The Tree of the Sephirothhttps://vopus.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/el-arbol-de-los-sephiroth-robert-fludd-default.png850480V.M. Kwen Khan KhuV.M. Kwen Khan Khuhttps://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e832d7de00772123ef7f897d80b0841daa13143ee04fa7c99f7a066face011ef?s=96&d=mm&r=g
Through Gnosis we have come to know, within the doctrinaire Kabbalah, what we Gnostics call the Sephirotic Tree represents to us, with all the unfoldments that emerge from it and that correspond to various most sacred parts of our Being.
By order of the most holy Theomegalogos, at the dawn of creation, the Elohim polarized themselves, masculine and feminine, performed an act of pure Sexual Magic and with words of power, mantras, gave form to the diverse dimensions of sidereal space.
Perspectives on magichttps://vopus.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/perspectivas-sobre-la-magia-kwen-khan-khu.png850480V.M. Kwen Khan KhuV.M. Kwen Khan Khuhttps://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e832d7de00772123ef7f897d80b0841daa13143ee04fa7c99f7a066face011ef?s=96&d=mm&r=g
According to historians, it is a work of theosophical character that contains various themes of natural philosophy and esotericism, taking elements from Kabbalah and Hermeticism.
Tree of light and darknesshttps://vopus.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/arbol-de-la-luz-y-de-la-oscuridad-kwen-khan-khu.png850480V.M. Kwen Khan KhuV.M. Kwen Khan Khuhttps://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e832d7de00772123ef7f897d80b0841daa13143ee04fa7c99f7a066face011ef?s=96&d=mm&r=g
First of all, appreciated reader, we must say that this illustration appears in the book entitled Studium Universale, written by Valentine Weigel, who was a German philosopher, writer and mystic from Saxony and, according to some, a precursor of Theosophy.