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-
- BAPHOMET XI°
-
- Liber CI
-
- {Book 101}
-
- O. T. O.
-
- Ordo Templi Orientis
-
- An Open Letter to
- Those Who May Wish
- to Join the Order
-
- Enumerating the Duties
- and Privileges
-
- These Regulations Come into Force in Any District Where the Membership
- of the Order Exceeds One Thousand Souls
-
- These regulations first appeared in The Equinox III(1) (Detroit:
- Universal, 1919) and constitute our best and most comprehensive
- guidelines for Thelemic social intercourse. Certain provisions will
- need to be modified to take advantage of the U.S.A.'s comparatively
- enlightened tax-exemption statutes as applied to religious
- organizations--a few are of dubious legality at this writing. Most of
- the principles outlined herein have long been observed in the U.S.
- O.T.O.--H.B.
-
- Issued by Order: BAPHOMET XI° O.T.O., HIBERNIAE IONAE ET OMNIUM
- BRITANNIARUM, REX SUMMUS SANCTISSIMUS
-
- AN EPISTLE OF BAPHOMET to Sir GEORGE MACNIE COWIE, Very Illustrious
- and Very Illuminated, Pontiff and Epopt of the Areopagus of the VIII
- Degree O.T.O. Grand Treasurer General, Keeper of the Golden Book,
- President of the Committee of Publications of the O.T.O.
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
-
- IT HAS BEEN REPRESENTED TO Us that some persons who are worthy to join
- the O.T.O. consider the fees and subscriptions rather high. This is
- due to your failure to explain properly the great advantages offered
- by the Order. We desire you therefore presently to note, and to cause
- to be circulated throughout the Order, and among those of the profane
- who may seem worthy to join it, these matters following concerning the
- duties and the privileges of members of the earlier degrees of the
- O.T.O. as regards material affairs. And for convenience we shall
- classify these as pertaining to the Twelve Houses of the Heaven, but
- also by numbered clauses for the sake of such as understand not the
- so-called Science of the Stars. First, therefore, concerning the
- duties of the Brethren. Yet with our Order every duty is also a
- privilege, so that it is impossible wholly to separate them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- OF THE DUTIES OF THE BRETHREN
-
-
- FIRST HOUSE
-
-
- 1. There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt. Yet it is well for
- Brethren to study daily in the Volume of the Sacred Law, Liber Legis,
- for therein is much counsel concerning this, how best they may carry
- out this will.
-
- SECOND HOUSE
-
-
- 2. The private purse of every Brother should always be at the disposal
- of any Brother who may be in need. But in such a case it is a great
- mischief if the one ask, and the other consent; for if the former be
- really in need, his pride is wounded by his asking; and if not, the
- door is opened to beggars and imposters, and all manner of arrant
- knaves and rogues such as are no true Brethren. But the Brother who is
- possessed of this world's goods should make it his business to watch
- the necessity of all those Brethren with whom he may be personally
- acquainted, anticipating their wants in so wise and kindly and
- delicate a manner that it shall appear as if it were the payment of a
- debt. And what help is given shall be given with discretion, so that
- the relief may be permanent rather than temporary.
-
- 3. All Brethren shall be exceedingly punctual in the payment of Lodge
- Dues. This is to take precedence of all other calls upon the purse.
-
- THIRD HOUSE
-
-
- 4. The Brethren shall be diligent in preaching the Law of Thelema. In
- all writings they shall be careful to use the prescribed greetings;
- likewise in speech, even with strangers.
-
- 5. They shall respond heartily to every summons of the Lodge or
- Chapter to which they may belong, not lightly making excuse.
-
- 6. Brethren should use every opportunity of assisting each other in
- their tastes, businesses, or professions, whether by direct dealing
- with Brethren in preference to others, or by speaking well of them, or
- as may suggest itself. It seems desirable, when possible, that where
- two or more Brethren of the same Lodge are engaged in the same work,
- they should seek to amalgamate the same by entering into partnership.
- Thus in time great and powerful corporations may arise from small
- individual enterprises.
-
- 7. They shall be diligent in circulating all tracts, manifestos, and
- all other communications which the Order may from time to time give
- out for the instruction or emancipation of the profane.
-
- 8. They may offer suitable books and pictures to the Libraries of the
- Profess-Houses of the Order.
-
- FOURTH HOUSE
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 9. Every Brother who may possess mines, land, or houses more than he
- can himself constantly occupy, should donate part of such mines or
- land, or one or more of such houses to the Order.
-
- 10. Property thus given will be administered if he desire it in his
- own interest, thus effecting a saving, since large estates are more
- economically handled than small. But the Order will use such property
- as may happen to lie idle for the moment in such ways as it may seem
- good, lending an unlet house (for example) to some Brother who is in
- need, or allowing an unused hall to be occupied by a Lodge.
-
- 11. (Yet in view of the great objects of the Order, endowment is
- welcome.)
-
- 12. Every Brother shall show himself solicitous of the comfort and
- happiness of any Brother who may be old, attending not only to all
- material wants, but to his amusement, so that his declining years may
- be made joyful.
-
- FIFTH HOUSE
-
-
- 13. Every Brother shall seek constantly to give pleasure to all
- Brethren with whom he is acquainted, whether by entertainment or
- conversation, or in any other manner that may suggest itself. It will
- frequently and naturally arise that love itself springs up between
- members of the Order, for that they have so many and sacred interests
- in common. Such love is peculiarly holy, and is to be encouraged.
-
- 14. All children of Brethren are to be considered as children of the
- whole Order, and to be protected and aided in every way by its members
- severally, as by its organization collectively. No distinction is to
- be made with regard to the conditions surrounding the birth of any
- child.
-
- 15. There is an especially sacred duty, which every Brother should
- fulfil, with regard to all children, those born without the Order
- included. This duty is to instruct them in the Law of Thelema, to
- teach them independence and freedom of thought and character, and to
- warn them that servility and cowardice are the most deadly diseases of
- the human soul.
-
- SIXTH HOUSE
-
-
- 16. Personal or domestic attendants should be chosen from among the
- members of the Order when possible, and great tact and courtesy are to
- be employed in dealing with them.
-
- 17. They, on their part, will render willing and intelligent service.
-
- 18. While in Lodge, and on special occasions, they are to be treated
- as Brothers, with perfect equality; such behaviour is undesirable
- during the hours of service, and familiarity, subversive as it is of
- all discipline and order, is to be avoided by adopting a complete and
- marked change of manner and address.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 19. This applies to all persons in subordinate positions, but not to
- the Brethren Servient in the Profess-Houses of the Order, who, giving
- service without recompense, are to be honoured as hosts.
-
- 20. In case of the sickness of any Brother, it is the duty of all
- Brethren who know him personally to attend him, to see that he want
- for nothing, and to report if necessary his needs to the Lodge, or to
- Grand Lodge itself.
-
- 21. Those Brethren who happen to be doctors or nurses will naturally
- give their skill and care with even more than their customary joy in
- service.
-
- 22. All Brethren are bound by their fealty to offer their service in
- their particular trade, business, or profession, to the Grand Lodge.
- For example, a stationer will supply Grand Lodge with paper, vellum,
- and the like; a bookseller offer any books to the Library of Grand
- Lodge which the Librarian may desire to possess; a lawyer will execute
- any legal business for Grand Lodge, and a railway or steamship owner
- or director see to it that the Great Officers travel in comfort
- wherever they may wish to go.
-
- 23. Visitors from other Lodges are to be accorded the treatment of
- ambassadors; this will apply most especially to Sovereign Grand
- Inspector Generals of the Order on their tours of inspection. All
- hospitality and courtesy shown to such is shown to Ourselves, not to
- them only.
-
- SEVENTH HOUSE
-
-
- 24. It is desirable that the marriage partner of any Brother should
- also be a member of the Order. Neglect to insist upon this leads
- frequently to serious trouble for both parties, especially the
- uninitiate.
-
- 25. Lawsuits between members of the Order are absolutely forbidden, on
- pain of immediate expulsion and loss of all privileges, even of those
- accumulated by past good conduct referred to in the second part of
- this instruction.
-
- 26. All disputes between Brethren should be referred firstly to the
- Master or Masters of their Lodge or Lodges in conference; if a
- composition be not arrived at in this manner, the dispute is to be
- referred to the Grand Tribunal, which will arbitrate thereon, and its
- decision is to be accepted as final.
-
- 27. Refusal to apply for or accept such decision shall entail
- expulsion from the Order, and the other party is then at liberty to
- seek his redress in the Courts of Profane Justice.
-
- 28. Members of the Order are to regard those without its pale as
- possessing no rights of any kind, since they have not accepted the
- Law, and are therefore, as it were, troglodytes, survivals of a past
- civilisation, and to be treated accordingly. Kindness should be shown
- towards them, as towards any other animal, and every effort should be
- made to bring them into Freedom.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 29. Any injury done by any person without the Order to any person
- within it may be brought before the Grand Tribunal, which will, if it
- deem right and fit, use all its power to redress or to avenge it.
-
- 30. In the case of any Brother being accused of an offence against the
- criminal law of the country in which he resides, so that any other
- Brother cognisant of the fact feels bound in self-defence to bring
- accusation, he shall report the matter to the Grand Tribunal as well
- as to the Civil Authority, claiming exemption on this ground.
-
- 31. The accused Brother will, however, be defended by the Order to the
- utmost of its power on his affirming his innocence upon the Volume of
- the Sacred Law in the Ordeal appointed ad hoc by the Grand Tribunal
- itself.
-
- 32. Public enemies of the country of any Brother shall be treated as
- such while in the field, and slain or captured as the officer of the
- Brother may command. But within the precincts of the Lodge all such
- divisions are to be forgotten absolutely; and as children of One
- Father the enemies of the hour before and the hour after are to dwell
- in peace, amity, and fraternity.
-
- EIGHTH HOUSE
-
-
- 33. Every Brother is expected to bear witness in his last will and
- testament to the great benefit that he hath received from the Order by
- bestowing upon it part or the whole of his goods, as he may deem fit.
-
- 34. The death of a Brother is not to be an occasion of melancholy, but
- of rejoicing; the Brethren of his Lodge shall gather together and make
- a banquet with music and dancing and all manner of gladness. It is of
- the greatest importance that this shall be done, for thereby the
- inherited fear of death which is deep-seated as instinct in us will
- gradually be rooted out. It is a legacy from the dead aeon of Osiris,
- and it is our duty to kill it in ourselves that our children and our
- children's children may be born free from the curse.
-
- NINTH HOUSE
-
-
- 35. Every Brother is expected to spend a great part of his spare time
- in the study of the principles of the Law and of the Order, and in
- searching out the key to its great and manifold mysteries.
-
- 36. He should also do all in his power to spread the Law, especially
- taking long journeys, when possible, to remote places, there to sow
- the seed of the Law.
-
- TENTH HOUSE
-
-
- 37. All pregnant women are especially sacred to members of the Order,
- and no effort should be spared to bring them to acceptance of the Law
- of Freedom, so that the unborn may benefit by that impression. They
- should be induced to become members of the Order, so that the child
- may be born under its aegis.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 38. If the mother that is to be have asserted her will to be so in
- contempt and defiance of the Tabus of the slave-gods, she is to be
- regarded as especially suitable to our Order, and the Master of the
- Lodge in her district shall offer to become, as it were, godfather to
- the child, who shall be trained specially, if the mother so wishes, as
- a servant of the Order, in one of its Profess-Houses.
-
- 39. Special Profess-Houses for the care of women of the Order, or
- those whose husbands or lovers are members of the Order, will be
- instituted, so that the frontal duty of womankind may be carried out
- in all comfort and honour.
-
- 40. Every Brother is expected to use all his influence with persons in
- a superior station of life (so called) to induce them to joint the
- Order. Royal personages, ministers of State, high officials in the
- Diplomatic, Naval, Military, and Civil Services are particularly to be
- sought after, for it is intended ultimately that the temporal power of
- the State be brought into the Law, and led into freedom and prosperity
- by the application of its principles.
-
- 41. Colleges of the Order will presently be established where the
- children of its members may be trained in all trades, businesses, and
- professions, and there they may study the liberal arts and humane
- letters, as well as our holy and arcane science. Brethren are expected
- to do all in their power to make possible the establishment of such
- Universities.
-
- ELEVENTH HOUSE
-
-
- 42. Every Brother is expected to do all in his power to induce his
- personal friends to accept the Law and join the Order. He should
- therefore endeavor to make new friends outside the Order, for the
- purpose of widening its scope.
-
- TWELFTH HOUSE
-
-
- 43. The Brethren are bound to secrecy only with regard to the nature
- of the rituals of our Order, and to our words, signs, etc. The general
- principles of the Order may be fully explained, so far as they are
- understood below the VI°; as it is written, ``The ordeals I write not:
- the rituals shall be half known and half concealed: the Law is for
- all.'' It is to be observed that punctual performance of these duties,
- so that the report thereof is noised abroad and the fame of it cometh
- even unto the Throne of the Supreme and Holy King himself, will weigh
- heavily in the scale when it comes to be a question of the high
- advancement of a Brother in the Order.
-
- OF THE PRIVILEGES OF THE BRETHREN
-
-
- FIRST HOUSE
-
-
- 44. The first and greatest of all privileges of a Brother is to be a
- Brother; to have accepted the Law, to have become free and
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- independent, to have destroyed all fear, whether of custom, or of
- faith, or of other men, or of death itself. In other papers the joy
- and glory of those who have accepted The Book of the Law as the sole
- rule of life is largely, though never fully, explained; and we will
- not here recapitulate the same.
-
- SECOND HOUSE
-
-
- 45. All Brethren who may fall into indigence have a right to the
- direct assistance of the Order up to the full amount of fees and
- subscriptions paid by them up to the time of application. This will be
- regarded as a loan, but no interest will be charged upon it. That this
- privilege may not be abused, the Grand Tribunal will decide whether or
- no such application is made in good faith.
-
- THIRD HOUSE
-
-
- 46. Members of the Order will be permitted to use the Library in any
- of our Profess-Houses.
-
- 47. Circulating Libraries will presently be established.
-
- 48. Brethren who may be travelling have a right to the hospitality of
- the Master of the Lodge of the district for a period of three days.
-
- FOURTH HOUSE
-
-
- 49. Brethren of all grades may be invited to sojourn in the Profess-
- Houses of the Order by Grand Lodge; and such invitation may
- confidently be expected as the reward of merit. There they will be
- able to make the personal acquaintance of members of the higher
- Grades, learn of the deeper workings of the Order, obtain the benefit
- of personal instruction, and in all ways fit themselves for
- advancement.
-
- 50. Brethren of advanced years and known merit who desire to follow
- the religious life may be asked to reside permanently in such houses.
-
- 51. In the higher degrees Brethren have the right to reside in our
- Profess-Houses for a portion of every year, as shown:
-
-
-
- P.R.S. Six weeks.S.G.C. Three months.
-
- VI°. Two weeks.
- VII°. Two months.
- G.T. One month.
- S.G.C. Three months.
- P.R.S. Six weeks.
- VIII°. Six months.
-
- 52. Members of the IX°, who share among themselves the whole property
- of the Order according to the rules of that degree, may, of course,
- reside there permanently. Indeed, the house of every Brother of this
- grade is, ipso facto, a Profess-House of the Order.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- FIFTH HOUSE
-
-
- 53. All Brethren may expect the warmest co-operation in their
- pleasures and amusements from other members of the Order. The perfect
- freedom and security afforded by the Law allows the characters of all
- Brethren to expand to the very limits of their nature, and the great
- joy and gladness with which they are constantly overflowing make them
- the best of companions. ``They shall rejoice, our chosen; who
- sorroweth is not of us. Beauty and strength, leaping laughter and
- delicious languor, force and fire, are of us.''
-
- 54. Children of all Brethren are entitled to the care of the Order,
- and arrangements will be made to educate them in certain of the
- Profess-Houses of the Order.
-
- 55. Children of Brethren who are left orphans will be officially
- adopted by the Master of his Lodge, or if the latter decline, by the
- Supreme Holy King himself, and treated in all ways as if they were his
- own.
-
- 56. Brethren who have a right to some especial interest in any child
- whose mother is not a member of the Order may recommend it especially
- to the care of their lodges or of Grand Lodge.
-
- SIXTH HOUSE
-
-
- 57. In sickness all Brethren have the right to medical or surgical
- care and attendance from any Brethren of the Lodge who may be
- physicians, surgeons, or nurses.
-
- 58. In special necessity the Supreme Holy King will send his own
- attendants.
-
- 59. Where circumstances warrant it, in cases of lives of great value
- to the Order and the like, he may even permit the administration of
- that secret Medicine which is known to members of the IX°.
-
- 60. Members of the Order may expect Brethren to busy themselves in
- finding remunerative occupation for them, where they lack it, or, if
- possible, to employ them personally.
-
- SEVENTH HOUSE
-
-
- 61. Members of the Order may expect to find suitable marriage partners
- in the extremely select body to which they belong. Community of
- interest and hope being already established, it is natural to suppose
- that where mutual attraction also exists, a marriage will result in
- perfect happiness. (There are special considerations in this matter
- which apply to the VII° and cannot be discussed in this place.)
-
- 62. As explained above, Brethren are entirely free of most legal
- burdens, since lawsuits are not permitted within the Order, and since
- they may call upon the legal advisers of the Order to defend them
- against their enemies in case of need.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- EIGHTH HOUSE
-
-
- 63. All Brethren are entitled after death to the proper disposal of
- their remains according to the rites of the Order and their grade in
- it.
-
- 64. If the Brother so desire, the entire amount of the fees and
- subscriptions which he has paid during his life will be handed over by
- the Order to his heirs and legatees. The Order thus affords an
- absolute system of insurance in addition to its other benefits.
-
- NINTH HOUSE
-
-
- 65. The Order teaches the only perfect and satisfactory system of
- philosophy, religion, and science, leading its members step by step to
- knowledge and power hardly even dreamed of by the profane.
-
- 66. Brethren of the Order who take long journeys overseas are received
- in places where they sojourn at the Profess-Houses of the Order for
- the period of one month.
-
- TENTH HOUSE
-
-
- 67. Women of the Order who are about to become mothers receive all
- care, attention, and honour from all Brethren.
-
- 68. Special Profess-Houses will be established for their convenience,
- should they wish to take advantage of them.
-
- 69. The Order offers great social advantages to its members, bringing
- them as it does into constant association with men and women of high
- rank.
-
- 70. The Order offers extraordinary opportunities to its members in
- their trades, businesses, or professions, aiding them by co-operation,
- and securing them clients or customers.
-
- ELEVENTH HOUSE
-
-
- 71. The Order offers friendship to its members, bringing together men
- and women of similar character, taste, and aspiration.
-
- TWELFTH HOUSE
-
-
- 72. The secrecy of the Order provides it members with an inviolable
- shroud of concealment.
-
- 73. The crime of slander, which causes so great a proportion of human
- misery, is rendered extremely dangerous, if not impossible, within the
- Order by a clause in the Obligation of the Third Degree.
-
- 74. The Order exercises its whole power to relieve its members of any
- constraint to which they may be subjected, attacking with vigour any
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- person or persons who may endeavour to subject them to compulsion, and
- in all other ways aiding in the complete emancipation of the Brethren
- from aught that may seek to restrain them from doing That Which They
- Will.
-
- It is to be observed that these privileges being so vast, it is
- incumbent upon the honour of every Brother not to abuse them, and the
- sponsors of any Brother who does so, as well as he himself, will be
- held strictly to account by the Grand Tribunal. The utmost frankness
- and good faith between Brethren is essential to the easy and
- harmonious working of our system, and the Executive Power will see to
- it that these are encouraged by all means possible, and that breach of
- them is swiftly and silently suppressed.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
-
- Our fatherly benediction, and the Blessing of the All-Father in the
- Outer and the Inner be upon you.
-
- BAPHOMET X° O.T.O., IRELAND, IONA, AND ALL THE
- BRITAINS