About the Author Rabbi Geoffrey Dennis is adjunct instructor of Rabbinics in the Jewish Studies Program at the University of North Texas and rabbi of Congregation Kol Ami in Flower Mound, TX. His articles have appeared in Journal of Ritual Studies, Parabola: the Magazine of Myth and Tradition, Journal of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, American Journal and The Journal of the Anthropology of Consciousness. He co-authored the recent article, Vampires and Witches and Commandos: Oy Vey! Comic Book Appropriations of Lilith, with his son, Avi. He has also authored over 20 encyclopedia entries for The Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception; The Encyclopedia of Possession and Exorcism; and The Encyclopedia of Miracles. Llewellyn Publications Woodbury, Minnesota Concerning everything that cannot be grasped, its question is its answer. —Ketem Paz To my sons, Avi and Micah, who love secrets. To Robin, the greatest angel I know. Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Introduction To The Second Edition How to Use This Book The Encyclopedia A–Z A / B / C / D / E / F / G / H / I / J / K / L M / N / O / P / Q / R / S / T / U / V / W / X / Y / Z Abbreviations Of Citations From Traditional Texts Quick Reference Glossary Of Frequently Used Terms Bibliography List of Art Credits Acknowledgments My deep appreciation to my classmates and friends Rabbi Martha Bergadine, Rabbi George Gittleman, Dr. Dana Kaplan, Rabbi Max Weiss, and Rabbi Stan Zamek for taking the time from their busy lives to read the manuscript and offer insights and suggestions. Their contributions greatly improved the final product. Thanks too to my brother John, to Charles Gregory, to Terry Hansen, and to Scott and Kelley Snowden. Though nonexperts in matters Jewish, they also read the book and helped me see it through the eyes of a general reader. My gratitude also goes to Dr. Richard Golden. He unwittingly triggered the creation of the EJMMM and then graciously offered me encouragement once I finally owned up to what I was doing. I want to acknowledge my teachers at Hebrew Union College- Jewish Institute of Religion, for teaching me the tools I needed to research this book: Rabbi Steven Balaban, Dr. Marc Bregman, Rabbi Chanan Brichto z”l, Dr. Alan Cooper, Dr. Susan Einbinder, Rabbi Ben Hollander, Dr. Adam Kamasar, Dr. Robert Katz z”l, Dr. Steve Kaufmann, Masha Klein, Dr. Michael Klein z”l, Dr. Barry Kogan, Dr. Paul Liptz, Dr. Michael Meyer, Dr. Eugene Mihaly z”l, Dr. Alvin Reines z”l, Hannah Saggi, Dr. Richard Sarason, Rabbi Julie Schwartz, Ezri Uval z”l, Dr. Ben Zion Wacholder z”l, Dr. Mark Washofsky, Dr. David Weisberg z”l, and Dr. Isaac Yerushalmi. I want to thank Natalie Harter, Karl Anderson, and all the editors at Llewellyn, both for taking an interest in an unsolicited proposal from an unknown author, and also for being the nicest and most pleasant people I’ve yet encountered in the publishing world. My greatest and eternal thanks must go to my wife and soulmate, Robin, who encouraged my vision and gave me the confidence to write this book. Not only did she read and help revise countless manuscripts, but she has been more patient and forgiving of me during the years of writing this book than I deserve or merit. May her reward be waiting in the World to Come, because she’s stuck with me until then. Introduction Judaism is one of the oldest living esoteric traditions in the world. Virtually every form of Western mysticism and spiritualism known today draws upon Jewish mythic and occult teachings—magic, prayer, angelology, alchemy, numerology, astral projection, dream interpretation, astrology, amulets, divination, altered states of consciousness, alternative, and rituals of power—all have roots in the Jewish occult. But for millennia, many of these core teachings have been unavailable to the general public, concealed by barriers of language and by the protective principles governing the teaching of Kabbalah, which has both nurtured and guarded such knowledge. Now, however, many more traditional texts of Jewish mysticism and magic are being translated into English and many more almost-forgotten manuscripts of Jewish esoteric teachings have been recovered and identified. At the same time, people of all backgrounds are thirsty for the kind of wisdom that can only be drawn from ancient wells. This confluence of factors inspired me to write a book like The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic, and Mysticism. When Adam HaRishon, the First Man, sinned, he blemished all the nitzotzot (Holy Sparks) … causing them to become immersed in the kelipot … The kelipot are the husks or shells [of impurity, evil, and entropy] that imprison the fallen Holy Sparks.1 This is a book full of husks and sparks: of things concealed and revealed, lost and then recovered. This encyclopedia focuses exclusively on the esoteric in Judaism—the fabulous, the miraculous, and the mysterious. In this book the reader will find many kelipot, husks from the ancient and shattered world of Jewish occult teachings: the seemingly eccentric, the offbeat, the peripheral, and the outlandish. Much of it will strike a modern reader as dark, strange, and alien stuff indeed—husks. Because so much has been lost over the past two centuries of what we term “modernization,” even many Jews will be puzzled by the contents of this book. And to be frank, most Jews can live very satisfactory spiritual lives never having known, or never knowing, much of what can be found in these pages. So be forewarned: this is not a primer on Judaism, providing a conventional perspective on those beliefs and practices most people associate with Torah and Jewish faith. On the other hand … Concealed within these many husks there are nitzotzot, or “holy sparks.” Since Jewish esotericism is the oldest and most influential continuous occult tradition in the West, shaping everything from angelology to the zodiac, this book contains lore that can spiritually enrich the lives of anyone, Jewish or not, who wishes to understand the mysteries that underlie our universe. The reader who looks carefully into this book will glimpse flashes of insight, glimmers of inspiration, and sparks of wit and wisdom. For Jews, this book uncovers aspects of Judaism that have been lost to most of us until recently. For every reader, this book is meant to be a portal into an exotic alternate spiritual world, for this is a book about three things that have profoundly shaped human experience: myth, magic, and mysticism. Already, with the word “myth,” the puzzlement begins and our modern prejudices take over our thinking. For is not a myth a kind of fairy tale, a fantastic account about something that never really was? Modern Jews are constantly taught that Judaism is a religion without mythology, a faith unburdened by fanciful and grotesque “adventures of the gods.” To that claim I answer, “Well, yes and no.” First of all, let us clear something up: a myth, a really good myth, is not a story about something that never happened. It’s a story about something that happens all the time. Myths are archetypal tales, fabulous stories told to help us fathom important truths—truths about ourselves, our universe, and how things really are. And while it is true that Judaism (mostly) lacks stories about “God as action-hero,” it nevertheless revels in mythological tales about those things which are, to paraphrase the Psalms, “little less than God”; angels and demons, primeval monsters, magicians and miracle-workers, agents of good and evil. After all, what are the first eleven chapters of Genesis if not a carefully crafted mythic account of exactly what human beings are and how our world came to look the way it does? The simple fact is that Jewish tradition overflows with myths of deep complexity and singular wisdom. It is much the same with regard to the magical. Modern Jews like to imagine that magic has been swept into the dustbin of history by the long, inexorable progress of rationalism. More than that, Jews have been taught from our youth that Judaism has always possessed an essentially naturalistic worldview and that magic, merely a marginal Jewish preoccupation at most, was just an anomaly resulting from our being situated (and corrupted) by the superstitions of our neighbors. But that’s not entirely accurate. It is only in the last two centuries that Jews have fully embraced science, but we have always been looking for ways to change the world for the better, whether it be through science, medicine, or “practical Kabbalah.” Even today, rationalism has not completely displaced our sense that there is a mystical potential at work in the world; Occam’s razor has never been able to fully overpower the Sixteen-Sided Sword of the Almighty.2 Millions of people, both Jews and gentiles, continue to believe that the stars influence our lives. Most Americans believe in the reality of angels. Jewish techniques of dream interpretation and for combating the evil eye are still widely practiced today. When you read the entries of this book on topics such as these, you will realize that magical thinking and enchanting deeds have always had a place in Judaism and, however much some might want to dismiss Judaism’s miraculous and wondrous traditions, the presence of Jewish magic in Jewish life has merely been eclipsed, never uprooted; it still has the potential to empower us.
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