Magia cerimonial.txt

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Extrato da parte 2 do Book 4 de Crowley
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PART II -- MAGICK

PRELIMINARY REMARKS



CEREMONIAL MAGICK,<<footnote: The old spelling MAGICK has been adopted 
throughout in order to distinguish the Science of the Magi from all its 
counterfeits.>>

THE TRAINING FOR MEDITATION

PRELIMINARY REMARKS

HITHERTO we have spoken only of the mystic path; and we have kept particularly 
to the practical exoteric side of it. Such difficulties as we have mentioned 
have been purely natural obstacles. For example, the great question of the 
surrender of the self, which bulks so largely in most mystical treatises, has 
not been referred to at all. We have said only what a man must do; we have not 
considered at all what that doing may involve. The rebellion of the will against 
the terrible discipline of meditation has not been discussed; one may now devote 
a few words to it.
There is no limit to what theologians call "wickedness." Only by experience can 
the student discover the ingenuity of the mind in trying to escape from control. 
He is perfectly safe so long as he sticks to meditation, doing no more and no 
less than that which we have prescribed; but the mind will probably not let him 
remain in that simplicity. This fact is the root of all the legends about the 
"Saint" being tempted by the '"Devil." Consider the parable of Christ in the 
Wilderness, where he is tempted to use his magical power, to do anything but the 
thing that should be done. These attacks on the will are as bad as the thoughts 
which intrude upon Dharana. It would almost seem as if one could not succesfully 
practice meditation until the will had become so strong that no force in the 
Universe could either bend or break it. Before concentrating the lower 
principle, the mind, one must concentrate the higher principle, the Will. 
Failure to understand this has destroyed the value of all attempts to teach 
"Yoga," "Menticulture," "New Thought," and the like.
There are method of training the will, by which it is easy to check one's 
progress.
Every one knows the force of habit. Every one knows that if you keep on acting 
in a particular way, that action becomes easier, and at last absolutely natural.
All religions have devised practices for this purpose. If you keep on praying 
with your lips long enough, you will one day find yourself praying in your 
heart.
The whole question has been threshed out and organized {53} by wise men of old; 
they have made a Science of Life complete and perfect; and they have given to it 
the name of MAGICK> It is the chief secret of the Ancients, and if the keys have 
never been actually lost, they have certainly been little used. <<footnote: The 
holders of those keys have always kept very quiet about it. This has been 
especially necessary in Europe, because of the dominance of persecuting 
churches.>>
Again, the confusion of thought caused by the ignorance of the people who did 
not understand it has discredited the whole subject. It is now our task to 
re-establish this science in its perfection.
To do this we must criticize the Authorities; some of them have made it too 
complex, others have completely failed in such simple matters as coherence. Many 
of the writers are empirics, still more mere scribes, while by far the largest 
class of all is composed of stupid charlatans.
We shall consider a simple form of magick, harmonized from many systems old and 
new, describing the various weapons of the Magician and the furniture of his 
temple. We shall explain to what each really corresponds, and discuss the 
construction and the use of everything.
The Magician works in a "Temple;" the Universe, which is (be it remembered!) 
conterminous with himself.<<footnote: By "yourself" you mean the contents of 
your consciousness. All without does not exist for you.>> In this temple a 
"Circle" is drawn upon the floor for the limitation of his working. This circle 
is protected by divine names, the influences on which he relies to keep out 
hostile thoughts. Within the circle stands an "Altar", the solid basis on which 
he works, the foundation of all. Upon the Altar are his "Wand," "Cup," "Sword," 
and "Pantacle," to represent his Will, his Understanding, his Reason, and the 
lower parts of his being, respectively. On the Altar, too, is a phial of "Oil," 
surrounded by a "Scourge," a "Dagger," and a "Chain," while above the Altar 
hangs a "Lamp." The Magician wears a "Crown," a single "Robe," and a "Lamen," 
and he bears a "Book" of Conjurations and a "Bell."
The oil consecrates everything that is touched with it; it is his aspiration; 
all acts performed in accordance with that are holy. The scourge tortures him; 
the dagger wounds him; the chain binds him. It is by virtue of these three that 
his aspiration remains pure, and is able to consecrate all other things. He 
wears a crown to affirm his lordship, his divinity; a robe to symbolize silence, 
and a lamen to declare his work. The book of spells or conjurations is his 
magical record, his Karma. In the East is the "Magick Fire," in which all burns 
up at last.<<footnote: He needs nothing else but the apparatus here described 
for invocation, by which he calls down that which is above him and within him; 
but for evocations, by which he calls forth that which is below him and without 
him, he may place a triangle without the circle.>>
We will now consider each of these matters in detail.{54}


CHAPTER I

THE TEMPLE

THE Temple represents the external Universe. The Magician must take it as he 
finds it, so that it is of no particular shape; yet we find written, Liber VII, 
vi, 2: "We made us a Temple of stones in the shape of the Universe, even as thou 
didst wear openly and I concealed." This shape is the Vesica Piscis; but it is 
only the greatest of the Magicians who can thus fashion the Temple. There may, 
however, be some choice of rooms; this refers to the power of the Magician to 
reincarnate in a suitable body. {55}


{diagram on this page: a magical circle reminiscent of an illustration in the 
"Treasure House of Images" in the Equinox. Caption below: "THE CIRCLE".}


{56}


CHAPTER II

THE CIRCLE

THE Circle announces the Nature of the Great Work.
Though the Magician has been limited in his choice of room, he is more or less 
able to choose what part of the room he will work in. He will consider 
convenience and possibility. His circle should not be too small and cramp his 
movements; it should not be so large that he has long distances to traverse. 
Once the circle is made and consecrated, the Magician must not leave it, or even 
lean outside, lest he be destroyed by the hostile forces that are without.
He chooses a circle rather than any other lineal figure for many reasons; e.g.,
1. He affirms thereby his identity with the infinite.
2. He affirms the equal balance of his working; since all points on the 
circumference are equidistant from the centre.
3. He affirms the limitation implied by his devotion to the Great Work. He no 
longer wanders about aimlessly in the world.
The centre of this circle is the centre of the Tau of ten squares which is in 
the midst, as shown in the illustration. The Tau and the circle together make 
one form of the Rosy Cross, the uniting of subject and object which is the Great 
Work, and which is symbolized sometimes as this cross and circle, sometimes as 
the Lingam-Yoni, sometimes as the Ankh or Crux Ansata, sometimes by the Spire 
and Nave of a church or temple, and sometimes as a marriage feast, mystic 
marriage, spiritual marriage, "chymical nuptials," and in a hundred other ways. 
Whatever the form chosen, it is the symbol of the Great Work.
This place of his working therefore declares the nature and object of the Work. 
Those persons who have supposed that the use of these symbols implied worship of 
the generative organs, merely attributed to the sages of every time and country 
minds of a calibre equal to their own.
The Tau is composed of ten squares for the ten Sephiroth.<<footnote: The Ten 
Sephiroth are the Ten Units. In one system of classification (see "777") these 
are so arranged, and various ideas are so attributed to them, that they have 
been made to mean anything. The more you know, the more these numbers mean to 
you.>> About this Tau is escribed a triangle, which is inscribed in the great 
Circle; but of the triangle nothing is actually marked but the three corners, 
the areas defined by the cutting of the lines bounding this triangle. This 
triangle is only visible in the parts which are common to two of the {57} sides; 
they have therefore the shape of the diamond, one form of the Yoni. The 
significance of this is too complex for our simple treatise; it may be studied 
in Crowley's "Berashith."
The size of the whole figure is determined by the size of one square of the Tau. 
And the size of this square is that of the base of the Altar, which is placed 
upon Maukuth. It will follow then that, in spite of the apparent freedom of the 
Magician to do anything he likes, he is really determined absolutely; for as the 
Altar must have a base proportionate to its height, and as that height must be 
convenient for the Magician, the size of the whole will depend upon his own 
stature. It is easy to draw a moral lesson from these considerations. We will 
merely indicate this one, that the scope of any man's work depends upon his own 
original genius. Even the size of the weapons must be determined by necessary 
proportion. The exceptions to this rule are the Lamp, which hangs from th...
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