"And Enoch walked with God: and he was not; for God took him." — Genesis 5:24
"Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye." — 1 Corinthians 15:51–52
The final step of the Great Work is Translation — the complete transfiguration of the self into light. Not the destruction of form, but its spiritualization. Not escape from the body, but the body's fulfillment.
Translation — from the Latin translatio, "to carry across" — is the passage from one state of being to another without the dissolution of death. It is the mystery hidden at the heart of every initiatory tradition: that the human being, fully awakened and fully surrendered, can cross the threshold consciously, whole, and luminous.
The mortal puts on immortality, and the corruptible puts on incorruption.
Enoch: The First Translation (Book II)
Enoch "walked with God and was not, for God took him." He did not die — he was translated. In the Kabbalistic tradition, Enoch becomes Metatron, the Angel of the Presence, the scribe of the divine court. His translation is the prototype: the human being who walks so closely with the Source that the boundary between human and divine dissolves. The Book of Enoch describes his ascent through the heavens, each level a further unveiling, until he stands before the Throne itself and is transformed into fire.
Elijah: The Chariot of Fire (Book III)
Elijah did not taste death. A chariot of fire descended, and he was taken up in a whirlwind. The Merkabah — the divine chariot — becomes in the Jewish mystical tradition the very vehicle of ascension, the throne-chariot of God. Elijah's translation establishes the archetype of the living ascent: the prophet who has so thoroughly purified the vessel that heaven reaches down to claim it. And the promise: Elijah will return before the great and terrible day — the translated one comes back to prepare the way.
Jesus: The Ascension & the Resurrection Body (Books III–IV)
The Resurrection is the supreme Christian statement of translation. The tomb is empty. The Risen Christ appears in a body that is both physical and more-than-physical: he eats, he is touched, yet he passes through walls and appears and disappears at will. The Ascension completes things: he is "taken up," and a cloud receives him. The corpus glorificationis — the glorified body — is the Christian name for the Body of Light.
Paul's teaching is explicit: "It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body" (1 Cor 15:44).
Moses: The Hidden Translation
Moses dies on Mount Nebo, but his burial place is never found — "no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto this day" (Deut 34:6). Jewish tradition debates whether Moses too was translated. In the Transfiguration on Mount Tabor, Moses appears alongside Elijah — the two translated ones — speaking with Christ in glory. The three witnesses of Translation, together on the mountain.
The Body of Light Across Traditions
The Rainbow Body (Jalü) — Tibetan Buddhism
The Dzogchen tradition preserves accounts of masters whose bodies, at the moment of death, dissolved into rainbow light — leaving behind only hair and fingernails. Padmasambhava, the founder of Tibetan Buddhism, is said to have achieved the rainbow body of great transference — departing without leaving a corpse at all. This is translation by another name.
The Solar Body — Hermeticism & Alchemy
The alchemical tradition speaks of the corpus solaris, the Solar Body — the imperishable vehicle forged through the Great Work. The Philosopher's Stone is not a substance but a state: the complete transmutation of lead (the mortal body, the unredeemed self) into gold (the Body of Light, the divine self). The Emerald Tablet's "It ascends from the earth to the heaven, and again it descends to the earth" describes the circulation of light that builds the immortal body.
The Merkabah — Jewish Mysticism
The Merkabah mystics sought to replicate Elijah's ascent — to build the chariot of light within the soul and ride it through the heavenly palaces (Hekhalot) to the Throne of Glory. The chariot is the Body of Light, constructed through prayer, purity, and the utterance of divine names.
The Soma Pneumatikon — Paul & the Early Christians
Paul distinguishes between the soma psychikon (soul-body) and the soma pneumatikon (spirit-body). The latter is not a rejection of embodiment but its completion — the body fully animated by Spirit, no longer subject to decay, limitation, or death.
The Taoist Immortal Body
In Taoist inner alchemy (neidan), the practitioner cultivates the yang shen — the pure yang spirit-body — through the refinement of jing (essence), qi (breath), and shen (spirit). The completed adept "ascends to heaven in broad daylight" — translation, in Chinese robes.
Translation as the Completion of the Royal Art
Translation is the fulfillment of incarnation — the reason the soul descended into matter in the first place. The descent into the body was always for the sake of this: the conscious return, carrying everything that was gathered in the journey.
As the alchemists say: Solve et Coagula. Dissolve and reconstitute. The Body of Light is matter redeemed — not abandoned, but transfigured from within.
"Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is." — 1 John 3:2
This is the final word of the Royal Art: you shall be changed. Not someday, in some distant heaven, but here — in this body, in this life, in this very moment of awakening. The Body of Light is not built in the future. It is revealed when the last veil falls.
The Apocalypse — the unveiling — is this: the discovery that you have always been light, dreaming you were lead.