Readers, please enjoy this guest blog post by Aaron Leitch, author of several books, including Secrets of the Magickal Grimoires, The Angelical Language Volume I and Volume II, and Essential Enochian Grimoire.
Greetings, Angelophiles!
Here’s another one from the Solomonic FB Group files! Somewhat recently, occult scoundrel and esoteric hooligan Nick Farrell posted the following comment to a thread about the Holy Guardian Angel (or “HGA”):
“I think the HGA is a big dumbed down modern con-trick. Sure Abramerlin featured him, but it was more of a gimmick, It was a pick part of Crowely’s ideas and of course Crowley was right about everything especially when it comes down to livestock. Now you get everyone asking you about HGA as if it is a vital thing… or worse your divine self (it really isn’t). I know… not a popular thought but there you are.”
Not a popular thought indeed! It was hardly just Crowley behind the HGA push in the Western Mystery Tradition. Israel Regardie picked up that flag and flew it in his work, and from those guys it was picked up bywell pretty much everyone else. (Except the Neopagansbut we’ll get back to that in a bit.) Especially among the Golden Dawn and Thelema crowds, the concept of achieving “Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel” became paramount. It was billed as the highest achievement of the adept, the “thing” toward which we should all be working. Without it can nothing else be accomplished! It is our Western version of Enlightenment.
That’s a very lofty philosophy, and I can’t blame those early Golden Dawners (yes, including Crowley) for sensing something vastly important at the heart of the Abramelin Rite. I certainly did! The Holy Guardian Angel is not described as a Cherub or Seraph or as coming from any of the known choirs of angels. I believe there is a Gnostic (-influenced!) core at the heart of the Book of Abramelin, and that its intent is to contact an entity from a much higher realm. This realm was called the Plermoa (fullness) by the ancient Gnostics, and it represented the perfection of the Godhead before the creation of the Heavens and the Earth. It was an “Eighth Heaven,” if you will, existing above and beyond the usual seven planetary firmaments. And the beings who populated itsuch as the Logos, Sophia, Spiritus Sanctus, and numberless super-archangelic beingswere called Aeons instead of mere “messengers.”
Also according to Gnostic philosophy, this Pleroma was the true origin of the Human Soul. The job of every Gnostic was to awaken from the slumber of the senses and subservience to the harsh laws of the archonic spiritual rulers of Matter and Time. Once awake, it was necessary to seek an ascetic and initiatory path back home againto cease the endless cycle of reincarnation into a world of suffering. (Did I mention some of these ancient Gnostics lived right next door to India?) Gnostic religion was quick to adopt the story of Jesusthey even wrote one of the four Gospels, the Book of Johnbecause his message had been much the same: “Put down your worldly things, take up your Cross, and follow me [back Home].”
A bunch of Victorian masons couldn’t have asked for a more sublime magickal operation than the Abramelin ritual. It has no worldly focus; in fact, it is just the opposite: intended to summon a pure being from the highest divine realm who possesses only the overriding purpose to break you free of the Wheel of Karma and guide you back Home again. Even A.E. Waite couldn’t find a problem with that concept! At least, so long as you casually ignore all the goetia at the end of the Book of Abramelin, oh and all the conjure spells in the middle.. but that’s ok because most folks usually do. Even where practical magick is unavoidable, you should now have infallible guidance from above on what you should or shouldn’t do.
Crowley went so far as to try the ritual, though he didn’t complete it. (He would later “complete” it under utterly ridiculous circumstancesbut, hey, at least he was in the desert at the time!) Regardless of whether or not one believes he was successful, he did meet an entity named Aiwass who went on to help him create and establish the Thelemic system. Is it any wonder, then, that the HGA concept would be central to such a tradition? Regardie and the modern Golden Dawn essentially inherited their view of the HGA’s importance from there.
But now we run into a snag. As wonderful and transcendent as the HGA may be, we don’t actually find him everywhere, do we? For all the influence the Golden Dawn and Thelema had on the shape of modern Neopaganism, the HGA didn’t make the trip from one to the other. Wicca describes a Goddess and God, with individual groups or practitioners focusing upon patron deities who represent Them. The original Golden Dawnand this one may shock youdidn’t mention him at all. And you’re not going to find him in any of the ATRs, nor in any form of indigenous witchcraft or conjure around the world. And (guess what?), all of them follow their traditions and get results without the HGA.
So has the concept of the HGA been overblown in the Western Mysteries? You bet it has! Nothing changes what the HGA represents, and if that’s the kind of thing you’re into then it’s absolutely a way to go. Without a doubt, if you were to perform the Rite successfully and have your Guardian Angel at your side (and in your head) for life, you would consider it the most important thing you had ever done. You would rightly attribute all your success to it. I certainly do.
Yet, at the same time, it is in no way what the modern Western Mystery Tradition has made it out to be. It is not the equivalent to Enlightenment. “Knowledge and Conversation” is not some alien and out-of-reach state to be achieved, just maybe!, by only the highest ranking and most experienced adepts. In fact, the Book of Abramelin is intended for beginnerswritten by Abraham of Worms for his second-oldest son who had not inherited the secrets of the Qabalah. If you are called to the HGA path, then you need to start with Abramelin, not end with it!
So we must (grudgingly) admit Nick Farrell has a point. The HGA concept has indeed been exploited for many years by charlatansnone of whom have actually performed Abramelin, mind you!who wish to elevate themselves to some special place in the social pecking order. “I am special because I have met and spoken with my HGA.” It’s not very different than the old days, when everyone had “contacts” in the spirit world. And of course: “My contact is bigger and badder than yours, if you really have one at all, which I doubt.” There truly is nothing new under the Moon, is there?
And so we are seeing a re-evaluation of the Holy Guardian Angel in the Western Mysteries today. Why, Nick was able to post that snarky comment about the HGA right out in public, where everyone could see, and got no blow-back from it. Aspirants are learning that Abramelin represents one path that can be chosen, but they are not wrong for going in a different direction. People can and do use magick all the time without a Holy Guardian Angel.
Except now we’ve hit another snag, I’m afraid….You see, while it is true the HGAby that namedoesn’t appear anywhere outside of the Book of Abramelin, the concept behind the Guardian Angel actually pops up everywhere. In many traditions, these guardians are called “head spirits;” essentially a patron deity who has been bonded to the head of the aspirant. In the ATRs, the aspirant is considered the spiritual child of the deity to which they are bonded, and are henceforth priests or priestesses of that deity’s tradition. In some ancient shamanic cultures, the same bonding was viewed as a marriage ceremonyafter which the human would be under the tutelage and guidance of his or her spiritual spouse. Of course, none of these deities are the “same thing” as the HGAas the former are part of the world while the latter is transcendentyet the process of invoking a higher spiritual being to “permanently possess” a human remains the same.
As I progress in my own path, I find myself writing about these head spirits more and more. They are something of a lost secret in the modern Western occult traditions, and I am discovering how ultimately detrimental it was to our magick and mysticism that we forgot about them. Your head spirit is your teacher and guide, your protector, your co-ritualist, and your power source. (In the sense of a battery, it charges your spells!) Not to mention the fact your head spirit can also be the Gatekeeperanother lost magickal secret. The gatekeeper, or intermediary spirit (usually Mercurial, but sometimes Solar in nature), is the one who knows how to open the way between the physical and spiritual realms, and knows how to carry your invocations to their target. He is the one who brings spirits to you when you perform evocations, and he is the one who makes your spells work after you’ve cast them.
Can you do magick without a head spirit? Sure. But you’re doing it completely alone, banging on the doorways and screaming into the wind in the hopes someone will hear you. Work at it long enough and you might even generate some useful relationships on the other side. That, in fact, seems to be the standard modern Western method. (Even Don Kraig talks about it in his Modern Magickhow solitary practitioners must work hard to establish a link with the angels and spirits, as opposed to initiates of orders who are directly introduced to them.) So, I am not suggesting that your magick can’t or doesn’t work if you don’t have a head spirit. I am, however, suggesting it is much more difficult and even potentially dangerous without one. If you haven’t explored this area, I would highly recommend you look into it.
So, head and intermediary spirits can be/are vitally important to magick. And what Western example do we have of a head spirit? Why, it’s our old overblown friend the Holy Guardian Angel! There are others as well, such as the Nativity Angela lower form of Guardian who is linked to your birth chart. There are also angelic guardians associated with every part of your chart, such as the angel of your Ascendant, your Sun Sign, your Part of Fortune, etc. There are even old Hermetic theurgic practices involving altars, statues, and invocations of Pagan deities that are strongly reminiscent of the older head-spirit initiations. (For the record, Crowley invented one of those that is often conflated with Abramelin, called Liber Samekh.) All of these are more Pagan because they call on deities of the physical world (the stars, planets, elements, etc), while the HGA is supposed to lead you to a higher place. Yet, I say again, in practice they are nearly identical.
And so we are coming ’round full circle. The HGA was once considered the highest achievement of the adeptsomething only the best of the best could hope to touch. But that didn’t exactly pan out, because it simply isn’t true. So we began to re-evaluate our viewpoints on the subjectto de-mystify it, so to speak. Yet, before we could even get that job done, we discovered that the HGA might be important after all. Not in the way we first thought, of course, but in a whole new way. Well, really a very old way that we had forgotten. Now that we know what a head-spirit is, and an intermediary to boot, we can come to appreciate the HGA as something vital to our magick without, perhaps, taking it too far.
And, now that I can freely declare how awesome the HGA is again, I can go right back to thinking Nick Farrell is wrong. All is right with the universe. 😉
Our thanks to Aaron for his guest post! Visit Aaron Leitch’s author page for more information, including articles and his books.
You didn’t explain why the knowledge and conversation with the Holy Guardian Angel was attributed to Malkuth. After all, if it was considered so high why did the GD/Crowley/ Fortune link it to the “lowest” spiritual experience?
Not believing in the HGA is not the same as not believing in the head spirit (I would never say that… just that the HGA is not the head spirit).
It is a label thing. To define the Holy Guardian Angel you can’t look at what Crowley, Regardie or anyone else thought the term meant. You have to look at what the worlds “holy”, “guardian” and “angel” meant when Abramerlin wrote the book.
The angel is a “messenger”, “guardian” means a protective spirit, “holy” implies that it serves a divine funtion. In the 11th century baptism ritual the candidate was told they had been assigned a holy guardian angel and a holy guardian demon. One acts as a tempter and the other keeps you following the Christian way. You are told not to piss off your HGA and not to listen to your demon. (The demon appears to have been dropped by the counter-reformation.)
The more modern (1962) catholic baptism rite prays “Lord, if it please you, to send down your holy angel from heaven to guard these servants of yours in like manner.” Again a spirit which guards and protects Christians which was assigned to them from the outside at their baptism. Not a head spirit otherwise you would not have a spiritual connection until you are baptised.
The HGA’s function is therefore the first point of contact you have with the spiritual world. It is not a super or head spirit. This fits perfectly with the role that Abramerlin assigned to it – to put you on the first rung of Jacob’s ladder and to see the divine influence over your material body and life. The fact the HGA was assigned to you “as a protector and guide to your material life” indicates it is not your Higher Self.
So it is not your “head spirit” it is a guardian spirit which you may or may not accept.
Crowley achieved union with the HGA in the south of England not the desert. Union is attained in Tipharet not Malkuth. The idea is found in Hebrew Kabbalah not just Hermetic Qabalah. The idea of union with the ”Beloved” is fundamental to Hebrew, Sufi and Christian mysticism. The Theme of the Beloved; that the mystic yearns to ”wed” is a constant theme in the poems of Rumi, a medieval Sufi. Rumi amazingly speaks of the Beloved as 1.God, 2.Your true self.3. As your true Lover; comparing your earthly lover to a veil of the true Beloved.
One Whisper of the Beloved
Lovers share a sacred decree –
to seek the Beloved.
They roll head over heels,
rushing toward the Beautiful One
like a torrent of water.
In truth, everyone is a shadow of the Beloved –
Our seeking is His seeking,
Our words are His words.
At times we flow toward the Beloved
like a dancing stream.
At times we are still water
held in His pitcher.
At times we boil in a pot
turning to vapour –
that is the job of the Beloved.
He breathes into my ear
until my soul
takes on His fragrance.
He is the soul of my soul –
How can I escape?
But why would any soul in this world
want to escape from the Beloved?
He will melt your pride
making you thin as a strand of hair,
Yet do not trade, even for both worlds,
One strand of His hair.
We search for Him here and there
while looking right at Him.
Sitting by His side we ask,
“O Beloved, where is the Beloved?”
Enough with such questions! –
Let silence take you to the core of life.
All your talk is worthless
When compared to one whisper
of the Beloved.
Rumi.
When the rose is gone and the garden faded
you will no longer hear the nightingale’s song.
The Beloved is all; the lover just a veil.
The Beloved is living; the lover a dead thing.
If love withholds its strengthening care,
the lover is left like a bird without care,
the lover is left like a bird without wings.
How will I be awake and aware
if the light of the Beloved is absent?
Love wills that this Word be brought forth.
Rumi.
I have heard it all my life,
A voice calling a name I recognized as my own.
Sometimes it comes as a soft-bellied whisper.
Sometimes it holds an edge of urgency.
But always it says: Wake up, my love. You are walking asleep.
There’s no safety in that!
Remember what you are and let this knowing
take you home to the Beloved with every breath.
Hold tenderly who you are and let a deeper knowing
colour the shape of your humanness.
There is no where to go. What you are looking for is right here.
Open the fist clenched in wanting and see what you already hold in your hand.
There is no waiting for something to happen,
no point in the future to get to.
All you have ever longed for is here in this moment, right now.
The Call: Discovering Why You Are Here,
You are wearing yourself out with all this searching.
Come home and rest.
How much longer can you live like this?
Your hungry spirit is gaunt, your heart stumbles. All this trying.
Give it up!
Let yourself be one of the God-mad,
faithful only to the Beauty you are.
Let the Lover pull you to your feet and hold you close,
dancing even when fear urges you to sit this one out.
Remember- there is one word you are here to say with your whole being.
When it finds you, give your life to it. Don’t be tight-lipped and stingy.
Spend yourself completely on the saying.
Be one word in this great love poem we are writing together. Rumi.
Quite Beautiful!
”All your talk is worthless
When compared to one whisper
of the Beloved”.