Author:
Peterson, Joseph
Untitled 1
For people interested in folk magic.
The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses, arguably one of the most popular
magick books ever published, contains two secret apocrypha ascribed to Moses,
perhaps pseudepigraphically. The book consists of a collection of texts,which
claim to explain the magick Moses used to win the biblical magick contest with
the Egyptian priest-magicians, part the Red Sea, and perform other miraculous
feats. It includes instruction in the form of invocations, magick words, and
seals for calling upon the angels to affect worldly ends, from the sublime
(calling down a plague of locusts and frogs upon your enemy) to the mundane
(getting more money).
Many manuscripts and printed pamphlet versions circulated in Germany in the
1800s, and an English translation by Johann Scheible first appeared in New York
in 1880 that had not been corrected or re-edited until now. In creating this
restored, corrected edition, Joseph Peterson drew on Scheible's final edition of
the text and his original sources. It will be of great interest to those who
have suffered through prior editions and anyone looking for a traditional source
of Western magick.
- Used in various modern traditions of American folk magick, from
Pennsylvania Dutch hexmeisters and contemporary eclectic magicians, to
voodoo practioners and African American root workers.
- Updated or fresh translations from original German, Latin, and Hebrew
sources and restoration of censored or left out passages in earlier editions
and 35 pages of text never before translated.
- Describes the biblical magick ascribed to Moses and its application.
- Extensively illustrated with over 100 magical seals, signs, and sigils. 320 Pages.
About the Author
Joseph Peterson studied religion and various languages at the University
of Minnesota and has translated many esoteric and religious source works. He has
amassed a large collection of photocopies and microfilms of rare occult tracts
for comparative research from the British Museum and other libraries. Peterson
lives in Kasson, MN.