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- BAPHOMET XI°
-
- What is Freemasonry?
-
- An Excerpt on the
- Reconstituted O.T.O.
-
- from his Confessions
-
- What follows is Crowley's own account of his motivations and methods
- in reconstructing the O.T.O. and its rituals. It is excerpted from The
- Confessions of Aleister Crowley, pp. 700-n-704. In this excerpt
- Crowley discusses his revision of the ``Oasis'' initiation rituals of
- O°-n-III°. His explanatory introduction to these revised rituals, as
- presented to then-Frater Superior Merlin Peregrinus X° when the
- reforms were proposed, appears elsewhere in this issue.--H.B.
-
- ``WHAT IS FREEMASONRY?'' I collated the rituals and their secrets,
- much as I had done the religions of the world, with their magical and
- mystical bases. As in that case, I decided to neglect what it too
- often actually was. It would be absurd to judge Protestantism by the
- political acts of Henry VIII. In the same was, I could not judge
- masonry by the fact that it had denounced the Concordat. I proposed to
- define freemasonry as a system of communicating truth--religious,
- philosophical, magical and mystical; and indicating the proper means
- of developing human faculty by means of a peculiar language whose
- alphabet is the symbolism of ritual. Universal brotherhood and the
- great moral principles, independent of personal, racial, climatic and
- other prejudices, naturally formed a background which would assure
- individual security and social stability for each and all.
-
- The question then arose, ``What truths should be communicated and by
- what means promulgated?'' My first object was to eliminate from the
- hundreds of rituals at my disposal all exoteric elements. Many degrees
- contain statements (usually inaccurate) of matters well known to
- modern schoolboys, through they may have been important when the
- rituals were written. I may mention one degree in which the candidate
- is portentiously informed that there are other religions in the world
- besides Christianity and that there is some truth in all of them.
- Their tenets are explained in many cases with egregious error. The
- description of Buddha as a god is typical. I saw no point in
- overloading the system with superfluous information.
-
- Another essential point was to reduce the unwieldly mass of material
- to a compact and coherent system. I thought that everything worth
- preserving could and should be presented in not more than a dozen
- ceremonies, and that it should be brought well within the capacity of
- any officer to learn by heart his part during the leisure time at his
- disposal, in a month at most.
-
- The eighteenth-century Rosicrucians, so-called in Austria, had already
- endeavoured to unite the various branches of Continental freemasonry
- and its superstructures; in the nineteenth century, principally owing
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- to the energy and ability of a wealthy iron master named Karl Kellner,
- a reconstruction and consolidation of traditional truth had been
- attempted. A body was formed under the name O.T.O. (Ordo Templi
- Orientis) which purported to achieve this result. It is purported to
- communicate the secrets, not only of freemasonry (with its Rites of
- 3°, 7°, 33°, 90°, 97°, etc.,) but of the Gnostic Catholic Church, the
- Martinists, the Sat Bhai, the Rosicrucians, the Knights of the Holy
- Ghost and so on, in nine degrees, with a tenth of an honorary
- character to distinguish the ``Supreme and Holy King''of the Order in
- each country where it was established. Chief of these kings is the
- O.H.O. (Outer Head of the Order, or Frater Superior), who is an
- absolute autocrat. This position was at this time occupied by Theodor
- Reuss, the Supreme and Holy King of Germany, who resigned the office
- in 1922 in my favour.
-
- The O.H.O. put the rituals of this Order at my disposal. I found them
- of the utmost value as to the central secret, but otherwise very
- inferior. They were dramatically worthless, but the prose was unequal,
- they lacked philosophical unity, their information was incomplete and
- unsystematic. Their general idea was, however, of the right kind; and
- I was able to take them as a model.
-
- The main objects of the instruction were two. It was firstly necessary
- to explain the universe and the relations of human life therewith.
- Secondly, to instruct every man how best to adapt his life to the
- cosmos and to develop his faculties to the utmost advantage. I
- accordingly constructed a series of rituals, Minerval, Man, Magician,
- Master-Magician, Perfect Magician and Perfect Initiate, which should
- illustrate the course of human life in its largest philosophical
- aspect. I begin by showing the object of the pure soul, ``One,
- individual and eternal,'' in determining to formulate itself
- consciously, or, as I may say, to understand itself.
-
- It chooses to enter into relations with the solar system. It
- incarnates. I explain the significance of birth and the conditions
- established by the process. I next show how it may best carry out its
- object in the eucharist of life. It partakes, so to speak, of its own
- godhead in every action, but especially through the typical sacrament
- of marriage, understood as the voluntary union of itself with each
- element of its environment. I then proceed to the climax of its career
- in death and show how this sacrament both consecrates (or, rather,
- sets its seal upon) the previous procedure and gives a meaning
- thereto, just as the auditing of an account enables the merchant to
- see his year's transactions in perspective.
-
- In the next ceremony I show how the individual, released by death from
- the obsession of personality, resumes relations with the truth of the
- universe. Reality bursts upon him in a blaze of adorable light; he is
- able to appreciate its splendour as he could not previously do, since
- his incarnation has enabled him to establish particular relations
- between the elements of eternity.
-
- Finally, the cycle is closed by the reabsorption of all individuality
- into infinity. It ends in absolute annihilation which {...} may in
- reality be regarded as an exact equivalent for all other terms soever,
- or (by postulating the category of time) as forming the starting point
- for new adventure of the same kind.
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- It will be clear from the above that the philosophical perfection of
- this system of initiation leaves nothing to be desired. We may write
- Q.E.D. The practical problem remains. We have already decided to
- incarnate, and our birth certificates are with our bankers. We do not
- have to worry about these matters, and we cannot alter them if we
- would; death and what follows death, are equally certain, and equally
- able to take care of themselves. Our sole preoccupation is how to make
- use of our lives.
-
- Now the O.T.O. is in possession of one supreme secret. The whole of
- its system at the time when I became an initiate of the Sanctuary of
- the Gnosis (IX°) was directed towards communicating to its members, by
- progressively plain hints, this all-important instruction. I
- personally believe that if this secret, which is a scientific secret,
- were perfectly understood, as it is not even by me after twelve years'
- almost constant study and experiment, there would be nothing which the
- human imagination can conceive that could not be realized in practice.
- {...}
-
- The injunctions of the sages, from Pythagoras, Zoroaster and Lao Tzu,
- to the Cabalistic Jew who wrote the Ritual of the Royal Arch, and the
- sentimental snob who composed those of the Craft degrees, are either
- directed to indicating the best conditions for applying this secret,
- or are mere waste of words. Realizing this, it was comparatively
- simple for me to edit masonic ethics and esoterism. I had simply to
- refer everything to this single sublime standard. I therefore answered
- the question ``How should a young man mend his way?'' in a series of
- rituals in which the candidate is instructed in the value of
- discretion, loyalty, independence, truthfulness, courage, self-
- control, indifference to circumstance, impartiality, scepticism, and
- other virtues, and at the same time assisted him to discover for
- himself the nature of this secret, the proper object of its employment
- and the best means for insuring success for its use. The first of
- these degrees is the V°, in which the secret is presented in a
- pageant; while he is also instructed in the essential elements of the
- history of the world, considered from the standpoint of his present
- state of evolution and his proper relation to society in general with
- reference to the same.
-
- The degree of Knight Hermetic Philosopher follows, in which his
- intellectual and moral attitude is further defined. In the VI°, his
- position having been thus made precise, he is shown how to concentrate
- himself to the particular Great Work which he came to earth in order
- to perform. In the VII°, which is tripartite, he is first taught the
- principle of equilibrium as extended to all possible moral ideas;
- secondly, to all possible intellectual ideas, and lastly, he is shown
- how, basing all his actions on this impregnable rock of justice, he
- may so direct his life as to undertake his Great Work with the fullest
- responsibility and in absolute freedom from all possibility of
- interferences.
-
- In the VIII°, the secret is once more manifested to him, more clearly
- than before; and he is instructed in how to train himself to use it by
- certain preliminary practices involving acquaintance with some of
- those subtler energies which have hitherto, for the most part, eluded
- the observation and control of profane science.
-
- In the IX°, which is never conferred upon anyone who has not already
- divined from previous indications the nature of the secret, it is
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- explained to him fully. The conclusions of previous experiments are
- placed at his service. The idea is that each new initiate should
- continue the work of his predecessor, so that eventually the
- inexhaustible resources of the secret may be within the reach of the
- youngest initiate; for at present, we are compelled to admit that the
- superstitious reverence which has encompassed it in past ages, and the
- complexity of the conditions which modify its use, place us in much
- the same position as the electricians of a generation ago in respect
- of their science. We are assured of the immensity of the force at our
- disposal; we perceive the extent of the empire which it offers us, but
- we do not thoroughly understand even our successes and are uncertain
- how to proceed in order to generate the energy most efficiently or to
- apply it most accurately to our purposes.
-
- The X°, as in the old system, is merely honorary, but recent
- researches into the mysteries of the IX° have compelled me to add an
- XI°, to illustrate a scientific idea which have been evolved by the
- results of recent experiments.
-
- In the reconstituted O.T.O. there are therefore six degrees in which
- is conveyed a comprehensive conception of the cosmos and our relation
- therewith, and a similar number to deal with our duty to ourselves and
- our fellows, the development of our own faculties of every order, and
- the general advancement and advantage of mankind.
-
- Wherever freemasonry and allied systems contribute to these themes,
- their information has been incorporated in such a way as not to
- infringe the privileges, puerile as they often seem, which have been
- associated hitherto with initiation. Where they merely perpetuate
- trivialities, superstitions and prejudices, they have been neglected.
-
- I claim for my system that it satisfies all possible requirements of
- true freemasonry. It offers a rational basis for universal brotherhood
- and for universal religion. It puts forward a scientific statement
- which is a summary of all that is at present known about the universe
- by means of a simple, yet sublime symbolism, artistically arranged. It
- also enables each man to discover for himself his personal destiny,
- indicates the moral and intellectual qualities which he requires in
- order to fulfil it freely, and finally puts in his hands an
- unimaginably powerful weapon which he may use to develop in himself
- every faculty which he may need in his work.
-
- {...} I believe that my proposals for reconstituting freemasonry on
- the lines above laid down should prove critically important.
- Civilization is crumbling under our eyes and I believe that the best
- chance of saving what little is worth saving, and rebuilding the
- Temple of the Holy Ghost on plans, and with material and workmanship,
- which shall be free from the errors of the former, lies with the
- O.T.O.