If a chemist from the twentieth century could step into a time-machine
and go back two-hundred years he or she would probably feel a deep
kinship with the chemists of that time, even though there might be
considerable differences in terminology, underlying theory, equipment
and so on. Despite this kinship, chemists have not been trapped
in the
past, and the subject as it is studied today bears little resemblance
to
the chemistry of two hundred years ago.
Kabbalah has existed for nearly two thousand years, and like any living
discipline it has evolved through time, and it continues to evolve.
One
aspect of this evolution is that it is necessary for living Kabbalists
to continually "re-present" what they understand by Kabbalah so that
Kabbalah itself continues to live and continues to retain its usefulness
to each new generation. If Kabbalists do not do this then it
becomes a
dead thing, an historical curiousity (as was virtually the case within
Judaism by the nineteenth century). These notes were written
with that
intention: to present one view of Kabbalah as it is currently
practised
in 1992, so that people who are interested in Kabbalah and want to
learn
more about it are not limited purely to texts written hundreds or
thousands of years ago (or for that matter, modern texts written about
texts written hundreds or thousands of years ago). For this reason
these notes acknowledge the past, but they do not defer to it.
There
are many adequate texts for those who wish to understand Kabbalah as
it
was practised in the past.
These notes have another purpose. The majority of people who are
drawn
towards Kabbalah are not historians; they are people who want to know
enough about it to decide whether they should use it as part of their
own personal mystical or magical adventure. There is enough information
not only to make that decision, but also to move from theory into
practice. I should emphasise that this is only one variation
of
Kabbalah out of many, and I leave it to others to present their own
variants - I make no apology if the material is biased towards a
particular point of view.
The word "Kabbalah" means "tradition". There are many alternative
spellings, the two most popular being Kabbalah and Qabalah, but Cabala,
Qaballah, Qabala, Kaballa (and so on) are also seen. I made my
choice
as a result of a poll of the books on my bookcase, not as a result
of
deep linguistic understanding.
If Kabbalah means "tradition", then the core of the tradition was the
attempt to penetrate the inner meaning of the Bible, which was taken
to
be the literal (but heavily veiled) word of God. Because the
Word was
veiled, special techniques were developed to elucidate the true
meaning....Kabbalistic theosophy has been deeply influenced by these
attempts to find a deep meaning in the Bible.
The earliest documents (~100 - ~1000 A.D.) associated with Kabbalah
describe the attempts of "Merkabah" mystics to penetrate the seven
halls
(Hekaloth) of creation and reach the Merkabah (throne-chariot) of God.
These mystics used the familiar methods of shamanism (fasting,
repetitious chanting, prayer, posture) to induce trance states in which
they literally fought their way past terrible seals and guards to reach
an ecstatic state in which they "saw God". An early and highly
influential document (Sepher Yetzirah) appears to have originated during
the earlier part of this period.
By the early middle ages further, more theosophical developments had
taken place, chiefly a description of "processes" within God, and a
highly esoteric view of creation as a process in which God manifests
in
a series of emanations. This doctrine of the "sephiroth" can
be found
in a rudimentary form in the "Yetzirah", but by the time of the
publication of the book "Bahir" (12th. century) it had reached
a form
not too different from the form it takes today. One of most interesting
characters from this period was Abraham Abulafia, who believed that
God
cannot be described or conceptualised using everyday symbols, and used
the Hebrew alphabet in intense meditations lasting many hours to reach
ecstatic states. Because his abstract letter combinations were
used as
keys or entry points to altered states of consciousness, failure to
carry through the manipulations correctly could have a drastic effect
on
the Kabbalist. In "Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism" Scholem
includes a
long extract of one such experiment made by one of Abulafia's students
-
it has a deep ring of truth about it.
Probably the most influential Kabbalistic document, the "Sepher ha
Zohar", was published by Moses de Leon, a Spanish Jew, in the latter
half of the thirteenth century. The "Zohar" is a series of separate
documents covering a wide range of subjects, from a verse-by-verse
esoteric commentary on the Pentateuch, to highly theosophical
descriptions of processes within God. The "Zohar" has been widely
read
and was highly influential within mainstream Judaism.
A later development in Kabbalah was the Safed school of mystics headed
by Moses Cordovero and Isaac Luria. Luria was a highly charismatic
leader who exercised almost total control over the life of the school,
and has passed into history as something of a saint. Emphasis
was
placed on living in the world and bringing the consciousness of God
through *into* the world in a practical way. Practices were largely
devotional.
Throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Judaism as a whole
was heavily influenced by Kabbalah, but by the beginning of this century
a Jewish writer was able to dismiss it as an historical curiousity.
Jewish Kabbalah has vast literature which is almost entirely
untranslated into English.
A development which took place almost synchronously with Jewish Kabbalah
was its adoption by many Christian mystics, magicians and philosphers.
Renaissance philosophers such as Pico della Mirandola were familiar
with
Kabbalah and mixed it with gnosticism, pythagoreanism, neo-platonism
and
hermeticism to form a snowball which continued to pick up traditions
as
it rolled down the centuries. It is probably accurate to say
that from
the Renaissance on, virtually all European occult philosophers and
magicians of note had a working knowledge of Kabbalah.
It is not clear how Kabbalah was involved in the propagation of ritual
magical techniques, or whether it *was* involved, or whether the ritual
techniques were preserved in parallel within Judaism, but it is an
undeniable fact that the most influential documents appear to have
a
Jewish origin. The most important medieval magical text is the
"Key of
Solomon", and it contains the elements of classic ritual magic - names
of power, the magic circle, ritual implements, consecration, evocation
of spirits etc. No-one knows how old it is, but there is a reasonable
suspicion that its contents preserve techniques which might well date
back to Solomon.
The combination of non-Jewish Kabbalah and ritual magic has been kept
alive outside Judaism until the present day, although it has been
heavily adulterated at times by hermeticism, gnosticism, neo-platonism,
pythagoreanism, rosicrucianism, christianity, tantra and so on.
The
most important "modern" influences are the French magician Eliphas
Levi,
and the English "Order of the Golden Dawn". At least two members
of the
G.D. (S.L. Mathers and A.E. Waite) were knowledgable
Kabbalists, and
three G. D. members have popularised Kabbalah - Aleister
Crowley,
Israel Regardie, and Dion Fortune. Dion Fortune's "Inner Light"
has
also produced a number of authors: Gareth Knight, William Butler,
and
William Gray.
An unfortunate side effect of the G.D is that while Kabbalah was an
important part of its "Knowledge Lectures", surviving G.D. rituals
are
a syncretist hodge-podge of symbolism in which Kabbalah plays a minor
or
nominal role, and this has led to Kabbalah being seen by many modern
occultists as more of a theoretical and intellectual discipline, rather
than a potent and self-contained mystical and magical system in its
own
right.
Some of the originators of modern witchcraft drew heavily on medieval
ritual and Kabbalah for inspiration, and it is not unusual to find
witches teaching some form of Kabbalah, although it is generally even
less well integrated into practical technique than in the case of the
G.D.
The Kabbalistic tradition described in the notes derives principally
from Dion Fortune, but has been substantially developed over the past
30
years. I would like to thank M.S. and the T.S.H.U. for all the fun.
Chapter 1.: The Tree of Life
At the root of the Kabbalistic view of
the world are three
fundamental concepts and they provide a natural place to
begin.
The three concepts are force, form and consciousness and
these
words are used in an abstract way, as the following
examples
illustrate:
- high pressure steam in the cylinder
of a steam engine
provides a force. The engine is a form
which constrains the
force.
- a river runs downhill under the
force of gravity. The
river channel is a form which constrains the
water to run in
a well defined path.
- someone wants to get to the centre of a garden
maze. The
hedges are a form which constrain that
person's ability to
walk as they please.
- a diesel engine provides the
force which drives a boat
forwards. A rudder
constrains its course to a given
direction.
- a polititian wants to change
the law. The legislative
framework of the country is a
form which he or she must
follow if the change is to be made legally.
- water sits in a bowl. The force of gravity
pulls the water
down. The bowl is a form which gives its shape
to the water.
- a stone falls to the ground under the
force of gravity.
Its acceleration is constrained
to be equal to the force
divided by the mass of the stone.
- I want to win at chess. The force of
my desire to win is
constrained within the rules of chess.
- I see something in a shop window and have
to have it. I am
constrained by the conditions
of sale (do I have enough
money, is it in stock).
- cordite explodes in a gun barrel and provides
an explosive
force on a bullet. The gas and the bullet
are constrained by
the form of the gun barrel.
- I want to get a passport. The government
won't give me one
unless I fill in lots of forms in precisely
the right way.
- I want a university degree. The university
won't give me
a degree unless I attend certain courses
and pass various
assessments.
In all these examples there is something which is causing change
to take place ("a force") and there is something
which causes
change to take place in a defined way ("a form"). Without
being
too pedantic it is possible to identify two very different types
of example here:
1. examples of natural physical processes
(e.g. a falling
stone) where the force is one of the natural
forces known to
physics (e.g. gravity) and the form
is is some combination
of physical laws which constrain the force
to act in a well
defined way.
2. examples of people wanting something,
where the force is
some ill-defined concept of "desire",
"will", or "drives",
and the form is one of the forms we
impose upon ourselves
(the rules of chess, the Law, polite behaviour
etc.).
Despite the fact that the two different types of
example are
"only metaphorically similar", Kabbalists see
no fundamental
distiniction between them. To the Kabbalist there
are forces
which cause change in the natural
world, and there are
corresponding psychological forces which drive us to change both
the world and ourselves, and whether these forces are natural
or
psychological they are rooted in the same place: consciousness.
Similarly, there are forms which the component
parts of the
physical world seem to obey (natural
laws) and there are
completely arbitrary forms we create as part of the process
of
living (the rules of a game, the shape of a mug, the design of an
engine, the syntax of a language) and these forms are also rooted
in the same place: consciousness. It is a Kabbalistic axiom that
there is a prime cause which underpins all the manifestations
of
force and form in both the natural and psychological world
and
that prime cause I have called consciousness for lack of a better
word.
Consciousness is undefinable. We know
that we are conscious
in different ways at different times - sometimes we feel free and
happy, at other times trapped and confused, sometimes angry
and
passionate, sometimes cold and restrained -
but these words
describe manifestations of consciousness. We can
define the
manifestations of consciousness in terms of manifestations
of
consciousness, which is about as useful as defining an ocean
in
terms of waves and foam. Anyone
who attempts to define
consciousness itself tends to come out of the same door as
they
went in. We have lots of words for the phenomena of consciousness
- thoughts, feelings, beliefs, desires, emotions, motives and
so
on - but few words for the states of consciousness
which give
rise to these phenomena, just as we have many words to
describe
the surface of a sea, but few words to describe
its depths.
Kabbalah provides a vocabulary for states
of consciousness
underlying the phenomena, and one of the purposes of these notes
is to explain this vocabulary, not by definition, but mostly
by
metaphor and analogy. The only genuine method of
understanding
what the vocabulary means is by attaining various
states of
consciousness in a predictable and reasonably objective way,
and
Kabbalah provides practical methods for doing this.
A fundamental premise of the Kabbalistic model
of reality is
that there is a pure, primal,
and undefinable state of
consciousness which manifests as an interaction between force and
form. This is virtually the entire guts of the Kabbalistic
view
of things, and almost everything I have to say from now
on is
based on this trinity of consciousness,
force, and form.
Consciousness comes first, but hidden within it is an
inherent
duality; there is an energy associated with consciousness
which
causes change (force), and there
is a capacity within
consciousness to constrain that energy and cause it to
manifest
in a well-defined way (form).
First Principle
of
/ Consciousness \
/
\
/
\
Capacity
Raw
to take ________________ Energy
Form
Figure 1.
What do we get out of raw energy and an inbuilt capacity for form
and structure? Is there yet another hidden potential within this
trinity waiting to manifest? There is. If modern physics is to be
believed we get matter and the physical world. The cosmological
Big Bang model of raw energy surging out from an
infintesimal
point and condensing into basic forms of matter as it cools, then
into stars and galaxies, then planets, and
ultimately living
creatures, has many points of similarity with the
Kabbalistic
model. In the Big Bang model a soup of energy condenses according
to some yet-to-be-formulated Grand-Universal-Theory
into our
physical world. What Kabbalah does suggest (and modern
physics
most certainly does not!) is that matter and consciousness
are
the same stuff, and differ only in the
degree of structure
imposed - matter is consciousness so heavily
structured and
constrained that its behaviour becomes describable
using the
regular and simple laws of physics. This is shown in Fig. 2.
The
primal, first principle of consciousness is synonymous with
the
idea of "God".
First Principle
of
/ Consciousness \
/ |
\
/ |
\
Capacity |
Raw
to take _____________ Energy/Force
Form |
\ |
/
\ |
/
\ |
/
Matter
The World
Figure 2
The glyph in Fig. 2 is the basis for the Tree of Life. The first
principle of consciousness is called Kether, which means
Crown.
The raw energy of consciousness is called Chockhmah or
Wisdom,
and the capacity to give form to the energy of consciousness
is
called Binah, which is sometimes translated as Understanding, and
sometimes as Intelligence. The outcome of the
interaction of
force and form, the physical world, called Malkuth or
Kingdom.
This quaternery is a Kabbalistic representation
of God-the-
Knowable, in the sense that it the most primitive representation
of God we are capable of comprehending; paradoxically, Kabbalah
also contains a notion of God-the-Unknowable which
transcends
this glyph, and is called En Soph. There is not much I
can say
about En Soph, and what I can say I will postpone for later.
God-the-Knowable has four aspects, two
male and two female:
Kether and Chokhmah are both represented as male, and Binah
and
Malkuth are represented as female. One of the titles of Chokhmah
is Abba, which means Father, and one of the titles of Binah
is
Aima, which means Mother, so you can think of Chokhmah
as God-
the-Father, and Binah as God-the-Mother.
Malkuth is the
daughter, the female spirit of God-as-Matter, and it would not be
wildly wrong to think of her as Mother Earth. One of
the more
pleasant things about Kabbalah is that its symbolism gives equal
place to both male and female.
And what of God-the-Son?
Is there also a God-the-Son in
Kabbalah? There is, and this is the point where Kabbalah tackles
the interesting problem of thee and me. The glyph in Fig. 2 is
a
model of consciousness, but not of self-consciousness, and self-
consciousness throws an interesting spanner in the works.
The Fall
Self-consciousness is like a mirror in
which consciousness
sees itself reflected. Self-consciousness is modelled in Kabbalah
by making a copy of figure 2.
Consciousness
of
/ Consciousness \
/ |
\
/ |
\
Consciousness | Consciousness
of ________________ of
Form |
Energy/Force
\ |
/
\ |
/
\ |
/
Consciousness
of the
World
Figure 3
Figure 3. is Figure 2. reflected through self-consciousness. The
overall effect of self-consciousness is to add
an additional
layer to Figure 2. as follows:
First Principle
of
/ Consciousness \
/ |
\
/ |
\
Capacity |
Raw
to take _____________ Energy/Force
Form |
\ |
/
\ |
/
\ |
/
Consciousness
of
/ Consciousness \
/ |
\
/ |
\
Consciousness | Consciousness
of ________________ of
Form |
Energy/Force
\ |
/
\ |
/
\ |
/
Consciousness
of the
World
|
|
|
Matter
The World
Figure 4
Fig. 2 is sometimes called "the Garden of
Eden" because it
represents a primal state of consciousness. The effect of
self-
consciousness as shown in Fig. 4 is to drive a wedge between
the
First Principle of Consciousness (Kether) and that Consciousness
realised as matter and the physical world (Malkuth).
This is
called "the Fall", after the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden
of Eden. From a Kabbalistic point of view the story of Eden, with
the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, the
serpent and the
temptation, and the casting out from the Garden has a great deal
of meaning in terms of understanding
the evolution of
consciousness.
Self-consciousness introduces
four new states of
consciousness: the Consciousness of Consciousness
is called
Tipheret, which means Beauty; the Consciousness of Force/Energy
is called Netzach, which means
Victory or Firmness; the
Consciousness of Form is called Hod, which means
Splendour or
Glory, and the Consciousness of Matter is called
Yesod, which
means Foundation. These four states have
readily observable
manifestations, as shown below in Fig. 5:
The Self
Self-Importance
Self-Sacrifice
/ |
\
/ |
\
/ |
\
Language |
Emotions
Abstraction_______________Drives
Reason |
Feelings
\ |
/
\ |
/
\ |
/
\ Perception /
Imagination
Instinct
Reproduction
Figure 5
Figure 4. is almost the complete Tree of Life, but not quite
-
there are still two states missing. The inherent
capacity of
consciousness to take on structure and objectify itself
(Binah,
God-the-Mother) is reflected through self-consciousness
as a
perception of the limitedness and boundedness of things. We
are
conscious of space and time, yesterday and today, here and there,
you and me, in and out, life and death,
whole and broken,
together and apart. We see things as limited and bounded and
we
have a perception of form as something "created" and "destroyed".
My car was built a year ago, but it was smashed
yesterday. I
wrote an essay, but I lost it when my computer crashed. My granny
is dead. The river changed its course. A law has been repealed. I
broke my coffee mug. The world changes,
and what was here
yesterday is not here today. This perception
acts like an
"interface" between the quaternary of
consciousness which
represents "God", and the quaternary which represents a
living
self-conscious being, and two new states
are introduced to
represent this interface. The state which represents the creation
of new forms is called Chesed, which means Mercy, and the
state
which represents the destruction of forms is
called Gevurah,
which means Strength. This is
shown in Fig. 6. The
objectification of forms which takes place in a self-conscious
being, and the consequent tendency to view the world in terms
of
limitations and dualities (time and space, here and there,
you
and me, in and out, God and Man, good and evil...)
produces a
barrier to perception which most people rarely overcome, and
for
this reason it has come to be called the Abyss. The Abyss is also
marked on Figure 6.
First Principle
of
/ Consciousness \
/ |
\
/ |
\
Capacity |
Raw
to take _____________ Energy/Force
Form |
|
|\ |
/|
| \ |
/ |
--------------Abyss---------------
| \ |
/ |
Destruction |
Creation
of_____\_____|_____ /____of
Form \ |
/ Form
| \ \ | /
/ |
| \ \ | /
/ |
| \ Consciousness / |
| of
|
| / Consciousness \ |
| / |
\ |
|/ |
\|
Consciousness | Consciousness
of ________________ of
\ Form |
Energy/Force
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ Consciousness /
\ of
/
\ the World /
\
/
\ |
/
\ | /
\ | /
Matter
The World
Figure 6
The diagram in Fig. 6 is called
the Tree of Life. The
"constructionist" approach I have used to justify its structure
is a little unusual, but the essence of my presentation
can be
found in the "Zohar" under the guise of the Macroprosopus
and
Microprosopus, although in this form it is not readily accessible
to the average reader. My attempt to show how the Tree
of Life
can be derived out of pure consciousness through the interaction
of an abstract notion of force and form was not intended to be
a
convincing exercise from an intellectual point of view - the Tree
of Life is primarily a gnostic rather
than a rational or
intellectual explanation of consciousness and its
interaction
with the physical world.
The Tree is composed of 10 states or
sephiroth (sephiroth
plural, sephira singular) and 22 interconnecting paths.
The age
of this diagram is unknown: there is enough information
in the
13th. century "Sepher ha Zohar" to construct this diagram,
and
the doctrine of the sephiroth has been attributed to Isaac
the
Blind in the 12th. century, but we have no certain knowledge
of
its origin. It probably originated sometime
in the interval
between the 6th. and 13th. centuries AD. The origin of
the word
"sephira" is unclear - it is almost certainly derived from
the
Hebrew word for "number" (SPhR), but it has also been attributed
to the Greek word for "sphere" and even to the Hebrew word for
a
sapphire (SPhIR). With a characteristic aptitude for discovering
hidden meanings everywhere, Kabbalists find all three derivations
useful, so take your pick.
In the language of earlier Kabbalistic writers
the sephiroth
represented ten primeval emanations of God, ten focii
through
which the energy of a hidden, absolute and unknown Godhead
(En
Soph) propagated throughout the creation,
like white light
passing through a prism. The sephiroth can be
interpreted as
aspects of God, as states of consciousness, or as nodes
akin to
the Chakras in the occult anatomy of a human being
.
I have left out one important detail
from the structure of
the Tree. There is an eleventh "something" which is
definitely
*not* a sephira, but is often shown on modern representations
of
the Tree. The Kabbalistic "explanation" runs as follows:
when
Malkuth "fell" out of the Garden of Eden (Fig. 2) it left behind
a "hole" in the fabric of the Tree, and this "hole", located
in
the centre of the Abyss, is called Daath, or Knowledge.
Daath is
*not* a sephira; it is a hole. This may sound like gobbledy-gook,
and in the sense that it is only a metaphor, it is.
The completed Tree of Life with
the Hebrew titles of the
sephiroth is shown below in Fig. 7.
En Soph
/-------------------------\
/
\
( Kether
)
/ (Crown) \
/ |
\
/ |
\
/ |
\
Binah |
Chokhmah
(Understanding)__________ (Wisdom)
(Intelligence) |
|
|\ |
/|
| \ Daath
/ |
| \ (Knowledge) / |
| \ |
/ |
Gevurah \ |
/ Chesed
(Strength)\_____|_____/__ (Mercy)
| \ |
/ (Love)
| \ \ | /
/ |
| \ \ | /
/ |
| \ Tipheret / |
| / (Beauty) \ |
| / |
\ |
| / |
\ |
|/ |
\|
Hod |
Netzach
(Glory) _______________(Victory)
(Splendour) |
(Firmness)
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ Yesod /
/
\ (Foundation) /
\
/
\ |
/
\ | /
\ | /
Malkuth
(Kingdom)
Figure 7
From an historical point of view the doctrine of emanations
and
the Tree of Life are only one small part of
a huge body of
Kabbalistic speculation about the nature of divinity and our part
in creation, but it is the part which has survived.
The Tree
continues to be used in the Twentieth Century because
it has
proved to be a useful and productive symbol for practices
of a
magical, mystical and religious nature. Modern Kabbalah
in the
Western Mystery Tradition is largely
concerned with the
understanding and practical application of the Tree of Life,
and
the following set of notes will list some of the characteristics
of each sephira in more detail so that you will have a "snapshot"
of what each sephira represents before going on to examine
the
sephiroth and the "deep structure" of the Tree in more detail.
****************************************************************************
Chapter 2.: Sephirothic Correspondences
The correspondences are a set of symbols,
associations and
qualities which provide a handle on the elusive
something a
sephira represents. Some of the correspondences are hundreds
of
years old, many were concocted this century, and some are my own;
some fit very well, and some are obscure - oddly enough
it is
often the most obscure and ill-fitting correspondence which
is
most productive; like a Zen riddle it perplexes and annoys
the
mind until it arrives at the right place more in spite
of the
correspondence than because of it.
There are few canonical
correspondences; some of the
sephiroth have alternative names, some
of the names have
alternative translations, the mapping from Hebrew spellings
to
the English alphabet varies from one author to the
next, and
inaccuracies and accretions are handed down
like the family
silver. I keep my Hebrew dictionary to hand but guarantee none of
the English spellings.
The correspondences I have given are as follows:
1. The Meaning is a translation
of the Hebrew name of the
sephira.
2. The Planet in most cases is
the planet associated with
the sephira.
In some cases it is not a planet at all
(e.g.
the fixed stars). The planets are
ordered
by decreasing
apparent motion - this is
one
correspondence which
appears to pre-date Copernicus!
3. The Element is the physical element
(earth, water, air,
fire, aethyr)
which has most in common with the nature
of the Sephira.
The Golden Dawn applied an excess of
logic to these attributions
and made a mess of them, to
the confusion
of many. Only the five Lower
Face
sephiroth have been
attributed an element.
4. Briatic colour. This is
the colour of the sephira as
seen in the world
of Creation, Briah. There are colour
scales for the
other three worlds but I haven't found
them to be useful
in practical work.
5. Magical Image. Useful in meditiations; some are astute.
6. The Briatic Correspondence is
an abstract quality
which says something
about the essence of the way the
sephira expresses
itself.
7. The Illusion characterises the
way in which the energy
of the sephira clouds
one's judgement; it is something
which is *obviously*
true. Most people suffer from one
or more of these according
to their temperament.
8. The Obligation is a personal
quality which is demanded
of an initiate at
this level.
9. The Virtue and Vice are the
energy of the sephiroth as
it manifests
in a positive and negative sense in the
personality.
10. Qlippoth is a word which means
"shell". In medieval
Kabbalah each
sephira was "seen" to be adding form to
the sephira
which preceded it in the Lightning Flash
(see Chapter 3.).
Form was seen to an accretion, a shell
around the pure
divine energy of the Godhead, and each
layer or
shell hid the divine radiance a little bit
more, until God was
buried in form and exiled in matter,
the end-point of the
process. At the time attitudes to
matter were
tainted with the Manichean notion that
matter
was evil, a snare for the
spirit, and
consequently the Qlippoth
or shells were "demonised" and
actually turned into
demons. The correspondence I have
given here restores
the original notion of a shell of
form *without*
the corresponding force to activate it;
it is the lifeless,
empty husk of a sephira devoid of
force, and while
it isn't a literal demon, it is hardly
a bundle of laughs
when you come across it.
11. The Command refers to the Four
Powers of the Sphinx,
with an extra one
added for good measure.
12. The Spiritual Experience is just that.
13. The Titles are a collection of alternative
names for the
sephira; most are
very old.
14. The God Name is a key
to invoking the power of the
sephira in the world
of emanation, Atziluth.
13. The Archangel mediates the energy of the
sephira in the
world of creation,
Briah.
14. The Angel Order administers the energy
of the sephira in
the world of formation,
Yetzirah.
15. The Keywords are a collection of phrases
which summarise
key aspects of the
sephira.
=================================================================
Sephira: Malkuth
Meaning: Kingdom
-------
-------
Planet: Cholem Yesodeth
Element: earth
--------(the Breaker of
-------
the Foundations, sphere
of the elements, the Earth)
Briatic Colour: brown
Number: 10
------------- (citrine, russet-red,------
olive green, black)
Magical Image: a young woman crowned and throned
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: stability
----------------------
Illusion: materialism
Obligation: discipline
--------
----------
Virtue: discrimination
Vice: avarice & inertia
------
----
Qlippoth: stasis
Command: keep silent
--------
-------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of the Holy Guardian Angel
------
Titles: The Gate; Gate of Death; Gate of Tears; Gate of Justice;
------ The Inferior Mother; Malkah, the
Queen; Kallah, the
Bride; the Virgin.
------
God Name: Adonai ha Aretz
Archangel: Sandalphon
-------- Adonai Malekh
---------
Angel Order: Ishim
-----------
Keywords:the real world, physical matter, the
Earth, Mother
Earth, the physical
elements, the natural world, sticks
& stones,
possessions, faeces, practicality, solidity,
stability, inertia,
heaviness, bodily death, incarnation.
=================================================================
Sephira: Yesod
Meaning: Foundation
-------
-------
Planet: Levanah (the Moon)
Element: Aethyr
--------------
-------
Briatic Colour: purple
Number: 9
-------------
------
Magical Image: a beautiful man, very strong (e.g. Atlas)
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: receptivity, perception
----------------------
Illusion: security
Obligation: trust
--------
----------
Virtue: independence
Vice: idleness
------
----
Qlippoth: zombieism, robotism Command:
go!
--------
-------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of the Machinery of the Universe
--------------------
Titles: The Treasure House of Images
------
God Name: Shaddai el Chai
Archangel: Gabriel
--------
---------
Angel Order: Cherubim
----------
Keywords: perception, interface, imagination, image, appearance,
glamour, the
Moon, the unconscious, instinct, tides,
illusion, hidden
infrastructure, dreams, divination,
anything as
it seems to be and not as it is, mirrors
and crystals,
the "Astral Plane", Aethyr, glue,
tunnels, sex
& reproduction, the genitals, cosmetics,
instinctive
magic (psychism), secret doors, shamanic
tunnel.
=============================================================
Sephira: Hod
Meaning: Glory, Splendour
-------
-------
Planet: Kokab (Mercury)
Element: air
------
-------
Briatic Colour: orange
Number: 8
-------------
------
Magical Image: an hermaphrodite
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: abstraction
----------------------
Illusion: order
Obligation: learn
--------
----------
Virtue: honesty, truthfulness Vice: dishonesty
------
----
Qlippoth: rigidity
Command: will
--------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of Splendour
------
Titles: -
------
God Name: Elohim Tzabaoth
Archangel: Raphael
--------
---------
Angel Order: Beni Elohim
Keywords: reason, abstraction, communication, conceptualisation,
logic, the sciences,
language, speech, money (as a
concept), mathematics,
medicine & healing, trickery,
writing, media
(as communication), pedantry,
philosophy,
Kabbalah (as an abstract system), protocol,
the Law, ownership,
territory, theft, "Rights", ritual
magic.
===============================================================
Sephira: Netzach
Meaning: Victory, Firmness
-------
-------
Planet: Nogah (Venus)
Element: water
--------------
-------
Briatic Colour: green
Number: 7
-------------
------
Magical Image: a beautiful naked woman
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: nurture
----------------------
Illusion: projection
Obligation: responsibility
--------
----------
Virtue: unselfishness
Vice: selfishness
------
----
Qlippoth: habit, routine
Command: know
--------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of Beauty Triumphant
------
Titles: -
------
God Name: Jehovah Tzabaoth
Archangel: Haniel
--------
---------
Angel Order: Elohim
----------
Keywords: passion, pleasure, luxury, sensual beauty, feelings,
drives, emotions
- love, hate, anger, joy, depression,
misery, excitement,
desire, lust; nurture, libido,
empathy, sympathy,
ecstatic magic.
================================================================
Sephira: Tipheret
Meaning: Beauty
-------
-------
Planet: Shemesh (the Sun)
Element: fire
--------------
-------
Briatic Colour: yellow
Number: 6
-------------
------
Magical Image: a king, a child, a sacrificed god
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: centrality, wholeness
----------------------
Illusion: identification
Obligation: integrity
--------
----------
Virtue: devotion to the Great Work Vice: pride, self-importance
------
----
Qlippoth: hollowness
Command: dare
--------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of Harmony
--------------------
Titles: Melekh, the King; Zoar Anpin, the lesser countenance, the
------ Microprosopus; the Son; Rachamin, charity.
God Name: Aloah va Daath
Archangel: Michael
--------
---------
Angel Order: Malachim
-----------
Keywords: harmony, integrity, balance, wholeness, the Self, self-
importance,
self-sacrifice, the Son of God, centrality,
the Philospher's
Stone, identity, the solar plexus,
a King, the
Great Work.
================================================================
Sephira: Gevurah
Meaning: Strength
-------
-------
Planet: Madim (Mars)
--------------
Briatic Colour: red
Number: 5
-------------
------
Magical Image: a mighty warrior
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: power
----------------------
Illusion: invincibility
Obligation: courage & loyalty
--------
----------
Virtue: courage & energy
Vice: cruelty
------
----
Qlippoth: bureaucracy
--------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of Power
--------------------
Titles: Pachad, fear; Din, justice.
------
God Name: Elohim Gevor
Archangel: Kamael
--------
---------
Angel Order: Seraphim
-----------
Keywords: power, justice, retribution (eaten cold), the Law (in
execution),
cruelty, oppression, domination & the Power
Myth, severity,
necessary destruction, catabolism,
martial arts.
===============================================================
Sephira: Chesed
Meaning: Mercy
-------
-------
Planet: Tzadekh (Jupiter)
--------------
Briatic Colour: blue
Number: 4
-------------
------
Magical Image: a mighty king
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: authority
----------------------
Illusion: being right
Obligation: humility
-------- (self-righteousness) ----------
Virtue: humility & obedience
Vice: tyranny, hypocrisy,
------
---- bigotry, gluttony
Qlippoth: ideology
--------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of Love
--------------------
Titles: Gedulah, magnificence, love, majesty
------
God Name: El
Archangel: Tzadkiel
--------
---------
Angel Order: Chasmalim
-----------
Keywords: authority, creativity, inspiration, vision, leadership,
excess, waste,
secular and spiritual power, submission
and the Annihilation
Myth, the atom bomb, obliteration,
birth, service.
================================================================
Non-Sephira: Daath
Meaning: Knowledge
-----------
-------
Daath has no manifest qualities and cannot be invoked directly.
Keywords: hole, tunnel, gateway, doorway, black hole, vortex.
================================================================
Sephira: Binah
Meaning: Understanding,
-------
-------
Planet: Shabbathai (Saturn)
------
Briatic Colour: black
Number: 3
-------------
------
Magical Image: an old woman on a throne
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: comprehension
----------------------
Illusion: death
--------
Virtue: silence
Vice: inertia
------
----
Qlippoth: fatalism
--------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of Sorrow
--------------------
Titles: Aima, the Mother; Ama, the Crone; Marah, the bitter
sea; Khorsia,
the Throne; the Fifty Gates of
Understanding;
Intelligence; the Mother of Form; the
Superior Mother.
God Name: Elohim
Archangel: Cassiel
--------
---------
Angel Order: Aralim
-----------
Keywords: limitation, form, constraint, heaviness, slowness, old-
age, infertility,
incarnation, karma, fate, time,
space, natural
law, the womb and gestation, darkness,
boundedness,
enclosure, containment, fertility, mother,
weaving and
spinning, death (annihilation).
==================================================================
Sephira: Chokhmah
Meaning: Wisdom
-------
-------
Planet: Mazlot (the Zodiac, the fixed stars)
--------------
Briatic Colour: silver/white Number:
2
------------- grey
------
Magical Image: a bearded man
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: revolution
----------------------
Illusion: independence
--------
Virtue: good
Vice: evil
------
----
Qlippoth: arbitrariness
--------
Spiritual Experience: Vision of God face-to-face
------
Titles: Abba, the Father. The Supernal Father.
------
God Name: Jah
Archangel: Ratziel
--------
---------
Angel Order: Auphanim
-----------
Keywords: pure creative energy, lifeforce, the wellspring.
==================================================================
Sephira: Kether
Meaning: Crown
-------
-------
Planet: Rashith ha Gilgalim (first swirlings, the Big Bang)
--------------
Briatic Colour: pure white
Number: 1
-------------
------
Magical Image: a bearded man seen in profile
-------------
Briatic Correspondence: unity
----------------------
Illusion: attainment
--------
Virtue: attainment
Vice: ---
------
----
Qlippoth: futility
--------
Spiritual Experience: Union with God
--------------------
Titles: Ancient of Days, the Greater Countenance
(Macroprosopus),
the White Head, Concealed of the
Concealed, Existence
of Existences, the Smooth Point,
Rum Maalah,
the Highest Point.
God Name: Eheieh
Archangel: Metatron
--------
---------
Angel Order: Chaioth ha Qadesh
-----------
Keywords: unity, union, all, pure consciousness, God, the
Godhead, manifestation,
beginning, source, emanation.
****************************************************************************
Chapter 3: The Pillars & the Lightning Flash
============================================
In Chapter 1. the Tree
of Life was derived from three
concepts, or rather one primary concept
and two derivative
concepts which are "contained" within it. The primary concept was
called consciousness, and it was said to "contain" within it
the
two complementary concepts of force and form. This chapter builds
on the idea by introducing the three Pillars of the
Tree, and
uses the Pillars to clarify a process called the Lightning Flash.
The Three Pillars are shown in Figure 8. below.
Pillar Pillar
Pillar
of of
of
Form Consciousness Force
(Severity) (Mildness) (Mercy)
Kether
/ (Crown) \
/ |
\
/ |
\
/ |
\
Binah |
Chokhmah
(Understanding)__________ (Wisdom)
(Intelligence) |
|
|\ |
/|
| \ Daath
/ |
| \ (Knowledge) / |
| \ |
/ |
Gevurah \ |
/ Chesed
(Strength)\_____|_____/__ (Mercy)
| \ |
/ (Love)
| \ \ | /
/ |
| \ \ | /
/ |
| \ Tipheret / |
| / (Beauty) \ |
| / |
\ |
| / |
\ |
|/ |
\|
Hod |
Netzach
(Glory) _______________(Victory)
(Splendour) |
(Firmness)
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ |
/ /
\ \ Yesod /
/
\ (Foundation) /
\
/
\ |
/
\ | /
\ | /
Malkuth
(Kingdom)
Figure 8
Not surprisingly the three pillars are referred to as the pillars
of consciousness, force and form. The pillar of
consciousness
contains the sephiroth Kether, Tiphereth, Yesod and Malkuth;
the
pillar of force contains the sephiroth Chokhmah,
Chesed and
Netzach; the pillar of form contains the sephiroth Binah, Gevurah
and Hod. In older Kabbalistic texts the pillars are referred
to
as the pillars of mildness, mercy and severity, and
it is not
immediately obvious how the older jargon relates to the new.
To
the medieval Kabbalist (and this is a recurring metaphor in
the
Zohar) the creation as an emanation of
God is a delicate
*balance* (metheqela) between two opposing tendencies: the mercy
of God, the outflowing, creative, life-giving
and sustaining
tendency in God, and the severity or strict judgement of God, the
limiting, defining, life-taking and ultimately
wrathful or
destructive tendency in God. The creation is "energised" by these
two tendencies as if stretched between the poles of a battery.
Modern Kabbalah makes a half-hearted
attempt to remove the
more obvious anthropomorphisms in the descriptions
of "God";
mercy and severity are misleading terms, apt to remind one of
a
man with a white beard, and even in medieval times the terms
had
distinctly technical meanings as the following quotation
shows
[1]:
"It must be remembered that to the Kabbalist,
judgement [Din
- judgement, another title of Gevurah]
means the imposition
of limits and the correct determination of
things. According
to Cordovero the quality
of judgement is inherent in
everything insofar as everything wishes
to remain what it
is, to stay within its boundaries."
I understand the word "form" in precisely this
sense - it is that
which defines *what* a thing is, the structure whereby
a given
thing is distinct from every other thing.
As for "consciousness", I use the word
"consciousness" in a
sense so abstract that it is virtually meaningless, and according
to whim I use the word God instead, where it is understood
that
both words are placeholders for something which is
potentially
knowable in the gnostic sense only -
consciousness can be
*defined* according to the *forms* it takes, in which case we are
defining the forms, *not* the
consciousness. The same
qualification applies to the word "force". My inability to define
two of the three concepts which underpin the structure
of the
Tree is a nuisance which is tackled traditionally by the use
of
extravagent metaphors, and by elimination
("not this, not
that").
The classification of sephiroth into three
pillars is a way
of saying that each sephira in a pillar partakes
of a common
quality which is "inherited" in a progressively more
developed
and structured form from of the top of a pillar to the
bottom.
Tipheret, Yesod and Malkuth all share with Kether the quality
of
"consciousness in balance" or "synthesis of opposing qualities",
or but in each case it is expressed differently according to
the
increased degree of structure imposed. Likewise, Chokhmah, Chesed
and Netzach share the quality
of force or energy or
expansiveness, and Binah, Gevurah and Hod share the quality
of
form, definition and limitation. From Kether down
to Malkuth,
force and form are combined; the symbolism
of the Tree has
something in common with a production line, with
molten metal
coming in one end and finished cars coming out the
other, and
with that metaphor we are now ready to describe the
Lightning
Flash, the process whereby God takes on flesh, the process which
created and sustains the creation.
In the beginning...was Something.
Or Nothing. It doesn't
really matter which term we use, as both are equally meaningless
in this context. Nothing is probably the better of the two terms,
because I can use Something in the next paragraph.
Kabbalists
call this Nothing "En Soph" which literally means "no
end" or
infinity, and understand by this a hidden, unmanifest
God-in-
Itself.
Out of this incomprehensible and indescribable
Nothing came
Something. Probably more words have been devoted to this
moment
than any other in Kabbalah, and it is all too easy to make
fun
the effort which has gone into elaborating the indescribable,
so
I won't, but in return do
not expect me to provide a
justification for why Something came out of Nothing. It just did.
A point crystallised in the En Soph. In some versions
of the
story the En Soph "contracted" to "make room" for the
creation
(Isaac Luria's theory of Tsimtsum), and this
is probably an
important clarification for those who have rubbed noses with
the
hidden face of God, but for the purposes of these notes
it is
enough that a point crystallised. This point was the
crown of
creation, the sephira Kether, and within Kether was contained all
the unrealised potential of the creation.
An aspect of Kether is the raw creative
force of God which
blasts into the creation like the blast of hot gas which keeps
a
hot air ballon in the air. Kabbalists are quite clear about this;
the creation didn't just happen a long time ago - it is happening
all the time, and without the force to sustain it the
creation
would crumple like a balloon. The force-like aspect within Kether
is the sephira Chokhmah and it can be thought of as the will
of
God, because without it the creation would cease to
*be*. The
whole of creation is maintained by this ravening, primeval desire
to *be*, to become, to exist, to
change, to evolve. The
experiential distinction between Kether, the point of emanation,
and Chokhmah, the creative outpouring, is elusive,
but some of
the difference is captured in the
phrases "I am" and "I
become".
Force by itself achieves nothing; it
needs to be contained,
and the balloon analogy is appropriate again. Chokhmah
contains
within it the necessity of Binah, the Mother of Form. The person
who taught me Kabbalah (a woman) told me Chokhmah
(Abba, the
Father) was God's prick, and Binah (Aima, the mother) was
God's
womb, and left me with the
picture of one half of God
continuously ejaculating into the other half. The author of
the
Zohar also makes frequent use of sexual polarity as a
metaphor
to describe the relationship between force and form, or mercy and
severity (although the most vivid sexual metaphors are used
for
the marriage of the Microprosopus and his bride, the Queen
and
Inferior Mother, the sephira Malkuth).
The sephira Binah is the Mother of Form;
form exists within
Binah as a potentiality, not as an actuality, just
as a womb
contains the potential of a baby. Without the
possibility of
form, no thing would be distinct from any other thing;
it would
be impossible to distinguish between things, impossible to
have
individuality or identity or change.
The Mother of Form
contains the potential of form within her womb and gives birth to
form when a creative impulse crosses the Abyss to the Pillar
of
Force and emanates through the sephira Chesed. Again we have
the
idea of "becoming", of outflowing creative energy, but at a lower
level. The sephira Chesed is the point at which
form becomes
perciptible to the mind as an inspiration, an idea,
a vision,
that "Eureka!" moment immediately prior
to rushing around
shouting "I've got it! I've got it!" Chesed is that quality
of
genuine inspiration, a sense of
being "plugged in" which
characterises the visionary leaders who drive the
human race
onwards into every new kind of endeavour. It can be for good
or
evil; a leader who can tap the petty malice and vindictiveness in
any person and channel it into a vision of
a new order and
genocide is just as much a visionary as any
other, but the
positive side of Chesed is the humanitarian leader
who brings
about genuine improvements to our common life.
No change comes easy; as
Cordova points out "everything
wishes to remain what it is". The creation of form is balanced in
the sephira Gevurah by the preservation and destruction of form.
Any impulse of change is channelled through Gevurah, and if it is
not resisted then something will be destroyed. If you
want to
make paper you cut down a tree. If you want to abolish
slavery
you have to destroy the culture which perpetuates it. If you want
to change someone's mind you have to
destroy that person's
beliefs about the matter in question. The sephira Gevurah is
the
quality of strict judgement which opposes change, destroys
the
unfamiliar, and corresponds in many ways to an
immune system
within the body of God.
There has to be a balance between creation
and destruction.
Too much change, too many ideas, too many things happening
too
quickly can have the quality of chaos (and can literally
become
that), whereas too little change, no new ideas, too much form and
structure and protocol can suffocate and stifle. There has to
be
a balance which "makes sense" and this "idea
of balance" or
"making sense" is expressed in the sephira Tiphereth. It
is an
instinctive morality, and it isn't present by default
in the
human species. It isn't based on cultural norms; it doesn't have
its roots in upbringing (although it is easily destroyed by it).
Some people have it in a large measure, and some people are
(to
all intents and purposes) completely lacking in it. It
doesn't
necessarily respect conventional morality: it may laugh
in its
face. I can't say what it is in any detail,
because it is
peculiar and individual, but those who have it have
a natural
quality of integrity, soundness of judgement,
an instinctive
sense of rightness, justice and compassion, and a willingness
to
fight or suffer in defense of that sense of justice. Tiphereth is
a paradoxical sephira because in many people it is
simply not
there. It can be developed, and that is one
of the goals of
initiation, but for many people Tiphereth is a room with nothing
in it.
Having passed through Gevurah on the
Pillar of Form, and
found its way through the moral filter of Tiphereth, a
creative
impulse picks up energy once more on the Pillar of Force via
the
Sephira Netzach, where the energy of "becoming" finds its
final
expression in the form of "vital urges". Why do
we carry on
living? Why bother? What is it that compels us to do things?
An
artist may have a vision of a piece of art, but what
actually
compels the artist to paint or sculpt or write? Why do we want to
compete and win? Why do we care what happens
to others? The
sephira Netzach expresses the basic vital creative urges
in a
form we can recognise as drives, feelings and emotions.
Netzach
is pre-verbal; ask a child why he wants a toy and the answer will
be
"I just do".
"But why," you ask, wondering why he
doesn't want the much
more "sensible" toy you had in mind. "Why don't you
want this
one here."
"I just don't. I want this one."
"But what's so good about that one."
"I don't know what to say...I just like it."
This conversation is not fictitious and
is quintessentially
Netzach. The structure of the Tree of Life posits that the basic
driving forces which characterise our behaviour are
pre-verbal
and non-rational; anyone who has tried to change another person's
basic nature or beliefs through force of rational argument
will
know this.
After Netzach we go to the sephira Hod
to pick up our last
cargo of Form. Ask a child why they want something and they
say
"I just do". Press an adult and you will
get an earful of
"reasons". We live in a culture where it is
important (often
essential) to give reasons for the things we do, and Hod is
the
sephira of form where it is possible to give shape to our
wants
in terms of reasons and explanations. Hod is
the sephira of
abstraction, reason, logic, language and communication,
and a
reflection of the Mother of Form in the human mind. We
have a
innate capacity to abstract, to
go immediately from the
particular to the general, and we have an innate
capacity to
communicate these abstractions using language, and it should
be
clear why the alternative
translation of Binah is
"intelligence"; Binah is the "intelligence of
God", and Hod
underpins what we generally recognise as intelligence in people -
the ability to grasp complex abstractions, reason about them, and
articulate this understanding using some means of communication.
The synthesis of Hod
and Netzach on the Pillar of
Consciousness is the sephira Yesod. Yesod is
the sephira of
interface, and the comparison with computer peripheral interfaces
is an excellent one. Yesod is sometimes called "the Receptacle of
the Emanations", and it interfaces the emanations of all
three
pillars to the sephira Malkuth, and it is through Yesod that
the
final abstract form of something is realised in matter. Form
in
Yesod is no longer abstract; it is
explicit, but not yet
individual - that last quality is reserved for Malkuth
alone.
Yesod is like the mold in a bottle factory -
the mold is a
realisation of the abstract idea "bottle" in
so far as it
expresses the shape of a particular bottle
design in every
detail, but it is not itself an individual bottle.
The final step in the process is the sephira
Malkuth, where
God becomes flesh, and every abstract
form is realised in
actuality, in the "real world". There is much to say about this,
but I will keep it for later.
The process I have described is called the
Lightning Flash.
The Lightning Flash runs as follows: Kether, Chokhmah,
Binah,
Chesed, Gevurah, Tiphereth, Netzach, Hod, Yesod, Malkuth, and
if
you trace the Lighning Flash on a diagram of the Tree you
will
see that it has the zig-zag shape of a lightning
flash. The
sephiroth are numbered according to their order on the lightning
flash: Kether is 1, Chokhmah is 2, and
so on. The "Sepher
Yetzirah" [2] has this to say about the sephiroth:
"When you think of the ten sephiroth
cover your heart and
seal the desire of your lips to
announce their divinity.
Yoke your mind. Should it escape your
grasp, reach out and
bring it back under your control. As
it was said, 'And the
living creatures ran and returned
as the appearance of a
flash of lightning,' in
such a manner was the Covenant
created."
The quotation within the quotation comes from Ezekiel
1.14, a
text which inspired a large amount
of early Kabbalistic
speculation, and it is probable that the Lightning
Flash as
described is one of the earliest components
of the idea of
sephirothic emanation.
The Lightning Flash
describes the creative process,
beginning with the unknown, unmanifest hidden God, and follows it
through ten distinct stages to a change in the material world. It
can be used to describe *any* change - lighting a match, picking
your nose, walking the dog - and novices are usually
set the
exercise of analysing any arbitrarily chosen event in terms
of
the Lightning Flash. Because the Lightning Flash can be used
to
understand the inner process whereby the material world
of the
senses changes and evolves, it is a key to
practical magical
work, and because it is intended to account for *all* change
it
follows that all change is equally magical, and the word "magic"
is essentially meaningless (but
nevertheless useful for
distinguishing between "normal" and "abnormal"
states of
consciousness, and the modes of causality which pertain to each).
It also follows that the key to understanding
our "spiritual
nature" does not belong in the spiritual empyrean,
where it
remains inaccessible, but in *all* the routine and
unexciting
little things in life. Everything is is equally
"spiritual",
equally "divine", and there is more to be learned from
picking
one's nose than there is in a spiritual discipline which puts you
"here" and God "over there". The Lightning Flash ends in Malkuth,
and it can be followed like a thread through the hidden pathways
of creation until one arrives back at the
source. The next
chapter will retrace the Lightning Flash
by examining the
qualities of each sephira in more detail.
[1] Scholem, Gershom G. "Major Trends in
Jewish Mysticism",
Schoken Books 1974
[2] Westcott, W. Wynn, ed. "Sepher Yetzirah". Many reprintings.
****************************************************************************
Chapter 4: The Sephiroth
========================
This chapter provides a detailed
look at each of the ten
sephiroth and draws together material scattered over
previous
chapters.
Malkuth
-------
Malkuth is the Cinderella
of the sephiroth. It is the
sephira most often ignored by beginners, the sephira most
often
glossed over in Kabbalistic texts, and it is not only the
most
immediate of the sephira but it is also the most complex, and for
sheer inscrutability it rivals Kether - indeed,
there is a
Kabbalistic aphorism that "Kether is Malkuth, and Malkuth is
in
Kether, but after another manner".
The word Malkuth means "Kingdom",
and the sephira is the
culmination of a process of emanation whereby the creative power
of the Godhead is progressively structured and defined
as it
moves down the Tree and arrives in a completed form in
Malkuth.
Malkuth is the sphere of matter, substance, the real,
physical
world. In the least compromising
versions of materialist
philosophy (e.g. Hobbes) there is nothing beyond physical matter,
and from that viewpoint the Tree of Life beyond Malkuth does
not
exist: our feelings of identity and
self-consciousness are
nothing more than a by-product of chemical
reactions in the
brain, and the mind is a complex automata which suffers from
the
disease of metaphysical delusions.
Kabbalah is *not* a
materialist model of reality, but when we examine
Malkuth by
itself we find ourselves immersed in matter, and it is natural to
think in terms of physics, chemistry and molecular biology.
The
natural sciences provide the most accurate models of matter
and
the physical world that we have, and it would be foolishness
of
the first order to imagine that Kabbalah can
provide better
explanations of the nature of matter on the basis of a study
of
the text of the Old Testament. Not
that I under-rate the
intuition which has gone into the making of Kabbalah
over the
centuries, but for practical purposes the average
university
science graduate knows (much) more about the material stuff
of
the world than medieval Kabbalists, and a grounding
in modern
physics is as good a way to approach Malkuth as any other.
For those who are not comfortable
with physics there are
alternative, more traditional ways of approaching Malkuth.
The
magical image of Malkuth is that of a young woman
crowned and
throned. The woman is Malkah, the Queen, Kallah, the Bride.
She
is the inferior mother, a reflection and realisation
of the
superior mother Binah. She is the Queen who inhabits the Kingdom,
and the Bride of the Microprosopus. She is Gaia, Mother
Earth,
but of course she is not only the substance of this world; she is
the body of the entire physical universe.
Some care is required when assigning Mother/Earth
goddesses
to Malkuth, because some of them correspond more closely to
the
superior mother Binah. There is a close and
deep connection
between Malkuth and Binah which results in the
two sephiroth
sharing similar correspondences, and
one of the oldest
Kabbalistic texts [1] has this to say about Malkuth:
"The title of the tenth path [Malkuth]
is the Resplendent
Intelligence. It is called this because
it is exalted above
every head from where it sits upon the throne
of Binah. It
illuminates the numinosity
of all lights and causes to
emanate the Power of the
archetype of countenances or
forms."
One of the titles of Binah is Khorsia, or Throne, and the
image
which this text provides is that Binah provides the
framework
upon which Malkuth sits. We will return to this
later. Binah
contains the potential of form in the abstract, while Malkuth
is
is the fullest realisation of form, and both sephiroth share
the
correspondences of heaviness, limitation, finiteness,
inertia,
avarice, silence, and death.
The female quality of Malkuth is often
identified with the
Shekhinah, the female spirit of God
in the creation, and
Kabbalistic literature makes much of the (carnal) relationship of
God and the Shekhinah. Waite [7] mentions that the relationship
between God and Shekhinah is mirrored in the relationship between
man and woman, and provides a great deal of information on
both
the Shekhinah and what he quaintly calls "The Mystery of
Sex".
After the exile of the Jews from Spain
in 1492, Kabbalists
identified their own plight with the fate of the Shekhinah,
and
she is pictured as being cast out into matter in much the
same
way as the Gnostics pictured Sophia, the outcast divine
wisdom.
The doctrine of the Shekhinah within Kabbalah and within Judaism
as a whole is complex and it is something I don't feel competent
to comment further on; more information can be found in
[3] &
[7].
Malkuth is the sphere
of the physical elements and
Kabbalists still use the four-fold scheme which dates
back at
least as far as Empedocles and probably
the Ark. The four
elements correspond to four readily-observable states of matter:
solid - earth
liquid - water
gas - air
plasma - fire/electric arc (lightning)
In addition it is not uncommon to include a fifth
element so
rarified and arcane that most people (self included) are
pushed
to say what it is; the fifth element is aethyr (or ether) and
is
sometimes called spirit.
The amount of material
written about the elements is
enormous, and rather than reproduce in bulk what is
relatively
well-known I will provide a rough outline so that those
readers
who aren't familiar with Kabbalah will realise I am talking about
approximately the same thing as they have seen before. A detailed
description of the traditional medieval view of the four elements
can be found in "The Magus" [2]. The hierarchy
of elemental
powers can be found in "777" [4] and in Golden Dawn material
[5]
- I have summarised a few useful items below:
Element Fire Air Water Earth
God Name Elohim Jehovah Eheieh Agla
Archangel Michael Raphael Gabriel Uriel
King Djin Paralda Nichsa Ghob
Elemental Salamanders
Sylphs Undines Gnomes
It amused me to notice that the section on the elemental kingdoms
in Farrar's "What Witches Do" [6] had been taken by Alex Saunders
lock, stock and barrel from traditional
Kabbalistic and CM
sources.
The elements in Malkuth are arranged as follows:
South
Fire
East Zenith Aethyr+
West
Air Nadir
Aethyr- Water
North
Earth
I have rotated the cardinal points through 180 degrees from their
customary directions so that it is easier to see how the elements
fit on the lower face of the Tree of Life:
Tiphereth
Fire
Hod Yesod
Netzach
Air Aethyr
Water
Malkuth
Earth
It is important to distinguish between the elements in Malkuth,
where we are talking about real substance (the water
in your
body, the breath in your lungs), and the elements on the
Tree,
where we are using traditional correspondences *associated* with
the elements, e.g.:
Earth: solid, stable, practical, down-to-earth
Water: sensitive, intuitive, emotional, caring, fertile
Air: vocal, communicative, intellectual
Fire: energetic, daring, impetuous
Positive Aethyr: glue, binding, plastic
Negative Aethyr: unbinding, dissolution, disintegration
Aethyr or Spirit is enigmatic, and I tend to think of it in terms
of the forces which bind matter together. It is almost certainly
a coincidence (but nevertheless interesting) that there are four
fundamental forces - gravitational, electromagnetic, weak nuclear
& strong nuclear - known to date, and current belief is that they
can be unified into one fundamental force. On a slightly
more
arcane tack, Barret [2] has this to say about Aethyr:
"Now seeing that
the soul is the essential form,
intelligible and uncorruptible,
and is the first mover of
the body, and is moved itself; but that the
body, or matter,
is of itself unable and unfit for motion,
and does very much
degenerate from the soul, it appears that
there is a need of
a more excellent medium:- now such a medium
is conceived to
be the spirit of the world,
or that which some call a
quintessence; because it is not from
the four elements, but
a certain first thing, having
its being above and beside
them. There is, therefore, such a kind of
medium required to
be, by which celestial souls [e.g.
forms] may be joined to
gross bodies, and bestow upon
them wonderful gifts. This
spirit is in the same manner, in the
body of the world, as
our spirit is in our bodies; for as
the powers of our soul
are communicated to the members of the body
by the medium of
the spirit, so also the virtue of the
soul of the world is
diffused, throughout all
things, by the medium of the
universal spirit; for there is
nothing to be found in the
whole world that hath not a spark of the virtue
thereof."
Aethyr underpins the elements like
a foundation and its
attribution to Yesod should be obvious, particularly as it forms
the linking role between the ideoplastic world of
"the Astral
Light" [8] and the material world. Aethyr is often
thought to
come in two flavours - positive Aethyr, which binds, and negative
Aethyr, which unbinds. Negative Aethyr
is a bit like the
Universal Solvent, and requires as much care in handling ;-}
Working with the physical elements in Malkuth
is one of the
most important areas of applied magic, dealing as it does
with
the basic constituents of the real world. The physical
elements
are tangible and can be experience in a very direct way
through
recreations such as caving, diving, parachuting or firewalking;
they bite back in a suitably humbling way, and they provide
CMs
with an opportunity to join the neo-pagans in the great outdoors.
Our bodies themselves are made from physical stuff, and there are
many Raja Yoga-like exercises which can be carried out using
the
elements as a basis for work on the body. If you can stand
his
manic intensity (Exercise 1: boil an egg by force of will)
then
Bardon [9] is full of good ideas.
Malkuth is often associated with various kinds
of intrinsic
evil, and to understand this attitude (which I do not share)
it
is necessary to confront the same question as thirteenth century
Kabbalists: can God be evil? The answer to this
question was
(broadly speaking) "yes", but Kabbalists have gone through
many
strange gyrations in an attempt to avoid what was for
many an
unacceptable conclusion. It was difficult to accept that famine,
war, disease, prejudice, hate, death could be a part of a perfect
being, and there had to be some way to account for evil which did
not contaminate divine perfection. One approach was to sweep evil
under the carpet, and in this case the
carpet was Malkuth.
Malkuth became the habitation for evil spirits.
If one examines the structure of the Tree
without prejudice
then it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that evil is
quite
adequately accounted for, and there is no need to shuffle
evil
to the periphery of the Tree like a cleaner without a
dustpan.
The emanation of any sephirah from
Chokhmah downwards can
manifest as good or evil depending on circumstances and the point
of view of those affected by the energy involved. This appears to
have been understood even at the time of the
writing of the
"Zohar", where the mercy of God is constantly contrasted with the
severity of God, and the author makes it clear that one
has to
balance the other - you cannot have the
mercy without the
severity. On the other hand, the severity of God is persistently
identified with the rigours of existence
(form, finiteness,
limitation), and while it is true that many of the things
which
have been identified with evil are
a consequence of the
finiteness of things, of being finite beings in a world of finite
resources governed by natural laws with inflexible causality,
it
not correct to infer (as some have)
that form itself is
*intrinsically* evil.
The notion that form and matter are *intrinsically*
evil, or
in some way imperfect or not a part of God, may
have reached
Kabbalah from a number of sources. Scholem
comments:
"The Kabbalah of the early
thirteenth century was the
offspring of a union between
an older and essentially
Gnostic tradition represented by the book
"Bahir", and the
comparatively modern element of Jewish Neo-Platonism."
There is the possibility that the Kabbalists of Provence
(who
wrote or edited the "Sepher Bahir") were
influenced by the
Cathars, a late form of Manicheanism. Whether the
source was
Gnosticism, Neo-Platonism, Manicheanism or some combination
of
all three, Kabbalah has imported a view of matter and form which
distorts the view of things portrayed by the Tree of Life, and so
Malkuth ends up as a kind of cosmic outer darkness, a bin for all
the dirt, detritus, broken sephira and dirty
hankies of the
creation. Form is evil, the Mother of Form is female, women
are
definitely and indubitably evil, and Malkuth is the most
female
of the sephira, therefore Malkuth is most definitely evil...quod
erat demonstrandum. By the time we reach the time of S.L. Mathers
and the Golden Dawn there is a complete Tree of
evil demonic
Qlippoth *underneath* Malkuth as a relection of the "good"
Tree
above it. I believe this may have something to do with the
fact
that meditations on Malkuth can easily become
meditations on
Binah, and meditations on Binah have a habit of slipping into the
Abyss, and once in the Abyss it is easy to trawl up enough
junk
to "discover" an averse Tree "underneath" Malkuth. This view
of
the Qlippoth, or Shells, as active, demonic
evil has become
pervasive, and the more energy people put into the demonic Tree,
the less there is for the original. Abolish
the Qlippoth as
demonic forces, and the Tree of Life comes alive with its
full
power of good *and* evil. The following quotation from
Bischoff
[10] (speaking of the Sephiroth) provides a more rational view of
the Qlippoth:
"Since their energy [of the sephiroth]
shows three degrees
of strength (highest, middle
and lowest degree), their
emanations group accordingly in sequence.
We usually imagine
the image of a
descending staircase. The Kabbalist
prefers to see this fact as a decreasing
alienation of the
central primeval energy.
Consequently any less perfect
emanation is to him the cover
or shell (Qlippah) of the
preceeding, and so the last (furthest)
emanations being the
so-called material things are the shell of
the total and are
therefore called (in the actual sense) Qlippoth."
This is my own view; the shell of something is the accretion
of
form which it accumulates as energy comes down
the Lightning
Flash. If the shell can be considered by itself then it is a dead
husk of something which could be alive - it preserves
all the
structure but there is no energy in it to bring it alive.
With
this interpretation the Qlippoth are to be found everywhere:
in
relationships, at work, at play, in ritual, in society. Whenever
something dies and people refuse to recognise that it is
dead,
and cling to the lifeless husk of whatever it was, then you get a
Qlippah. For this reason one of the vices of Malkuth is Avarice,
not only in the sense of trying to acquire material things,
but
also in the sense of being unwilling to let go of anything, even
when it has become dead and worthless. The Qlippah of Malkuth
is
what you would get if the Sun went out: Stasis, life frozen into
immobility.
The other vice of Malkuth
is Inertia, in the sense of
"active resistance to motion; sluggish; disinclined to
move or
act". It is visible in most people at one time or another,
and
tends to manifest when a task is
new, necessary, but not
particularly exciting, there is no excitement or "natural energy"
to keep one fired up, and one has to keep on pushing right to the
finish. For this reason the obligation
of Malkuth is (has
to be) self-discipline.
The virtue of Malkuth is Discrimination,
the ability to
perceive differences. The ability to perceive differences
is a
necessity for any living organism, whether a bacteria
able to
sense the gradient of a nutrient or a kid working out how
much
money to wheedle out of his parents. As Malkuth is
the final
realisation of form, it is the sphere where
our ability to
distinguish between differences is most pronounced. The capacity
to discriminate is so fundamental to survival
that it works
overtime and finds boundaries and distinctions everywhere - "you"
and "me", "yours" and "mine", distinctions of
"property" and
"value" and "territory" which are intellectual abstractions
on
one level (i.e. not real) and fiercely defended
realities on
another (i.e. very real indeed). I am not going to
attempt a
definition of real and unreal, but it is the case that
much of
what we think of as real is unreal, and much of what we think
of
as unreal is real, and we need the same discrimination
which
leads us into the mire to lead us out again. Some people
think
skin colour is a real measure of intelligence; some don't.
Some
people think gender is a real measure of ability;
some don't.
Some people judge on appearances; some don't. There is clearly
a
difference between a bottle of beer and a bottle of piss, but
is
the colour of the *bottle* important? What *is* important?
What
differences are real, what matters? How much energy do we devote
to things which are "not real". Am I able to perceive how much
I
am being manipulated by a fixation on unreality? Are my goals
in
life "real", or will they look increasingly silly and
immature
as I grow older? For that matter, is Kabbalah "real"?
Does it
provide a useful model of reality, or is it the remnant
of a
world-view which should have been put to rest centuries ago?
One
of the primary exercises of an initiate
into Malkuth is a
thorough examination of the question "What is real?".
The Spiritual Experience
of Malkuth is variously the
Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel (HGA),
or
the Vision of the HGA (depending on who you believe). I vote
for
the Vision of the HGA in Malkuth,
and the Knowledge and
Conversation in Tiphereth. What is the HGA? According
to the
Gnosticism of Valentinus each person has a guardian
angel who
accompanies that individual throught their life and reveals
the
gnosis; the angel is in a sense the divine Self. This belief
is
identical to what I was taught by the person
who taught me
Kabbalah, so some part of Gnosticism lives
on. The current
tradition concerning the HGA almost certainly entered the Western
Esoteric Tradition as a consequence of S.L. Mather's translation
[11] of "The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin
the Mage",
which contains full details of a lengthy ritual to
attain the
Knowledge and Conversation of the HGA. This ritual has
had an
important influence on twentieth century magicians
and it is
often attempted and occasionally completed.
The powers of Malkuth are invoked
by means of the names
Adonai ha Aretz and Adonai Melekh, which mean "Lord of the World"
and "The Lord who is King" respectively. The power is transmitted
through the world of Creation by the archangel Sandalphon, who is
sometimes referred to as "the Long Angel", because his feet
are
in Malkuth and his head in Kether, which gives him an opportunity
to chat to Metatron, the Angel of the Presence. The angel
order
is the Ashim, or Ishim, sometimes translated as the
"souls of
fire", supposedly the souls of righteous men and women.
In concluding this section on Malkuth, it worth emphasising that
I have chosen deliberately not to explore some
major topics
because there are sufficient threads for anyone with an interest
to pick up and follow for themselves. The image of
Malkuth as
Mother Earth provides a link between Kabbalah and
a numinous
archetype with a deep significance for some. The image of Malkuth
as physical substance provides a link into the sciences, and
it
is the case that at the limits of theoretical
physics one's
intuitions seem to be slipping and sliding on the same reality as
in Kabbalah. The image of Malkuth as the sphere of the
elements
is the key to a large body of practical magical technique
which
varies from yoga-like concentration on the bodily elements,
to
nature-oriented work in the great outdoors. Lastly, just
as the
design of a building reveals much about its builders, so Malkuth
can reveal a great deal about Kether - the bottom of the Tree and
the top have much in common.
References:
[1] Westcott, W. Wynn, ed. "Sepher Yetzirah", many editions.
[2] Barrett, Francis, "The Magus", Citadel 1967.
[3] Scholem, Gershom G., "Major Trends in Jewish
Mysticism",
Schocken 1974
[4] Crowley, A, "777", an obscure reprint.
[5] Regardie, Israel, "The Complete Golden Dawn System of Magic",
Falcon, 1984.
[6] Farrar, Stewart, "What Witches Do", Peter Davies 1971.
[7] Waite, A.E, "The Holy Kabbalah", Citadel.
[8] Levi, Eliphas, "Transcendental Magic", Rider, 1969.
[9] Bardon, Franz, "Initiation into Hermetics", Dieter
Ruggeberg 1971
[10] Bischoff, Dr. Erich, "The Kabbala", Weiser 1985.
[11] Mathers, S.L., "The Book of the Sacred Magic of
Abramelin
the Mage", Dover 1975.
Yesod
-----
Yesod means "foundation", and that is
what Yesod is: it is
the hidden infrastructure whereby the
emanations from the
remainder of the Tree are transmitted to the sephira
Malkuth.
Just as a large building has its air-conditioning ducts, service
tunnels, conduits, electrical wiring, hot and cold water
pipes,
attic spaces, lift shafts, winding rooms,
storage tanks, a
telephone exchange etc, so does the Creation, and the external,
visible world of phenomenal reality
rests (metaphorically
speaking) upon a hidden foundation
of occult machinery.
Meditations on the nature of Yesod tend to be full
of secret
tunnels and concealed mechanisms, as if the Creation was a Gothic
mansion with a secret door behind every mirror, a
passage in
every wall, a pair of hidden eyes behind every portrait,
and a
subterranean world of forgotten tunnels leading who knows where.
For this reason the Spiritual Experience of Yesod is aptly named
"The Vision of the Machinery of the Universe".
Many Yesod correspondences
reinforce this notion of a
foundation, of something which lies behind, supports and
gives
shape to phenomenal reality. The magical image of Yesod is of
"a
beautiful naked man, very strong". The image which
springs to
mind is that of a man with the world resting on his
shoulders,
like one of the misrepresentations of the
Titan Atlas (who
actually held up the heavens, not the world). The angel order
of
Yesod is the Cherubim, the Strong Ones, the archangel is Gabriel,
the Strong or Mighty One of God, and the God-name is Shaddai
el
Chai, the Almighty Living God.
The idea of a foundation suggests that there
is a substance
which lies behind physical matter and "in-forms it" or "holds
it
together", something less structured, more plastic, more refined
and rarified, and this "fifth element" is often called aethyr.
I
will not attempt to justify aethyr in terms of current
physics
(the closest concept I have found is the
hypothesised Higgs
field); it is a convenient handle on a concept which has enormous
intuitive appeal to many magicians, who, when asked
how magic
works, tend to think in terms of a medium which
is directly
receptive to the will, something which is plastic
and can be
shaped through concentration and imagination, and which transmits
their artificially created forms into reality.
Eliphas Levi
called this medium the "Astral Light". It is also
natural to
imagine that mind, consciousness, and
the soul have their
habitation in this substance, and there are volumes detailing the
properties of the "Etheric Body", the "Astral Body", the "Causal
Body" [1,2] and so on. I don't take this stuff too seriously, but
I do like to work with the kind of natural intuitions which occur
spontaneously and independently in a large number of
people -
there is power in these intuitions - and it is
a mistake to
invalidate them because they sound cranky. When I
talk about
aethyr or the Astral Light, I mean there
is an ideoplastic
substance which is subjectively real to many
magicians, and
explanations of magic at the level of
Yesod revolve around
manipulating this substance using desire, imagination and will.
The fundamental nature of Yesod is that of
*interface*; it
interfaces the rest of the Tree of Life to Malkuth. The interface
is bi-directional; there are impulses coming down from
Kether,
and echoes bouncing back from Malkuth. The idea of interface
is
illustrated in the design of a computer system: a computer with a
multitude of worlds hidden within it is a source
of heat and
repair bills unless it has peripheral interfaces
and device
drivers to interface the world outside the computer to the world
"inside" it; add a keyboard and a mouse and a
monitor and a
printer and you have opened the door into another reality.
Our
own senses have the same characteristic of being a bi-directional
interface through which we experience the world, and
for this
reason the senses correspond to Yesod, and not only
the five
traditional senses - the "sixth sense" and the "second sight" are
given equal status, and so Yesod
is also the sphere of
instinctive psychism, of clairvoyance, precognition, divination
and prophecy. It is also clear from accounts of lucid
dreaming
(and personal experience) that we possess the ability to perceive
an inner world as vividly as the outer, and so to Yesod
belongs
the inner world of dreams, daydreams and vivid imagination,
and
one of the titles of Yesod is "The Treasure House
of Images".
To Yesod is attributed Levanah,
the Moon, and the lunar
associations of tides, flux and change, occult influence,
and
deeply instinctive and sometimes
atavistic behaviour -
possession, mediumship, lycanthropy and
the like. Although
Yesod is the foundation and it has associations with strength, it
is by no means a rigid scaffold supporting a world
in stasis.
Yesod supports the world just as the sea supports all the
life
which lives in it and sails upon it, and just as the sea has
its
irresistable currents and tides, so does Yesod. Yesod is the most
"occult" of the sephiroth, and next to Malkuth it is
the most
magical, but compared with Malkuth its magic is of a more subtle,
seductive, glamorous and ensnaring kind. Magicians are
drawn to
Yesod by the idea that if reality rests on a hidden foundation,
then by changing the foundation it is possible to
change the
reality. The magic of Yesod is the magic of form and appearance,
not substance; it is the
magic of illusion, glamour,
transformation, and shape-changing. The
most sophisticated
examples of this are to be found in modern marketing, advertising
and image consultancies. I do not jest. My tongue
is not even
slightly in my cheek. The following quote was taken
from this
morning's paper [3]:
Although the changes look cosmetic,
those responsible for
creating corporate image
argue that a redesign of a
company's uniform or name is just the visible
sign of a much
larger transformation.
"The majority of people continue to misunderstand
and think
that it is just a logo, rather
than understanding that a
corporate identity programme is actually concerned
with the
very commercial objective of having a strong
personality and
single-minded, focussed
direction for the whole
organisation, " said Fiona Gilmore, managing
director of the
design company Lewis Moberly. "It's
like planting an acorn
and then a tree grows. If you create
the right *foundation*
(my itals) then you are building
a whole culture for the
future of an organisation."
I don't know what Ms. Gilmore studies in her spare time, but the
idea that it is possible to manipulate reality by
manipulating
symbols and appearances is entirely magical. The same article
on
corporate identity continues as follows:
"The scale of the BT relaunch is colossal.
The new logo will
be painted on more than 72,000 vehicles
and trailers, as
well as 9,000 properties.
The company's 92,000 public payphones
will get new decals,
and its 90 shops will have to changed,
right down to the
yellow door handles. More than 50,000
employees are likely
to need new uniforms or "image clothing".
Note the emphasis on *image*. The company in question
(British
Telecom) is an ex-public monopoly with an appalling
customer
relations problem, so it is changing
the colour of its
door handles! This is Yesodic magic on a gigantic scale.
The image manipulators gain most
of their power from the
mass-media. The mass-media correspond to two sephiroth:
as a
medium of communication they belong in Hod, but as a foundation
for our perception of reality they belong in Yesod. Nowadays most
people form their model of what the world (in the large) is like
via the media. There are a few individuals who travel the
world
sufficiently to have a model based on personal experience,
but
for most people their model of what most of the world is like
is
formed by newspapers, radio and television; that is,
the media
have become an extended (if inaccurate) instrument of perception.
Like our "normal" means of perception the
media are highly
selective in the variety and content of information provided, and
they can be used by advertising agencies and other manipulative
individuals to create foundations for new collective realities.
While on the subject of changing perception
to assemble new
realities, the following quote by "Don Juan" [4] has a definite
Kabbalistic flavour:
"The next truth is that perception takes place,"
he went on,
"because there is in
each of us an agent called the
assemblage point that
selects internal and external
emanations for alignment. The particular
alignment that we
perceive as the world is the product
of a specific spot
where our assemblage point is located on our
cocoon."
One of the titles of Yesod is "The Receptacle of the Emanations",
and its function is precisely as described above - Yesod is
the
assemblage point which assembles the emanations of the
internal
and the external.
In addition to the deliberate,
magical manipulation of
foundations, there are other important areas of magic relevant to
Yesod. Raw, innate psychism is an ability which tends to improve
as more attention is devoted to creative visualisation, focussed
meditation (on Tarot cards for example), dreams (e.g. keeping
a
dream diary), and divination. Divination
is an important
technique to practice even if you feel you are terrible
at it
(and especially if you think it
is nonsense), because it
reinforces the idea that it is permissible
to "let go" and
intuite meanings into any pattern. Many people have
difficulty
doing this, feeling perhaps that they will
be swamped with
unreason (recalling Freud's fear, expressed to Jung, of needing a
bulwark against the "black mud of occultism"), when in
reality
their minds are swamped with reason and could use a holiday.
Any
divination system can be used, but systems which emphasise
pure
intuition are best (e.g. Tarot, runes, tea-leaves,
flights of
birds, patterns on the wallpaper, smoke. I heard of a Kabbalist
who threw a cushion into the air and carried out divination
on
the basis of the number of pieces of foam stuffing
which fell
out). Because Yesod is a kind of aethyric reflection
of the
physical world, the image of and precursor to reality,
mirrors
are an important tool for Yesod magic. Quartz crystals are
also
used, probably because of the use
of crystal balls for
divination, but also because quartz crystal and amethyst have
a
peculiarly Yesodic quality in their own right. The average
New
Age shop filled with crystals, Tarot cards, silver jewelry (lunar
association), perfumes, dreamy music, and all the glitz, glamour
and glitter of a daemonic magpie's nest, is like
a temple to
Yesod. Mirrors and crystals are used passively
as focii for
receptivity, but they can also be used actively for certain kinds
of aethyric magic - there is an interesting book on making
and
using magic mirrors which builds on the kind of elemental magical
work carried out in Malkuth [5].
Yesod has an important
correspondence with the sexual
organs. The correspondence occurs in three ways. The first way is
that when the Tree of Life is placed over the human body,
Yesod
is positioned over the genitals. The author of the Zohar is quite
explicit about "the remaining members of the Microprosopus",
to
the extent that the relevant paragraphs in Mather's translation
of "The Lesser Holy Assembly" remain in Latin to avoid offending
Victorian sensibilities.
The second association of Yesod
with the genitals arises
from the union of the Microprosopus and his
Bride. This is
another recurring theme in Kabbalah, and the symbolism is complex
and refers to several distinct ideas, from
the relationship
between man and wife to an internal process within the
body of
God: e.g [6].
"When the Male is joined
with the Female, they both
constitute one complete body, and all
the Universe is in a
state of happiness, because all things receive
blessing from
their perfect body. And this is an Arcanum."
or, referring to the Bride:
"And she is mitigated, and receiveth
blessing in that place
which is called the Holy of Holies below."
or, referring to the "member":
"And that which floweth down into
that place where it is
congregated, and which is emitted
through that most holy
Yesod, Foundation, is entirely
white, and therefore is it
called Chesed.
Thence Chesed entereth into the Holy
of Holies; as it is
written Ps. cxxxiii. 3 'For there
Tetragrammaton commanded
the blessing, even life for evermore.'"
It is not difficult to read a great deal into paragraphs
like
this, and there are many more in a similar vein. Suffice
to say
that the Microprosopus is often identified
with the sephira
Tiphereth, the Bride is the sephira Malkuth, and
the point of
union between them is obviously Yesod.
The third and more abstract association
between Yesod and
the sexual organs arises because the
sexual organs are a
mechanism for perpetuating the *form* of a living organism.
In
order to get close to what is happening in sexual reproduction it
is worth asking the question "What is a computer program?". Well,
a computer program indisputably begins as an idea; it is
not a
material thing. It can be written down in various ways;
as an
abstract specification in set theoretic notation akin
to pure
mathematics, or as a set of recursive
functions in lambda
calculus; it could be written in several different
high level
languages - Pascal, C, Prolog, LISP, ADA, ML etc.
Are they all
they same program? Computer scientists wrestle with this problem:
can we show that two different programs written in two different
languages are in some sense functionally identical?
It isn't
trivial to do this because it asks fundamental questions
about
language (any language) and meaning, but it
is possible in
limited cases to produce two apparently
different programs
written in different languages and
assert that they are
identical. Whatever the program
is, it seems to exist
independently of any particular language, so what is the program
and where is it? Let us ignore that chestnut and go on
to the
next level. Suppose we write the program down. We
could do it
with a pencil. We could punch holes in paper. We
could plant
trees in a pattern in a field. We can line up magnetic
domains.
We can burn holes in metal foil. I could have it tattooed on
my
back. We can transform it into radically different forms (that is
what compilers and assemblers do). It obviously isn't tied to any
physical representation either. What about the computer it
runs
on? Well, it could be a conventional one made with
CMOS chips
etc.....but aren't there a lot of different kinds and makes
of
computer, and they can all run the same program. It is also quite
practical to build computers which *don't* use electrons
- you
could use mechanics or fluids or ball bearings - all you need
to
do is produce something with the functionality
of a Turing
machine, and that isn't hard. So not only is the program not tied
to any particular physical representation, but the same goes
for
the computer itself, and what we are left with is two puffs
of
smoke. On another level this is crazy; computers are real,
they
do real things in the real world, and the programs
which make
them work are obviously real too....aren't they?
Now apply the same kind of scrutiny to living
organisms, and
the mechanism of reproduction. Take a good look at nucleic acids,
enzymes, proteins etc., and ask the same kind of questions. I
am
not implying that life is a sort of program,
but what I am
suggesting is that if you try to get close to what constitutes
a
living organism you end up with another puff of
smoke and a
handful of atoms which could just as well be ball-bearings
or
fluids or....The thing that is being perpetuated through
sexual
reproduction is something quite abstract and immaterial; it is an
abstract form preserved and encoded in a particular pattern
of
chemicals, and if I was asked which was more real, the transient
collection of chemicals used, or the abstract form
itself, I
would answer "the form". But then, I am a programmer, and I would
say that.
I find it astonishing
that there are any hard-core
materialists left in the world. All the important stuff seems
to
exist at the level of puffs of smoke, what Kabbalists call form.
Roger Penrose, one of the most eminent mathematicians living
has
this to say [7]:
"I have made no secret of the fact that
my sympathies lie
strongly with the Platonic view that
mathematical truth is
absolute, external and eternal,
and not based on man-made
criteria; and that mathematical
objects have a timeless
existence of their own, not dependent
on human society nor
on particular physical objects."
"Ah Ha!" cry the materialists, "At
least the atoms are
real." Well, they are until you start pulling them
apart with
tweezers and end up with a heap of equations which turn out to be
the linguistic expression of an idea. As Einstein said, "The most
incomprehensible thing about the
world is that it is
comprehensible", that is, capable of being described
in some
linguistic form.
I am not trying to convince anyone of the
"rightness" of the
Kabbalistic viewpoint. What I am trying to do is show that
the
process whereby form is impressed on matter (the
relationship
between Yesod and Malkuth) is not arcane, theosophical
mumbo-
jumbo; it is an issue which is alive and kicking, and the closer
we get to "real things" (and that certainly
includes living
organisms), the better the Kabbalistic model (that form precedes
manifestation, that there is a well-defined process of form-ation
with the "real world" as an outcome) looks.
The illusion of Yesod is security, the kind of security
which
forms the foundation of our personal existence in the world. On a
superficial level our security is built out of relationships,
a
source of income, a place to live, a vocation, personal power and
influence etc, but at a deeper level the foundation of
personal
identity is built on a series of accidents,
encounters and
influences which create the illusion of who we
are, what we
believe in, and what we stand for. There is
a warm, secure
feeling of knowing what is right and wrong, of doing the
right
thing, of living a worthwhile life in the service of worthwhile
causes, of having a uniquely privileged vantage point from which
to survey the problems of life (with all the
intolerance and
incomprehension of other people which accompanies this insight),
and conversely there are feelings of despair, depression, loss of
identity, and existential terror when a crack
forms in the
illusion, and reality shows through - Castaneda calls
it "the
crack in the world". The smug, self-perpetuating illusion
which
masquerades as personal identity at the level of Yesod
is the
most astoundingly difficult thing to shift or destroy. It fights
back with all the resources of
the personality, it will
enthusiastically embrace any ally which will help to shore up its
defenses - religious, political
or scientific ideology;
psychological, sociological, metaphysical
and theosophical
claptrap (e.g. Kabbalah); the law and popular morality; in fact,
any beliefs which give it the power to retain
its identity,
uniqueness and integrity. Because this parasite of the soul uses
religion (and its esoteric offshoots) to sustain itself they have
little or no power over it and become a
major part of the
problem.
There are various ways of overcoming
this personal demon
(Carroll [8], in an essay on the subject, calls it
Choronzon),
and the two I know best are the cataclysmic and the abrasive. The
first method involves a shock so extreme that it is impossible to
be the same person again, and if enough preparation
has gone
before then it is possible to use the shock to rebuild
oneself.
In some cases this doesn't happen; I have noticed
that many
people with very rigid religious beliefs talk
readily about
having suffered traumatic experiences, and the
phenomenon of
hysterical conversion among soldiers suffering from war neuroses
is well known. The other method, the abrasive, is
to wear away
the demon of self-importance, to grind it into nothing by
doing
(for example) something for someone else for which one
receives
no thanks, praise, reward, or recognition. The task has to be big
enough and awful enough to become a demon in its own right
and
induce all the correct feelings of compulsion (I
have to do
this), helplessness (I'll never make it), indignation
(what's
the point, it's not my problem anyway), rebellion (I
won't, I
won't, not anymore), more compulsion (I can't give up), self-pity
(how did I get into this?), exhaustion (Oh
No! Not again!),
despair (I can't go on), and finally a kind of submission
when
one's demon hasn't the energy to put up a struggle any more
and
simply gives up. The woman who taught me Kabbalah used both
the
cataclysmic and the abrasive methods
on her students with
malicious glee - I will discuss this in more
detail in the
section on Tiphereth.
The virtue of Yesod is independence, the ability
to make our
own foundations, to continually rebuild ourselves, to reject
the
security of comfortable illusions and confront reality
without
blinking.
The vice of Yesod is idleness. This
can be contrasted with
the inertia of Malkuth. A stone is inert because it
lacks the
capacity to change, but in most circumstances people can
change
and can't be bothered. At least, not today. Yesod has a
dreamy,
illusory, comfortable, *seductive* quality, as in the Isle of the
Lotus Eaters - how else could we live as if death and
personal
annihilation only happened to other people?
The Qlippothic aspect of Yesod occurs
when foundations are
rotten and disintegrating and only the superficial
appearance
remains unchanged - Dorian Gray springs to mind, or cases
where
the brain is damaged and the body remains and carries out
basic
instinctive functions, but the person is dead as far
as other
people are concerned. Organisations are just as prone to this
as
people.
[1] A.E. Powell, "The Etheric Double", Theosophical
Publishing
House, 1925
[2] A.E. Powell, "The Astral Body", Theosophical Publishing
House, 1927
[3] "It's the Image Men We Answer To", The Sunday Times,
6th.
Jan 1991
[4] Castenada, Carlos, "The Fire from Within", Black Swan, 1985.
[5] N. R. Clough, "How to Make and Use Magic Mirrors", Aquarian
1977
[6] S.L. Mathers, "The Kabbalah Unveiled", Routledge & Kegan
Paul
1981
[7] Roger Penrose, "The Emperor's New Mind", Oxford
University
Press 1989
[8] Peter J. Carroll, "Psychonaut", Samuel Weiser 1987.
Hod & Netzach
-------------
"Objects contain the
possibility of all situations.
The possibility
of occurring in states of affairs
is the form
of an object.
Form is the
possibility of structure."
Wittgenstein
"Since feeling is first
who pays any
attention
to the syntax
of things
will never wholly
kiss you."
E.E. Cummings
The title of the sephira Hod is
sometimes translated as
Splendour and sometimes as Glory. The title
of the sephira
Netzach is usually translated as Victory, sometimes as Endurance,
and occasionally as Eternity. Although there
have been many
attempts to explain the titles of this pair of sephiroth,
I am
not aware of a convincing explanation.
The two sephiroth correspond to the
legs and like the legs
are normally taken as a pair and
not individually. They
complement another but are not opposites any more than force
and
form are opposites. This pair of sephiroth provide
the first
example of the polarity of form and force
encountered when
ascending back up the lightning flash from the sephira
Malkuth.
Neither quality manifests in a pure state, as form and force
are
thoroughly mixed together at the level of Hod and Netzach:
the
force aspect represented by Netzach is differentiated (an example
of form) into a multitude of forces,
and the form aspect
represented by Hod acts dynamically (an example of
force) by
synthesising new forms and structures. Both sephiroth represent
the plurality of consciousness at this level, and in older texts
they are referred to as the "armies" or "hosts". To
understand
why they are referred to in this way it is necessary to look
at
an archaic aspect of Kabbalistic symbolism whereby the
Tree of
Life is a representation of kingship.
One of the titles of Tiphereth is Melekh,
or king. This king
is the child of Chokhmah (Abba, the father) and Binah (Aima,
the
Mother) and hence a son of God who wears the crown of Kether. The
kingdom is the sephira Malkuth, at the same time queen
(Malkah)
and bride (Kallah). In his right hand the king wields the
sword
of justice (corresponding to Gevurah), and
in his left the
sceptre of authority (corresponding to Chesed), and he rules over
the armies or hosts (Tzaba), which are Hod and Netzach.
The use
of kingship as a metaphor to convey what the
sephiroth mean
obscures as much as it reveals, but it is an unavoidable piece of
Kabbalistic symbolism, and the attribution of Hod and Netzach
to
the "armies" does capture something useful about the nature
of
consciousness at this level: consciousness is fragmented
into
innumerable warring factions, and if there is no rightful
king
ruling over the kingdom of the soul (a common state of affairs),
then the armies elect a succession of leaders from the ranks, who
wear a lopsided crown and occupy the throne only for as long
as
it takes to find another claimant - more on this later.
The psychological interpretation
of Hod is that it
corresponds to the ability to abstract, to
conceptualise, to
reason, to communicate, and this level of consciousness
arises
from the fact that in order to survive we have evolved a nervous
system capable of building internal representations of the world.
I can drive around London in a car because I possess an internal
representation of the London street system. I can diagnose faults
in the same car because I have an internal representation of
its
mechanical and electrical systems and how they might fail. I
can
type this document without looking at the keyboard because I know
where the keys are positioned, and your ability to read
what I
have written pre-supposes a shared understanding
about the
meaning of words and what they represent. Our nervous
systems
possess an absolutely basic ability
to create internal
representations out of the information
we are capable of
perceiving through our senses.
It is also an absolutely basic characteristic
of the world
that it is bigger than my nervous system. I
cannot possibly
create *accurate*, internal representations of the world, and one
of the meanings of the verb "to abstract" is "to remove quietly".
This is what the nervous system does: it quietly removes most
of
what is going on in the world in order to create
an abridged
representation of reality with all the important (important
to
me) bits underlined in highlighter pen. This is the
world "I"
live in: not in the "real" world, but
an internal reality
synthesised by my nervous system. There has
been a lot of
philosophising about this, and it is difficult to think about how
our nervous systems *might* be distorting or even manufacturing
reality without a feeling of unease,
but I am personally
reassured by the everyday observation that most adults can drive
a car on a busy road at eighty miles per hour
in reasonable
safety. This suggests that while
our synthetic internal
representation of the world isn't accurate, it isn't at all bad.
Abstraction does not end
at the point of building an
internal representation of the external world. My nervous system
is quite content to treat my internal representation of the world
as yet another domain over which it can
carry out further
abstraction, and the subsequent new world of
abstractions as
another domain, and so on indefinitely, giving
rise to the
principal definition of "abstraction": "to
separate by the
operation of the mind, as in forming a general
concept from
consideration of particular instances". As an example,
suppose
someone asks me to watch the screen of a computer and to describe
what I see. I have no idea what to expect.
"Hmmm...lots of dots moving
around randomly...different
colour dots...red, blue, green.
Ah, the dots seem to be
clustering...they're forming circles...all
the dots of each
particular colour are forming
circles, lots of little
circles. Now the circles
are coming together to form a
number...it's 3. Now they're
moving apart and forming
another number...its
15...now 12..9..14. They've
gone..........that was it..3, 15, 12, 9, 14.
Is it some sort
of test? Do I have to guess the next
number in the series?
What are the numbers supposed to mean? What
was the point of
it? Hmmm..the numbers might
stand for letters of the
alphabet...let's see. C..O..L..I...N. It's
my name!"
The dots on the screen are real - there are
real, discrete,
measurable spots of light on the screen. I
could verify the
presence of dots of light using an appropriate light meter.
The
colours are synthesised by my retinas; different elements in
my
eye respond to different frequencies in the light and give
rise
to an internal experience we label "red", "blue", "green".
The
circles simply do not exist: given the nature of
the computer
output on the screen, there are only individual pixels, and it is
my nervous system which constructs circles. The numbers
do not
exist either; it is only because of my particular
upbringing
(which I share with the person who wrote the computer
program)
that I am able to distinguish patterns standing
for abstract
numbers in patterns of circles e.g.
oo
o o
o
o
o
o
o
ooooo
And once I begin to reason about the *meaning* of a sequence
of
numbers I have left the real world a long way behind: not only is
"number" a complex abstraction, but when I ask a question
about
the "meaning" of "a sequence of numbers" I am working
with an
even more "abstract abstraction". My ability to happily
juggle
numbers and letters and decide that there is an identity between
the abstract number sequence "3, 15, 12, 9, 14" and the character
string "COLIN" is one of those commonplace
things which any
person might do and yet it illustrates how easy it is to
become
completely detached from the external world and function
within
an internal world of abstractions which have been detached
from
anything in the world for so long that they are taken
as real
without a second thought.
In parallel with our ability to structure
perception into an
internal world of abstractions we possess
the ability to
communicate facts about this internal world. When I say "The
cup
is on the table", another person is able to identify in the real
world, out of all the information reaching their
senses, the
abstraction "chair", the abstraction "cup",
and confirm the
relationship of "on-ness". Why
are the cup and table
abstractions? Because the word "cup" does not uniquely
specify
any particular cup in the world, and when I use the word
I am
assuming that the listener already
possesses an internal
representation of an abstract object "cup", and can
use that
abstract specification of a cup to identify a particular
object
in the context within which my statement was made.
We are not normally conscious of this
process, and don't
need to be when dealing with simple propositions about objects in
the real world. I think I know what a cup is, and I think you
do
too. If you don't know, ask someone to show you a few. Life gets
a lot more complicated when dealing
with complex internal
abstractions: what is a "contract", a
"treaty", a "loan",
"limited liability", a "set", a "function", "marriage", a "tort",
"natural justice", a "sephira", a "religion",
"sin", "good",
"evil", and so on (and on). We
reach agreement about the
definitions of these things using language. In some cases,
for
example, a mathematical object, the thing is
completely and
unambiguously defined using language, while in other cases (e.g.
"good", "sin") there is no universally accepted definition. Life
is further complicated by a widespread lack of awareness
that
these internal abstractions *are* internal, and it is common
to
find people projecting internal abstractions onto the world as if
they were an intrinsic part of the fabric of existence,
and as
objectively real as the particular cup and the particular table I
referred to earlier. Marriage is no longer a contract between
a
man and a woman; it is an estate made in heaven. What is heaven?
God knows. And what is God? Trot out your definitions and
let's
have an argument - that is the way such questions are answered.
Much of the content of electronic bulletin boards
consists of
endless arguments and discussions on the definition of
complex
internal abstractions (what is ritual, what is magic,
what is
karma, what is ki, what is...).
A third element which goes together
with abstraction and
language to complete the essense of the sephira Hod is
reason,
and reason's formal offspring, logic. Reason is the ability
to
articulate and justify our beliefs about the world using a
base
of generally agreed facts and a generally agreed technique
for
combining facts to infer valid conclusions.
If reason is
considered as one out of a number of possible
processes for
establishing what is true about the world
we live in, for
establishing which models of reality are valid and which are not,
then it has been phenomenally successful: in its
heyday there
were those who saw reason as the most divine faculty, the faculty
in humankind most akin to God, and that legacy is still with us -
the words "unreasonable" and "irrational" are
often used to
attack and denigrate someone who does not (or cannot) articulate
what they do or why they do it. There is of course no
"reason"
why we should have to articulate or justify anything,
even to
ourselves, but the reasoning machine
within us demands an
"explanation" for every phenomenon, and a "reason"
for every
action. This is a characteristic of reason - it is an obsessive
mode of consciousness. A second characteristic of reason is that
it operates on the "garbage-in, garbage-out" principle:
if the
base of given facts a person uses to reason about are garbage, so
are the conclusions - witness what
two thousand years of
Christian theology has achieved
using sound dialectical
principles taken from Aristotle.
If the sephira Hod on the Pillar
of Form represents the
active synthesis of abstract forms
in consciousness (and
abstraction, language and reason are prime examples)
then the
sephira Netzach on the Pillar of Force
represents affective
states of consciousness which influence how we act
and react:
needs, wants, drives, feelings, moods and emotions.
It is
difficult to write about affective states, to be clear
on the
distinction between a need and a want on one hand, or a
feeling
or a mood on the other, and I find it particularly
difficult
because the essence of sadness is *being* sad, the
essence of
excitement is the *feeling* of excitement, the essence of desire
is the aching, lusting, overwhelming *feeling* of
desire, and
being too precise about defining feelings is in the essence
of
Hod, *not* Netzach. These things are incommunicable. They can
be
produced in another person, but they cannot be communicated.
It
is possible to be clinical and abstract and precise
about the
sephira Hod because an abstract clinical precision captures that
aspect of consciousness perfectly, but
when attempting to
communicate something about Netzach one feels tempted to try
to
communicate feelings themselves, a task more suited to a poet
or
a musician, an actor or a dancer. Please accept this unfortunate
limitation in what follows, a limitation not necessarily present
when Kaballah is learned at first hand from someone.
Netzach is on the Pillar of Force, but
in reaching Netzach
the Lightning Flash has already passed through Binah and Gevurah
on the Pillar of Form and so it represents a force
conditioned
and constrained by form; when we talk about
Netzach we are
talking about the different ways force
can be shaped and
directed, like toothpaste squeezed out of a tube. The toothpaste
we are talking about is something I will call "life
force" or
"life energy", and as a rule, when I have a lot of it I feel well
and full of vitality, and when I don't have much I feel
unwell,
tired, and vulnerable. To continue
the somewhat phallic
toothpaste metaphor, the magnitude of pressure
on the tube
corresponds to vitality, the direction in which the
toothpaste
comes out corresponds to a need or a want, and the shape of
the
nozzle corresponds to a feeling: all three factors,
pressure,
direction and nozzle determine how the toothpaste comes out; that
is, we could say that there are three factors giving a *form*
to
the toothpaste (or life-energy). It
may seem sloppy and
unnecessarily metaphysical to imply that all needs,
wants and
feelings are merely conditions of manifestation of something more
basic, some "unconditioned force", but Kaballah is primarily
a
tool for exploring internal states, and there are internal states
(certainly in my experience) where this force
is experienced
directly with much less differentiation,
hence the clumsy
metaphor.
Textbooks on psychology define a need
as an internal state
which results in directed behaviour, and discuss needs
such as
thirst, hunger, sex, stimulation, proximity seeking, curiousity
and so on. These things are interesting,
but for virtually
everyone such basic and inherent needs are in
the nature of
"givens" and don't provide much individual
insight into the
questions "why do I behave differently from other people?",
or
"should I change my behaviour?", or more interesting still
"to
what extent do I (or can I) influence my behaviour?". In addition
to inherent needs it is useful also to look at needs which
have
been acquired (i.e. learned), and for convenience
I will call
them "wants" because people are usually conscious of
"wanting"
something specific. To give some examples, a person might want:
- to buy a bar of chocolate.
- to go to the toilet.
- to own a better car.
- to have a sexual relationship with
someone.
- to live forever.
- to be thinner (more
musculer, taller, whiter,
browner...).
- to read a book.
- to gain social recognition within
a particular group.
- to win in sport.
- to go shopping.
- to go to bed.
Not only are these "wants" the sort of thing many
people want
these days, but these "wants" can all occur concurrently in
the
same person, and while some may have been simmering away
on a
back burner for years, there can be an astonishing
variety of
pots and pans waiting for an immediate turn on the
stove. The
average person's consciousness zips around the kitchen
like a
demented short-order cook stirring this dish, serving that
one,
slapping a pot on the stove for a few minutes only to take it off
and put something else on, throwing whole meals in the bin
only
to empty them back into pots a few minutes later. The choice
of
which pot ends up on the hot plate depends largely on mood
and
accident: some people may plan
their lives like military
campaigns but most don't. Most people have far more wants
than
there are hours in the day to achieve them, and those which
are
actually satisfied on a given day is more a function of accident
than design. Careers are thrown away (along
with status and
security) in a moment of sexual infatuation; the desire
to eat
wars with the desire to be slim; the writer
retires to the
country to write the great novel and does everything but
write;
the manager desperately tries to finish an urgent
report but
finds himself dreaming about a car he saw in the car park;
the
student abandons an important essay on impulse to go
out with
friends. One activity is quickly replaced by
another as the
person attempts to reconcile all his wants
and drives, but
unfortunately there is no requirement that
wants should be
internally consistent or complementary; like
a multi-process
operating system, a single thread of energy is randomly
cycled
around an arbitrary list of needs and wants to produce the mixed-
up complexity of the average person. Each want can be treated
as
a distinct mode of consciousness - I can eat a slap-up meal
one
day and thoroughly enjoy it, while the next day I can look in the
mirror and swear never to touch another pizza again. It is as
if
two separate beings inhabited my body, one who loves pizzas
and
one who wants to be thin, and each makes plans independently
of
the other, and only the magic dust of unbroken memory
sustains
the illusion that I am a single person. When I view my own wants
and actions dispassionately I can conclude that there is a
host
or army of independent beings jostling inside me,
a crowd of
artificial elementals individually ensouled with enough
of my
energy to bring one particular desire to fruition. I cope
with
the semi-chaotic result of mob rule by using
the traditional
remedy: public relations. I put together internal press releases
(various rationalisations and justifications) to convince myself,
and others if need be, that the mess was either due to
external
circumstances beyond my control (I didn't have time last night),
the fault of other people (you made me angry), or inevitable
(I
had no choice, there was no alternative). In cases where even
my
public relations don't work I erect a shrine to the gods of Guilt
and make little offerings of sorrow and regret over the
years.
This is normal consciousness for most people.
It is a kind
of insanity. Wants rush to and fro on the stage of consciousness
like actors in the closing scenes of Julius Caeser - alarums
and
excursions, bodies litter the stage, trumpets and battle
shouts
in the wings, Brutus falls on his sword, Anthony claims the field
- perhaps this is why the sephira is called Victory! Every
day
new wants are kicked off in response to advertising
or peer
pressure, old wants compete with each other in a zero-sum
game.
Having said this, I should point out that it is not
desire or
wants or drives which create the insanity - Kaballah
does not
place the value judgement on desire that Buddhism
does (that
desire is the cause of suffering, and by inference, something
to
be overcome). The insanity arises from mob-rule, from the bizarre
internal processes of justification, rationalisation and
guilt,
and from the identification of Self with the result -
I will
return to this when discussing the sephira Tiphereth, as the mis-
identification of Self is a key element in the
discussion on
Tiphereth.
Netzach also corresponds to
our feelings, emotions and
moods, because this background of
"psychological weather"
strongly conditions the way in which
we think and behave:
regardless of what I am doing,
my energy will manifest
differently when I am happy than when I am not. Sometimes
moods
and emotions are triggered by a specific event, and
sometimes
they are not: free-floating anxiety and depression
are common
enough, and perhaps free-floating happiness is too (I can't speak
from experience there ;-). There are hundreds
of words for
different moods, emotions and feelings, but most seem to refer to
different degrees of intensity of the same thing, or
the same
feeling in different contexts, and the
number of genuinely
distinct internal dimensions of feeling appears to
be small.
Depression, misery, sadness, happiness, delight, joy, rapture and
ecstacy seem to lie along the same axis, as do loathing,
hate,
dislike, affection, and love. It is an interesting
exercise to
identify the genuinely, qualitatively different feelings
you
can experience by actually conjuring up each feeling.
I have
tried the experiment with a number of people,
and you will
probably find there are less than 10 distinct feelings.
The most immediate and personal correspondences
for Hod and
Netzach are the psychological correspondences:
the rational,
abstract, intellectual and communicative on one hand
and the
emotional, motivational, intuitive, aesthetic, and non-rational
on the other. The planetary and elemental correspondences mirror
this: Hod corresponds to Kokab or Mercury, and the
element of
Air, while Netzach corresponds to Nogah or Venus, and the element
Water.
The Virtue of Hod is honesty or truthfulness,
and its Vice
is dishonesty or untruthfulness. One of the features
of being
able to create abstract representations
of reality and
communicate some aspect of it to another person is that
it is
possible to *misrepresent* reality, or to put it
bluntly, lie
through your teeth.
The Illusion of Hod is order, in the
sense of attempting to
impose one's sense of order upon the
world. This is very
noticeable in some people; whenever something happens they
will
immediately pigeonhole it and declare with great authority "it is
just another example of XYZ". A surprising number of people
who
claim to be rational will claim "there's
no such thing as
(ghosts, telepathy, free lunches, UFO's)" without having examined
the evidence one way or the other. They are probably right, and I
have no personal interest either way, but it is not difficult
to
distinguish between someone who carefully weighs the
pros and
cons in an argument and readily admits
to uncertainty, and
someone with a firm and orderly conviction that "this is the
way
the world is". The illusion of order
occurs because people
confuse their internal representation of the world with the world
itself, and whenever they are confronted with
something they
attempt to fit it into their representation.
The illusion of order (that everything
in the world can be
neatly classified) relates closely to the klippoth of Hod, which
is rigidity, or rigid order. As children we start
out with an
open view of what the world is like, and by the time we reach our
late teens or early twenties this view has set fairly solid, like
cold porridge - there are few minds more full of certainties than
that of an eighteen year old. A good critical education sometimes
has the effect of stirring the porridge into a lumpy gruel,
but
it gradually starts to set again (unless the heavy hand of
fate
stirs it up), and it is generally recognised, particularly in the
sciences, that a deeply ingrained sense of "how things
are" is
the greatest obstacle to progress. If
you hear some kids
listening to music and find yourself thinking "I don't know what
they find in that noise!" then it's happening to you too. If find
yourself looking back to a time when everything
was so much
better than it is today and find yourself declaring
"nostalgia
isn't what it used to be" then you will know that the
porridge
has gone very cold and very stiff.
The Vision of Hod is the Vision
of Splendour. There is
regularity and order in the world - it's not all an illusion
-
and when someone is able to appreciate natural
order in its
abstract sense, via mathematics for example, it can
lead to a
genuinely religious, even ecstatic experience. The
thirteenth
century Kabbalist Abraham Abulafia developed a rigorous system of
Hebrew letter mysticism based on the letters
of the Hebrew
alphabet, their symbolic meanings,
and their abstract
relationships when permuted into different "names of God";
many
hours of intense concentration spent combining letters according
to complex rules generated highly abstract symbolic meanings
and
insights which led to ecstatic experiences. The same sense of awe
can come from mathematics and science - the
realisation that
gravitational dynamics in three dimensions is geometry
in four
dimensions, that plants are living fractals, that primes are
the
seeds of all other numbers, are just as likely to lead towards an
intense vision of the splendour of the world made visible through
the eye of the rational intellect.
The Virtue of Netzach is unselfishness,
and its Vice is
selfishness. Both the Virtue and the Vice are an attitude towards
things-which-are-not-me, specifically, other people and
living
creatures. If I was surrounded by a hundred square miles of empty
desert then my attitude to other living things wouldn't
matter,
but I don't, and nothing I do is without some consequence;
my
needs, wants and feelings invariably have an effect on
people,
animals and plants, who all want to live and have some level
of
needs and wants and feelings too. Unselfishness
is simply a
recognition of others' needs. Selfishness taken to an extreme
is
a denial of life, because it denies freedom and life to anything
which gets in the way; my needs must come first. Netzach lies
on
the Pillar of Force and is an expression of life-energy,
so to
deny life is a perversion of the force symbolised
by Netzach,
hence the attribution of selfishness to the Vice.
The Vision of Netzach is the Vision
of Beauty Triumphant.
Whereas the Vision of Splendour corresponding to Hod is a vision
of complex abstract relationships, symmetry, and
mathematical
elegance, the Vision of Beauty Triumphant is purely aesthetic and
firmly based in the real world of textures, smells, sounds,
and
colours, an appropriate correspondence for Venus, the goddess
of
sensual beauty.
Suppose two housebuyers go to look at a house.
The first is
interested in the number of rooms, the size of the garage,
the
house's position relative to local amenities, the
price, the
number of square metres in the plot, and whether the windows
are
double-glazed. The second person likes the decoration
in the
lounge, the colour of the bathroom, the wisteria
plant in the
garden, the cherry tree, the curving shape of the stairs, and the
sloping roof in one of the bedrooms. Both people like the house,
but the first likes various abstract properties associated
with
the house, whereas the second likes the house itself. Suppose the
same two people buy the house and decide to do ritual magic.
The
first person wants white robes because white is the colour of the
powers of light and life. The second wants a green velvet
robe
because it feels and looks nice. The first reads lots of books on
how to carry out a ritual, while the second sits under the cherry
tree in the garden with a flute and a blissful
expression of
cosmic love. The first person has continued to make choices based
on an abstract notion of what is correct, while the second makes
choices based on what *feels right*. Both are
driven by an
internal sense of "rightness", but in the first case it is based
on abstract criteria, while in the second it is based on personal
aesthetic notion of beauty.
The Vision of Beauty Triumphant has a compelling
power. It
is pre-articulate and inherently uncritical, and at the same time
it is immensely biased. A person in its grip
will pronounce
judgement on another person's taste in art, literature, clothes,
music, decor or whatever, and will do it with such
a profound
lack of self-consciousness that it is possible to believe
good
taste is ordained in heaven. This person will mock
those who
surround themselves with rules, regulations,
principles, and
analysis, the "syntax of things" as E. E. Cummings puts
it, and
instead exhibit a whimsical spontaneity, a penetrating (so
they
believe) intuition, and a free spirit in tune with ebb and
flow
of life. There are those who
might complain about their
astounding arrogance, fickleness, unreliability, and the
never-
ending flow of unshakable and prejudiced opinions delivered with
papal authority, but those who complain are
(clearly) anal-
retentive nit-pickers and don't count. For a total immersion
in
the aesthetic vision read Oscar Wilde's "The Picture of
Dorian
Grey".
The Illusion of Netzach
is projection. We all tend to
identify feelings and characteristics in other people which
we
find in ourselves and when we get it right it is called "empathy"
or "intuition"; when we get it wrong it is called "projection",
because we are incorrectly projecting
our feelings, needs,
motives, or desires onto another person and interpreting
their
behaviour accordingly. Some level of projection is unavoidable,
and at best it can be balanced with a critical awareness that
it
can occur, but projection is insidious, and
the strength of
feeling associated with a projection can easily overwhelm
any
intellectual awareness. Projection usually "feels right".
One of the most overwhelming forms of projection
accompanies
sexual desire. Why do I find one person sexually attractive
and
not another? Why do I find some characteristics
in a person
sexually attractive but not others? In my own case I discovered
that when I put together all the characteristics I
found most
attractive in a person a consistent picture emerged of an "ideal
person", and every person I had ever considered as
a possible
sexual partner was instantly compared against this template.
In
fact there was more than one template, more than one ideal,
but
the number was limited and each template
was very clearly
defined, and most importantly, each template was
internal. My
sexual (and often many other feelings) about a person were based
on an internal and apparently arbitrary internal template.
This
was crazy; I found my sexual feelings about a person would change
depending on how they dressed or behaved, on
how well they
"matched the ideal". It became obvious that what I was
in love
with did not exist outside of myself, and I was trying
to find
this ideal in everyone else. Each one of these "templates" was
a
living aspect of myself which I had chosen not to regard as "me",
and in compensation I spent much of my time trying to find people
to bring these parts to life, like a director auditioning actors
and actresses for a part in a new play. If a person
previously
identified as ideal failed to live up to my notion of how
they
should be ideally behaving then I would project a fault on them:
there was something wrong with *them*! Madness indeed.
The Swiss psychologist C.
G. Jung [1] recognised this
phenomenon and gave these idealised and projected components
of
our psyche the title "archetype".
Jung identified several
archetypes, and it is worth mentioning
the major and most
influential.
The Anima is the ideal
female archetype. She is part
genetic, part cultural, a figure
molded by fashion and
advertising, an unconscious composite of woman in the abstract.
The Anima is common in men, where she can appear with
riveting
power in dreams and fantasy, a projection brought to life by
the
not inconsiderable power of the male sexual drive. She might
be
meek and submissive, seductive and
alluring, vampish and
dangerous, a cheap slut or an unattainable goddess - there is
no
"standard anima", but there are many recognisable patterns which
can have a powerful hold on particular men. Male sexual
fantasy
material is amazingly predictable, cliched, unimaginitive
and
crude, and contains a limited number of steroetyped
views of
women which are as close to a "lowest common denominator
anima"
as one is likely to find.
The Animus is the ideal male archetype,
and much of what is
true about the Anima is true of
the Animus. There are
differences; the predominant quality
in the Anima is her
appearance and behaviour, while the predominant quality
in the
Animus is social power and competence. In the interests of sexual
equality it is worth mentioning that female
romantic fantasy
material is amazingly predictable, cliched, unimaginitive
and
crude, and contains a limited number of stereotype views of
men
which are as close to a "lowest common denominator animus" as one
is likely to find.
The Shadow is the projection
of "not-me" and contains
forbidden or repressed desires and impulses. In most
men the
Anima is repressed and in most women the Animus is repressed, and
so both form a component of the Shadow. The major part
of the
Shadow however is composed of forbidden impulses, and the Shadow
forms a personification of evil. Much of what is considered evil
is defined socially and the communal personification of evil
as
an external force working against humankind (such as Satan)
is
widespread.
The Persona is the mask a person
wears as a member of a
community when a large proportion of his or her
behaviour is
defined by a role such as doctor, teacher, manager, accountant,
lawyer or whatever. Projection occurs in two
ways: firstly,
someone may be expected to conform to a role in a
particularly
rigid or stereotyped way, and so suffer a loss of individuality
and probably a degree of misplaced trust or prejudice. Secondly,
many people identify with a role to the extent that they
carry
that role into all aspects of their
private lives. This
"projection onto self" is a form
of identification - see
the section on Tiphereth.
The archetype of Self at the level
of Hod and Netzach is
usually projected as an ideal form of person; that is,
someone
will believe that he or she is highly imperfect creature and
it
is possible to attain an ideal state of being in which the
same
person is kind, loving, wise, forgiving,
compassionate, in
harmony with the Absolute, or whatever. This
projection will
either fasten on a living or dead person, who then
becomes a
hero, heroine, guru, or master with grossly inflated abilities,
or it fastens on a vision of "myself made perfect". The projected
vision of "myself made perfect" is common (almost
universal)
among those seeking "spiritual development", "esoteric training",
and other forms of self-improvement, and in almost every case
it
is based on an abstract ideal. The person will probably
insist
that the ideal has existed in certain rare individuals
(usually
long dead saints and gurus, or someone who lives a long way
off
whom they haven't met), and that is the sort of person they want
to be. It should be comical, but it isn't. There is more
to say
about this and it will keep till the section on Tiphereth.
The klippoth or shell of Netzach is habit and
routine. When
behaviour, with all its potential for new experiences,
new ways
of doing things, new relationships, becomes locked into patterns
which repeat over and over again, then the life energy, the force
aspect of Netzach is withdrawn and all that remains is the dead,
empty shell of behaviour. Just as the klippoth of Hod is
rigid
order, the petrification of one's internal
representation of
reality, so the klippoth of Netzach is the
petrification of
behaviour.
The God Names of Hod and Netzach
are Elohim Tzabaoth and
Jehovah Tzabaoth respectively, which mean "God of Armies", but in
each case a different word is used for "God". The name
"Elohim"
is associated with all three sephiroth on the Pillar of Form
and
represents a feminine (metaphorically speaking) tendency in that
aspect of God. The elucidation
of God Names can become
phenomenally complex and obscure, with long
excursions into
gematria and textual analysis of the Pentateuch and
it is a
quagmire I intend to avoid.
The Archangels are Raphael and Haniel.
The Archangel of Hod
is sometimes given as Michael, but I prefer Raphael (Medicine
of
God) for no other reason than the association of
Mercury with
medicine and healing; besides, Michael has perfectly good reasons
for residing in Tiphereth. This sort of thing can give rise to an
amazing amount of hot air when Kabbalists meet; for
those who
wonder how far back the confusion goes, Robert Fludd (1574-1607)
plumped for Raphael, whereas two hundred years
later Francis
Barrett prefered Michael. The co-founder of the Golden Dawn,
S.L.
Mathers, went for both depending on which text you read. Kabbalah
isn't an orderly subject and those who want to impose too
much
order on it are falling into the illusion of...I leave this as an
exercise to the reader.
The Angel Orders are the Beni Elohim
and the Elohim.
The triad of sephiroth Yesod, Hod and Netzach comprise the triad
of "normal consciousness" as we normally
experience it in
ourselves and most people most of the
time. This level of
consciousness is intensely magical; try to move away from it
for
any length of time and you will discover the strength
of the
force and form sustaining it. It is not an exaggeration
to say
that most people are completely unable to leave this state, even
when they want to, even when they desperately try to. The sephira
Tiphereth represents a state of being which unlocks the energy of
"normal consciousness" and is the subject of the next section.
[1] Jung, C.G, "Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology
of the
Self", Routledge & Kegan Paul 1974
Tiphereth
---------
"Nothing is left to you at this moment but
to burst out into
a loud laugh"
From "The Spirit of Zen"
The sephira Tiphereth lies at the heart of
the Tree of Life,
and like Rome all paths lead to it. Well, not all, but Tiphereth
has a path linking it to every sephira with the
exception of
Malkuth. If the Tree of Life is a map then the sephira
titled
Tiphereth, Beauty, or Rachamin, Compassion, clearly
represents
something of central importance. What does it represent? Can
you
imagine in your mind's eye what it might be? Do you feel anything
within you when you contemplate Tiphereth? If asked
could you
define what it stands for? Well, if you can do any
or all of
these things you are almost certainly barking up the wrong Tree.
As Alan Watts comments [1]:
"The method of Zen is to baffle, excite,
puzzle and exhaust
the intellect until it is realised that intellection
is only
thinking *about*; it will
provoke, irritate and again
exhaust the emotions until it is realised
that emotion is
only feeling *about*, and
then it contrives, when the
disciple has been brought to an intellectual
and emotional
impasse, to bridge the gap between
second-hand conceptual
contact with reality, and first-hand experience."
The sephira Tiphereth presents the student of Kabbalah
with a
conundrum. Whatever you say it is, it isn't; whatever you imagine
it to be it isn't; whatever you feel it might be, it isn't; it is
an empty room. There is nothing there. The modes of consciousness
appropriate to Hod, Yesod and Netzach
respectively are not
appropriate to something which is clearly and unambiguously shown
on the Tree as being distinct from all three. So what is it?
The
student is told that the Virtue of Tiphereth is Devotion to
the
Great Work. What is this "Great Work"? The
student is told
solemnly that in order to find the answer he or she should obtain
the Spiritual Experience of Tiphereth, which is the Knowledge and
Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel. So the student runs
off
and duely reports (after some work in the library perhaps)
that
the Great Work is the raising of a human being in every aspect to
perfection. Or it is the saving of the planet from
industrial
pollution. Or it is the retrieval and perpetuation of knowledge,
or perhaps it is the spiritual redemption
of humanity. The
student then burns enough frankincense to pay off the
Somalian
national debt, records endless conversations
with the Holy
Guardian Angel in the magical record, and impresses
all and
sundry with an unbending commitment to the
Great Work. This
enthusiasm, commitment, personal sacrifice and sense
of moral
purpose leads to the development of a special kind
of person:
pious, preaching, judgemental, a humble servant of
the highest
powers with a blind spot of intolerance. Those who inhabit
the
vicinity of such moral incandescence may have reason to
recall
that the Vice of Tiphereth is self-importance and pride.
A student can spend
years running around in circles,
bringing to the planet the benefits
of advanced spiritual
consciousness, and this seems to be a necessary exercise. People
need to sweat various personal obsessions out of their
systems,
and the empty room of Tiphereth is an excellent set on which
to
act out a personal drama. If the devotion to the Work is genuine,
and if Tiphereth and the HGA are invoked
with passion and
determination, then sooner or later the hand of fate lends a hand
and the student has the shit knocked out in a big way. An attempt
to penetrate the nature of Tiphereth does seem to
bring about
that state which the Greeks called "hubris",
an overweening
arrogance, self-importance and pride,
until eventually the
inevitable happens and one's life comes crashing
down around
one's ears. The resulting mess varies from person to person;
in
some people every idea about what is important is turned
upside
down, while in others an emotional
attachment to habits,
lifestyle, possessions or relationships turns to dust. The daemon
of the false self is dealt a massive blow and sent reeling,
and
in that moment there is a chance for real change and the dawning
of the golden sun of Tiphereth.
This is how I interpret the word "initiation":
there is a
state of being represented by the sephirah Tiphereth
which is
absolutely distinct from what most people experience as
normal
consciousness. Once attained the change is
irreversible and
permanent; it causes a permanent change in
the way life is
experienced. When it occurs it is recognised instantly for
what
it is...as if every cell in one's body shouted simultaneously "So
*that's* all there is to it!" This
state has been widely
documented in many parts of the world, and
Alan Watts' book
(referenced below) is as guarded and explicit on the subject
as
any worthwhile book is likely to be.
The symbolism of Tiphereth
is three-fold: a king, a
sacrificed god, and a child.
This three-fold symbolism
corresponds to Tiphereth's place on the extended
Tree (to be
explained in a later chapter), where it appears as
Kether of
Assiah, Tiphereth of Yetzirah, and Malkuth of Briah, and to these
three aspects correspond the king, the sacrificed god,
and the
child respectively. One interpretation of this symbolism
is as
follows: if the kingdom is to be redeemed then the king (who
is
also the son of God - see below) must be sacrificed,
and from
this sacrifice comes a rebirth as a child. This is a metaphor
of
initiation. It is also markedly Christian in symbolism, an aspect
many explicitly Christian Kabbalists have not failed to elaborate
upon, but it would be a mistake to make too much
out of the
apparent Christian symbolism. The king, the child and the son are
synonyms for Tiphereth in the earliest Kabbalistic
documents
(e.g. the Zohar), and the introduction of divine kingship and the
sacrificed god into modern Kabbalah owes a
lot more to the
publication of "The Golden Bough" [2] in 1922 than it
does to
Christianity.
The theme of death and rebirth is an
important element in
many esoteric traditions, and provides continuity between modern
Kabbalah and the mystery religions and
initiations of the
Mediterranean basin. The initiatory rituals of the Golden
Dawn
[3], an organisation which did much to reawaken
interest in
Kabbalah, were loosely inspired by the Eleusinian mysteries
of
Demeter and Persephone - at least to extent
that the Temple
officers were named after the principal
officers of the
Eleusinian mysteries. The Golden Dawn Tiphereth initiation
was,
like most Golden Dawn rituals, a witch's brew of symbolism,
but
it was strongly based on the mysteries of the crucifixion and the
resurrection - at one point the aspirant was actually lashed to a
cross - and took place in a symbolic reconstruction of the vault
and tomb of Christian Rosenkreutz. The following
extract [3]
gives the flavour of the thing:
"Buried with that Light in a mystical death,
rising again in
a mystical resurrection, cleansed and
purified through Him
our Master, O Brother of the Cross and the
Rose. Like Him, O
Adepts of all ages,
have ye toiled. Like Him have ye
suffered tribulation. Poverty,
torture and death have ye
passed through. They have been but the
purification of the
Gold."
Gold is a Tiphereth symbol, being the metal of Shemesh, the Sun,
which also corresponds to Tiphereth. Gold is incorruptible
and
symbolises a state of being which is not "base" or
"corrupt";
again, it is a symbol of initiation, of a state of being compared
to which normal consciousness is corruptible dross.
I do not wish to go any further into this
kind of symbolism
- there is an awful lot of it. It is possible to write at
great
length and succeed in doing nothing more than losing the
reader
in a web of symbolism so dense and sticky that the inner
state
one is pointing at becomes a sterile thing of words and symbols.
I wanted to provide an idea of how a large
amount of exotic
symbolism has accreted around Tiphereth, but that is
all. The
state indicated by Tiphereth is real
enough, and lashing
comfortably-off middle-class aspirants to a cross in
a wooden
vault at the local Masonic Hall and prattling on about
poverty,
torture and death is somewhat wide of the mark.
In the traditional
Kabbalah the sephira Tiphereth
corresponds to something called Zoar Anpin, the Microprosopus, or
Lesser Countenance. As might be expected, there is also something
called Arik Anpin, the Macroprosopus, or Greater Countenance, and
this is often used as a synonym for the sephira
Kether. The
symbology connected with the Greater and Lesser Countenances
is
extremely complex: the "Greater Holy Assembly" [4], one
of the
books of the Zohar, is largely a detailed description
of the
cranium, the eyes, the cheeks, and the hairs in the beard of both
the Greater and Lesser Countenances. In
a crude sense the
Macroprosopus is God, and the Microprosopus is man made in God's
image, hence the symbolism, but
this is too simple. The
Microprosopus is also the archetypal man Adam Kadmon, a mystical
concept which should not be confused with a real
human being.
Adam Kadmon is androgynous, male and female, Adam-and-Eve
in a
pre-manifest, pre-Fall state of divine perfection. The symbology
of the Macroprosopus, Microprosopus, and Adam Kadmon appears
to
exist independently of the concept of sephirothic emanation,
and
it is probably fair to say that the former
was more highly
developed during the Zoharic period of Kabbalah, while the latter
is used almost exclusively at the present time - I have
yet to
encounter a modern Kabbalist with
much insight into the
thirteen parts of the beard of the Macroprosopus.
Another rich set of symbols associated with
Tiphereth comes
from the divine name of four letters YHVH, usually
written as
Jehovah or Yahweh. The letter Yod is associated with the supernal
father Chokhmah, and the letter He is
associated with the
supernal mother Binah. The letter Vov is associated with the
son
of the mother and father, and is both the Microprosopus and
the
sephira Tiphereth. The final He is associated with the
daughter
(and bride of the son), the sephira Malkuth. Tiphereth
is thus
the "child" of Chokhmah and Binah, and also "the son of God".
In
Hebrew the letter Vov can represent the number 6, and in Kabbalah
this refers to Chesed, Gevurah, Tiphereth,
Netzach, Hod and
Yesod, the six sephiroth which correspond to states
of human
consciousness and hence also to the Microprosopus. With a typical
Kabbalistic flexibility they can also stand for the six days
of
Creation.
The illusion of Tiphereth is Identification.
When a person
is asked "what are you", they will usually begin with statements
like "I am a human being", "I am a lorry driver",
"I am Fred
Bloggs", "I am five foot eleven". If pressed further
a person
might begin to enumerate personal qualities and behaviours: "I am
trustworthy", "I lose my temper a
lot", "I am afraid of
heights", "I love chessecake", "I hate dogs". It
is extremely
common for people to identify what they are with the totality
of
their beliefs and behaviours, and they will defend the
sanctity
of these beliefs and behaviours, often to the death - a
person
might have behaviours which make their life a misery and
still
cling to them with a grip like a python. This inability to stand
back and see behaviour or beliefs in an impersonal way produces a
peculiar ego-centricity: the sense of
personal identity is
founded on a set of beliefs and behaviours which
are largely
unconscious (that is, a person
may be unaware of being
grotesquely selfish, or pompous, or attention-getting) and at the
same time seem to be uniquely special and sacred. When behaviour
and beliefs are unconscious and incorporated into
a sense of
identity it becomes impossible to make sense of other people.
If
I am unaware that I regularly slip
little put-downs into
my conversation, and Joe takes umbrage at my sense
of humour,
then rather than change my behaviour (which is unconscious)
I
interpret the result as "Joe doesn't have a sense of humour;
he
needs to learn to laugh a little". There are
many behaviours
which may seem innocuous to the person concerned but which
are
irritating or offensive to others, and when the injured
party
reacts appropriately it is impossible for me to make
sense of
this reaction if my behaviour is unconscious and tightly bound to
my sense of identity. Our sense of identity thus becomes a
kind
of "Absolute" against which everything
is compared, and
judgements about the world become absolute and almost impossible
to change, even when we realise intellectually the subjectivity
of our position. Referring to this projection of the unconscious
onto the world Jung [5] comments:
"The effect of projection is to isolate the
subject from his
environment, since instead of a real relation
to it there is
now only an illusory one. Projections
change the world into
one's unknown face."
In summary, the illusion of Tiphereth is a false identification
with a set of beliefs or behaviours.
It can also be an
identification with a social mask
or Persona, something
discussed in the section on Netzach. So to return to the orginal
question: "what are you?". Is there an answer? If the answer
is
to be something which is not an arbitrary collection of emphemera
then you are not your behaviours - behaviour can be changed;
you
are not your beliefs - beliefs can be changed; you are not
your
role in society - your role in society can change; you
are not
your body - your body is continually changing. Out of this comes
a sense of emptiness, of hollowness. The intellect attempts
to
solve the koan of koans but has no anchor to hold on to. Is there
no centre to my being, nothing which is *me*, no
axis in the
universe, no morality, no good, no
evil? Do I live in a
meaningless, arbitrary universe where any belief is as
good as
any other, where any behaviour is acceptable so long as I can get
away with it? This sense of emptiness or
hollowness is the
Qlippoth or shell of Tiphereth, Tiphereth as the Empty Room with
Nothing In It. Jung [6] provides
a memorable and moving
description of how his father,
a country parson, was
progressively consumed by this feeling of hollowness. There
can
be few fates worse than to devote a life to the outward forms
of
religion without ever feeling one touch of that which gives
it
meaning.
The God Name of Tiphereth is Jehovah
Aloah va Daath, or
simply Aloah va Daath. It is often translated
as "God made
manifest in the sphere of the mind". The Archangel is sometimes
given as Raphael, but I prefer the attribution to Michael,
long
associated with solar fire. His name "Who is like God" reinforces
the upper/lower relationship between Kether and Tiphereth.
The
angel order is the Malachim, or Kings.
To cover all of the
traditional material related to
Tiphereth is to cover most of Kabbalah. Tiphereth
is at the
centre of a complex of six sephiroth which represent
a human
being. This isn't a modern interpretation,
an "initiated"
interpretation of obscure medieval documents. Kabbalah has always
been deeply concerned with the dynamics of
the relationship
between God and the Creation, between God and a human being,
and
the descriptions of the Macroprosopus and Microprosopus
in the
Zohar are a bold attempt to grasp something ineffable
using a
language built from the most immediate of metaphors, the
human
body. According to the Bible and Kabbalah, a human being
is in
some sense a reflection of God, and to the extent that
Kabbalah
is an outcome of genuine mystical experience it is a description
of the dynamics of that relationship, and more importantly it
is
a description of something *real*. Even if you don't
like the
look of the word "God" (I don't) Kabbalah is trying to
express
something important about a relatively inaccessible dimension
of
human experience. Tiphereth is a reflection
of Kether and
represents the "image of God", the "God within",
whatever you
take that to mean; it is a symbol of centrality,
balance, and
above all, wholeness. It can be
an empty room, a gaping
emptiness, or it can be the heart and blazing sun of the Tree. It
is the symbol of a human being who lives in full consciousness of
the outer and the inner, who denies neither the reality
of the
world nor the mystery of self-consciousness, and who attempts to
reconcile the needs of both in a harmonious balance.
[1] Watts, Alan W., "The Spirit of Zen", John Murray 1936
[2] Frazer, J.G., "The Golden Bough,
A Study in Magic and
Religion", Macmillan 1976
[3] Regardie, I., "The Complete Golden Dawn System
of Magic",
Falcon 1984
[4] Mathers, S.L., "The Kabbalah Unveiled", RKP 1981
[5] Jung, C.G., "Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology
of the
Self", RKP 1974
[6] Jung, C.G., "Memories, Dreams, Reflections", RKP 1963
Gevurah and Chesed
------------------
"The chief foundations of all states,
new as well as old or
mixed, are good laws and good arms; and because
there cannot
be good laws where there are not good arms,
and where there
are good arms there must needs be good
laws, I will omit
speaking of the laws and speak of the
arms."
Machiavelli
"God is the great urge that has
not yet found a body
but urges towards incarnation with the
great creative urge."
D.H. Lawrence
The title of the
sephira Gevurah is translated as
"strength", and sometimes as "power".
The sephira is also
referred to by its alternative titles of Din,
"justice", and
Pachad, "fear". The title of the sephira Chesed is translated
as
"mercy" or "love", and it is often called Gedulah, "majesty"
or
"magnificence". Gevurah and Chesed lie on the Pillars of Form and
Force respectively, and possess a more definite and
generally
agreed symbolism than any other sephiroth: Chesed
stands for
expansiveness and the creation and building-up of form, what
can
very appropriately be referred to as anabolism,
and Gevurah
stands for restraint and both the preservation of form, and
the
breaking-down (or catabolism) of form.
Within the symbolism of the Kabbalah
the most explicit and
concrete expression of form occurs in Malkuth,
the physical
world, and as it takes a conscious being (e.g. thee and
me) to
comprehend the world in terms of forms which are
built-up and
broken down, so Chesed and Gevurah express something vital about
our conscious relationship with the external, material
world.
When I see something beautiful being created I may
well think
this is "good", but when I see the same thing
being wantonly
destroyed, I would probably think this is "bad", and this type of
thinking pervades early Kabbalistic writing. In his commentary on
"The Bahir", Aryeh Kaplan writes [1]:
"The concept of Chesed-Love is that of freely
giving, while
that of Gevurah-Strength is that of
restraint. When it is
said that Strength is restraint, it
is in the sense of the
teaching "Who is strong, he who restrains
his urge". It is
obvious that man can restrain his nature,
but if man can do
so, then God certainly can. God's nature,
however, is to do
good and therefore, when He restrains His
nature, the result
is evil. The sephira of Gevurah-Strength
is therefore seen
as the source of evil."
The Zohar also contains many references
to the "rigorous
severity" of God (another synonym for Gevurah) and its being
the
source of evil in the creation. However, when one considers that
the creation and uncontrolled growth of a cancer would correspond
to Chesed, and the attempts of the immune system to contain
and
destroy it would correspond to Gevurah, it should be clear
that
it is not useful to consider creation and destruction in terms of
good and evil. It *is* useful to look at a living, organic system
as a *balance* between these two opposed tendencies,
and the
manifest Creation in Kabbalah is very definitely pictured
as a
living, organic system (i.e. a Tree of Life).
The most vivid metaphors for Chesed and Gevurah
come from a
time when European societies were ruled by kings and queens, when
(in principle at least) the ultimate authority
and power in
society rested in a single individual. Chesed corresponds to
the
creative aspects of leadership, and early texts are one-sided
in
characterising this by love, mercy
and majesty. Gevurah
corresponds to the conservative aspects of leadership,
to the
power to preserve the status-quo, and the
power to destroy
anything opposed to it. These two aspects go hand-in-hand -
try
to change anything of consequence in society, and someone
will
invariably oppose that change. To bring about change it is often
necessary to have the power to over-rule opposition. Consensus is
an impossibility in society - there will always be someone whose
opinions are at best ignored and at worst suppressed - and Chesed
and Gevurah represent respectively the kingly obligation to seek
what is good for the many (enlightened leadership of
course!),
and the power to judge and punish those opposed to the
will of
the king. The following description of Margaret Thatcher
comes
from Nicholas Ridley, a minister in her cabinet [2]:
"She governed with superb style, carrying every
war into the
enemy's camp, seeking to destroy
rather than contain the
opposition, and determined to blaze a radical
trail. But she
never let power corrupt her; nor
did she ever fail to be
compassionate and kind as a human being."
Whether this description is accurate or not is
irrelevant to
this discussion; what it does do is capture in
two sentences
something essential about a leader, the balance between
power,
strength and militancy on one hand,
and humanitarianism,
compassion and caring on the other. This is very much a model
of
divine kingship (or queenship!): a king who loves and cares
for
his people and seeks to bring about "heaven on earth", but at the
same time punishes transgression, and fights for and
preserves
what is good and worth preserving. Kabbalists thought of God
in
this way: God loves us (so the argument goes), and the mercy
and
benignity of God is represented by the sephira Chesed, but at the
same time God has made his laws known to humankind and will judge
and punish anyone who opposes these laws. Read
the book of
Proverbs in the Bible if you want to enter into this
view of
reality.
Many modern Kabbalists have
a more jaundiced view of
leadership than medieval Kabbalists, and certainly do
not see
Chesed as purely the love or mercy of God.
In the twentieth
century we have seen a succession of
leaders harness their
vision, creativity and leadership to the four Vices of
Chesed,
which are tyranny, bigotry, hypocrisy and gluttony. It
takes an
uncommon skill and vision not
only to contemplate the
annihilation of entire races, but to create a structure in which
it happens. And how many people would dream of a socialist utopia
where traditional communities are forcibly bulldozed and replaced
by dilapidated concrete slums, and have the power to bring
this
about? You may not like this kind of leadership, but it is still
leadership, and in its own way it is inspired. A leader
may be
inspired by a vision, and may have the power to bring that vision
into reality, but it is unfortunately also the case
that the
result can become a new definition of evil. Good and evil are not
static qualities with fixed meanings; in every generation
there
are exemplars who define for the whole of society the meaning
of
the words in new contexts. Tamerlane may have built pyramids from
skulls, but what did he know about asset stripping?
Tyranny, bigotry, hypocricy
and gluttony, the vices of
Chesed, are the meat and drink of daily newspapers. Tyranny
is
leadership without authority, an illegitimate or unconstitutional
leadership usually oiled with large helpings of cruelty, the Vice
of Gevurah. Bigotry is a quick and easy way to drum up
a power
base: find a minority group in society, emphasise and magnify
to
grotesque proportions the differences between them and the
rest
of society, and use the natural fear of the strange or unfamiliar
to do the rest. Hypocrisy can be found in religious leaders
who
denounce normal human behaviour as a sin, sin comprehensively
in
private, and use genuine religious aspirations as in excuse
to
line their pockets. It can be found in those who talk about
the
dictatorship of the proletariat in public and buy their
luxury
goods from exclusive party shops -
the collapse of state
socialism in Europe has revealed to those who didn't already know
it the full extent to which pious
utterances about social
equality were a cover for almost limitless privileges
for the
few. Gluttony is over-consumption, an appetite well in excess
of
need, and one has only to remember Imelda Marcos's wardrobe
to
get the idea. It is virtually a fashion among modern tyrants
to
siphon billions of dollars into Swiss bank accounts - the
scale
on which men like Idi Amin Dada, Ferdinand
Marcos, Baby Doc
Duvalier, Mengistu, and Saddam Hussein (to name but a few)
were
able to beggar nations for their own personal advantage goes
so
far beyond any rational measure of human need it
is hard to
comprehend.
When one looks at the worst twentieth century
tyrants, men
who were directly responsible for the deaths of
thousands or
millions of people, it is hard to find any Einsteins of
evil -
one is struck by the sheer ordinariness of these
men. Clever,
manipulative, politically adept, lucky, exceptional
in their
ability to climb to the top of the heap, successful in
grasping
and holding power, but not conscious, plotting
allies of a
terrible dark power. Behind the brutality,
murder, torture,
imprisonment, and the apparatus of oppression one can see a very
human vulnerability, self-importance, vanity, folly, insecurity,
and greed. The vices of Chesed are the vices of all
the other
sephiroth writ large - power magnifies a vice until it becomes
a
ravening monster. A man with rigid and unbending views on
human
morality will do no harm if he has no audience, but
give him
enough power and he will put society in chains which might last a
thousand years. A greedy man with enough power might
loot an
entire country. A petty and irrational bigot with enough
power
might enslave or annihilate whole races. They say power corrupts,
but this is not so; corruption is already within all of us,
and
we lack only the necessary authority and power to unleash our own
personal evil on the world.
The moral is that power needs to be
tempered by mercy and
love, and the correspondences for Chesed
emphasise this so
strongly it is easy to
for a novice to ignore
the
appalling negative qualities of Chesed - power without restraint,
indiscriminate destruction, everything in excess. The Virtue
of
Chesed is humility, the ideal of
leadership without self-
importance and all its accompanying vices. The Spiritual
Vision
of Chesed is the Vision of Love, love and caring for all
living
things, and the desire to find a way (be it ever
so small -
remember humility) to make the world a better place. There is
a
strong message in the positive correspondences
for Chesed:
without humility and love, leadership and
power become the
instruments of self-importance, and the petty vices
of human
nature are transformed into the monsters of evil which terrorise
the human race.
The illusion of Chesed is Right,
in the sense of "being
right". It is difficult to lead without conviction, when one sits
on every fence and wavers on every question, but no-one is
ever
right with a capital "R", and anyone who seeks the reassurance of
Being Right is evading the essence of responsibility.
The qlippoth of Chesed is ideology, not in
the philosophical
sense, but in the common-use sense of "political ideology".
The
rationale behind this is that it is very easy to take a creed, or
a doctrine, or a dogma, or whatever, and use it as a platform for
leadership. If you see a politian (or a religious leader)
being
interviewed on television, and the response to every question
is
just the same old empty jargon, the same old formulae,
the same
old evasions, the same old arguments and irrefutable assertions,
and you feel you have heard the same thing a dozen times
before
out of a dozen different mouths, then this is the
dead, empty
shell of leadership.
The sephira Gevurah is as often misunderstood
as the sephira
Chesed. The planet associated with Chesed is
(appropriately)
Tzedek, Jupiter, leader of the gods; the planet associated
with
Gevurah is Madim, Mars, the god of war and
destruction. The
magical image of Gevurah is a king in a chariot, or conversely
a
mighty warrior. Most novices take this imagery at face value
and
envision Gevurah as a very forceful, violent
and destructive
sephira, and cannot understand why it is positioned on the pillar
of form. Almost all novices will (wrongly) attribute the emotion
of anger to Gevurah. It is worth recalling from Chapter
3. the
traditional Kabbalistic view [3]:
"It must be remembered that to the Kabbalist,
judgement [Din
- judgement, a title of Gevurah]
means the imposition of
limits and the correct determination of things.
According to
Cordovero the quality of judgement is inherent
in everything
insofar as everything wishes to remain what
it is, to stay
within its bounderies."
This is a statement about *form*.
The form of something
determines what it *is*, in distinction from everything else, and
when it no longer has that form, it no longer *is*. Take a table
tennis ball and squash it; it stops
being a table tennis
ball...it stops being a ball. Something still
exists in the
world, but its form *as a ball* has been destroyed. Take
these
notes and randomly jumble the letters; the letters still
exist,
but the notes are gone. These notes are contained in the
*form*
of the letters; destroy the form of the letters and the notes are
also destroyed.
Everything in the world *is* its form.
We cannot see the
natural substance of the world; we cannot see atoms, and even
if
we could, we would see protons, neutrons and electrons
arranged
in different *forms* to create the chemical elements.
It has
taken physicists most of this century to deduce that the protons,
neutrons and electrons are not the "true" stuff of the world, and
underneath there might be "quarks", "leptons"
and "gluons"
arranged in different *forms* to
create the fundamental
particles. Is that the end? Are quarks and
gluons the "true
stuff", the raw, primal gloop which carries all
form? No-one
knows. Sometimes I think, in common with the earliest Kabbalists,
that Malkuth sits upon the throne of Binah, and at no point will
we find the raw gloop of Malkuth. Someone will write
down an
equation and show the properties of quarks and
gluons are a
natural consequence of the *form* of the equation, and the
form
of the equation is one of those things beyond any possibility
of
explanation. "Look" we will say, "The form of all
things is a
potential outcome of this one equation. The mother of everything
that exists can be written down on a piece of paper. Look,
here
it is!"
There is a deep mystery in form.
The world is made not of
things, but of patterns. In our minds we accept the reality
of
these patterns, and forget that the sweet, white stuff we put
in
our tea and coffee is just one of an infinite number of patterns
of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Carbon is just one
of a large
number of combinations of protons, neutrons and electrons, and so
on. We forget that "War and Peace" is just one of
an infinite
number of combinations of letters of the alphabet. The
patterns
are our reality, and I suspect that *only* the patterns are real
- there is nothing more real than
patterns waiting to be
discovered. I have read graduate texts on quantum electrodynamics
and quantum chromodynamics, and I find no grey gloop
mentioned
anywhere. These texts do not explain the world, but they predict
it, often with astonishing accuracy, and something one
does not
find is a prediction that the world is founded on
a formless
gloop. As a programmer I have built realities
out of pure
mathematical forms - sets, functions, containers - and
nowhere
did I need any grey gloop; my worlds were the
way they were
because the objects within them behaved the way they
did, and
that behaviour was simply the structure or form I created.
The
view of reality in Wittgenstein's "Tractatus" [4] has a
deeply
Kabbalistic (if one-sided) flavour, the Vision of Splendour
of
Hod in a distilled form:
"If I know an object I also know all its possible
occurences
in states of affairs.
(Every one of these possibilities must be
part of the nature
of the object).
A new possibility cannot be discovered later.
If I am to know an object,
though I need not know its
external properties,
I must know all its internal
properties.
If all objects are
given, then at the same time all
*possible* states of affairs are also given.
Each thing is, as it were, in a space
of possible states of
affairs.
........
Objects contain the possibility of all situations.
The possibility of its occuring in states
of affairs is the
*form* of an object." (my italics)
I have digressed this far into the nature of
form because I
do not believe it is possible to understand either
Chesed or
Gevurah in depth without understanding the importance of form
in
Kabbalah, and when talking about
form I am not "talking
mystical". Programmers work with form; they shape programs out of
forms with the same inquisitive delight as a glassblower handling
a blob of molten glass. They talk about objects, and behaviours,
and classify objects in hierarchies according to behaviour. They
*create* new objects with a given abstract behaviour; they leave
unwanted objects to be tidied up by the "garbage
collector".
There is much more which can be said about this,
but as many
people are not programmers and most programmers do not admit
to
being Kabbalists, I must leave this as a trail to be
followed.
The important point is that when I talk about form I find similar
thinking in chemistry, physics, computer science, and Kabbalah;
the world of human beings is perceived in terms of form, and form
is created and destroyed. That is what
Chesed and Gevurah
represent.
The sephira Binah is the mother of
form. That is, Binah
contains within her womb the potential of all form, just as woman
in the abstract contains within her womb the potential
of all
babies. The birth of form takes place in Chesed, and that is
why
Chesed corresponds to the visionary;
the preservation and
destruction of form takes place in Gevurah, and
that is why
Gevurah corresponds to the warrior.
In most societies even a warrior takes
second place to the
Law. The Law comes first, and the warrior swears to defend
both
the Law and the country. This may sound a little idealistic,
but
if one takes the trouble to listen to a few oaths of allegiance
(e.g. British Police, British Army, Soviet Army) one should find
that the essence is to obey, uphold and defend. Nothing
about
violence, destruction, mayem or anger. The essence of Gevurah
is
to uphold and defend - as Cordovero says,
"the quality of
judgement is inherent in everything insofar as everything wishes
to remain what it is, to stay
within its bounderies". If
Cordovero had the jargon he might have talked about "the
immune
system of God".
The Virtues of Gevurah are courage and
energy. There is a
saying among managers that "any fool can manage when things
are
going well". The acid test of management is to have the
courage
to tackle, and essentially destroy, organisations (forms)
which
no longer work, and to have the energy to keep going against
the
inevitable opposition. The Vice of Gevurah is cruelty - power
is
seductive, and destruction can be pleasurable.
The spiritual experience of Gevurah is the
Vision of Power,
and the Illusion is invincibility. I don't think these need
any
explanation.
The qlippoth of Gevurah is bureaucracy,
in the common-use
sense of a system of rules and procedures which has become an end
in itself. My most memorable experience was the time I went into
a social security office to ask whether they could issue me with
a social security number.
"You'll have to take a ticket and wait,"
the woman behind
the counter said.
"But you only have to tell me yes or no,"
I protested.
"You'll have to take a ticket and wait!" she
snapped.
So I took a ticket and waited for twenty minutes. When
my turn
came I asked the question again.
"Can you issue me with a social security number
here?"
"No! Next please!"
This is probably not the best example of
the dead hand of
bureaucracy at work, as it contains
a certain amount of
deliberate cruelty, but we have all encountered endless
forms
which *have* to be filled in, pointless procedures which
*have*
to be observed, interminable delays and so on. The
essence of
bureaucracy is that there is real power behind it, otherwise
we
wouldn't suffer the indignities, but the power is locked up
and
everyone is rendered impotent by the *forms* of bureaucracy.
Gevurah is a hard sephirah to
work with, as Kabbalistic
magicians often discover to their cost. There is absolutely
no
place for emotion, no place for excess, no place for
ego. The
warrior works within the Law, and ignorance of the Law is not
an
excuse. If you don't know what the Law is,
don't work with
Gevurah. Most people are sloppy in thinking about problems,
and
take what appears to be the simplest and
superficially most
convenient solution. Gevurah is clinically exact,
and if you
invoke Gevurah you are invoking well above the level of emotion,
particularly *your* emotions, and as you judge, so will
you be
judged. Invoke on the Pillar of Form, and cause and effect
will
follow without the slightest regard for your feelings. All
good
programmers who have sweated throughout
the night with a
programming error of their own making know this in their bones.
Associated with Chesed and Gevurah are two
tendencies which
are so pronounced, readily observed, and deeply rooted
that I
have called them the Power myth and the Annihilation myth, where
I use the word myth in the sense that there
is pre-existent,
archtypal script in which anyone
can play the role of
protagonist.
The Power myth features
a protagonist who seeks power
because power means control. Everything
is specified and
controlled down to the finest detail
to eliminate every
possibility of discomfort, surprise or insecurity.
The world
becomes an impersonal mechanism designed to provide
for every
demand. The natural world
is destroyed to reduce its
unpredictability and untidyness. All knowledge is subverted
to
control. Personal relationships are restricted and formalised
to
minimise intrusion or any possibility of personal hurt, and
are
modelled to increase self-importance. Anyone who won't play
can
be removed or suitably punished. The protagonist lives
at the
centre of the world.
In the Annihilation myth
the protagonist lives for the
Cause. The Cause is the most important
thing in life. The
protagonist prays to be released from the thrall of ego and self-
importance that he may better serve the Cause with every atom
of
his soul. "Yea, I am nothing", he whispers,
"Less than the
smallest worm in the ground compared with the glory of the Cause.
I humble myself before the Cause. I live only
to serve the
Cause." Pain, suffering and death are mere adornments
for the
ever-lasting glory of the Cause. The Cause might be the Beloved,
the Revolution, the Great Work, the Mistress or Master,
or God
(to name only a few).
Examples of both these myths in practice
are legion; two
examples are the package-holiday tourist as an example
of the
Power myth, and many Christian mystics as an
example of the
Annihilation myth. Both myths can be
observed in glorious,
infinitely repetitive, and predictable detail in S&M fantasies.
The God name associated with Chesed is
"El", or Almighty
God. The archangel is Tzadkiel, the "Righteousness of God".
The
angel order is the Chashmalim, or Shining Ones.
In Ezekiel,
Chashmal is a substance which forms the
splendour of God's
countenance, and as chashmal is the modern
Hebrew word for
electricity, I find it useful to think of the Chashmalim in terms
of crackling thunderbolts - it goes well
with the Jupiter
correspondence.
The God name associated with Gevurah
is Elohim Gevor. All
the sephiroth on the Pillar of Form use Elohim
in their God
names, and in this case it is qualified by "gevor", a word which
expresses the qualities of a great hero
- strength, might,
and courage. The name is sometimes
translated as "God of
Battles". The archangel is is sometimes given as
Kamiel, and
sometimes as Samael. Samael, the "Poison of God" is an angel with
a *long* history - see [5], and is essentially
the Angel of
Death. Samael is not the first choice of angel to
invoke when
working Gevurah - work on Gevurah is tricky at the best of times,
and the Angel of Death does not mess around. Neither does Kamiel
(which I have been told means "sword of God" - I cannot
confirm
this), but there is marginally more scope for interpretation! The
angel order is the Seraphim, or Fiery Serpents.
Chesed and Gevurah are the sceptre
and sword of a king;
there are many statues of medieval kings in British
cathedrals
which show a king seated with the sceptre of legitimate authority
in one hand and the sword of temporal might in the
other. In
Kabbalah the King corresponds to the sephira Tiphereth, the union
of Chesed and Gevurah. This is a symbol of a
human being in
relationship to the world - at the bottom of all initiations
is
the full consciousness that we are kings and queens
with the
freedom and power to do anything
we please, and total
responsibility for the consequences of
everything we do.
Somewhere between the extremes of power and love each one of
us
has to find our own balance, and somewhere in a garden a Tree
of
Knowledge of Good and Evil still grows, and still bears fruit.
[1] Kaplan, Aryeh, "The Bahir", Samuel Weiser 1979
[2] Ridley, Nicholas, "My Style of Government:
The Thatcher
Years" Hutchinson 1991
[3] Scholem, Gershom G., "Major Trends in Jewish
Mysticism",
Schocken 1974
[4] Wittgenstein, Ludwig, "Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus",
Routledge 1974
[5] Graves, R., and Patai, R., "Hebrew
Myths: The Book of
Genesis", Arena, 1989
Daath and the Abyss
-------------------
"When you look into the abyss,
the abyss also looks into
you"
Nietzsche
"Nothingness lies coiled in the
heart of being - like a
worm"
Sartre
In modern Kabbalah there is a well developed
notion of an
Abyss between the three supernal sephiroth of Kether, Chokhmah,
and Binah, and the seven lower sephiroth. When one looks
at the
progress of the Lightning Flash down the Tree of Life, then
one
finds that it follows the path structure connecting
sephiroth
*except* when it makes the jump from Binah
to Chesed, thus
reinforcing this idea of a "gap" or "gulf"
which has to be
crossed. This notion of an Abyss is extremely old and has
found
its way into Kabbalah in several different forms,
and in the
course of time they have all been mixed together into the notion
of "the Great Abyss"; the Great Abyss is one of those things
so
necessary that like God, if it didn't already exist,
it would
have to be invented.
One of the earliest sources for
the Abyss comes from the
Bible:
"And the earth was without form, and
void; and darkness was
upon the face of the deep."
Kabbalists adopted this view that there was a time
before the
creation characterised by Tohu and Bohu,
namely Chaos and
Emptiness [1]. Another idea mentioned several times in the Zohar
[2] is that there were several failed
attempts at creation
*before* the present one; these attempts failed because mercy and
judgement (e.g. force and form) were not
balanced, and the
resulting detritus of these failed attempts, the broken shells of
previous sephiroth, accumulated in the Abyss. Because the shells
(Qlippoth) were the result of unbalanced rigour or judgement they
were considered evil, and the Abyss became a repository of
evil
spirits not dissimilar from the pit of Hell
into which the
rebellious angels were cast, or the rebellious Titans in
Greek
mythology who were buried as far beneath the Earth as the
Earth
is beneath the sky.
Another theme which contributed to the
notion of the Abyss
was the legend of the Fall. According
to the Kabbalistic
interpretation of the Biblical myth, at the conclusion of the act
of Creation there was a pure state, denoted by Eden, where
the
primordial Adam-and-Eve-conjoined existed in a state of
divine
perfection. There are various esoteric interpretations
of what
the Fall represents, but all agree that after
the Fall Eden
became inaccessible and Adam and Eve were separated and took
on
bodies of flesh here in the material
world. This theme of
separation from God and exile in a world of
matter (and by
extension, limitation, finiteness, pain, suffering,
death -
manifestations of the rigours or evil inherent in God)
precedes
Kabbalah and can be found in the Gnostic legend of Sophia exiled
in matter. This idea of separation or exile from divinity mirrors
very closely the use of the Abyss on the modern Tree to
divide
the sephiroth representing a human being from
the sephiroth
representing God.
Isaac Luria (1534 -1572) introduced
a new element into the
notion of the Abyss with his idea of "tzimtzum" or contraction.
Luria wondered how it was possible for the hidden God (En
Soph)
to create something out of nothing if there wasn't any nothing to
begin with. If the En Soph (no-end, the infinite) is everywhere
then how can we be distinct from the En-Soph? Luria argued
that
creation was possible because a contraction in the En Soph
had
created an emptiness where God was not, that En Soph had
chosen
to limit itself by a withdrawal, and
this showed that the
principle of self-limitation was a necessary
precursor to
creation; not only did this explain why the Creation is separate
from the hidden God, but it emphasised
that limitation was
inherent in creation from the very
beginning. Limitation,
finiteness, the separation of one thing from another, what early
Kabbalists referred to as the severity or "strict judgement"
of
God (what modern Kabbalists call "form") was a puzzling
quality
to introduce into the Creation given that it is the
source of
suffering and evil in the impersonal sense, what
Dion Fortune
calls "negative evil" [3]. Luria's notion of tsimtsum suggested
that there was no possibility of creation
without it, and
provided a rather abstract explanation to
one of the most
persistent questions of all time, namely: "if God made the world
and God is good, how come he made mosquitoes?".
Pull together the various ideas of the
Great Abyss and one
ends up with a sort of vast, initially empty arena like a
Roman
amphitheatre where the drama of the Creation was
enacted. The
mysterious En Soph played a brief role as director
from the
imperial box, only to retire behind a veil at the conclusion
of
the performance leaving behind a huge power cord snaking in from
the unknown region beyond the arena, and plugged-in to a
socket
at the rear of the sephira Kether. The lights of the
sephiroth
blaze out and illuminate the centre of this vast arena; this
is
Olam Ha-Nekudoth, "The World of Point Lights". At the periphery
of the arena far from the lights of manifestation there is a deep
darkness where all the cast-off detritus
and spoil of the
creation was deposited by weary angels and left to rot. A strange
life lives there.
The situation was more-or-less as described
above when in
1909 Aleister Crowley decided to "cross the Abyss" and added
to
the mythology of the Abyss with the following description [4]:
"The name of the Dweller in the Abyss is Choronzon,
but he
is not really an individual. The Abyss is
empty of being; it
is filled with all possible forms, each
equally inane, each
therefore evil in the only true sense of the
word - that is,
meaningless but malignant, in so far
as it craves to become
real. These forms swirl senselessly
into haphazard heaps
like dust devils, and each chance aggregation
asserts itself
to be an individual and shrieks `I am
I!' though aware all
the time that its elements have no true
bond; so that the
slightest disturbance dissipates
the delusion just as a
horseman, meeting a dust devil, brings it
in showers of sand
to the earth."
I was struck when reading this by
the similarity between
Crowley's description above and the section on Hod and
Netzach
in which I described the chaos of a personality under the control
of the "hosts" or "armies" of those two sephira, where a host
of
forms of behaviour compete for the right to be "me".
Crowley's
experience has far more in common with the rending of the Veil of
Paroketh separating Yesod and Tiphereth, and further comments
by
Crowley add weight to this:
"As soon as I had destroyed my personality,
as soon as I had
expelled my ego, the universe
to which it was indeed a
frightful and fatal force, fraught with
every form of fear,
was only so in relation to the idea `I'; so
long as `I am I'
all else must seem hostile. Now that there
was no longer any
`I' to suffer, all these ideas which had inflicted
suffering
became innocent. I could
praise the perfection of every
part; I could wonder and worship the whole."
This is a very recognisable description of someone who has
been
released from the demon of the false self and the
imprisoning
triad of Hod, Netzach and Yesod, and moved through the
Paroketh
towards Tiphereth. Crowley's experience is valid as it
stands,
but what it might mean to "cross the Abyss", and the absurdity of
Crowley's belief that he had achieved this, will be examined
in
the following section on Binah and Chokhmah.
A twentieth-century Kabbalist
who did succeed in adding
something useful to the ever-expanding notion of the Abyss
was
Dion Fortune, in her theosophical work "The Cosmic Doctrine" [3].
The form of this work appears to
have been inspired by
Blavatsky's "The Secret Doctrine", and certainly
lives up to
Fortune's claim that it was "designed to train the mind, not
to
inform it."
Fortune describes three
processes arising out of the
Unmanifest (i.e. En Soph). Ring Cosmos is an anabolic
process
underlying the creation of forms
of greater and greater
complexity. Ring Chaos is a catabolic process
underlying the
destruction and recycling of form. Ring-Pass-Not is a limit where
catabolism turns back into anabolism. She visualised
this as
three great rings of movement in the Unmanifest, with the motion
associated with Ring Cosmos spiralling towards the centre,
the
movement of Ring Chaos unwinding towards the periphery, and
the
dead-zone of Ring-Pass-Not defining the outer limit of Ring Chaos
as an abyss of unbeing, a cosmic compost heap
where form is
digested under the dominion of the Angel of Death and turned into
something fertile where new growth can take place.
The similarity between Fortune's description
of Ring Chaos
and what in programming is called a "reference-counting
garbage
collector" is remarkable, given that she was writing in the 30's.
Many programming languages allow new programming structures to be
created dynamically, thus allowing the creation of more and more
complex structures. At the same time there is a
mechanism to
reclaim unused resources so that the system does not run out
of
memory or disc space, and the normal
scheme is that if a
structure is not referenced by any other structure, recycle
it.
In Fortune's language, if you want to destroy
something, you
"make a vacuum round it (i.e. remove all references). You prevent
opposition from touching it. Then, being unopposed, it is free to
follow the laws of its own nature, which is to join the motion of
Ring Chaos."
"Cosmic Doctrine" is a valiant
attempt to say something
quite profound; at an intellectual level it fails
"abysmally",
and I cannot read it without squirming, but it still has more raw
Kabbalistic and magical insight at an intuitive level than
just
about anything else I have read. The idea of a cosmic reference-
counting garbage collection process and an abyss of unbeing which
is not so much a state as a process of unbecoming is
something
not easily forgotten once touched.
A final example of an abyss is one which
differs from the
previous examples in that it brings to the fore the relationship
between us, the created, and the Unmanifest, the En Soph itself.
Kabbalistic writers agree that the Unmanifest is not nothing;
on
the contrary, it is the hidden wellspring of being, but as it
is
"not manifest being" it combines the words "not" and "being" in a
conjuction which can be apprehended as a kind of abyss.
Scholem
[6] discusses this "nothingness" as follows:
"The primary start or wrench in which the introspective
God
is externalised and the light
that shines inwardly made
visible, this revolution of perspective, transforms
En Soph,
the inexpressible fullness, into nothingness.
It is in this
mystical "nothingness" from which all
the other stages of
God's gradual enfolding in the Sefiroth emanate,
and which
the kabbalists call the highest
Sefira, or the "supreme
crown" of Divinity. To use another metaphor,
it is the abyss
which becomes visible in
the gaps of existence. Some
Kabbalists who have developed this idea,
for instance Rabbi
Joseph ben Shalom of Barcelona
(1300), maintain that in
every transformation of reality, in every
change of form, or
every time the status of a thing is
altered, the abyss of
nothingness is crossed and for a fleeting
mystical moment
becomes visible."
It should be clear by now that the Abyss
is a metaphor for
a number of intuitions or experiences. I do not know
how many
different kinds of abyss there are,
but there are some
distinctions which can be made:
- the Abyss of nothingness
- the Abyss of separation
- the Abyss of knowledge
- the Abyss of un-being (or un-becoming)
The perception that being and nothingness go
hand-in-hand is
something Sartre studied in great depth [7], and
many of his
observations on the nature
of consciousness and its
relatationship to negation or nothingness are among
the most
perceptive I have found. His arguments are lengthy and
complex,
and I do not wish to summarise them here other than to say
that
he viewed nothingness as the necessary consequence of a
special
kind of being he calls "being-for-itself", the kind of being
we
experience as self-conscious human beings.
The Abyss of separation can be experienced
as a separation
from the divine, but it can also be experienced quite acutely
in
one's relationships with others and with the
physical world
itself. Much of what we perceive about the world and other people
is an illusion created by the machinery of perception; strip away
the trick, Yesod becomes Daath, and a yawning abyss
opens up
where one is conscious less of what one knows than of what
one
does not; it is possible to look at a close
friend and see
something more alien, remote and unknown than the
surface of
Pluto. This experience is closely related
to the Abyss of
knowledge, which is discussed in more detail in the discussion on
Daath below.
The Abyss of un-being is the direct
perception that at any
instant it is possible to not-be. This perception goes beyond the
contemplation or awareness of physical death; it is the
direct
apprehension of what Dion Fortune calls "Ring Chaos", that
un-
being is less a state than a process, that at every instant there
is an impulse, a magnetic attraction
towards total self-
annihilation on every level possible. The
closer one moves
towards the roots of being, the closer one moves
towards the
roots of un-being.
Daath means "Knowledge".
In early Kabbalah Daath was a
symbol of the union of Wisdom (Chokhmah)
and Understanding
(Binah). The book of Proverbs is rich
mine of material on
the nature of these three qualities, material which
forms the
basis of many ideas in the Zohar and other Kabbalistic
texts;
e.g. Proverbs 3.13:
"Happy is the man that findeth
wisdom, and the man that
getteth understanding....She is a tree of
life to them that
lay hold upon her: and happy is
every one that retaineth
her. The Lord by
wisdom hath founded the earth; by
understanding hath he founded the heavens.
By his knowledge
the depths are broken up, and the clouds drop
down the dew"
And Proverbs 24.3:
"Through wisdom is an house builded; and by
understanding is
it established: And by knowledge
shall the chambers be
filled with all pleasant and precious riches."
In the "Bahir" [8] and "Zohar" [e.g. 2] Daath
represents the
symbolic union of wisdom and understanding,
and is their
offspring or child. As the Microprosopus, often symbolised
by
Tiphereth, is also the symbolic child of Chokhmah
and Binah,
there is some room for confusion. According to the Zohar however,
Daath has a specific location in the Microprosopus, namely in one
of the three chambers of the brain, from
where it mediates
between the higher (Chokhmah and Binah) and the lower (the
six
sephiroth or "chambers" of the Microprosopus - see the reference
to Proverbs 24.3 above).
I have often puzzled as to why
knowledge is the natural
outcome of wisdom and understanding. It was only recently when
I
read Proverbs that I realised that wisdom was being used in
the
sense of something *external*, something which is received
from
someone else. As children we were told "do this" or
"don't do
that", and often couldn't question the wisdom
of the advice
because we lacked the understanding. I once had a
furious row
with my father about building a liquid fuel rocket engine in
the
house using petrol and hydrogen peroxide. He flatly refused
to
let me do it. I couldn't understand the problem - I was going
to
be careful. I now *know*, because I *understand* the stupidity of
what I was trying to do, the *wisdom* of his refusal.
Received
wisdom cannot be integrated into oneself unless there
is the
capacity to understand it, and having understood, it becomes real
knowledge which can be passed on again as wisdom to someone else.
For early Kabbalists the ultimate wisdom was the wisdom of God as
expressed in the Torah, and by attempting to
understand this
wisdom (and that is what Kabbalah was) they could arrive at
the
only knowledge truely worth having. Knowledge of
God was the
union between the higher and lower, and perhaps this is why Daath
was never a sephiroth, something which manifests
positively;
since the Fall that knowledge has
been lost. One of the
unattributable pieces of Kabbalah I was taught was that Daath
is
the hole left behind when Malkuth fell out of the Garden of Eden.
If you examine my derivation of the Tree of Life in Chapter
1.
closely you will see that I have based some of it on this
very
astute observation.
The notion of Daath as a "hole" appears
to have originated
this century. Gareth Knight, for example [9], provides a complete
set of correspondences for Daath, many of which happen
to be
negative Tiphereth correspondences or misplaced correspondences
borrowed from other sephiroth, but one at least is appropriate:
he gives the magical image of Daath as Janus, god of
doorways.
Kenneth Grant [10], with his usual florid imagination, sees Daath
as a gateway through to "outer spaces beyond, or behind, the Tree
itself" dominated by Qlippothic forces.
There is a deep correspondence
between sephiroth in the
lower face of the Tree and sephiroth in the upper face: look
at
the symmetry of the Tree and you
should see why Malkuth,
Tiphereth and Kether are linked, why Hod and Binah are
linked,
why Chokhmah and Netzach are linked, and most importantly for the
purposes of this discussion, that there is
a correspondence
between Yesod and Daath. These are not just
simple geometric
symmetries; they express some important relationships which
are
experientially verifiable, and in terms of what makes most sense
in Kabbalah and what does not, these relationships are important.
Daath and Yesod, at different levels, are like two sides
of the
same coin. Jam the machinery of perception I said
above, and
Yesod can become Daath. The following quotation is taken from
an
bona-fide anthropological article [11] attempting to explain some
of the characteristic features of cave art:
"Moving into a yet
deeper stage of trance is often
accompanied, according to
laboratory reports, by an
experience of a vortex or rotating
tunnel that seems to
surround the subject. The external
world is progressively
excluded and the inner world
grows more florid. Iconic
images may appear on the walls of the vortex,
often imposed
on a lattice of squares, like television screens.
Frequently
there is a mixture
of iconic and geometric forms.
Experienced shamans are able to
plunge rapidly into deep
trance, where they manipulate the imagery
according to the
needs of the situation. Their experience
of it, however, is
of a world they have come briefly to inhabit;
not a world of
their own making, but a spirit world
they are privileged to
visit."
This will come as no surprise to anyone who has
read Michael
Harner's "The Way of the Shaman" [5]. There on page 103 (plate 8)
is a beautiful picture of the tunnel
vortex, complete with
prisms. When I first saw this picture I
was astonished and
recognised it instantly, prisms and all; when I showed
it to my
wife her reaction was the same. The tunnel vortex appears to
be
one of the constants of magical/mystical experience,
and it
appears in a very precise context. In Kabbalah
the shamanic
tunnel would be attributed to the 32nd. path connecting
Malkuth
to Yesod; this path connects the real world to the underworld
of
the imagination and the unconscious, and is commonly symbolised
by a tunnel [eg.9]. However, using the symmetry of the Tree, this
path also corresponds to the path at another level
connecting
Tiphereth across the Abyss, through Daath,
to Kether. The
tunnel/vortex at this level is no longer subjective, because this
level of the Tree corresponds
to the noumenal reality
underpinning the phenomenal world, and links individual
self-
consciousness to something greater. Just as Yesod represents
the
machinery of sense perception, so Daath can flip over to
become
the Yesod of another level of perception, not sense perception,
but something completely different that seems to operate out
of
the "back door" of the mind; this is objective knowledge,
what
used to be called gnosis.
To conclude this section on Daath and the
Abyss, it is worth
asking what the relationship between the two ideas
is. As I
programmer I am continually aware of the gulf between
abstract
ideas, such as the number two and its physical representations in
the world: 2, II, .., two etc. The number two can be represented
in an infinite number of ways, and it is only when you share some
understanding of my language that you can *begin* to guess that a
particular mark in the world represents the
number two. The
situation is even worse than it might seem; a basic theorem
of
information theory states that the optimum way of expressing
any
piece of information is one where the symbols occur
completely
randomly. I could take this paragraph, pass it through an optimal
text compressor and the same
piece of text would be
indistinguishable from random garbage. Only
I, knowing the
compression procedure, could extract the original message
from
the result. Whatever we call information
appears to exist
independently of the physical world, and uses the world of chalk
marks, ink marks, magnetic domains or whatever like a rider uses
a horse. To me, the gulf is irreconcilable; between the physical
world and the world of the mind is an abyss,
and I am not
indulging in "new physics" or anything vaguely suspect - this
is
meat and drink to the average progammer, who spends most of
his
or her time transforming abstractions from one symbol
set to
another.
To take a slightly
different approach, there is a
mathematical proof that there is no largest prime number. I know
that proof. No dissection of my brain will ever reveal the proof
to someone who does not know it. I am prepared to bet
a large
quantity of alcohol that it is theoretically
impossible to
discover; the proof that there is no largest prime number
will
never be extracted even if you assume a neurologist capable
of
mapping every atom in my brain.
Evolution tends towards
optimality, and I think the proof will be encoded optimally
to
look like random garbage. There is an abyss
here; there is
knowledge which can never be attained.
In Kabbalah this
particular abyss is called the abyss of Assiah; it is the
first
in a series of abysses. The next abyss is the abyss of Yetzirah,
and it is this abyss I have been discussing for most
of this
section. There are further abysses, and this should be
clearer
when I discuss the Four Worlds and the Extended Tree. The
Abyss
and Daath go together because the Abyss sets a limit on what
can
be *known* from below the Abyss; the abyss
is an abyss of
knowledge, and Daath is the hole we fall into when we try
probe
beyond. Can the nature of God be expressed in terms of
anything
human? No. God is as human as a cockroach, as human as a lump
of
stone, as human as a star, as human as empty space.
So how can
you *know* anything about God? Only when Daath flips
over to
become the Yesod of another world can you *know* anything,
but
unfortunately the fiery speech of angels is
like leprecaun's
gold: by the time you've taken it home to show to your
friends,
you've nothing but a purse of dried leaves.
[1] Robert Graves & Raphael Patai, "Hebrew Myths:
The Book of
Genesis", Arena 1989
[2] Mathers, S.L., "The Kabbalah Unveiled", RKP 1981
[3] Fortune, Dion, "The Cosmic Doctrine", Aquarian 1976
[4] Crowley, Aleister, "The Confessions of Aleister
Crowley",
Bantam 1970
[5] Harner, Michael, "The Way of the Shaman", Bantam 1982
[6] Scholem, Gershom G., "Major Trends in Jewish
Mysticism",
Schocken 1974
[7] Sarte, Jean-Paul, "Being and Nothingness", Routledge 1989
[8] Kaplan, Aryeh, "The Bahir Illumination", Weiser 1989
[9] Knight, Gareth, "A Practical Guide to Qabalistic Symbolism",
Vols 1 & 2, Helios 1972
[10] Grant, Kenneth, "Cults of the Shadow", Muller 1975
[11] Lewin, Roger, "Stone Age Psychedelia", New Scientist
8th.
June 1991
Binah, Chokmah, Kether
-----------------------
Only man can fall from God
Only man.
No animal, no beast nor creeping thing
no cobra nor hyaena nor scorpion nor hideous
white ant
can slip entirely through the fingers of the
hands of god
into the abyss of self-knowledge,
knowledge of the self-apart-from-god.
For the knowledge of the self-apart-from-God
is an abyss down which the soul can slip
writhing and twisting in all the revolutions
of the unfinished plunge
of self-awareness, now apart from God, falling
fathomless, fathomless, self-consciousness
wriggling
writhing deeper and deeper in
all the minutiae of self-
knowledge, downwards, exhaustive,
yet never, never coming
to the bottom, for there is no
bottom;
zigzagging down like the fizzle from a finished
rocket
the frizzling, falling fire that
cannot go out, dropping
wearily,
neither can it reach the depth
for the depth is bottomless,
so it wriggles its way even further down,
further down
at last in sheer horror of not being able
to leave off
knowing itself, knowing itself apart from
God, falling.
"Only Man", D. H. Lawrence
The triad of Binah, Chokmah and
Kether are a Kabbalistic
representation of the manifest God. A discussion on this
triad
presents me with a problem. The problem is that while I have used
the word "God" in many places in these notes, I have done so with
a sense of unease, understanding that the word means
so many
different things to so many people that
it is effectively
meaningless. I have chosen to use the word as a placeholder
for
personal experience, with the implicit assumption that the reader
understands that "God" *is* a personal experience, and
not an
ill-defined abstraction one "believes in". My view is not novel,
but there are still many people who are uncomfortable with
the
idea of experiencing (as opposed to "believing in") God. A second
assumption implicit in the use of the word "God" as a placeholder
is that it stands *only* for experience; your experience,
and
hence your God, is as valid as mine, and as there are no
formal
definitions, there is no scope for theological debate or dispute.
This leaves me with nothing more to say.
However.....these notes were
intended to provide some
insight into Kabbalah, and it would be odd, having begun to write
them, to then turn around and say "sorry, I won't say
anything
about the three supernal sephiroth". I think
I have to say
something. Balanced against this is my original intention,
at
every stage in these notes, to relate the objects of discussion
to something real, to make a personal contribution by adding
my
own understanding to the subject rather than simply pot-boiling
the same old material. I cannot see how to put flesh on the bare
bones of the supernal sephiroth without
discussing my own
conception of God and whatever personal experience I might have.
I am loth to do this. For a start, it isn't fair on those people
who study and use Kabbalah (many Jewish) who do not
share my
views, and secondly, remembering the parable of the blind men and
the elephant, impressions of God tend to be shaped by the
part
one grabs hold of, and how close to the bum end one is standing.
Like it or not, my explanations
of the supernal sephiroth
are going to be lacking in substance. I can only ask
you, the
reader, to accept that the primary purpose of Kabbalah has always
been the direct, personal experience of the living God,
a state
Kabbalists have called "devekuth", or cleaving to God,
and the
way towards that experience comes,
not from a studious
examination of the symbolism of the supernals,
but from the
practical techniques of Kabbalah to be discussed
in a later
chapter.
The title of
the sephira Binah is translated
as
"understanding", and sometimes as "intelligence". The title
of
the sephira Chokmah translates as "wisdom", and that of
Kether
translates as "crown". These three sephiroth are often
referred
to as the supernal sephiroth, or simply the supernals,
and they
represent that aspect of God which is manifest in creation. There
is another aspect of God in Kabbalah, the "real God" or En Soph;
although En Soph is responsible for the creation of the universe,
En Soph manifests to us only in the limited form of the
sephira
Kether. An enormous amount of effort has gone into "explaining"
this process: one book on Kabbalah [1] in my possession
devotes
eight pages to the En Soph, twelve pages to the supernal trio
of
Kether, Chokmah and Binah, and five pages to the remaining seven
sephiroth, a proportion which seems
relatively constant
throughout Kabbalistic literature.
Briefly, the hidden God
or En Soph crystallised a point
which is the sephira Kether. In most versions (and this idea
can
be found as far back as the "Bahir" [2]) the En Soph "contracted"
(tsimtsum) to "make room" for the creation, and the crystallised
point of Kether manifested within this "space". Kether
is the
seed planted in nothingness from which the creation springs -
an
interesting metaphor turns the Tree of Life "upside
down" and
shows Kether at the bottom of the Tree, rooted in the soil of the
En Soph, with the rest of the sephiroth
forming the trunk,
branches and leaves. Another metaphor shows Kether connected
to
the En Soph by a "thread of light", a metaphor I used
somewhat
whimsically in the section on "Daath and the Abyss",
where I
portrayed the Tree of Life as a lit-up Christmas
tree with a
power cord snaking out of the darkness of the En Soph and through
the abyss to Kether. Like the Moon, Kether
has two aspects:
manifest and hidden, and for this reason its magical
image is
that of a face seen in profile: one side of the face (the
right
side, as it happens) is visible to us, but the other
side is
turned forever towards the En Soph.
Kether has many titles: Existence of
Existences, Concealed
of the Concealed, Ancient of Ancients,
Ancient of Days,
Primordial Point, the Smooth Point, the Point within the Circle,
the Most High, the Inscrutable Height, the Vast Countenance (Arik
Anpin), the White Head, the Head which is not,
Macroprosopus.
Taken together, these titles imply that Kether is the first,
the
oldest, the root of existence, remote, and
its most accurate
symbol is that of a point. Kether
precedes all forms of
existence, all differentiation and distinction, all
polarity.
Kether contains everything in potential, like a seed that sprouts
and grows into a Tree, not once, but continuously. Kether is both
root and seed. Because it precedes all forms and
contains all
opposites it is not *like* anything. You can say
it contains
infinite goodness, but then you have to say that
it contains
infinite evil. Wrapped up in Kether is all the love in the world,
and wrapped around the love is all the
hate. Kether is an
outpouring of purest, radiant light, but equally
it is the
profoundest stygian dark. And it is none of these
things; it
precedes all form or polarity, and its Virtue is unity.
It is a
point without extension or qualities,
but it contains all
creation within it as an unformed potential.
The "Zohar" [3] is packed with references
to Kether, and it
is difficult to be selective, but the following quote from
the
"Lesser Holy Assembly", is clear, simple, and subtle:
"He (Kether) hath been formed,
and yet as it were He hath
not been formed. He hath
been conformed so that he may
sustain all things; yet is He not formed,
seeing that He is
not discovered.
When He is conformed He produceth nine Lights,
which shine
forth from Him, from his conformation.
And from Himself those Lights shine forth,
and they emit
flames, and they rush forth and are
extended on every side,
like as from an elevated lantern the
rays of light stream
down on every side.
And those rays of light, which
are extended, when anyone
draweth near unto them so that they may be
examined, are not
found, and there is only the lantern alone."
Polarity is contained within Kether in the form of Chokmah
and
Binah, the Wisdom and Understanding of God, and Kabbalists
have
represented this polarity using the most obvious of
metaphors,
that of male and female. Chokmah is Abba, the Father, and
Binah
is Aima, the Mother, and the entire world is seen as the child of
the continuous and never-ending coupling of this divine pair. The
following passage is taken again from the "Lesser Holy Assembly":
"Come and behold. When the
Most Holy Ancient One, the
Concealed with all Concealments
(Kether), desired to be
formed forth, He conformed all things under
the form of Male
and Female; and in such place
wherein Male and Female are
comprehended.
For they could not permanently exist save in
another aspect
of the Male and Female (their
countenances being joined
together).
And this Wisdom (Chokmah) embracing
all things, when it
goeth forth and shineth forth
from the Most Holy Ancient
One, shineth not save under the
form of Male and Female.
Therefore is this Wisdom extended, and
it is found that it
equally becometh Male and Female.
ChKMH AB BINH AM: Chokmah is the
Father and Binah is the
Mother, and therein
are Chokmah, Wisdom, and Binah,
Understanding, counterbalanced together
in the most perfect
equality of Male and Female.
And therefore are all things established in
the equality of
Male and Female, for were it not so, how could
they subsist!
This beginning is the Father of all things;
the Father of
all Fathers; and both are mutually bound
together, and the
one path shineth into the other - Chokmah,
Wisdom, as the
Father; Binah, Understanding, as the Mother.
It is written, Prov.
2.3: 'If thou callest Binah the
Mother."
When They are associated together They
generate, and are
expanded in truth.
And concerning the continuing act of procreation:
"Together They (Chokmah & Binah) go forth,
together They are
at rest; the one ceaseth not from the
other, and the one is
never taken away from the other.
And therefore is it written, Gen
2.10: 'And a river went
forth from Eden' - i.e. properly speaking,
it continually
goeth forth and never faileth."
A river or spring metaphor is often
used for Chokmah, to
emphasise the continuous nature of creation. The primary metaphor
is that of a phallus - Chokmah is the phallus which
ejaculates
continuously into the womb of Binah, and Binah in
turn gives
birth to phenomenal reality. Phallic symbols - a standing stone,
a fireman's hose, a fountain, a spear etc, belong to Chokmah, and
womb symbols - a cauldron, a gourd, a chalice,
an oven etc,
belong to Binah. In an abstract
sense, Chokmah and Binah
correspond to the first, primal manifestation of the polarity
of
force and form. To repeat a metaphor I have
used previously,
Binah is a hot-air balloon, and Chokmah is the roaring blast
of
flame which keeps it in the air. The metaphor is not completely
accurate: Binah is not form, but she is the Mother of Form -
she
creates the condition whereby form can manifest.
The colour of Binah is black,
and she is associated with
Shabbatai ("rest"), the planet Saturn. The symbolism of Binah
is
twofold: on one hand she is Aima, the fertile mother of creation,
and on the other hand she is
the mother of finiteness,
limitation, restriction, boundaries, time, space, law, fate,
and
ultimately, death; in this form she is often depicted as Ama
the
Crone, who broods (like many pictures of Queen Victoria) in
her
black widow's weeds on the throne of creation - one of the titles
of Binah is Khorsia, the Throne.
The magician and Kabbalist
Dion Fortune had a strongly
intuitive grasp of Binah, not just as a sphere of a
particular
kind of emanation, but as the Great Mother
herself, as the
following rhyme from her novel "Moon Magic" [4] shows:
"I am she who ere the earth was formed
Was Rhea, Binah, Ge.
I am that soundless, boundless, bitter sea
Out of whose deeps life wells eternally.
Astarte, Aphrodite, Ashtoreth -
Giver of life and bringer in of death;
Hera in heaven, on earth Persephone;
Diana of the ways, and Hecate -
All these am I, and they are seen in me.
The hour of the high full moon draws near;
I hear the invoking words, hear and appear
-
Shaddai El Chai and Rhea, Binah, Ge -
I come unto the priest who calleth me - "
One of the oldest correspondences for Binah is the
element of
water, and she is called Marah, the bitter sea from
which all
life comes and must return. She is also the Superior or
Greater
Mother; the Inferior or Lesser Mother is the sephira Malkuth, who
is better symbolised by nature goddesses of the earth itself
-
e.g. the trinity of Kore, Demeter, and Persephone.
The Tree of
Life has many goddess symbols, and it is not always easy to
see
where they fit:
Binah is the Great Mother of All,
with symbols of space,
time, fate, spinning, weaving, cauldrons etc.
Malkuth is the Earth as the soil from
which life springs,
matter as the basis for
life, the spirit concealed in
matter, best symbolised
by goddesses of this earth,
fertility, vegetation etc.
Yesod in its lunar aspect is the Moon, a hidden
reality with
the ebb and flow of secret tides, illusion,
glamour, sexual
reproduction etc, and is sometimes in invoked
in the form of
lunar goddesses - Selene, Artemis etc.
Gevurah is on the Pillar of Form;
the whole Pillar has a
female aspect, and Gevurah is sometimes
invoked in a female
form as Kali, Durga, Hecate,
or the Morrigan, although it
must be said that all four goddesses
also share definite
Binah-type correspondences.
Netzach has the planet Venus as a correspondence,
and its
aspect of sensual pleasure, luxury,
sexual love and desire
is sometime invoked through
a goddess such as Venus or
Aphrodite.
The Spiritual Experience of Binah is
the Vision of Sorrow:
as the Mother of Form Binah is also the Mother of finiteness
and
limitation, of determinism, of cause and effect.
Every quality
comes forth hand-in-hand with its opposite: life and death,
joy
and despair, love and hate, order and chaos, so that
it is not
possible to find an anchor in life. For every reason to
live I
can find you, buried like a worm in an apple, a reason
not to
live; the Vision of Sorrow is a vision of a life
condemned to
tramp along the circumference of a circle while forever denied
a
view of the unity of the centre. At its most extreme the creation
is seen as an evil trick played by a malign demiurge,
a sick,
empty joke, or a joyless prison with death the only release.
The
classic vision of sorrow is that of Siddhartha
Gautama, but
Tolstoy records [5] a terrible and enduring psychic
experience
which contains most of the elements associated with
the worst
Binah can offer - it drove him to the very edge of suicide.
The Illusion of Binah is death; that is, the
vision of Binah
may be compelling, but it is one-sided, a half-truth,
and the
finiteness it reveals is an illusion. Our own personal finiteness
is an illusion.
The Qlippoth of Binah is fatalism,
the belief that we are
imprisoned in the mechanical causality of form, and not only
are
we incapable of changing or achieving anything, but even
if we
could, there wouldn't be any point. Why
try to be happy -
happiness leads inexorably to sadness. Why try
to build and
create - it all ends in decay and ruin soon enough. As the author
of "Ecclesiastes" says, all is vanity.
The Vice of Binah is avarice. Form is
only one-half of the
equation of life - change is the other half - and
to try to
hold onto and preserve form at the expense of change would be the
death of all life. The Virtue of Binah is silence. Beyond
form
there are no concepts, ideas, abstractions, or words.
The Spiritual Experience of Chokmah
is the Vision of God
Face-to-Face. The tradition I received has it that
one cannot
have this vision while incarnate i.e. one dies in the
process.
One Hasidic Rabbi liked to bid farewell to
his family each
morning as if it was his last - he feared he might die of ecstacy
during the day. In the "Greater Holy Assembly" [3], three Rabbis
pass away in ecstacy, and in the "Lesser Holy Assembly" [3]
the
famous Rabbi Simeon ben Yohai passes away at
the conclusion.
There is a fairly widespread belief that to look on
the naked
face of God, or a God, means death, but fortunately there
is no
historical evidence to suggest that the majority of
Kabbalists
died of anything other than natural causes. Having said that,
I
would not like to underplay the naked
rawness of Chokmah;
unconstrained, unconfined, free of form, it is the creative power
which sustains the universe, and
talk of death is not
melodramatic.
The Illusion of Chokmah is independence;
at the level of
Binah we seem to be locked in form, separate and finite, but just
as death is seen to be an illusion
so ultimately is our
independence and free-will. We *seem* to be independent,
and we
*seem* to have free-will, but at the level of Chokmah we draw our
water from the same well.
The Virtue of Chokmah is
good, and the Vice is evil.
Regardless of your definition of
good or evil, Chokmah
encompasses every possibility of action,
circumstance and
creation, and modern Kabbalists no longer try to believe God
is
good, and evil must reside elsewhere. Medieval Kabbalists
liked
to hedge their bets, but one has only to plumb the
bottomless
depths of personal good and evil to find they spring
from the
same place.
The Qlippoth of Chokmah is arbitrariness.
The raw, creative,
unconstrained energy of God at its most primal and dynamic
can
seem utterly arbitrary and chaotic, and some authors [e.g.
[6]]
have seen it this way. This removes the "divine will" from
the
energy and leaves a blind, directionless
and essentially
mechanical force which is unbiased - creation and
destruction,
order and chaos, who cares? The Kabbalistic view is that this
is
not so: Chokmah contains form (as Binah) *in potential*,
and it
is not correct to view Chokmah as a purely chaotic energy. It
is
an energy biased towards an end - "God's Will", for lack
of a
better description.
The Spiritual Experience of Kether is
Union with God. My
comments on the Spiritual Experience of Chokmah apply
also to
Kether. The Illusion of Kether is attainment. We can live, we can
change, but there is nothing to attain. Even Union with God is no
attainment; we were always one with God, and *knowing*
that we
are changes nothing of any consequence - as long
as we live,
there is no goal in life other than living
itself. As the
Kabbalist Rebbe Nachman of Breslov said [7]:
"No matter how high one reaches,
there is still the next
step. Therefore, we never know
anything, and still do not
attain the true goal. This is
a very deep and mysterious
concept."
The Qlippoth of Kether is Futility. Perhaps the creation
was a
bad idea. Maybe the En Soph should never have emanated the point-
crown of Kether. Perhaps the whole of creation, life, the entire,
ghastly three-ring circus we are forced to endure is nothing more
than *a complete waste*. The En Soph should suck
Malkuth back
into Kether, collapse the whole, crazy house of cards, and admit
the mistake.
The God-name of Binah is Elohim,
a feminine noun with a
masculine plural ending. When we read in the
Bible "In the
beginning created God...", this God is Elohim. The name Elohim is
associated with all the sephiroth on the Pillar of Form, and
is
taken to represent the feminine aspect of God. The God-name
of
Chokmah is Yah (YH), a shortened form of YHVH. The God-name
of
Kether is Eheieh, a name sometimes translated as "I am", and more
often as "I will be".
The archangel of Binah is Tzaphqiel;
I have been told this
means "Shroud of God", but I have not been able to verify
this.
If it does not mean "Shroud of God", it most certainly
should.
The archangel of Chokmah is Ratziel, the Herald of
the Deity.
According to tradition, the wisdom of God and the deepest secrets
of the creation were inscribed on a sapphire which
is in the
keeping of the archangel Ratziel, and this "Book of Ratziel"
was
given to Adam and handed down through the generations [8].
The
archangel of Kether is Metatron, the Archangel of the Presence.
According to tradition Metatron was once the man Enoch, who
was
so wise he was taken by God and made a prince among the angels.
The angel orders of Binah, Chokmah and Kether
can be derived
directly from the vision of Ezekiel. In
the Biblical text,
Ezekiel describes successively the Holy Living Creatures,
the
great wheels within wheels, and
lastly the throne-chariot
(Merkabah) of God. The vision of Ezekiel had a great influence on
early Kabbalah, and it is no coincidence that the angel order
of
Binah is the Aralim, or Thrones, the angel order of Chokmah
is
the Auphanim or Wheels, and the angel order of Kether
is the
Chiaoth ha Qadesh, or Holy Living Creatures. The
forms of the
Chiaoth ha Qadesh - lion, eagle, man and ox - have survived
to
this day in many Christian churches, and can be found
on the
"World" card of most Tarot packs.
It is difficult to grasp the nature
of Chokmah and Binah
from symbols alone, just as it is difficult to grasp interstellar
distances, the energy output of a star, the number of stars in
a
galaxy, and the number of galaxies visible to us. The scale
of
the observable physical universe relative to our planet (and
the
planet is a big place for most of us) is staggering;
there are
something like a hundred stars in *our galaxy alone* for
every
person on this planet. When I think of Chokmah
and Binah I
attempt to think of them on this scale; the physical
universe
where we have our home, considered
as Malkuth, is vast,
mysterious, and contains inconceivable energies - to consider the
Father and Mother of creation on any less a scale seems arrogant
to me. Which brings me to the question "Can one experience, or be
initiated into, the supernal sephiroth?".
If the Kabbalah is to be considered as based
on experience,
and not an intellectual construction, then the answer has to
be
"yes". The supernals represent something real.
What do they
represent? Is it possible to "cross the Abyss"? The answers
to
these questions depends on which Kabbalistic model one chooses to
use, and precisely how one interprets the Tree of Life.
For the
sake of argument I have chosen three alternative models:
Model A: the sephira Malkuth represents
the whole physical
universe; the
sephiroth from Yesod to Chesed (the
Microprosopus)
represent a sentient, self-conscious
being;
the supernals represent the God of the whole
universe, God-in-the-Large.
Model B: the Tree of Life is a model of human consciousness; the
supernals represent
the God within, God-in-the-Small.
Model C: the Tree of Life exists in the four
worlds of the
creation, namely
Atziluth, Briah, Yetzirah, and Assiah.
When talking
of "the Tree", we are talking about "the
Tree of Yetzirah";
"The Abyss" is in fact "the Abyss of
Yetzirah" only.
All three models can be found in Kabbalistic writing, and it
is
rarely clear which version an author is using at any given time.
I admit the fault myself. Model A differs radically from Models B
and C: Model A is an all-embracing model of everything,
whereas
in Models B and C the Tree has been applied
recursively to
a component of the whole, namely a human being
considered a
divine spark. This is a valid
(if confusing) Kabbalistic
technique: take a whole, and find a new Tree
in each of its
components; apply the method recursively until
you generate
enough detail to explain anything. This idea is summed up in
the
aphorism: "there is a Tree in every sephiroth".
Is it possible to experience the supernals
in Model A? I
would say that it is only possible to experience them at a remove
via the paths crossing over the Abyss from Tipheret;
that is,
as a living, incarnate being my consciousness rises no further up
the Pillar of Consciousness than Tiphereth (or Daath), but it
is
possible to apprehend the supernals via the linking
paths. To
experience the consciousness of Binah in this model
would be
tantamount to being able to modify the physical
constants of
nature - Planck's constant, the speed of light, the Gravitational
constant, the ratio of masses of
particles etc. - the
consequences don't bear thinking about! To experience
Chokmah
would be to experience the force which
underpins a billion
galaxies. I do not believe even the most
arrogant twentieth
century magician would claim to have achieved either
of these
initiations - the continuing existence of the planet is probably
the best evidence for that.
Model B is a model of the
Microprosopus *as a complete
Tree*. There is some evidence in the "Zohar" that
the author
thought about the Macroprosopus and Microprosopus in
precisely
this way, with references to "the greater Chokmah"
and "the
lesser Chokmah". Model C is substantially similar to Model B, but
cast in a slightly different model. With this interpretation
it
is certainly possible to consider "the lesser Chokmah"
as an
accessible state of consciousness, but "the
Greater Chokmah"
remains as in Model A; that is, we can experience the God within,
"God-in-the-Small", and experience our essential unity with
all
other living beings considered as "Gods-in-the-Small", but beyond
that lies a greater mystery, that of "God-in-the-Large".
We may
each be a chip off the old block, but individually we
are not
*identical* with the old block.
This discussion may seem arcane,
but there is a natural
tendency in people to exalt spiritual experience to the
highest
level, which does nothing more than inflate
and devalue the
currency of the language we use to describe these
experiences.
The universe is too large, too mysterious,
and too full of
infinite possibilities of wonder for anyone to claim initiation
into Malkuth, far less Kether.
Lastly, it is worth asking "what *is*
God?". What does the
Kabbalistic trinity of Kether, Chokmah and Binah represent
*in
reality*? I have deliberately avoided mentioning
an enormous
amount of Kabbalistic material on these three sephiroth
because
it is not clear whether it
contributes to a genuine
understanding. How useful, for example, is it to
know that the
name Binah (BINH) contains not only IH (Yod, He),
the letters
representing Chokmah and Binah, but also BN, Ben, the son? There
is a level of understanding Kabbalah which is intellectual,
and
capable of almost inifinite elaboration, but it leads
nowhere.
What experience or perception does the word "God"
denote? If
there is nothing which is not God, why
are so many people
searching for God? Why do so many people feel apart from God?
I
quoted D.H. Lawrence's poem "Only Man" because of
his deeply
intuitive view of the Fall from God and the abyss of separation.
I was browsing in my local occult bookshop recently,
a shop
which contains a catholic selection of books covering
Eastern
religions, astrology, Tarot, shamanism, crystals,
theosophy,
magick, Celtic and Grail traditions,
mythology, Kabbalah,
witchcraft, and so on. I am not sure what I was looking for,
but
despite a couple of hours of browsing I certainly did not
find
it. What did strike me was the extent to which so many of
these
books were written to make human beings
*feel good* about
themselves. There is a smug view permeating
so much occult
literature that "spiritual" human beings are a little bit
more
"advanced" or "developed" than the pack, that they are
"moving
along the Path" towards some kind of "enlightenment",
"cosmic
consciousness", "union with God", "divine love", or one
of many
more fantastic and utterly sublime goals. It is all so empowering
and affirming and cosy. Even in the less starry-eyed and
gushy
works the view is predominantly, almost
exclusively human-
centred, and I found it difficult to avoid the impression
that
the universe was designed as a foam-padded playground for
human
souls to romp around in. There is more than a little
truth in
Marx's statement that religion is the opium of the people, and
a
cynic could justify a claim that occultism and esoteric religion
are little more than a security blanket for unfortunate
people
who cannot look reality in the face. Where are the books
which
say "you are an insignificant speck of flyshit in a universe
so
vast you cannot even begin to comprehend its scale; your
occult
pretensions amount to nothing and are carefully
designed to
protect you from any experience of reality; all human experience
and knowledge is parochial, insignificant and largely irrelevant
on a universal scale, and your personal contribution even
more
so; there are no Masters or Powers, no Secret Chiefs,
no Inner
Plane Adepti, no Messiahs, and God does not love you;
the only
thing you possess is your life, and the joy and mystery of living
in a universe filled to the brim with life, where little is known
and much remains to be discovered; when you die, you are dead." I
do not concur with this position in its entirity, but it
is a
valid position to adopt, and one
which is not strongly
represented in esoteric and occult literature. Why not?
Perhaps
people do not want to buy books which say this. I will venture an
opinion which reflects my own experience; as such
it has no
general validity, but it is worth recording nevertheless.
I believe that many
religious, esoteric and occult
traditions currently extant are unconsciously designed to protect
human beings from experiencing God and lead towards experiences
which are valid in themselves but which
are biased towards
feelings of love, protection, peace, safety,
personal growth,
community and empowerment, all wrapped up in a strongly
human-
centred value system where positive
*human* feelings and
experiences are emphasised. I believe that people are apart from
God by choice, that they cannot find God because *they
do not
want to*.
It is difficult to justify this statement
without resorting
to an onion-skin model of the psyche; underneath
the surface,
unsuspected and virtually inaccessible, is a layer which does its
best to protect us from the existential terror of
confronting
things as they really are. As a child I was terrified
of the
dark; the dark itself was not malign, but I was deeply
afraid,
and in this case it was fear which determined my
relationship
with the dark, not any quality of the dark itself. So it is with
God - it is our deeply buried and
unrecognised fear which
determines our relationship with God. We read books, go
to the
cinema and theatre, argue, invent, throw parties,
play games,
search for God, live and love together, and bury ourselves in all
the distractions of human society in a frenetic and
unceasing
effort to avoid the layers of fear - fear of solitude,
fear of
rejection, fear of disease and decay and disintregration, fear of
madness, fear of meaninglessness, arbitrariness and
futility,
fear of death and personal annihilation. Like an audience
in a
cinema, we can live in a fantasy for a time and forget that it is
dark, cold and raining outside, but sooner or later we
have to
leave our seats. And underneath all the fears is
the fear of
opening the door which conceals the awful truth: that
we have
wilfully, and with great energy and persistence, chosen
*not to
know*.
[1] Ponce, Charles, "Kabbalah", Garnstone Press, 1974.
[2] Kaplan, Aryeh, "The Bahir", Samuel Weiser 1989.
[3] Mather, S.L., "The Kabbalah Unveiled", RKP 1970
[4] Fortune, Dion, "Moon Magic", Star Books, 1976
[5] James, William, "The Varieties of Religious
Experience",
Fontana 1974
[6] Peter J. Carroll, "Liber Null & Psychonaut", Samuel Weiser 1987
[7] Epstein, Perle, "Kabbalah", Shambhala 1978
[8] Graves, Robert, & Patai, Raphael, "Hebrew Myths,
the Book
of Genesis", Arena 1989
Chapter 5: Practical Kabbalah
==============================
"But just as I was going to put
my feet into the water I
looked down and saw that they were all
hard and rough and
wrinkled and scaly just as they had been before.
Oh, that's
all right said I, it only means I had
another smaller suit
on underneath the first one, and I'll
have to get out of it
too. So I scratched and tore again and this
underskin peeled
off beautifully and out I stepped and
left it lying beside
the other one and went down to the well for
my bathe.
"Well,
exactly the same thing happened again. And I
thought to myself, oh dear, how
ever many skins have I got
to take off? For I
was longing to bathe my leg. So I
scratched away for the third time and got
off a third skin,
just like the two others, and stepped out
of it. But as soon
as I looked at myself in the water
I knew it had been no
good.
"Then
the lion said - but I don't know if it spoke -
"You will have to let me undress you."
I was afraid of his
claws, I can tell you, but
I was pretty nearly desperate
now. So I just lay flat down on my back and
let him do it.
"The very first
tear he made was so deep that I thought
it had gone right into my heart. And
when he began pulling
the skin off, it hurt worse than
anything I've ever felt.
The only thing that made me able
to bear it was just the
pleasure of feeling the stuff peel off."
C.S. Lewis
From an historical and traditional perspective
the practical
techniques of Kabbalah include techniques of mysticism and (to
a
lesser extent) magic to be found
the world over: complex
concentration and visualisation exercises, meditation,
breath
control, prayer, ritual, physical posture, chanting and singing,
abstinence, fasting, mortification and good works. Many different
combinations of practice were used at different times and places,
and it is clear that practice grew more out of the temperament of
the individual than from a long historical tradition. From
time
to time an outstanding teacher would appear, and a school
would
form, but these schools tended to be short-lived,
and one is
struck more by the diversity and individuality of the different
approaches, than by (what is often presumed) a chain of
masters
handing down the core of a secret
tradition through the
centuries. A problem with trying to find an authentic tradition
of Kabbalistic practice is not only is it difficult to
identify
just what such a tradition might be (given
the diversity of
approaches over the centuries), but more importantly, the keys to
many of the practical techniques have been lost. In her book
on
Kabbalah [1], Perle Epstein makes a number of wry comments about
the state of Kabbalah in Judaism today, and regrets the loss of a
practical mystical tradition. Outside of Judaism the situation is
little better; Kabbalah has become an element in the syllabus
of
many traditions, but its practical application is often
limited
to exercises such as pathworking. It is instructive to
examine
the Golden Dawn initiation rituals [2] as an example
of what
happens when Kabbalah is boiled up with a mixture of ingredients
drawn from Greek, Egyptian, Rosicrucian and Enochian sources
-
there is a pervasive smell of Kabbalah throughout, but it rarely
amounts to a meal.
The following description of Kabbalistic
practice makes no
attempt to be comprehensive; on the contrary, I have chosen only
those practices with which I am personally familiar. This
will
be unsatisfactory to those readers with an academic or historical
interest, but these notes were intended to
have a practical
value, and I see no value in trying to describe techniques I have
not used. Epstein [1] provides a useful introduction
to the
breadth of Kabbalistic practice, and the personalities which have
shaped Kabbalistic thought. I am aware that there will be
those
who would not wish to associate the name "Kabbalah"
with the
practices I am about to describe - although I am not Jewish,
I
respect the beliefs of those who are - but at the same time there
is a great deal of variety in nearly two
thousand years of
Kabbalah, and one living tradition is worth at least as much
as
several dead traditions. There is no right or canonical tradition
of Kabbalistic practice.
The practice of Kabbalah
as I will describe it is
underpinned by the theosophical structure
I have outlined
previously in these notes. First and foremost comes the
belief
that there is a God. The ultimate nature of God is neither known
nor manifest to us, but just as light can be passed
through a
prism to produce a rainbow of colours, so God manifests
in the
creation as ten divine lights or emanations, usually referred
to
as sephiroth. Each of one of us is a part of God, a microcosm,
a
complete and functioning simulacrum of the whole,
and so God
similarly manifests within us as ten divine lights. Because
we
can look in the mirror of our own being and see the reflection of
the macrocosm it follows that self-knowledge shades imperceptibly
into knowledge of God, and as the whole
of creation is an
emanation of God, so self-knowledge
moves the centre of
consciousness away from a subjective awareness of reality towards
an objective and non-dualistic union with everything that is.
The second key idea is that the emanations
or sephiroth are
aspects of the *creative* power of God. On a macrocosmic
scale,
the creation is seen as the continuing outcome
of a dynamic
process in which creative energy manifests progressively through
the sephiroth; at a microcosmic and personal
level the same
process is at work, and this is the Kabbalistic interpretation of
the notion that we are "made in God's image". By
understanding
the elements which comprise our own natures, by going far enough
inside ourselves to understand the energy and dynamics operating
within our own consciousness, so we touch the
same energies
operating in the universe. When we have touched these energies we
can call on them; one name for
this process is "magic".
Traditionally these energies are called upon by name,
and are
characterised in concrete ways - the list of
correspondences
given in Chapter 2 of these notes provides many ideas as to
how
these energies are likely to be observed at a level where we
are
most likely to observe them. The Kabbalistic Tree of Life is
an
abstract representation or map describing the creative energy
of
God and the process of manifestation.
And that is it, in essence.
How literally you take these
assumptions is up to you; my attitude resembles
that of the
engineer Oliver Heavyside, who didn't care whether
his self-
invented mathematical methods made sense to mathematicians (they
didn't), as long as his calculations produced the right
answers
(they did). I will talk about angels and archangels and names
of
God, powers and sephiroth and invocations, and leave it to you to
make your own sense of it.
But to return to the discussion of practical
Kabbalah: one
can identify two major kinds of practical work arising out of the
assumptions above. From the idea that we are made in the image of
God we can conclude that by knowing ourselves we can
(in some
degree) know God; this leads to practical
work designed to
increase self-knowledge to the greatest
degree possible, a
process I will refer to as *initiation*. From the idea
that we
can call upon aspects of the creative energy of God
to change
reality we arrive at practices intended to increase
*personal
power*. Kabbalah has divided along these two paths, and I believe
it is accurate to say that traditional
Jewish Kabbalah is
predominantly mystical, with the emphasis on union
with God,
while non-Jewish Kabbalah is predominantly
magical.
It is easy to sit in judgement of these two
approaches; many
authors have done so. To seek for union with God is to seek to do
God's will; the world-wide mystical agenda is composed largely of
the subjugation of ego and the replacement of personal wilfulness
with divine union. Magic is seen to be predominantly wilful,
and
so shares the original Satanic impulse of pride and
rebellion
against the divine will. It is easy to conclude that
mystical
union (devekuth, or "cleaving to God") is the true
goal, and
magic an "egocentric" aberration of consciousness.
It is difficult to provide a *rational*
counter to this
argument: to be rational is
to fail to appreciate the
ineffability of mystical insight, and to argue is to demonstrate
Satanic wilfulness - one is condemned out of one's
own mouth.
Nevertheless, there is a middle way between the two extremes, and
in what follows the process of initiation is combined with
the
use of magical techniques in a blend which I believe captures the
best of both approaches. I have chosen to describe the process of
initiation first because I have the romantic
notion that an
ethical sense grows out of self-knowledge. I follow that with
a
discussion of some general magical techniques.
Initiation
----------
One of the meanings of the word "initiation" is "the process
of
beginning something". What is one beginning? One is
committing
oneself to find answers to certain questions. What questions? The
questions vary, but they are usually fundamental questions about
the nature of life and personal existence: "why is the world
the
way it is?", "why am I alive?", "what lies behind the phenomenal
world?", "why should I continue living?", "what
is good and
what is evil?", "how should I live?", and "how can I become rich,
famous and sexually attractive without expending any effort?". It
happens (for no obvious reason) that there are people who cannot
escape the nagging conviction that some or all of these questions
can be answered, and the same people are determined to wring
the
answers out of somebody or something. The situation resembles
a
cat in a new house; the poor creature will not rest until it
has
explored every nook and cranny from the attic to the crawlspace.
So it is with certain people; they look out on the
world with
cat's eyes, and metaphysical and philosophical questions are like
dark openings into the attic and crawlspace of existence. And
it
happens that every question, when
followed with enough
determination, leads back to the questioner. What
is the pre-
condition for knowing anything? We are the attics and crawlspaces
of existence, and so in the end we forced to look
within, and
know ourselves.
There is another aspect to initiation:
on one hand we have
the desire to *know*, and on the other hand we have the desire to
*be something else*. Initiation is also the
beginning of a
process of self-transformation, a process of becoming something
else. Becoming what? Answers vary, but in the main, people have a
vision of "myself made perfect", and if they believe in
saints,
they want to be saintly; if they believe in God, they want to
be
united with God. Some want to be more powerful, and some want
to
be rich, famous, and sexually attractive. Two easily observable
characteristics of people looking for
mystical or magical
training are a lust for knowledge and a desire to be
something
other than what they currently are. A bizarre situation
indeed;
not only do they seek to know what they are and why they are, but
even before they know the answers, they want to
be something
else.
Kabbalistic initiation is a process
of increasing self-
knowledge, and an accompanying process of change. It is based
on
a practical experience of the sephiroth: if
each of us is
potentially a simulacrum of God, and if the creative energy
of
God can be described in terms of the
dynamics of the ten
sephiroth, then by understanding the dynamics of the
sephiroth
within us we begin to understand the nature of the God
within,
and by extrapolation, the nature of God in the
absolute. The
learning process (like most learning) mirrors
the alchemical
operation of "solve et coagula" - that is, before we can
reach
the next stage in knowledge and understanding ("coagula") it
is
necessary to break down what already exists into its
component
parts ("solve"). This can be observed whenever we
attempt to
learn a new skill; we begin in a state of unconcious competence
where we can do many tasks without difficulty, but when we try
a
new skill we find that our old habits are a positive
obstacle,
and we become unconsciously incompetent - we approach a new task
in an old way and make a mess of it. When we have
made enough
messes we either give up, or we realise the necessity of change,
drop old habits as a prerequisite for
acquiring new habits
(solve), and become consciously incompetent. Finally, with enough
practice (coagula), we return once more to a state of unconscious
competence, ready to begin the cycle one more time. The
process
of kabbalistic initiation leading to increased
self-knowledge
begins with the sephiroth, and each sephira contains within it
a
world of "solve et coagula", a world where one may function with
limited unconscious competence, but to reach a
new level of
understanding and competence one must go through the
fire and
experience the energy of the
sephira deliberately and
consciously.
What possible advantage could there be in
understanding the
nature of a sephira? What "things" are there to be learned?
In
answer, there are no "things" to be learned. A sephira
is not a
particular manifestation of consciousness (e.g. pleasure),
or a
particular behaviour (e.g. being honest,
being kind); the
sephiroth underpin manifestations of consciousness, they are
the
earth in which behaviours (and their opposites) are rooted,
and
by understanding a sephira one burrows underneath the *phenomena*
of consciousness and grasps an abstract state
of *becoming*
(emanation, or sephira) which gives rise to phenomena. This is
a
magical procedure; when one ceases to identify with the shopping
list of qualities, beliefs and behaviours which can be
mistaken
for personal identity (a necessarily
fixed and limited
abstraction) then one touches the raw substance of becoming,
and
it is on the power to manipulate the "becoming" of reality
that
magic is based. The closer one tries to get to the energy
of a
sephira, the more one must abandon the artificial restrictions of
personality; the mystical quest for self-knowledge
and the
magical quest for personal power unite in the same place.
There are many ways
to investigate the nature of the
sephiroth, but one of the simplest and most direct is to ask
the
powers of the sephiroth for help. In principal all one has to
do
is call upon the powers of a sephira, and ask to be instructed.
There are three potential problems with this procedure. The first
is that it is like asking to be dropped in a wilderness; you
may
learn to survive, or you may not. The second possible problem
is
that people tend to have a natural affinity for some
sephiroth
and not others, and left to themselves tend to
develop their
knowledge in a lop-sided manner. Lastly, many people do not know
how to call upon the powers - you can't ask Gabriel to help
you
if you don't know Gabriel, and you don't know how
to contact
Gabriel. But, if you knew someone who knew Gabriel....
The time-honoured method of initiation into
the nature of a
particular sephira is to ask someone who has had that experience
to invoke to powers of the sephira on your behalf.
The person
chosen as initiator would use the techniques of ritual magic
to
invoke the powers of a sephira with the intention that you should
receive instruction and insight into the nature of that
sphere.
It works. Metaphysical theories may be impossible to
prove or
disprove, supposed magical powers evaporate
in the physics
laboratory, but people who undergo this kind of initiation
can
change visibly and even claim to have learned something. One
can
argue about the objective reality of the Archangel Gabriel
and
the Powers of the sephira Yesod, but it is difficult to
dispute
the validity of initiation when someone changes
his or her
outlook on reality and actually does things differently
as a
consequence.
I would like to clarify some
possible misunderstandings.
This kind of initiation is not a ceremony with
a fixed and
lengthy script, like the masonic-type rituals which have
become
so closely associated with magical initiations. The
initiation
ritual I am describing is a challenge;
it is a one-to-one
encounter between an initiatee, and an initiator
who acts as
agent for the invoked powers. If there is a script it is minimal;
the purpose of the ritual is not to impart secrets, or impose
a
view of the world, but to challenge the initiatee to demonstrate
a personal and individual understanding
relevant to the
initiation. The success of the
initiation depends on the
initiator's ability to invoke and channel the powers, and on
the
initiatee's willingness to be challenged at a deeply
personal
level in an atmosphere of trust.
The challenge aspect of
initiation is a vital part of its success; it creates a catalytic
stress which can act to bring about sudden and sometimes dramatic
changes in perspective. The initiation is also a challenge
for
the initiator; each initiatee is different and approaches
the
same place from a different direction.
This kind of initiation is not a lightweight
procedure. It
is easy to abuse it. The purpose of initiation is not to
select
for conformity (quite the opposite), but it must be said that
it
is easy for an initiator to use an initiation to enhance personal
power. This is a problem in esoteric
systems which use an
apprenticeship system and is not unique to this particular
form
of initiation.
Self-initiation is possible and may
be the only option for
many people. It suffers from a
number of disadvantages:
- people are naturally self-important
and endow their
opinions, attitudes
and prejudices with far more
importance than another person
would. Working with another
person produces beneficial friction.
- it is easy to make excuses to yourself which
you wouldn't
make to another person. Their
presence is a challenge to
make an effort, or do things differently.
- magical work can produce dramatic changes
in behaviour. An
observer can provide useful feedback.
- most of Kabbalah isn't "facts"; it is "ways
of being", and
an excellent method of learning
is to let someone else
demonstrate.
- it is easy to reinvent the wheel when working by oneself.
None of these difficulties are insurmountable.
Joining an
amateur dramatic group as a conscious and deliberate
magical
exercise should provide some of the raw input needed, and provide
lots of stress, friction, and challenges to one's personal world
view. It is easy to think up other examples. What is important is
not to treat practical Kabbalah as something separate from normal
life, but to use normal life as the stimulus to put Kabbalah into
practice - this is a traditional Kabbalistic idea. If you
can't
do it in ordinary life, you can't do it.
It is easy to mystify initiation
and pretend it leads
somewhere different from the "school of hard knocks". It doesn't.
Ordinary life is a perfectly adequate initiator, and people
do
change in many ways (sometime dramatically) as they grow
older.
At most initiation may go further. It can and should accelerate
the process of acquiring self-knowledge and (in theory at least)
lead to someone who has explored their personal microcosm
in a
broader, deeper and more systematic way than someone who has
had
to suffer "the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune"
in the
patchy and random sequence that is our common lot. The Kabbalist
should be able to go further in exploring and
analysing the
extremes of consciousness, boundless steppes in the shadowland of
"not-me", where daemons of "otherness" threaten the fragile ghost
of personal identity.
Much of what an initiator does is to ask questions.
If you
want to carry out a self-initiation you will have to ask your own
questions. I will use the sephiroth of
Hod and Netzach as
examples to show how the sephirothic correspondences can be used
to ask questions. Suppose you want to identify those behaviours
and attitudes in your personality which are underpinned
by Hod
and Netzach. Read the correspondences in Chapter 2 for
Hod and
Netzach and try to decide. Are you impulsive? Do you do what
you
want to do and ignore people who warn you of the consequences? Do
you have strong passions for things, people, places. If asked why
you are doing something, how do you explain yourself -
do you
give elaborate rationalisations, or do you say things
like "I
haven't any choice", or "you made me do it", or "I just want to",
or "I can't explain why". Do other people tell you to stop being
irrational? Do you find it hard to suppress your emotions, do you
think you are transparent to others? Are you furious one minute,
miserably sad the next, do your moods
and feelings change
on the fly?
On the other hand, you might be
someone who is concerned
with the protocol of relationships and situations
(you worry
whether it is right to kiss on the first date!). You like to talk
about things and have definite ideas about the right and
wrong
way to conduct a discussion - you refer
to this as "being
rational". You analyse your conduct in some detail according to a
constantly developing set of rules, and you dream up hypothetical
situations to test your ability to apply these rules - you don't
want to make a mistake. You are skilled at handling problems with
many rules, and may be adept at cheating the rules. You
have a
clear grasp of high-level abstractions and might work
in law,
medicine, finance, science, or engineering,
where you can use
your ability to apply rule-based knowledge.
You might feel
uncomfortable with a display of emotion
in another person,
particlarly when it cuts across your sense of protocol, and
you
keep a tight rein on your own emotions. Other people may find you
sharp but clinical, able to communicate verbally
but poor at
responding to real-life situations involving emotional conflict,
poor at any problem where there is insufficient
information,
where variables cannot be quantified, or where
there is no
abstract model.
The first set of behaviours is appropriate
to Netzach, while
the second set is appropriate to Hod. Few people are purely
one
thing or another, and behaviours change according to circumstance
- drinking alcohol tends to shift people from Hod-type behaviours
to Netzach-type behaviours. A person may sustain a Hod persona at
work, then go to a bar in the evening and become
the complete
opposite. My favourite Hod/Netzach joke concerns
the (real)
couple who were asked which of the two sephiroth they
had the
greatest affinity to. The man responded "Well, I feel I'm
Hod",
and the woman replied "I think I'm probably Netzach".
The analysis can be
taken further. Suppose you have
identified a large number of Hod-type behaviours in yourself. The
virtue of Hod is honesty or truthfulness,
and its vice is
dishonesty - the power of language to represent and communicate
information about the world automatically brings
with it the
power to *misrepresent* what is going on. How
often are you
dishonest? With yourself? With others? In what situations do
you
sanction dishonesty? What value do you perceive in
dishonesty?
Are you capable of giving a purely factual account of a
failed,
close relationship without rationalising your own behaviour?
Try
it, and ask a good friend to score the attempt. I must emphasise
that there is no moral intent in this dissection
of personal
honesty - it is an exercise designed to expose the way in
which
we represent events so as to make ourselves feel comfortable.
The illusion of Hod is Order, and the qlippa
or shell of Hod
is Rigid Order. It is easy to observe during
discussions and
arguments how people try to defend and preserve the structure (or
form) of their beliefs. Do you know anyone with an
unshakeable
view of the world? Does it annoy you that no matter how ingenious
you are in finding counter-examples to his or her
view, this
person will always succeed in "fitting" your example into
their
world view? What about yourself? Do you collect evidence
which
reinforces your beliefs like someone collecting stamps? Are
you
conscious of trying to "fit" and "interpret" the
evidence to
support your beliefs? Why are your beliefs important?
What is
their actual *value* to you. What would happen to you if you gave
them up?
You can do the same thing with
the sephira Netzach. The
illusion of Netzach is projection, the averse face of
empathy,
the tendency to incorrectly attribute to others the same feelings
and motives as I have. Suppose I am
sexually attracted to
someone; I look at this person and they smile in
return. What
does that smile mean to me at that instant? How many
different
mistakes might I have made? Suppose I say to someone "I know
how
you feel", and they retort angrily "No you bloody well
don't!".
One of the fastest ways of alienating someone is to consistently
misinterpret how they feel. Are you constantly puzzled why people
don't share your taste in clothes, music, literature, films, art,
or decor? Do you feel that if only their eyes were opened,
they
might? Do you ever try to convert people to your taste?
How do
react when they aren't impressed? Do you make secret judgements
which affect the way you treat them? Have you ever
discounted
someone because their taste offended yours? What
*value* does
your personal aesthetic have to you? What would happen
if you
gave it up?
As you can see, this
is not a procedure where anyone
(barring yourself) is going to provide answers. Questions,
yes;
lots of questions, but no answers. Asking the right
questions
isn't easy; we tend to have a peculiar blindness about
our own
behaviour, beliefs, and attitudes, and that translates
into an
unconsciousness of what we are. One of the oldest
jokes that
children play is to stick a notice on someone's back saying "Kick
Me". The poor unfortunate walks around and
wonders why his
acquaintances are behaving oddly - tittering, sneaking up behind,
and so on. He can't see what other people can see clearly, and he
hasn't the power to understand (and possibly influence)
their
behaviour until he does see. Suppose an "initiator" walks up
and
says:
"Have you looked at your back recently?"
"Ahhhh....!" says the victim in a sudden flash
of insight.
According to folk wisdom, asking
questions is a dangerous
business. Asking yourself questions certainly is. It hurts.
It
has no obvious benefit. You may find yourself hating yourself
as
you penetrate layers of self-deception and dishonesty
only to
discover a fear (or terror) of changing, and pious
resolutions
and commitments fall apart in the face of that fear. You take off
the first skin, and then you take off the next skin, and then you
take off the skin under that. Then you get stuck. You can't
go
any further by yourself - you haven't the courage to do it -
and
at the same time you can't go back to what you were. A blind
and
deaf man can stand happily in the middle of a busy road, but give
him sight and hearing for only a second and that
happiness is
gone. It is at this point where it helps to have a faith
in a
power greater than yourself - your Holy Guardian Angel, God,
the
Lion, whatever.
In summary, the process of kabbalistic
initiation described
above is based in detail on the map of consciousness provided
by
the Tree of Life and the correspondences. The
sephiroth are
explored by using ritual magic to invoke the
powers of the
sephiroth for the purposes of
initiation. Incidents in
ordinary life are interpreted as
challenges or learning
experiences supplied by the powers. Major steps in the process of
initiation are marked by observable changes in the initiatee, and
confirmed by an initiator whose role is primarily
that of a
catalyst. This technique of initiation has been used for at least
one hundred years, but its execution has tended to be marred by a
good deal of superfluous dross - elaborate
ceremonials and
scripts, pompous and often meaningless grades and
titles, and
magical systems so vastly elaborate that the would-be
initiate
spends more time looking at the finger than the moon.
Ritual
======
The Kabbalistic ritual technique I am about to describe is based
on an assumption which may or may not be valid, but which
gives
the technique a characteristic style. The assumption
is "form
precedes manifestation"; that is, anything which
manifests in
this, the real, physical world, is preceded
by a process of
"formation", a process described in its general outline
by the
doctrine of sephirothic emanation and the Kabbalistic
Tree of
Life. This premise is not so odd or metaphysical
as it might
seem. Every object in the room I am sitting in is a product
of
human manufacture. The mug I am drinking my tea out of was
once
clay, and its form existed in someone's mind before taking shape
in fired clay. The house I live in was
once an architect's
design, and before that, an abstract object in a land developer's
scheme for making lots of money.
Every object of human
manufacture originally existed as an idea or form in
someone's
mind, and each idea went through a process of development,
from
inspiration to manufacture - I have described
much of this
elsewhere in these Notes. It is not a large step to conceive
of
the whole universe as the product of mind, so that every form
of
substance - the physical elements, each species of
plant and
animal - are the result of a process of formation
occuring in
mind. Where are these abstract minds? They compose a whole which
the Kabbalist conveniently labels "God", and the parts,
if we
want to refer to them seperately as subordinate components,
we
call "archangels", and "angels" and "spirits", and "elementals"
and "devils". Each of these minds or
intelligences holds a
portion of the archetypal form of the world in place, and
each
mind is a form in its own right; each
of these archetypal
intelligences can be comprehended as a
part of Binah, the
Intelligence of God and Mother of all form.
When I drop a stone, it falls to the
ground. It does this
because the spirit of matter inhabiting the stone uses messenger
spirits (or angels) called gravitons to communicate
with the
spirit of matter inhabiting the Earth. It turns out
that the
curvature of space-time (its form) is determined by the Lords
of
Matter in an intricate but completely exact way according to
the
distribution of mass-energy - the details can be summarised in an
equation first written down by Albert Einstein.
It may seem
absurd and retrograde (and William of Occam would certainly turn
in his grave) to suggest that what we call the laws of
physics
are forms maintained in the minds of archetypal intelligences,
but as Einstein himself stated, "The most incomprehensible thing
about the world is that it is comprehensible"; that is, it can be
described using language. There *are*
abstract forms which
describe change in the physical world,
and they *can* be
comprehended by mind, and although it is a large step to propose
that mind takes primacy over matter, it is a view attractive
to
the practising magician. It is a view completely consistent with
Kabbalah. When I call upon a spirit to modify the law of gravity
at a specific time and place, I am not violating a physical law;
I am *changing* it at its source.
If "form precedes manifestation",
then practical magic is
about understanding how the future is formed out of the present.
The seeds of many futures are planted
in the present, and
accessible to the magician as the forms of the future. The forms
of the future are being progressed by many minds;
where they
overlap, there is conflict and
inconsistency, a situation
resembling a bus where each passenger has
a steering wheel
providing an unknown and variable input to the eventual direction
of the bus. In one interpretation (primacy of will) the magician
is the person with the most powerful steering wheel; in
another
interpretation (Taoist nudging) the magician is
a person who
understands the dynamics of steering sufficiently well
to use
opportune moments to move the bus in a desired direction. Perhaps
both interpretations are valid. In either case, if one
accepts
the simile, then it should be clear that magic is rarely
about
certain outcomes. In both cases the magician must have
a clear
notion of direction, what is usually called *intention*.
Formation is a process
of increasing limitation or
constraint. Once something is manifest it is
constrained or
limited by what it is at that instant. Suppose I want to make
a
film. It could be a film about *anything*. Once I have a script I
am more limited, but have a lot of scope in directing the film
-
choice of actors, sets, locations etc. Once I have the rushes
my
choices are even more constrained, but I still have some freedom
in the editing. Finally, once the film is released,
I have no
more freedom to change it, unless, like some directors, I choose
to re-edit and re-issue it. Intention is also a limitation: it is
a limitation of will. I chose to make a film, but I could
have
chosen to write a book instead, or chosen to take a holiday.
In
choosing to make a film I limited my free-will. I could of course
abandon the film project, but a life of incomplete,
abandoned
projects is not very satisfactory to most people, so my will
to
complete (i.e. to bring into manifestation) sustains my intention
and I have to learn to live with
this fairly considerable
limitation on my theoretical free-will.
The limitation of will and the
formation of the film go
hand-in-hand. I can't just intend to make a film:
I have to
intend to get a script, find some money, borrow the
equipment,
recruit some actors and a crew. The formation of
the film is
driven by a fragmentation of my original intention
into many
components and sub-components as the task proceeds, and activity
and intention feed off each other until, knee-deep in the details
of film making, I might find myself thinking "I'd give
anything
if we could get this scene in the can and knock off for a beer."
We have gone from a person with theoretically unlimited free-will
to someone who cannot knock off for a beer. Most people who go to
work and attempt to bring up a family are in this situation
of
being so limited by previous choices and past history that
they
have very little actual free-will or
uncommitted energy, a
situation which has to be understood in
some detail before
attempting serious magical work.
To summarise: if magic is about making things
*happen*, then
the magician might want to understand the process of
formation
which precedes manifestation, and understand not only the
forms
which other people are *intending*,
forms which may be
competitive, but also the detailed relationship between formation
and intention. You don't have to understand these things;
many
people like magic to be truely *magical* (i.e. without causality
or mechanism), but Kabbalah does provide a theoretical model
for
magical work (the lightning flash on the Tree) which many
have
found to be useful. I think it is a mistake to confuse a lack
of
consciousness of mechanism with a lack of mechanism,
just as
someone might look at a clock and assume that it goes round
"by
magic", and so I'd like to say something more about the
concept
of limitation, a concept essential to understanding the
ritual
framework I am going to describe.
We are limited beings: our lives are limited
to some tens of
years, our bodies are limited in their physical abilities,
and
compared to the different kinds of life on this planet
we are
clearly very specialised compared with the potential
of what
we could be if we had the free choice of
being anything we
wanted. Even as human beings we are limited, in that we
are all
quite distinct from each other; we limit ourselves to
a small
number of behaviours, attitudes and beliefs
and guard that
individuality and uniqueness as an inalienable right. We
limit
ourselves to a few skills because of the
effort and talent
required, and only in exceptional cases do we find people who are
expert in a large number of different skills - most people
are
happy if they are acknowledged as being an expert in one
thing.
It is a fact that as the sum total of knowledge increases,
so
people (particularly those with technical skills) are forced
to
become more and more specialised.
This idea of limitation and specialisation
has found its way
into magical ritual because of a magical (or mystical) perception
that, although all consciousness in the universe is One, and that
Oneness can be perceived directly, it has become limited.
There
is a process of limitation (formation)
in which the One
(God, if you like) becomes progressively
structured and
constrained until it reaches the level of thee and me. Magicians
and mystics the world over are relatively unanimous in insisting
that the normal everyday consciousness of most human beings
is
a severe limitation on the potential of consciousness,
and it
is possible, through various
disciplines, to extend
consciousness into new regions. From a magical point of view
the
personality, the ego, the continuing sense of individual
"me-
ness", is a magical creation,
an artificial elemental
or thoughtform which consumes our magical power
in exchange
for the kind of limitation necessary to survive, and in order
to
work magic it is necessary to divert energy
away from this
obsession with personal identity and self-importance.
Now, consider the following problem:
you have been
imprisoned inside a large inflated plastic bag. You
have been
given a sledghammer and a scalpel. Which tool will get
you out
faster? The answer I am obviously looking for is the scalpel. The
key to getting out of large, inflated, plastic bags is
to apply
as much force as possible to as sharp a
point as possible.
Magicians agree on this principle - the key to successful ritual
is a "single-pointed will". A mystic
may try to expand
consciousness in all directions simultaneously, to encompass more
and more of the One, to embrace the
One, perhaps even to
transcend the One, but this is hard, and most people aren't up to
it in practise. Rather than
expand in all directions
simultaneously, it is much easier to limit
an excursion of
consciousness in one direction only, and the more
precise and
well-defined that limitation to a specific direction, the easier
it is to get out of the plastic bag. Limitation of consciousness
is the trick we use to cope with the complexities
of life in
modern society, and as long as we are forced to live under
this
yoke we might as well make a virtue out of a necessity, and
use
our carefully cultivated ability to concentrate
attention on
minutiae to burst out of the bag.
We find the concept of limitation appearing
in the process
of formation which leads to manifestation; in the limitation
of
will which leads to intention; now I suggest that
a focussed
limitation of consciousness is one method to
release magical
energy. Limitation is the key to understanding the structure
of
magical ritual as described in these
notes, and the key
to successful practice.
Essential Steps
---------------
I decided against giving the details of any
rituals. All the
rituals I have taken a part in were written by one or more of the
people present. I do not think any of the rituals would be worth
preserving for their literary or poetic content. On
the other
hand, the majority of the rituals I have taken a part
in have
conformed to a basic structure which has rarely
varied; this
structure we called "the essential steps".
There is never going to be agreement about
what is essential
in a ritual and what is not, any more than there will
ever be
agreement about what makes a good novel. That doesn't mean there
is nothing worth learning. The steps I
enumerate below are
suggestions which were handed down to me, and a lot of
insight
(not mine) has gone into them; they conform to a Western magical
tradition which has not changed in its essentials for thousands
of years, and I hand them on to you in the same
spirit as I
received them.
These are the essential steps:
1. Open the Circle
2. Open the Gates
3. Invocation to the Powers
4. Statement of Intention and Sacrifice
5. Main Ritual
6. Dismissal of Powers
7. Close the Gates
8. Close the Circle
Step 1: Opening the Circle
The Circle is the place where magical
work is carried out.
It might literally be circle on the ground, or it
could be a
church, or a stone ring, or a temple, or it might be an imagined
circle inscribed in the aethyr, or it could be any spot hallowed
by tradition. In some cases the Circle is created
specifically
for one piece of work and then closed, while in other cases (e.g.
a church) the building is consecrated and all the space
within
the building is treated as if it was an open circle
for long
periods of time. I don't want to deal too much in generalities,
so I will deal with the common case where a circle
is created
specifically for one piece of work, for
a period of time
typically less than one day. The place
where the circle is
created could be anywhere: indoors, outdoors, top
of a hill, a
cellar. It could be an imaginary place, the ritual carried out in
a lucid dream for example. Most often a ritual will take place in
a room in a house, and the first magical ability
the magician
develops is the ability to turn any place into a temple. I
like
to prepare a room with some kind of cleaning, and clear
enough
floor space for a real or visualised circle. I secure the
room
against access as far as possible, take the phone off the
hook
etc.
The Circle is the first important magical
limit: it creates
a small area within which the magical work
takes place. The
magician tries to control everything which takes place within the
Circle (limitation), and so a circle
half-a-mile across is
impractical. The Circle marks the boundary between the
rest of
the world (going on its way as normal), and a magical space where
things are most definitely not going on as
normal (otherwise
there wouldn't be any point in carrying out a ritual in the first
place). There is a dislocation: the region inside the circle
is
separated from the rest of space and is free to go its own
way.
There are some types of magical work where it may not be sensible
to have a circle (e.g. working with the natural elements in
the
world at large) but unless you are working with a power
already
present in the environment in its normal state, it is
best to
work within a circle.
The Circle may be a mark on the ground,
or something more
intangible still; my own preference is an imagined line of
blue
fire drawn in the air. It is in the nature of consciousness that
anything taken as real and treated as real will eventually
be
accepted as Real - and if you want to start an argument,
state
that money doesn't exist and isn't Real. From a
ritual
point of view the Circle is a real
boundary, and if its
usefulness is to be maintained it should be treated with the same
respect as an electrified fence. Pets,
children and casual
onlookers should be kept out of it. Whatever
procedures take
place within the Circle should only take place within the Circle
and in no other place, and conversely, your normal life
should
not intrude on the Circle unless it is part of your
intention
that it should. From a symbolic point of view, the Circle marks a
new "circle of normality", a circle different from
your usual
"circle of normality", making it possible
to keep the two
"regions of consciousness" distinct and separate. The
magician
leaves everyday life behind when the Circle
is opened, and
returns to it when the Circle is closed, and for
the duration
adopts a discipline of thought and deed which is specific to
the
type of magical work being undertaken; this procedure is not
so
different from that in many kinds of laboratory where scientists
work with hazardous materials.
Opening a Circle usually
involves drawing a circle in
the air or on the ground, accompanied
by an invocation to
guardian spirits, or the elemental powers of the four quarters,
or the four watchtowers, or the archangels, or whatever. The well
known Lesser Ritual of the Pentagram [2] can be used as the basis
for a Kabbalistic circle-opening. The precise method
isn't so
important as practicing it until you can do it in your sleep, and
it should be carried out with the same attitude as a soldier
on
formal guard duty outside a public building. The kind of ritual I
am describing is formal; much of its effectiveness derives from a
clinical precision. For example, I never at anytime turn or move
in an anti-clockwise direction within the circle. When I work
in
a group one of the most important
officers is the sword-
bearing sentinel, responsible for procedure and discipline within
the circle. When you create a circle you
are establishing a
perimeter under the watchful "eyes" of whatever guardians
you
have requested to keep an eye on things, and a martial
attitude
and sense of discipline
and precision creates the
right psychological mood. When working
in a group it is
helpful if the person opening the circle announces "the circle is
now open" because there should be no doubt among those
present
about whether the opening has been completed to the satisfaction
of the person carrying it out, and the sacred space
has been
established.
Step 2: Opening the Gates
The Gates in question are the boundary
between normal and
magical consciousness. Just as opening the Circle
limits the
ritual in space, so opening the Gates limits the ritual in time.
Not everyone opens the Gates as a separate activity; opening
a
Circle can be considered a de-facto opening of Gates, but
there
are good reasons for keeping the
two activities separate.
Firstly, it is convenient to be able to open a Circle
without
going into magical consciousness; despite what I said about
not
bringing normal consciousness into the Circle, rules are made
to
be broken, and there are times when something
unpleasant and
unwanted intrudes on normal consciousness, and a Circle
can be
used to keep it out - think of pulling blankets over your head at
night. Secondly, opening the Gates as a separate activity
means
they can be tailored to the
specific type of magical
consciousness you are trying to enter. Thirdly, just
as bank
vaults and ICBMs have two keys, so it is prudent
to make the
entry into magical consciousness something you are not likely
to
do on a whim, and the more distinct steps there are,
the more
conscious effort is required. Lastly - and it is
an important
point - opening the Circle is best done with a martial attitude,
and it is useful to have a breathing space to switch out of that
mood and into the mood needed for the invocation.
Opening the
Gates provides an opportunity to make that switch.
There are many ways to open the Gates,
and many Gates you
could open. I imagine the gates in front of me, and I physically
open them, reaching out with both arms. I visualise
different
gates for different sephiroth, and sometimes different gates
for
the same sephira.
Step 3: Invocation to the Powers
The invocation to the Powers is normally an
excuse for some
of the most leaden, pompous, grandiose and turgid prose
ever written or recited. Tutorial books on magic are full of this
stuff. If you are invoking Saturn during a waxing moon you might
be justified in going on like Brezhnev addressing the Praesidium
of the Soviet Communist Party, but as in every other aspect
of
magic, the trick isn't what you do, but how
you do it, and
interminable invocations aren't the answer. On a practical level,
reading a lengthy invocation from a sheet
of paper in dim
candlelight will require so much conscious effort that it is hard
to "let go", so try to keep things simple and to the point,
so
that you can do an invocation without having to think about
it
too much, and that will leave room for
the more important
"consciousness changing" aspect of the invocation. When
I do
sephirothic work I use the sephirothic God,
Archangel, Angel
Order and sephira names as part of my invocation, and put all
my
effort into the intonation of the name rather than
memorising
lengthy invocations.
An invocation is like a ticket for a train:
if you can't
find the train there isn't much point in having
the ticket.
Opening the Gates gets you to
the doorstep of magical
consciousness, but it is the invocation which gets you onto
the
train and propels you to the right
place, and that isn't
something which "just happens" unless you have a natural aptitude
for the aspect of consciousness you are invoking. It does happen
that way however; people tend to begin their magical work
with
those areas of consciousness where they feel most at
home, so
they may well have some initial success. Violent, evil people
do
violent and evil conjurations; loving people invoke love -
most
people begin their magical work with "a free ticket",
but in
general invoking takes practice, and the power of the invocation
comes from practice, not from deathless prose.
I can't give
a prescription for entering magical
consciousness. Well devised rituals, practised often, have a
way
of shifting consciousness which is surprising and unexpected.
I
don't know why this happens; it just does. I suspect the peculiar
character of ritual, the way it involves every sense,
occupies
mind and body at the same time,
its numinous and exotic
symbolism, the intensity of preparation and execution,
involve
dormant parts of the mind, or at least engage the normal parts in
an unusual way. Using ritual to
cause marked shifts in
consciousness is not difficult; getting the results you want, and
avoiding unexpected and undesired side-effects is harder.
Ritual is not a rational procedure. The symbolism of
magic is
intuitive and bubbles out of a very deep well; the whole process
of ritual effectively bypasses the rational mind, so
expecting
the outcome of a ritual to obey the dictates
of reason is
completely irrational. The image of a horse
is appropriate:
anyone can get on the back of a wild mustang, but getting to
the
point where horse and rider go in the same direction at the same
time takes practice. The process of limitation described in these
notes can't influence the natural waywardness of the animal,
but
at least it is a method of ensuring the horse
gets a clear
message.
Step 4: Statement of Intention and Sacrifice
If magical ritual is not to
be regarded as a form of
bizarre entertainment carried out for its own sake, then
there
has to be a reason for doing it - healing, divination,
personal
development, initiation, and the like. If it is healing, then
it
is usually healing for one specific person, and then again, it is
not just healing in general, but healing
for some specific
complaint, within some period of time. The statement of intention
is the culmination of a process of limitation which begins
when
the Circle is opened, and to return to the analogy of the plastic
bag, the statement of intention is like the blade on the scalpel
- the more precise the intention, the more the energy
of the
ritual is applied to a single point.
The observation that rituals work better if
their energy is
focussed by intention is in accord with
our experience in
everyday life: any change, no matter how small or insignificant,
tends to meet with opposition. If you want to change the brand of
coffee in the coffee machine, or if you want to rearrange
the
furniture in the office, someone will object. If
you want to
drive a new road through the countryside, local
people will
object. If you want to raise taxes, everyone objects.
The more
people you involve in a change, the more opposition
you will
encounter, and in magic the same principle holds, because from
a
magical point of view the whole fabric of the universe is held in
place by an act of collective intention involving everything from
God downwards. When you perform a ritual you are setting yourself
up against that collective will to keep most things the way they
are, and your ritual will succeed only if certain
things are
true:
1. you are a being of awesome will (you
have the biggest
steering wheel on the bus).
2. you have allies (lots of people on the bus
want to get to
the same place as you).
3. you limit your intention to minimise
opposition (Taoist
nudging); another analogy is the diamond cutter
who exploits
natural lines of cleavage to split a diamond.
Regardless of which is the case, I will suggest that
precision
and clarity of intention will generally produce better results.
And so to sacrifice. The problem arises
from the perception
that in magic you don't get something for nothing,
and if you
want to bring about change through magic you have to pay for
it
in some way. So far so good. The question is: what can
you give
in return? You can't
legitimately sacrifice anything
which is not yours to give, and so the answer to
the question
"what can I sacrifice" lies in the answer to the question
"what
am I, and what have I got to give?". If you
don't make the
mistake of identifying yourself with your possessions you
will
see that the only sacrifice you can make is yourself,
because
that is all you have to give. Every ritual intention
requires
that you sacrifice some part of yourself, and if you don't
make
the sacrifice willingly then either the ritual will fail, or
the
price will be exacted without your consent.
You don't have to donate pints
of blood or your kidneys.
Each person has a certain
amount of what I will call
"life energy" at their disposal - Casteneda calls it "personal
power" - and you can sacrifice some of that energy to power
the
ritual. What that means in ordinary down-to-earth terms is
that
you promise to do something in return for your intention, and you
link the sacrifice to the intention in such
a way that the
sacrifice focuses energy along the direction of your intention.
For example, my cat was ill and hadn't eaten for three weeks, so,
as a last resort, fearing she would die of starvation, I carried
out a ritual to restore her appetite, and as a sacrifice
I ate
nothing for 24 hours. I used my (very real) hunger to drive
the
intention, and she began eating the following day.
Any sacrifice which hurts enough engages a
very deep impulse
inside us to make the hurt go away, and the magician can use that
impulse to bring about magical change by linking the removal
of
the pain to the accomplishment of the intention. And I don't mean
magical masochism. We are creatures of habit who find comfort and
security by living our lives in a particular way, and any change
to that habit and routine will cause some discomfort
and an
opposing desire to return to the original state, and that desire
can be used. Just as a ritual intends to change the world in some
way, so a sacrifice forces us to change ourselves in some
way,
and that liberates magical energy. If you want to heal
someone,
don't just do a ritual and leave it at that; become involved
in
caring for them in some way, and that active caring will act as a
channel for the healing power you have invoked. If you
want to
use magic to help someone out of a mess,
provide them with
active, material help as well; conversely,
if you can't be
bothered to provide material help, your ritual will be
infected
with that same inertia and apathy - "true will, will out",
and
in many cases our true will is to do nothing at all.
From a magical perspective each one of us
is a magical being
with a vast potential of power, but that is denied to us
by an
innate, fanatical, and unbelievably deep-rooted desire
to keep
the world in a regular orbit serving
our own needs. Self-
sacrifice disturbs this equilibrium and lets out some
of that
energy, and this may be why the egoless devotion
and self-
sacrifice of saints has a reputation for working miracles.
Step 5: The Main Ritual
After invoking the Powers and having
stated the intention
and sacrifice, there would seem to be nothing more to
do, but
most people like to prolong the contact with the Powers to carry
out some kind of symbolic ritual for a period of
time varying
from minutes to days. Ritual as I have described it so
far may
seem like a fairly cut-and-dried exercise, but it isn't;
it is
more of an art than a science, and once the Circle and Gates
are
opened, and the Powers are in attendance, whatever science there
is gives way to the art. Magicians operate in a world where ordinary
things have deep symbolic meanings or correspondences, and
they
use a selection of consecrated implements or "power objects"
in
their work. The magician can use this palette of symbols
in a
ritual to paint of picture which signifies an intention in a non-
verbal, non-rational way, and it is this ability to communicate
an intention through every sense of the body, through every level
of the mind, which gives ritual its power.
Here are a few suggestions:
- each sephira has a corresponding number which
can be used
as the basis for knocks, gestures, chimes,
stamps etc.
- each sephira has a corresponding colour which
can be used
throughout the working area:
altar cloth, candle(s),
banners, flowers, cords etc.
- many occult suppliers make
sephirothic incenses. The
quality is so variable
that it is best to try a few
suppliers and apply common sense.
- each sephira has corresponding
behaviours which can be
used during the central part of the ritual.
- if you are working with several people then
they can take
their roles from the sephira, and wear corresponding
colours
etc. For example,
a sentinel would use Gevuric
correspondences, a scribe would use Hod correspondences.
- each sephira has ritual weapons or
"power objects" which
can be used in a symbolic way.
- every sephira
has a wide range of individual
correspondences which can be used on specific
occasions e.g.
a ritual of romantic love
in Netzach might use a rose
incense, roses, a copper love
cup, wine, a poem or song
dedicated to Venus, whatever gets you going...
Step 6: Dismissal of Powers
Once the ritual is complete
the Powers are thanked and
dismissed. This begins the withdrawal of consciousness
back to
its pre-ritual state.
Step 7: Close Gates/Close Circle
The final steps are closing the Gates (thus
sealing off the
altered state of consciousness) and closing the
Circle (thus
returning to the everyday world). The Circle should not be closed
if there is a suspicion that the withdrawal from the
altered
state has not been completed. It is sensible to carry out
a sanity check between closing the Gates and closing the Circle.
It sometimes happens that although the magician goes through
the
steps of closing down, the attention is not engaged,
and the
magician remains in the altered state. This is not a good
idea.
The energy of that state will continue to manifest
in every
intention of everyday life, and all sorts of unplanned (and often
unusual) things will start to happen. A related problem (and
it
is not rare) is that every magician will find sooner or later
an
altered state which compensates for some of
their perceived
inadequacies (in the way that some people like to get drunk
at
parties), and they will not want to let go of it because it makes
them feel good, so they come out of the ritual in
an altered
state without realising they have failed to close down correctly.
This is sometimes called obsession, and it is a difficulty
of
magical work. Closing down correctly is important if you
don't
want to end up like a badly cracked pot. If you don't feel happy
that the Powers have been completely dismissed and
the Gates
closed correctly, go back and repeat the steps again.
Using the Sephiroth in Ritual
-----------------------------
The sephiroth can be invoked during a
ritual singly or in
combination. This provides a vast palette of correspondences
and
symbols to work with, and one of the most difficult aspects
of
planning this kind of ritual is deciding which sephiroth are
the
key to the problem. It is an axiom of Kabbalistic
magic that
every sephira is involved somewhere in every problem, and it
is
sometimes difficult to avoid the conclusion
that all ten
sephiroth should be invoked; there is nothing wrong with
doing
this, but if one goes the whole hog with colours, candles
etc.,
then the temple begins to look like an explosion
in a paint
factory, and this tends to dilute the focus of rituals
if done
regularly.
A ritual would involve typically one to three
sephiroth. An
important consideration is balance: when invoking sephiroth
on
either of the side pillars of the Tree
one is creating or
correcting in imbalance, and it is worthwhile to
consider the
balancing sephira. For example, when using Gevurah destructively,
what fills the vacuum left behind? When using Chesed creatively,
what gives way for the new? The same principle applies
to the
pairs of Hod/Netzach and Binah/Chokmah.
The Tree is naturally arranged in many triads,
or groups of
three sephiroth, and after one has gained an understanding
of
individual sephira it is natural to go on to
investigate the
triads. From the point of view of balance there is a great
deal
to be said for initiation into triads of sephiroth rather
than
individual sephira. The sephiroth are interconnected by
paths,
and again, the paths can be investigated by invoking
pairs of
sephiroth. This further extends the palette of correspondences
and relationships, and over time the Tree becomes a living
tool
which can be used to analyse situations in
great depth and
detail. Unless one works closely with a group of people
over a
period of time the Tree must remain largely a personal symbol and
vocabulary, but if one *does* work closely with other people
it
becomes a shared vocabulary of great expressive and
executive
power - ideas which would otherwise be inexpressible
can be
translated directly and fairly precisely into shared action
via
ritual magic.
Clues as to when to invoke a given sephira
can found in the
correspondences, but for the sake of example I have
given an
indication in a list below:
The sephira Malkuth is useful for the following magical work:
- where you want to increase the stability
of a situation.
Particularly useful when everything is in
a turmoil and you
want to slow things down.
- when you want to earth unwanted or unwelcome
energy. Also
useful for shielding and warding (think of
a castle).
- when working with the four elements in the physical world.
- when you want an intention to materialise
in the physical
world; when it is
essential that an intention "really
happens". e.g. it is
one thing to write a book, it is
another thing to get it printed, published,
and read.
- when invoking Gaia, Mother Earth.
The sephira Yesod is useful for the following magical work:
- for divination and scrying;
to increase psychism -
telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition.
- when changing the appearance of something,
for works of
transformation, for shape
changing (e.g. marketing and
advertising!)
- when trying to manipulate the foundation of
something, the
form behind the appearance.
- for works concerning the sexual urge,
the sexual organs,
fornication, instinctive behaviours, atavism.
- for intentions involving images
of reality - painting,
photographs, cinema, television etc.
- for lucid dreaming, astral projection.
The sephira Hod is useful for the following magical work:
- for healing and medicine (Raphael is the healer of God).
- when dealing with spoken or written communication.
- the media, particularly newspapers and radio.
- propaganda, lying, misinformation.
- teaching and learning.
- philosophy, metaphysics,
the sciences as intellectual
systems divorced from experiment.
- computers and information technology.
- the nervous system.
- protocol, ceremony and ritual.
- the written law, accounting.
The sephira Netzach is useful for the following magical work:
- when working with the emotions.
- the endocrine system.
- when nurturing or caring for someone or something.
Charity
and unselfishness, empathy.
- for works involving pleasure,
luxury, romantic love,
friendships etc. (e.g. parties).
- anything to do with aesthetics
and taste: decor, art,
cinema, dress, fashion, literature,
drama, poetry, gardens,
song, dance etc.
The sephira Tiphereth is useful for the following magical work:
- work involving integrity, wholeness and balance.
- work involving the Self (the
Jungian archetype), self-
importance, self-sacrifice, devotion, compassion.
- overall health and well-being.
- communion with your Holy Guardian Angel.
- the union of the microcosm and the macrocosm.
The sephira Gevurah is useful for the following magical work:
- active defense.
- destruction.
- severance.
- justice and lawful retribution.
The sephira Chesed is useful for the following magical work:
- growth and expansion.
- vision, leadership and
authority (e.g. in business
management, in politics).
- inspiration and creativity.
The sephiroth Gevurah and Chesed are best considered as a
pair,
since any work concerning one usually requires consideration
of
the other. For example, if you want something to grow and expand
(Chesed), will it grow at the
expense of something else
(Gevurah)?
The supernal sephiroth of Binah, Chokmah
and Kether can be
invoked, but I would not recommend doing so
until you have
considerable experience of invoking the other sephiroth - either
nothing will happen, or the scope of the results may go
beyond
your intention.
Other Practical Work
--------------------
The sephirothic ritual technique described
can be used to
design an enormous variety of rituals quickly and easily, as
the
basic format can remain the same. A ritual involving Yesod should
have an utterly different feel and effect from a ritual involving
Tiphereth, and yet the basic construction of the two rituals
can
be identical. Because a ritual can be quickly carried out
(not
necessarily easily, but certainly quickly), sephirothic
ritual
can be used to add clout to
other magical and mystical
techniques, such as meditation, divination, scrying, oath-making,
prayer, concentration and visualisation, mediumship and
so on.
In Conclusion
-------------
I wanted to provide in these notes
approximately the same
information as I was given when I began to study Kabbalah.
The
person who gave me this information said "You don't need to read
lots of books, just go off and do it." It was sound advice.
If
you want to learn how to build bridges, read books about building
bridges, but if you want to learn about yourself, just go off and
do it. "Doing It" consists of invoking the sephiroth and
asking
to be instructed. It consists of jumping in with both feet
when
something new comes along. It involves trusting your
intuition
and conscience. It requires you to question everything.
It also
requires countless meditations, concentration and visualisation
exercises, self-examination, rituals, dream-recording,
prayer,
whatever you want, but there is no prescription for
this, and
each person tends to find their own happy medium. As a
chronic
reader I found the advice about not reading books on magic
and
Kabbalah hard to take, but I took it, and for something like
ten
years I lost the habit completely. I'm very glad I did.
There is almost enough information in these
notes to go off
and "just do it". The information I have withheld I have done
so
deliberately, as it consists of little things which any
person
with a small amount of common sense, initiative and
trust in
themselves can work out. You don't need to learn other
peoples'
rituals: trust your own imagination and
creativity, however
insufficient they might seem, and write your own.
You need to
trust yourself, and that is
why I haven't provided a
detailed prescription. If you think Kabbalah
should be more
complicated, then make it more complicated. If you think
it is
essential to learn about the four worlds, or the parts
of the
soul, or the beard of Arik Anpin or whatever, then learn
about
them, but I don't think it is essential to begin with, and there
are better and quicker ways of learning than running
off and
buying the "Zohar". If you trust in yourself, you will learn what
you need to know at the rate at which you can learn it. Kabbalah
is only a map (but for the record I believe it is an accurate and
useful map), and the entrance to the territory lies within you.
In my experience the sephirothic magical rituals
are the key
to everything else. If you are afraid of ritual that
is fine;
lots of people are. If you are afraid of ritual but you
invoke
the Powers with the attitude and respect that is their due,
and
you are not afraid to give freely for what you get, then you will
get a great deal, and almost certainly a great deal more than you
would have expected.
Colin Low 1992
[1] Epstein, Perle, "Kabbalah", Shambhala, 1978
[2] Regardie, Israel, "The Complete Golden Dawn System of Magic",
Falcon Press, 1984