Abracadabra,
Hocus-Pocus, Mumbo Jumbo
Abracadabra
comes from a pagan god (Abraxas), hocus-pocus from
the 'Hoc est Corpus' ('This is My Body') of transubstantiation
in the Latin Mass, and
mumbo jumbo from a grotesque African idol of that
name.
The
use of the first and the last might possibly signify in
demonology and the middle one may strike some as blasphemy.
Conjurors'
use of presto (fast) is not really part of a charm
or spell. In The Arabian Nights, open sesame is a
magical phrase; in the comic books shazzam is similar.
When the name of a devil or demon
or The Devil himself
is used, we have demonology.
It
is remarkable that some black magicans include the names
of God and the angels and
saints in their invocations.
To anagrammatize these, or to use them backwards in disrespect
and rejection, is one thing; to use them 'straight' looks
very odd.
The
Right Words
It
is a firm belief in magic
that if one does not say the incantation
exactly right - it's an incantation, not an invocation
- there will be no result. One must get the hocus-pocus
right. That term is a Protestand insult to the Roman Catholic
Mass.
Those
who still would like to cling to the Latin Mass - which
the Roman Church did say at the 16th century Council of
Trent was forever, an idea dropped after a Vatican council
in our century - argue that the words of consencration don't
work in other languages, making the Mass more like a Protestant
memorial of the Last Supper than a Roman Catholic miracle
of transubstantiation on the altar.
In
the history of magic there are reports that the single word
Agla, if said in the right way, prodoced extraordinary
results. It is also said that merely by pronouncing seven
names correctly (Adonai, Perai, Tetragrammaton, Anexhexeton,
Inessensatoal, Pathumaton, and Itemon) King Solomon
was able to bring all demons under his personal control.
The name Primematum holds power over the whole host
of Heaven. The name of God commands the hosts of Hell. You
open the Gates of Hell by chanting Zazas, Zazas, Nasantanada,
Zazas. Closing them is considerably more difficult.
You know of the story with 'Open, Sesame!' What was the
password for closing?