Showing posts with label black magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black magic. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Casting Death Spell
As a sub set of the Health Spells in general, these death spells are some of the most powerful spells in this spell book.
Although none of the spells will directly cause the death of the intended victim they will cause the body to get ill and die.
However, because of the power of the spells, when they backfire
onto the caster, they are usually much more powerful then they would
normally be, making removal of a mis-cast death spell nearly impossible.
Sit in a little room light the candle cut yourself let the blood fall on
the floor and say this blood represents my victims this is my payment
godess. please hear me out and burn this person in your name. long shall
you reign mighty godess.
Monday, November 10, 2014
Ritual of Death
At 1st check the links below;
http://sh.st/ikEQ9
http://sh.st/ikEQ7
http://sh.st/ikEQ2
http://sh.st/ikEWw
http://sh.st/ikEQ6
http://sh.st/ikEW0
http://sh.st/ikEQ3
http://sh.st/ikEQ8
http://sh.st/ikEQ5
http://sh.st/ikEWe
http://sh.st/ikEQ7
http://sh.st/ikEQ2
http://sh.st/ikEWw
http://sh.st/ikEQ6
http://sh.st/ikEW0
http://sh.st/ikEQ3
http://sh.st/ikEQ8
http://sh.st/ikEQ5
http://sh.st/ikEWe
This is a translation of an abridged version of the Garuda Purana.
The Garuda Purana is one of the Vishnu Puranas.
It is in the form of a dialog between Vishnu and Garuda, the King of Birds.
The second section of this Purana (given here)
deals with issues connected with death,
particularly funeral rites and the metaphysics of reincarnation.
Portions of the Garuda Purana are used by some Hindus as funeral liturgy.
Indeed, some consider it unlucky to read this text except during funerals.
Of interest are the intermediate states between
birth and rebirth, which roughly correspond to the western
concepts of Hell and Heaven.
Since this was written during the medieval era,
it is possible that the writer of this text had contact with
Christianity.
Earlier Hindu texts do not elaborate about 'hell' and 'heaven,'
at least not to this extent, and the subject is completely
absent in the oldest texts.
Here, the torments of Hell are described in terms that would not
be out of place in a Baptist revival tent (or Dante, for that matter).
In addition, the four-square city of Yama, the God of Death, is
reminiscent of the heavenly city in Revelation.
However, these are way stations between incarnations
(or, as termed in the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Bardos),
not a permanent destination.
The Garuda Purana starts with the details of the afterlife.
Following this is an account of funeral procedures,
including rituals, the astrological timing of the post-death observances,
and ritual gifts.
Balancing the extended vision of Hell in the earlier part of the document
is a shorter account of the City of Yama.
After that is an enumeration of correspondences between the macrocosmos
and the human body.
The final part of this text is an appeal to self-knowledge as the key
to liberation, going beyond austerities and study of the texts.
"The fool, not knowing that the truth is seated in himself, is bewildered
by the Shastras,--a foolish goatherd, with the young goat under his arm,
peers into the well."
Labels:
black magic,
death,
evil,
magic,
ritual,
ritual of death,
satan
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Black Magic Ritual
http://westernlink.co/l/wG0FZ
http://westernlink.co/l/GnRFD
http://westernlink.co/l/4RQtO
http://westernlink.co/l/3VoeZ
http://westernlink.co/l/sWfOO
http://westernlink.co/l/vZDu0
http://westernlink.co/l/sNX4e
http://westernlink.co/l/L3K09
http://westernlink.co/l/KAuqo
http://westernlink.co/l/nSBd1
http://westernlink.co/l/GnRFD
http://westernlink.co/l/4RQtO
http://westernlink.co/l/3VoeZ
http://westernlink.co/l/sWfOO
http://westernlink.co/l/vZDu0
http://westernlink.co/l/sNX4e
http://westernlink.co/l/L3K09
http://westernlink.co/l/KAuqo
http://westernlink.co/l/nSBd1
You may ask, what is black magic? There are many debates as to what exactly is black magic and how it is different than white magic, or any other color magic you may have heard of.
In the simpliest terms, all magic is the same and really had no color,
but the media, movies, television and video games has made color magic
very popular. In the media, black magic is portrayed as evil, white as
good. Red is often seen as love magic, green as money or wealth.
Such a division of magic into colors is useful, you can color-code your
own spell code, writing love spells on red or pink paper and make them
easy to find, but in reality this division of color does not really
exist, the 'magic' is the same for all these spells and rituals.
Real practitioners consider spells which fight against, or try to
manipulate free will as black magic. Because these spells try to
influence the normal life of others they can become pretty dangerous if
they backfire. Free will is considered by some as the strongest force in
nature so care should definately be taken when dealing in the dark
arts.
The line between what can be considered back magic is fuzzy though. Love
spells are rarely seen as black magic, but if the spell makes someone
leave their spouce and travel across the country to be with you you are
definatly messing with free will. However, a simple crush spell to get a
date doesn't really mess with their free will.
To distinguish in a mass of forged literature certain books as more
spurious than others, seems at first sight a needless ingenuity of
criticism. There are, however, some Rituals of Black Magic which are
merely the knavish speculations of catchpenny booksellers, and there are
others, anterior to the period, and foreign to the centres, of colportage,
which have never exercised any influence, and are, in fact, generally
unknown. Both classes neither possess a history nor have contributed
anything to their subject. Yet it does not follow that they offer no
points of curiosity or interest, and some account of them must be given
in this place.
The Verus Jesuitarum Libellus, or "True Magical Work of the
Jesuits, containing most powerful conjurations for all evil spirits of
whatever state, condition and office they are, and a most powerful and
approved conjuration of the Spirit Uriel; 1
to which is added Cyprian's Invocation of Angels, and his Conjuration
of the Spirits guarding Hidden Treasures, together with a form for their
dismissal,"--purports to have been published at Paris in the Latin
tongue, and in the year 1508. It was reprinted by Scheible at Stuttgart
in 1845, forming part of the curious collection of Faust documents
already mentioned. Finally, in the year 1875, the late Major Herbert
Irwin made, or procured privately, an English translation, which remains
in MS. The date placed on the title-page of the original edition at
once betrays the imposture. It will be almost needless to say that in
the first decade of the sixteenth century there were no Jesuits; the Society originated
with St. Ignatius, who died in 1556, being two years after the
confirmation of the Society by Pope Paul III.
The Conjurations are
excessively curious. The first is addressed to a spirit whose name is
not indicated, but he is, supposed to have been obedient to Abraham and
Isaac, and is directed to bring the magician, out of the depths of the
sea, so many millions--the number is not specified and depends upon the
cupidity of the operator--of the best Spanish gold; otherwise, says the
Conjuration, I will condemn thy body (sic) and thy soul. In the second. formula, the spirit is cited by the knowledge and exorcising power of Agrippa, 1
which again puts a definite limit to the antiquity of the collection,
were it otherwise necessary. The third Invocation is addressed to the
spirit Zayariel, who is conjured by Agla Scheffert and the great Jehova Podashocheia.
The remainder, to the number of seven in all, are nearly identical in
character and precisely in purpose, the demon being invariably required
too bring that which is desired by the operator from the depths of the
sea, or from the abyss of the waters, or from the spiritual abyss. The
Discharge or Absolution which concludes the series is really an
additional conjuration.
The Citation of St. Cyprian is presumably an experiment in
what is distinguished as White Magic, seeing that it is addressed to an
Angel who was the guest of Lot and Abraham. The object being "help in
need," and this in all simplicity, it is apparently appropriate for
every strait in life, and should be, therefore, noted for reference by
those who may think it worth while; it is too cumbrous and tedious for
these pages, A similar observation would apply only too truly to the Process for the Magical Acquisition of Hidden Treasures, but it is much more complete than the rest and has so much connection with the Summum Bonum,
the desire of the eyes of all Ceremonial Magic, that it may be held
necessary to give it. it is, however, an operation of Necromancy and
will be found in its proper place in the Second Part. 1 The Verus Jesuitarum Libellus
closes with a fuliginous conjuration of the entire hierarchy of
Infernus, which continues for many pages and contains more
unintelligible words than several combined Grimoires. In the absence of
all knowledge of its original edition, it is impossible to throw any
light upon this singular imposture.
The Praxis Magica Fausti or "Magical Elements of Dr. John
Faust, Practitioner of Medicine," claims to have been printed from the
original MS. in the Municipal Library of Weimar and is dated 1571, at
which period it must be respectfully affirmed that there was no
Municipal Library in the birthplace of Goethe. Furthermore, the existing
collection does not include the MS. Whether the original edition was
antedated cannot be certainly affirmed, as it is exceedingly scarce, and
I am acquainted with it only in the reprint of Scheible and in an
unprinted transcript by Major Irwin. The work consists of a few curious
plates, in the manner of the seventeenth century, and a few
unintelligible conjurations, all exceedingly brief.
The third of these
exhorts the Evil Spirit on the quaint ground that now it is the time of
the Great Name Tetragrammaton. The purpose of citation is not
indicated; the formulæ are Christian, broken up by innumerable crosses
and by names and terms which defy conjecture as to their significance.
The hierarchy of the spirit is determined by the closing words: "I
command thee, O Spirit Rumoar, even by Lucifer, thy mighty sovereign."
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Voodoo Rituals in Haiti
http://bit.ly/1EUvvgy
http://bit.ly/14CVfD3
http://bit.ly/1xz1La0
http://bit.ly/1xKKmZJ
http://bit.ly/1EXTeyn
http://bit.ly/1qiHKSY
http://bit.ly/11fpZbi
http://bit.ly/1zyrjC7
http://bit.ly/1xKKvMH
http://bit.ly/1yOoM5M
http://bit.ly/14CVfD3
http://bit.ly/1xz1La0
http://bit.ly/1xKKmZJ
http://bit.ly/1EXTeyn
http://bit.ly/1qiHKSY
http://bit.ly/11fpZbi
http://bit.ly/1zyrjC7
http://bit.ly/1xKKvMH
http://bit.ly/1yOoM5M
In 1998, 16 years after he first became interested in visiting Haiti, photographer Anthony Karen made his first of what would be many trips to the Caribbean country. In the early 1980s, Karen had seen a documentary about the Creole pig in Haiti. The documentary focused on the United States’ role in the pigs’ eradication due to an outbreak of swine flu in neighboring Dominican Republic and subsequent fear of the U.S. pork industry being devastated.
But it was the references throughout the documentary of the Creole
pig’s role in some Voodoo rituals that really caught Karen’s attention.
“The documentary … portrayed [the Voodoo rituals] as very dark and
cloaked in mystery; that combined with Haiti being ranked the most
dangerous place in the Western Hemisphere, I felt compelled to go,”
Karen wrote via email.
That attitude shouldn’t surprise anyone familiar with Karen’s work.
He’s never afraid to go after taboo subjects, such as his work with the Ku Klux Klan, which was featured on Slate in August.
Karen’s travels to Haiti are often for medical missions and volunteer
work. During those trips, he also found time to approach people about
his interest in attending a Voodoo ceremony. Karen didn’t feel
comfortable getting into a private space and photographing the ceremony
during his first trip, but as his comfort slowly increased, he began to
document the rituals.
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