Credibility of this Magick
Wisdom
For the
well-informed reader, the issue of credibility for King
Solomon’s works does not need to be touched upon. However, the
inquisitive reader should King Solomon is credited with writing
three volumes of the most distributed book on the planet, the
Bible. These include Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and Songs of
Solomon (Renamed to Song of Songs in ‘newer’, ‘revised’
volumes).
Besides
writing three books of the bible, Solomon also authored many
others books on nature, science, astrology and the likes.
The scope of this guide, will unveil his writings about the
science of commanding spirits.
Many of
those who know of these manuscripts believe Solomon was the
originator of this arcane science, however this is not the
truth.
The
roots, however, go much deeper than Solomon himself. The
actual origins of this information can be found in a set of
ancient spiritual rites and traditions called the Kabbalah.
The Kabbalah was the work of Abraham, some 4,000 years ago.
It's thought to be oldest wisdom in the world, and the basis for
three biggest monotheistic religions: Judaism, Christianity and
Islam -- as well as the basis of study for the Magus, namely
Aleister Crowley.
King Solomon: At a Glance
The time of King David and King
Solomon was the golden age of Israel. David's military skill had
relieved his kingdom from the constant threat of foreign
invasion, and had established an empire over the surrounding
region. Solomon's diplomatic skill maintained this empire
without the need for further war.
Solomon was prolific in art
and science, having written three of the books of our modern
Bible — the Song of Solomon, Ecclesiastes, and most of the Book
of Proverbs. Early in his reign, God promised him great
wisdom, and in fact his wisdom was legendary in his own time and
today.
However, in spite of the great advantages of his heritage from
David, wisdom from God, and the prosperity and security that
resulted, late in life Solomon fell away from God and lived a
life full of sin. As a result, the glory days of Israel were
short-lived.As soon as Solomon died, the kingdom was split,
Solomon's heir King Rehoboam retaining the smaller portion, and
both kingdoms experienced much trouble that resulted from
Solomon's sins.
His Wisdom
One night early in his
reign, the Lord
gave Solomon a dream. In the dream, God told Solomon to ask for
something — anything he wanted.
Solomon, young and humble, spoke
to God about the great responsibility involved in governing
God's people, and he asked for wisdom sufficient for the job.
The Lord
was pleased with Solomon's request. He could have asked for
wealth, political or military security, long life or fame, but
instead he asked for wisdom to carry out the responsibilities
God had given him. And so God promised he would give Solomon
exceptional wisdom, unlike anyone else before or after him, and
he would also give him those things he hadn't asked for —
wealth, respect, security.
God kept his promise, for
Solomon's wisdom is legendary. He was recognized by his peers,
the kings of surrounding kingdoms, as the wisest — wiser also
than any philosophers famous in his day. He wrote 3,000 proverbs
and 1,005 songs — a prolific output for any writer or musician.
He was the acknowledged expert in botany and biology. He held
seminars attended by cabinet members of kings from throughout
the region. Even the Queen of Sheba, who traveled 1,000 miles to
visit Solomon, was totally wowed by the magnificence of his
operations.
Source: 1 Kings 3:1-15, 4:29-34; 2
Chronicles 1King
Solomon's Temple
King Solomon built many
houses and palaces, gardens and parks, irrigation projects and
public works. But the most famous of all his achievements was
the temple that bore his name. For nearly 400 years Solomon's
Temple stood as the focal point for worship of the Lord.
The structure, though not
over-large — it was about 90 feet by 30, and three stories
high — was magnificent. King David, forbidden by God from
building the temple, consoled himself by accumulating vast
amounts of building materials, including timber, dressed stone,
iron and bronze, silver and gold. Solomon followed this up with
further imports of lumber and quarried stone. The amount was so
great that, to transport the materials, Solomon conscripted a
labor force of nearly 200,000 of his own people, not counting
the workers of the foreign exporters. The temple's interior
walls were dressed with carvings of angels and nature scenes,
and were plated with gold throughout — about 23 tons of it. Even
with a huge staff of both paid and conscripted labor, its
construction had taken seven years.

This is only an
artist's approximation of what King Solomon's Temple looked like
when it was originally constructed. The building of the Temple
kicked off massive construction efforts during Solomon's reign
that resulted in the erection of many royal and public
buildings. The Temple, however, remained the center of Jerusalem
until its initial destruction in the sixth century B.C.
For
the temple's dedication, Solomon hosted a festival, inviting the
entire nation. A great parade accompanied the ushering of the
Ark of the Covenant from its tent to its new home in the
temple's inner sanctuary, the Holy Place. As the Ark was
positioned in its place, the Lord
showed his approval; the glory of the Lord,
in the form of a cloud, at once dark and shining brightly,
filled the temple. It was so intense the priests had to abandon
their rituals and go outside.
Solomon preached sermons
and prayed prayers, asking the Lord
to be present in the temple, to use the temple to draw his
people to faithfulness, and to bless all who worship him there.
When all was done, the Lord
spoke to Solomon, promising that if his people were faithful, he
would bless them, but if they turned to sin, he would destroy
them. Even so, if they repented of their sin, he would bless
them again, rescuing them from the troubles that resulted from
their sin.
Source: 1 Kings 5 - 9; 2
Chronicles 2 - 7
The Queen of Sheba
God gave Solomon the great wisdom
he had promised him. Solomon's fame spread throughout the
region, and the queen of Sheba, 1,000 miles to the south, was
deeply impressed with the stories she heard. Resolving to pick
Solomon's brain, she gathered gifts fit for a king, assembled a
caravan, and traveled to Jerusalem.
Solomon met her. She asked all
her difficult questions, and Solomon answered them all to her
satisfaction. Furthermore, the queen was overcome with awe for
Solomon's wealth, vast dominion and smooth-running
administration. The king gave her gifts fit for a queen, and she
returned home.
It was this visit to which Jesus
later referred when he said, “The queen of the south shall rise
up in the judgment with this generation, and shall condemn it:
for she came from the uttermost parts of the earth to hear the
wisdom of Solomon; and, behold, a greater than Solomon is here.”1
Source: 1 Kings 10:1-13; 2
Chronicles 9:1-12
Solomon's Fall
Though Solomon had long
been faithful to the Lord,
late in life he fell away.
Part of Solomon's
diplomatic success had come through marriages with foreign
royalty. In all, he had 1,000 wives, many of them foreign. The Lord
had forbidden his people to marry foreigners,1
for fear their religious practices would corrupt the true
worship of the Lord.
And in fact, this is what happened to Solomon.
Out of love for his wives,
Solomon built shrines to their idols. To please his wives, he
personally participated in the worship of those idols. This was
no small sin, nor a positive expression of religious freedom.
Each of these idols was connected with detestable practices. For
example, both of the idols Chemosh and Molech required human
sacrifice of children or infants in their worship.
And so Solomon, previously
pure and committed to the Lord,
introduced much sin into Israel in the name of political
success. And this apostasy came in spite of God's great blessing
to Solomon — God had personally spoken to him on two occasions,
and had given him great wisdom, wealth, and security.
For this apostasy, God told
Solomon he had decided to remove him from being king. Yet out of
respect for Solomon's father, faithful King David, he would not
do this during Solomon's lifetime, nor would he remove him
completely — Solomon's heir would retain a small portion of the
kingdom. This was fulfilled when Solomon's son King Rehoboam
foolishly lost most of the kingdom.
Where to
read Solomon's story:
1 Kings 1 - 11; 1 Chronicles 29:21-25; 2 Chronicles 1 - 9
"Choose my instruction instead of silver,
knowledge rather than choice of gold."
- King Solomon, Proverbs 8:10
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Everyone
should know that it through King Solomon's work's
which much of Aleister Crowley's famous magical
powers were obtained. So play very close
attention to the information contained in the books
that follows and take everything 'with a grain of
salt'.
Realize
much of what is said is done so in symbolism, and
take nothing that is said on blind faith alone.
Use your own initiative to test, experiment and
examine the results of the techniques outlined by
Solomon, Crowley and Mathers.
To
Download the Books: Right-Click and Select
"Save Target As..."
PDFs:
The Greater Keys of Solomon:
The Greater
Key of Solomon I
- 521 KB
The Greater Key of Solomon II
- 492 KB
The Greater Key of Solomon III
- 557 KB
This
collection is the considered the best collection of
Solomon's 72 spirits of the Goetia as well as his
secret procedure, it's mysteries and magic rites,
original plates, seals, charms and talismans.
Translated to English from ancient Hebrew
manuscripts by Aleister Crowley and SL MacGregor
Mathers.
PDFs:
The Lesser Keys of Solomon (Legementon):
The
Legementon I - 616 KB
The Legementon II -
920 KB
The Legementon III -
350 KB
The Legementon IV - 56
KB
The Legementon V - 103
KB
Best
known as "The Lesser Keys of Solomon". These
five books are the original manuscripts of King
Solomon and the basis for the "Greater Key of
Solomon" series. Also, translated to English
from ancient Hebrew manuscripts by Aleister Crowley
and SL MacGregor Mathers.
PDFs:
King Solomon's Contributions to the Holy Bible:
Proverbs
- 102 KB
Ecclesiastes - 37 KB
Song of
Solomon - 262 KB
King
Solomon was actually accredited with writing five
books of the Bible. However, modern studies
now believe it to 'only' be three instead. No
matter your beliefs about the Bible or Christianity,
there is no doubt these are the three of most
insightful filled books written in this great cosmic
day.
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