My first exposure to the
idea of a license to depart was in the first Neo-Pagan magic book I
read. It focused on the idea of invoking deities, and by invoking it
intended something along the lines of assuming god-forms or calling
divine energies into yourself and channeling them to your desired
goal. It made a big deal of dismissing the energy afterward so that
you didn't get overtaken by it. The Golden Dawn would have described
this as developing an impure magnetism, the Catholic church would
likely link this to the idea of Obsession. Essentially a person being
overtaken by the influence of a spiritual force, drawn into its
current to the point of an unhealthy imbalance, but not specifically
possessed by it. Personally as a child, around the age of 12 or 13 I
got to experience this imbalance by way of forgetting this step. This
idea isn't a bad one for that type of magic. Disconnecting from a
force you're working with in a non-initiatic context is healthy.
Opening yourself up to immersion into any random force without reason
is probably not so healthy.
But, this isn't exactly what
the license to depart is about.
When we get into Modern
Ceremonial Magic we start to see a focus on banishing spirits. Now
for some people these spirits aren't spirits but are parts of their
psyches they are externalizing in order to integrate. So while I
don't believe in that world view, I would question the logic of
banishing. If you're going to reify a piece of your mind into an
external manifestation with which to interact so you can take an
uncontrolled potentially chaotic or problematic part of yourself and
make it into a controlled and beneficial piece of your consciousness
it would not make sense to then banish that piece of your
consciousness.
So what if we're looking at
spirits as spirits? The license to depart still seems to take the
form of a banishment. I attended a ritual sometime a few months ago
where the magician giving the license to depart gave this aggressive,
nasally, sonorous, angry and condescending to the point of hateful
sounding license to depart. He was dealing with an angel. In general
this reflects the belief common in modern magic that the magician
must command the spirits by virtue of intense and stern authority.
The magician is an “exorcist” and so he has to command the
spirits like an “exorcist” would in terms of a Catholic priest
exorcising a malignant spirit...regardless of the nature of the
spirit in question.
In regards to angels,
generally the communication between the spirit and the magician in
historical manuscripts is pretty chill. It's not a power or dominance
struggle. If we go back to the oldest texts of angel magic they serve
the magician because God is the arbiter of magic and he tells the
angels to help mankind (Yuval Harari's Intro to the Sword of Moses
explains this). In the Sworn Book of Honorius the magician and the
angels recognize that they share a love for God. By later medieval
magic the magician just asks God to send an angel and the angel and
the magician work together because they serve the Lord together. It's
never about the magician being the dominant bad ass.
I think some of the
confusion which comes up is because magicians engaged in Modern
Ceremonial Magic are primarily influenced either directly or
indirectly by the Mathers version of the Greater Key of Solomon and
by the Goetia of Solomon as published by Mathers/Crowley. In those
the spirits, regardless of which spirits, are conjured with curses
and threats and angry biblical references. So it colors the
impression of what magicians working with spirits looks like. While
some of the older grimoires approach the spirits this way, it doesn't
always show up this way in earlier texts. In the Testament of
Solomon, one of the oldest Solomonic texts, the demons are conjured
by way of thwarting angels, divine grace, and a magic ring rather
than by angry threats of damnation. In the Heptameron there is a
brief reference to depriving spirits of their places and binding them
to the inferno but most of the conjuration is based on the authority
of divine names and symbols.
While demons are still
infernal in older texts of demoniac magic they still work within a
particular structure of hierarchy which doesn't require cursing and
torment as its primary means of work. We see this more in later
texts.
That being said even as we
get to later texts, the license to depart doesn't get to be this
extreme cursing of the spirit into submission, nor is it an actual
banishment, it is a release.
So let's look at a few.
The Sworn Book of Honorius
does not seem to license the spirits to depart. But it works with
angels, aerial spirits, and terrestrial spirits rather than infernal
ones.
Another older text, the
Heptameron gives this license to depart:
“In the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, go in peace unto your
places; peace be between us and you; be ye ready to come when you are
called.”
No cursing, no terrifying
language, no banishment, no hatred and condescension. Their are
wishes for peace between the magician and the spirit and a request
for future readiness for service.
The Greater Key as presented
by Mathers, despite some of the aggressive conjurations, gives a
similar license to depart:
“In the name of ADONAI,
the eternal and everlasting one, let each of you return unto his
place; be there peace between us and you, and be ye ready to come
when ye are called. ”
Almost identical.
The Veritable Key of Solomon
gives this as a license to depart for the Olympic spirits:
“Faithful minister, go in
peace in the Name of the Great God, your Master, who has sent you to
be sympathetic towards me”
This one in particular seems
to suggest a sort of friendship between the magician and the spirit.
The Goetia of Solomon gets
more wordy:
“O Thou spirit N. Because
thou hast very dilligently answered my demands and was ready and
willing to come at my first call I doe hear licence thee to depart
unto thy proper place without doeing any Injury or danger to any man
or beast depart I say and be ever reddy to come at my call being duly
Exorcised and conjured by ye sacred rites of Magicke. I
charge thee to withdraw peacebly and quiet1y, and the peace of God be
ever continued between me and the [thee]. Amen.”
There is still no intense
sense of dominance, but the adjurations not to do harmful or
dangerous things give it a different feel. There is a little more
feeling of banishing with “depart I say” and there is less of a
“hey lets work together” in noting that the spirit should be
ready when “exorcised and conjured.”
Over all, the license to
depart is typically not a banishing so much as a commitment to peace,
a release to return to ones own abode, and an acknowledgment of
future work. The license to depart is largely about a relationship
between the magician and the spirit. The license to depart is an
important part of the magical work between the spirit and the
magician. When the magician licenses the spirit to depart, if it has
work to do for the magician beyond that immediately performed during
the conjuration (such as answering questions or consecrating a
talisman) the spirit has to go do that work now. So if you banish the
spirit you're not sending it to do the work you're kicking it out of
your sphere. You're taking away the locus you are lending to it to
aid in its ability to operate in the world. If you release it to
return to its work and its natural place REMAINING IN A STATE OF
PEACE WITH YOU then it is still in the state of cooperation achieved
in the ritual and therefore is still able to operate in its appointed
task within its region of influence.
The license to depart is
reflective of the relationship between the magician and the spirit.
John King, who I am not typically on board with, expresses a view
that this promise of peace and cooperation is a means of redemption
for the spirit. The magician and the spirit swear a bond of peace,
which implies that at the final judgment the magician will be at
peace with the spirit and not stand in condemnation thereof, but
rather speak for its redemption. The editors of the Book of Oberon
suggest a similar view in the introduction: “The BoO also gives
another reason: that the spirits hope to redeem their fallen state by
doing good deeds for mortals.” Certain parts of the work of Eliphas
Levi reflect this view, and my own work with elements of alchemy,
Kabbalah, the grimoires, and the Sacred Magic suggest this, but this
is something for which I would rather devote a future blog post.
All in all, the license to
depart presents an important moment in spirit work from a magical
perspective regarding the relationship with the spirit. Do you want a
relationship in which you are the evolved magician shining with
NeoPlatonic virtue, reflecting the light of the Creator, and
inspiring the spirits to work with you, or do you want to be the
cobbler pulling together charms and curses and yelling at spirits on
the basis that they might easily be fooled into fearing you and
temporarily tow a strained line of obedience?
Whichever you choose your
license to depart should express that character. It shouldn't be a
show, but rather an inward feeling swelling up and channeled out in
your words, posture, actions, thoughts and feelings as you speak to
the spirit. If you are a friend, a servant of the same lord, and they
serve you because of this, you should embody that presence and
communicate that. If you are the stern task master who wields the
scourge of divine power against celestial and infernal alike you
should embody that and communicate that. But you have to understand
which you are, what you're doing, and why in order to do either with
true success.
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