“The Girdle of The Storm: Spellcraft of the Ancient Canaanite Deity Baal” by Erza Bloodworth

"The Girdle of The Storm: Spellcraft of the Ancient Canaanite Deity Baal" by Erza Bloodworth

"The Girdle of the Storm: Spellcraft of the Ancient Canaanite Deity Baal by Erza Bloodworth is a modern occult grimoire that adapts ancient Ugaritic and Canaanite religious practices for contemporary spiritual use. Drawing on historical research into the city-state of Ugarit, the text focuses on Baal-Hadad, the "Rider of the Clouds" and "Lord of Thunder", reimagining him as an archetypal force for mastery over chaos and the manifestation of order.

The book serves as a practical guide for practitioners seeking to tap into the Storm God's power for:
Prosperity and Abundance: Rituals that parallel ancient prayers for life-giving rain with modern needs for financial flow and steady income.
Authority and Advancement: Techniques designed to clothe the practitioner in a "mantle of kingship" to command respect in professional settings and job interviews.
Justice and Protection: Workings for correcting imbalances, exposing deception, and binding those who mean active harm.

Bloodworth provides detailed instructions for establishing a "Storm Altar" using traditional elements like bronze daggers, cedar wands, and ritual libations of wine and honey. While rooted in ancient Levantine mythology—including Baal's epic battles against the sea-god Yam and the death-god Mot—the grimoire is intended for practical sorcery rather than academic scholarship," offering a living system of techniques for the modern world."