Since earliest times,
people have carried objects of special power and meaning to help them
in their daily lives. Perhaps it was a bone from an ancestor to ward
off storms, or a carved icon to promote fertility. Whatever the item
or its intended use, it was considered the focus of divine energy and
power.
Over the centuries,
these talismans and amulets (talismans specifically worn to protect
the wearer) were used for myriad purposes in almost every culture.
They became an important part of Egyptian mummification rituals. The
Greeks developed a system of talismanic cursing and binding, as well
as healing and protection. But it was the ancient Jews who turned
talisman making into a scientific art that has greatly influenced the
Western magical tradition.
Rabbinical magicians
would create powerful talismans using an appropriate name of God, an
angel, as well as a relevant or specific verse from scripture. The
talismans were made of metal disks, paper, or parchment. Their
creation required such knowledge and piety that the work was often
only done by the Chief Rabbi of the town.
Occultists of the
Middle Ages and the Renaissance were heavily influenced by the
talisman’s Judaic heritage. It was during the Renaissance that Henry
Cornelius Agrippa of Nettersheim codified many of the magical
correspondences used for talismans in his Three Books of Occult
Philosophy (ISBN 0-87542-832-0).
The Esoteric Order of the Golden Dawn added the concepts of the
Kabbalah (or Tree of Life) and color to talismanic creation during the
nineteenth century. They also developed tablets of flashing colors
that could trap planetary energy to be used to energize talismans or
other magical work.
In the twentieth
century, Madeline Mountalban, an associate of Aleister Crowley,
developed a simple, yet effective system for creating talismans. Her
system is used in many Alexandrian Wiccan covens today. With this long
and impressive history, it’s no wonder that talismans are considered
an effective way to accomplish your magical goals.
In Making Talismans:
Living Entities of Power, author Nick Farrell shows you how to
design, create, and use talismans. He includes many tables to help you
use the correct shapes, colors, numbers, magical alphabets, and
symbols. He also explains how to use planetary influences, angelic
hosts, and special names to strengthen the effect of the talisman.
Making Talismans also has a chapter that shows you how to make a
device to test the efficacy of your talisman, and what steps to take
if there is a problem with it.
Making Talismans
provides you with step-by-step guidance on design, creation, charging,
consecration, testing, and use of this most powerful magical tool. And
there are instructions on how to properly annul and dispose of a
talisman when the its work is finished.
The following excerpt
describes an important activity that must be mastered before
attempting to create any talisman or magical object: the creation of
personal sacred space in which to undertake works of magic. This
particular technique was perfected by W. E. Butler, and can be
implemented in any space and under any circumstances.
creating sacred
space
Any magical work
requires a space that is set aside and made special or sacred. What
defines and makes sacred space special is the mind of the magician.
Rituals can be performed silently, even in the busiest places if the
magician can set aside, then access, a safe, quiet part of his or
her mind. It takes practice, and there are many different techniques
to do it. One of the simplest is the preparation of place exercise
as taught by W. E. Butler, a pupil of Dion Fortune.
Sit in a chair and relax as deeply as possible. Regularize your
breathing so that your inhalations take the same amount of time as
your exhalations.
Visualize yourself
surrounded by a shell of impermeable bright blue light. Then
meditate on the intention of your ritual.
Stray thoughts will appear in your mind and the sounds of the
outside world will distract you. As they appear see them as objects,
like birds or dogs, and gently push them outside the blue sphere.
Keep doing this until the space within the blue sphere is totally
calm and quiet. Visualize a still candle of divine light in your
heart—this represents your divine self.
Visualize the blue sphere getting bigger until it fills the physical
space you wish to work your ritual. As the blue light expands it
pushes aside all thought forms, people, and objects out of its way.
See the light of the
candle glow brightly, filling your sacred space with divine presence
and making the ground on which you stand holy.
It takes time to
master this technique, but once achieved it is possible to work a
ritual anywhere in the sort of calm that would be achieved only by a
magician working in an isolated temple.