Invoking vs Evoking: Which Spirit Work Method is Right for You?
What is Invoking?
Invoking (or invocation) is the practice of calling a deity, spirit, or energy INTO yourself or your sacred space, inviting them to be present within you or to join you in partnership. When you invoke, you're asking the entity to enter, merge with you, or work through you. In Wicca, Drawing Down the Moon is a form of invocation where the High Priestess becomes a vessel for the Goddess. Invocation is about welcoming, embodying, and becoming a channel for divine or spiritual energy.
Invoking Characteristics:
- Direction: Calling energy/entity INTO you or your space
- Relationship: Partnership, embodiment, channeling
- Tone: Welcoming, respectful, invitational
- Purpose: Embody deity, channel energy, receive guidance
- Safety: Generally safer, working with benevolent entities
- Result: Entity works through you or with you
Invoking is like inviting a honored guest into your home—you welcome them, they enter, and you work together.
What is Evoking?
Evoking (or evocation) is the practice of calling a spirit, demon, or entity to appear OUTSIDE of yourself, typically within a triangle, circle, or contained space where you can communicate with it while maintaining separation. When you evoke, you're commanding the entity to manifest externally so you can question, bargain with, or direct it. Evocation is common in ceremonial magic and grimoire work, often used to summon spirits for knowledge, power, or specific tasks.
Evoking Characteristics:
- Direction: Calling entity to appear OUTSIDE you
- Relationship: Command, control, separation
- Tone: Commanding, authoritative, protective
- Purpose: Gain knowledge, command tasks, communicate with entity
- Safety: Requires strong protection, can be dangerous
- Result: Entity appears externally, you maintain control
Evoking is like summoning someone to appear before you for questioning—they manifest, you communicate, but you remain separate and in control.
Key Differences Between Invoking and Evoking
1. Location of Entity
Invoking:
- Entity enters you or your space
- Becomes part of you temporarily
- Works through you
- Internal presence
- Merging or partnership
Evoking:
- Entity appears outside you
- Remains separate from you
- You observe and communicate
- External manifestation
- Clear separation maintained
2. Relationship Dynamic
Invoking:
- Partnership and cooperation
- Respectful invitation
- Welcoming and honoring
- Entity is guest or ally
- Mutual benefit
Evoking:
- Command and control
- Authoritative summoning
- Demanding appearance
- Entity is servant or subject
- Practitioner benefits
3. Types of Entities
Invoking is typically used for:
- Deities (gods and goddesses)
- Benevolent spirits
- Angels or divine beings
- Ancestors (friendly)
- Spirit guides
- Elemental energies
Evoking is typically used for:
- Demons or infernal spirits
- Planetary spirits
- Goetic entities
- Neutral or potentially hostile spirits
- Entities you need to control
- Spirits for specific tasks
4. Safety and Protection
Invoking:
- Generally safer (working with benevolent entities)
- Basic protection sufficient
- Trust-based relationship
- Entity wants to help
- Lower risk
Evoking:
- Potentially dangerous
- Requires strong protection (circle, triangle, seals)
- Control-based relationship
- Entity may be hostile or tricky
- Higher risk if done incorrectly
5. Purpose and Goals
Invoking is for:
- Receiving divine guidance
- Embodying deity for ritual
- Channeling healing or wisdom
- Spiritual communion
- Drawing down divine power
- Becoming vessel for deity
Evoking is for:
- Gaining specific knowledge
- Commanding spirit to perform task
- Questioning entity
- Obtaining magical power or skill
- Bargaining for favors
- Controlling potentially hostile spirits
6. Tradition and Practice
Invoking:
- Common in Wicca, paganism, devotional practice
- Drawing Down the Moon/Sun
- Aspecting (embodying deity)
- Channeling and mediumship
- Devotional worship
Evoking:
- Common in ceremonial magic, grimoire work
- Goetia (Lesser Key of Solomon)
- Solomonic magic
- Hermetic traditions
- Advanced magical practice
How to Invoke
Simple Invocation (Deity or Spirit):
- Prepare: Cleanse yourself and space, cast circle if desired
- Set up altar: Place representations of deity/spirit
- Ground and center: Calm your energy
-
Call the entity:
- "[Deity name], I call upon you"
- "I invite you into this sacred space"
- "Please join me, guide me, work through me"
- Welcome: Open yourself to their presence
- Feel the presence: Notice energy shift, sensations, thoughts
- Work together: Perform ritual, receive guidance, channel energy
- Thank and release: "Thank you [name] for your presence. Blessed be."
- Ground: Return to normal consciousness
Drawing Down the Moon (Wiccan Invocation):
- High Priestess stands before altar
- High Priest invokes Goddess into her
- Uses formal invocation ("I invoke thee and call upon thee...")
- Priestess becomes vessel for Goddess
- Goddess speaks through Priestess
- After ritual, Goddess is thanked and released
Personal Invocation:
- Meditate on the deity or energy you want to invoke
- Visualize their energy entering your body
- Say: "[Name], I welcome you into my heart and mind. Work through me, guide me, be with me."
- Feel their presence merge with yours
- Proceed with your work
- Thank and gently release when done
How to Evoke
Basic Evocation (Ceremonial Magic):
-
Prepare extensively:
- Study the entity thoroughly
- Know its seal, name, nature
- Prepare all tools and protections
- Cast protective circle: Strong, formal circle
- Create triangle of manifestation: Outside circle, where spirit will appear
- Wear protective amulets: Pentacle, holy symbols
-
Call the entity:
- Use commanding language
- "I conjure and command thee, [name]"
- "By the power of [divine names], I summon thee"
- "Appear before me in this triangle"
- Maintain authority: Stay in circle, don't break protection
- Communicate: Ask questions, give commands
- Dismiss: "I license thee to depart. Go in peace and harm none."
- Close circle: Banish and ground
Goetic Evocation (Advanced):
Warning: This is advanced practice requiring extensive study and preparation.
- Prepare according to grimoire instructions
- Use proper timing (planetary hours, days)
- Wear ritual robes and ring
- Have grimoire, wand, and all tools ready
- Cast circle with divine names
- Draw triangle with seal of spirit
- Recite conjurations (often lengthy)
- Command spirit to appear
- Bind spirit to task or oath
- Dismiss with license to depart
- Perform banishing ritual
When to Use Invoking
Invoke when you:
- Want to work with benevolent deities or spirits
- Need divine guidance or wisdom
- Want to embody deity for ritual
- Are performing devotional worship
- Need healing or blessing energy
- Want partnership with spiritual entity
- Are comfortable with entity entering you
- Trust the entity completely
When to Use Evoking
Evoke when you:
- Need to work with potentially hostile spirits
- Want specific knowledge or power
- Need to command entity to perform task
- Must maintain separation for safety
- Are working with demons or goetic spirits
- Have strong magical protection skills
- Are experienced in ceremonial magic
- Understand the risks involved
Safety Considerations
Invoking Safety:
- Know who you're invoking: Research the deity/spirit
- Only invite benevolent entities: Don't invoke demons or hostile spirits
- Have a plan to release: Know how to ask them to leave
- Stay grounded: Don't lose yourself completely
- Set boundaries: You can say no or ask them to leave
- Start small: Brief invocations before full embodiment
Evoking Safety:
- NEVER evoke without protection: Always use circle and triangle
- Know the entity thoroughly: Study before attempting
- Have banishing ready: Know how to dismiss if things go wrong
- Never break the circle: Stay protected throughout
- Don't make deals lightly: Spirits can be tricky
- Advanced practice only: Not for beginners
- Have backup plan: Know emergency banishing
Common Mistakes
Invoking Mistakes:
- Invoking entities you don't know or trust
- Not having a release plan
- Losing yourself completely (no grounding)
- Invoking while emotionally unstable
- Not setting boundaries
- Invoking demons or hostile spirits (use evoking instead)
Evoking Mistakes:
- Attempting without proper protection
- Breaking the circle during evocation
- Not knowing how to banish
- Showing fear or weakness
- Making deals without understanding terms
- Evoking as a beginner (requires experience)
- Not researching the entity first
Which Practice is Right for You?
Choose Invoking if you:
- Work with deities and benevolent spirits
- Want partnership and cooperation
- Are comfortable with embodiment
- Practice Wicca or devotional paganism
- Seek guidance and wisdom
- Want gentle, loving spiritual connection
- Are beginner to intermediate practitioner
Choose Evoking if you:
- Practice ceremonial or grimoire magic
- Need to work with demons or neutral spirits
- Want to command specific tasks
- Require separation for safety
- Seek specific knowledge or power
- Are experienced in magical protection
- Are advanced practitioner
Use Both if you:
- Practice comprehensive ceremonial magic
- Work with both deities and spirits
- Understand when each is appropriate
- Have experience with both methods
- Can discern which entity requires which approach
Ethical Considerations
Invoking Ethics:
- Only invoke with permission and respect
- Don't invoke for ego or show
- Honor the deity/spirit you invoke
- Don't claim to BE the deity (you're a vessel)
- Release them properly and thank them
Evoking Ethics:
- Don't evoke for frivolous reasons
- Treat spirits with respect (even when commanding)
- Don't harm others through evoked spirits
- Keep your word if you make agreements
- Dismiss properly, don't leave spirits bound
- Understand karmic consequences
Final Thoughts
Invoking and evoking are two fundamentally different approaches to spirit work, each with distinct purposes, methods, and safety considerations. Invoking offers partnership with benevolent entities—welcoming them into you or your space to work together in cooperation and love. Evoking offers controlled communication with potentially dangerous entities—summoning them to appear externally while you maintain authority and protection.
For most practitioners, invoking is the primary method of spirit work—safer, more accessible, and aligned with devotional practice and partnership with the divine. Evoking is advanced practice reserved for ceremonial magicians working with grimoires and entities that require command and control rather than invitation and cooperation.
Whichever method you choose, approach spirit work with respect, preparation, and clear intention. Whether you're welcoming a goddess into your heart or commanding a spirit to appear in a triangle, remember: you are working with real forces that deserve respect and require responsibility. Practice safely, ethically, and with full awareness of what you're doing.