The Chosen Ideal
Sophia-Dione 23
Coven Quiddity
Presented as an illustrated Power Point Slide Presentation on March 1, 2009
Chosen Ideal = Ishta devata
The term Chosen Ideal is a popular translation of the Sanskrit word Ishta devata, which basically means “favorite deity.” The chosen ideal is important in Hindu spiritual practice (sadhana) and is, at least in the nondualistic and qualified nondualistic forms of Hinduism, the personal representation of an impersonal and attributeless divinity. It is “God with form”or “God with attributes” in a philosophical system that believes that all the gods are one god, that god is Reality itself, and that enlightenment is the realization and identification with that Reality.
Nikhilananda, trans. The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna. Mylapore, Madras: Sri Ramakrishna Math, 1974.
The Vedanta Philosophy. In: Chatterjee S, Data D. An Introduction to Indian Philosophy. Calcutta: The University of Calcutta, 1984.
Ishta is related to the word Ishvara= Lord and Ishvari= Lady. In Hindu philosophy, Ishvara is the Supreme Being that becomes the world through self-sacrifice (as in the creation myth of Prajapati). Ishvari is the divine nature and energy of the universe. As mentioned, in certain forms of Hinduism, the highest idea of God is that God is indefinable and beyond any attribute. To relate and aspire to it, the human mind will naturally create a form-or forms-and then interact with the form. This form is the ishta devata or chosen ideal.
If you want to understand what Ishvara/Ishvari are in the western pagan Wiccan sense, contemplate the Charge of the Goddess:
“. . . She in the dust of whose feet are the hosts of heaven and whose body encircles the universe:
"I who am the beauty of the green earth, and the white moon among the stars, and the mystery of the waters, call unto thy soul: Arise, and come unto me. For I am the soul of nature, who gives life to the universe. From Me all things proceed, and unto Me all things must return; and before My face, beloved of gods and of men, let thine innermost divine self be enfolded in the rapture of the infinite. . . . For behold, I have been with thee from the beginning; and I am that which is attained at the end of desire."
Doreen Valiente Charge of the Goddess." In Starhawk, "The Spiral Dance: A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess," Harper & Row, 2nd edition, (1989).
Compare to a portion of the Narayani Stotram of the Devi Mahatmyam:
“You are the sovereign goddess of all that is moving and unmoving. You are the sole substratum of the universe, existing in the form of earth. In the form of water, you nourish the universe. You are the power of the All Pervading Lord and of limitless courage. You are the primordial seed of the Universe . . . All forms of knowledge are your aspects. All women in the world are endowed with your various attributes . . . Praise to you, Abode of Mankind, who abides as intelligence in all beings and bestows enjoyment and liberation. . . . As the Self of the Universe, you support the Universe. . . Those who are devoted to you themselves become the refuge of the Universe.”
In these prayers, the goddess is not a sky fairy; she is reality itself. Hindu prayers to other deities-male and female-extol them in similar ways, using similar words. That is, any deity can be singularly associated with the supreme deity. We have a relationship with a transcendental idea of deity by relating to that deity as an entity with attributes that we are in relationship with. Furthermore, deities are composites of symbols. When you look at an image, it is not a statue; it is a story. Every aspect of the image is pregnant with symbolism meant for contemplation. The story told in an image about the deity, is about deity, the nature of existence, and yourself.
Yidam
In Tibetan Buddhism, the ishta devata is called a Yidam. It is a term that more strongly denotes the idea of self integration with an ideal or truth. According to Sarah Harding, a Tibetan translator and lama in the Kagyü school of Vajrayana Buddhism: “The word is said to be a contraction of yid kyi dam tshig, which essentially means to bind one’s mind (yid) by oath to a deity who embodies enlightened mind.” She explains:
“Yidams may be sambhogkaya buddhas, tantric deities, bodhisattvas, dharma protectors or historical figures. In all cases, the yidam is the very manifestation of enlightenment . . . ”
The sadhana-or spiritual practice-that is applied is similar to that applied when working with the ishta devata in devotional ritual, especially when following Tantric ritual:
“In visualizing the yidam deity, we use our creative imagination to shift our natural self-imaging tendency, using imagery that is ultimately more ‘real’ than our current conditioned rendition of reality. Thus, the re-visualized self is the yidam deity and the re-imagined world is the mandala of the yidam appearing to one's pure perception. During the process of the sadhana, one must relate with the yidam both as an object of reverence and a source of blessing.”
You are creating a spiritual world. When doing ritual, calling the quarters, and casting a circle you are doing the same thing. You should be visualizing the seasons of the year, the phase of the moon, the station of the sun during the day. And in Hermetic magic, you may be visualizing Hebrew letters that have significant in Kabala, archangels. There super stars and constellations related to the directions, and there are Buddhas and shaktis related to the quarters as well. That is creating the sacred space. And who is in the sacred space. You and deity and ultimately you as deity.
Sarah Harding. Yidam. Buddhadharma The Practitioners Quarterly.
www.thebuddhadharma.com/issues/2005/spring/dharma_dictionary.html In Buddhism, depending on the lineage in which you are studying, your guru (lama) may assign a yidam to you to work with-and this will come with specific instructions and observances. A similar course is taken with an ishta devata in certain forms of esoteric Tantric Hinduism. A mandala or yantra and mantra associated with the yidam may be used. A mandala is a symbolic field or world in which the yidam resides and is itself a complex tapestry of symbols for contemplation. A yantra is a design that is a geometric vibration of the deity that also acts as a map of a specific line of contemplation and realization about the nature of that deity and, by extension, of Reality itself. The person working with a deity is initiated into how to work with its associated mandala or yantra.
The yidam or the devata also may be a god-form that you naturally have an affinity for or feel a natural calling to. You may work alone or with a teacher to explore this. Again, sometimes people have mystical experiences in which the deity presents itself to them in some way, and the bond and exploration begin there.
Patron Saint/Tutelary deity
The equivalent in Christianity is the patron saint. In paganism, the chosen ideal is called the tutelary deity.
A patron or tutelary deity is thought of more as a guardian or protector or intercessor and it occurs in a dualistic orientation to deity, whereas-with the exception of how it is treated in Vaishnavism or purely dualistic forms of Hinduism-an ishta devata or yidam is your goal-your vision or a higher reality about yourself that you are aspiring to.
Augoeides/Holy Guardian Angel/ Tutelary or Personal Daimon
In ceremonial magic, especially ceremonial magic since the turn of the 20th century, the chosen ideal in a guise similar to the oriental one is called the Augoeides or Holy Guardian Angel.
The term Augoeides means “luminous being” in Greek. [“luminous being” is what the word “deva” literally means. Deva is a Sanskrit word that is usually translated as “god.” We get the Latin word Deus from it. The word Zeus is epistemologically related to those words from the Sanskrit word Dyaus, meaning “heavenly.” Dyaus Pitre means “Heavenly Father” in Sanskrit. This is was the word Jupiter literally means.]
The term was used by a Neoplatonist named Porphyry who lived during the 3rd century and was the student of the father of Neoplatonism, Plotinus. Plotinus referred to it as a personal daimon in commentary on content from Plato (10th chapter of the Republic and the end of Timaeus, also Phaedo). It is described as a perfect, divine idea of oneself to aspire to. Through it, a person transcends the limitations of his incarnation and circumstance (which is said to be of a lower, or “vegetable” order.)
Plotinus. Our Tutelary Spirit. From the fourth tractate of the third Ennead. Translated by Stephan MacKenna. London: Penguin Books. 1991.
Kabala and Hermeticism figured into early medieval mysticism, and later Neoplatonism, which sort of disappeared with the ascendency of Christianity and was rediscovered in about the 15th century. In the 14th century, a book surfaced called The Book of Abramelin, attributed to a German Jewish Kabbalist. It outlines material on ceremonial magic and specifically is a very long and involved magical operation to realize a “Holy Guardian Angel.” After attaining this, one is promised all kinds of magical powers not unlike siddhis known in yoga (eg,, powers of magical flight, materialization, longevity, and other special powers).
At the turn of the 20th century (1897), this book was partially and somewhat inaccurately translated by Samuel MacGregor Mathers, who was the founder of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. He conflated the term with the Neoplatonic term Augoiedes. Aleister Crowley, who belonged to the Golden Dawn and spun off the Ordo Templis Orientis and other lodges from it, began to do work with and write about the Holy Guardian Angel and developed his own ideas about what it was and rites about achieving it. You can find these rites online. The idea is more or less the same as in Hinduism and Buddhism-to become your divine ideal and become empowered by it. For Crowley, this was to realize your true self and True Will.
Liber VIII: The Ritual Proper for the Invocation of Augoeides
www.themagickalreview.org/classics/liber_0008phpInvocation of the Augoeides, The Luminous Self Being the Invocation of Holy Guardian Angel / True Will
http://home.earthlink.net/~xristos/GoldenDawn/augoeides.htmDrury, Nevil. Dictionary of Mysticism and the Occult.San Francisco. Harper & Row. 1985. p. 119
Holy Guardian Angel. .
Sutin, Lawrence. Do What Thou Wilt: A Life of Aleister Crowley. New York. St. Martin's Griffin. 2000 Addendum
Spiritual Guides, Genii, Inner Plane Adepti, and Astral Lovers
Among magical practitioners, it is also not uncommon for them to relate to what you might call a spiritual guide or even an entity or projection that is experienced as a presence that acts as an astral lover a mentor or ideal to the point that it becomes a personal godform. These entities are not chosen or fabricated; they arise as presences to a person. Whether they are real spiritual entities or projections or fragments of one’s own consciousness is a point that a person needs to decide for himself. The caveat is that a person has to have a strong footing in reality when these entities arise because similar phenomena happen to psychologically unstable persons who cannot distinguish between the world of their mental or spiritual or mystical experience and functional reality.
Realizing the Chosen Ideal
Think about your deity or ideal. Read about it, Web search it, put an image or representation of it in a place that you use for meditation. Think about how to move past a vague interest, a curiosity, and think about what attributes of this deity you aspire to and how you will serve that deity to aspire to those goals.
Invocation and the Chosen Ideal
In magic ritual and shamanism, there are practices in which a person becomes the deity. In the extreme, this takes the form of possession trances (being “ridden” by the deity). It is a feature within shamanic traditions. Loss of consciousness and/or disinhibition is common. In mystical/Tantric-based practice, when identification with the ideal is achieved, illuminated consciousness (not loss of consciousness) is experienced; the practitioner is poised in the power and expression of the deity.