Share via Share via... Twitter Facebook Pinterest WhatsAppRecent ChangesSend via e-MailPrintPermalink × On the Nepios by T Polyphilus first delivered by T Polyphilus to a congregation of Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica at Aum Ha Oasis in a Liturgy of the Word of the Law on the Feast of Cattle, Anno IV xv I do not know your daily prayers but this evening I will share with you one that belongs to us all when we dare to use it. Thelema affords many rituals for our daily use and enjoyment: The ritual of the pentagram, The fourfold adoration of the Sun, The Mass of the Phoenix, The Ritual of the Mark of the Beast, and others besides. The true formula whose virtues sufficed the Beast in his Attainment was thus: INVOKE OFTEN In homelier words, in order to be true magicians we must pray daily, unto whatsoever power we may hold to be most high. That sense of OFTEN in invoking, the iterative power of a holy work done from everlasting to everlasting, that sense can come not only from your own repetitions not only from the discipline of the individual but also from the great momentum of community and culture and history. Thus the Prophet called upon his Angel with the daily repetition of the Invocation of the Bornless One, a ritual constructed from an ancient text: a Greco-Egyptian spell of god-mastery And thus we spoke in unison early in this ceremony a Prayer to the Aeon that is my own chief daily prayer. It is perhaps the single prayer most repeated by human lips in the last two thousand years, but rewritten by our Prince-Priest the Beast. Many have proclaimed the magical power of the old form of this prayer. One of the Prophet’s teachers, The magician Allan Bennett, as a youth of sixteen spoke it in reverse to conjure the Devil and gave himself an enduring fright. The old prayer was the sacramental key of the medieval Cathar heretics who are one of the primal wellsprings of our Gnostic and Catholic Church. This prayer is the only piece of verbal liturgy that the Bible puts in the mouth of Jesus. So Bible-worshipping Protestants have called it “The Lord’s Prayer” While Catholics call it by its first words: “Our Father” Or in the days of Latin liturgy: “Pater Noster.” The Post-Protestant magus Aleister Crowley called his version “The Cry of the Hawk,” after Horus, the Crowned and Conquering Child, whom we adore. And I call it “Nepios” a Greek word for Child with the same numeric value as the name of thy house four hundred and eighteen. And our prayer is not merely a parody of the older one but a profound appropriation and conversion of the forces bound into that form. If the old prayer has the power to delight or enthrall you the new one should do it so much more. If the old prayer disgusts or repels you the new one should transform woe into weal. In addition to the prose version that we recited together Crowley also wrote a “Nepios” in verse That we often use in ceremonies of our Church: Now I begin to pray: Thou Child, > Holy Thy name and undefiled! Thy reign is come: Thy will is done. Here is the Bread; here is the Blood. Bring me through midnight to the Sun! Save me from Evil and from Good! That Thy one crown of all the Ten Even now and here be mine. AMEN Our Brother the Prophet analyzed this prayer into ten words and while I could never, never exhaust the meaning of the “Nepios,” I want to briefly reflect on each of these ten words and their significance to us as Thelemites. The first word: THOU—CHILD! In our new prayer In our New Aeon the Child Horus has succeeded his Father Osiris. We aspire to the necessary creativity of the future, not the supposed originality of the past. We give life to the god! As the Prophet says: We ignore what created us; we adore what we create. The god may be of clay: adore him; he becomes GOD. Let us create nothing but GOD! To know what it is to have a child is an accomplishment it is not a passive given. Is your child a girl? a boy? a painting? a symphony? a theorem? Not all works are children, but every Child is WORK. When we speak this prayer we assert our creative relationship to GOD. The Second Word: Thy Name is holy. Just as Christians never name their Father, the Nepios proclaims holy a name which it does not speak. The Great Invocation of the Cairo Working used eleven different names for the Child. The Book of the Balance instructs us to “blaspheme not the name by which another knoweth his God.” Indeed, it is a spiritual impertinence even to presume to know the name by which another would best apprehend the Highest. To fully divulge the name of the Child would be to profane it– yet “an indicible arcanum “is an arcanum that cannot be revealed.” Merely human thought and action cannot desecrate the True Name. In parallel with other parts of the Nepios, this Word shifts from the future tense to the present. We do not merely request or anticipate that the Child’s name will be sanctified. We forthrightly acknowledge that it is holy. The Third Word: Thy Kingdom is come. The reign of the Child is not a utopian hope. not a fairytale about the end of time. It is happening now. The old world was destroyed by fire in Nineteen-oh-four, and our eyes gleam with the white of the ash prepared by Hermes the Invisible. The Kingdom of the Child is not pie in the sky when you die! “There is none that shall be cast down or lifted up: “all is ever as it was.” This moment is your eternal destiny, limned in tragic finitude for the accomplishment of your True Will. The reign is not merely a regime, it is a proper kingdom with a sovereign, emblemized as our Lord the Sun and his viceregent the Phallus. In the world of the individual soul, the Holy Guardian Angel is sovereign. And the Kingdom is come, in the orgasmic rapture of angelic union and the magick power of the elements of human generation. The Fourth Word: Thy Will is done. “There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt.” The world manifests the will of the Child, which is also hidden in the heart of the speaker of the prayer. The pure will of the Child is done, complete, accomplished, perfect. The Nepios does not say “on earth as it is in heaven” because the turn of the Aeon has already brought these two into alignment. In our Gnostic Masses, the virgin proclaims the greeting of earth and heaven. Earth is a planet in the starry heaven. We are all both on earth and in heaven. The Fifth Word: Here is the Bread. We do not plead to a Father, that he might give us the bread we need. We ourselves provide bread to the Child. We have within ourselves all that is needful to bring forth and nourish God. We sacrifice, not as to a stern parent, but as caring parents ourselves of a god we will never fully understand, although he is created in us and through us. The Sixth Word: Here is the Blood. We also offer blood. Note the transformation from the last word to this one. It is neither “Here is the Bread; here is the Wine,” nor “Here is the Body; here is the Blood.” Instead, the two words show a transition from the material of the meat and drink to the spirit of the living god within us. Thus, the speaker of this prayer affirms his own priestly power and his filiation from the saints of the true church of old time. As our priests say: “Touto esti to poterion tou haimatos mou.” This is the cup of my blood. The Seventh Word: Bring us through Temptation! We seek to pass through Temptation, not to avoid it! The capital T of that Temptation is the real Cross of each Thelemite’s Passion. “The word of Sin is Restriction” therefore we seek Righteousness, exploring the interior of Iniquity, and fortifying ourselves to overcome all. The Eighth Word: Deliver us from Good and Evil! Saint Friedrich Nietzsche assures us: “Whatever is done from love takes place beyond good and evil.” And we know that “Love is the law, love under will.” We do not seek to be between Good and Evil, in the path of hapless, lukewarm compromise. No: we seek balance, by the Method of Equilibrium, so that we might pass beyond Good and Evil, and yet enfold and embrace these contraries as our own “self-realization “through projection in conditioned Form.” This attainment is the one pronounced by the Crowned and Conquering Child in the ultimate Aethyr of the Vision & the Voice, saying: I am light, and I am night, and I am that which is beyond them. I am speech, and I am silence, and I am that which is beyond them. I am life, and I am death, and I am that which is beyond them. I am war, and I am peace, and I am that which is beyond them. I am weakness and I am strength, and I am that which is beyond them. The Ninth Word: That Mine as Thine be the Crown of the Kingdom, even now. The “power and the glory” of the “Our Father” reflects the Moral Triad of the Kabbalistic Tree: ve-geburah ve-gedulah as we say in the old Pentagram Ritual. But the Nepios emphasizes the Middle Pillar, from the Crown at its top to the Kingdom at its base. Similarly, the doxology of the “Our Father” ends “for ever and ever” calling for eternity, le-olam. But the Nepios calls for immediacy: “Even now.” It is the sentiment of Dante’s Virgil at the threshold of the Earthly Paradise: No longer await any word or sign from me: Free, upright, and whole is your will, and it would be a fault not to act according to its intent. Therefore you over yourself I crown and mitre. The Tenth Word: ABRAHADABRA! This last word of the Nepios is also the first word of Chapter Three of the Book of the Law. ABRAHADABRA is sometimes called “the Word of the Aeon.” Like ‘Nepios’ it has the value of four hundred and eighteen. The Prophet translated this word into English as “the Voice of the Chief Seer.” Its eleven letters represent the Great Work as the union of the human five and the divine six. It is spoken by the adept and the angel together in their consummated interpenetration. In order to accomplish our True Wills, to achieve the Great Work, the Summum Bonum, True Wisdom and Perfect Happiness, let us INVOKE OFTEN. And may the one who invoketh often behold the Formless Fire, with trembling and bewilderment; and in the lengthening of that meditation, resolve it into coherent and intelligible symbols, and hear the articulate utterance of that Fire, interpret the thunder thereof as a still small voice in the heart. And may the Fire reveal to the eyes the aspirant's own image in its own true glory; and speak in the ears the Mystery that is the adept’s own right Name. AMEN. Altar Call Sermons, Expatiations and Discourses Vigorous Food & Divine Madness — fileinfo: path: '../hermetic.com/dionysos/nepios.htm' created: 2016-03-15 modified: 2016-03-15 … Last modified: 2016/03/15 20:28by 127.0.0.1