“The body can become a vehicle to that which is beyond body, and sex energy can become a spiritual force.”
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“The body can become a vehicle to that which is beyond body, and sex energy can become a spiritual force.”
John the Baptist was born on June 24. Right at the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, when the sun peaks and starts its slow retreat.
His cousin Jesus was born six months later, at the winter solstice. Two men. Two solar turning points.
The Christian calendar has pagan astronomy stitched into it from the beginning.
Most people picture a simple desert preacher. He was not that. He lived in the Judean wilderness, ate locusts and wild honey, wore camel hair.
Scholars connect him to the Essenes, a radical Jewish sect that practiced full ritual immersion in water, kept sacred texts, and lived cut off from the Temple establishment.
The same community whose scrolls turned up at Qumrán in 1947.
The baptism he performed was not gentle. Total submersion. Symbolic death. Rebirth.
Before Christianity turned it into a ceremony, it was an act of rupture. You declared your old life finished.
He was beheaded for refusing to stay quiet. Herod Antipas jailed him for publicly criticizing his marriage to Herodias, his own sister-in-law. Her daughter Salome danced. Herod made a promise. She asked for John's head on a plate. This is not legend. The Jewish historian Flavius Josephus records it independently, outside any religious text.
Did you know the world's first Masonic Grand Lodge was founded on exactly June 24, 1717, his feast day? Medieval stonemasons at Cologne Cathedral had already been calling themselves "Brethren dedicated to Saint John" since the 1400s. They did not pick that date out of religious devotion. They picked it because John represents the threshold. The one who announces something greater without being that thing himself. For a brotherhood built around seeking the Light, that logic is perfect.
An uncomfortable man. A man who lived between two worlds and belonged fully to neither. That is its own kind of power.
What does that tell you?
🌼 Katy Deroma
#JohnTheBaptist #SacredHistory #EsotericKnowledge #SummerSolstice #AncientMysteries #TarotReader #SpiritualWisdom #saints #MysticTradition
HERB MAGIC: Medicinal Properties vs. Magical Properties
Hello beautiful souls ✨
You reach for lavender. Why?
Because it calms anxiety (medicinal property)?Because it attracts love (magical property)?Because it smells good and makes you feel peaceful (both)?
Here's the question nobody asks: Are medicinal and magical properties actually different, or are they the same thing described in different languages?
Today we're exploring herb magic—one of the oldest, most accessible, and most misunderstood practices in witchcraft.
We'll cover:
The history (how medicinal and magical herbalism diverged)
The Doctrine of Signatures (reading plants' "messages")
How medicinal properties CREATE magical associations
Why some correspondences make sense and others are arbitrary
The role of mythology, planetary rulership, and cultural use
Practical herb magic that respects both science and tradition
Safety considerations (some "magical" herbs are toxic)
This is Elements & Correspondences That Actually Make Sense—where we explain the logic behind magical associations.
Let's decode the plants.
THE SHORT ANSWER
Medicinal and magical properties are often THE SAME THING viewed through different frameworks.
Example: Chamomile
Medicinal property: Mild sedative, anti-anxiety, digestive aid (proven by science)
Magical property: Peace, calm, stress relief, sleep magic
Are these different? No. The magical use directly reflects the medicinal effect.
BUT— not all magical correspondences derive from medicine. Some come from mythology, planetary association, appearance, or cultural tradition.
The relationship is complex. Let's unpack it.
THE HISTORY: WHEN MEDICINE AND MAGIC WERE ONE
For most of human history, there was no distinction between medicinal herbalism and magical herbalism.
ANCIENT PRACTICE (PRE-1500s):
The village herbalist/cunning person/witch doctor:
Knew which plants healed which ailments
Accompanied medicine with prayers, charms, timing (moon phases, planetary hours)
Understood that healing involved body AND spirit
Used plants for physical healing AND spiritual/magical work
There was no separation. Giving someone willow bark (natural aspirin) for pain AND saying a prayer while preparing it were BOTH part of healing.
THE SPLIT (1500s-1800s):
The rise of "rational" medicine:
Physicians claimed authority over healing
"Scientific" medicine wanted to distance itself from "superstition"
Herbalism became associated with women, poor people, witches (derogatory)
Magical uses were dismissed as folklore; medicinal uses were "legitimized" (if they worked)
This created the false binary:
Medicine = rational, scientific, physical, real
Magic = superstitious, spiritual, psychological, fake
But the plants didn't change. Only how we talked about them changed.
MODERN REUNION:
Today, many practitioners recognize:
Herbal medicine works (science proves it—many pharmaceuticals derive from plants)
The psychological/spiritual aspect of healing also matters
Plants can be used for physical effects AND energetic/magical effects
These aren't contradictory
We're returning to a holistic view—with the added benefit of scientific understanding.
THE DOCTRINE OF SIGNATURES
One major link between medicinal and magical properties:
The Doctrine of Signatures is the ancient belief that plants' physical appearance, habitat, or characteristics indicate their medicinal/magical uses.
The concept: God/Nature marked plants with "signatures"—visual clues to their purpose.
EXAMPLES:
Walnuts look like brains → Used for brain health, mental clarity, headaches (medicinal AND magical)
Lungwort leaves have lung-shaped spots → Used for respiratory issues (medicinal) and breath/communication magic (magical)
Bleeding Heart flowers look like hearts → Used for heart health (medicinal) and love magic (magical)
Yellow flowers (like St. John's Wort) → Used for jaundice/liver issues (medicinal—yellow = bile) and solar magic, joy, depression (magical)
Plants with milky sap (like dandelion) → Used to increase breast milk (medicinal) and fertility magic (magical)
Red plants (like beets, hibiscus) → Used for blood health (medicinal) and passion, vitality, blood magic (magical)
DOES THIS ACTUALLY WORK?
Sometimes.
Walnuts DO contain omega-3 fatty acids beneficial for brain health. Coincidence? Maybe. Or maybe ancient herbalists observed over generations that walnut-eaters had better cognitive function and created the "brain" signature to remember it.
Yellow St. John's Wort DOES help depression (proven—it's prescribed in Germany). The "solar" association and yellow color may have helped herbalists remember this use.
But sometimes it's wrong. Lungwort doesn't actually help lungs more than other expectorants. The spots are just spots.
The Doctrine of Signatures is:
Part observation
Part pattern recognition
Part mnemonic device (helping people remember uses)
Part projection (seeing what you want to see)
It created links between appearance and use—which then created magical correspondences.
HOW MEDICINAL PROPERTIES CREATE MAGICAL ASSOCIATIONS
This is the most direct link:
If a plant DOES something physically, it's assigned magical properties related to that effect.
LAVENDER:
Medicinal: Sedative, anti-anxiety, mild pain relief, antimicrobial Magical: Peace, calm, sleep, purification, love (the love part comes from the calming/attractiveness—you're more appealing when relaxed)
The magic mirrors the medicine.
PEPPERMINT:
Medicinal: Digestive aid, mental clarity, headache relief, cooling Magical: Mental clarity, prosperity (probably because trade in mint was profitable), cleansing, air element
The clarity and cleansing link directly to medicinal effects.
ROSEMARY:
Medicinal: Memory enhancement (proven—compounds in rosemary improve cognitive function), circulation, antimicrobial Magical: Memory, remembrance, mental clarity, protection, fidelity (remembering commitments)
"Rosemary for remembrance" is both medicinal AND magical.
YARROW:
Medicinal: Stops bleeding (powerful styptic), fever reducer, wound healing Magical: Protection, courage (warriors used it to stop bleeding in battle), boundary setting, divination (historical use in I Ching)
The protection correspondence comes from literal physical protection (stopping wounds).
MUGWORT:
Medicinal: Mild sedative, digestive bitter, may stimulate dreaming (anecdotal), emmenagogue (brings on menstruation) Magical: Dreams, psychic ability, astral travel, divination, feminine power
The dream/psychic association likely came from observed effects on sleep/dreams.
PATTERN: The plant's physical effect shapes its magical use.
But not always...
WHEN MAGICAL PROPERTIES COME FROM OTHER SOURCES
Not all magical correspondences are medicinal. Some come from:
SOURCE 1: MYTHOLOGY & FOLKLORE
Bay Laurel (Bay Leaf):
Medicinal: Mild digestive aid, antimicrobial (not particularly powerful)
Magical: Victory, success, prophecy, wishes
Why the magical association?
Sacred to Apollo (Greek god of prophecy, sun, victory)
Laurel wreaths crowned Olympic victors
Pythia (Oracle at Delphi) chewed bay leaves during prophecy
The magical use comes from MYTHOLOGY, not medicinal effect.
Basil:
Medicinal: Culinary herb, mild digestive, antimicrobial
Magical: Love, wealth, protection (varies by culture)
Why?
In Italian tradition, women wore basil to attract suitors
In India (sacred to Krishna/Vishnu), used in spiritual protection
In African diaspora traditions, used for prosperity
Cultural tradition creates the correspondence.
SOURCE 2: PLANETARY RULERSHIP
Astrological herbalism assigns plants to planets, and the planet's qualities transfer to the plant.
Cinnamon:
Medicinal: Antimicrobial, blood sugar regulation, warming circulatory stimulant
Magical: Success, prosperity, passion, solar magic
Why?
Ruled by Sun (warming quality, gold color)
Expensive historically (prosperity through value)
Warming = passion
Combination of medicinal effect (warming) + planetary rulership (Sun) + economic history (expensive).
Rue:
Medicinal: Emmenagogue, antispasmodic, toxic in large amounts
Magical: Protection, hex-breaking, banishing
Why?
Ruled by Mars (aggressive, protective)
Bitter taste = drives away (doctrine of signatures through taste)
Historical use in protective amulets
Planetary association shapes magical use.
SOURCE 3: APPEARANCE (Doctrine of Signatures)
High John the Conqueror Root:
Medicinal: Mild laxative (not particularly notable)
Magical: Power, luck, success, masculine strength
Why?
Root looks vaguely phallic (masculine power)
Named for a folk hero (African American folklore—a trickster who outwitted enslavers)
STORY creates the power, not medicinal effect
SOURCE 4: SCENT/AESTHETIC
Rose:
Medicinal: Mild astringent, aromatic (uplifts mood through scent)
Magical: Love, beauty, divination, feminine power
Why?
Beautiful flower = beauty magic
Associated with Venus/Aphrodite (goddess of love)
Scent is romantic (cultural conditioning)
Five petals = pentacle = magical symbolism
Appearance + mythology + scent = magical use.
NOT primarily medicinal.
THE PROBLEM WITH CORRESPONDENCE LISTS
Most herb magic books give you lists:
"Lavender: love, peace, sleep""Basil: money, love, protection"
But they don't tell you WHERE these come from or if they're universal.
ISSUES:
1. CULTURAL VARIATION
Basil in Italian culture: Love, romance Basil in Greek culture: Hatred, bad luck (associated with scorpions) Basil in Indian culture: Sacred, protective, devotional
Which is "correct"? All of them—in their cultural context.
2. OUTDATED CORRESPONDENCES
Some magical uses come from medieval European herbalism and don't apply anymore.
Example: "Mandrake root for fertility" comes from its vaguely human shape (doctrine of signatures) + mythology. It's also TOXIC. Modern practitioners often use substitutes.
3. APPROPRIATED PRACTICES
Many "magical herb" lists appropriate from closed practices (hoodoo, Indigenous traditions, Ayurveda) without credit or context.
"White sage for cleansing" comes from Indigenous practices. It's overharvested and sacred to specific tribes. If you're not Indigenous, research alternatives and respect boundaries.
4. JUST PLAIN WRONG
Some correspondences have NO basis in medicine, mythology, or tradition—they're modern inventions or misattributions.
Always research. Don't just trust one book's list.
PRACTICAL HERB MAGIC: BRIDGING MEDICINE & MAGIC
METHOD 1: USE MEDICINAL PROPERTIES MAGICALLY
Chamomile tea for sleep:
Medicine: Drink the tea (mild sedative enters bloodstream) Magic: While brewing, visualize peace, say "I call peaceful sleep," charge the tea with intention
You're using the actual medicinal effect + adding magical amplification.
This is the most effective approach—you're working WITH the plant's nature, not against it.
METHOD 2: SYMBOLIC/ENERGETIC USE (When you're NOT ingesting)
Cinnamon stick in your wallet for prosperity:
Not medicinal (you're not eating it) Magical: The symbolism, scent, and cultural association work psychologically and energetically
This relies on:
Your belief in the correspondence
The cinnamon's energetic signature (if you believe in that)
Scent triggering positive associations
Symbolic reminder to attract abundance
It's not medicine—it's symbolism and energy work.
METHOD 3: SMOKE/INCENSE (Energetic + Aromatic)
Burning dried rosemary for clarity:
Medicinal-ish: The scent may enhance alertness (aromatherapy—mild effect) Magical: Smoke carries intention, scent shifts consciousness, historical use for cleansing
Borderline between medicine (scent affects brain) and magic (intention/energy).
METHOD 4: BATH MAGIC
Lavender bath for calm:
Medicinal: Lavender absorbed through skin? Minimal. But scent affects mood. Magical: The ritual, the scent, the visualization, the intention
Mostly psychological/magical, slightly medicinal (aromatherapy).
METHOD 5: CHARM BAGS/SACHETS
Rose petals in a love sachet:
Not medicinal (you're not consuming) Magical: Scent, symbolism, intention, carrying physical reminder of your spell
Purely symbolic/energetic.
SAFETY: SOME "MAGICAL" HERBS ARE TOXIC
Just because a plant has magical uses doesn't mean it's safe.
COMMONLY USED BUT TOXIC HERBS:
Belladonna (Deadly Nightshade):Magical use: Astral travel, flying ointments, Hecate/underworld work Reality: DEADLY. Causes hallucinations, respiratory failure, death. DO NOT USE.
Mandrake:Magical use: Fertility, prosperity, protection Reality: Toxic. Causes hallucinations, delirium. Modern practitioners use substitutes (like ginger root shaped to look like mandrake).
Hemlock:Magical use: (Historically) baneful magic, Hecate offerings Reality: DEADLY. Killed Socrates. DO NOT USE.
Foxglove:Magical use: Fairy magic, protection Reality: Toxic. Source of digoxin (heart medication in controlled doses). Can cause heart failure. Do not ingest or handle without care.
Rue:Magical use: Protection, hex-breaking Reality: Can cause photosensitivity, miscarriage. Safe in tiny amounts; toxic in larger doses.
Pennyroyal:Magical use: (Historically) abortion, hex-breaking Reality: Toxic. Causes liver failure. Abortion attempts with pennyroyal have killed women. NEVER USE INTERNALLY.
Wormwood:Magical use: Psychic ability, spirit work, absinthe Reality: Contains thujone (toxic in large amounts). Absinthe is regulated for this reason. Small amounts in tinctures okay; large amounts dangerous.
THE RULE:
NEVER ingest an herb for magical purposes unless you've researched its safety thoroughly.
Safe magical use options for toxic herbs:
Use imagery/artwork instead of actual plant
Use safe substitutes (many traditions have substitute lists)
Work with the plant's spirit/energy without physical contact
Use in tightly sealed charm bags (never opened)
When in doubt, don't use it.
CREATING YOUR PERSONAL HERB GRIMOIRE
Don't rely on books alone. Build your own knowledge base.
FOR EACH HERB YOU WORK WITH, RECORD:
1. BOTANICAL NAME (Common names vary; botanical names are precise)
2. MEDICINAL PROPERTIES (Research from herbalism books, scientific studies)
3. TRADITIONAL MAGICAL USES (From multiple sources—note which tradition)
4. SAFETY INFO (Toxic? Interactions with medications? Pregnancy warnings?)
5. PLANETARY/ELEMENTAL CORRESPONDENCE (If applicable—note the source)
6. YOUR PERSONAL EXPERIENCE (How does it smell/taste/feel to you? What results did you get?)
7. SUBSTITUTIONS (What can you use if you don't have this herb?)
Over time, you'll build a grimoire that combines tradition, science, and personal gnosis.
ETHICAL & SUSTAINABLE HERB MAGIC
ISSUE 1: OVERHARVESTING
White sage, palo santo, sandalwood—all overharvested due to magical/spiritual demand.
Alternatives:
White sage → Garden sage, rosemary, mugwort, bay leaf
Palo santo → Frankincense, copal, cedar
Sandalwood → Cedarwood, vetiver
Or buy from Indigenous-owned businesses that sustainably harvest and have permission to sell.
ISSUE 2: CULTURAL APPROPRIATION
Smudging with white sage is a specific Indigenous practice. If you're not Indigenous, it's appropriation.
Alternatives:
Call it "smoke cleansing" (not smudging)
Use herbs from your own ancestry/region
Learn your local plant allies
ISSUE 3: WILDCRAFTING RESPONSIBLY
If you harvest wild plants:
Take only 10% of what you see
Never harvest endangered species
Leave enough for wildlife and reproduction
Thank the plant
Know what you're harvesting (misidentification can be dangerous)
When in doubt, buy ethically sourced dried herbs.
COMMON HERBS: MEDICINAL + MAGICAL BREAKDOWN
LAVENDER
Medicinal: Calming, sleep aid, pain relief, antimicrobial Magical: Peace, love, sleep, purification, protection Connection: Direct—medicinal effects create magical uses Safe: Yes
ROSEMARY
Medicinal: Memory, circulation, antimicrobial Magical: Memory, mental clarity, protection, purification Connection: Direct—memory link especially strong Safe: Yes (avoid large amounts if pregnant)
PEPPERMINT
Medicinal: Digestive, mental alertness, headache relief Magical: Prosperity, mental clarity, purification Connection: Mostly direct; prosperity may come from trade value Safe: Yes
CINNAMON
Medicinal: Blood sugar regulation, antimicrobial, warming Magical: Success, prosperity, passion, lust Connection: Warming = passion; expensive = prosperity; solar rulership Safe: Yes (can irritate skin in large amounts)
MUGWORT
Medicinal: Dreams, digestion, emmenagogue Magical: Dreams, psychic ability, protection Connection: Direct—dream effects well-documented anecdotally Safe: Avoid if pregnant; can cause allergic reaction
CHAMOMILE
Medicinal: Calming, sleep, digestive, anti-inflammatory Magical: Peace, calm, prosperity, sleep Connection: Direct—calming effects dominant Safe: Yes (rare allergies exist)
BASIL
Medicinal: Digestive, antimicrobial, culinary Magical: Love, money, protection (culturally variable) Connection: Indirect—mostly cultural/mythological Safe: Yes
BAY LEAF
Medicinal: Mild digestive Magical: Wishes, success, prophecy, protection Connection: Indirect—mostly mythological (Apollo, laurel wreaths) Safe: Yes
YARROW
Medicinal: Stops bleeding, wound healing, fever reduction Magical: Courage, protection, love, divination Connection: Direct—protection from bleeding = magical protection Safe: Yes (avoid if pregnant)
THYME
Medicinal: Antimicrobial, expectorant, cough relief Magical: Courage, purification, health Connection: Direct—medicinal strength = magical strength Safe: Yes
THE BOTTOM LINE
Are medicinal and magical properties different?
Often, no. They're the same thing described in different frameworks.
Medicinal herbalism says: "Lavender contains compounds that bind to GABA receptors, reducing anxiety."
Magical herbalism says: "Lavender carries peaceful vibrations that calm the spirit."
Both are describing the same plant producing the same effect.
But sometimes magical correspondences come from:
Mythology and folklore
Planetary rulership
Appearance (Doctrine of Signatures)
Cultural tradition
Arbitrary assignment
For effective herb magic:
Understand the plant's actual effects (medicinal)
Research traditional magical uses (cultural)
Notice your personal response (experiential)
Use safely (some magical herbs are toxic)
Source ethically (don't contribute to overharvesting or appropriation)
The best herb magic works WITH the plant's nature, not against it.
Lavender for love makes sense (it calms and attracts through scent).Lavender for aggression makes no sense (it's calming, not stimulating).
Know your plants. Respect their medicine. Honor their magic. They're often the same thing.
YOUR TURN
Do you work with herbs magically, medicinally, or both?
What's your favorite herb and why?
Have you noticed connections between a plant's medicinal effects and its magical uses?
Let's discuss. Herbalism is one of the most personal, experiential practices—we learn from each other's gardens.
Blessed be 🌿
The plant doesn't care if you call it medicine or magic. It does what it does—heals, calms, clarifies, protects. Your words don't change the plant's nature. But understanding its nature changes how effectively you work with it. Now you know the difference between medicinal and magical properties: often, there isn't one.
While alchemy, kabbalah, tarot, and psychology have developed as distinct traditions throughout history, they share profound roots within the esoteric mystery schools of antiquity. Rather than forming a new age hodgepodge or vague constellation of disparate belief systems, these principles convey the multifaceted nature of spiritual practice and divine realization from different angles, constituting a unique body of experiential knowledge known in Greek as γνῶσις gnosis. Therefore, properly prepared individuals can utilize these insights for interpreting the highly symbolic, mystical, and alchemical art of opera, whose composers were often Freemasons initiated into the secret allegories and disciplines of the ancients. This lecture explains some of the spiritual traditions behind Puccini's La Bohème, which will serve for future viewings and discussions on its gnostic symbolism, especially in relation to creative energy (alchemy), character representations and archetypes (kabbalah), predictive, prophetic, and pragmatic implications (tarot), and the path of internal transformation (psychology).
Spiritual symbolism and admonition in Puccini's beloved opera.
RAZIEL: The Most Dangerous Angel In Jewish Mysticism...
There is a whisper in the ancient mystical corridors that speaks of an angel who stands closer to the Throne than most dare to approach. His name is Raziel, the Keeper of Secrets, the Guardian of Forbidden Knowledge, the Silent Witness who holds the scrolls of creation itself. When mystics say that nothing in existence escapes his sight, they are not speaking in metaphor. Raziel is believed to stand behind the Divine Throne, listening to every cosmic secret spoken by the Creator and archiving every mystery that governs reality.
Tradition teaches that Raziel is the author of the Sefer Raziel, a legendary book said to contain every principle of magic, the mechanics of creation, and the hidden laws that bind the visible and invisible worlds. According to Jewish mystical lore, this book was once given to Adam after he was cast out of Eden. It was Raziel who delivered the forbidden knowledge of how humanity could rebuild its spiritual power, rise again in consciousness, and even command creation itself.
The story goes further. When the other angels discovered that Raziel had given this book to mankind, they were enraged. They feared humanity would ascend too quickly. They feared mankind would unlock realms meant only for celestial beings. It is said they stole the book from Adam and cast it into the sea. But Raziel would not be defied. He reclaimed the book using forces no angel dared resist and returned it to humanity through Enoch, who later transformed into Metatron, the highest of angels. This myth alone makes Raziel one of the most rebellious and compassionate archangels in all mystical traditions.
In Kabbalah, Raziel rules the Sefirah of Chokmah which means Divine Wisdom. Chokmah is the sphere from which creation bursts forth in raw unfiltered intelligence. Raziel is not simply a messenger of wisdom. He is the architect of it. He is the inner voice behind intuition, the spark behind sudden enlightenment, the strategist behind prophetic visions. His energy is so potent that Kabbalists warn students to approach Raziel with caution because awakening deep wisdom too fast can shatter the ego and destabilize the mind.
Raziel is associated with the mysteries of alchemy, sacred geometry, divine mathematics, and the codes that form reality. Occult traditions say he is the one who guides magicians into the deeper pathways of metaphysics, unlocking the mysteries behind sigils, angelic languages, the manipulation of the four elements, and the art of commanding spiritual forces. He is not gentle with his teachings. Raziel teaches through revelation and revelation often comes with upheaval.
The Zohar calls Raziel the Angel of Mysteries. It teaches that he oversees the river of wisdom that flows from the upper worlds down into the subconscious minds of prophets, mystics, and dreamers. When someone suddenly understands a truth they never studied, when they decode a pattern in life with uncanny accuracy, when a secret is revealed in a dream that later becomes factual, mystics say Raziel has spoken to that soul.
Some esoteric orders believe that Raziel once appeared to Solomon and gave him deeper mastery over the forces of nature. This is why Solomon commanded spirits, understood the nature of demons, and accessed higher magical sciences. Raziel does not discriminate. He reveals knowledge to those who truly seek even if their intentions are questioned by other celestial beings. To Raziel, knowledge is sacred and must flow.
Raziel is also connected to the rainbow light that surrounds the Throne. This is known as the Sphere of Prism Consciousness. When Raziel manifests, he appears as a being of impossible color shifting through the spectrum like liquid light. Mystics say that each color hides a cosmic secret and that Raziel uses these lights to transmit coded information directly into the soul of the seeker.
His presence is said to break illusions. Raziel pulls back the curtain of reality. He reveals what people are afraid to know. He exposes lies, ancestral illusions, spiritual traps, deception in relationships, hidden intentions behind human behavior, and even the secret motives of the soul. For this reason, invoking Raziel is not a casual act. He brings truth in its raw form. He brings knowledge that will change you forever.
Some call Raziel dangerous because he does not protect you from the truth. He reveals it in ways that leave you with no excuses. Others call him liberator because he dismantles ignorance and places divine power back into human hands. And this is why Raziel remains controversial among angels. He empowers mankind. He gives us the knowledge that heaven once tried to conceal. He restores what was lost in Eden.
ART: "Angel with the Flaming Sword" by Edwin H Blashfield.
The Illuminati: Guardians of Wisdom or Masters of Illusion?
Throughout history, secret societies have shaped the flow of knowledge—some preserving wisdom, others distorting it. Manly P. Hall spoke of a true Illuminati, enlightened individuals working to guide humanity toward truth. But alongside them exist orders that manipulate perception, offering the illusion of power while keeping people bound to hierarchy. Do these forces oppose each other, or do they serve different roles in the same grand design? And most importantly—who really influences the flow of knowledge, and why? Let’s explore the deeper reality behind secrecy and enlightenment.
Repost from @spiritualtitans • Drop a ❤️ if you are ready for a positive change in life ✨️ . . . . . . . #higherawakening #higherfrequency #highervibes #highervibration #esotericknowledge #esoteric #consciousness #thirdeyeawakening #aura #consciousness #higherconsciousness #accessconsciousness #spiritjunkie #higherconsciousness #consciousliving #mindbodyspirit #conscious #newearth #accessconsciousness #cosmicconsciousness #expandingconsciousness #consciousnessshift #subconscious #cosmicenergy #consciouscommunity #lightcodes #wisdomquotes #ancientwisdom #universalconsciousness https://www.instagram.com/p/Ck5mFiquj_WOFfBRCMDCL2ObEzCgHp-ZESWNvk0/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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