The Witch's Familiar: Spiritual Partnership for Successful Magic - Softcover

9780738703398: The Witch's Familiar: Spiritual Partnership for Successful Magic
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Since ancient times, witches and magicians have worked magic with the aid of Familiars, or helpful spirits. Familiars may take the form of a beloved pet, a totem animal, or even a helpful nonphysical entity.

Explore the fascinating history of Familiar spirits in The Witches' Familiar. Written by one of today's leading authorities on both Wicca and traditional hereditary Witchcraft, this book is your complete guide to finding and working with a Familiar.

You'll read about the three types of Familiars: physical, astral, and spiritual. Learn how to call a Familiar to you, and how to choose an appropriate name. Discover how to use magical seals and sigils to command or release a nonphysical Familiar. Protect yourself and your loved ones by asking your Familiar to guard your home. Make your magic even more potent by enlisting your Familiar's aid in spellwork and ritual. Keep your bond strong, and find out how to release a Familiar when its work is done or it has passed from the physical plane.

This is the first book to present never-before-published traditional Craft methods for working with Familiars as well as historical examples from Western ceremonial magic. Your magic will be even more powerful when you combine forces with a Familiar face.

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About the Author:

Raven Grimassi was a Neo-Pagan scholar and award-winning author of more than eighteen books on Witchcraft, Wicca, and Neo-Paganism. He was devoted to the study and practice of witchcraft for over forty years, and was co-founder and co-director of the Ash, Birch, and Willow tradition.

Grimassi's background included training in old forms of witchcraft as well as Brittic Wicca, the Pictish-Gaelic tradition, Italian Witchcraft, and Celtic Traditionalist Witchcraft. Raven was also a member of the Rosicrucian Order, and studied the Kabbalah through the First Temple of Tifareth under Lady Sara Cunningham.

Raven lived in New England with his wife and co-author Stephanie Taylor-Grimassi. Together, they directed The Fellowship of the Pentacle, a modern Mystery School devoted to preserving pre-Christian European spirituality.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
1
History
of the
Familiar Spirit
In this chapter we will explore the occult concept
of the Familiar spirit in Witchcraft.
According to ancient lore, a spirit from the Otherworld
was believed able to dwell within the
physical body of an animal or creature. The traditional
vessels for such spirits were the cat, mouse,
ferret, hare, bat, snake, hound, or bird―particularly
a raven or an owl. The lore surrounding the
Familiar spirit indicates that a Witch received
one following initiation into the Witches’ sect.
A magical connection between humans and
animals has its roots in Paleolithic and Neolithic
concepts, and is evident in old shamanic
practices associated with animal guides. Various
drawings and etchings in cave art depict ritualized
scenes that are believed to represent magical
themes. A variety of artifacts from these periods
represent different animals and creatures carved
and painted by ancient artisans. Many of these identical creatures
later appear as Familiar spirits in the lore of Witchcraft.
This is highly suggestive of a survival theme related to ancient
beliefs and practices.
In the earliest writings about Witches the creatures associated
with Witchcraft all possess a chthonic nature. We find many of
them to be creatures of woodlands, wetlands, and caves. This association
links them to Underworld themes and to Underworld
deities such as Hecate, Diana, Proserpina, Morrigan, Macha,
Badb, and Nemain. To our ancestors, the night and the moon
were intimately linked to the Otherworld or Spirit World. Folk
beliefs held that in the night many supernatural beings inhabited
the dark and wooded places.
The Concept of a Familiar
The basic concept of a Familiar spirit most likely arose from a
human need to communicate with the unseen world of spirits.
At first the Familiar spirit served as a type of mediator between
the worlds. Later, the concept of a companion and ally evolved.
As we shall see later in this chapter, with the rise of Christianity
the Church viewed the Familiar spirit as a servant given to the
Witch by the Devil of Judeo-Christian religion. In this biased
and distorted view of the Familiar spirit the creature was portrayed
as a “partner in evil” who aided the Witch in casting
harmful spells.
As humankind became civilized, establishing farms, cities, and
the supporting structures associated with such communities, a resulting
loss of connection with Nature occurred. Instead of working
in a “common cause” with Nature, humans set about trying
to master Nature. All of Nature came to be viewed as a resource
for the gain of humankind. In response, the spirits of Nature
withdrew from the company of humans.
By contrast the Witch seeks to maintain rapport with Nature
and to live his or her life in partnership. Wild animals, and some
“domesticated” animals such as the cat, are more in tune with
Nature in daily life than are the vast majority of human beings.
Establishing communication with such animals brings one closer
to the source to which these creatures themselves are attuned.
Possessing a Familiar spirit allows the Witch to merge with the
instincts of the animal and thereby interface with the intelligence
of Nature.
The physical senses such as hearing and smell are more acute
in animals than in human beings. From an occult perspective,
the psychic senses of animals are stronger as well. A close rapport
with the Familiar spirit enhances the psychic abilities of the
Witch. The Familiar also benefits from having a relationship
with the Witch. Merging with human consciousness provides the
Familiar with an expanded view of reality, and intensifies the energy
pattern of the Familiar. The alien worlds of human consciousness
and “natural order” consciousness join together to
form a magical consciousness. In this the Familiar becomes the
mediator.
The magical consciousness of the Witch and the Familiar can
open portals to other realms, and can accomplish works of magic
in the material realm as well as the astral plane. This is the basis
of legends in which we find the magical servant of the Witch,
and tales of shapeshifting by Witches. In reality the Familiar is a
magical partner and companion for the Witch, and vice versa.
The oldest concept of the Witches’ Familiar was the spiritanimal
belonging to the group consciousness of a specific type of
animal. In other words, this was the spirit of the entire species
delimited into a single form. In some cultures this is called a
power animal or animal guide. Such an entity can be used as a
doorway or link connecting to the higher animal spirit or nature.
In such cases the astral form of the animal becomes the vehicle
for working with the greater consciousness.
The concept of the Witches’ Familiar is connected with
shamanic practices and the lore of magical creatures from many
cultures. One of the earliest and most clear signs of the relationship
between humans and guardian animal spirits is reflected in
the Ver Sacrum, the ancient Italic rite of the Sacred Springtime
predating the rise of the Roman Empire. Every spring season ancient
Italic tribes observed a custom wherein a portion of the
tribe was required to divide off and form new colonies. Their sacred
animal guided each tribe in this endeavor, leading them to
new lands in which to establish villages. The people known as
the Sabellians were guided by a bull, the Piceni by a woodpecker,
the Lucani by a wolf, and so forth.
Many of the animals associated with various deities, such as
Diana and the hound, Hecate and the toad, Proserpina and the
serpent, Pan and the goat, are animals that also appear as
Witches’ Familiars in the vast literature on Witchcraft. It is worthy
of note to realize that the various types of Familiars mentioned
in Witch trials are the same creatures associated with
moon goddesses, mother goddesses, and ancient chthonic deities.
In particular these are the frog/toad, snake, bird, and lizard
among many others. This is an indication of the antiquity of pre-
Christian themes found in Witchcraft, and demonstrates a longstanding
mystical tradition.
Over the course of time humans personified various spirits and
the forces of Nature. The concept of fairies and other supernatural
beings blended together into a common mythos. Historian
Jeffrey Burton Russell, in his book Witchcraft in the Middle Ages
(London: Cornell University, 1972), writes, “The small demons
that became the Witches’ Familiars of the later Middle Ages
were originally dwarves, trolls, fairies, elves, kobolds, or the fertility
spirits called Green Men. . . .” He adds that black and green
were the favored colors of Witches, and that green was a fairy
color. Historian Diane Purkiss (The Witch in History, London:
Routledge, 1996) comments on Familiars as being malevolent
fairies. Viewing Familiars as remnants of earlier pagan spirits suggests
a survival theme of pre-Christian religion within the folklore
and folk magic traditions associated with Witchcraft of the
Middle Ages and early Renaissance periods.
Richard Baxter (1615–1619) was an earlier figure who viewed
Familiars as Nature spirits. Baxter was a Puritan cleric who wrote
a treatise titled The Certainty of the World of Spirits, which was
published in the year of his death. The treatise argued for the belief
in “invisible powers and spirits.” Baxter believed that such
things aided Witches in raising storms and casting spells. In his
treatise Baxter wrote that it is uncertain whether the spirits that
served Witches “are neither Angels, good or bad” or “whether
those called Fairies and Goblins are not such.” The fact that the
latter concept was even a consideration here demonstrates the
survival of such Pagan beliefs into later periods.
Nonphysical Familiars
One of the persistent themes in the literature of Witchcraft is
the tale of Witches being transported to the Sabbat through the
aid of a Familiar spirit. In Fairy lore there are also many accounts
of humans being transported into the Fairy Realm. This is suggestive
of an Otherworld experience, a crossing between the
realms of mortals and spirits by the intervention of a supernatural
being. According to oral tradition, in order to avoid detection
some Witches met within the astral realm to hold their Sabbats.
This often included the use of “flying ointment” smeared upon
the skin. In Fairy lore either a magical dust or a potion is used.
According to the literature on Witchcraft, the Witches’ flying
ointment was made from herbs: aconite (wolfsbane), belladonna,
hemlock, smallage, and cinquefoil. This was mixed with a paste
made from the meal of fine wheat, or with fat or oil. In order to
be nonlethal, such a recipe would have to be concocted under
the guidance of a master herbalist, as even small amounts of
some of these herbs are deadly. We know that the earliest word
for Witch in Western literature was the Greek word pharmakis,
which means one who possesses the knowledge of herbs.
Inducing a trance, whether through meditation, chemicals, or
other means, can link the Witch to other realms of existence and
to altered states of consciousness. One ancient technique involved
listening to the croaking of frogs as an aid to entering a
trance. Here we see the connection of the animal spirit as a magical
partner to the Witch figure. The fact that the frog moves
back and forth between land and water perhaps suggested a supernatural
power to lead the Witch to and from the spirit realm.
Nineteenth-century folklorists such as Charles Leland, Roma
Lister, and J. B. Andrews noted the incorporation of small bronze
frog images used by Witches for spells and other works of magic,
which seems to indicate a magical connection and relationship
between frogs and Witches.
From an occult perspective, trance (as an altered state of consciousness)
is conducive to astral projection, which allows the
consciousness to leave the physical body and travel as desired.
Astral projection is a theme that appears in the literature on
Witchcraft even as late as the seventeenth century, where it is
called “traveling in spirit” or “journeying without the body.”
Such tales appearing in Witch trial transcripts are consistent
throughout Europe.
In some writings a Witch’s Familiar is a fairy or imp. Such
creatures are said to dwell in spirit realms, and doorways from
this world lead into the Otherworld. Traveling “in spirit” allowed
the Witch to enter the Otherworld that exists beyond the physical
world. Perhaps this is why the fairy and the Witch are often
associated in folk beliefs throughout much of Europe and the
British Isles.
The Church and the Familiar Spirit
In 1318 Pope John XXII sent nine alleged Witches to be prosecuted
for various magical practices, including contacting Familiar
spirits with the aid of a polished glass. The Church employed
several scriptures from the Old Testament concerning Familiar
spirits, although it is unclear what the concept would have
meant to ancient Hebrews in comparison to the Christian
Church of the Middles Ages and Renaissance periods. Many
have used the story of the “Witch of Endor” from the Old Testament
(1 Samuel 28: 3–25) as a foundation stone concerning the
Church’s view on Familiars. However, there is nothing in the
original language to indicate that the woman in question was a
Witch. Here she is referred to as a ba’alath ob, literally a “mistress
of the Ob.” The Latin translation read mulierem habentem
pythonem
, which means “a woman possessing an oracle spirit.” It
is the King James version that translated the later Latin rendering
to mean “possessing a Familiar spirit.”
Sorcerers or necromancers who evoked the dead to answer
questions were referred to in Hebrew as an ob. Some commentators
have suggested that “ob” refers to a leather bottle, and therefore
this nickname arose from the belief that a sorcerer’s body
could serve as a vessel for a spirit from the Otherworld. Such
commentators claim that the Greek word pytho was used in
much the same regard to denote both the person and the spirit
within the sorcerer. However, historian Frederick H. Ceyer, in
his article “Magic in Ancient Syria-Palestine―and in the Old
Testament” (appearing in the book Witchcraft and Magic in Europe:
Biblical and Pagan Societies
, Ankarloo and Stuart, University
of Pennsylvania Press, 2001) states that the precise meaning of
ob eludes us.
The King James Bible rendered the translation to read “Familiaris.”
This changed the meaning of the original scripture, and
now indicated a “household servant.” This was done in order to
portray such spirits as being the personal servants of a sorcerer.
The literal translations of the Bible do not actually address the
Familiar spirit; biblical scripture deals mainly with practitioners
of the occult arts. The Book of Deuteronomy 18:10–11 admonished
one not to keep company with any who is a fortuneteller,
soothsayer, charmer, diviner, spell-caster, a spirit medium, or anyone
who seeks oracles from the dead. The Book of Leviticus
20:27 called for a strict penalty: “A man or a woman who acts as
a medium or fortuneteller shall be put to death by stoning.” The
King James Bible replaced the original concept and inserted the
word “witch.”
The Court and the Familiar Spirit
In the year 1563, Queen Elizabeth issued a Witchcraft statute
that decreed a penalty for anyone who invoked or conjured “evill
and wicked Spirites.” A later statute introduced by King James in
1604 was more specific:
That if any person or persons . . . shall use practise or exercise
any Invocation or Conjuration of any evill and
wicked Spirit, or shall consult covenant with entertaine
employ feede or rewarde any evill and wicked Spirit
(they will be punished).*
Local court officials anxious to convict people of Witchcraft
used coercion to shape the evidence in such a way that suspected
Witches were in clear violation of the law (i.e., feeding or entertaining
evil spirits).
An interesting theme that appears in Witch trial transcripts is
the mention of the inherited Familiar. Most scholars view the
――――
* Used with permission, © Thomas Donaldson, 1995.
Familiar spirit as primarily part of English Witchcraft, although it
appears in the Witch trial transcripts of other regions of Europe
as well. One example is the Venetian trial of Elena Draga and
Maddalena la Greca, who claimed to possess a fada in the form of
a chicken. A fada is a fairy-like creature, and in modern Italian is
called a fata. The Familiar spirit also appears in the Salem
Witchcraft trials in New England.
In the Chelmsford trial (1556), the accused confessed to possessing
a white-spotted cat named Sathan that was passed down
from Witch to Witch. In another Chelmsford trial (1582), a
twelve-year-old girl named Elizabeth Frauncis said she received a
cat from her grandmother, but later gave it away to a woman
named Agnes Waterhouse. In...

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  • PublisherLlewellyn Publications
  • Publication date2003
  • ISBN 10 0738703397
  • ISBN 13 9780738703398
  • BindingPaperback
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages192
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Book Description Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. You can use Familiars as guardians during dream or astral work or to protect your home and property. Familiars can also help in spell-casting and other works of magick. The Witches' Familiar is the first thorough and serious work on the subject for modern Witches and Pagans. It shows how to obtain a Familiar and work with one and it also provides cautions and remedies for any problems that may occur in this magical partnership. Learn a magical system for creating and using mystical seals designed to evoke Familiar spirits. This is never-before-published material, based upon Pagan elements rather than the more common Hebrew and Kabbalistic seals. Strengthen your magic with a Familiar face. This complete guide working with Familiars coven three types: physical, astral, and spiritual. You'll learn how to call these helpful spirits, choose an appropriate name, and command/release a nonphysical familiar. Combine forces with Familiars to boost your spellwork and rituals or even guard your home. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780738703398

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