Dictionary Definition
invoke
Verb
1 evoke or call forth, with or as if by magic;
"raise the specter of unemployment"; "he conjured wild birds in the
air"; "stir a disturbance"; "call down the spirits from the
mountain" [syn: raise,
conjure, conjure up,
evoke, stir, call down,
arouse, bring up,
put
forward, call
forth]
2 cite as an authority; resort to; "He invoked
the law that would save him"; "I appealed to the law of 1900"; "She
invoked an ancient law" [syn: appeal]
3 request earnestly (something from somebody);
ask for aid or protection; "appeal to somebody for help"; "Invoke
God in times of trouble" [syn: appeal]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- a US , /ɪnˈvoʊk/, /In"voUk/
Etymology
invocareVerb
- To call upon (a person, especially a god) for help, assistance or guidance.
- To conjure up with incantations.
- To cause (a program or subroutine) to execute.
Extensive Definition
An invocation (from the Latin verb
invocare "to call on, invoke") may take the form of:
- Supplication or prayer.
- A form of possession.
- Command or conjuration.
- Self-identification with certain spirits.
These forms are described below, but are not
mutually exclusive. See also Theurgy.
Supplication or prayer
As a supplication or prayer it implies to call upon God, a god or goddess, a person, etc. When a person calls upon a god or goddess to ask for something (protection, a favour, his/her spiritual presence in a ceremony, etc.) or simply for worship, this can be done in a pre-established form or with the invoker's own words or actions. An example of a pre-established text for an invocation is the Lord's Prayer.All religions in general use invoking prayers,
liturgies, or hymns; see for example the mantras in Hinduism and
Buddhism,
the Egyptian
Coming Out by Day (aka Book of
the Dead), the Orphic Hymns and the
many texts, still preserved, written in cuneiform
characters on clay tablets, addressed to Shamash, Ishtar, and other
deities.
A form of possession
The word "possession" is used here in its neutral form to mean "a state (potentially psychological) in which an individual's normal personality is replaced by another". This is also sometimes known as 'aspecting'. This can be done as a means of communicating with or getting closer to a deity or spirit and as such need not be viewed synonymously with demonic possession.In some religious traditions including Paganism, Shamanism and
Wicca,
"invocation" means to draw a spirit or Spirit force into ones own
body and is differentiated from "evocation", which involves asking
a spirit or force to become present at a given location. Again,
Crowley states that
To "invoke" is to "call in", just as to "evoke"
is to "call forth". This is the essential difference between the
two branches of Magick. In invocation, the macrocosm floods the
consciousness. In evocation, the magician, having become the
macrocosm, creates a microcosm.
Possessive invocation may be attempted singly or,
as is often the case in Wicca, in pairs - with one person doing the
invocation (reciting the liturgy or prayers and acting as anchor),
and the other person being invoked (allowing themselves to become a
vessel for the spirit or deity). The person successfully invoked
may be moved to speak or act in non-characteristic ways, acting as
the deity or spirit; and they may lose all or some self-awareness
while doing so. A communication might also be given via imagery (a
religious
vision). They may also be led to recite a text in the manner of
that deity, in which case the invocation is more akin to ritual
drama. The Wiccan Charge
of the Goddess is an example of such a pre-established
recitation. See also the ritual of Drawing
Down the Moon.
The ecstatic, possessory form of invocation may
be compared to loa
possession in the Vodou tradition where
devotees are described as being "ridden" or "mounted" by the deity
or spirit. In 1995 National
Geographic journalist Carol
Beckwith described events she had witnessed during Vodoun
possessions:
A woman splashed sand into her eyes, a man cut
his belly with shards of glass but did not bleed, another swallowed
fire. Nearby a believer, perhaps a yam farmer or fisherman, heated
hand-wrought knives in crackling flames. Then another man brought
one of the knives to his tongue. We cringed at the sight and were
dumbfounded when, after several repetitions, his tongue had not
even reddened.
Possessive invocation has also been described in
certain Norse rites where workers of seidr (Norse shamanism) become as
steeds "ridden" by Odin (this being a
reference to his eight-legged horse Sleipnir and
indeed appears throughout the world in most mystical or ecstatic
traditions, wherever the devotee seeks to touch upon the essence of
a deity or spirit.
Command or conjuration
Sometimes an invocation mixes a supplication with a commandment in an attempt to obtain a favour from some spirit by commanding that entity to do something under a threatening of some bond placed unto him/her in case the asked favour is not obtained.The following is a curious example of an
invocation found engraved in cuneiform characters on a statue of
Pazuzu, used
as an amulet to protect
people from this demon.
Although it seems to be a self-affirmation of the demon's
personality, it was believed it could act as a commandment to avoid
him hurting people and their goods.
I am Pazuzu, son of the king of the evil spirits,
that one who descends impetuously from the mountains and bring the
storms. That is the one I am.
Another example is found in the book
Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches during the Conjuration of
Diana, where
the Goddess Diana is invoked into a piece of bread:
I do not bake the bread, nor with it salt, Nor do
I cook the honey with the wine, I bake the body and the blood and
soul, The soul of (great) Diana, that she shall Know neither rest
nor peace, and ever be In cruel suffering till she will grant What
I request, what I do most desire, I beg it of her from my very
heart! And if the grace be granted, O Diana! In honour of thee I
will hold this feast, Feast and drain the goblet deep, We, will
dance and wildly leap, And if thou grant'st the grace which I
require, Then when the dance is wildest, all the lamps Shall be
extinguished and we'll freely love!
Self-identification with certain spirits
Invocation can refer to taking on the qualities of the being invoked, such as the allure of Aphrodite or the ferocity of Kali. In this instance the being is literally called up from within oneself (as an archetype) or into oneself (as an external force), depending on the personal belief system of the invoker. The main difference between this type of invocation and the possessive category described above is that the former may appear more controlled, with self-identification and deity-identification mixed together. In practise, invocation may manifest as a mix of many of these categories, for example prayer leading to possession leading to self-identification; see for example this traditional Hymn to Astarte:Mother inexhaustible and incorruptible,
creatures, born the first, engendered by thyself and by thyself
conceived, issue of thyself alone and seeking joy within thyself,
Astarte! Oh! Perpetually fertilized, virgin and nurse of all that
is, chaste and lascivious, pure and revelling, ineffable,
nocturnal, sweet, breather of fire, foam of the sea! Thou who
accordest grace in secret, thou who unitest, thou who lovest, thou
who seizest with furious desire the multiplied races of savage
beasts and couplest the sexes in the wood. Oh, irrisistable
Astarte! hear me, take me, possess me, oh, Moon! and thirteen times
each year draw from my womb the sweet libation of my blood!
References
External links
invoke in German: Invokation
invoke in French: Invocation
invoke in Polish: Inwokacja
invoke in Russian: Инвольтация
invoke in Swedish: Invokation
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accost,
address, adjure, apostrophize, appeal, appeal to, approach, beg, beseech, bespeak, bid come, buttonhole, call, call away, call back, call
for, call for help, call forth, call in, call on, call out, call
to, call together, call up, call up spirits, call upon, cite, clamor for, commune with God,
conjure, conjure up,
conjure up spirits, convene, convoke, crave, cross-refer,
cross-reference, cry for, cry on, cry to, demand, direct attention to,
effect, entreat, evoke, give thanks, greet, hail, halloo, impetrate, implement, implore, importune, imprecate, indent, kneel to, make a
cross-reference, make reference to, make supplication, muster, muster up, obtest, offer a prayer, order up,
page, petition, plead, plead for, pray, pray over, preconize, raise, raise ghosts, recall, recite the rosary, refer
to, reference,
requisition, return
thanks, run to, salute,
say grace, send after, send for, serve, speak, speak fair, speak to,
subpoena, summon, summon forth, summon
spirits, summon up, summons, supplicate, take aside, talk
to