A∴A∴

The seal of the A∴A∴

The A∴A∴ is a spiritual organisation described in 1907 by occultist Aleister Crowley. Its members are dedicated to the advancement of humanity by perfection of the individual on every plane through a graded series of universal initiations. Its initiations are syncretic, unifying the essence of Theravkada Buddhism with Voedantic yoga and ceremonial magic. The A∴A∴ applies what it describes as mystical and magical methods of spiritual attainment under the structure of the Qabalistic Tree of Life, and aims to research, practise, and teach "scientific illuminism".

History

The A∴A∴ claims to have been present in all societies and epochs, although not necessarily under that name.[1]

The A∴A∴ was formulated in 1907 by Aleister Crowley and George Cecil Jones, claiming authority from Aiwass (the Author of The Book of the Law) and other Secret Chiefs of the planetary spiritual order after the schism in and subsequent collapse of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn at the turn of the Twentieth century.[2] The principal holy book of the A∴A∴ is the book Crowley called "AL" and "Liber Legis", technically called "Liber AL vel Legis sub figura CCXX as delivered by 93=418 to DCLXVI", whose scriptural title is The Book of the Law, by which name the Book is most commonly known and referred to. There are several other holy books venerated in A∴A∴, which comprise the so-called Class A and AB material.[3]

In 1909 the O.T.O. considered itself to be a "close ally" of the A∴A∴, both organisations having accepted the authority of the Book of the Law, although the O.T.O., being a temporal and fraternal society, in no way participates in the A∴A∴'s strictly hierarchic and spiritual initiatory program, nor does O.T.O. represent A∴A∴. or transmit its functions or authority.[4]

The classic account of A∴A∴ is Von Eckharthausen's "The Cloud Upon the Sanctuary", re-issued by the A∴A∴[1] as "Liber XXXIII".

After Crowley

Following Crowley's death in 1947, his student Karl Germer took over running the Order,[5] but since Germer's death the situation has been less clear. Various lineages of the A∴A∴ survive today that claim to be descended from Crowley.

One such lineage descends from Crowley's student, actress Jane Wolfe (known as Soror Estai).[6] Soror Estai's one student, Phyllis Seckler (Soror Meral), founded College of Thelema in 1973 and (with James A. Eshelman and Anna-Kria King) founded Temple of Thelema in 1987.[7] She designated Eshelman as her successor in the Jane Wolfe branch of A∴A∴ and as chancellor of College of Thelema. Later, she also affirmed David Shoemaker's authority to "admit, supervise, and train" A∴A∴ initiates.[8]

Several lineages run through pupils of Marcelo Ramos Motta, such as Ray Eales,[9] David Bersson[10] and J. Daniel Gunther[11] Motta was a student of Germer. Another lineage links itself to Crowley through Israel Regardie and his pupil Gerald Suster, claiming that Regardie joined the A∴A∴ when he became Crowley’s secretary in 1928, but distanced himself from the organisation when the two men parted company four years later in 1932.[12] Other lineages run through Grady McMurtry and Charles Stansfeld Jones. There are also lineages descended from Frank Bennett and Rosaleen Norton operating in Australia.[13] There are also 'independent' A∴A∴ lineages that either don't descend from the pupils of Crowley or that choose not to declare their link. There presently exists no single undisputed central authority of the A∴A∴ such as existed under Crowley and Germer; nor has any surviving mechanism for the transference of such temporal authority been preserved down to the present day.

Name

Language Possible Name Translation
Latin Argentium Astrum silver star Note: This name has frequently been asserted as the true name of the Order, however according to James Eshelman, this Latin translation of the phrase "silver star" is not the correct name of the Order.[14]
Greek Άστρον Αργυρόν[15] (transliteration: Astron Argiron) silver star James Eshelman gives the true name of the Order as (transliteration: Astron Argon.) By gematria this name enumerates to 451, the value of the Greek words Konx Om Pax, an important mystical phrase interpreted in the old Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn as meaning "Light in Extension". Eshelman also points out that 451 also corresponds to the Hebrew phrase Eth ha-Adam, "The Essence of Humanity".[14] A variant on this Greek rendering of the words "Silver Star" is Aster Argos - also a correct Greek rendering of the word "Silver Star". Eshelman states that due to Crowley's use of the phrase "Astron Argon" (once in a note and once in an official document in Crowley's handwriting) that the latter is to be taken as the true Greek name. The gematria of Aster Argos is 489, also the value of Sothis, the Greek name for the star Sirius. Eshelman states that "Sirius commonly is held to be the physical expression of that "Silver Star" after which the Order is named." [16]
Aramaic [17]אריך אנפין (transliteration: Arikh Anpin) long face or extended countenance. A concept within the Jewish Kabbalah. Enumerates to 422=231+191.
Latin Arcanum Arcanorum[18] secret of secrets. James Eshelman states "Were we not otherwise informed, we might suspect that these initials refer to the Arcanum Arcanorum ('Secret of Secrets'), which is to be found within the Sanctum Sanctorum ('Holy of Holies'). In fact, the initials have a different meaning."[14]
English Angel and Abyss[19] Angel and Abyss Eshelman explains this as an 'affectionate' meaning for the Order's name. It refers to the work of the initiate in working with the Holy Guardian Angel and with the work of aspiring to cross the Abyss of the Qabalistic Tree of Life

L. Sprague de Camp) suggested it to mean "Atlantean Adepts".[20]

Membership

Members of the First Order of A∴A∴ (Golden Dawn) and Dominis Liminis are sworn to openly declare everywhere their connexion with A∴A∴ (Liber CLXXXV). Adepts, however, are expected to work in silence, whereas Magi are required to declare "their Law". The Ipsissimi, who "existeth without form", the highest initiates manifest on this plane, are sworn to silence as to their attainment to this degree (Liber B vel Magi, One Star in Sight).

In A∴A∴ members officially only know those directly above and below in the chain of instruction. Members are expected to work alone, consulting as needed with their superior in the Order. In this way the founders of the system hoped to avoid the many political problems that allegedly brought about the downfall of the predecessor organisation, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. The A∴A∴ is an organisation focused on enlightenment of the individual, with a strong emphasis on maintaining the chain of initiation from teacher to student, and devoting all of one's attainments to those individuals below them (One Star in Sight).

All members of the A∴A∴ at some point, are expected to perform TWO central tasks:

Any person whom so ever may swear the Oath of the Master of the Temple of A∴A∴ and be admitted into the Opening of the Grade of Magister Templi and the Order of the S∴S∴ the opening of which is the passage through the Abyss.[23]

It is the strict and inviolable rule of the Order that members of A∴A∴ never accept payment or other consideration for initiation or other services, on pain of irredeemable expulsion.[24]

Initiatory structure

The initiatory structure of A∴A∴ is based on the Qabalistic Tree Of Life, its grades following the sephira up the tree in reverse order. The A∴A∴ is sub-divided into three orders: The S.S., being the governing body (Third Order) and comprising those grades that are above the Abyss; The R.R. et A.C. (Second Order), comprising those degrees that are below the Abyss but above the Veil of Paroketh; and The Golden Dawn (First Order), comprising the grades below the Veil of Paroketh. A complete description of the tasks of the First Order is given in Liber XIII vel Graduum Montis Abiegni: a syllabus of the steps upon path, in The Equinox Volume 1.

Two additional "grades", the Dwellers on the Thresholds, link the orders: Dominis Limnis in Paroketh, and Babe of the Abyss in the Abyss.

Members of the Third Order can generate their own variations of the First and Second Order teachings as reflections of their own Understanding, contemplating systems of attainment not compassed in the curriculum of the main system [25]

Student

A student's business is to acquire a general intellectual knowledge of all system of attainment, as declared in the prescribed books. At the end of a fixed period, the Student takes a written examination to test his reading, after which he passes through a small ritual involving the reading of the History Lection (Liber LXI), and passes to the grade of Probationer.

The Order of the G∴D∴ (Golden Dawn)

Probationer

(0°=0): The Probationer's principal business is to begin such practices as he or she may prefer, and to write a careful record of the same for one year.

Neophyte

(1°=10): Has to acquire perfect control of the astral plane.

Zelator

(2°=9): The Zelator's main work is to achieve complete success in asana and pranayama. The Zelator also begins to study the formula of the Rosy Cross.

Practicus

(3°=8): Is expected to complete the intellectual training, and in particular to study Qabalah.

Philosophus

(4°=7): Is expected to complete the moral training. Is tested in Devotion to the Order.

Dominus Liminis

(The Link): Is expected to show mastery of pratyahara and dharana.

The Order of the R∴C∴ (Rosy Cross)

Adeptus Minor (Without)

(5°=6): Lesser Adept (Without). Is expected to perform the Great Work and to attain the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel.

Adeptus Minor (Within)

(5°=6): Lesser Adept (Within). Is admitted to the practice of the formula of the Rosy Cross on entering the College of the Holy Ghost.

Adeptus Major

(6°=5): Greater Adept. Obtains a general mastery of practical Magick, though without comprehension.

Adeptus Exemptus

(7°=4): Exempt Adept. Completes in perfection all these matters. He then either (a) becomes a Brother of the Left Hand Path or, (b) is stripped of all his attainments and of himself as well, even of his Holy Guardian Angel, and becomes a Babe of the Abyss, who, having transcended the Reason, does nothing but grow in the womb of its mother. It then finds itself a Magister Templi.

The Order of the S∴S∴

Magister Templi

or Master of the Temple (8°=3): The principal business of this grade is to obtain a perfect understanding of the Universe. The essential Attainment is the perfect annihilation of that personality which limits and oppresses his true self. The Magister Templi is pre-eminently the Master of Mysticism, that is, his Understanding is entirely free from internal contradiction or external obscurity; his Word is to comprehend the existing Universe in accordance with his own Mind. This grade corresponds to Binah on the Tree of Life, and to the Secret Chiefs in the old Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Crowley also linked it with the experience he called "Shivadarshana" and with the Four Formless States of Buddhism,[26] although he cautions against treating these criteria as sufficient for the grade.[27]

Magus

(9°=2): The Magus seeks to attain Wisdom, declares his law, and is a Master of all Magick in its greatest and highest sense. His will is entirely free from internal diversion or external opposition; His work is to create a new Universe in accordance with his Will. This grade corresponds to Chokmah on the Tree of Life. It also bears some resemblance to Nietzsche's "new philosopher" who creates values, although with more focus on self-transcendence according to Crowley biographer Lawrence Sutin.[28]

Ipsissimus

(10°=1): Beyond the comprehension of the lower degrees. An Ipsissimus is free from limitations and necessity and lives in perfect balance with the manifest universe. Essentially, the highest mode of attainment. This grade corresponds to Kether on the Tree of Life. Ipsissimus is quite hard to translate directly from Latin to English, but it is essentially the superlative of "self", translating rather approximately to "His most Selfness," or "self-est." (c.f. generalissimo for the same superlative form in use for a grade from same Latin root.)

Crowley named as a condition of this grade the trance Nirodha-samapatti,[29] which reduces heartbeat and other life functions to the bare minimum.[30][31] Theravada Buddhist monks traditionally attain nirodha-samapatti by producing the aforementioned Formless States one after the other, and perceiving in each what they call the Three Characteristics of all existence: sorrow or tendency towards sorrow, change or unreliability, and insubstantiality or lack of self.[30] Crowley and the A∴A∴ however seek to replace this threefold view with the quest for balance as both a motive for discipline and the means of achieving their end goal.[32] In Liber B vel Magi they urge the Magus seeking further progress to identify the Buddhist Three Characteristics with the opposite states. "Wherein Sorrow is Joy, and Change is Stability, and Selflessness is Self." Crowley's version of nirodha includes "seeing first the truth and then the falsity of the Three Characteristics" according to his published theory.[33]

The Ipsissimus should keep the achievement of this final grade secret, even from the rest of the Order, and continue with the work of the Magus while expressing the nature of an Ipsissimus in word and deed.[34]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 The Equinox Volume 1 No 1
  2. Liber LXI, in The Equinox 3,9
  3. Liber 61 vel Causae, verses 29-30, and Preface to Thelema: The Holy Books of Thelema, Samuel Weiser, Inc. 1983.
  4. The Equinox 3,1 page 198
  5. "In a June 1947 letter to the most loyal of his disciples, Crowley specified that Germer should succeed him in the leadership of the O.T.O." Sutin, Do what thou wilt: A life of Aleister Crowley, 2002 edition, p. 419. Online copy of a 1941 letter gives him authority in the O.T.O. and A∴A∴
  6. Order's website, web version of article from In the Continuum, Vol. V, No. 10 (Autumnal Equinox, 1996 E.V.)
  7. James A. Eshelman, The Mystical and Magical System of the A∴A∴: The Spiritual System of Aleister Crowley and George Cecil Jones Step-by-Step. Los Angeles: The College of Thelema, Dec 1993 (1st hardcover edition 2000), Book Jacket.
  8. "Warrant | The International College of Thelema". Cotnorcal.org. Retrieved 2014-06-12.
  9. "Our heritage - To Mega Therion - Frater Saturnus - Frater Ever - Frater 939∴" http://www.hoor.org,
  10. "Welcome to castletower.org Domain". Castletower.org. Retrieved 2014-06-12.
  11. Gunther. Initiation in the Aeon of the Child. p. 15.
  12. Regardie (3rd ed. 1998) p. xv-xvii
  13. Richmond pp. 5-6, 15
  14. 1 2 3 James A. Eshelman, The Mystical and Magical System of the A∴A∴: The Spiritual System of Aleister Crowley and George Cecile Jones Step-by-Step. Los Angeles: The College of Thelema, Dec 1993 (1st hardcover edition 2000), p. 23
  15. TOTSE Archived October 28, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  16. James A. Eshelman, The Mystical and Magical System of the A∴A∴: The Spiritual System of Aleister Crowley and George Cecil Jones Step-by-Step. Los Angeles: The College of Thelema, Dec 1993 (1st hardcover edition 2000), p. 24
  17. Crowley, Aleister. Sepher Sephiroth SVB FIGVRA D. The number "2".
  18. "Thelema.org". Thelema.org. Retrieved 2014-06-12.
  19. James Eshelmani, The Mystical and Magical System of the A∴A∴; page 24
  20. L. Sprague de Camp, The Ragged Edge of Science, p. 124.
  21. James A. Eshelman, The Mystical and Magical System of the A∴A∴. Los Angeles: College of Thelema, Dec 1993 (1st hardcover edition 2000), Chapters 8-9. Liber Collegii Sancti sub figura CLXXXV. The Task of the Adeptus Minor. Crowley, Aleister, One Star in Sight.
  22. James A. Eshelman, The Mystical and Magical System of the A∴A∴. Los Angeles: College of Thelema, Dec 1993 (1st hardcover edition 2000), Chapter 11. Crowley, Aleister, One Star in Sight.
  23. One Star in Sight,
  24. Aleister Crowley, London: 1929 Magick in Theory and Practice, Appendix II One Star in Sight
  25. "One Star in Sight"
  26. "The Psychology of Hashish", XVI-XVIII, in The Equinox I no. 2.
  27. Magick Without Tears, Chapter XII.
  28. Sutin, Do what thou wilt, p. 126.
  29. Liber B vel Magi, published in The Equinox I no. 7.
  30. 1 2 The Structure and Dynamics of the Attainment of Cessation in Theravada Meditation, by Winston L. King. Journal of the American Academy of Religion 1977 XLV(2):226.
  31. Narada Maha Thera, quoted in Buddhist Phenomenology: A Philosophical Investigation of Yogacara Buddhism by Dan Lusthaus, p. 139 (Google Books)
  32. "The whole point is to make (attainment) perfect in balance. Then it radiates light in every direction, while the Ipsissimus is utterly indifferent to it." Diary quoted as explanation in Sutin, p. 277.
  33. "Psychology of Hashish" XIX.
  34. Magick second revised edition 1998, Appendix II "One star in sight", p. 491. Online version last retrieved July 5, 2010.

References

External links


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