Long ago, people looked upward and read the sky as a living book. Imagine knowing nothing except what nature reveals, and at night seeing only these mysterious lights shining across the vault above.
As generations watched and recorded, they noticed some lights moved while others remained fixed. They began to track and trace these movements, discovering a great Order and Harmony to it all.
Certain lights they called planetos—"wanderers"—because they were always moving. The fixed stars stayed constant, reliable, shining bright and steady in their appointed places. Throughout the 365 days of the year, constellations appeared at the same times and places, returning in eternal procession. Slowly, understanding emerged: we exist at the center of some vast and intricate cosmos—and this cosmos is not artificial machinery but Nature itself, the structure and mechanism of Life, Creation, God.
Through observing, studying, and aligning mind and life with this nature and structure of existence, direct knowing emerged—gnosis, immediate experience of the reality and presence of the Divine. That bright ever-burning light shining from every star was seen as the Light of God itself, the Source. Each star is a center, an embodied sphere and being of light, yet the light itself comes from beyond them all.
The Great Chain of Being
The ancients understood existence as a Great Chain of Being descending from the Source: through angelic realms, through our galaxy, through the fixed stars, through our sun, through the planets of our solar system, down to Earth where we live composed of the four elements. We have descended that great ladder to arrive here.
The path is to ascend back up and return Home to the Heart of God and the Realm of Light—to the Empyrean, the Mind of God itself.
You are the Son or Daughter of God. Your mind is a miniature version of your Creator's—a holographic fractal of the All. The entire cosmos is the body of the Divine Mind, and the Divine Mind is exactly the same in structure as your own mind. Looking upward becomes a way of looking inward.
In Hermetic cosmology, the soul descends from the divine through the seven planetary spheres, clothing itself in their qualities. After death it ascends back through them to the One. Each planet represents a stage of purification or mastery. The soul travels through these spheres before birth and returns through them after death—the Ladder of Light.
The Macrocosm and Microcosm
Hermeticism centers on the principle that the human being (microcosm) reflects the universe at large (macrocosm). The phrase often quoted: "That which is below is like that which is above." The sky is both external field and internal terrain. Looking at the heavens is equivalent to examining the soul's structure. The planets and stars are not merely external objects but express inner states, potentials, and initiatory stages.
Everything happening in the macrocosmic universe mirrors what happens on Earth, in humanity, in you, in your life and being. When Mars is in a certain geometric relationship to Venus, there is conflict—wars and fights among people. When Jupiter is well aspected with Venus, many marry. When Saturn aligns favorably, it becomes an auspicious time for the coronation of a King.
The stars are not causing these things to happen; rather, when you see the universe as literally "one verse, one song," you perceive that everything is interconnected and occurs as one movement.
In Hermetic medicine, the universe and human form correspond. The head relates to Aries, the feet to Pisces, the heart to the Sun, the lungs to Mercury. Looking at the night sky thus becomes a form of self-knowledge: every constellation marks a part of your own greater body. The human being is seen as mediator between Heaven and Earth—above us the infinite heavens, below us the microcosmic world of metals and chemical processes. You stand at the center. You are God's Gardener, God's Son or Daughter, meant to co-create.
The Seven Planetary Spheres
Each classical planet—Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Sun, Venus, Mercury, Moon—was understood as both a physical world and a spiritual intelligence shaping qualities of the soul. Imagine these as living forces in themselves: Saturn as structure and initiation, Jupiter as expansion and wisdom, Mars as energy and courage, the Sun as divine self, Venus as love and harmony, Mercury as mind and communication, the Moon as reflection and growth.
The ancients saw these movements and patterns as the movements of Life itself, of God's Mind in motion. Every star was understood as a very high being, every planet a god. Everything is alive. Everything is connected. Every movement is part of a great orchestration.
The Fixed Stars and the Zodiac
Beyond the planets lies the realm of the fixed stars—the zodiac, the eternal patterns. The twelve signs are archetypal gates through which the soul descends and ascends. The zodiac signs and constellations function as passages—gates or patterns the soul moves through in descent or return.
The twelve constellations form the "Wheel of Becoming." Every soul journeys through its cycles of experience and return. Aries marks beginnings, Pisces dissolution and transcendence, and the circle turns eternally.
Many ancient peoples believed souls were born from the stars and would return there. The Egyptians saw the dead pharaoh becoming a star in Orion's belt. The Stoics called the stars the dwellings of perfected souls. When we look at the stars, we are meeting our own ancestral light—older versions of ourselves scattered through time.
The Celestial Temple
In the ancient view, the sky was a temple without walls. The horizon was the sacred circle of initiation; the dome above was the vault of heaven, painted with living fires. Every rising and setting of a star was a ritual procession, and the observer was a priest participating in the ceremony of the cosmos. The ecliptic—the path of the Sun and planets—was the processional route through the temple of eternity.
The Music of the Spheres
From Pythagoras through Plato, the ancients believed each planet emitted a tone according to its orbital speed and size, forming a perfect harmony—the musica mundana. Though inaudible to the ears, it could be heard by the soul in moments of contemplation. The harmony of the heavens was mirrored in music, mathematics, and virtue. Perhaps you can hear the silent harmony.
The Elements and the Layers of Being
In the hermetic-alchemical model, the universe is structured in layers: the elemental world (earth, water, air, fire, and aether), the planetary spheres, the fixed stars, and beyond. Ancient astronomy divided the world into four elemental spheres—Earth, Water, Air, and Fire—and above them the aether, the fifth element, pure and divine. The stars existed in this aetheric realm, beyond decay.
The human being also has layers: body, emotions, mind, will, spirit. These correspondences mean that looking at the sky invites seeing the layered architecture of our own being.
Alchemy and the Heavens
Alchemy extends this understanding: the transformation of metals mirrors the transformation of the soul. The Sun corresponds to gold, the Moon to silver, Mars to iron, and so forth. When the alchemist looks at the night sky, they see the ingredients and structure of the Great Work—light and darkness blending, creation perpetually refining itself.
In alchemical terms, each planet corresponds to a metal, a psychological state, and a stage of the Work. Alchemy in its older sense is not only about metals or laboratory operations but about the transformation of consciousness. The outer process (for example, transforming lead to gold) symbolizes the inner process of transmuting base consciousness into enlightened being. The alchemist sought to awaken the quintessence—the fifth element—within.
Astrology as Sacred Correspondence
Astrology in its older, hermetic form treats the planets and stars not simply as physical bodies but as intelligences, symbols, and energetic forces that reflect and influence consciousness. The movements of the classical planets were associated with stages of the soul's journey, individual character, and cycles of transformation.
Astrotheurgy: Working with Celestial Intelligences
Astrotheurgy means working with celestial intelligences through ritual, meditation, and imagination. Theurgy means "divine work"—uniting the human and divine through conscious participation. Astrotheurgy is the practice of consciously engaging with the intelligences associated with celestial bodies through meditation, invocation, attention, ritual, and sight. In older texts this might mean synchronizing one's will with a planet's quality or entering into relationship with the intelligence of a star.
We are not passive observers of the sky—we are participants in the cosmic drama.
The Role of the Magus
The Magus or Hermetic philosopher is not a spectator but a participant in the cosmic order. Through prayer, ritual, and contemplation, the Magus aligns microcosm and macrocosm, becoming a conscious organ of the universe's own intelligence.
The Unity of Science and Mysticism
Before the split between science and spirituality, the same people studied geometry, astronomy, and theology. They saw the mathematical order of the heavens as the mind of God written in number. Copernicus and Kepler still thought in sacred terms. The more we learn scientifically, the more mysterious and holy the cosmos becomes.
The Infinite and the Heart
Hermeticism teaches that the center of the universe is everywhere. Each conscious being is a point through which the whole radiates. Looking up, the observer realizes they themselves are the midpoint of infinity—the universe looking back at itself through human eyes.
Look at the stars and forget what you have been told at school, by the scientists. What actually are they?