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-
- BAPHOMET XI°
-
- Liber CXCIV
-
- {Book 194}
-
- O. T. O.
-
- An Intimation
- with Reference to the
- Constitution of the Order
-
- This Intimation is presently being implemented in the United States--
- the most significant recent development was the institution of the
- Electoral College. Unlike the Constitution proper, which has a
- decidedly international emphasis, most of its clauses govern national
- operations. This Intimation should be closely studied in conjunction
- with the Constitution, the Open Letter and other relevant papers
- published in this volume by those who are concerned with the future
- direction of the O.T.O., in the United States and abroad. It first
- appeared in The Equinox III(1) (Detroit: Universal, 1919). Paragraph
- numbers have been supplied for reference purposes, and it is followed
- by a synthetic, diagrammatic representation of the Intimations
- prepared by the New York Constitutional Study Group.--H.B.
-
- Issued by Order: BAPHOMET XI° O.T.O., HIBERNIAE IONAE ET OMNIUM
- BRITANNIARUM, REX SUMMUS SANCTISSIMUS
-
- ANY PROVINCE OF THE O.T.O. is governed by the Grand Master and those
- to whom he delegates his authority, until such time as the Order is
- established, which is the case when it possesses eleven or more
- Profess-Houses in the province. Then the regular constitution is
- automatically promulgated. The quotation is slightly adapted from an
- address in one of the rituals.
-
- 1. This is the Constitution and Government of our Holy Order; by the
- study of its Balance you may yourself come to apprehension of how to
- rule your own life. For, in True Things, all are but images one of
- another; man is but a map of the universe, and Society is but the same
- on a larger scale.
-
- 2. Learn then that our Holy Order has but Three True Grades; as it is
- written in The Book of the Law: The Hermit, The Lover, and the Man of
- Earth.
-
- 3. It is but for convenience that these grades have been separated
- into Three Triads.
-
- 4. The Third Triad consists of the degrees from Minerval to Prince of
- Jerusalem. The Minerval degree is a Prologue to the First; the degrees
- subsequent to the Third but pendants to it. In this, the Man of Earth
- series, there are then but Three Degrees; and these Three are One.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 5. The Man of Earth takes no share in the Government of the Order; for
- he is not yet called upon to give his life to it in service; and with
- us Government is Service, and nothing else. The Man of Earth is
- therefore in much the position of the Plebian in Rome in the time of
- Menenius Agrippa. But there is this marked difference; that every Man
- of Earth is encouraged and expected to push on to the next stage. In
- order that the feelings of the general body may be represented, the
- Men of Earth choose four persons, two men and two women, from among
- themselves, to stand continually before the face of the Father, the
- Supreme and Holy King, serving him day and night. These persons must
- not be of higher rank than the Second Degree; they must volunteer for
- this service at the conclusion of that ceremony; and therefore they
- give up their own prospect of advancement in the Order for one year,
- that they may serve their fellows. This is then the first lesson in
- our great principle, the attainment of honour through renunciation.
-
- 6. The degree of Knights of the East and West is but a bridge between
- the first and second series; but it is important, for in that grade a
- new pledge-form must be signed, and the new Knight vowed to devote his
- life to the Establishment of the Law of Thelema.
-
- 7. The members of the Fifth Degree are responsible for all that
- concerns the Social welfare of the Order. This grade is symbolically
- that of beauty and harmony; it is the natural stopping-place of the
- majority of men and women; for to proceed farther, as will appear,
- involves renunciation of the sternest kind. Here then is all joy,
- peace, well-being on all planes; the Sovereign Prince Rose Croix is
- attached equally to the higher and the lower, and forms a natural link
- between them. Yet let him look to it that his eyes are set on high!
-
- 8. In this degree the Most Wise Sovereign of each chapter will appoint
- a committee of four persons, two men and two women, to arrange for all
- social gatherings, banquets, dances, the performance of plays, and
- similar pleasures. They will also endeavour to promote harmony among
- the Brethren in all possible ways, and to compose any disputes by tact
- and friendliness without formal appeal being made to any more
- authoritative tribunal.
-
- 9. The next grade, that which lies between the Fifth and Sixth
- Degrees, is called the Senate. This is the first of the governing
- bodies, properly speaking, and here we begin to insist upon
- Renunciation. For within this body is the Electoral College of the
- O.T.O.
-
- 10. The principle of popular election is a fatal folly; its results
- are visible in every so-called democracy. The elected man is always
- the mediocrity; he is the safe man, the sound man, the man who
- displeases the majority less than any other; and therefore never the
- genius, the man of progress and illumination.
-
- 11. This electoral college consists of Eleven Persons in each country.
- It has full control of the affairs of the Men of Earth, appointing
- Lodge Masters at will. It has however no authority over the Chapters
- of Rose Croix.
-
- 12. Persons who wish to be appointed to this College by the Supreme
- and Holy King must volunteer for the office. The appointment is for
- Eleven Years. Volunteers must renounce for that period all further
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- progress in the Order. They must give evidence of first-rate ability
- in
-
- i(i) Some branch of athletics.
-
- (ii) Some branch of learning.
-
- 13. They must also possess a profound general knowledge of history and
- of the art of government, with some attention to philosophy in
- general.
-
- 14. They must each live in solitude, without more than the necessary
- speech even to casual neighbours, serving themselves in all respects,
- for three months continuously, once at least in every two years. The
- President will summon them at the four seasons of the year, and if
- necessary at other times, when they will deliberate upon the affairs
- placed in their charge. All applications to pass to the Fifth Degree
- must receive their sanction. Appeal from their decisions may however
- be made to the Supreme Council.
-
- 15. The Sixth Degree is an executive or military body, and represents
- the temporal power of the Supreme and Holy King. Each member is
- amenable to military discipline. Singly or in concert with his
- comrades, each Knight is vowed to enforce the decisions of authority.
-
- 16. The Grade of Grand Inquisitor Commander follows. Here every member
- has the right to a seat on the Grand Tribunal, which body decides all
- disputes and complaints which have not been composed by the Chapters
- of Rose Croix or the Lodge Masters. Its verdicts are without appeal,
- unless a member of the Electoral College give sanction to take the
- case to the Areopagus of the Eighth Degree. All members of the Order,
- even of higher grades, are subject to the Grand Tribunal.
-
- 17. The next grade is that of Prince of the Royal Secret. Every member
- of this degree is devoted to the Propagation of the Law in a very
- special manner; for this grade is the first in which the Beginning of
- the Inmost Secret is declared openly. He will therefore, by his
- personal exertions, induce one hundred and eleven persons to join the
- Order, before he may proceed to the Seventh Degree, except by special
- order from the Supreme and Holy King.
-
- 18. The Seventh Degree is, in military language, the Great General
- Staff of the Army of the Sixth Degree. From its members the Supreme
- and Holy King appoints a Supreme Grand Council.
-
- 19. This Council is charged with the government of the whole of the
- Second Triad, or Lovers. All members of the Seventh Degree travel as
- Sovereign Grand Inspectors General of the Order, and report, on their
- own initiative, to the Supreme and Most Holy King, as to the condition
- of all Lodges, and Chapters; to the Supreme Council, on all affairs of
- the Second Triad; and to the Electoral College, on those of the Third.
-
- 20. The Eighth Degree is a Philosophical Body. Its members being fully
- instructed in the Principles of the Order, save in one point only,
- devote themselves to the understanding of what they have learned in
- their initiation. They have power to reverse the decisions of the
- Grand Tribunal, and to compose all conflicts between any of the
- governing bodies. And this they do upon the great principles of
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- philosophy. For it will often occur that there is contention between
- two parties, both of whom are right from their own point of view. This
- is so important that an illustration is desirable. A man is smitten
- with leprosy; is it right that men should circumscribe his liberty by
- isolating him from his fellows? Another holds back land or some other
- necessity from the common use; is he to be compelled to surrender it?
- Such cases of difficulty involve deep philosophical principles; and
- the Areopagus of the Eighth Degree is charged with the duty of
- resolving them in accordance with the great principles of the Order.
-
- 21. Before the face of the Areopagus stands an independent Parliament
- of the Guilds. Within the Order, irrespective of grade, the members of
- each craft, trade, science, or profession form themselves into a
- Guild, make their own laws, and prosecute their own good, in all
- matters pertaining to their labour and means of livelihood. Each Guild
- chooses the man most eminent in it to represent it before the
- Areopagus of the Eighth Degree; and all disputes between the various
- Guilds are argued before that Body, which will decide according to the
- grand principles of the Order. Its decisions pass for ratification to
- the Sanctuary of the Gnosis, and thence to the Throne.
-
- 22. Epopts and Pontiffs of this exalted grade are bound to live in
- isolation for four consecutive months in every year, meditating the
- mysteries revealed to them.
-
- 23. The Ninth Degree--the Sanctuary of the Gnosis--is synthetic. The
- prime duty of its members is to study and practise the theurgy and
- thaumaturgy of the grade; but in addition they must be prepared to act
- as direct representatives of the Supreme and Most Holy King, radiating
- his light upon the whole world. Yet, from the nature of their
- initiation, they must veil their glory in a cloud of darkness. They
- move unseen and unrecognized among the youngest of us, subtly and
- loftily leading us into the holy ineffable mysteries of the True
- Light.
-
- 24. The Supreme and Most Holy King is appointed by the O.H.O. His is
- the ultimate responsibility for all within his holy kingdom. The
- succession to the high office of O.H.O. is decided in a manner not
- here to be declared; but this you may learn, O Brother Magician, that
- he may be chosen even from the grade of a Minerval. And herein lieth a
- most sacred Mystery.
-
- 25. The Electoral College possesses one most singular power. Every
- eleven years, or in the case of a vacancy occurring, they choose two
- persons from the Ninth Degree, who are charged with the duty of
- Revolution.
-
- 26. It is the business of these persons constantly to criticise and
- oppose the acts of the Supreme and Most Holy King, whether or no they
- personally approve of them. Should he exhibit weakness, bodily,
- mental, or moral, they are empowered to appeal to the O.H.O. to depose
- him; but they, alone of all the members of the Order, are not eligible
- to the Succession.
-
- 27. The O.H.O., as the supreme authority in the Order, will act, in
- such an emergency, as he may see fit. He may himself be removed from
- office, but only by the unanimous vote of all the members of the Tenth
- Degree.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 28. Of the Eleventh Degree, its powers, privileges, and
- qualifications, nothing whatever is said in any grade. It has no
- relation to the general plan of the Order, is inscrutable, and dwells
- in its own Palaces.
-
- 29. There are certain important financial obligations in various
- grades.
-
- 30. The Electoral College of the Senate is vowed to poverty. All
- property, earnings, or salaries are vested in or paid over to the
- Grand Treasurer General. The members subsist on the charity of the
- Order, which is extended to them in accordance with their original
- rank in life.
-
- 31. These remarks apply equally to the Supreme Grand Council, and all
- higher degrees.
-
- 32. In the Seventh Degree it is a qualification to vest some real
- property in the Order; and no one is admitted to this grade without
- this preliminary.
-
- 33. Those members of the Order who have given all to it must obtain
- the money for their initiation fees and subscriptions from the Third
- Triad, whose honour is thus concerned in the unselfish support of
- those who have abandoned all for their sakes.
-
- 34. The Grand Treasurer General is appointed by the Supreme and Most
- Holy King; he may be a member of any grade whatever; but he must, on
- accepting office, take the vow of poverty. His authority is absolute
- in all financial matters; but he is responsible to, and may be removed
- at will by, the Supreme and Most Holy King. He will appoint a
- committee to assist him and advise him in his work; and he will
- usually select one person from each of the governing bodies of the
- Order.
-
- Such is a brief outline of the government of the O.T.O. It combines
- monarchy with democracy; it includes aristocracy, and conceals even
- the seeds of revolution, by which alone progress can be effected. Thus
- we balance the Triads, uniting the Three in One; thus we gather up all
- the threads of human passion and interest, and weave them into an
- harmonious tapestry, subtly and diligently with great art, that our
- Order may seem an ornament even to the Stars that are in the Heavens
- at Night. In our rainbow-coloured texture we set forth the glory of
- the whole Universe--See thou to it, brother Magician, that thine own
- thread be strong, and pure, and of a colour brilliant in itself, yet
- ready to mingle in all beauty with those of thy brethren!