neptunesdolphins: dolphins leaping (Default)
 A panticle (Note 1) can be made by using a white plate and inscribing a pentagram on it. Jason Mankey suggests making a circle around the pentagram to contain the energy (Note 2). He explains that the circle defines the portal. Instead of making one, I bought a wooden disk with a tree entwined with a pentagram.
 
In the Roman Polytheist tradition, the Door is the liminal space between the inside and the outside. Two-faced Janus watches the Door, keeping the bad out and the good in. Or He lets the bad out and the good enter. In Roman rituals, Janus receives the first and last offerings. He opens the Door to the Gods and watches over the ritual. When the rite is over, He closes the Door.
 
In divination, I asked Janus if the panticle I had purchased would be acceptable to Him. Janus replied no. Then I asked what would be. I finally bought a small silver metal disk with a pentagram in a circle. Wheat shafts were inscribed around the circle.
 
To prepare for the consecration of the panticle, I decided to practice tracing a circle containing a pentagram. Tracing a pentagram in the air with a wand creates a portal between the worlds. I wanted to understand more of the movement of energy and the focus of the will in magic.
 
As a part of my continuing brain therapy, I practice writing in cursive a letter of the day. Vimala Rogers in “Your Handwriting Can Change Your Life” says that “each stroke of the pen reaffirms a thinking habit, and each thinking habit shapes our self-image, and self-image is the lens through which we see life, and this lens determines our behavior.” Rogers continues, “We write the way we do because we think the way we do. Our thought habits are reflected in the neurological patterns in the brain. When we alter the way we write we are simultaneously altering the way we think, and the neuronal pathways shift accordingly.”
 
Drawing the pentagram within the circle has enhanced my magical skills. As Rogers indicated, doing repeated tracing of the pentagram surrounded by the circle changed how I view energy. It helped me to understand the use of the will within magic. I felt the power of the panticle, which became more than an inert object. By repeatedly tracing the panticle, that I had purchased, I activated it.
 
Heron Michelle cautions, “opening the elemental gateways feels like turning a faucet of pure energy to flow into and fill the temple. When done effectively, there is a tangible shift to the energy of the circle once the elements are flowing and mixing. They need the circle to contain them.” She stresses to think of safety in doing this. Tracing the panticle on paper helped me to focus on safely concerning these energies.
 
I made offerings to Janus to bless and to use the panticle in my magic working. In divination, Janus indicated that it could act as a Door. I left the panticle on the altar for four days, since four is a magical number for Romans. At the end, I made final offerings to Janus to close the portal. In using the panticle for magical workings, I will make offerings to Janus at the beginning and at the end of each.
 
Notes
Note 1. Mankey and others refer to the “panticle” as “pantacle.”
Note 2. This is the common symbol used in pentacles (pantacles) – a pentagram in a circle.
 
Works Used.
Adkins Lesley and Roy Adkins, “Dictionary of Roman Religion.” New York: Oxford University Press. 1996.
Greer, John Michael, “The New Encyclopedia of the Occult.” Woodbury (MN): Llewellyn. 2003.
Mankey, Jason and Laura Tempest Zakroff, “The Witch’s Altar.” Woodbury (MN): Llewellyn. 2021.
Michelle, Heron, “Elemental Witchcraft.” Woodbury (MN): Llewellyn. 2021.
Rogers, Vimala, “Your Handwriting Can Change Your Life.” New York: Fireside. 2000.
Zell-Ravenheart, Oberon, “Grimoire for the Apprentice Wizard.” Franklin Lakes (NJ): New Page Books. 2004.
neptunesdolphins: dolphins leaping (Default)
 Before understanding what a panticle (Note 1) is, several terms need to be explained. “Pentacle” and “pentagram” are often confused since Gerald Manley, one of the founders of modern witchcraft, used these terms interchangeably. Another term, “panticle” is used more sparingly but is important to know about.
 
“Pentagram” refers to the five-pointed star, which consists of a triple triangle that forms an interior pentagon. This geometric figure has a long history of magical use. For example, Christians believed that it represented the Five Wounds of Christ. Meanwhile the Pythagoreans of Ancient Greece regarded it to be a sign of perfection. Eliphas Levi called the pentagram, a “sign of intellectual omnipotence and autocracy.”
 
“Pentacle” refers to a magical disk that is used to summon spirits. The pentacle that most people are familiar with is the one with a pentagram in a circle. However, the symbol on the disk need not be a pentagram; it can be a seven-point star or a magical sigil. The pentacle, as a tool, acts as the threshold between the worlds. People will often place one in the center of their altar and use it for charging other magical tools.
 
In “The Witch’s Altar,” Jason Mankey defines a pantacle as the personal tool of the magician. He writes, “It’s designed to represent how the individual magician understands the entire universe and their place within it.” This differs from what Oberon Zell-Ravenhart writes in “Grimoire For the Apprentice Wizard.” For him, “the panticle is used in Ceremonial Magick as an instrument of protection, or as a tool to evoke spirits.” They both agree that the tool is the foundation from which magical working is built.
 
Zell-Ravenhart describes the panticle as a “disc engraved with a five-pointed star, or pentagram, and may also include other symbols relating to the Earth….” He stresses that the tool is called “panticle,” which means “all angles.” Zell-Ravenhart writes that it is “commonly misnamed pentacle, a synonym for pentangle, which means five angles.” Since the sources I have used refer to the panticle as pantacle, I will quote them as such.
 
Heron Michelle of Modern Witchcraft offers a nuanced point of view. In “Elemental Witchcraft,” she refers to the panticle is a “magickal hotplate because it focuses elemental energy into manifestation… This is a gateway to all the realms and so forms a focus of power there.” Michelle calls it is a “paten or peyton, which is a flat disk or plate with the pentacle symbol fashioned into the material.” According to her, the pentacle (the symbol) (Note 2) represents the interwoven elements of the physical earth. Because it anchors the elemental energies, the pentacle (the disk) is a gateway to all of the realms by forming a focus of power.
 
Notes.
Note 1. The “panticle” is also referred to as “pantacle.”
Note 2. The symbol is the pentagram in a circle.
 
Works Used.
Greer, John Michael, “The New Encyclopedia of the Occult.” Woodbury (MN): Llewellyn. 2003.
Mankey, Jason and Laura Tempest Zakroff, “The Witch’s Altar.” Woodbury (MN): Llewellyn. 2021.
Michelle, Heron, “Elemental Witchcraft.” Woodbury (MN): Llewellyn. 2021.
Zell-Ravenheart, Oberon, “Grimoire for the Apprentice Wizard.” Franklin Lakes (NJ): New Page Books. 2004.

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