777 and Modern Qabalah
777 is one of the most prominent books of the Qabalah in the western esoteric tradition, alongside Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers' Kabbalah Unveiled, Israel Regardie's A Garden of Pomegranates and Dion Fortune's Mystic Qabalah. The Kabbalah however is a much earlier Jewish form of Torah commentary that was prominent in the sixteenth century via the book the Zohar. It introduced the diminishing four worlds, God as the transcendent Ain Soph, Israel as embodying the Shekinah, or "presence", as spouse of the male God, and most popularly the ten sephiroth as schema of the universe between Israel and Jehovah. It did this by interpreting the concrete letters of the scripture rather than, say, the universal parable more evident in the gospels. Through the reformation it became popular with occultists like Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, Pico della Mirandola and Eliphas Levi before being formalized in popular new-age magic.
Read more about this topic: 777 And Other Qabalistic Writings Of Aleister Crowley
Famous quotes containing the word modern:
“The modern state no longer has anything but rights; it does not recognize duties any more.”
—Georges Bernanos (18881948)