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-
- BAPHOMET XI°
-
- Liber DCXXXIII
-
- {Book 633}
-
- De Thaumaturgia
-
- De Thaumaturgia enlarges on the ethical basis of the magical praxis
- for initiates-in-training, and underscores an important principle that
- is all too often overlooked. It first appeared in The International
- (New York, February 1918).--H.B.
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
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- IT IS NOT POSSIBLE for the Master, o my brethren, who has fought so
- long with those things within Himself which have hindered Him, to
- expect that if toys be given to children they will not play with them.
- But watch may rightly be held lest they injure themselves therewith;
- this paper therefore, as a guard.
-
- O, My Brethren, even as every dog is allowed one bite, so let every
- wonder-worker be allowed one miracle. For it is right that he should
- prove his new power, lest he be deceived by the wile and malice of the
- apes of Choronzon.
-
- But with regard to the repetition of miracles the cause is not
- similar. Firstly cometh forth the general magical objection. The
- business of the aspirant is to climb the Middle Pillar from Malkuth to
- Kether; and though the other Pillars must be grasped firmly as aids to
- equilibrium, he should in no wise cling to them. He aspires to the
- Knowledge and Conversation of his Holy Guardian Angel, and all other
- works are deviations. He may however perform miracles when necessary
- in order to carry out this main work; thus. he may perform a
- divination to assist him to discover a suitable house for the purpose,
- or even evoke a planetary spirit to guard him and aid him during the
- time of preparation, if it be necessary. But in all such works let him
- be well assured in himself that his sole object is really that
- Knowledge and Conversation. Otherwise, he has broken concentration,
- and the One work alone being White Magick, all others are Black
- Magick.
-
- Secondly ariseth a similar objection derived from considerations of
- Energy. For all miracles involve loss; as it is said ``she perceived
- that virtue had gone out of him.'' The exception is therefore as
- follows, that such miracles as tend to the conservation or renewal of
- Energy are lawful. Thus the preparation of the Elixir of Life is
- blameless; and the practices of the IX° of O.T.O. in general, so far
- as they have for object the gain of Strength, Youth, and Vitality.
-
- It may further be considered just to perform miracles to aid others,
- within certain limits. One must consciously say: I deliberately
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- sacrifice Energy and my own Great Work for this Object. Therefore the
- Magician must first of all calculate whether or no the object be
- worthy of the sacrifice. Thus, in the first year of the Path of the
- Master Therion, he, with V.H. Frater Volo Noscere, evoked the Spirit
- Buer to save the life of V.H. Frater Iehi Aour; saying in themselves:
- The life of this holy man is of vast importance to this Aeon; let us
- give up this small portion of our strength for this great end. The
- answer might have been made: Nay, nothing is ever lost; let him rather
- work out this evil Karma of ill-health, and die and incarnate anew in
- youth and strength. It is hard even now to say if this had been
- better. The holy man did indeed recover, did attain to yet greater
- things, did awake a great people to aspiration; no operation could
- ever have been more successful: Yet still there remaineth doubt as to
- whether the natural order of things had not conceived a finer
- flowering.
-
- But this is a general objection of the sceptical sort to all miracles
- of whatever kind, and leadeth anon into the quagmire of arguments
- about Free Will. The adept will do better to rely upon The Book of the
- Law, which urgeth constantly to action. Even rash action is better
- than none, by that Light: let the magician then argue that his folly
- is part of that natural order which worketh all so well.
-
- And this may be taken as a general license to perform any and every
- miracle according to one's will.
-
- The argument has therefore been swung to each extreme; and like all
- arguments, ends in chaos.
-
- The above concerning true miracles; but with regard to false miracles
- the case is altogether different.
-
- Since it is part of the Magick of every one to cause both Nature and
- man to conform to the Will, man may lawfully be influenced by the
- performance of miracles. But true miracles should not be used for this
- purpose; for it is to profane the nature of the miracle, and to cast
- pearls before swine; further, man is so built that he will credit
- false miracles, and regard true miracles as false. It is also useful
- at times for the magician to prove to them that he is an imposter;
- therefore, he can easily expose his false miracles, whereas this must
- not be done where they are true; for to deny true miracles is to
- injure the power to perform them.
-
- Similarly, none of the other objections cited above apply to false
- miracles; for they are not, properly speaking, magick at all, and come
- under the heading of common acts. Only insofar as common acts are
- magick do they come under consideration, and here the objection may be
- raised that they are, peculiarly, Error; that they simulate, and so
- blaspheme, the Truth. Certainly this is so, and they must only be
- performed for the purpose of blinding the eyes of the malicious, and
- that only in that peculiar spirit of mockery which delights the
- initiates in the Comedy of Pan.
-
- The end of the matter then is that as in Comedy and Tragedy all things
- are lawful, live thou in Comedy or Tragedy eternally, never blinding
- thyself to think Life aught but mummery, and perform accordingly the
- false miracles or the true, as may be Thy Will.
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- Love is the law, love under will.
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