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New Age Dictionary W
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- Walk-In:
- A term used by Ruth
Montgomery for a highly aware entity from the spiritual
dimension who, with permission, enters an unwanted adult
human body in order to begin its humanitarian work at once
by avoiding living the childhood years.
- Walpurgisnacht:
- Beltane.
- Wand:
- A traditional tool of magick
and sorcery. (See wands)
- Waning:
- The lunar phase when the moon
is getting "smaller" (more crescent-like). This is
the time when magick that involves banishing things,
breaking habits, and getting rid of things is to be
performed. Opposite of waxing.
- Ward:
- A protection spell.
- Warlock:
(Old English- wærloga,
'traitor', 'the one that breaks
faith', literally 'oath liar')
- 1) A
wizard,
a sorcerer,
a magician,
a male witch;
an evil
spirit; a sprite; an imp; a man who
holds the key that unlocks secret
and supernatural powers; a man who
practices black magick. a man who
practices magick
and/or witchcraft; a man skilled in the magical arts.
2). It is a common
misconception that male witches are called warlocks. .
The
term was used to describe men who
pretended to be witches in order to
penetrate covens and betray them
during the Burning Times.
- Watchman Nee:
- See The Local Church.
- Watchtower:
- Magazine published by the Watchtower
Bible and Tract Society; full name, The Watchtower
Announcing Jehovah’s Kingdom.
- Watchtower Bible and Tract Society:
- Church founded by Charles Taze Russell. Headquartered in
Brooklyn, NY.
- Watchtowers:
- A concept derived from
ceremonial magick; the four watchtowers each represent a
cardinal direction, element, elemental, and a color.
Originally
from the
Enochian
branch of
ceremonial
magick,
they are
now
incorporated
into many
traditions
of Wicca.
They are
the four
elemental
"directions"
or
"quarters"
(corresponding
to the
appropriate
points on
the
compass)
called to
protect
the Circle
during its
establishment.
Each of
them have
a
correspondence
between
the
compass
point, an
element
and (varing
among the
various
traditions)
color
associated
with them
- Waxing:
- The lunar phase when the moon
is getting "larger" (nearing the full moon). This
is the time when magick that involves growth and bringing
things to you is best performed. Opposite of
waning.
- Way International, The:
- Organization founded by Victor
Paul Wierwille The group meets in small groups called
Twigs, usually in members’ homes. The American Christian
Press is their publishing arm. Current leader is
Rosalie F. Rivenbark, installed as third president after
resignation of Craig Martindale,
who was under accusation of sexual misconduct. The Way has
experienced several schisms
- Weil, Dr. Andrew:
- A medical doctor who helped popularize alternative
medicine or holistic health in his
books and lectures. He currently operates a clinic in
Tucson.
- Werewolf:
A shapeshifter.
Also
werwolf
and
lycanthrope.
A
legendary being who who at night
transforms
himself
or, during the full
moon,
is
transformed
into a
wolf
(a
process
called
lycanthropy)
in
form
and
appetite,
and
roams
at
night
in
search
of
human
victims
to
devour.
This
transformation
was
either
temporary
or
permanent,
and
was
supposedly
brought
about
by
supernatural
influences,
by
witchcraft,
or
voluntarily.
The
werewolf
must
return
to
human
form
at
daybreak
by
shedding
his
wolf's
skin
and
hiding
it. If
it is
found
and
destroyed,
the
werewolf
dies.
A
werewolf
who is
wounded
immediately
reverts
to his
human
form
and
can be
detected
by the
corresponding
wound
on his
body.
Similar
creatures
exist
in
folklore
worldwide:
the
tiger,
boar,
hyena,
and
even
the
cat,
are 'wereanimals'
in
areas
where
wolves
are
not
found.
Belief
in wer
(or
man)
animals
was
common
in the
Middle
Ages,
and
was
probably
a
relic
from
early cannibalism.
In
16th
century
France
the
superstition
regarding
werewolves
seems
to
have
been
widespread
and
prevalent,
as
evidenced
by the
numerous
trials
in
which
it was
shown
clearly
murder
and
cannibalism,
all
attributed
to
lycanthropy.
This
belief
is now
all
but
extinct.
- Wesley, Charles:
(1707-88)
- Anglican hymn writer and brother of John Wesley, founder
of Methodism.
- Wesley, John: (1703-91)
- Ordained Anglican priest, founder (in 1784) of Methodism.
- Wet Rebirthing:
- Guided by a rebirthing
therapist, participants relive their birth trauma in a water
environment in order to work out negativity concerning the
birth process.
- Wheel of the Year:
One full cycle of the
seasons, in pagan beliefs in begins on Samhain as opposed to
in January.
- Whirling Dervish:
See Sufism.
- White, Ellen G.:
Founding prophet of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church.
- Whitelighter:
- One who believes in or seeks the White Light.Hence, anyone
seeking enlightenment. Originally used as a pejorative for
New Agers. In the TV show Charmed it refers to
an angel.
- White Magic:
- Rituals performed for benign purpose, such as healing or
fertility. Many North American or European adherents of
modern Neo-Paganism or Witchcraft employ the term for their
rituals and practices.
- Wicca:
(Anglo-Saxon,
"wise one.")
- An earth or pagan religion
and magical system dedicated to the Goddess and God which
uses ceremonies or rituals to achieve communion with the
natural forces. The religion founded in England in
1938, often referred to as Witchcraft. A common creed
is, “Do what you will, and harm none.” Modern Wicca owes
much to the influence of Gerald B. Gardner
- Wiccan
Rede:
- The code by which most Wiccans live by:
"And Harm It Done, Do As Ye
Will.", thought by some to have been
originated by Aliester Crowley
- Widdershins:
- Counter clockwise. The
opposite of deosil
- Wilde, Stuart:
rominent New Age author and
lecturer.
- Williamson, Marianne:
Prominent New Age author and
speaker. Best known for her book, A Return To Love;
also wrote Illuminata and other books. See A
Course in Miracles for underlying theology
- Windigo:
- Huge mysterious, human-=like creature, allegedly
living in the forests of Quebec. According
to Indian legends, the creature "goes naked in
the bush and eats Indians, and makes a sinister
hissing noise, often accompanied by fearful howls, to
strike terror into the hearts of everyone who hears
it." See Mysterious
Primates, Abominable
Snowman, Almas,
Yowie,
Chemosit,
Chuchunaa,
Higabon,
Maricoxi,
Yeti,
Meh-teh,
'X',
Nguoi
Rung, Orang
Pendek, Bigfoot
and Sasquatch
- Wise Woman:
A solitary female
practitioner of witchcraft who gave charms and healing
salves to villagers in Europe.
- Wita, Witta:
Scottish Wicca
- Witch:
A member of the Wicca
religion. A practitioner of witchcraft. There are many
types and traditions of witches. A witch is not necessarily
a Wiccan, though if a Wiccan practices witchcraft they can
be called a witch.
- Witchcraft:
The practice of spells
and magick, often involving the worship of deities or a god
and/or goddess.See Wicca
- Witchfinder:
- Also witch-hunters. During the witchcraft
trials in Europe it was established legal procedure
for specially appointed (or self-appointed)
individuals to find or discover witches
and bring them to trial. As fees were usually paid for
such discoveries, the role of witchfinder was often
highly lucrative. The most famous English
witchfinder, the so-called Witchfinder General, was
Matthew Hopkins, who in fourteen months (from 1645)
had several hundred witches hanged — over a hundred
at Bury St. Edmunds alone. His equally notorious
pricker was John Steams.
- Witch's
Bottle:
- A container filled with sharp objects,
vinegar & mirror parts that is kept near
the home to protect against negativity.
- Witch's
Ladder:
- A string of forty beads or a cord with forty
knots, used for auto-suggestion practices, to
avoid the need for conscious counting.
- Witness Lee:
- See The Local Church.
- Wizard:
A name for male
ceremonial magicians, rarely used for Wiccans unless they
are eclectic and use ceremonial magick as well.
- Word,
The:
- (Greek-
logos). Used in New Testament to refer to Christ as the
comprehensible expression of God(Chaos). It means, order,
logic, that which can be understood.
- Word-Faith Movement:
- A movement based in large part on the teachings of E. W.
Kenyon (1867-1948) that became a distinct movement under the
teaching and leadership of Kenneth Hagin, a Pentecostal
faith-healing evangelist. Its teachings include: God himself
created the world and all that he does by speaking
words of faith. Man’s creation in God’s image means that
human beings are “little gods” capable of speaking
creative words of faith. The fall of Adam into sin
transformed Adam (and all unredeemed people) into Satan’s
nature and transferred Adam’s godhood or dominion on
earth to Satan. Jesus
became man in order to restore human beings to godhood as
renewed “incarnations” of God. He did this by dying
spiritually as well as physically on the cross, suffering in
hell, and then while in hell becoming the first person to be
“born again,” before finally being raised from the dead.
Those who believe in Jesus are supposedly empowered to speak
words of faith again, especially in order to obtain bodily
health and financial prosperity. Most of the followers of
the Word-Faith teachers are Pentecostals
- World Council of Churches:
An international agency promoting interfaith
dialogue and ecumenical cooperation among churches. Most
participants are mainline denominations dominated by the
theological perspective of liberal
Christianity.
- Worldwide Church of God:
Under the leadership of its founder, Herbert W.
Armstrong, this church rejected the essential doctrines and
epitomized the unique set of beliefs and practices that
became known as Armstrongism.
Beginning in the early 1990s under the leadership
Armstrong’s successors, Joseph W. Tkach and his son Joe
Tkach, this group has undergone remarkable doctrinal
transformation. They now hold to a more traditional
evangelical position on the nature of God and the gospel,.
Large numbers of its membership have left to join splinter
groups that still teach classic Armstrongism.
- Wovoka: (ca.
1856-1932)
- Paiute Native American prophet of the 1890s Ghost Dance,
also known as Jack Wilson (after a rancher who employed him)
and the Messiah (The Christ returned to help Native
Americans). After 1892, Wovoka corresponded with the help of
a local merchant with followers, selling them sacred objects
and personal effects, and continued to serve as a shaman.
- Wu:(Chinese,
"nonbeing," "nothingness,"
"void")
- A Chinese philosophical concept for a primordial state
before the differentiation of distinct phenomena. First
intimated in the Lao-tzu (Tao-te ching), the
concept was elaborated by third-century Hsuan-hsueh
thinkers such as Wang Pi, fourth-century Buddhists such as
Tao-an, and twelfth-century Neo-Confucians such as Lu
Hsiang-shan.
- Wycliff, John: (1326-84)
- English Catholic reformer and theologian who inspired one
of the early efforts at translating the Bible into English.
A professor at Oxford, Wycliff joined controversies on the
authority of tradition, on the Eucharist, and on
monasticism. The "Wycliff Bible," though supported
by him, was in fact authored by his disciples, Nicholas of
Hereford (d. ca. 1420) and John Purvey (ca. 1353-1428).
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| X |
- Xenoglossia:
- The ability to speak in an unlearned and unheard
foreign language. It is associated with
past-life recall, states of trance or hypnosis and
mediumship. The phenomenon is very rare. Many
so-called instances turn out to be cases where the
foreign language has been learned at some stage and
then forgotten. When xenoglossia does occur, cases
where individuals recite foreign words and phrases
without understanding their meaning are far more
common than cases where an individual can actually
converse intelligently in the supposedly unknown
language. See Glossolalia.
- Xenomancy:
- Divination
by studying the first stranger to be found or who
appears.
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Y
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- Yahweh :
- According to many scholars, a
possible spelling of the Hebrew letters YHVH - i.e. Jehovah.
- Yahwehism:
- Alternative name for the Sacred
Name movement
- Yajna:
- 1) A sacrificial fire
ritual in which Vedic mantras are recited while wood, fruit,
grain, oil, yogurt, and ghee are poured into the fire as an
offering to the Lord. 2) Any work or spiritual practice that
is offered as worship to God.
- Yama:
- The Hindu god of death, also
the five Hindu moral commandments
- Yang:
- See Yin and
Yang
- Yantra: (Sanskrit.,
"instrument," "device")
- A geometrical diagram used in Tantric ritual and worship
and for magical and occult purposes. Yantras symbolize
the cosmos and its creative dynamism, the Shakti.
- Yarmulke:
- The ritual skullcap worn by Jewish men.
- Yashtikasana: (Sanskrit)
- The stick posture in
yoga
- Yahweh:
- One
rendering
of
the
name
of
God
as
written
in
Hebrew,
i.e.
JHVH
(See
Jehovah)
-
- Ydromancy:
- Also
known
as
hydromancy
and
hydrascopy,
it
is
one
of
various
different
methods
of
predicting
the
future
by
means
of
water
or
rain.
One
technique
supposedly
involved
a
basin
full
of
water
which,
at
the
command
of
the
diviner,
is
activated
by
spirits
in
order
to
vibrate
to
a
point
where
it
appears
to
boil
and
give
off
meaningful
sounds.
Methods
of
disturbing
water
(by
means
of
suspended
rings
or
by
means
of
pebbles
being
dropped
into
the
bowl)
are
also
described
as
legitimate
hydromantic
techniques,
and
some
diviners
are
supposed
to
read
from
the
reflections
on
the
surface
or
from
the
color
of
water,
as
well
as
from
the
movement
of
water
in
fountains
or
the
pattern
of
ripples
formed
after
an
object
is
cast
into
the
pool.
Some
of
these
techniques
are
Lecanomancy,
Pegomancy,
Eromanty
and
Castronomancy.
- Yeshiva:
- A traditional Jewish academy for talmudic study. The term
is also used for a Jewish primary or secondary school that
teaches secular as well as religious subjects.
- Yeti:
- The Tibetan name for the Abominable
Snowman, a humanlike monster whose tracks have
been discovered in the frigid lands of perpetual snow in the
Himalayan regions of India, Nepal, and Tibet. According to
locals, the Yeti is but one of several unidentified
creatures that inhabit the highlands of southern Asia.
- Yggdrasil:
- The Norse tree which held up
the world and the heavens; its roots led to the underworld.
It provided the complex network of the universe.
- Yi King:
- Alternative form of the term I
Ching.
- Yiddish:
- The common language of Ashkenazi Jews in Europe from
medieval to modern times. Its vocabulary and structure are
derived primarily from German, with elements from Hebrew,
Slavic, and romance languages. The majority of the
world's native Yiddish speakers died in the Holocaust
- Yin/Yang
- Taoist terms referring to the
active and passive principles of the universe. Yin refers to
the female or [in-active] negative force; Yang to the male
or active force. These two polar forces continually
interplay with each other. Both are necessary and both must
be harmonized for proper function. This Yin and Yang also
flow through the human body so that a balance is required to
maintain health.
- Ymir:
- The
primeval
being
of
Scandinavian
mythology,
father
of
all
the
giants.
He
was
nourished
by
the
four
milky
streams,
which
flowed
from
the
cow
Audhumla.
The
sons
of
Bor
—
Odin,
Vili
and
Ve
—
slew
Ymir
and
all
the
frost
giants
were
drowned
in
his
blood,
which
formed
the
world's
lakes
and
seas.
His
bones
and
flesh
became
the
mountains
and
the
land,
and
his
skull
became
the
vault
of
heaven.
A
race
of
dwarfs
grew
within
his
carcass.
- Yod:
(Hebrew
Yodh)
- 1)
The
10th
letter
of
the
Hebrew
alphabet
which
looks
something
like
the
letter
"Y".
2)something
expressing
or
containing,
metaphysically,
the
meanings
of
the
yod.
i.e.
the
pointing
hand,
and
the
number
10,
the
musical
note
F,
and
the
color
yellow-green,
Virgo
in
the
zodiac,
response,
the
union
of
opposites,
touch,
the
intelligence
of
Will,
and,
on
the
Tree
of
Life,
the
path
connecting
Chesed
to
Tiphareth.
3)
In
astrology,
it
is
a
"Y"-shaped
aspect.
made
up
of
three
planets.
two
of
these
planets
are
60
degrees
from
each
other,
forming
a
sextile,
and
both
are
quincunx
to
a
3rd
planet.
It
forms
an
elongated
triangle
when
looking
at
the
aspect
wheel.
- Yoga:
(from Sanskrit. verbal root, meaning
"discipline," )
- Any number of physical or
spiritual disciplines arising in India. An Eastern
philosophy involving spiritual discipline using various
techniques to experience union with a Supreme Being. Many
yogic paths exist and include work on the physical body as
in Hatha yoga, which uses breathing exercises and sustained
physical postures to gain physical and mental control over
the body; Bhakti, the yoga of devotion and love using the
heart as a vehicle for transcendence; and other types of
yoga specific to a path or teacher including Iyengar, Jnana,
Karma, Kripalu, Kriya, Kundalini, Raja, Siddha and
Tantra yoga
- Yogachara: (Sanskrit.,
"the practice of yoga")
- A major school of Mahayana Buddhist philosophy concerned
with the practice of meditation and discipline that leads to
the attainment of Buddhahood. Adherents of the school are
called Yogacharins ("practitioners of yoga") or
Vijnanavadins ("those who hold the doctrine of
consciousness"). The school traces its
origin to Asanga and Vasubandhu (fourth or fifth century)
and, through these two brothers, to the Bodhisattva
Maitreya. While many of the fundamental texts of the school
are attributed to one or another of these three figures, the
question of authorship is highly problematic.
The most distinctive doctrine of the school is the claim
that the world consists of nothing but mind. This doctrine
has been interpreted as a form of Buddhist idealism in which
one denies the reality of the external world but affirms the
reality of the mind itself. Yogacharins generally have a
more positive attitude toward the nature of ultimate reality
than many of their Mahayana opponents. They often compare
reality to the ocean, gold, or space and argue that the
distinctions of ordinary experience are
"adventitious" or temporary defilements of a pure,
underlying substance. Yogachara texts were
translated into Chinese as early as the sixth century, and
the school achieved considerable popularity in China under
the leadership of the great scholar-monk Hsuan-tsang
(602-664), who traveled to India, studied with Yogachara
masters, and promulgated their teaching in China. The school
he founded was eventually eclipsed by other, indigenous
Chinese schools, but the Yogachara approach to the
fundamental doctrines of the Mahayana continued to have deep
influence on Chinese and Japanese speculation about the
nature of reality
- Yogananda,
Paramahansa:
(1893-1952)
- Founder
of
the
Self-realization
Fellowship
and
the
one
given
credit
for
introducing
yoga
to
the
U.S.
- Yogasana: (Sanskrit)
- The anchor posture in yoga
- Yogi:
- 1) One who practices yoga.
2) One who has attained perfection through yogic practices.
- Yogini:
(often feminine)
- 1) One who practices yoga.
2) One who has attained perfection through yogic practices
- Yom Kippur::
(Hebrew, "day of atonement")
- The most solemn day of the Jewish year (10 Tishri), which
ends the ten-day period of repentance that Rosh Hashanah
begins. Virtually the entire day is spent in the synagogue
petitioning God to pardon sins and bestow life for the
coming year. No food or drink is consumed from sundown to
sundown
- Yoni: (Sanskrit,
"place of issue," secondarily
"womb-chamber")
- 1) The female genitals 2) In Vedic philosophy, "the
source" of creation, identified with brahman. 3)
In Hinduism, the emblem of feminine cosmic creativity
(Sanskrit. Shakti), the highest symbol of Devi,
consort of Shiva, corresponding to his lingam.
Shaiva temples have a circular yoni-pedestal for the
lingam. In meditational diagrams, especially Tantric, the
yoni is a triangle with downward apex.
-
- Yule:
- The pagan winter sabbat. Also
called Winter Solstice.
- Yule Log:
- The traditional log burned at
Christmas ceremonies which most likely came from a pagan
tradition for Yule celebration.
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Z
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- Zarathushtra:(c. 628 - 551 BC)
- Religious teacher and prophet in ancient Persia.
According to legend, he was born in NW Persia and
received enlightenment by the Daitya river at age 30.
There he received a vision of Vohu Manah (“Good
Thought”) who took him into the presence of lord Ahura-Mazda. Lord Mazda taught Zoroaster the “true
religion,” rejecting magick and idol
worship and promoting belief in heaven, hell, a devil (Angra-Mainyu) and one true god.
- Zem
Zem:
- The
sacred
well
near
the
Kaaba
at
Mecca.
According
to
Arab
tradition,
this
is
the
very
well
that
was
shown
to
Hagar
when
Ishmael
was
perishing
of
thirst.
- Zen
:
(Japanese-
"meditation"}
- A branch of Mahayana Buddhism believed to
have originated in India from the teachings of a Buddhist
master, Bodhidharma, about 600 BC, but traced back by
advocates to the Buddha himself.
Practitioners seek satori (sudden illumination
enabling bliss and harmony), which cannot be explained but
only experienced. Techniques include zazen
(sitting meditation techniques)
and koans, which are short riddles or sayings.
The koans (which number about 1700) are not designed to have
cognitive answers but to promote the experience of Zen
- Zend-Avesta:
- The
sacred
writings
of
Zoroaster
that
formed
the
basis
of
the
religion
that
prevailed
in
Persia
from
the
6th
century
BC
to
the
7th
century
AD.
Avesta
means
the
lore,
or
sacred
writings,
and
Zend,
the
commentary.
Hence
the
application
of
Zend
to
the
ancient
Iranian
language
in
which
the
Zend-Avesta
is
written.
- Zephyr:
- The
west
wind.
- Zeus:
- Originally an Indo-European sky god,
the
most
powerful
of
the
Greek
gods,
the
ruler
of
heaven
and
earth,
lord
of
the
sky,
god
of
thunder
and
lightning,
king
of
the
gods,
and
known
to
the
Romans
as
Jupiter,
is
usually
depicted
as
a
great
bearded
figure
carrying
a
thunderbolt.
He
obtained
his
power
by
overthrowing
his
father
Cronus
and
the
Titans
and
rules
from
Mt.
Olympus..
Notorious
for
his
affairs
with
human
women,
Zeus
often
changed
his
appearance
to
seduce
them,
despite
his
marriage
to
Hera.
He
fathered
many
other
gods
with
the
Titans
and
other
goddesses.
The
twins
Apollo
and
Artemis
were
his
children
by
a
Titan
named
Leto.
She
had
given
birth
to
them
on
the
island
of
Delos,
where
Hera
had
chased
her
in
a
fit
of
jealousy.
Zeus'
favorite
daughter
was
Athena,
goddess
of
wisdom.
She
had
sprung
from
his
head
fully
grown
and
fully
armed,
wearing
a
shining
helmet
and
a
glimmering
robe.
Zeus's
son
Hephaestus
had
split
open
his
father's
head
with
an
axe
so
that
Athena
could
leap
out.
When
it
was
time
to
man
to
be
created,
Zeus
gave
this
important
work
to
Prometheus
and
Epimetheus,
the
two
Titans
who
had
helped
him
in
his
battle
against
Cronus
and
the
other
Titans.
Zeus
also
gave
them
the
task
of
providing
men
and
animals
gifts
that
would
insure
their
survival.
For
giving
men
fire,
Prometheus
was
punished
by
Zeus,
who
chained
him
to
a
rock
in
the
Caucasus
mountains,
where
a
vulture
would
eat
his
ever-growing
liver
for
eternity.
- Ziggurat: (Babylonian,
something high and holy)
- A stepped temple tower, crowned by a shrine,
characteristic of ancient Mesopotamia. The Tower of Babel
has been identified as a ziggurat.
- Zion:
- 1)a
hill in Jerusalem (variously
identified, but probably the Temple Mount). In the Bible, it
is the place from which God rules the earth.
2)
the
Jewish
people
as
a
group,
or
the
Jewish
homeland
as
a
symbol
of
Judaism.
- Zionism:
- A
plan
or
movement
of
the
Jewish
people
to
return
from
the
Diaspora
to
Palestine.
Zionism
originated
aimed
at
the
re-establishment
of
a
Jewish
national
homeland
and
state
in
Palestine.
It
is
now
concerned
with
the
development
and
support
of
Israel.
- Zodiac:
- The band of twelve
constellations along the plane of the ecliptic through which
pass the sun, moon and planets across the sky. Each
constellation, or sign, is attributed symbolic significance
and associations that describe or affect various aspects of
life on Earth.
- Zohar:
- A compendium, which shares
with the Sepher Yetzirah the reputation of
being the oldest extant treatise on the Hebrew cabbala.
Tradition assigns its authorship to Rabbi Simeon ben Jochai,
A.D. 80, but modern criticism is inclined to believe that a
very large portion of the volume is no older than 1280, when
it was certainly edited and published by Rabbi Moses de
Leon, of Guadalaxara in Spain. The truth seems to lie
in a middle path - that while Moses de Leon was the
first to produce the volume as a whole, yet a large part of
some of its constituent tracts consists of traditional
dogmas and illustrations, which have come down from the time
of Simeon ben Jochai and the Second Temple. There are
portions of the doctrines of the Zohar which bear the
impress of Chaldee thought and civilization, to which the
Jews had been exposed in the Babylonish captivity. Yet on
the other hand it may be noticed that the Crusades are
mentioned; that a quotation is made from a hymn by Ibn
Gebirol, A.D. 1050; that the asserted author, Simeon ben
Jochai, is spoken of as more eminent than Moses; that it
mentions the vowel-points, which did not come into use until
Rabbi Mocha (A.D. 570) introduced them to fix the
pronunciation of words as a help to his pupils, and lastly,
that it mentions a comet which can be proved by the evidence
of the context to have appeared in 1264.
- Zombie:
- In
Haitian
and
West
African
folk
belief,
a
soulless
corpse
reanimated
by
a
Voodoo
preist,
known
as
a
bocor.
A
zombie
moves
listlessly
in
a
trancelike
state
and
does
the
bidding
of
the
bocor.
The
term
is
apparently
derived
from
Nzambi,
a
West
African
deity.
Most
cultural
anthropologists
working
in
Haiti
discount
stories
about
zombies.
Some
researchers,
however,
claim
that
the
stories
are
true
and
that
a
bocor's
victims
are
administered
a
powder
containing
a
powerful
neurotoxin
derived
from
the
puffer
fish.
The
powder
is
alleged
to
paralyze
the
victim
into
a
deathlike
state.
The
bocor
later
revives
the
victim.
Pharmacologists
who
have
tested
samples
of
the
alleged
powder
found
little
or
no
poison
in
them.
Zombie
was
originally
a
python
god
of
certain
West
African
tribes,
and
its
worship
was
carried
to
the
West
Indies
with
the
slave
trade,
and
still
somewhat
survives
in
Voodoo
ceremonies
in
Haiti
and
some
of
the
southern
states
of
the
USA.
- Zone
Therapy:
- Reflexology.
- Zoomnacy:
- Divination
by
the
appearance
and/or
behavior
of
any
type
of
animal.
Another
type
of
Zoomancy,
often
called
Theriomancy,
consisted
of
divination
by
the
movement
of
beasts,
or
wild
animals.
Yet
another
type
of
Zoomancy
was
predictions
from
the
appearance
of
imaginary
or
psychic
animals,
such
as
unicorns,
sea-monsters,
or
salamanders.
- Zoroaster:
- (Greek form of Zarathushtra)
- Zoroastrianism:
- The religion founded by the Iranian-speaking prophet
Zarathushtra, Greek Zoroaster, about 600 BC. It is known to
its followers by the Pahlavi title, Daena Mazdayasni,
"the Good Religion of the Worshipers of Mazdah."
Later followers, however, worshipped Zoroaster in addition
to Mazda. Good Lord Mazda and evil Angra Mainyu are
seen as equal in power. There are presently some
150,000 adherents, the majority living in India in the area
of Bombay and in Gujarat. Many of these Zoroastrians,
called Parsis, "Persians," moved to India after
the Islamization of Iran, their original homeland.
Today, many live in other parts of the world, including
North America. Versions of Zoroastrianism were made
the official religion of the three major pre-Islamic Near
Eastern empires of the Iranians, namely that of the
Achaemenids, the Parthians, and the Sassanids; under the
last the religion was radically unified. Following the
Muslim conquest in the middle of the seventh century,
Zoroastrianism was reduced by increasing conversions to
Islam. The Turkish and Mongol conquests of Iran saw
widespread persecutions, largely reducing the adherents of
Zoroastrianism to the desert cities of Kerman and Yazd.
- Zwingli, Huldrych:
(1484-1531)
- Leader of the Swiss Christian Reformation. He is best
known for his dispute (1525) with Martin Luther on the
status of the Eucharist. Luther maintained the presence of
the body of Christ; Zwingli argued for the Eucharist's
symbolic nature. These views are summarized in Zwingli's
popular work On the Lord's Supper (1526).
- Zygomancy:
- Divination
by
using
weights.
-
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