Both Eliphas Levi and Dr. Paul Foster Case believed that imagination was the catalyst of any magical work done with the Kabbalah. In his seminal Transcendental Magic, Levi wrote, "The intelligence and will of man {sic} possess a faculty which belongs to the realms of magic: it is the imagination. The old Kabbalists call it the Diaphane or the Translucid...It is the soul's eye, wherein forms are outlined and preserved. Thereby we behold the reflections of the invisible world."
Major Arcana and Kabbalah
In Kabbalistic practice it is believed that the process of applying imagination to reason allows an angelic power to manifest on the material plane. Case emphasized that this power is needed so there is no temptation to play with the practice for whimsy or ego gratification. Work with the Tarot is not done for divinations, but for using archetypes for conscious visualization.
Kabbalists profess that the use of symbol allows for contact with the deeper aspects of spirituality. The symbol system in the Tarot,, contains all of the archetypes in existence (according to Jung) or all possible combinations of the key to the Kabbalah (according to Levi). Levi connected the 22 Major Arcana of the Tarot with the 22 Hebrew letters, and stressed that the spiritual tradition has been an oral one for thousands of years. He called the Tarot the Wheel of the Rosicrucian and its pictorial system the Universal Language. Case saw it as the language of the subconscious.
Israel Regardie: Kabbalah for All
Israel Regardie was another important figure who disseminated the secrets of the Golden Dawn to the public at large. He was secretary to Aleistar Crowley for four years, but then chose to distance himself from the man. He still had a high degree of respect for his work, though. In his books The Tree of Life and A Garden of Pomegranates, he described many of the secret traditions and practices of the Golden Dawn. He was accused of being an oath-breaker (as Case was charged), but he felt that it was important for this information to not disappear. In My Rosicrucian Adventure, he wrote, "It is the heritage of every man and woman, their spiritual birthright."
Regardie was Jewish and Case, Christian. They both firmly believed that passing on the knowledge of the occult was for "the honor and glory of God." They, as well as many others involved in the first generation of the Golden Dawn, strongly ascribed to the importance of remaining connected to the Judeo-Christian tradition and in maintaining that the Kabbalah evokes the plurality within the Unity of God, never divorced from the Unity.
Angel Names and Kabbalah Practice
Angelic spheres are thought to have much to do with the practical work of the Kabbalah. Both the Sefer Raziel and Sefer Yetzirah are said to have been inspired by angels and emphasize that relationships are to be established with these angelic beings. In Jewish tradition, one relates to God and God's messengers through "clinging" to Divine Presence through spiritual acts, such as prayer, fasting, meditation and Kabbalistic study.
Kabbalistic study is associated with entering an Earthly Paradise. Angel names are chanted in some Hermetic lodges. Some of the names used are synonyms with planetary deities. It is believed that the Godhead is revealed through all of creation. Jewish tradition maintains that angels appear throughout history to instruct in the Kabbalistic mysteries.
Spiritual Journey of Kabbalah
Kabbalah means "to receive." Those who practice this type of spiritual journey believed that its purpose is to gain understanding in how higher celestial spheres operate in order for the angels to teach the student. Dr. Case referred to this meeting as contact with the Higher Guardian Angel, or the Inner Teacher. He felt that the ability to listen and discern is the real connection with the Source within, and that the goal of Kabbalah is to perfect consciousness. Once this occurs, he believed that there is no obstacle between the initiate and the "inner teacher," also known as the "hierophant."
Sources:
Part 1, Soror A.L. Archetypes on the Tree of Life: Teaching of the Paul Foster Case Tarot, The Raphael Group, Berkeley, 2009.
Controversial.com, George Knowles, Israel Regardie (1907 – 1985), Retrieved on June 18, 2010.
Regardie, Israel, My Rosicrucian Adventure, Llewellyn Publications, St. Paul, 1971.