You’re a Hermeticist? What’s that?

Emerald Hourglass2

Update: 11/30/25:

I am no longer a Christian Hermeticist.  I haven’t been for a very long time. I’m just an Old Catholic priest.  I completely forgot this old page was here until I saw a comment come through.  I immediately considered deleting the page.  But since I’m not the sort of person who gleefully sanitizes their past, and because I think this page is a great opportunity to minister to occultists, I’m leaving it up.  Churches are seeing huge influxes of neopagans and occultists seeking healing from demonic influences.

If you are an occultist, ceremonial magician, neopagan, agnostic, Unitarian Universalist, or someone on the fringes of Christianity, then Christian Hermeticism is the first rung on a ladder that, if you continue upon it and follow it upward, will lead upward to a fuller relationship with Christ.  You will, in time, leave it behind and just become a good old-fashioned Christian.  Christianity has plenty of room for the wonderful, the mysterious, the liminal, and numinous.  Christ himself said, “Unless you turn and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 18:3).

But if you are a believing, practicing Christian who is looking for a way to explore the occult or to embrace a universalist tendency, Christian Hermeticism is a dangerous first rung on a ladder that, if you continue upon it, will lead you down to hell.  Go back up and don’t look down.  If you have questions that are causing you to stumble on the Christian path, simply ask your pastor, your priest, or even me, for help and advice.  Christians have been doing apologetics for a couple of millennia.  Rest assured, there is an answer to your question within the faith.  There is no need to go looking for answers in the occult.

Also, the Cabal Fang project is no more.  It was totally re-worked and what was valuable and non-occult was absorbed into Heritage Arts.  The book pictured below is no longer available and the old links are dead.

Regards,

~Fr. Robert “Mitch” Mitchell

Original Post:

Yes, I’m a Hermeticist. More precisely a Christian Hermeticist.

What’s a Hermeticist? Someone who studies or practices Hermeticism, which is a philosophy based on wisdom teachings attributed to a mythical figure called Hermes Trismegistus, a conflation of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth.

Hermeticists believe that there are certain universal, timeless truths (“the Perennial Wisdom”) which have always been, and will always be, accessible anyone through the powers of symbol, parable, analogy, myth and initiation. Hermeticism is, in the words of the great Valentin Tomberg, the search for the “communal soul of religion, science, and art.”

This is why Hermeticism seeks to infuse all human endeavor with sacredness — to align all human activity with the Divine Will. This idea is embodied in the great Hermetic axiom, “As Above, So Below.”

There is no conflict between Hermeticism and Christianity whatsoever. Christ Logos, the Truth Itself, was with us from the beginning (John 1). Humanity’s brushes with Logos are revealed in ancient art, architecture, and philosophy. Pagan religions were human attempts to hear Christ’s distance voice. The great pre-Christian sages and philosophers were the distant rumbles of thunder before the lightning strike of Jesus Christ.

On an individual level, Hermeticists strive to unify thoughts, desires, actions and beliefs — to behave with integrity — which is exemplified in the Hermetic Quaternary: “To Know, To Will, To Dare; To Keep Silent.”

Hermeticits believe that there is no conflict between science, religion, and art. The three of them should walk arm in arm. So it’s no surprise that a list of famous Hermeticists includes scientists (Sir Isaac Newton, Dr. John Dee), authors and poets ( William Butler Yeats and Arthur Machen), artists (Pamela Colman Smith). and clergy (Giordano Bruno, William Alexander Ayton).

The mot enduring Hermetic text is the Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus, which makes a fitting end to this brief definition.

The Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus

  1. True it is, without falsehood, certain and most true.
  2. That which is above is like that which is below, and that which is below is like that which is above, to accomplish the miracles of one thing.
  3. And as all things were by contemplation of one, so all things arose from this one thing by a single act of adaptation.
  4. The father thereof is the sun, its mother the moon; the wind carried it in its womb; the earth is the nurse thereof.
  5. It is the father of all works of wonder throughout the whole world.
  6. The power thereof is perfect.
  7. If it be cast on to earth it will separate the element of earth from that of fire, the subtle from the gross.
  8. With great sagacity it doth ascend gently from earth to heaven; again it doth descend to earth, and uniteth in itself the force from things superior and things inferior.
  9. Thus thou wilt possess the glory of the brightness of the whole world, and all obscurity will fly far from thee.
  10. This thing is the strong fortitude of all strength, for it overcometh every subtle thing and doth penetrate every solid substance.
  11. Thus was this world created.
  12. Hence there will be marvelous adaptations achieved, of which the manner is this.
  13. For this reason I am called Hermes Trismegistus, because I hold three parts of the wisdom of the whole world.
  14. That which I had to say about the operation of sol is completed.

Hermeticism is the central philosophy of Cabal Fang, the non-profit martial art I founded in 2009. Sign up for the free distance learning program by clicking here, or take read my e-book and go on a 12-week journey of self-transformation.

6 responses to “You’re a Hermeticist? What’s that?

  1. Pingback: Tenugui (手拭い), Hashi (箸) and WOOTW #18 | Robert Mitchell Jr.

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  4. Hi I am a person whose seen spirits since I was young only in the past year to be confirmed as a medium I want to do my part in the spiritual world to help heal and help others understand the occult and not to immediately fear it I was wondering if you are able to or would know how I could be ordained as a priestess in hermeticism.

  5. Hello Izzy! I did exactly what you did — I went looking for a seminary where I could become a priest of hermeticism. I immediately set about reading the books on their recommended reading list. And one of them in particular really had a profound effect on me: Valentin Thomberg’s masterpiece Meditations on the Tarot. This book showed me the mystical side of conventional Christianity — the afterword of the book is by Catholic priest and theologian Hans Urs von Balthazar, and the Pope John Paul II kept a copy on his desk. That book, followed by Richard Smoley’s Inner Christianity and Myth and Ritual in Christianity by Alan Watts, were early rungs on a ladder that ultimately led me back to Christ and into traditional priesthood in the Old Catholic Church.

    Mediumship and hermeticism are very, very dangerous. My advice is to read the books I have recommended above and to begin your ascent. And if you’d like to chat, let’s set up a Google Meet. Email me at mitch@heritageartsinc.com and let’s make it happen — God Bless!

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