, Conjure, and Rootwork: African American Folk Magic. Retrieved 2022-08-29 from https://www.luckymojo.com/hoodoohistory.html#hoodoois

Occult Sherbrooke: Adventures with Angelic Cathedrals, Elementals, and Drowned Dead

By Frater S.C.F.V.

A. Introduction: “The Queen of the Eastern Townships”

Following up on the esoteric adventures in Bourcherville that were recounted in the preceding article, my travels next took me to the historic city of Sherbrooke. Located in the Estrie Region of Québec, Canada, Sherbrooke has long been dubbed “The Queen of the Eastern Townships.” Of course, the city of Sherbrooke, like all of the cities in the province, was founded on Indigenous land. First Nation Peoples first settled the region between 3,000 to 8,000 years ago and subsequently referred to it by different names; the Abenaki People called it Ktinékétolékouac (The Large Forks) or Shacewanteku (where one smokes) (Commission de Toponymie, 2022). The first colonial settler in the area was a French farmer named Jean-Baptiste Nolain, who came to the area in 1779.

Situated at the confluence of the Saint-François and Magog rivers, a fur-trading center developed in the area which developed into a full-blown settler colony by 1802 when American pioneers from Vermont built several mills. To quote the Canadian Encyclopedia, “the village took the name of Governor General John Coape Sherbrooke in 1818. The city owes its initial urban growth to industrialization, which occurred in waves from the 1840s. It became a textile centre with the establishment of Canada’s first cotton manufacturing plant in 1844 and a large wool plant in 1867. The town’s success in the 19th century is due as much to its dynamic anglophone businessmen, who established a regional bank and promoted railways and new industries, as to its francophone population, which supplied much of the industrial manpower. The development of agriculture and mining in the region also enhanced Sherbrooke’s role as a wholesale trade and services centre. Since the 1950s, the city has had difficulty attracting new industry and has experienced a decline in its textile and clothing industries. The founding of Université de Sherbrooke in 1954 and the decentralization of the province’s administration have helped restore much of the city’s dynamism.”

Map of Sherbrooke from 1881.

I came to the city to explore its rich history, culture, attractions, and sandy beach, but was equally interested in its spiritual riches. I expected Sherbrooke to be a city so steeped in Christian tradition that the chances of finding an occult shop there would be slim; indeed the 2011 Census found that 79% of Sherbrooke residents identify as Catholic. However, I was pleasantly surprised to discover that the city plays host to a surprisingly well-stocked esoteric shop called Wiccan-Trinity (18 Rue King O, Sherbrooke, QC J1H 1N8, https://www.wiccan-trinity.com/herbes-et-sauges-herbs-and-sage?page=2). There, I picked up a variety of curios and herbs for use in my ongoing studies of Hoodoo, Conjure, and Rootwork with my fantastic teacher Fr. Aaron Davis. The prices were surprisingly fair; indeed some were half the price of what one would pay for the same item in Montréal! I enjoyed the small-sized minerals they had available, of which I purchased Tiger’s Eye, Jade, Aventurine, and Howlite, and which I intend to integrate into Rootwork Condition oils and Mojo bags.

I also picked up a Medal of Saint Christopher, Patron Saint of Travelers, which I exorcised, consecrated, prayed over, and anointed with Protection Oil before affixing to my backpack for protection while traveling.

Many things could be written about the wonderful memories I formed here. However, for the purpose of this article, I will focus only on the occult adventures that transpired at (a) the Magog River Gorge, (b) the Basilica of Saint Michael the Archangel, and (c) the Cathedral of John the Baptist.

An 1840 sketch of the Magog Gorge waterfalls in Sherbrooke, courtesy of the Eastern Townships Archives Portal.

B. Communing with the Flow of Forces: Attuning to Elementals and Drowned Dead Above a Waterfall

With its rich colonial history spanning hundreds of years and thousands of years of Abenaki oral before that, Sherbrooke is replete with the spiritual traces of countless beings, both human and not. Those who have esoteric eyes to see and ears to hear–to paraphrase Isaiah and Christ in Isaiah 6:10 Matthew 13:9-16–will find many subtle energies at play here from the ruins of old houses to the spans of nature and the ”forlorn and isolated spots free from all interruption” where daimons roam (Le Grand Grimoire, Peterson, 1999).

One such place to which I felt drawn was the series of rapids and waterfalls, both natural and man-made, that make up the Magog River Gorge. Here, a promenade takes one directly over the main waterfall where the river above plunges into the gorge below. The elemental energy here was palpable, with beautiful green trees flanking a deep pool, which cascaded down with the power of falling water.

Magog River Gorge Waterfalls, photography by the author.

I decided to pour a libation of alcohol directly into the waterfall, offering it to the Most High on behalf of the spirits of the area, and inviting any local spirits to partake of it. The practice of alcohol libations has a rich history; Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey both feature libations of wine being poured out to various spirits, from the dead to the Olympic gods and similar practices were also well-attested in Babylonian engravings (Klingbeil, 2018).

The practice also occurs in the Hebrew Bible, for instance, in Genesis 35:14, in which the Prophet Jacob pours a drink offering on a pillar that he erected at the place where God appeared to him as he was fleeing to Haran. I was taught it in the Hoodoo context, as it was used by African Americans in the South of the United States of America. Like many Hoodoo practices, however, this practice was carried into North America by West African slaves. As Smith (2004) notes, alcohol libations marked major events in Akan, lgbo, Kongo and Arada societies, including birth, and naming and marriage ceremonies and were often used in religious offerings. In later Hoodoo applications, it was common to provide an alcohol offering to spirits in a graveyard before collecting grave dirt for use in Rootwork.

Magog River Gorge Waterfalls, photography by the author.

In this instance, I poured the offering, closed my eyes, and tuned into the ”signatures” of the spirits who came to partake of it. I was interested to see that a variety of spirits took interest and partook. On the lighter side, I detected at least two kinds of Water Elementals. One kind moved quickly and rapidly; these were smaller and appeared to me in flashes of a woman and of a quickly-waving fish tail. These seemed curious about my presence and playful in nature. They reminded me of Ancient Greek Nereids or Paracelsus’ Undines.

Another kind were completely opposite; they were large and slow and appeared to me like dark blotches underwater that reminded me vaguely of whales. These seemed entirely uninterested in me and eminently focused and mature.

Spirit Of Deep Water canvas print by Andrey Narchuk.

In addition, I observed the presence of a sprightly kind of Air Elemental that appeared to me like a fairy-sylph. These flitted about quickly also, but appeared to be enjoying dancing over the water, especially near the waterfall, where mists were being kicked up. These reminded me of the Ancient Greek descriptions of Nephelai nymphs who appear in plumes of vapour and rain. These appeared entirely absorbed in their playful activity, delighting in dancing on currents of air and water.

Roman mosaic depiction of Eros and Nephelai Nymph from Antioch, House of the Triumph of Dionysos, Date 2nd – 3rd Century C.E.

Off by the shore, I sensed some Earth Elementals, silently watching the Water and Air spirits at play. These appeared to have different personalities. Some appeared more jovial and to be enjoying the mirth of the spirits. Others appeared sterner and stared with flat expressions.

A final type of spirit I sensed here was darker in nature. This was a Drowned Dead spirit, the spirit of a man who had drowned in the Gorge. I could not tell when, but his clothes appeared to be in brown and tan tones and rough in nature. To me, he did not appear to be wealthy, but more of a common worker who might have worked in a nearby farm or been a worker in one of the Sherbrooke mines. His energy was heavy and dark. He appeared lost and sad. My heart sunk for him. I prayed for him, that he might feel free to leave this place and transition on. As a wise Espiritista once taught me, with spirits like this, it is best to pray for their luz y progresso y paz (light, progress, and peace). So, I took time to do this for a while. Eventually, the dark presence seemed to lift and a lighter feeling pervaded. I am not sure if this was because the spirit simply left the area or if he was finally able to move on towards the Other Side. I’d like to believe it was the latter.

Magog River Gorge Waterfalls, photography by the author.

C. Into the Archangelic Sanctuary: Tuning into Relics of Blessed Marie-Léonie Paradis at the Cathedral of Saint Michael

Sometimes, our Spirits guide us in ways we cannot always foresee. This happened to me on another day in Sherbrooke. I looked on my map for the nearest store where I might be able to purchase a towel for my planned trip to the Michel-Blanchard beach. Unfortunately, it would be quite the walk to get there, and all uphill; Sherbrooke is a city of many hills, quite like San Francisco, California. However, I felt a prompting from one of my Spirits to go this route anyway, so I did.

As I rounded a curve up a hill, I was stunned by the sight of a great Cathedral, which turned out to be the massive Basilica of Saint Michael the Archangel, who happens to be one of my Patrons and a Spirit with whom I have worked in the past. It was as if he wanted me to enter this beautiful edifice over which he presided. I thanked him for his guidance and was happy to oblige.

This Church was striking in its features. To quote Destination Sherbrooke (2022), ”The Basilica-Cathedral Saint-Michel is the seat of the Archdiocese of Sherbrooke, which covers the dioceses of Sherbrooke, Nicolet and Saint-Hyacinthe. It was built on the heights of the cliff Saint-Michel, close to the city center. Perched on a kind of acropolis, it dominates the city and the surrounding area of ​​its massive, robust silhouette, which is complemented by the more aerial lines of the archiepiscopal palace, looking like a castle. Archbishop’s palace and cathedral form today an imposing masonry complex, which reveals the evolution of the thought of the principal architect of this work, the architect Louis-Napoleon Audet.”

Saint Michael Basilica-Cathedral of Sherbrooke, photograph by the author.

Particularly striking to me was the monumental stone image of the Crucified Christ that towers over the Cathedral doors:

Saint Michael Basilica-Cathedral of Sherbrooke, photograph by the author.

The lower-half of the Cathedral was constructed from 1914 to 1917, but a lack of funds resulted in a tragic thirty-nine year pause in construction. The the upper-half of the Cathedral was finally finished in 1957. The interior of the Basilica features some ornate artwork, such as Archbishop Chapel artwork by the great Canadian painter Ozias Leduc. However, it was the images of Archangel Michael that attracted me the most. One such image was a painting, displayed upon a wall, depicting Michael standing on the head of Satan:

Saint Michael Basilica-Cathedral of Sherbrooke, photograph by the author.

Another image was an illuminated statue of the Archangel spearing the Dragon of Revelation 12:7–10, with a French prayer on the wall beside him:

Saint Michael Basilica-Cathedral of Sherbrooke, photograph by the author.
Saint Michael Basilica-Cathedral of Sherbrooke, photography by the author.

The atmosphere in the Cathedral was light, pleasant, and yet solemn at the same time, in a quasi-Kabbalistic blend of Divine Mercy and Severity.

As it turned out, the Cathedral also contained relics of the Blessed Marie-Léonie Paradis (12 May 1840 – 3 May 1912). In 1854, at the age of fourteen, and while her father was seeking gold in California, she joined the Marianites of Saint-Laurent in Montreal, a female branch of the Holy Cross Congregation, despite her frail health (Meenan, 2022). She received the name of “Marie-Léonie”, formally known as “Marie de Sainte-Léonie.”

She taught in Montreal for several years until, in 1862, she was sent to the Church of St. Vincent de Paul a parish for French speaking Catholics in Manhattan, where the congregation ran an orphanage (Meenan, 2022). She remained there until 1870, when she joined the Sisters of the Holy Cross, the American branch of her order, located at Notre Dame, Indiana. There she taught French and needlework to the sisters training to become teachers. In 1874, Paradis was appointed Mistress of Novices at the Collège Saint-Joseph in Memramcook, New Brunswick, and supported the Holy Cross Fathers there in their educational ministry (Meenan, 2022).

Blessed Marie-Léonie Paradis and Nuns of her Order.

Meenan (2022) notes that ”Sister Marie-Léonie felt called to found a new religious order with the specific task of supporting the priests and seminarians, dedicated to service, which would be home-grown Canadian. Thus was founded on August 26, 1877 the ‘Little Sisters of the Holy Family’, without whose help many colleges and seminaries would not have been able to survive, as was also the case for many hospitals.” The kind Sister died in 1912 at the age of 71, after a brief battle with cancer, and was beatified by Pope Saint John Paul II on his pilgrimage to Canada, on September, 11, 1984.

To quote the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (2022), ”By ensuring the training of the young women who wanted to collaborate in her work, the founder was also ensuring their well-being. Most of these women came from poor families, and religious life was their hope of contributing something meaningful and getting a better education than their families could provide. As she wrote in 1899 to a priest at Suncook, New Hampshire, “The community of the Little Sisters of the Holy Family was founded to give poor, uneducated young girls the advantages of religious life.”’

Icon of Blessed Marie-Léonie Paradis.

The Conference (2022) writers go on to add that ”Bishop Paul LaRocque would say that she spent her life giving herself away: “She always had her arms open and her heart was transparent. She was always ready with a hearty, open laugh, welcoming each person as if they were God himself. She was a woman of the heart.” Her generosity was not limited to her religious family. No matter how poor her community might have been, she responded without hesitation to all needs. She helped the sick who came to the door or a family that she met in her travels. She hospitably received several religious who had been forced to leave France. She even adopted a young Berber woman, whose son became a priest.”

“Our mission in the Church is to help the priest on the temporal and spiritual planes,” she wrote. “But what it really demands as a supreme witness is for us to love one another and to love all people, not with just any love, but with all the love that God wants to give them. We must therefore repeat without tiring that our principal work is to give love.”

This 1976 pamphlet from the Centre Marie-Léonie Paradis contained a prayer ”to obtain a favour” through her intercession, a prime example of Catholic folk magic through intercessory prayer.

The Saint Michael Cathedral-Basilica features, in addition, to items that belonged to the Blessed Marie-Léonie, also a shrine in her honour, complete with relics belonging to her over which one can pray while kneeling:

Saint Michael Basilica-Cathedral of Sherbrooke, photography by the author.

I felt drawn to kneel at one of these reliquary stations and to tune in psychometrically with my hand on the relic to see if I could get a sense of the Blessed Marie-Léonie.

Her spiritual presence was eminently loving and radiant. With my hand over her relic, I saw a vision of her smiling face, with love in her eyes, and nurturing and benevolent intentions in her heart. I could sense that she would have made an effective teacher because her sincere commitment to her students and love for their well-being. I prayed and gave thanks to God in her honour and asked for her to guide me in her ways of love, service, pedagogy, and kindness. At the end of my prayer, I saw her luminous face, smiling once more…

Saint Michael Basilica-Cathedral of Sherbrooke, photography by the author.

D. Astral Signatures Embedded in Stone: Psychometry at the Church of St. John the Baptist

As fortune should have it, the Cathedral-Basilica of Saint Michael should not prove the final church I would visit during my time in Sherbrooke. From across the river, I glimpsed the shining silver towers of yet another towering Cathedral and climbed a hill to get to it. This was the Église de Saint-Jean Baptiste (Church of Saint John the Baptist). As it turned out, I arrived at his eponymous church in the weekend of his Feast Day, which is celebrated all across Québec for he is also regarded as a Patron Saint of the Province of Québec itself.

The Saint-Jean-Baptiste parish built this monumental Catholic church between 1905 and 1908, and was very typical of the religious architecture of Quebec at that time. A first chapel, transformed into a parish hall (300, rue du Conseil), was first built in 1884 to serve the faithful of the parish of Saint-Michel living east of the Saint-François River. Autonomous since 1890, the growing parish at last embarked on this grandiose project, known as “the cathedral of the East”. The project was entrusted to the young Sherbrooke architect Wilfrid J. Grégoire and to Raoul-Adolphe Brassard of Montreal. Louis-Napoléon Audet would first be Grégoire’s intern on this project before becoming his associate in 1907. The inauguration of this “temple to the glory of the Most High” in 1908 gave rise to numerous celebrations in the city. More than a century later, the Saint-Jean-Baptiste church still stands in the heart of Eastern Sherbrooke.

The Church of Saint John the Baptist, photography by the author.

Here, I undertook to do a session of psychometry, by resting my hand on the stone of the church and then on its massive doors to sense what I could of what had transpired here in the past and whether there were any current Spirits still lingering here.

Psychometry at l’Église Saint-Jean Baptiste.

As a refresher on this practice, I will quote my previous article on weather magic and psychometry in Boucherville:

For those who may not be familiar with the term, the word Psychometry (from the Greek: ψυχή, psukhē, “spirit, soul” and μέτρον, metron, “measure”) was coined by American physician and Professor of physiology Joseph Rodes Buchanan (December 11, 1814 – December 26, 1899) in 1842. The term came to refer to the metaphysical practice of obtaining information about the history of an object or place by “tuning into” it while touching it or placing it to one’s forehead (New World Encyclopedia, 2007).

As I understand the practice, what we essentially do with Psychometry is open up our astral senses and then attempt to tune into the the region of the Astral Plane that corresponds to the physical object or location. Then we attempt to surrender to the reception of images, sounds, smells, touches, and other impressions that sometimes show “snapshots” or, as it were, “movies” of things that happened there in the past (I call these “psychic history traces’“), and at other times allow us to tune into the spirits of the dead who still have a connection to the place or object in question (I call these “connected spirits“). I had no success with it at all for years until I started to develop my astral senses and also improve at spirit conjuring, divination, and scrying, after which I found it to be a very similar practice. Psychometry is almost like doing a divination and reading, assisted by touch, of an object or place instead of a set of Tarot cards, Runes, Geomancy markings, etc. combined with the kind of reception of spirit impressions that we experience in an evocation.

Psychometry at l’Église Saint-Jean Baptiste.

On this particular occasion, and in contrast to the Magog River Gorge area, where there were connected spirits like the Drowned Dead who had drowned in the river, I did not detect any connected spirits here.

However, I did detect an abundance of ‘psychic history traces’ here, that is, impressions of events that unfolded here in the past. Over the many decades of the church’s history, many people passed through here. I saw images of happy families celebrating marriages with black-clad grooms and white-dressed brides. Images of christenings came through as well, with crying babies being baptized and proud parents looking on. There were also images of a variety of people, some poor, some more wealthy as evidenced by their clothes and fine hats, who had come to the church over the years for ordinary Sunday Mass. The energy here was overwhelmingly positive, although I’m sure many funereal tears and penitent sinners with heavy hearts had also passed through here over the years. One women, clad in a green dress and green hat, stood out from the others. I thought at first she might be a connected spirit, but she was not. This woman was still alive and had passed through here recently.

The Saint John the Baptist Church has a rich history, but its history is still being written. I was grateful for my chance to peer into the Astral traces of some small portion of that history, which is a legacy of people celebrating the milestones of their lives, the connectedness of their community, and the glorification of their God within these massive stone walls.

The Church of Saint John the Baptist, photography by the author.

E. Conclusion: The End of One Chapter, Beginning of Another

My time in Sherbrooke was eminently positive, despite its steep hills reminding my legs just how out of shape they are. I was grateful for its kind people, great restaurants–such as a Steakhouse and an Indian Thali restaurant run by a man and woman who are a couple and poured their love of food into twin establishments that run in parallel–and historic sites. May the Spirits of those who reside here be blessed with all manifestations of the Good, warmed by love, soothed by the kindness of Marie-Léonie Paradis, and cradled in the Divine Presence that carries them to Glory. B’shem Yeshua. Amen.

References

Klingbeil, G. A. (2018). Libation Rituals in the Ancient Near East. Khirbet Qeiyafa Vol. 4, 219. Retrieved July 1, 2022 from shorturl.at/pwJRT

Meenan, J.P. (2022). ”Blessed Marie-Leonie Paradis.” Catholic Insight. Retrieved July 1, 2022 from https://catholicinsight.com/blessed-marie-leonie-paradis/

Peterson, J. H. (1999). ”Le Grand Grimoire.” Esoteric Archives. Retrieved July 1, 2022 from http://www.esotericarchives.com/solomon/grand.htm

The Canadian Conference of Bishops (2022). ”Blessed Marie-Léoni Paradis.” Retrieved July 1, 2022 from https://www.cccb.ca/the-catholic-church-in-canada/saints-blesseds-canada/canadian-blesseds/blessed-marie-leonie-paradis-1840-1912/

The Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica (2022). “Sherbrooke, Quebec.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved July 1, 2022 from https://www.britannica.com/place/Sherbrooke

“Sherbrooke”. Commission de Toponymie. Retrieved July 1, 2022 from https://toponymie.gouv.qc.ca/ct/ToposWeb/fiche.aspx?no_seq=59493

“Sherbrooke.” The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved July 1, 2022 from https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/sherbrooke

Smith, F. H. (2004). Spirits and Spirituality: Enslaved Persons and Alcohol in West Africa and the British and French Caribbean1. The Journal of Caribbean History38(2), 279.

Solomonic Invocation of Archangel Gabriel and Cauldron of Art Consecration

By Frater S.C.F.V.

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Note: This article and all images contained herein are Offerings of thanks to the great Archangel Gabriel, not unto my glory, but unto the glory of the Most High. May all of the praise and honour be to Him and Him alone. All photos were taken after the Temple was closed. All communications from the Angel are shared here with permission for the extension of the Good for the benefit of all beings and the accomplishing of the Divine Will. May all beings be well, blessed, and free from suffering, amen!

Date: Monday, January 14, 2018
Sun Phase: Set
Moon Phase: Waxing, First Quarter (58% Illumination, as close as possible to the 50% suggested by the Heptameron) in 3 degrees Taurus
Mansion of the Moon: Thurayya
Planetary Day: Day of the Moon
Planetary Hour: Hour of the Moon
Activities: Solomonic Ritual Bathing with Hyssop; Crafting Gabriel’s Sigil; Dressing Candles for Cyprian and Gabriel; Preliminary Prayers; Offerings to the Most High and to Saint Cyprian of Antioch; Heptameron Prayer; Invoking the Angels of the Four Directions as per Heptameron; Psalm 103 Recitation; Conjuration of Gabriel; Exorcism and Consecration of the Cauldron by Cyprian and Gabriel; Scrying with Gabriel; Temple Closing 

For the past few days, I have felt a strong call not only to consecrate my new Cauldron of Art, but to invoke the Archangel Gabriel as well as my Patron St. Cyprian of Antioch for help in the process.  I was receiving a strong nudge, of the kind I often receive from Saint Cyprian or the Holy Spirit, that Gabriel would have a message for me. Therefore, I began a 3-day regime of ritual purity in preparation, culminating in today.

The timing for the Operation was appropriate. The Heptameron requires in “Of the Manner of Working” that if possible, “Let the Moon be increasing and equal, if it may then be done;” at 58% illumination, the ‘equal’ requirement was almost perfectly met  (Peterson, 2008). In addition, the Moon today is in the Lunar Mansion of Thurayya, which is, as Picatrix (12th century) says, proper for “the acquisition of all good [things].” Agrippa (16th century) adds that it is good for “happy fortune and every good thing.” It is especially a good time for new creative ventures and asking for assistance and favours.

After a ritual bath with hyssop, I got into my white robe and stole, put on my Cyprianic rosary, scapular, and Cyprianic bracelet, and covered my hair with a black covering.  Proceeding to the Temple, which had already been arranged prior to the beginning of the Planetary Hour, I sounded the Bell of Art three times before entering the Circle as per the Hygromanteia. Then, I entered the Circle, and began preliminary prayers to the Divine while asperging the Circle, Altar, and all Instruments of the Art with Holy Water.  I then took up my Solomonic Sword and traced over the outer line of the Circle with its point. I put down the Sword and picked up my Wand. 

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First, I presented Offerings to the Most High and asked for His Help in sending His servant, Gabriel to be present with me and aid me in this Operation of the Art. Next, I presented Offerings to my Patron, St. Cyprian of Antioch, of Frankincense, a Candle dressed with Chili, Mugwort, and San Cipriano Oil, and bread drizzled with Maple Syrup. I poured his previous week’s offering of Spring Water into the Cauldron on the Altar and sprinkled it with Mugwort. I asked St. Cyprian to assist me in exorcising it, which I proceeded to do, while rubbing it with water from St. Cyprian’s water glass as Conjureman Ali recommends. I then asked if the Saint would bless it for use in all Operations of the Art and empower and charge it with prayers to the Most High and his own skill in the Art.

With this done, I proceeded to the Heptameron Prayer prior to Conjurations. I then asked Cyprian to aid me in bringing to the Circle those Spirits I would call and similarly called upon the Holy Spirit to aid me in this way. Then, I took up the Bell of Art and my Wand and then called the appropriate Angels of the First Heaven, ruling on Monday, as per the Heptameron, as follows:

  • From the East.
    • Gabriel. Gabrael. Madiel. Deamiel. Janael.
  • From the West.
    • Sachiel. Zaniel. Habaiel. Bachanael. Corabael.
  • From the North.
    • Mael. Vuael. Valnum. Baliel. Balay. Humastrau.
  • From the South.
    • Curaniel. Dabriel. Darquiel. Hanun. Anayl. Vetuel (Peterson, 2015).

Next, I sang Psalm 103 and then, while holding the Wand, proceeded with the Heptameron Conjuration of Gabriel. I performed the Conjuration in song-like vibratory pitch, slow and powerful. When it was done, I suffumigated and sprinkled Gabriel’s Sigil, which I had drawn in the Day and Hour of the Moon during the waxing Moon at its ‘equal’ stage, and stared at while vibrating Gabriel’s name over and over again. I continued in this way until I felt his presence in the room growing stronger. His presence struck me, as always, as powerful, incredible ancient, and yet warm and compassionate. I gave him consent to speak into my mind, or through the incense smoke, or otherwise to guide me how best he would like me to communicate with him on this day.

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To begin, I asked him to confirm his presence by moving the three streams of incense smoke visibly to the left, which he promptly did. Then, I welcomed him, knelt before the Altar, and blessed him with great love and respect and offered him gifts of incense, bread drizzled with maple syrup, a blue candle dressed with Saint Cyprian Oil, Mugwort, and White Sesame (sacred to the Moon). I asked him if the Offerings were acceptable to him and a deep, warm voice began to speak in my mind, feeling quite distinct from my own, saying:

These gifts were not necessary. But the kindness of your heart is appreciated.

I told him I was glad to hear this and how grateful I felt that he was here. I reminded him that I had always felt a loving connection with him and hoped I could learn much from him as he accompanied me on the journey of life.

I then asked him if he had any wisdom to offer me at this point in time. His message was as profound as it was moving:

O Son of Humankind, turn your vision to this candle flame you have offered unto me. To we Angels, this is what your human lives are like — a fleeting flame, that burns for the flash of a moment. Just as soon as it came, it is gone. For us, your entire human history, all that has passed, is now, and ever shall be, is but a flame of this same kind. Simply a flash of light in the darkness. The light of your life is not even yours, but a gift from your Lord, a sharing of His Light. And yet, how arrogant are your fellow human beings! How great you exalt yourselves, while fleeting flames!

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I felt so humbled by his words as I knelt before the Altar. I confessed my own shortcomings in this area, the many ways in which I had missed the mark. I then asked the Archangel what we, as individuals can do to help our fellow human beings in this time when we fleeting flames are so exalting ourselves, so out of balance, and seemingly so lost. The great Angel replied:

First, notice the fragility of human life. How easily blown out is a small and flickering flame. Give thanks for the light bequeathed to you. Then tend to your flame. Having tended to your own flame to strengthen it, tend to the flames of those with whom you share your world. Let your every meeting with another strengthen their flame, not weaken it. And as you strengthen them, so shall you be strengthened.

Then turn to the flames as yet unlit, flames only to be lit hundreds and thousands of years from now, the flames of future beings. Let your actions now, tend to their flames then. Tread lightly on the Earth, lest, in seeking to strengthen your own flame, your actions blow out theirs. Many among you are desperate and hurting. We see you and we help you as best we can as we are Willed to do. You are not alone. Show your fellow beings hope as you have been shown hope. Strengthen them as you have been strengthened. Nurture the Light bestowed on you. For your Father is in you as you are in Him. And all you meet are but Him in disguise.”

I thanked him for his wisdom. Then, out of curiosity, I asked Gabriel something I had long wondered. How did Mary, mother of Yeshua, respond when Gabriel went to see her and told her she would give birth to a son? Asked this question, his presence in the room seemed to brighten as if resonating with a fond and beautiful moment and he said:

She was surprised, as any would be. But she was humble. She surrendered to God’s Will. She did not elevate herself, but lowered herself, grateful. Her life became an offering, for she knew the blessings bestowed on her would be given to all.

I asked Gabriel if he would aid me by touching and blessing this Cauldron of Art for work to extend the Good as is the Will of the Most High. I was instructed to place the candle I offered unto him into the Cauldron and place his Sigil over the rim of the Cauldron.

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Then Gabriel spoke these words:

As this candle flame’s light fills this Cauldron, so, too does my Light bless it now. Use it for good or not at all.”

I said I would and then asked Gabriel for another request. Would he bless me with the honour of formally becoming one of my Patrons, to guide me in life and in my service to others, and lead me deeper into the Divine Mysteries? Much to my joy, the Angel replied:

As you have asked, it shall be. If you humble yourself and nurture the flames in others, then I will nurture the flame in you. Wherever you are, I too, will be. When you worship your Father, I will be there by your side. As God is in you, so be in God, for you and your Father are One. And there is none that do not abide in Him. Some know it, some do not. Nurture those who know and those who do not alike.

The wise know this: to humble yourself infinitely is to realize the Divine infinity in you. If you are willing to lay yourself so low as to be Nothing, then you shall realize the Nothing that is All. If you raise yourself up, you shall be brought down, but if you bring yourself down, you shall be raised up. To those who offer themselves for the good of the All, the All will be offered for the good of them. Receive by giving.”

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I asked if there was any final thing that the Archangel would like to show me before we closed.

“Gaze carefully into the Candle flame within the Cauldron.”

I did as instructed. Soon my gaze begun to fade out, distant and yet close. Both of my hands gripped the Altar on either side. I remained there for a few moments. And then a peculiar thing began to happen. My perspective seemed to zoom out, so that I could see my body kneeling before the Altar. Suddenly I became aware that Gabriel was not confined to the candle flame, to the Cauldron, or to the Altar. Instead, he was all around me, everywhere I looked and everywhere I could not see. His massive presence with thousands of wings surrounded the entire Circle…

Gazing within the Cauldron, the perspective shifted out further and further and further. Until I saw the whole Earth in Gabriel’s embrace, his vast white Wings of light wrapped around it, nothing out of his reach…

Remember the smallness of the candle flame…” He said.

I thanked him for his presence and invited him to enjoy the Offerings as long as he pleased, as I did to Cyprian. I then thanked the Angels and Spirits of the Four Directions for their presence and aid, blessing them with the Bell and with prayers each in turn. I gave the License to Depart to all spirits present and then formally closed the Temple, leaving the candles offered unto Cyprian and Gabriel flickering in the Temple.

A humbled, but joyful loving feeling glowed within me for hours after the Operation. How grateful I feel for even a moment in the presence of Gabriel. How grateful I feel for all of the beautiful candle flames whose light adorns my life, my friends, family, students,  colleagues, Fraters and Sorors, and loved ones. How they bless me with their light. May I always remember my responsibility to each of them and never take them for granted. I close with these all-important words of an Angel far wiser than this humble flame…

First, notice the fragility of human life. How easily blown out is a small and flickering flame. Give thanks for the light bequeathed to you. Then tend to your flame. Having tended to your own flame to strengthen it, tend to the flames of those with whom you share your world. Let your every meeting with another strengthen their flame, not weaken it. And as you strengthen them, so shall you be strengthened.”

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Cryptoconsecratio: Reflections on the Magical Consecration by Mass in the Solomonic Grimoires

By Adam J. Pearson

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The Marginalized Method: Introduction to the Magical Consecration by Mass

Consecration is one of the fundamental methods, not only of the traditional priestly art of the exoteric priest, but also of the traditional Medieval and Renaissance Magician. As Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa (2000) reveals in his Third Books of Occult Philosophy, priests and Magicians alike have long used a variety of different methods to consecrate magical and sacred objects, methods which range from the use of sacred bells to the casting of exorcised salt and sanctified Holy Water:

“Bells by consecration and benediction receive virtue that they drive away and restrain lightnings, and tempests, that they hurt not in those places where their sounds are heard; in like manner Salt and Water, by their benedictions and exorcisms, receive power to chase and drive away evil spirits” (Agrippa, 2000).

The exorcisms and benedictions by consecrated Water and Salt of Art to which Agrippa alludes here are well-known to Solomonic Magicians; indeed instructions for both are presented in Chapters 5 and 11 of Book II of Peterson’s (2004) Clavicula Salomonis or Key of Solomon. Elsewhere, Agrippa (2000) alludes to the use of Fire and Incense in exorcisms, consecrations, and blessings of magical tools, as in the suffumigations we find within the Key (Peterson, 2004).

However, the commensurate power of bells themselves to exorcise and bless sacred spaces within the Solomonic tradition is often neglected; for this reason, I undertook a detailed and comprehensive study of the use of Bells and Trumpets of Art in the Solomonic grimoires. However, both the great Agrippa himself and contemporary magicians like myself who humbly stand on his shoulders have long omitted one additional method of consecration that is employed in the Medieval and Renaissance grimoires. Indeed, this marginalized method remains as oft-neglected, understudied, or dismissed as the consecrational use of Bells.

This mysterious method is none other than the method of consecration by Mass, which I will define for the purposes of this article as:

The process of spiritually empowering or sanctifying either Magicians or magical objects through their presence in the formal performance of liturgical or votive Christian Masses.

In this article, I will analyze a series of key instances of this oft-neglected formula in three Solomonic grimoires, namely, Juratus Honorii or the The Sworne Booke of Honorius, Sloane 3847 – The Clavicle of Solomon Revealed by Ptolomy the Grecian, and the Heptameron or Magical Elements. After thus establishing a theoretical and historical grounding for the method, I will then proceed to share some practical suggestions for how contemporary Magicians can apply this magical technique in order to optimally benefit from its powers and most closely follow the protocols outlined by the grimoiric systems.

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In History and Manuscripts: Consecration by Mass in the Solomonic Grimoire Tradition

The method of consecration by Mass occurs in multiple grimoires, perhaps because the power of the Mass as a magico-spiritual ceremony was vividly apparent to the clerical authors who penned the Late Medieval and Renaissance texts (Leitch, 2009). In order to illustrate some examples of both how the method was traditionally applied as well as the contexts in which it was used, I will briefly consider three grimoiric examples here, namely, those of Juratus Honorii or the The Sworne Booke of Honorius, Sloane 3847 – The Clavicle of Solomon Revealed by Ptolomy the Grecian, and the Heptameron or Magical Elements.

1. Magical Consecration by Mass in The Sworne Booke of Honorius

First, Liber Juratus Honorii or the The Sworne Booke of Honorius has the distinction of being one of the earliest extant Medieval grimoires available to contemporary practitioners and scholars; indeed the most reliable and complete manuscript of the text, Sloane 3854, art. 9, fol 117-144, seems to date to the 14th century (Peterson, 2009). In this fascinating text, the method of consecration by Mass is interestingly employed, not to purify, bless, and empower magical objects, but to enact the same sacred transformation on the Magician. As Joseph H. Peterson’s (2009) edition of the text lays bare, Liber Juratus requires the Magician to enlist the help of a “wary and faithful” priest who is willing to work with and purify him–in keeping with its historical context and Medieval gender biases, the text assumes a male practitioner–for his [sic] Operations with the spirits. As the text explains,

Let [the Magician] have a wary and a faithful priest which may say unto him … a Mass of the Holy Ghost, and in his introit let him say the 13th prayer, and after the offertory the 9th prayer. Then take frankincense and incense and cense the altar saying the first prayer, and because the holy fathers did trust in the saints that were there named, therefore they did so, and if he that shall work have more devotion to any other saints, then be there named, let him change name for name, for faith doth always work, as I said before.

Then let the 2nd prayer be said immediately and after te igiter in the Mass; let be said the 3rd, 4th, 5th, 7th, and 8th prayers in consecrating of the Body of Christ, let the priest pray for him that shall work that through the grace of God he may obtain the effect of his petition. And so must the priest do in all his prayers that he shall say for him that shall work, but add nothing else to them. Also after the Communion, the priest shall say the 26th prayer, and after mass he that shall work shall receive the sacrament saying the 19th and 20th prayer.

But let him take heed that he receive not the Body of Christ for an evil purpose, for that were death unto him, wherefore some men have entitled this book calling it The Death of the Soul, and that is true to them that work for an evil intent and purpose, and not to have some science or some good thing; for the Lord sayeth “Ask, and it shall be given you, seek and ye shall finde,” and in another place he sayeth “where 2 or 3 are gathered together in my name, I am in the midst of them and everything that they shall ask the father in my name and he will fulfill and do it.”

The Magician of Liber Juratus is held to a very high standard of moral purity, a spiritual and ritual state that is here magnified by the priest’s consecration of “he that shall work”–the text’s term for the Magician or Exorcist–by the power of the Mass and Holy Communion (Peterson, 2009).

Two additional things are worth noting about this interesting passage. First, the particular Mass that the grimoire recommends is a special ‘votive’ or devotional mass called the “Mass of the Holy Ghost,” now called the “Mass of the Holy Spirit,” which was used in the 14th century to invoke the Holy Spirit and ask for guidance and wisdom; the invocation of Divine power and wisdom is, of course, very relevant to the work of a Christian Magician.

Second, the Mass is here given in a modified version in which the specific numbered prayers given in the grimoire are inserted into it and the priest prays for the success of the Magician’s operation at the most auspicious of moments, namely, during the “consecration of the Body of Christ,” in which the wafer was believed by Catholics to be transubstantiated from an ordinary wafer into Christ’s body itself. The net effect of making these changes to the standard script of the Mass is to produce a kind of grimoiric Mass that is an explicitly magical ritual in itself through its connection to the Liber Juratus procedures.

Later in the text, the Magician is instructed to conduct a prolonged series of fasts, prayers, and purifications, and once again, is instructed to attend the Mass. Here, however, “he that shall work” is instructed to say specific prayers, which are given in the text, while receiving the Holy Communion or the Body and Blood of Christ in the Church (Peterson, 2009). As Liber Juratus explains:

If therefore anybody wishes to operate with those spirits, we must first warn him strictly that he must be thoroughly purified, as we have said in the preceding, until he comes to the fourteenth day, on which day he must begin his fast. Then when the Mass of the Holy Spirit is being said or celebrated, when the operator is receiving the Body of Christ (eucharist), he should say prayers 19 and 20 (LXXVII-LXXIX), as we have said, when the priest is holding up the Body of Christ (i.e. wafer), to reveal it to the congregation, he should pray on behalf of the Operation.

This passage is noteworthy because it lays bear the notion that for the author of Liber Juratus, the exoteric Mass and the esoteric work of the conjurer were not seen as two separate things, as some contemporary theorists who postulate a rigid divide between the techniques of “magic” and “religion” may suggest. Instead, the work of the Mass was part of the magic and supplied part of its spiritual empowerment; in the Liber Juratus‘s system, the preparatory purifying Rites and the later callings of the spirits are part of a single magico-religious continuum. Indeed, without the consecration by Mass, the Magician was held to be unfit and insufficiently purified to proceed with the Operations with spirits (Peterson, 2009).

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2. Magical Consecration by Mass in Sloane 3847 – The Clavicle of Solomon Revealed by Ptolomy the Grecian

Second, the same principle that the Christian Mass itself has the power to consecrate both practitioners and tools of the Art is applied in another grimoiric text, namely, Sloane 3847 – The Clavicle of Solomon Revealed by Ptolomy the Grecian. This text is one of the earliest available manuscripts of the Key of Solomon and seems to date to 1572, the only earlier one I’m aware of being BNF or Bibliothèque Nationale de France Ital 1524, which dates to 1446 (Peterson, 1999).  In Sloane 3847, the method of consecration by Mass is applied not only in the consecration of the Tools of the Art, but also in the consecration of the Pentacles. As will be seen, the process given for consecrating the Pentacles is considerably more involved and demanding in this manuscript than in later manuscripts of the Clavicula Salomonis, which may suggest that later writers may have abrogated the text to simplify the method.

In Sloane 3847, the Magician is required to have not one, but multiple Masses said over the Planetary Pentacle to consecrate and empower it, as the text explains:

The Pentacles be made upon

day, and in the hour of Mercury,(…). Have a house or secret chamber clean and goodly wherein shall none inhabit, but the cheefe coniurer and his fellowes, and make a fumigation there and sprinckle it with yewater, as it is said (…) and have your paper or better, virgin paper and begin that hour to write the foresayde pentacle of noble collour as is emabrium or celestem coniured and exorsized as it is sayd.

For the Pen and the Inke, let them be writt and other thinges to be exorsized, and when they be written perfectly, that hour if they be not completed, doe not cease untill they be fullfilled when ye may. Then take some noble cloth of silke wherin ye may hold the foresayd pentacles, and have there an earthen pot great, and full of coales, and let there be of ligno mastico masculo & ligno aloe, coniured, and let ye coniurer be cleare [24v] as it is meete, and have there prepared Arthanum nupatum [the Quill knife] in the juice of pimpernell and the blood of a goose made and completed upon Mercuries day in the augementinge [waxing] of the moone where upon let 3 Masses be songe with gospells and fumigate it with fumigations of ye knife, that ye must cut and make maicum Isopi [hyssop], with your whole minde and humble deuotion, sayinge these Psalmes with yeoration followinge…

Nor is that all. The Magician is then required to complete a series of prayers over the next three days, and “cause” an additional series of Masses to be said over the Pentacle to activate it and en-spirit it with magical force:

Say this 3 dayes continuall upon the foresayed pentacles and cause 3 Masses to be sayed of ye Holy Ghost, and one of Our Lady, and afterward put the foresaid signes, in a silke cloth with goodly sauours, and put them up in a cleane place.

And when it is neede, ye may worke as it is said of the artes magicall, of thy cloth were decked with gold it were of more efficacye, and when they be put in a cleane place, fumigate them and sprincle them with water and Isope [hyssop] and soe let them alone. They have immumerable vertues as it is contained heareafter.

Nor is the formula of consecration by Mass only applied for Pentacles. The Clavicle also requires it for the consecration of “the Conjurer’s” tools, such as the Knife, Wand, and Needle:

With such a knife as the circles should be made with, if it be greevous for you to make such a knife, finde some knife of the foresaid fashion, with a haft all white or all blacke, and write upon manicumor haft the foresaid wordes, after the mañer aforesaid of that knife, and upon the plate begiñinge from the poynt, write with encausto conjured, Alpha et omega, agla, Ja, el, ou, premeumaton, syrnel, afrnel, and cause to be sayd over this knife 3 masses, one of the holy ghost and 2 of our Lady and fumigate him, with the fumigations followinge, and blesse him with water as followeth, conjuring sayinge, in nomine patris filii et S. Sancti Amen, and put him in a silke cloth, of such as followeth, until ye will worke, and of that knife let the circles of artes be made, and with that knife, let things necessary to the artes or experiments be cut, likewise let Artanus be made, but they neede not to be put in any operation. Let other Instruments of Iron, or staves, or rodds excersised in artes or experiments be consecrated, on that mañer, if they be Instrumts Let them be made on

Mercury

dayes and his Hour as it is said of ye knife, and Arthano [the quill knife], and let these that followeth be written upon them…

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This passage is fascinating for a number of reasons. First, it seems to suggest that a single knife can be used, not both a black-handled knife and a white-handled knife as in later manuscripts, but a knife “with a haft [handle] all white or all black” (Peterson, 1999). This small, but significant difference places this manuscript more closely in line with the Hygromanteia, which only features a single knife (Marathakis, 2011). As Dr. Stephen Skinner explains in his detailed analysis within the same edition of the text, in the Hygromanteia,

The blade of the knife must be from an older sword or knife that has brought death, but the handle must be made from the horn of a black he-goat. P has she-goat instead and G does not refer to the handle at all. According to A, B, G and B3 certain nomina barbara have to be written on the knife, and it must be constructed on the day and the hour of Mars.

Except for this section and the subsequent mentions of the black handled knife in the making of the pen, the parchment and the circle, the manuscripts mention the knife in relation to a number of independent divinatory operations that will be treated of below. The oldest reference to the black-handled knife, brought to my attention by David Rankine, comes from Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo Yitzhaki), the famous 11th century commentator of the Talmud. Rashi, commenting on a Talmudic passage, says:

He who is particular about the vessel (by means of which he divines), that he cannot do anything without the vessel that is required for that thing, as, for instance, the “princes of the thumb”, for which they require a knife, the handle of which is black, or the “princes of the cup”, that they require a cup of glass.” (…)

Another early reference to the black handled knife can be found in the Recension C of the Testament of Solomon, which, according to McCown may belong to the 12th or 13th century. In this text, Beelzeboul says:

Take fifty one in number black unborn kids, bring me a new knife with a handle made from black horn and attached by three rivets, and skin the kids [baby goats].”

It is additionally worth noting the explicit Christianity of this passage from the Clavicle, which not only requires “3 Masses, one of the Holy Ghost and 2 of our Lady [the Virgin Mary]” to be said over the Knife of Art, but also conjures the Knife by means of the Trinity, “in nomine patris filii et S. Sancti Amen” (Peterson, 1999). This stands in contrast to later manuscripts of the Key of Solomon, which eliminate all Christian references in an attempt to make the text appear entirely Jewish, and thus, more in line with the religion of its pseudepigraphic author, King Solomon.

In the interests of brevity, I will not quote all of the passages concerning consecrations by Mass in the Clavicle, for there are many, but it may suffice to say in summary that Masses are also required to be recited over the “Virgin Wax or Earth” (“three Masses”), the Needle of Art (“three Masses”), the Virgin Parchment (“three Masses”), and the Silk Cloth for wrapping implements of the Art (a staggering “9 Masses!) (Peterson, 1999).

As these passages reveal, consecration by Mass was considered by the author of the Clavicle, that is, Pseudo-Ptolemy the Grecian in Sloane 3847, to be a fundamental and essential magical technique for consecrating all of the Tools of the Art as well as the Pentacles produced using the Clavicular method (Peterson, 1999).  As such, the absence of consecration by Mass in later manuscripts of the Key, arguably a product of attempts to streamline and facilitate the Solomonic method, is remarkably conspicuous.

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3. Magical Consecration by Mass in The Heptameron or Magical Elements Pseudepigraphically attributed to Peter de Abano

Third, consecration by Mass also figures strongly in the Heptameron or Magical Elements, in two key respects, namely, the consecrations of the Pentacle and Garment and the Sword of Art. As the text, in Peterson’s (2018) edition, explains:

The Operator ought to be clean and purified by the space of nine daies before the beginning of the work, and to be confessed, and receive the holy Communion. Let him have ready the perfume appropriated to the day wherein he would perform the work. He ought also to have holy water from a Priest, and a new earthen vessel with fire, a Vesture and a Pentacle; and let all these things be rightly and duly consecrated and prepared. Let one of the servants carry the earthen vessel full of fire, and the perfumes, and let another bear the book, another the Garment and Pentacle, and let the master carry the Sword; over which there must be said one mass of the Holy Ghost.”

Similarly, a later passage clarifies that the consecration by Mass must not only be performed for the Sword, but also for the Pentacle:

Let it be a Priest’s Garment, if it can be had, let it be of linen, and clean. Then take this Pentacle made in the day and hour of Mercury, the Moon increasing, written in parchment made of a kids skin [goat skin]. But first let there be said over it the Mass of the holy Ghost, and let it be sprinkled with water of baptism

As these passages reveal, the Pseudo-Peter de Abano of the Heptameron also saw the consecration by Mass to be a crucially important method for imbuing the Sword and Pentacle with their magical power.

To bring these three analyses together, the magical theoretic logic at play behind both Juratus’ consecration of the Magician by Mass and the Clavicle and Heptameron’s consecrations of the Tools and Pentacles by Mass seems to be largely the same. In both cases, proximity to or immersion in the Holy Mass brings the Magician and the Tools into sympathetic resonance with the holy forces that they are intended to help conjure and direct to magical ends.

To the Catholic Magicians who penned these three grimoires, it was only natural to draw upon the most powerful ceremony of which they were aware, in which the Body and Blood of their Saviour were symbolically ingested in the Mystery of Eucharist, to empower their instruments, a logic Agrippa explains in his analyses of sympathetic “occult vertue” (Agrippa, 2000). Indeed, the fact that the method of consecration by Mass recurs in so many influential and early texts only makes its glaring omission by most modern Magicians all the more striking. By omitting it, contemporary practitioners risk leaving out a key component of the magical method and theory enshrined in these pivotal texts.

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Resurrecting the Consecration by Mass: Practical Suggestions for the Contemporary Practitioner

In light of the method’s powerful historical legacy in the grimoires and in the interests of faithfulness to the source texts, what are contemporary practitioners to do if they wish to implement the consecration by Mass into their own 21st-century work?

Three main options remain open to contemporary Magicians:

1) They can follow Liber Juratus and try to find a “faithful and wary” ordained priest who is willing to help in performing Masses over them or their magical implements. This is possible in some cases, but priests willing to cooperate in occult enterprises can be few and far between. This unfortunate state of affairs is predominantly due to the continued stigmatization of esotericism as necessarily and intrinsically demonic that reigns within the contemporary Church. With that said, Reverend Aaron Leitch does offer a service of consecration by Mass for those who would like to enlist his services.

2) They can become ordained as priests and perform the Masses over their own implements ourselves. To aid and support those who are interested in doing this, I have included a full Latin text of the “Mass of the Holy Ghost” called for in the aforementioned grimoires in Appendix I of this article. The journey to authentic ordination is a long one requiring great devotion and commitment, but this second option is often still easier than the first, and indeed, I know several individuals who have taken this approach.

3) The third and final method is the approach I affectionately refer to as cryptoconsecratio, that is, the clandestine consecration of objects performed in public. In this case, cryptoconsecratio entails bringing magical items to Church and praying over and consecrating them secretly during the Mass itself.

One challenge posed by this latter approach, however, is that, as we have already seen, the “Mass of the Holy Spirit” prescribed above is not the standard Sunday liturgical Mass, but rather a votive or devotional Mass that is rarely performed by most Churches today at all if not once or a few times per year (Rex, 2014). Thankfully, practical experimentation has revealed that the standard Mass, while not as optimally aligned with the grimoiric specifications as the Mass of the Holy Spirit, works nearly as well for our purposes.

Practical Tips for Cryptoconsecrating Magical Objects by Mass

Those who would like to attempt the cryptoconsecratio method of consecration by Mass, can facilitate their task by placing magical items in an unsuspicious bag such as a backpack, purse or satchel, which they bring with them into the Church. Ideally, the objects to be consecrated would be placed as close to the Altar as possible; indeed, the grimoires’ authors envisioned the items being placed on the Altar itself. However, as per Agrippan occult philosophical logic, the items can remain in the pews if necessary; since the Mass technically unfolds throughout the entire Church, its “occult vertue” and sympathetic empowerment can still be transferred to any location within the Church during the Mass provided appropriate and effective prayers are used to direct the process (Agrippa, 2000).

The closer to the Altar, the better, however. The boldest Magicians can sit in the front row and thereby be as close to the Altar as they can possibly be without being the officiating priests themselves. If practitioners are performing the clandestine cryptoconsecratio from their pews with the items in a bag beside them, then during the Mass, they can simply and discretely place a hand over the items to be consecrated and pray over them to complete the consecration.

Praying over the items multiple times throughout the Mass seems to be most effective approach, as practical experimentation has revealed. However, the most crucial moment to perform such clandestine prayers is when the priest is initiating the transubstantiation or the mystic transformation of the bread and wine into the Blood and Body of Christ (Peterson, 2009). Liber Juratus makes the esoteric potency of this moment abundantly clear in the aforementioned passage regarding the prayers to be recited by “he that shall work” (Peterson, 2009). Following Agrippa once again, the magical rationale is clear; since the priest is performing a sacred transformation, the moment is pregnant with the ‘occult vertue’ of that sacred transformative power–quite like an auspicious and benefic astrological election–thus facilitating the consecration of the targeted magical objects by the Mass (Agrippa, 2000).

At this point, I anticipate that my intelligent and practically-minded readers will likely pose a very understandable question: what about the Sword — surely it’s not so easy to cryptoconsecrate as small objects?

Admittedly, the Sword of Art’s size does seem to pose a problem. Thankfully, however, it is one easily solved. Since the Sword does not fit in most bags, it can instead be placed in the case of a musical instrument — a guitar case, for instance, works remarkably well. Once again, as in the case of the bags, clandestine practitioners need only place a hand over the Sword as it lies hidden in its case and pray over it to consecrate it during the Mass. Exorcisms of the items to be consecrated can be done in the Magician’s private Temple prior to going to Church for the Mass and final suffumigations and Holy Water sprinklings of the items can be done upon returning home.

In short, whether through a priestly ally, through becoming priests, or through discrete cryptoconsecratio performed during Masses officiated by others, the method of consecration by Mass remains accessible to this day.

A Mystic Legacy with Enduring Value: Concluding Words on an Ongoing Practice

In conclusion, the method of consecration by Mass has a respectable grimoiric pedigree and remains accessible today through methods such as the three approaches suggested in this article. Grimoiric traditionalists and Christian Magicians may find particular value in the method. Non-Christian practitioners with an open-mind and a curiosity about magical methods from other cultures, however, may still find that the method offers a fertile magical technology under-girded by hundreds of years of esoteric history as well as a fascinating avenue for exploration.

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Appendix I – The Latin text of the ‘Mass of the Holy Ghost/Spirit,’ shared here from the Public Domain (for the English text, see this List of Resources from BJ Swayne):

Missa de Spiritu Sancto

Introitus. Sap. l, 7.

Spíritus Dómini replévit orbem terrárum: et hoc, quod cóntinet ómnia, sciéntiam habet vocis.

(T.P. Allelúja, allelúja.)

Ps. 67,2.

Exsúrgat Deus, et dissipéntur inimíci ejus: et fúgiant, qui odérunt eum, a fácie ejus.

℣. Glória Patri.

Oratio.

Deus, qui corda fidélium Sancti Spíritus illustratióne docuísti: da nobis in eódem Spíritu recta sápere; et de ejus semper consolatióne gaudére. Per Dóminum . . . in unitáte ejúsdem Spíritus Sancti.

Léctio Actuum Apostólorum.

Act. 8, 14-17.

In diébus illis: Cum audíssent Apóstoli, qui erant Jerosólymis, quod recepísset Samaría verbum Dei, misérunt ad eos Petrum et Joánnem. Qui cum veníssent, oravérunt pro ipsis, ut accíperent Spíritum Sanctum: nondum enim in quemquam illórum vénerat, sed baptizáti tantum erant in nómine Dómini Jesu. Tunc imponébant manus super illos, et accipiébant Spíritum Sanctum

Graduale.

Ps. 32, 12 et 6.

Beáta gens, cujus est Dóminus Deus eórum: pópulus, quem elégit Dóminus in hereditátem sibi.

℣. Verbo Dómini coeli firmáti sunt: et Spíritu oris ejus omnis virtus eórum.

Allelúja, allelúja. (Hic genuflectitur)

℣. Veni, Sancte Spíritus, reple tuórum corda fidélium: et tui amóris in eis ignem accénde. Allelúja.

Post Septuagesimam, omissis Allelúja et
Versu sequenti, dicitur:

Tractus. Ps. 103, 30.

Emítte Spíritum tuum, et creabúntur: et renovábis fáciem terræ.

℣. O quam bonus et suávis est, Dómine, Spíritus tuus in nobis! (Hic genuflectitur)

℣. Veni, Sancte Spíritus, reple tuórum corda fidélium: et tui amóris in eis ignem accénde.

Tempore autem Paschali omittitur Graduale,
et ejus loco dicitur:

Allelúja, allelúja.

℣. Ps. 103, 30.

Emítte Spíritum tuum, et creabúntur: et renovábis fáciem terræ. Allelúja. (Hic genuflectitur)

℣. Veni, Sancte Spíritus, reple tuórum corda fidélium: et tui amóris in eis ignem accénde. Allelúja.

Sequéntia sancti Evangélii secúndum Joánnem.

Joann. 14, 23-31.

In illo témpore: Dixit Jesus discípulis suis: Si quis diligit me, sermónem meum servábit, et Pater meus díliget eum, et ad eum veniémus, et mansiónem apud eum faciémus: qui non díligit me, sermónes meos non servat Et sermónem quem audístis, non est meus: sed ejus, qui misit me, Patris. Hæc locútus sum vobis, apud vos manens. Paráclitus autem Spíritus Sanctus, quem mittet Pater in nómine meo, ille vos docébit ómnia et súggeret vobis ómnia, quæcúmque díxero vobis.

Pacem relínquo vobis, pacem meam do vobis: non quómodo mundus dat, ego do vobis. Non turbátur cor vestrum neque fórmidet. Audístis, quia ego dixi vobis: Vado et vénio ad vos. Si diligerétis me, gauderétis útique, quia vado ad Patrem; quia Pater major me est. Et nunc dixi vobis, priúsquam fiat: ut, cum factum fúerit, credátis. Jam non multa loquar vobíscum. Venit enim princeps mundi hujus, et in me non habet quidquam. Sed ut cognóscat mundus, quia díligo Patrem, et sicut mandátum dedit mihi Pater, sic fácio.

Offertorium. Ps. 67, 29-30.

Confírma hoc, Deus, quod operátus es in nobis: a templo tuo, quod est in Jerúsalem, tibi ófferent reges múnera. (T.P. Allelúja.)

Secreta.

Múnera, quǽsumus, Dómine, obláta sanctífica: et corda nostra Sancti Spíritus illustratióne emúnda. Per Dóminum . . in unitáte ejusdem Spíritus Sancti.

Præfatio de Spiritu Sancto.

Communio. Act. 2, 2 et 4.

Factus est repénte de cælo sonus tamquam adveniéntis spíritus veheméntis, ubi erant sedéntes: et repléti sunt omnes Spíritu Sancto, loquéntes magnália Dei.
(T.P.Allelúja.)

Postcommunio.

Sancti Spíritus, Dómine, corda nostra mundet infúsio: et sui roris íntima aspersióne fecúndet. Per Dóminum . . . in unitáte ejúsdem Spíritus Sancti (Zardetti, 1888).

References

Agrippa, H. C. (2000). Three Books of Occult Philosophy. Ed. Joseph H. Peterson. [online eBook]. Esoteric Archives. Based on a transcription from Moule: London, 1651. Available at http://www.esotericarchives.com/agrippa/agrippa1.htm[Accessed 01 October 2018].

Leitch, A. (2009). Secrets of the Magickal Grimoires: The Classical Texts of Magick Decyphered. Woodbury: Llewellyn Publications.

Marathakis, I. (2011). The Magical Treatise of Solomon or Hygromanteia. Singapore: Goldon Hoard Press.

Peterson, J. H. (2004). Clavicula Salomonis or The Key of Solomon. [online eBook]. Esoteric Archives. Available at: http://www.esotericarchives.com/solomon/ksol.htm [Accessed 01 October 2018].

Peterson, J. H. (2018). Heptameron or Magical Elements. [online eBook] Esoterica Archives. Available at: http://www.esotericarchives.com/solomon/ksol.htm [Accessed 01 October 2018].

Peterson, J. H. (2009). Liber Juratus Honorii or the The Sworne Booke of Honorius. [online eBook]. Esoteric Archives. Available at: http://www.esotericarchives.com/solomon/ksol.htm [Accessed 01 October 2018].

Peterson, J. H. (1999). Sloane 3847 – The Clavicle of Solomon, Revealed by Ptolomy the Grecian. [online eBook]. Esoteric Archives. Available at: http://www.esotericarchives.com/solomon/ksol.htm [Accessed 01 October 2018].

Rex, R. (2014). The Religion of Henry VIII. The Historical Journal, 57(1), 1-32.

Zardetti, O. (1888). Special Devotion to the Holy Ghost. New York: General Books.

Pathworking on the 27th Path of Peh (פ)

GoldenDawnlogoDate: August 16, 2018
Time:  8:33 – 8:55 A.M.
Sun Phase: Rising, clear sky
Moon Phase: 69 degrees Waxing Crescent in 2 Degrees Scorpio, Lunar
Mansion of al-Iklil al-Jabhah
Planetary Day: Day of Jupiter
Planetary Hour: Hour of the Sun
Activities: LIRP, Pathworking of the Path of Peh (פ), QC

fe.gifAfter performing the Lesser Ritual of the Pentagram in the Invoking mode, and donning the astral form of wearing my white robe, Stole, Lamen, Nemyss, and holding my Solomonic Wand, I astral projected into the 27th Path of Peh (פ), entering it via the exit of the Temple of Hod (הוד).

I found myself in a rocky, red-earthed field with scarce vegetation upon it. In the distance, I could hear what sounded like explosions, the clashing of metal weapons, and the cries of entities at war.
I made an offering to the King of the Spirits of Mars and asked for a Guide to be sent to lead me through the Mysteries of the Path of Peh (פ).

Soon thereafter, a large, muscular entity appeared before me. He was of a masculine form and was much taller than me, perhaps 7 or 8 feet tall. His skin was brown and he wore armor on his bulky muscles. His eyes appeared fiery and red and he appeared to have a pig-like nose. To me, he resembled the spear-carrying Moblins in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, but with more resplendent armor, a more articulate disposition, and a firm demeanor tempered with a gruff sense of humor.

Spear_Moblin_(Ocarina_of_Time).png
I greeted him in peace and with the blessings of ELOHIM GIBOR (אלהים גיבור), the Divine Name of the Path, which he returned, saying “you must have some courage to come to a place like this!”

He asked my business and I said that I had come to ask for guidance through the Mysteries and Wisdom of the Path of Peh (פ). He said he would, but that this was a dangerous realm and I would need to keep my wits about me “as all soldiers must.”

I agreed and asked him his name. He said it was “Pagiel,” a name I had never heard before. Later research revealed that it occurs in Numbers 1:13; 2:277:72,77; and 10:26, where a Prince of the Tribe of Asher and the son of Okran appears by the same name. Pagiel is sometimes translated as “allotment of God,” which evokes a sense of soldierly rationing, but also Divine provision and distribution. It is also sometimes translated as “intervention of God” or “occurrence of God.” In Hebrew, it is written as פַּגְעִיאֵ֖ל and has a Hebrew Gematria value of 194. The word צדק (tzedek) has the same value and means “to be right, blameless, righteous, and upright.” 194 is also the atomic radius of Iron (Fe), which was historically used in the weapons wielded by countless warriors. Other words with the same value are ויבקעו (cleave), לקחנו (to take), פקיד (officer), יחלצון (deliver), and ידליקם (pursue), פצחו (break), which all seem appropriate to the nature of this soldierly Spirit.

Follow me,” he said.

We walked closer to a massive battlefield, where countless soldiers of unknown species were battling in orange and green armor.  Massive catapults launched exploding projectiles which tore through the soldiers with great ease. The roar of conflict was powerful indeed. As Pagiel stood close to me, however, I could still hear his voice as he spoke.

These are the forces of Passion and Reason, spontaneous action and calculated strategy. See how the green-armored soldiers fight with berserk passion while the orange-clad soldiers fight with strategic precision. This is the tension between Netzach (נצח) and Hod (הוד), the foundations of the Pillars of Mercy and Severity. It is ongoing and eternal. But in your world of time, what you see as conflicts seem to come and go. “Conflict” is not always what it seems. What appears as conflict may simply be a re-balancing.”

Be wary to assume one side is “right” and the other is “wrong,” Pagiel said. “Both are valuable. Reason guides, passion enlivens. One supplies direction, the other, drive. One, planning, the other, spontaneity. The tensions of the Path of Peh, the tensions between Splendorous Glory and Victory are the substance of the dynamism of life itself. Know it as such and do not shy away from it in cowardice; embrace the fray with courage and the wisdom of the larger balance.”

As we were talking, the troops swarmed towards us and the fierce intensity of the battle became even clearer. As the conflict crescendo’d, a large Red Dragon swooped down from the sky, blaring fire at the troops through its gaping mouth studded with razor-sharp teeth. At this moment, it occurred to me that the meaning of Peh (פ) in Hebrew is “mouth,” and by extension, “word, speech, expression.” How often do our words and our conflicts create and sustain conflict, the Martian energy of the path!

To my surprise, the Red Dragon landed immediately on top of me and pinned me to the ground beneath one of its massive feet! I wondered if Pagiel would help me or whether I should attack the Dragon myself.

Remaining cool-headed, Pagiel spoke to me and said “Do not be so quick to assume that one who seems to attack you is a foe. A friend may appear as a foe and foe as a friend. Peh (פ) can be speak words of peace and words of attack, words that soothe and words that harm. We are responsible for how we wield its power. You have a choice right now. You can slay this Dragon or trust it. A soldier must practice discernment.

draFollowing my intuition, I decided to trust the Dragon. He immediately began to blast fire into my face, which soon engulfed my entire astral form. Amazingly, I felt no pain from the fire. On the contrary, it occurred to me that this was a fire of purification, of refinement, or alchemical transmutation.

Wise choice,” Pagiel said. “Sometimes, fire is required to purify the excesses of overly analytical or neurotic thinking and deluded and exaggerated emotion — the heart of the War of the Path. Ore must be purified and forged with heat to become a Sword.  When heated and under great pressure, coal becomes radiant Diamond.  Cowards resist pressure and run from it; warriors embrace the pressure and welcome the transformation.”

When the Dragon was finished his work, he lifted his foot off of my body and gestured with his head for Pagiel and me to climb onto his back. We did so and flew over the battling hordes, who continued their relentless combat. From the air, I could see how the soldiers in green armor fought like wild berserkers in a state of reckless, spontaneous abandon to passionate bloodlust and rage. The orange-armored soldiers, in contrast, formed Roman-like formations and deployed and mobilized in strategic configurations. Their very movements belied the differing archetypal forces that drove them — Reason and Passion, Air and Fire.

tower.jpgExplosive projectiles from the catapults blasted apart the foundations and structures of towers and buildings around the battlefield and I was immediately reminded of the Tarot attribution of the Path — the Tower, with its violent portrayal of the toppling of the Tower of Babel via Divine Intervention (“intervention of God” – Pagiel). Both rational and emotional Towers can fall. The superstructures of ideologies and philosophical systems, spiritual systems, political systems, and the “best laid plans of mice and men” can all be toppled by the winds and tides of history. The loving structures of Venus, the domain of Netzach (נצח) , can also fall; relationships can be blown apart, hearts can be broken. But like conflict, apparent falls may simply be forms of rebalancing. Destruction of the old can create the building blocks of the new.

So long as there is creation, there will be destruction, and the tension of sustaining,” Pagiel said. Destruction is neither intrinsically evil nor harmful; it is simply a Force of Nature. The fallen plants of yesterday become the fertile soil for the plants of tomorrow. The despised stone of a fallen Tower can become the cornerstone of a new tower more in line with Divine Will than self-centered delusion. The Martial Arts of Peh (פ) require balance and adaptiveness. When Towers fall; embrace it. In a combat roll, you lean into a fall. Fall with, not against. Flow. And see how the destruction of the Towers of your past may not be a loss, but a gain — the upwelling of potential and liberation.”

The Dragon landed near the entrance to the Temple of Netzach (נצח) , with its vast green dome. I asked Pagiel if he could initiate me into the energetic current of the Path of Peh. He asked me to clasp his right hand in my own and for each of us to place our left hand on each other’s forehead, immediately over the Third Eye. Then he transmitted a red influx of vivifying, encouraging, and strengthening current and resolve that resonated through the Ruachian astral body. I equilibrated the energy with the Qabalistic Cross.

I then asked Pagiel if I could attempt to contact him ceremonially and physically within my Temple. He said he was not sure if he could come down to that level of manifestation, but that he could try. I asked him for his Sigil by which I could reach him and he traced one in the air in red fire:

pagiel.png
I thanked Pagiel for all of his guidance and blessed him once more in the Name of ELOHIM GIBOR (אלהים גיבור). “Peace be with you,” I said, before leaving the Path to return to my body.

Peace when possible,” Pagiel said with a smile and a wink, “and war when necessary.