Seraphim
Burning Ones · Angelic Order of Geburah
The fiery intelligences of Geburah's severity and purifying strength. Six-winged, surrounding the divine throne, crying the Trisagion until the doorposts shake. Their touch does not destroy — it removes everything that cannot withstand divine presence. What survives the Seraphim's fire is made fit to approach the throne.
Correspondences
The Nature of the Seraphim
Isaiah's Seraphim — Fire that Purifies
In Isaiah 6, a seraph touches the prophet's lips with a live coal from the altar: "Your iniquity is taken away, and your sin purged." This is the Seraphim's function in Geburah: not punishment but purification. The fire of Geburah does not destroy for destruction's sake — it removes everything that cannot withstand divine presence. What survives the Seraphim's touch is made fit to approach the throne.
Isaiah's vision establishes the pattern: the prophet encounters the divine directly and is immediately undone — "Woe is me, for I am undone; I am a man of unclean lips." Before he can function as a prophet, before he can carry the divine word, the Seraphim must act. The coal is not punishment; it is preparation. Geburah's severity is always in service of something higher: it clears the vessel so that the content can be received.
Six Wings — The Geometry of Reverence
Two wings to cover the face before pure holiness (the supernals above Geburah), two to cover the feet before the manifest world (Malkuth below), two to fly (movement through the middle pillar connecting all). The geometry maps the entire Tree: crown, root, and the paths between. A Seraph is not a simple creature — it is the entire axis of the Tree expressed as a single burning intelligence.
The covering of face and feet is not shame but appropriate reverence — the recognition that Geburah stands in the middle of the Tree, between what it cannot fully comprehend (the supernals) and what it must not overwhelm with its full force (the lower Sephiroth). The Seraphim's self-restraint is as important as their fire. Power that knows how to contain itself is the mark of true Geburah: strength in service of the whole.
Serpent Fire and the Kundalini Correspondence
The word seraph contains the same root as the bronze serpent (nehushtan) Moses lifted in the desert — the serpent that healed those who looked at it. In cross-tradition mapping, this is the Kundalini current: the serpent fire that ascends the spine (the middle pillar), healing by burning. The Seraphim are the intelligences of this ascending fire — purification through intensification.
This cross-correspondence illuminates why Geburah, so often read as purely restrictive, carries a profoundly transformative and even healing function. The fire that burns impurity is the same fire that enlivens. The Kundalini that rises through the chakras does not leave the practitioner diminished — it leaves them more fully alive. The Seraphim do not reduce; they intensify, burning away the dross so the gold can shine with its full brilliance.