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-
- Liber II
-
- {Book 2}
-
- The Message of
-
- The Master Therion
-
- This Epistle first appeared in The Equinox III(1) (Detroit: Universal,
- 1919). The quotations are from Liber Legis--The Book of the Law.--H.B.
-
- ``Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.''
-
- ``There is no Law beyond Do what thou wilt.''
-
- ``The word of the Law is Velhma.''
-
- Velhma--Thelema--means Will.
-
- The Key to this Message is this word--Will. The first obvious meaning
- of this Law is confirmed by antithesis; ``The word of Sin is
- Restriction.''
-
- Again: ``Thou hast no right but to do thy will. Do that and no other
- shall say nay. For pure will, unassuaged of purpose, delivered from
- the lust of result, is every way perfect.''
-
- Take this carefully; it seems to imply a theory that if every man and
- every woman did his and her will--the true will--there would be no
- clashing. ``Every man and every woman is a star,'' and each star moves
- in an appointed path without interference. There is plenty of room for
- all; it is only disorder that creates confusion.
-
- From these considerations it should be clear that ``Do what thou
- wilt'' does not mean ``Do what you like.'' It is the apotheosis of
- Freedom; but it is also the strictest possible bond.
-
- Do what thou wilt--then do nothing else. Let nothing deflect thee from
- that austere and holy task. Liberty is absolute to do thy will; but
- seek to do any other thing whatever, and instantly obstacles must
- arise. Every act that is not in definite course of that one orbit is
- erratic, an hindrance. Will must not be two, but one.
-
- Note further that this will is not only to be pure, that is, single,
- as explained above, but also ``unassuaged of purpose.'' This strange
- phrase must give us pause. It may mean that any purpose in the will
- would damp it; clearly the ``lust of result'' is a thing from which it
- must be delivered.
-
- But the phrase may also be interpreted as if it read ``with purpose
- unassuaged''--i.e., with tireless energy. The conception is,
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- therefore, of an eternal motion, infinite and unalterable. It is
- Nirvana, only dynamic instead of static--and this comes to the same
- thing in the end.
-
- The obvious practical task of the magician is then to discover what
- his will really is, so that he may do it in this manner, and he can
- best accomplish this by the practices of Liber Thisarb (see Equinox
- I(7), p. 105) or such others as may from one time to another be
- appointed.
-
- Thou must (1) Find out what is thy Will. (2) Do that Will with
- a) one-pointedness, (b) detachment, (c) peace.
-
- Then, and then only, art thou in harmony with the Movement of Things,
- thy will part of, and therefore equal to, the Will of God. And since
- the will is but the dynamic aspect of the self, and since two
- different selves could not possess identical wills; then, if thy will
- be God's will, Thou art That.
-
- There is but one other word to explain. Elsewhere it is written--
- surely for our great comfort--``Love is the law, love under will.''
-
- This is to be taken as meaning that while Will is the Law, the nature
- of that Will is Love. But this Love is as it were a by-product of that
- Will; it does not contradict or supersede that Will; and if apparent
- contradiction should arise in any crisis, it is the Will that will
- guide us aright. Lo, while in The Book of the Law is much of Love,
- there is no word of Sentimentality. Hate itself is almost like Love!
- ``As brothers fight ye!'' All the manly races of the world understand
- this. The Love of Liber Legis is always bold, virile, even orgiastic.
- There is delicacy, but it is the delicacy of strength. Mighty and
- terrible and glorious as it is, however, it is but the pennon upon the
- sacred lance of Will, the damascened inscription upon the swords of
- the Knight-monks of Thelema.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-