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Discussing the Book of the Law

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  • E Edward Mason

    93,

    Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

    It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
    Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
    detract from the Book in its own right.
    What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
    tool in the thelemic ideal?

    The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
    There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
    say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

    It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

    The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
    Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
    Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

    My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

    If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

    There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

    Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

    In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

    What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

    The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

    Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

    The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

    So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

    You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

    93 93/93,
    Edward

    F Offline
    F Offline
    Frater MVKDSh
    wrote on last edited by
    #13

    In some ways this reminds me of the basic political classification system used in Archaology: band, tribe, chiefdom, state.

    In undergrad this was always presented as a vertical classification. Because I was taught to perceive this vertically, I could not imagine or even think of it any other way.

    Then in Grad school a horizontal perspective was introduced to me. This simple perspective, something I had never considered before, changed completely my concept of political classification.Through discussion It provided waves of insight about politics and its relation to culture.

    I think there is a time to learn(like an undergrad) and there is a time to discuss(like a grad).

    Just my opinion:)

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • E Edward Mason

      93,

      Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

      It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
      Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
      detract from the Book in its own right.
      What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
      tool in the thelemic ideal?

      The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
      There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
      say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

      It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

      The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
      Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
      Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

      My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

      If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

      There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

      Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

      In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

      What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

      The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

      Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

      The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

      So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

      You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

      93 93/93,
      Edward

      R Offline
      R Offline
      RobertAllen
      wrote on last edited by
      #14

      @FraterYod said

      "In some ways this reminds me of the basic political classification system used in Archaology: band, tribe, chiefdom, state.

      In undergrad this was always presented as a vertical classification. Because I was taught to perceive this vertically, I could not imagine or even think of it any other way.

      Then in Grad school a horizontal perspective was introduced to me. This simple perspective, something I had never considered before, changed completely my concept of political classification.Through discussion It provided waves of insight about politics and its relation to culture.

      I think there is a time to learn(like an undergrad) and there is a time to discuss(like a grad).

      Just my opinion:)"

      Are you being critical of my terms, Horizontal/Vertical, or my point of view? 😕

      If it is my point of view, could you be more descriptive and precise about what I actually wrote that you disagree with, because otherwise your post is confusing. If it's the terms, then what about the terms is bothering you, the spatial metaphor or their black/white binary character? You know, I could just have easily used terms like Inner/Outer or Private/Public.

      Use quotes from my previous posts. Otherwise we are not having a discussion. Just my opinion:)

      By the way, congrats on making it to Grad school.

      Love and Will

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • E Edward Mason

        93,

        Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

        It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
        Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
        detract from the Book in its own right.
        What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
        tool in the thelemic ideal?

        The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
        There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
        say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

        It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

        The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
        Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
        Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

        My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

        If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

        There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

        Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

        In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

        What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

        The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

        Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

        The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

        So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

        You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

        93 93/93,
        Edward

        F Offline
        F Offline
        Frater MVKDSh
        wrote on last edited by
        #15

        sorry about that:( Sometimes I tend to write in a forcefull manner even when I am just trying to share some thoughts. I hope u will forgive me if I insulted you.

        Anyway, I agree with everything u said. I was just connecting my thoughts to yours....sharing:)

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • E Edward Mason

          93,

          Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

          It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
          Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
          detract from the Book in its own right.
          What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
          tool in the thelemic ideal?

          The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
          There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
          say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

          It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

          The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
          Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
          Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

          My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

          If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

          There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

          Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

          In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

          What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

          The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

          Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

          The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

          So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

          You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

          93 93/93,
          Edward

          E Offline
          E Offline
          Edward Mason
          wrote on last edited by
          #16

          Robert, 93,

          "The difficult point seems to be the idea that there needs to be an agreement. But what if I simply agree to respect you and your process, what would be the need for discussion? You already have my respect, no need to discuss! So, why do I need to discuss the book at all? To connect with like-minded people? we could have a pot-luck for that, a social mixer. Alas, there is still no need to discuss the book."

          The key issue for me here is that many people have taken the Comment as a gag-order. But without there being some exchange of perspectives about what's in Liber L, those who come to approach it in future will be limited to Crowley's own views as a guide.

          For me, 'discussion' doesn't have to happen between a group of people sitting in the same room, nor do there need to be conclusions reached, let alone, agreement or consensus. I regard consensus is intrinsically impossible, not to mention undesirable. The need isn't for agreement, but for better and wider comprehension of the ways in which interpreting it should be approached. The art of Qabalistic exegesis needs to be learned from example.

          I agree with your other point about the arts allowing people to explore changing perspectives. In fact, I'm a little surprised at the tack you've taken on this, given your own experience with theater. 😉

          93 93/93,
          Edward

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • E Edward Mason

            93,

            Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

            It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
            Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
            detract from the Book in its own right.
            What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
            tool in the thelemic ideal?

            The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
            There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
            say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

            It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

            The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
            Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
            Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

            My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

            If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

            There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

            Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

            In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

            What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

            The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

            Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

            The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

            So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

            You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

            93 93/93,
            Edward

            F Offline
            F Offline
            Frater MVKDSh
            wrote on last edited by
            #17

            @Edward Mason said

            "The difficult point seems to be the idea that there needs to be an
            For me, 'discussion' doesn't have to happen between a group of people sitting in the same room, nor do there need to be conclusions reached, let alone, agreement or consensus. I regard consensus is intrinsically impossible, not to mention undesirable. The need isn't for agreement, but for better and wider comprehension of the ways in which interpreting it should be approached. The art of Qabalistic exegesis needs to be learned from example."

            I agree 100%.

            I noticed when I was in college that i would learn as much from my classmates as I would my Instructor. The different veiwpoints always seem to stimulate my intellect and allowed me a better overall understanding on the subject.

            I get the feeling this is a natural, inherent way of learning.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • E Edward Mason

              93,

              Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

              It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
              Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
              detract from the Book in its own right.
              What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
              tool in the thelemic ideal?

              The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
              There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
              say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

              It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

              The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
              Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
              Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

              My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

              If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

              There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

              Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

              In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

              What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

              The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

              Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

              The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

              So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

              You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

              93 93/93,
              Edward

              R Offline
              R Offline
              RobertAllen
              wrote on last edited by
              #18

              @Edward Mason said

              "

              I agree with your other point about the arts allowing people to explore changing perspectives. In fact, I'm a little surprised at the tack you've taken on this, given your own experience with theater. 😉
              "

              I'm not against discussion, or group process, just not sure how it makes sense in terms of discussing Liber Al.

              I self-define myself as a Thelemite; as such I accept the Book of the Law. How I am able to do this is a private matter. Talking about it seems impossible to my mind for any number of reasons: to do so would be to cheapen my relationship with the book, or willfully enter into a conceptual confusion when my experience is more of an experiential sort. I think I could get very confused very fast if I dealt with the Book in the wrong way.

              Theater is different. It is, in my experience, the highest expression of the group dynamic possible—enlightened, generous. But it is what it is. It was designed to help people live together. You want to transform the culture? Make Theater an integral part of K-12!

              A couple of posts back FraterYod asked about the difference between Discussion and Instruction. In practice they tend to overlap, but they are different. They form, along with Sharing the three things that tends to happen on this forum: people either discuss; they look for, or provide information; or they share something about themselves and their magical process. It's a messy world, so these rarely exist separate from the others, but they are nonetheless still separate activities.

              Let me share: As you pointed out in your initial post, chapter three is especially challenging, very difficult to understand, and even repulsive on some level. Appropriately, my acceptance has little to do with a rationale defense of the book in terms of its rhetoric. It feels more like a dance, a new style of physical locomotion where I am blind folded, but if I fling myself forward in just the right way I somehow manage a skating momentum on the edge of what is possible—beyond old, constricting frames of reference. I feel I am in the zone when all the opinions and arguments amount to a great big nothing—so what, I am moving forward—what is that fear and defensive posturing that used to dominate my thinking, and who cares...

              As for instruction: If you were to point out some mystery about Liber Al I would be eager to hear what you had to say.

              Having dealt with sharing and instruction we are left with discussion. What is the essence of this activity? When is discussion not a debate?
              @Edward Mason said

              "For me, 'discussion' doesn't have to happen between a group of people sitting in the same room, nor do there need to be conclusions reached, let alone, agreement or consensus. I regard consensus is intrinsically impossible, not to mention undesirable. The need isn't for agreement, but for better and wider comprehension of the ways in which interpreting it should be approached. The art of Qabalistic exegesis needs to be learned from example."

              Does what you are describing have more to do with the benefits of sharing and instruction than it does with discussion?

              "...argue not; convert not; talk not over much!"

              Love and Will

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • E Edward Mason

                93,

                Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                detract from the Book in its own right.
                What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                tool in the thelemic ideal?

                The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                93 93/93,
                Edward

                A Offline
                A Offline
                Anonymous
                wrote on last edited by
                #19

                deleted

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • E Edward Mason

                  93,

                  Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                  It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                  Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                  detract from the Book in its own right.
                  What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                  tool in the thelemic ideal?

                  The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                  There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                  say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                  It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                  The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                  Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                  Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                  My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                  If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                  There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                  Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                  In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                  What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                  The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                  Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                  The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                  So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                  You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                  93 93/93,
                  Edward

                  E Offline
                  E Offline
                  Edward Mason
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #20

                  Robert ,93,

                  "I self-define myself as a Thelemite; as such I accept the Book of the Law. How I am able to do this is a private matter. Talking about it seems impossible to my mind for any number of reasons: to do so would be to cheapen my relationship with the book, or willfully enter into a conceptual confusion when my experience is more of an experiential sort. I think I could get very confused very fast if I dealt with the Book in the wrong way. "

                  Well, I'm not suggesting we have to talk about it! You have formed your own relationship with the text and all that lies behind it, which sounds like the fruit of careful thought, meditation and whatever practices you follow. My concern is that too many people can't get into the text because they find it hard to open the doors to it.

                  In addition, I think Crowley's own relationship to Liber L, while highly important, has blinded a lot of people to the intuitions that can arise. I sometimes find him too set on a particular course in his published exegeses, and I need to spurn him in order to stay with the tendencies of my True Will in this matter.

                  But to "get very confused very fast" is a part of the process of opening up to the Book. We need to make wrong turns, so that when we finally make the corrections, remembrance of what we learned stays with us. To do this solely in a private bubble slows our learning.

                  I don't see the distinction between discussion and instruction as a valid division of ideas. I am instructed by discussing my own ideas with others. Again: I basically want the gag-order lifted permanently, not to find an excuse to lecture people on my own private explorations.

                  "Let me share: As you pointed out in your initial post, chapter three is especially challenging, very difficult to understand, and even repulsive on some level. Appropriately, my acceptance has little to do with a rationale defense of the book in terms of its rhetoric. It feels more like a dance, a new style of physical locomotion where I am blind folded, but if I fling myself forward in just the right way I somehow manage a skating momentum on the edge of what is possible—beyond old, constricting frames of reference. I feel I am in the zone when all the opinions and arguments amount to a great big nothing—so what, I am moving forward—what is that fear and defensive posturing that used to dominate my thinking, and who cares..."

                  It's perspectives such as this that we need to share as much as specific insights into individual verses. For example, people coming to this forum are, quite probably, still trying to figure out literal meanings of verses, and don't have a wider frame of reference.

                  "As for instruction: If you were to point out some mystery about Liber Al I would be eager to hear what you had to say."

                  The only thing that occurs to me in this context is what happened after I'd spent a long time - over a year, maybe two - memorizing Chapter One. One evening, as I sat down to go through it as usual, I found it being recited through me. That was when I first understood that Nuit, rather than being just a grand philosophical proposition about All & Everything, has the actual character of a Goddess. She was far beyond what I was really able to grasp or encompass with my normal consciousness.

                  The more I try to say about that experience, the further from the reality my words are going to go. But simply noting it for the benefit of others could be worth something. And I don't think that goes against "talk not overmuch."

                  93 93/93,
                  Edward

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • E Edward Mason

                    93,

                    Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                    It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                    Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                    detract from the Book in its own right.
                    What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                    tool in the thelemic ideal?

                    The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                    There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                    say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                    It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                    The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                    Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                    Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                    My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                    If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                    There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                    Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                    In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                    What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                    The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                    Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                    The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                    So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                    You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                    93 93/93,
                    Edward

                    Z Offline
                    Z Offline
                    Zalthos
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #21

                    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                    @RobertAllen said

                    "I would love to read a play, a hypothetical dialogue between a group of individuals, where opinions are discussed, and where the result is an enhancing of ones inner connection to the truth and not a weakening of it."

                    There's one in the Curriculum of the A∴A∴:

                    Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous by George Berkley

                    Love is the law, love under will.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • E Edward Mason

                      93,

                      Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                      It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                      Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                      detract from the Book in its own right.
                      What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                      tool in the thelemic ideal?

                      The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                      There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                      say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                      It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                      The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                      Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                      Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                      My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                      If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                      There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                      Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                      In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                      What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                      The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                      Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                      The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                      So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                      You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                      93 93/93,
                      Edward

                      F Offline
                      F Offline
                      Frater MVKDSh
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #22

                      "As for instruction: If you were to point out some mystery about Liber Al I would be eager to hear what you had to say.

                      "

                      Part of my problem with this is that I have taken many OATHS and I have a hard time determining if I initially learned something on my own or was instructed under the oath. So I get anxious sometimes when I think about discussing Liber AL 😛

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • E Edward Mason

                        93,

                        Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                        It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                        Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                        detract from the Book in its own right.
                        What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                        tool in the thelemic ideal?

                        The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                        There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                        say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                        It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                        The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                        Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                        Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                        My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                        If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                        There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                        Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                        In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                        What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                        The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                        Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                        The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                        So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                        You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                        93 93/93,
                        Edward

                        R Offline
                        R Offline
                        RobertAllen
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #23

                        Edward,

                        As often happens, at some point the in discussion the 'back and forth' seems more like a general agreement than a clearly defined demarcation between your camp and my camp. Nevertheless, I still feel I have a valid concern, but getting hung up on definitions is just bad form.

                        Something else begins to kick in for me, in so far as I am still thinking about the general proposition of discussing the book, and you keep talking about how you see it as an opportunity, not as a mistake. This is an artifact of my thinking related to being a director. Instead of insisting on my point of view I begin to think: if it's going to happen, how should it be done—what is the best way to get there from here. I become genuinely curious to see if I can make it happen.

                        @Edward Mason said

                        "I think Crowley's own relationship to Liber L, while highly important, has blinded a lot of people to the intuitions that can arise. I sometimes find him too set on a particular course in his published exegeses, and I need to spurn him in order to stay with the tendencies of my True Will in this matter."

                        @Edward Mason said

                        "But to "get very confused very fast" is a part of the process of opening up to the Book. We need to make wrong turns, so that when we finally make the corrections, remembrance of what we learned stays with us. To do this solely in a private bubble slows our learning."

                        @Edward Mason said

                        "I don't see the distinction between discussion and instruction as a valid division of ideas. I am instructed by discussing my own ideas with others. Again: I basically want the gag-order lifted permanently, not to find an excuse to lecture people on my own private explorations.
                        "

                        Not quoted are yours and my examples how we each related to parts of the book. I take that gesture as a possible first step—I could see a survey, an open invitation to other Thelimites asking them to share similar stories. This can be directed by asking leading questions, left totally open, or a combination of both. In this way it might be possible to develop a general sense of the kinds of things that tend to happen, a mapping of the various paths taken that have allowed people access to the book in some measure. I would consider this research and preparation for the creation of an actual study group.

                        This group would be created with the intent of exploring the general idea of discussing the book, in addition to exploring related practices like further sharing, instruction in exegetical practices, and becoming familiar with past commentaries. The general goal would be to develop a practice. Post discussion analysis should be part of the process to address the known concerns, new concerns and pit falls that are discovered in the process, the role of the moderator, if any, and so on...

                        I stop here. It would not really be my place to do this, despite my impulse to make every effort to be supportive and help based on my past experiences with ensemble created work. I lack the history and the connections.

                        Love and Will

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • E Edward Mason

                          93,

                          Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                          It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                          Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                          detract from the Book in its own right.
                          What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                          tool in the thelemic ideal?

                          The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                          There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                          say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                          It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                          The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                          Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                          Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                          My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                          If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                          There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                          Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                          In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                          What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                          The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                          Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                          The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                          So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                          You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                          93 93/93,
                          Edward

                          A Offline
                          A Offline
                          Atzilut
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #24

                          Robert Allen said:

                          "This is because vertical energy is private, something between you and what is above and below. "

                          There is a view that this only represents a particular phase of development. There is a view that also says that Man
                          has to develop via group initiation eventually; that certain initiations/developments are simply not possible unless it is on a group level. AA Bailey is a good example of this Theosophical idea, along with HPB who Crowley regarded in
                          very high esteem. Traditional Kabbalah also emphasizes the importance of the group towards the correction of Adam HaRishon.

                          What remains to be seen is whether specifically Thelemic groups will adopt this in the future, despite the current
                          initiatory procedures. There have been underground groups working on this principle for many years although the
                          results have never been made public.

                          Interesting thread to follow imo

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • E Edward Mason

                            93,

                            Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                            It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                            Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                            detract from the Book in its own right.
                            What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                            tool in the thelemic ideal?

                            The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                            There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                            say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                            It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                            The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                            Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                            Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                            My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                            If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                            There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                            Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                            In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                            What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                            The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                            Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                            The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                            So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                            You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                            93 93/93,
                            Edward

                            F Offline
                            F Offline
                            Frater MVKDSh
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #25

                            "There is a view that also says that Man
                            has to develop via group initiation eventually; that certain initiations/developments are simply not possible unless it is on a group level."

                            There a certain Initiations, Practices, Developments of Liber AL that CANNOT be done in a solitary manner....my 3 cents;)

                            I am positive there are those here who have walked way farther on the paTh then me. So i am sure that what I am saying can be validated if those individuals wish to do so.

                            I am sure I will get a severe reaction to this:p

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • E Edward Mason

                              93,

                              Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                              It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                              Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                              detract from the Book in its own right.
                              What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                              tool in the thelemic ideal?

                              The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                              There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                              say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                              It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                              The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                              Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                              Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                              My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                              If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                              There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                              Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                              In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                              What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                              The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                              Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                              The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                              So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                              You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                              93 93/93,
                              Edward

                              F Offline
                              F Offline
                              Frater MVKDSh
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #26

                              To clarify what i mean I want to reiterate that for me discussion and instruction cannot be seperated. For me instuction is a Child of discussion.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • E Edward Mason

                                93,

                                Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                                It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                                Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                                detract from the Book in its own right.
                                What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                                tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                                There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                                say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                                It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                                The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                                Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                                Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                                My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                                If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                                There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                                Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                                In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                                What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                                Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                                The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                                So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                                You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                                93 93/93,
                                Edward

                                R Offline
                                R Offline
                                RobertAllen
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #27

                                @Atzil said

                                "Robert Allen said:

                                "This is because vertical energy is private, something between you and what is above and below. "

                                There is a view that this only represents a particular phase of development. There is a view that also says that Man
                                has to develop via group initiation eventually; that certain initiations/developments are simply not possible unless it is on a group level. "

                                I'm not impressed by these kinds of statements. I've read similar sentiments myself. God, or the Devil, is in the details.

                                As I see it, if you want to assert this is happening, or is possible, you have two options. You can either claim the answer has to do with 'enlightened' practice—basically it looks the same as as old practice, but it is enlightened—or you can provide a structural model that can actually be tested. The enlightened argument, while it may be the only/best answer, is still a bit of a cop out because it basically asserts that any problem will be overcome when we are able to do it better.

                                I would argue, more from experience than anything else, that unless a person has a very firm grasp of who they are and what they know for themselves, group activity can be a mistake. This certitude in ones position—verticality—is the only thing I know of which can stand against the tidal forces of the group—horizontality.

                                Not saying it can't be done, I just am really curious to see for myself! 😉

                                Love and Will

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • E Edward Mason

                                  93,

                                  Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                                  It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                                  Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                                  detract from the Book in its own right.
                                  What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                                  tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                  The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                                  There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                                  say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                                  It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                                  The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                                  Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                                  Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                                  My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                                  If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                                  There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                                  Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                                  In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                                  What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                  The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                                  Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                                  The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                                  So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                                  You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                                  93 93/93,
                                  Edward

                                  F Offline
                                  F Offline
                                  Frater MVKDSh
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #28

                                  "I would argue, more from experience than anything else, that unless a person has a very firm grasp of who they are and what they know for themselves, group activity can be a mistake. This certitude in ones position—verticality—is the only thing I know of which can stand against the tidal forces of the group—horizontality.

                                  "

                                  Thats true. In my opinion both sides of this issue is true.

                                  But you dont need enlightenment to understand either of these issues. If u just read various myths and understand them via your intellect, u will see these patterns of Instuction and discusion over and over.

                                  Anyway, here are concrete examples in various outer orders that show in certain degrees/grades the interplay between discussion/instruction.

                                  O.T.O
                                  H.O.O.R.
                                  The Temple of Babalon

                                  I have been involved in all three of these Orders and I can state with confidence that at higher grades this interplay becomes pronounced.

                                  Thats all I can say about it. I value my Oath and also I cant afford to be sued in civil court:p

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • E Edward Mason

                                    93,

                                    Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                                    It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                                    Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                                    detract from the Book in its own right.
                                    What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                                    tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                    The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                                    There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                                    say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                                    It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                                    The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                                    Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                                    Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                                    My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                                    If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                                    There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                                    Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                                    In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                                    What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                    The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                                    Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                                    The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                                    So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                                    You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                                    93 93/93,
                                    Edward

                                    R Offline
                                    R Offline
                                    RobertAllen
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #29

                                    @FraterYod said

                                    "
                                    Thats all I can say about it. I value my Oath and also I cant afford to be sued in civil court:p"

                                    Oh, come on, spill the beans! It's not like you have to say what people were talking about, just describe how they talked about it...

                                    ps I'm thinking of suspending my keyboard from the ceiling so when I contribute to this forum I will also be extending my arms overhead to form a 'V,' the attitude of Apophis, the destroyer!

                                    Love and Will

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • E Edward Mason

                                      93,

                                      Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                                      It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                                      Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                                      detract from the Book in its own right.
                                      What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                                      tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                      The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                                      There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                                      say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                                      It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                                      The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                                      Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                                      Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                                      My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                                      If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                                      There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                                      Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                                      In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                                      What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                      The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                                      Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                                      The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                                      So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                                      You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                                      93 93/93,
                                      Edward

                                      F Offline
                                      F Offline
                                      Frater MVKDSh
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #30

                                      "ps I'm thinking of suspending my keyboard from the ceiling so when I contribute to this forum I will also be extending my arms overhead to form a 'V,' the attitude of Apophis, the destroyer!

                                      "

                                      haha:) well said:)

                                      "There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt."

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • E Edward Mason

                                        93,

                                        Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                                        It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                                        Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                                        detract from the Book in its own right.
                                        What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                                        tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                        The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                                        There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                                        say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                                        It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                                        The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                                        Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                                        Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                                        My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                                        If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                                        There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                                        Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                                        In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                                        What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                        The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                                        Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                                        The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                                        So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                                        You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                                        93 93/93,
                                        Edward

                                        A Offline
                                        A Offline
                                        Atzilut
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #31

                                        "I'm not impressed by these kinds of statements"

                                        They are not said to impress anyone, merely to reflect upon. These issues are not necessarily 'old' aeon
                                        just because they were uttered or formulated then.

                                        "I would argue, more from experience than anything else, that unless a person has a very firm grasp of who they are and what they know for themselves, group activity can be a mistake. This certitude in ones position—verticality—is the only thing I know of which can stand against the tidal forces of the group—horizontality."

                                        The first part I agree with with qualification, though not knowing who 'you' think you are has also been known
                                        to be an advantage. Typically I find that some members of Thelemic Orders I have belonged to stress the individual over the group because of their conception regarding the 'true will' and developing it, whilst relying on the 'group'
                                        to provide a social/ritualistic environment. By 'group' I wasn't referring to this idea of a social horizontal group, but
                                        rather something that exists in the very nature of 'vertical' ascent. Personally, the vertical/horizontal or directional idea doesn't really work for me. The Group, therefore, is not referring to some corporeal body of people, but rather the inner identity of our nature, so-to-speak.

                                        "The enlightened argument, while it may be the only/best answer, is still a bit of a cop out because it basically asserts that any problem will be overcome when we are able to do it better. "

                                        Can't see how it can be a cop out, unless we simply rest on our laurels hoping to be enlightened or delude ourselves we are, when we are not.

                                        The question for me, given what I see around me in terms of 'group' /individual practices, is whether the idea/concept/reality of the 'Kabbalistic' teachings of Adam HaRishon etc incorporated into Thelemic theory and practice is really taken seriously and understood. And would that change the way we operate? Im just exploring
                                        here 😉

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • E Edward Mason

                                          93,

                                          Some off-the-cuff thoughts in response to questions posed by Atzilut in Magick (Detailed Questions on the Klippot, Jan 30/11):

                                          It is all too easy to be deflected by how others choose to interpret the
                                          Book of the Law when you are surrounded by thelemic politics I do agree that this does not
                                          detract from the Book in its own right.
                                          What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective
                                          tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                          The majority of OTO thelamites (for example) I know do not discuss the Book, despite its apparent centrality.
                                          There are occasional quotes, but not much else. What I ask myself is, despite what founding documents may
                                          say etc, what does one hope to achieve in a group context, based on such a book?

                                          It never made sense to me that the Book of the Law should not be discussed. Just to recap, the warning Crowley gave was:

                                          The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
                                          Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
                                          Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.

                                          My own studies in Thelema indicate that many things simply reverse their apparent meaning when they're worked on patiently, and in depth. Thelema's whole stance up-ends previous societal and religious norms in the Western world, and it is nowhere near as dark at its core as it seems at first blush.

                                          If something is forbidden to me, my knee-jerk reaction is to recall that "the only sin is restriction." And because I am here to become a (capital F) Fool, who treads into the forbidden unknown, I ignored the advice on destroying the Book. I accept that in doing so, I am challenging my own mind and its assumptions, a dire and perilous enterprise that, after many blunders, wrong turns, and other useful and important acts will, I hope, bring me to Illumination.

                                          There are various places in the Thelemic system where poison is used as a metaphor for the corrosion and elimination of our old inhibitions and limitations. We have serpents that inject fatal venom (Liver LVX, V, v. 54) , we have the cauldron on the Art card that has the classic symbol for poison on it, and a whole lot of other symbols and imagery implying decay and illness. I see a healing crisis involved in the pestilence described in the Comment, and I think the epidemic is now well launched, and spreading. If anyone disapproves of my own attitude on this, he or she is free to shun me utterly.

                                          Crowley's own two commentaries ignore the warnings of the Comment. Jim Eshelman published some reflections of his own at www.aumha.org/arcane/ccxx.htm, and I don't shy from quoting the Book myself at times. We are bidden to "argue not, convert not," but pestilence doesn't spread as a deliberate human act. Incidental contact does the job quite nicely.

                                          In sum, I've always taken the Comment as a covert instruction to violate its apparent meaning.

                                          What do see as laying beyond the fundamentalism it challenges? Do you feel it is the most effective tool in the thelemic ideal?

                                          The Book is the starting point and the guide all the way through. It's the key tool, but it needs to be internalized more than analyzed. And it still has a lot that needs exploring. For example, we are still coming to terms with the Third Chapter, because it utterly defies a literal analysis, unless we conclude that "We need to go out and kill everyone we don't like." A short period of study of this chapter last year gave me a glimpse into what it seems to be about. In a word, I got: Joy. But I started by trying to analyze it verse by verse, and got nowhere. I had to open to it, and let what lies within the words speak to me.

                                          Doing this reminded me of trying to read the Koran some years ago. I found that text (in English, of course) to be unbelievably boring and, simultaneously, hostile. But at a certain moment, something opened up, and I understood the Peace that Muslims say lies within their faith. The words inverted their surface meaning, and a window in the ceiling, so to speak, briefly opened.

                                          The problem with understanding sacred texts such as the Koran and Liber L is that we try to comprehend them rationally, in terms that are acceptable to our ego-structures. I left the Koran alone because I felt (and feel) that its perspective is too limited for these times. But we are all still opening ourselves to Liber L.

                                          So, when you ask what lies beyond the fundamentalism, the only answer I can give is: We have to discover that for ourselves, through diligent study, and disciplined spiritual practices. Crowley's, or Jim Eshelman's idea of what's there, or mine, isn't anyone else's, even if we and 666,000 other people all concur on significant points. That's where this process becomes most pestilential - the pestilence eliminates orthodoxy, or a Church to interpret it. The ultimate fundamentalism the Book reveals is the adamantine yet dynamic nature of the Star at the core of each of us, and the connections of that Star with every other one. But this has to be experienced and then lived, not merely described.

                                          You asked what could be accomplished in a group based around the Book, and for me, the answer is: To make a good beginning. Also, since this stuff tends to drive us a little crazy, having other Stars with whom to compare notes along the way does tend to keep us from deciding we have no more beginnings to make.

                                          93 93/93,
                                          Edward

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                                          sethur
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                                          I thought it was generally known that Crowley wrote the "is forbidden" just to stop one student, possibly Norman Mudd, from sending him reams of Cabalistic gematria analysis of Liber Al. As has been pointed out, Crowley never stopped discussing it. The commandment should be seen as one of Crowley's "joke traps" for those over-literal!

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