Understanding the Occult: What is an Egregore?
by
Theron Dunn, 32° Freemason
Category:
Occultism Explained
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efore starting, the
author would like to express thanks to
Wr. Giovanni Lombardo for his assistance
in defining and bringing this article to
the readers.
If you have never heard of the term “egregore”,
join the crowd. Many people have never
heard the word, and until recently, that
crowd INCLUDED the author. A year ago,
while on The Lodgeroom US, a fervent
antimasonic… person, named Thomas “Skip”
Sampson, tossed out an unsupported and
off topic slander to the effect that we
masons should go back to working on
evoking our egregore in lodge.
At the time, the author was stunned,
never before having heard the word. A
quick internet search revealed nothing,
and not having any information on the
subject, a research project was born,
and thence this paper.
At the time, very little was available,
though that has changed recently. One of
the problems is that egregore is spelled
two different ways, with a “E” at the
end, and without. This made is difficult
at first to find information.
So, what is an egregore, and how does it
relate to freemasonry?
Let start with a simple explanation of
what an egregore is, or is reputed to
be, and then move on from there. On this
subject, there are various opinions,
especially among “occultists” who seem
to be the primary authors on the nature
of the egregore. Following are the four
primary occultist definitions:
An energized astral form produced
consciously or unconsciously by human
agency. In particular, (a) a strongly
characterized form, usually an
archetypal image, produced by the
imaginative and emotional energies of a
religious or magical group collectively,
or (b) an astral shape of any kind,
deliberately formulated by a magician to
carry a specific force.[1]
…from a Greek word meaning “watcher.” A
thought-form created by will and
visualization. A group egregore is the
distinctive energy of a specific group
of magicians who are working together,
creating and building the same
thought-form or energy-form.[2]
Any symbolic pattern that has served as
a focus for human emotion and energy
will build up an egregore of its own
over time, and the more energy that is
put into such a pattern, the more potent
the egregore that will form around it.
The gods and goddesses of every
religion, past and present, are at the
centers of vast egregore charged with
specific kinds of power. This power is
defined by, and contacted through, the
traditional symbolism of the deity in
question.[3]
An egregore is an angel, sometimes
called watcher; in Hebrew the word is ir,
and the concept appears in The Book of
Enoch.... Thus, Irim, the city of the
Nephilim is again linked with the Book
of Enoch, since the Nephilim, according
to that Book, were the sons of the Irim
(the egregores.)....Although the Irim,
the egregores, are angels on both sides
of the camp - fallen angels as well as
faithful ones.[4]
René Guénon, a prolific writer on
Masonic philosophy offers the following:
First of all, we must point out that we
have never used the word ‘egregore’ to
designate what could properly be called
a ‘collective entity’; the reason for
this is that the term is wholly
untraditional and only represents one of
the fantasies of modern occultist
language.
The first person to use it (egregore)
this way was Eliphas Levy, and if our
memory is exact, it was he who, to
justify this meaning gave it the
improbable Latin etymology, deriving it
from grex, ‘flock’, whereas the word is
purely Greek and has never signified
anything more than watcher.[5]
It appears therefore that, according to
Guénon that an egregore is a
manifestation of psychic energy, as
opposed to a spiritual force as the
occultists would define it. Now that the
author has completely confused you, let
us proceed to dissect what we have as
“definitions” to see if we can come to
an understanding of the egregore, and
its “place” in freemasonry.
Of the definitions offered, that of
Guénon seems to be the one that actually
relates to masonry, while the others
relate to religious/occult faith. The
egregore is a psychic entity, existing
between the material and the spiritual,
in contact with both. It is the creation
of the psychic will of the members of a
group, and exists as a connection to the
divine.
As we work rituals, the focused mental
energy creates and invokes the egregore
to fulfill the need of the group. An
egregore is not a magical creature, it
is not self aware, and is not a Djin, to
carry out wishes. The egregore serves as
a conduit, a nexus, to connect the group
that created/invoked it to the
spiritual.
Some egregores are temporary, while
some, like the egregore of a lodge, a
church, or a country, are the result of
the continuous will that creates them,
and this will also sustains them. The
egregore of freemasonry has existed for
centuries, and is the result of the
focused will to connect with the
spiritual from millions of men.
An egregore is the psychic “entity”. All
members of a group, whether it is a
club, your family, your lodge, a faith,
a political party, a country, or even a
single person, are united with the
egregore of that group through a psychic
connection. As a result, and given the
nature of society, we are often included
in the sphere of several egregores at
once.
The strength and ability of the egregore
to aid and assist the members of the
group grows over time and through
numbers, by drawing support from the
members constituting it and through
their repeated actions maintain its
power. The egregore, in turn, invokes
the immaterial and raises us from the
material, connecting us to the subtle
worlds.
Where the intent is positive and
spiritual, the effect of the egregore
consists in conveying spirituality to
the members as in the initiatic process
of the lodge. The intent is to divest
the candidate of the profane and connect
him to the spiritual, and for most
masons, that effect is felt and received
most profoundly. To the contrary, in the
case of other groups, especially the
counter-initiatic ones – which adopt
rites and symbols to attain profane or
negative goals – the egregore can be
quite destructive to the lives and
spirits of those members.[6]
Each individual who is involved in a
group is influenced by these egregores.
For those that reach for a spiritual
connection, the egregore assists and
facilitates that connection. This
process is unconscious, but is
intensified through the initiatic
process, which is designed to open the
mind to the spiritual through the
egregore.
A symbolic representation of this may be
had in the examination of the Star of
David, an emblem of the divine. The top
triangle points the heavens, and to the
spirit. The bottom triangle points down,
to the material and profane. United,
they form a new entity, the six-pointed
star that represents the unity of the
two, from material to the spirit,
connection to the divine.
An example of this we are familiar with
in Freemasonry is the Compasses and
Square. The compass represents the male,
the spiritual energy, while the square
represents the material. The compasses
enclose and define the spiritual, as in
the point within a circle, while the
square defines the mortal, the material
world. United, these two symbols, like
the triangles, which form the Star of
David, an emblem the represents the
divine, so, too, does the square and
compasses united, represent the divine,
as is shown by the letter G in the
middle.
So, the nature of the egregore has been
known since time immemorial, as shown
above. Its function is that of a guide,
and intercessory, to conduct the group
members to the spirit and connect them
with it. Some groups are connected more
powerfully from the profane and mortal
side to the spiritual than others, some
less so, but to each group according to
its intent. As with all things, it is
the intent that matters, not the form.
Guénon goes on to state, in reference to
the egregore’s influence:
Man has, however, to point out that the
Egregore “can never transcend the
individual domain since, in the final
analysis, it is only a resultant of the
component individualities, nor,
consequently, can it go beyond the
psychic order; now all that is, only
psychic can have no effective and direct
relationship with initiation since this
latter consists essentially in the
transmission of a spiritual influence
meant to produce effects of a similar
spiritual order, thus transcendent with
respect to the individuality, whence one
obviously must conclude that whatever is
able to render effective the initially
virtual action of this influence, must
itself necessarily have a
supra-individual and thus, if one may
put it so, a supra-collective
character.”[7]
In a lodge of freemasons, the egregore
is strengthened by time and experience,
and the will and intention of good men.
The strength of the egregore is patent
in the effect the ritual has on the
candidate, and effect that cannot be
accounted for simply in the execution of
the ritual itself.
We have all experienced the thrill, the
exhilaration of the initiation, and the
emotional high that carries us for days
afterward as the flame is kindled in our
breast. This is the spirit the egregore
connects us with that fills us and
carries us. It is this spirit that
breathes in us, inspires us with
brotherly love, relief, truth and
charity.
The spirit is from the divine. The
egregore is the psychic link between the
mortal to the spirit. The mason is
inspired by the breath of the spirit.
And thus: freemasonry.
Theron Dunn
[1957-2008]
References
1 Planetary Magick, Denning & Phillips,
(Llewellyn Publications)
2 Golden Dawn Glossary
http://www. thelemicgnosticism.
org/aa/contacts. htm
3 John Michael Greer, from: Inside a
Magical Lodge
4 Egregore by L.S. Bernstein,
http://www. crcsite. org/egregor. htm
5 Spiritual Influences and Egregores by
René Guénon, in Initiation and Spiritual
Realization, Sophia Perennis, Hillsdale,
N. Y. p37, paragraph 2
6 So it was in some Nazi esoteric
groups, such as Thule or Vril. Also
http://www. harare. unesco.
org/hivaids/webfiles/Electronic%20Versions/malawi%20lifeskil
ls. doc
7 Spiritual Influences and Egregores by
René Guénon, in Initiation and Spiritual
Realization, Sophia Perennis, Hillsdale,
N. Y. p119
May the blessings of heaven rest upon us
and all regular Masons, may brotherly
love prevail, and every moral and social
virtue, cement us.
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Source: Correspondence
with a member of the A.'.A.'.
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