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- LIBER 61
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- THE PRELIMINARY LECTION
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- In the Name of the Initiator, Amen.
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- 1. In the beginning was Initiation. The flesh profiteth nothing; the mind
- profiteth nothing; that which is unknown to you and above these, while firmly
- based upon their equilibrium, giveth life.
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- 2. In all systems of religion is to be found a system of Initiation, which may
- be defined as the process by which a man comes to learn that unknown Crown.
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- 3. Though none can communicate either the knowledge or the power to achieve
- this, which we may call the Great Work, it is yet possible for initiates to
- guide others.
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- 4. Every man must overcome his own obstacles, expose his own illusions. Yet
- others may assist him to do both, and they may enable him altogether to avoid
- many of the false paths, leading no whither, which tempt the weary feet of the
- uninitiated pilgrim. They can further insure that he is duly tried and tested,
- for there are many who think themselves to be Masters who have not even begun
- to tread the Way of Service that leads thereto.
-
- 5. Now the Great Work is one, and the Initiation is one, and the Reward is
- one, however diverse are the symbols wherein the Unutterable is clothed.
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- 6. Hear then the history of the system which this lection gives you the
- opportunity of investigating.
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- Listen, we pray you, with attention: for once only does the Great Order
- knock at any one door.
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- Whosoever knows any member of that Order as such, can never know another,
- until he too has attained to mastery.
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- Here, therefore, we pause, that you may thoroughly search yourself, and
- consider if you are yet fitted to take an irrevocable step.
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- For the reading of that which follows is Recorded.
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- THE HISTORY LECTION
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- 7. Some years ago a number of cipher MSS. were discovered and deciphered by
- certain students. They attracted much attention, as they purported to derive
- from the Rosicrucians. You will readily understand that the genuineness of the
- claim matters no whit, such literature being judged by itself, not by its
- reputed sources.
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- 8. Among the MSS. was one which gave the address of a certain person in Germany,
- who is known to us as S.D.A. Those who discovered the ciphers wrote to S.D.A.,
- and in accordance with the instructions received, an Order was founded which
- worked in a semi-secret manner.
-
- 9. After some time S.D.A. died: further requests for help were met with a
- prompt refusal from the colleagues of S.D.A. It was written by one of them
- that S.D.A.'s scheme had always been regarded with disapproval. But since
- the absolute rule of the adepts is never to interfere with the judgment of any
- other person whomsoever --how much more, then, one of themselves, and that one
- most highly revered! --
- they had refrained from active opposition. The adept who wrote this added that
- the Order had already quite enough knowledge to enable it or its members to
- formulate a magical link with the adepts.
-
- 10. Shortly after this, one called S.R.M.D. announced that he had formulated
- such a link, and that himself and two others were to govern the Order. New
- and revised rituals were issued, and fresh knowledge poured out in streams.
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- 11. We must pass over the unhappy juggleries which characterized the next
- period. It has throughout proved impossible to elucidate the complex facts.
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- We content ourselves, then, with observing that the death of one of his
- two colleagues, and the weakness of the other, secured to S.R.M.D. the sole
- authority. The rituals were elaborated, though scholarly enough, into verbose
- and pretentious nonsense:
- the knowledge proved worthless, even where it was correct: for it is in vain
- that pearls, be they never so clear and precious, are given to the swine.
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- The ordeals were turned into contempt, it being impossible for any one to
- fail therein. Unsuitable candidates were admitted for no better reason than
- that of their worldly prosperity.
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- In short, the Order failed to initiate.
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- 12. Scandal arose and with it schism.
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- 13. In 1900 one P., a brother, instituted a rigorous test of S.R.M.D. on the
- one side and the Order on the other.
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- 14. He discovered that S.R.M.D., though a scholar of some ability and a
- magician of remarkable powers, had never attained complete inititiation:
- and further had fallen from his original place, he having imprudently attracted
- to himself forces of evil too great and terrible for him to withstand.
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- The claim of the Order that the true adepts were in charge of it was
- definitely disproved.
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- 15. In the Order, with two certain exceptions and two doubtful ones, he found
- no persons prepared for initiation of any sort.
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- 16. He thereupon by his subtle wisdom destroyed both the Order and its chief.
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- 17. Being himself no perfect adept, he was driven of the Spirit into the
- Wilderness, where he abode for six years, studying by the light of reason
- the sacred books and secret systems of initiation of all countries and ages.
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- 18. Finally, there was given unto him a certain exalted grade whereby a man
- becomes master of knowledge and intelligence, and no more their slave. He
- perceived the inadequacy of science, philosophy, and religion; and exposed
- the self-contradictory nature of the thinking faculty.
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- 19. Returning to England, he laid his achievements humbly at the feet of a
- certain adept D.D.S., who welcomed him brotherly and admitted his title to
- the grade which he had so hardly won.
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- 20. Thereupon these two adepts conferred together, saying: May it not be
- written that the tribulations shall be shortened? Wherefore they resolved
- to establish a new Order which should be free from the errors and deceits
- of the former one.
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- 21. Without Authority they could not do this, exalted as their rank was among
- adepts. They resolved to prepare all things, great and small, against that day
- when such Authority should be received by them, since they knew not where to
- seek for higher adepts than themselves, but knew that the true way to attract
- the notice of such as to equilibrate the symbols. The temple must be builded
- before the God can dwell in it.
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- 22. Therefore by the order of D.D.S. did P. prepare all things by his arcane
- science and wisdom, choosing only those symbols which were common to all
- systems, and rigorously rejecting all names and words which might be supposed
- to imply any religious or metaphysical theory. To do this utterly was found
- impossible, since all language has a history, and the use (for example) of the
- word ``spirit'' implies the Scholastic Philosophy and the Hindu and Taoist
- theories concerning the breath of man. So was it dif(ss)$cult to avoid
- implication of some undesirable bias by using the words (ss)3(bl)2order,
- (ss)4 ``circle,(ss)4 ``chapter,(ss)4 ``society,(ss)4 `brotherhood,(ss)4 or
- any other to designate the body of initiates.
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- 23. Deliberately, therefore, did he take refuge in vagueness. Not to veil the
- truth to the Neophyte, but to warn him against valuing non-essentials. Should
- therefore the candidate hear the name of any God, let him not rashly assume
- that it refers to any known God, save only the God known to himself. Or should
- the ritual speak in terms (however vague) which seem to imply Egyptian, Taoist,
- Buddhist, Indian, Persian, Greek, Judaic, Christian, or Moslem philosophy, let
- him reflect that this is a defect of language; the literary limitation and not
- the spiritual prejudice of the man P.
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- 24. Especially let him guard against the finding of definite sectarian symbols
- in the teaching of his master, and the reasoning from the known to the unknown
- which assuredly will tempt him.
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- We labour earnestly, dear brother, that you may never be led away to perish
- upon this point; for thereon have many holy and just men been wrecked. By this
- have all the visible systems lost the essence of wisdom.
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- We have sought to reveal the Arcanum; we have only profaned it.
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- 25. Now when P. had thus with bitter toil prepared all things under the
- guidance of D.D.S. (even as the hand writes, while the conscious brain,
- though ignorant of the detailed movements, applauds or disapproves the
- finished work) there was a certain time of repose, as the earth lieth fallow.
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- 26. Meanwhile these adepts busied themselves intently with the Great Work.
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- 27. In the fullness of time, even as a blossoming tree that beareth fruit
- in its season, all these pains were ended, and these adepts and their companions
- obtained the reward which they had sought -- they were to be admitted to the
- Eternal and Invisible Order that hath no name among men.
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- 28. They therefore who had with smiling faces abandoned their homes, their
- possessions, their wives, their children, in order to perform the Great Work,
- could with steady calm and firm correctness abandon the Great Work itself: for
- this is the last and greatest projection of the alchemist.
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- 29. Also one V.V.V.V.V. arose, an exalted adept of the rank of Master of the
- Temple (or this much He disclosed to the Exempt Adepts) and His utterance is
- enshrined in the Sacred Writings.
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- 30. Such are Liber Legis, Liber Cordis Cincti Serpente, Liber Liberi vel
- Lapidis Lazuli and such others whose existence may one day be divulged unto you.
- Beware lest you interpret them either in the Light or in the darkness, for
- only in L.V.X. may they be understood.
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- 31. Also He conferred upon D.D.S., O.M., and another, the Authority of the
- Triad, who in turn have delegated it unto others, and they yet again, so
- that the Body of Initiates may be perfect, even from the Crown unto the
- Kingdom and beyond.
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- 32. For Perfection abideth not in the Pinnacles, or in the Foundations,
- but in the ordered Harmony of one with all.
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