Sefer ha-Malbush: The Book of the Garment

The Sefer ha-Malbush or ‘Book of the Garment’ is a Jewish esoteric text, consisting of a ritual for evoking angelic beings and performing various feats. This text can tentatively be traced back to the Geonic period (6th-11th centuries), and may have originated in Babylonia, where Jewish communities thrived during this era. Another mystical work with the same title, but only distantly related to it, is found in the Sefer Raziel.

The ritual embodied in the Book of the Garment involves a practice referred to as lebishat ha-shêm, in Hebrew, literally ‘putting on the Name’. Essentially, the practitioner seeks to impregnate their being with the Name or Names of God, usually by immersing themselves in water and reciting the Names. Variations on this procedure were commonplace in Jewish theurgic literature. In the Sword of Moses, another magical text from the Geonic era, we find an impressive ritual to evoke the Angel of the Presence, which begins with a procedure for putting on a holy name, in order to protect the mystic from the fierce energy of the Angel as well as the attacks of punishing angelic beings:
"In that hour when I wish to attach him to me and to employ him, I sit and fast on that very day ; but prior to it one must keep oneself free for seven days from any nocturnal impurity, and must bathe in the fountain of water, and not speak at all during those seven days, and at the end of this purification, on the day of the fast, he must sit in the water up to his throat, and before he utters the conjuration he must first say:
‘I conjure you, angels of dread, fear, and shaking, who are appointed to hurt those who are not pure and clean and desire the services of the servants of the Most High-- I conjure you in the name of QTT YH HYH SNNQQRWTT HWYH YH PPNNH YHWH YH ANQSYHWH, who is mighty over all, and rules over all, and everything is in His hands, that you do not hurt me, nor terrify me, nor frighten me; verily, in the name of the powerful, the revealer of the mysteries. After this he may commence his conjuration, for now he has fortified himself and has sealed himself with the name of God of 42 letters, before which all who hear it tremble and are frightened, and the heavenly hosts are terror-struck.

In the Sefer ha-Malbush, the procedure is slightly more complex, and requires a special garment (the me‘il ha-tzedaqah or “mantle of righteousness”, whereon the divine names are written) to be made, but also involves the practitioner immersing himself in water to put on the Holy Name. The Sefer ha-Malbush may be plausibly classified as an initiation ritual, which will grant the mystic various powers. Other variants of Putting on the Name may be found among the rich literature of the Hasidê Ashkenaz, early medieval German mystics who devoted themselves to the study of divine names and practical qabalah. Their most celebrated teacher, Eleazar of Worms, developed a rite to be used by a teacher and student for the transmission of divine names, which involves both of them standing in water in white garments while uttering prayers. The water element can possibly be traced back to the old Jewish ritual bath, the miqweh.

Full text on my Academia page


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