The Five Gestures: A Universal Grammar of Ritual - Softcover

Sublime, Kai

 
9798195552978: The Five Gestures: A Universal Grammar of Ritual

Synopsis

Magic didn't end at the witch trials. It just changed languages.

Every working tradition on earth — Islamic, Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, indigenous, magical — performs the same five acts in different vestments.

Clear a space. Call something into it. Meet what you called. Seal what happened. Give the result back to the world.

That is the working. That has always been the working.

The Five Gestures is a comparative anatomy of ritual, written from inside the practice rather than the seminar room. It places the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram next to wudu and Tibetan refuge. It places the Bornless Ritual next to fanaa and theosis and kensho. It shows that the Rose Cross of the Golden Dawn and the taslim of the Muslim prayer and the dedication of merit of the Tibetan Buddhist are dialects of one anatomy.

The argument is simple. The doing is older than the believing. The believing is the story each tradition tells itself about the doing. The doing is the technology, and the technology works regardless of which story you happen to inherit.

This is not a history of religion. It is not a how-to. It is not a substitute for any tradition you may already be inside.

It is a hand on the shoulder of the person at the wall.

Five chapters. One gesture each. Each closes with a workable practice you can begin tomorrow morning, in your kitchen, before the kettle goes on.

The traditions disagree about almost everything. They agree about what to do.

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