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- Twilight Crossing
-
- Twilight Crossing is a magical assembly dedicated to assisting its
- members in the pursuit of their artistic and spiritual satisfaction.
-
- 0. Legends
-
- A. Thirty centuries ago, dark crossroads were haunted by Hekati, earth
- goddess (or demon) of magic and sorcery. Hekati was far older than the
- "classical" gods of the Greeks. She was one of that band of primeval
- deities known as Titans who were deposed by the patriarchal conquerors
- of the Grecian lands. The myths were rewritten to parallel politics:
- the Titans were cast down from Heaven to the pits of Tartarus by Zeus,
- the God-King; yet Hekati had always lived there beneath the ground.
- Alone of the Titans she retained her status in later myth. Of the
- elder goddesses of the region, she was one of many retained by the
- invaders, but the only one not reduced to a pretty ankle and a
- breeder. Every home in Athens was fronted by an altar to Hekati: her
- worship was strongest in the Greek city-state with the smallest amount
- of centralized control and with the least power given over to a King.
-
- B. Ghost-herding Hekati, with her hair wound with snakes, dogs howling
- about her heels, and a guttering torch borne in one hand, represented a
- vital current of underworld power too strong for the force of arms to
- suppress. Her old Colchian sorceresses, Medea and Circe, became oddly
- sympathetic villainesses: their old herbal drugs were fermented to
- poisons, their sex magics were retold as child murders, their
- shamanistic animal transmutations were reduced to spells that waylaid
- careless adventurers; yet as a token of "respect", each became the
- lover and helpmate of great heroes -- Jason over Medea, and Odysseus
- over Circe. Hekati's great sorceresses were thus degraded more than
- the goddess herself. In the West's Middle Ages, these legendary
- sorceresses became the models of those most feared women, the witches,
- and Hekati was degraded to their unholy Queen. Those dead who were
- refused the sacraments were buried at crossroads, where once sacrifices
- to Hekati were held. And all without any change in their basic
- attributes, representing those qualities sacred to paganism which
- despots abhor in any hands but their own :-- will, beauty, immortality,
- knowledge, power, mystery, ecstasy, love. In middle Christendom all
- these became crimes.
-
- C. In middle and modern times, this current of dark power has come to
- be known as "Satanic" by analogy to Satan, the chief demon of the
- monotheistic triad. Like Hekati, Satan represents the underworld,
- sorcery, and opposition to the ruling gods. Satan's name is the Hebrew
- word for "enemy"; he is identified with the Serpent that brought
- humanity to ruin, and in legend he was cast down to Hell from Heaven.
- In the Zoroastrian religion a similar devil was known as Ahriman, a
- name which also means "enemy". Zoroastrianism, endorsed and enforced
- by the Persian Kings, saw all existence as a war between Ahura Mazda,
- the god of light and the Sun, and Ahriman, the dark god of evil and
- snakes. The ancient Egyptians feared Set, an earlier form of Satan,
- dweller in the demon-haunted land beneath the earth through which the
- Sun-King fought his way each night. Set was aided by his serpentine
- ally, the monstrous Apep, and a host of magical snakes. Set had been
- one of the greatest and most ancient gods of Egypt, but his people were
- conquered. For a long while he enjoyed a Hekatian status as the
- necessary ruler of the darker aspects of life, and he was degraded into
- more and more a demon as time wore on. By the time of the mythical
- Exodus, Set was a generic enemy, and glorious tales of battle became
- tales of victory of the Sun over Set and his minions. Just so the
- early Hebrew scriptures use "satan" as a generic term for their
- military enemies in Palestine.
-
- D. A pattern emerges from the "anti-gods" of history. Time and again,
- serpent deities representing both the underworld and magic have been
- declared inconvenient and driven from their status by official
- violence, figured in myth by a Sun-God who is also the King. It is not
- enough to forget them as most deposed deities are forgotten; they must
- be demonized.
-
- E. How does this demonization serve the needs of those in power?
- Authority feeds on enmity. The exercise of power is easiest to justify
- against an absolutely evil enemy who plainly demands the strictest
- opposition. Once this license for power against evil is obtained by
- consent of the people, it is easily applied against the people
- themselves. Most will never object to the ferreting out of "agents of
- evil" in their midst, will indeed gleefully support such a campaign of
- persecution. By supporting the authorities they vicariously exercise
- the same unfettered power. It is very comforting to be one of the
- agents of shining good standing firm against unimaginable depravity.
- But reality is not obliging in providing absolute evils for the use of
- Kings; all enemies are more understandable and sympathetic when more is
- known about their motives and history. Imaginary enemies do not evoke
- this difficulty, and once the belief in imaginary enemies -- Satan, the
- International Communist Conspiracy, whatever -- is established, it is
- easy to represent real people as agents of these ultimate enemies.
- Hekati would hardly have found a friendly home in Sparta. The common
- beliefs about Hekati, Ahriman, Marx, and the rest serve a vital
- political purpose.
-
- F. But why are underworld and sorcerous deities especially demonized?
- Officialdom is chiefly opposed to the individual will: the power that
- authority delights in exercising is the power of imposing its will on
- others. The opposition to this authoritarian will is the individual
- fount of creativity and unpredictability. In psychology, this fount is
- called the unconscious mind, the obscure and unseen intelligence which
- motivates us all to seek our own paths. The unconscious mind, the dark
- side of the psyche, is the symbolic meaning of the mythical underworld
- or "Hell". Tyrants are right to fear this deep well of power and to
- frighten their subjects away from it. Sorcery is a symbol of
- independent action, unauthorized and unregulable, obeying only the laws
- of the dark side and scorning the workings of temporal power. Tyrants
- who believe in its "magical" power fear it for pragmatic reasons, but
- these mundane concerns reflect the nature of the sorcerous myth. The
- individual sorceress could, like Medea, shatter the structures of
- authority if they became intolerably alienating. Sorcery is the
- mythological face of art. All good artists are sorcerors;
- spell-weavers; subversives; Satanists.
-
- G. The veneration of demons is not, as is commonly believed, the
- "worship of evil", but an escape from the authoritarian mentality of
- "us vs. them", of allies and enemies, of repressive and arbitrary
- regulations expressed for power itself rather than for the general
- interest, of good and evil as absolute forces in the world rather than
- as subjective judgments applied to human behavior. All these naive or
- corrupt political influences are banished from the crossroads at
- twilight by the irresistible, but subtle, influence of Hekati,
- snake-woman, Medea's muse, friend and mistress of the hounds of Hell;
- they are cracked and ruined by this sorceress behind and beyond all
- sorcery.
-
- H. Among the major exponents of this "Satanism" or "Diabolism" have
- been poets and playwrights, musicians and magicians: such as Rabelais,
- Blake, Shelley, Baudelaire, Swinburne, Shaw, Crowley, and (most
- recently) Galas. The assembly known as Twilight Crossing has an
- interest in continuing and expanding on this tradition, known as the
- "Satanic school" in the Oxford English Dictionary, without dogmatically
- adhering to any one creator's conception of it.
-
- I. The symbol of the crossing is significant beyond its Hekatian
- correspondence (but in ways that reflect on that symbolism).
- Conventional magical orders, covens, and the like, teach a path, a
- sequence of initiations or similar steps, more or less fixed in
- structure and adapted little if at all to the individual. Twilight
- Crossing is instead a meeting of paths, an intersection of ways: yet a
- particular meeting point, a crossroad sacred to Hekati, rather than a
- union of all paths. There may be those people whose roads do not touch
- this crossroad, but we welcome meetings with them at other
- intersections; and we remind them (and ourselves) that Hekati may live
- even where she is not at once apparent.
-
- 1. Membership
-
- A. The only requirement for membership in Twilight Crossing is a
- shared interest in the Hekatian or Satanic current expressed in poetry,
- theatre, music, magic, and other arts.
-
- B. The Crossing makes no promises of magical powers, exalted spiritual
- degrees, contact and contract with discorporate beings, nor simple
- answers to difficult questions. Nor does it forbid its members or
- assemblies from asserting such powers, degrees, contacts, or answers.
-
- C. Members of Twilight Crossing are free to believe what they will,
- but they are expected to scrutinize their beliefs to avoid dogmatism
- and folly.
-
- D. Members of Twilight Crossing are free to behave as they will, but
- they are expected to monitor their actions to avoid disrespect for
- their own interests and the interests of others.
-
- E. Twilight Crossing officially supports the rights of all human
- beings as put forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. All
- forms of discrimination on grounds of race, gender, national origin,
- social class, sexual preference, religion, creed, and so forth are
- expressly forbidden at the Crossing. The only exception is that
- assemblies formed exclusively of members of oppressed groups, such as
- women or African-Americans, are permitted.
-
- F. The Hekatian symbolism used to define the Crossing must not be
- taken as a mandate of literal belief in such a being, or in any
- spiritual being. Nor must the use of the symbolism of sorcery be taken
- as mandating a belief in the "paranormal" or extrapsychological powers
- of the black arts. Such matters are left to the individual judgment of
- members.
-
- G. Rituals of initiation, meditation, invocation, celebration, and so
- forth are sponsored by assemblies of the Crossing and by the Crossing
- as a whole for the artistic and spiritual benefit of the members. In
- all such rituals, the widest possible latitude of beliefs is to be
- embraced, so that no one should feel excluded because of the integrity
- of their intellectual conscience. Rituals and other works sponsored by
- the Crossing as a whole are to avoid all definite statements of belief
- or disbelief in such matters as the primacy of a certain artistic
- movement or the reality of spiritual beings and psychic powers. It is
- accepted that particular assemblies may be composed only of those who
- share an opinion on certain matters.
-
- 2. Hierarchy
-
- A. All hierarchy is suspect. The Satanic school stands firmly against
- all abuses of power, all attempts to reduce living beings to positions
- in an organizational chain, all stamping of people with formal
- estimates of merit, all dehumanization and forced conformity.
-
- B. The Crossing has no doctrines other than those intended to
- guarantee the freedom of its membership and of all people. To the
- extent that the Crossing has any fixed rules at all, they are meant
- only as pragmatic guidelines, and should never be considered to
- overrule the freedom of thought of any member. Any member or assembly
- finding itself in conflict with the "rules" of the Crossing should
- consider carefully before leaving the group, and should instead strive
- to preserve the meeting of the paths. If the free resolution of this
- conflict requires a change in the rules of the Crossing, then let the
- other members and assemblies not balk, but gratefully accept.
-
- C. There are no degrees, grades, or titles at the Crossing proper. All
- members are considered equal.
-
- D. Should it become necessary to impose some governing council on the
- Crossing due to the size of its membership, all its offices shall be
- selected by the full membership, and those who hold such positions
- shall not be considered superior to other members in any essential
- way. The full membership shall also have the opportunity to determine
- the structure of any governing body and to remove unfit members from
- leadership via the democratic process. All these votes will be decided
- by simple plurality, but no vote is valid without the votes of more
- than one-half of all members.
-
- E. The founder and early members of Twilight Crossing enjoy no special
- status within the group, though they are free to pursue whatever
- offices are open to other members.
-
- F. Individuals are generally accepted without difficulty. If a member
- challenges an admission, and another seconds the objections, then a
- general vote will be taken among the members. The admission is
- rejected on a two-thirds vote of those participating. (There is no
- voting quorum.) A member may also be ejected by a vote of two-thirds
- in similar fashion. Excessive dogmatism or exclusivism, or radical
- disregard for the rights of others, are the only grounds for refusal or
- removal of an individual.
-
- F. This foundation document and any other rules may be amended by a
- vote of three quarters of the membership.
-
- 3. Assemblies
-
- A. Twilight Crossing harbors various assemblies, or "special interest
- groups", dedicated to particular shared interests within the Satanic
- school. These are chiefly intended to be oriented towards the
- execution of various artistic projects, but may also form research
- groups, social groups, informal discussion groups not explicitly
- devoted to any particular project, and so on.
-
- B. Rules concerning freedom of belief are somewhat relaxed within the
- assemblies, so that people who share particular opinions may work
- together on projects dependent on those conditions. For instance, a
- group dedicated to atheism and to the freeing of members' minds from
- all belief in literal gods would certainly fall under the aegis of the
- Satanic school and Twilight Crossing in particular, but would be
- incapable of meainingfully including members who did believe in literal
- gods. Similarly, a group especially dedicated to occult spellcasting
- intended to work effects at a distance could hardly benefit from the
- presence of skeptics. And likewise for the reverse of these opinions.
-
- C. Assemblies are permitted to draw their doctrinal basis more
- narrowly than the Crossing as a whole, but they are expected to deal
- with their differences from other opinions as disagreements among
- reasonable people, rather than a special handle on the absolute truth
- which renders them the denizens of Olympus and others the denizens of
- Hell. Assemblies with apparently contradictory beliefs should appoint
- liasons to each other and encourage dialog, but they should not shy
- away from argument as if intellectual competition were some unthinkable
- poison or rudeness.
-
- D. These relaxed rules on doctrine should not be taken as a license
- for dogmatism. Limits on opinion are to be as unrestrictive as
- possible given the mission of the assembly and the nature of its shared
- interest. Any limits are to be drawn out explicitly when the assembly
- is proposed, and cannot be narrowed without recertification by the
- whole Crossing (as below) and by two-thirds of the entire assembly.
- Furthermore, an assembly should be so arranged that persons not sharing
- the assembly's common opinions would not be especially interested in
- joining its projects.
-
- E. Assemblies are created by assent of the whole membership. A simple
- plurality of votes, with a voting quorum of fifty per cent, admits an
- assembly to the Crossing. A vote of two thirds, with the same quorum,
- dissolves an assembly. Excessive dogmatism or exclusivism, or radical
- disregard for the rights of others, are the only grounds for refusal or
- dissolution of an assembly.
-
- 4. Initiations
-
- A. In no case is attendance at any initiation ritual mandatory for
- continued membership in Twilight Crossing as a whole, though it may be
- required for membership in a particular assembly.
-
- B. No initiation or other ritual sponsored by the Crossing or any
- assembly is to be taken as conferring any intrinsic spiritual
- superiority over those who have not taken the degree. Such rituals
- represent a personal progress along a particular path of artistic or
- spiritual refinement. Initiations should be structured in an open, not
- linear, fashion to help assure this, though this is only a
- recommendation.
-
- C. It is acceptable that one initiation should have some other as a
- prerequisite so long as there remain multiple threads of initiation --
- that is, so long as the initiatory paths of different assemblies are
- open to all.
-
- D. It is acceptable that those undergoing initiation rituals should be
- sworn to secrecy concerning the contents of those rituals, but only so
- that the rituals do not lose their efficacy through predictability.
-
- E. Individuals are not to be subjected to unanticipated physical
- jeapordy, or any deliberate harm of any kind, by any initiation or
- other ritual at Twilight Crossing.
-
- 5. Relations to Other Groups
-
- A. Members are free to sponsor their own rituals, groups, and so forth
- which involve practices frowned on at the Crossing, and to belong to
- such groups sponsored by others. Twilight Crossing encourages its
- members to join any and all religious or artistic groups which seem fit
- to them while members of the Crossing, as was often the case among the
- pagan mystery traditions of ancient Rome.
-
- B. Twilight Crossing is especially interested in maintaining good
- relations with other groups which define themselves as occult, Satanic,
- or Neo-Pagan in orientation, all of which are words which describe the
- Crossing as well. However, to the extent that the practices of these
- groups conflict with the values of Twilight Crossing, those groups
- should expect a certain amount of reasonable criticism from its
- members. This criticism is a vital and important function of the
- values of the Crossing; it is not intended to damage relations with
- other groups, but neither should members of the Crossing fail to
- respect their own interests in free intellectual exercise by
- artificially restricting the scope of their comments.
-
- C. Despite its orientation towards the Titans and Satan, the Crossing
- has no fixed teaching relative to Classical Greek mythology nor towards
- Christianity and the other two major monotheistic religions. A person
- holding any of these traditions in high regard should not feel
- constrained by that opinion against membership in Twilight Crossing.
- Just as it is by no means obvious that a modern Christian must oppose
- Buddhism simply because it teaches that God is deluded, neither is it
- clear that a freethinking Christian must oppose the redeemed symbolism
- of Hekati or Satan merely because their tradition has been one of the
- demonizers. The way is especially open to contacts with those modern
- Christian individuals and groups which share the Crossing's distaste
- for dogma and repression.
-
- D. The Crossing is critical of many temporal authorities. All
- governments drawn to date are flawed by authoritarianism and
- narrow-mindedness. Its right to criticize officialdom is guaranteed by
- the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Nonetheless, it is not
- seeking the violent overthrow of these governments as a matter of
- policy. Its official position advocates peaceful revolution through
- education, just as happened in the states of Eastern Europe shortly
- before the founding of the Crossing. Medea overthrew the rulers of
- Corinth through her sorcerous knowledge, not by staging a coup. In the
- Twilight Crossing's symbolism, sorcery means art and knowledge, not the
- force of arms. Individual members of the Crossing may support one or
- more revolutionary movements throughout the world, but they do so as
- individuals and not as members of the Crossing. No project of Twilight
- Crossing or any of its assemblies seeks the violent overthrow of any
- government.
-
- E. The Crossing does, however, refuse to recognize laws which stand in
- contravention to the rights of artistic and religious freedom, and
- freedom of thought and privacy, such as restrictions against sexual
- practices between consenting and sexually mature persons and against
- the voluntary consumption of consciousness-altering drugs. From the
- prehistoric past through the present, many cultures have incorporated
- both sex and drugs into religious and artistic practices, and it has
- credibly been argued by some scholars that all religion derives from
- them. Religious prostitution and sacramental drugs have been common
- mysteries of pagan religion from before the start of recorded history,
- and strong traces of both remain in the myths of monotheism as well.
- Twilight Crossing firmly insists that all people have the right to
- engage in sacred practices of these venerable types, and that no
- government or other agency has the right to interfere in them any more
- than in any exercise of freedom of religion or freedom of thought. Our
- patron sorceresses Medea and Circe had mastered every form of magic
- drug and herb, and of the arts of love; we would be untrue to their
- legend were we to turn away from their wisdom for mere political
- convenience.
-
- 6. Contact
-
- Twilight Crossing is in the process of formation. Those interested in
- assisting in its creation or in forming assemblies may call or write
- the author of this document, Tim Maroney.
-
- Electronic addresses:
- USENET: uunet!efi!tim or sun!hoptoad!tim
- ARPANET: tim@toad.com
- FIDONET: Tim Maroney at Thelema-Net, 1:161/93
-
- Phone number:(415) 495-2934
-
- Mailing Address:
- Tim Maroney
- EFI
- 950 Elm Avenue
- San Bruno CA 94066
-