I've always found the Merkaba symbol captivating and beautiful; but after attempting to do some research about its origins, I've wound up pretty confused.
It's supposedly associated with Merkabah Mysticism, a school of Abrahamic mysticism that grew out of the book of Ezekiel, which describes his prophetic visions of God in detail. But these descriptions have nothing to do with the multidimensional pointy star that many of us are familiar with. Ezekiel mentions the Chariot of God, which is composed of four beings, each made up of four faces pointing in different directions. He also saw the Ophanim, angels that appear as a "wheel inside of a wheel"; and lastly, the Seraphim (burning angels). Each of these things are visually represented in very specific ways.
Curious, I did some searching and tried to find any kind of link between the Merkaba shape and the school of mysticism which it is claimed to be connected to. I couldn't find a single credible source, and literally everything I saw about it were new-age blogs about chakras and learning how to "ascend to higher dimensions". A few of these "sources" seemed to recycle the same hocus-pocus jargon, and a few of them claimed the Merkaba has its origins in ancient Egypt (again, a claim I couldn't find a single viable source to verify).
So I'm wondering if anyone here has any information? Does this symbol actually have any kind of historical/theological significance, or was it made up by a bunch of hippies because it looks trippy? I'm not interested in anecdotal evidence--if you make a claim please back it up w/ a legitimate source.
Thanks!
It's supposedly associated with Merkabah Mysticism, a school of Abrahamic mysticism that grew out of the book of Ezekiel, which describes his prophetic visions of God in detail. But these descriptions have nothing to do with the multidimensional pointy star that many of us are familiar with. Ezekiel mentions the Chariot of God, which is composed of four beings, each made up of four faces pointing in different directions. He also saw the Ophanim, angels that appear as a "wheel inside of a wheel"; and lastly, the Seraphim (burning angels). Each of these things are visually represented in very specific ways.
Curious, I did some searching and tried to find any kind of link between the Merkaba shape and the school of mysticism which it is claimed to be connected to. I couldn't find a single credible source, and literally everything I saw about it were new-age blogs about chakras and learning how to "ascend to higher dimensions". A few of these "sources" seemed to recycle the same hocus-pocus jargon, and a few of them claimed the Merkaba has its origins in ancient Egypt (again, a claim I couldn't find a single viable source to verify).
So I'm wondering if anyone here has any information? Does this symbol actually have any kind of historical/theological significance, or was it made up by a bunch of hippies because it looks trippy? I'm not interested in anecdotal evidence--if you make a claim please back it up w/ a legitimate source.
Thanks!