Saturday, 24 September 2016

Library Generation Tables - Angelological


Angelological

Angelologists are single-minded and concerned only with the messengers of God - Fallen or otherwise. Anything else is of no, or minor, interest. Mollifying their one-eyedness, is the fact that they will read anything from any culture – as long as it pertains to angels, angel-like beings, or their antithesis. Thus, the Christian Bible, the Koran and the Talmud should all figure prominently on their bookshelves.

Angelologists who walk in the footsteps of that other ‘angel whisperer’ John Dee, may feel inclined to mix their lists of divine messengers with books on divination and astrology. The Dee link is also a good one for adding some Mythos elements, as he was known to have translated the Necronomicon in his day.

Note that some of the texts in this table appeared in a previous post and their particulars are not presented below; details about those works can be found in that earlier document.

01-09%
The Apocrypha
10-18%
Beatus Methodivo (1st Century AD)
19-27%
Book of the Sacred Magic of Abra-Melin (1458)
28-36%
Collin de Plancy’s “Dictionnaire Infernale” (1818)
37-45%
De Mirabili Potestate, Artis et Naturae
46-54%
The Gnostic Gospels (2nd-4th Century AD)
55-64%
The Golden Dawn (1936)
65-72%
The Key of Solomon (G)
73-81%
The Sixth & Seventh Books of Moses (G)
82-90%
Wonders of the Invisible World (1693)
91-00%
The Zohar (1200s)

The Apocrypha

The Biblical Apocrypha (from the Greek meaning “hidden”) are a number of books written by Biblical figures, or about Biblical matters, but which are not considered as part of the Biblical canon. For various reasons – mainly due to heterodoxy or the statement of non-orthodox Christian matters of faith – they were excluded from the main text and were occasionally forbidden to be presented to the faithful. The various strands of Christianity have differing approaches to the dissemination of this material: some Bibles have the Apocrypha presented between the Old and the New Testaments, or added as a supplementary index in the back; other faiths prefer the Apocrypha to be printed as a separate volume, distinct from the Bible itself.

Some branches of Christianity feel that the Apocrypha is instructional about life matters and manners, although not to be used for the establishment of doctrine. Some books – 3 Esdras, 4 Esdras and the Prayer of Manasseh – are considered canon by the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches, but are considered non-canonical by the Catholic Church and are therefore not presented in Catholic compilations of the Apocrypha. The Apocrypha is of great interest to angelologists because within its pages are recorded many more encounters with angels than in the canon text of the Bible, particularly in the Book of Tobit.


Beatus Methodivo

This work is more generally known as the Bea Methodius, which is a contraction of its full name, Beatus Methodivo. It was also misprinted as “Bermechobus” at one point, and that name appears occasionally too. The authorship is unclear and is usually attributed to either St. Methodius of Olympus (martyred in 311 AD), or the St. Methodius who was patriarch of Constantinople and who died in 846 AD. There is, however, nothing specific in the work to link it to either of these figures. In essence, this work is a vision of the Apocalypse, not unlike the Revelation of St. John and outlines the fate of the world.

The book details how Seth journeyed to the east to find a new country in which to settle and tells of how the children of Cain went to India and established a culture dominated by black magic. It goes on to reveal how the Ishmaelites were the real tribes who overthrew the Roman Empire. It speaks of a powerful Northern people who will one day be conquered by the Antichrist, or his machinations, and how afterwards, a worldwide kingdom under a ruler of French descent will institute a reign of peace and justice.


The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abra-Melin

The Book of Abramelin (to give it its more succinct title) reveals how Abraham of Worms – a German Jew who is presumed to have lived from around 1362 to 1458 – encountered the Egyptian mage Abra-Melin and was indoctrinated into his system of magic. The work is written as a series of letters from Abraham to his son Lamech, revealing how he travelled to the town of Arachi in Egypt and the things he encountered along the way before meeting Abra-Melin and becoming his pupil.

The work is largely kabbalistic and much of the information contained within it is an extended ritual for contacting one’s “guardian angel” an element of which involves summoning and binding several malevolent entities including Satan and Lucifer. The process is supposed to take eighteen months, however Crowley – who tried to undertake the procedure several times before dropping it – claims to have accomplished the task in only six (of course!). Other rituals involve the creating of magical wands and other ritual objects, recipes for “Abramelin Oil” and “Abramelin Incense” – both of which are mentioned (but not by those names) in the Book of Exodus – and a great many talismanic squares, similar to the well-known Sator Square, which produce a wide range of effects, from turning the user invisible to allowing them to walk underwater without the need to breathe.

The book purports to have been written in 1458 but the earliest versions of the book, all in German, are much more recent than this: two manuscript copies dating from around 1608 are in Wolfenbüttel and two other manuscript copies reside in Dresden and are dated 1700 and 1750 respectively. The first printed copy, also in German, was produced by Peter Hammer in Cologne in 1725. A partial copy in Hebrew is kept in the Bodleian Library in Oxford and a manuscript version in French was once housed in the Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal in Paris: this copy has been stolen but it still exists on microfiche.

All the German copies are composed of four books: the autobiographical account of Abraham’s journey to Egypt; a book of kabbalistic teaching; and two books containing the magical procedures outlined by Abra-Melin. The French and Hebrew versions have been shown to have been translated from the German originals: the Hebrew version only covers the first book of the work, without reference to any of the other books, while the French version – likely translated in the 18th Century - only covers the first three books. The English version – translated by Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers (1854-1918) of the Golden Dawn, used the French version and it is riddled with errors and incomplete sections, notably the duration of the “guardian angel” procedure which is given as eighteen months in all other versions but only six months in the English. Can we see the meddling hand of Crowley here?

German esoteric scholar George Dehn produced a new version of the work, published by Editions Araki in 2001. It combines all the information across all sources, correcting Mathers’s errors along the way. It was translated and re-published in English by American publisher Nicholas Hays in 2006.


Collin de Plancy’s Dictionnaire Infernal

"To deny that there are sorrows and rewards after death is to deny the existence of God; since God exists, it must be necessarily so. But only God could know the punishments meted out to the guilty, or the place that holds them. All the catalogues made herebefore are only the fruit of a more or less disordered imagination. Theologians should leave to the poets the depiction of Hell, and not themselves seek to frighten minds with hideous paintings and appalling books"
-Collin de Plancy, Dictionnaire Infernal

Jacques Auguste Simon Collin de Plancy (1793-1887) was a writer, printer and publisher who lived and worked in Plancy-l'Abbaye and Paris. He was also an occultist and demonologist and compiled his best-known work – the “Infernal Dictionary” – over the course of his life, publishing several editions. He was greatly inspired by Voltaire, an avowed free-thinker and scornful of both religion and superstition. Initially, the Dictionnaire Infernal was a means of poking fun at the ludicrous extremes of Catholic belief; however, as de Plancy aged, he converted to Catholicism himself and became ever more confirmed in this belief, something which confounded his initial fans.

First published in 1818, the Dictionnaire as a listing of the various demonic rulers of Hell, spoofing other such catalogues like the Pseudomonarchia Daemonum and the Lesser Key of Solomon. The 1863 re-print was decorated with its famous engravings of the demons and became an instant success; many esoteric books published later in England ‘borrowed’ these images without consent. After this, de Plancy began to invert the intent of his work and it became a testament of his faith – which now incorporated a belief in demons – rather than an exercise in intellectual criticism. Towards the end of his days he collaborated with a French priest to write a Church-sanctioned encyclopaedia of occult sciences.

The Dictionnaire Infernal was first released in 1818 under de Plancy’s imprint and went through six editions before 1863, becoming a two-volume book along the way (partnered with de Plancy’s Dictionnaire Sciences Occultes et des Idée'es Superstitieuses along the way). While the first edition is much sought-after, the illustrated 1863 edition is the most valued by collectors.


Gnostic Gospels

In 1945, two Egyptian farmers unearthed a cache of documents buried inside an earthenware jar in the Nag Hammadi district. They were centuries old and, upon inspection, turned out to be codices on the teachings of Jesus, written between the 2nd and 4th Centuries AD. These documents – the Nag Hammadi Library – were added to over time by subsequent finds, or earlier finds of a similar nature, and became the core of what are now known as the Gnostic Gospels.

The works vary widely in content and theme and scholarship is divided as to exact dates and attributions. The umbrella term “Gnostic” represents a common theme in the various books which ascribes the understanding of God and one’s self with an inner search, without the intervention of a guiding church structure. As such, the Gnostic Gospels are listed as part of the Christian Apocrypha. Many scholar believe that the Gospels represent an intermediate state of Christian thought, blending Western and Eastern philosophies.

Some of the gospels – such as the Gospel of Thomas – reflect elements of Gnosticism, while others – such as the Gospel of Judas or the Gospel of the Lord are borderline, or outright, heretical. Others reveal a wide sampling of the current philosophies of the period, such as the Gospel of Truth or the Trimorphic Protennoia. Other finds have revealed newer or more complete versions of the various texts but some of the gospels – like the Gospel of Mary, discovered in 1896 – remain extant in only one copy.

Modern day fictional authors – notably Dan Brown – have generated a renewal of interest in these works.


The Key of Solomon

Like Enoch and Moses before him, Solomon became the focus for a unique tradition of grimoire-writing, stemming from the fact that, when given the option by God to have anything that he desired, he asked for all the wisdom of the world. To many philosophically-minded commentators in later ages, this naturally meant all the dark and mystical wisdom of the world as well. Legend goes on to say that Solomon was tempted by the Queen of Sheba into the idolatrous worship of Moloch and Baal in later years, so the magical traditions of these beliefs were generally supposed to be part of his magical arsenal as well.

According to Biblical, apocryphal and legendary sources, Solomon was capable of great feats of magic, including the trapping of demonic spirits in order that they do his bidding. He was said to have been able to ensnare all of the demons of creation inside a bottle which was stoppered with a magical Seal of Solomon. These demons were then able to build, at Solomon’s command, the Temple in Jerusalem – a massive stone edifice – in only nine days. Naturally, many necromancers in later times eagerly sought this powerful sigil.

As the sources of magic were later believed to stem from Hebraic roots, largely influenced by commentaries on the Kabbalah arising in southern Spain, books of magic attributed to Solomon began to have greater currency on the mystical market. Most notably in Europe, the Clavicule of Solomon was a prime source for grimoire manufacture. The Clavicula Salomonis, or Key of Solomon, circulated widely, attributed to Solomon but was most likely written in Italy during the 14th or 15th Centuries. It is a typical magic text of those times and inspired many other European compilations of magic, the best known of which was the 17th Century Clavicula Salomonis Regis, better known as the Lesser Key of Solomon, or the Lemegeton.


The Sixth and Seventh Book of Moses

“...I admitted privately to some curiosity about the object of my host’s preoccupation, insofar as he had been given to reading the Seventh Book of Moses, which is a kind of Bible for the supposed hexes, since it purported to offer all manner of spells, incantations, and charms to those readers who were gullible enough to believe in them.”
-August Derleth, “Wentworth’s Day”

What a mess. This is what happens when three different religions with (at least) three different languages and styles of writing use the same material across several different cultures to tell the same story and impart spiritual meaning to an identical series of events. The essence of the Moses legend is that he was the abandoned scion of an oppressed people who, having grown up amongst the oppressors, was able to lead them to freedom and into a covenanted lifestyle in a new land with a beneficent deity. In order to do this, he had to draw upon a magical repertoire which gave him the ability to defeat those in opposition to him. Historically, there is little evidence to support the notion that Moses existed at all; theologically, there is a wealth of writing - contributions from Jewish, Islamic and Christian writers - which delves into the source and nature of the mystical powers of Moses and those of his brother Aaron.

The predominant way of thinking regarding Moses was that he must have been given access to magical powers in order to call down the plagues upon Egypt, thus convincing Pharaoh to let his people go. In fact, most of the plagues are actually called down by Aaron, who is instructed by Moses accordingly. This suggested that whatever lore to which Moses was privy, he could share it with others. A theory emerged that Moses had inherited mystical knowledge from the patriarch Enoch, who had written down his magical procedures and passed them along to Moses via Noah; this lore, the Books of Enoch  possibly allowed for the summoning of plagues, the parting of the Red Sea, the succouring of those lost in the Wilderness and the curing of the faithful.

Later in the narrative, Moses receives the Ten Commandments from God upon Mount Sinai. There are various interpretations as to what this incident actually entails, suffice it to say that, according to Jewish tradition, it is believed that God gave Moses a work called The Book of the Covenant – what would later become the Talmud - or what Christians refer to as the Pentateuch, comprising the first five books of the Bible. Jews believe that the stone tablets accompanying this gift are simply a kind of elaborate ‘receipt’ of the transaction between God and Moses; Christians and Islamics place much greater emphasis on the tablets than on the books. These five books were thought to contain the secrets of the magic that Moses and Aaron used to escape Egypt; however, patently, as every Jewish male over a certain age can tell you, they do not. A belief arose that there were more books than were generally known about, circulating amongst a select group of cognoscenti and possibly kept hidden in the magical Ark of the Covenant.

The writers of Moses’ exploits in the earliest days were keen to emphasise that Moses’ magical powers were different from those of the Egyptians, who were seen at the time to be great and powerful sorcerers. Moses’ power came from God; in other words, a purer, cleaner source than the magic of the Egyptians which – speculation suggested – was based on murky, necromantic thinking. Later writers in the mediaeval period inverted this thinking, emphasising the fact that Moses had been raised as an Egyptian and therefore would have had access to their magical arsenal. Medieval thinkers re-invented Moses as a magical wunderkind and books of magic attributed to him swiftly appeared: a scroll, dating from the Second Century AD, was discovered in the Nineteenth Century discussing Moses’ puissance as a magician and notes the following texts attributed to him:

The Archangelical Teaching of Moses;
The Eighth Book of Moses;
The Key of Moses;
The Secret Moon Book of Moses; and
The Tenth & Hidden Book of Moses.

By the time of the later Roman Empire, the roots of magical power had removed from the Egyptian to the Jewish peoples and many Roman emperors had Jewish slaves in their households for the purposes of casting divinatory spells or countering evil influences. In the Dark Ages, Islamic and Jewish mystical lore filtered into Europe via Spain taking this notion of Mosaic writings with them: by the Eleventh Century, copies of a grubby little grimoire called the Harba de-Mosha (“The Sword of Moses”) were circulating there, with spells allowing the caster to walk on water rubbing along with the usual hexes and wards for avoiding the Evil Eye. In 1725 in Germany, a work entitled The Sixth and Seventh Book of Moses appeared and, despite the fact that the author is unlikely to have known about the posited Eighth Book, it became the most influential magical work to appear in modern times.

Probably written in the 18th or 19th Century, the Sixth and Seventh Book of Moses contains a wide array of incantations and other spells designed to duplicate the miracles outlined in Exodus. It contains lists of Talmudic magical names and a wide selection of seals useful in controlling the weather, contacting the dead or Biblical figures among other things. The book was circulated through Germany in the 18th Century and an 1849 printing made its way to America via German settlers in that country. From there it passed into the magical traditions of Black America.

Moses’ African roots appealed strongly to the black communities in America’s southern states and to residents of the large cities such as New York and Philadelphia. Small presses churned out cheap mail order copies of the Sixth and Seventh Book of Moses and distributed them all along the Eastern seaboard of the US and as far away as Haiti and West Africa. The influence of the work is strongly felt among the folk traditions of Hoodoo and Voodoo, the Rastafari religion, and it even influenced the workings of the modern Spiritualist movement.


Wonders of the Invisible World

“The essential Saltes of Animals may be so prepared and preserved, that an ingenious Man may have the whole Ark of Noah in his own Studie, and raise the fine Shape of an Animal out of its Ashes at his Pleasure; and by the lyke Method from the essential Saltes of humane Dust, a Philosopher may, without any criminal Necromancy, call up the Shape of any dead Ancestour from the Dust whereinto his Bodie has been incinerated.”
-Cotton Mathers, Magnalia Christi Americana, 1702.

Cotton Mather lived at the time of the Salem Witch Trials and had a huge impact on those deplorable events. He was pastor at Boston’s North Church and had some very strong and very peculiar ideas about America and the things which lived there: specifically, he felt it was a land infested with “devils”, all of which were trying to tear the Puritan bulkhead that he and his folk were trying to establish. Although he was not a witness to the events that happened in Salem, he was instrumental in causing the hallucinations and visions of those involved to be taken on board by the court as “evidence”. An earlier book which he had written - Memorable Providences Relating to Witchcraft and Possessions – revealed his views that America had been the undisturbed realm of Satan prior to the puritan’s landing and fanned the flames of the witch-hunting frenzy that culminated in the Salem debacle.

Wonders of the Invisible World – written in 1693 - discusses the Salem trials and many other cases of witchcraft and possession which Mathers took a direct hand in prosecuting. It discusses the means of freeing one’s self from the powers of the Devil (mainly through prayer and fasting) and the means of determining if an ecstatic vision derives from God or from Hell. It sifts through the evidence presented at the Salem trials and vigorously defends the verdicts reached at those hearings. Ironically, in the aftermath of the trials, those involved deeply regretted their actions, and felt that Mathers’ interference was a direct catalyst in the matter getting out of hand. In fact, a later book was published – More Wonders of the Invisible World – which critically discusses the hysterical meddling of Mathers and other notable figures of the colony during the events.

Mathers survived the backlash and went on to further his career as a religious leader in Massachusetts. He died and in 1728 and was buried in Copps Hill Burial Ground in Boston. Given the ghoulish activity Lovecraft identified as taking place in that locale, it’s probably not worth anyone’s time going to visit him there...


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