Share via Share via... Twitter Facebook Pinterest WhatsAppRecent ChangesSend via e-MailPrintPermalink × On the Initiation of the Prophet by T Polyphilus first delivered by T Polyphilus to a congregation of Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica at Aum Ha Oasis on the Feast of the Initiation of the Prophet, Anno IV xvi One of the most significant events in the life of the Prophet of the Law of Thelema was his initiation into that secret magical order known then only to its members as the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Although he was only active in the Order for a few years, and though he considered most of its members to be mediocre nonentities who had not been truly initiated, the Prophet still viewed that original initiation to the Golden Dawn grade of Neophyte as his first contact, however mediated, with the Secret Chiefs, and the beginning of the path for which he took the name PERDURABO: meaning, “I will endure to the end.” Eventually, Brother Perdurabo would pass judgment on the Order, and he would claim to have “destroyed” it by publishing its secret rituals. His later student Israel Regardie, an initiate of the Golden Dawn offshoot Stella Matutina, who published their secret rituals, wrote of Perdurabo: This elaborate Golden Dawn system became part of [Aleister] Crowley’s own inner world … He carried it further than even the Golden Dawn principals had envisaged. I know of nothing within the Order documentary that even hints at the kind of visionary and spiritual experience that Crowley managed to get out of it. Crowley eventually came to view the Thelemic movement as the child of the Theosophical Society on the one hand and the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn on the other. He was brought into the Order through an impressive ceremony, staged in a Masonic Hall with language drawn from ancient oracles and the Hellenized mysteries of Egypt. He was directed to study the Kabbalah, to learn an elaborate system of esoteric correspondences, and to aspire toward his own higher nature. The Order furnished him with two mentors: George Cecil Jones and Allan Bennett. It also provided him with rivals like Arthur Edward Waite. Waite had in fact primed Crowley for the Golden Dawn. When Crowley first took interest in the occult, he had written the author Waite, who directed him to read The Cloud Upon the Sanctuary, with its description of an invisible church or secret college— fueling an appetite for the sort of secret order that the Golden Dawn strove to be. Like many forms of esoteric freemasonry, the Golden Dawn gave out new passwords to the members twice per year. Whereas Masons would change their word on the feasts of the Saints John at midsummer and midwinter; the Golden Dawn password was issued instead at the equinoxes of spring and fall, with a rotation of the temple officers, in an elegant ceremony designed to illustrate the principles of cosmic equilibrium. Crowley not only divined a word at each equinox for the order A∴A∴ that he grew after the Golden Dawn schisms, but he called his celebrated occult journal The Equinox, and he took the Golden Dawn’s equinox ceremony as the formal type of the cosmic change manifesting through the Cairo Working by which he received The Book of the Law and became the Prophet of Thelema. He called this event an Equinox of the Gods. In a letter to a disciple, Crowley wrote that the Golden Dawn was the context for an act of self-sacrifice by which he proved himself to the Secret Chiefs as material worthy of a Magus of the Aeon: “I earned my chance to be chosen by the A∴A∴,” he said, “when I abandoned my Abramelin operation in 1900 “for the sake of my Brethren in the Golden Dawn.” When the Golden Dawn was over, there came a daytime of many orders seeking to perpetuate the streams of knowledge that it had originally dispensed. The old Chief Mathers continued it as Alpha et Omega. Various English adepts organized Stella Matutina. Waite offered a Christianized “Holy” Golden Dawn. Crowley continued the use of the letters G.D. in his A∴A∴ system, along with the Word of the Equinox, the kabbalistic system of Grades, and a radically reformed Neophyte ceremony. He at first rejected the lodge-based socialization that he thought had poisoned the original order. But when he became head of O.T.O., another lodge-based society, he infused certain elements of the Golden Dawn into his revisions of the Order’s rituals. And now I invite you to join us in celebrating the heritage of that sublime occasion, when —as he explained in his analysis of the formula of this initiation— a thing inert and impotent was endowed with balanced motion in a given direction, a direction that would culminate in his case with the Law of a New Aeon. Altar Call Sermons, Expatiations and Discourses Vigorous Food & Divine Madness — fileinfo: path: '../hermetic.com/dionysos/acingd.htm' created: 2016-03-15 modified: 2016-03-15 … Last modified: 2016/03/15 20:27by 127.0.0.1