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- WONDER.
- "A little more than kin, and less than kind" are the Trance of Sorrow,
- and the Vision of the Machinery of the Universe; this latter being the
- technical aspect of the Apprehension of the Law of Change, which is also a
- Trance of the same order as that of Sorrow. Now one mode of victory over
- all these is the Trance of Indifference, in which one stands aloof from the
- whole matter; but it is only one mode, and (in the generally known form)
- full of falsehood and imperfection. For to stand aloof is to affirm
- duality, which is itself the root of Sorrow. To obtain the highest one must
- unite oneself with all things, partake of all as a true Sacrament. And this
- motion leads to the Trance of Wonder.
- It is written "The fear of the Lord is the Beginning of Wisdom." Here
- the Predicate refers to the Opening of the Grade of Magus; but the Subject,
- duly translated, reads "The Wondering at Tetragrammaton," and so refers to
- this Trance. For herein one is wholly identified with the Universe in its
- dynamic aspect; and the first synthesis of the understanding thereof is
- this Amazement at the fitness and necessity of the entire mechanism. For,
- given the formula of Manifestation, the need to conceive and perceive
- Perfection by means of the symbolism of Imperfection, the actual process of
- ideation becomes apodeictic. (I write as for the least instructed of the
- Little Children of the Light.)
- The Trance of Wonder arises naturally -- it is the first movement of the
- mind -- from the final phrase of the Oath of a Master of the Temple. "I
- will interpret every phenomenon as a particular dealing of God with my
- ~soul." For, immediately the Understanding illuminates the darkness of
- knowledge, every fact appears in its true guise miraculous.
- «MDUL»It is so:«MDNM» then, how marvellous that it should so be!
- In all Trances of importance, and most especially in this, the Postulant
- should have acquired the greatest possible knowledge and Understanding of
- the Universe properly so called. His rational mind should have been trained
- thoroughly in intellectual apprehension: that is, he should be familiar
- with all Science. This is evidently impossible on the face of it; but he
- should aspire to the closest approximation to perfect Adeptship in this
- matter. The method most possible is to make a detached study of some chosen
- branch of Science, and a general study of epistemology. Then by analogy,
- fortified by contemplation, a certain inner apprehension of the Unity of
- Nature may grow up in the mind, one which will not be unduly presumptuous
- and misleading.
- But our Work demands more than this. The Neschamah or Intuitive Mind
- must also be furnished with Knowledge and Understanding of those Planes of
- Nature which are inaccessible to the untrained sense. That is, he must
- pursue our Methods of Vision with indefatigable ardour.
- Now in all this the true unitive and transcendental Science is that of
- Mathematics for the Ruach, and its crown the Holy Qabalah for the
- Neschamah. By this means the Work is not, as would at first seem, increased
- beyond human capability. There is a definite critical stage, comparable to
- that familiar to the Adepts of Asana and of Dharana, after which the terms
- of the Equation (like the latter terms of a Binomial Expansion) repeat
- themselves, though after another manner, so that the meditation becomes
- progressively easier. The Postulant, so to speak, finds himself at home.
- The added knowledge is no longer a burden to the mind. he is able to throw
- off the gross facts which present themselves as complication, and to
- apprehend their essence in simplicity. He had in fact succeeded in
- developing a higher function of the mind. The process is similar to that
- which occurs in ordinary study of a science, when one, by grasping the
- nature of a general law underlying diversity of experience, is able not
- only to assimilate new facts with ease, but to predict new facts wholly
- unknown. One may instance the discovery of Neptune from mathematical
- considerations without optical research, and the description of unknown
- elements by contemplation of the Periodic Law.
- Let it be known each such step in Meditation is itself a motive Energy
- capable of inducing the Trance of Wonder; and this Trance (like all others)
- grows in sublimity and splendour with the quantity and quality of the
- material which is furnished to the mind by the Adept.
- Those, therefore, who effect to despise "profane" Science are themselves
- despicable. It is their own incapacity for true Thought of any serious
- kind, their vanity and pertness; nay more also! their own subconsciousness
- sense of their own shame and idleness, that induces them to build these
- flimsy fortification of pretentious ignorance.
- There is nothing in the Universe which is not of supreme significance,
- nothing with may not be used as the very keystone of the Rainbow Arch of
- the Trance of Wonder.
- It is necessary to add but one brief word to this elementary essay: this
- Trance is of its nature not only passive and intuitive. Its occurrence
- floods the mind with Creative Energy; it fills the Adept with Power, and
- excites in him the Will to work. It exalts him to the Atziluthic World in
- his Essence, and in his manifestation to the Briatic. In a very special
- sense, therefore, it may be said that the Postulant is most intimately
- united with the Supreme Lord God Most High, the True and Living Creator of
- all Things, whensoever he attains to enter this most Majestic Pylon of the
- Trance of Wonder.