The Temple of Set I

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The Temple of Set I Page 43

by Michael A Aquino


  Therefore it is not enough to feel blind trust in and enthusiasm for Setian concepts of reality

  One must know how those concepts came to be formulated as being most probably true. He must

  understand the reasoning behind each proposition. Initiation implies not just knowing how but

  also knowing why.

  The second distinctive characteristic of the Temple of Set is its utilitarian approach to

  White Magic (WM) and Lesser Black Magic (LBM). The former, embracing all conventional

  religions and occultisms, is assessed simply as fraud and/or self-delusion. The Temple of Set has

  no self-appointed mission to cure the mass of humanity of fraud or delusion, so we ignore White

  Magicians as courteously as possible.

  Chapter #19’s discussion of LBM illustrated that many social and scientific techniques used

  casually, ignorantly, or inexpertly by the rest of society are utilized by the Black Magician to

  realize his immediate goals in the OU. Further that mastery of LBM does not come quickly or

  easily, and that it is by no means a substitute for cooperation with society’s accepted rules of

  competition, survival, and prosperity. It is a specialized technique for use in situations which

  appear to be ideally suited to it, and it is generally used as an enhancement to more ordinary

  techniques already in play.

  Many of those who encountered the Temple of Set’s predecessor institution, the Church of

  Satan, were confused by the Satanic Bible’s approach to magic. First, in the “Book of Satan”, it

  scorned all belief systems and reduced all gods and demons to simple fantasies and

  psychological crutches. But then, in the subsequent Books of “Lucifer”, “Belial”, and “Leviathan”,

  it promised satisfaction in return for appealing to various demons through ritual. The public

  apology for this seeming inconsistency was that rituals are mere psychodrama: play-acting for

  emotional gratification. But the reality was that the rituals were performed with complete

  seriousness throughout all the Grottos of the Church, and that they in fact yielded the results

  they promised, at least to some degree.

  The Satanic Priesthood gradually concluded that, although the mythological imagery of

  such ritual might be prima facie inaccurate and inconsistent, the particular type of mental and

  willful concentration achieved during ritual did in fact exert an effect upon both the celebrant

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  and the OU. To the celebrant it seemed that, as his concentration and projection of will

  increased, the normal barriers of space and time began to recede. The celebrant’s SU appeared to

  force its way into the OU in a limited, focused fashion.

  What this meant for the fledgling Satanist was an experience of the “blurring of reality”. It

  was often disturbing and distressing, just as the experience of hallucination or schizophrenia can

  be disturbing and distressing. A ritual working differed from psychosis, however, in that the

  magician’s own mental coherence - his sense of identity and ability to organize his thought -

  remained unimpaired. He knew precisely what was happening: where each universe began and

  the other one ended, what he wished to do, and how to increase, decrease, or halt the interaction.

  As the Satanist became increasingly familiar with the sensations of ritual magic, his fear of

  it would disappear and he would become proficient at creating precisely the blend of universes

  desired. The need for OU props (a physical ritual chamber) to create a suitably dramatic

  atmosphere lessened, as did the need for texts, incantations, and scripts. Ultimately a threshold

  would be reached where the experience and exercise of ritual became a completely fluent one for

  the magician, who could now blend his SU with the OU and accomplish changes in it as

  delicately as a skilled surgeon might wield a scalpel.

  An individual’s SU, to be sure, is extremely fluid. It may closely resemble the OU, or it may

  become bizarre and fantastic. Many clinical schizophrenics are simply those who have lost the

  ability to distinguish the SU from the OU, and who in some cases are at the mercy of “runaway”

  SU mental imagery.

  Clinical schizophrenia is usually involuntary - the result of a physically diseased or injured

  brain, or of extraordinary psychological stress. A danger of ritual magic is that the experience

  may become so intoxicating that the underlying sense of perspective upon and balance between

  the two universes may be neglected or abandoned, resulting in an uncontrolled blending process.

  The magician is still in control of his will, but he is unable to accurately distinguish the elements

  of the OU from those of his SU. He makes mistakes, which appear in his SU as inexplicable

  abortions of his previously effective desires and creations. Ultimately he may lose all control of

  his consciousness, becoming a paranoiac and/or a megalomaniac.

  The old myth that you will endanger your soul if you dare to experiment with Black Magic

  thus has more than a grain of truth in it. Not because some fiend in red tights is going to drag

  you down to Dante’s Inferno in punishment for your blasphemy, but rather because you are

  now exercising your mind in the deliberate conception and construction of its own

  external frames of reference. If you do this with prudence, intelligence, and sensitivity, the

  result will be a more excellent state of being (= initiation). If you do it impulsively or carelessly,

  the result could be disastrous.

  The Temple of Set thus repeats the warning in its introductory literature: Black Magic is

  dangerous. LBM is dangerous because it can tempt the individual to unethical abuse of its

  techniques, while GBM is dangerous because its practice makes possible the destruction of the

  perspectives of the rational consciousness. Extreme care must be taken when experimenting

  with either discipline. And so to the specific subject of this chapter:

  Greater Black Magic (GBM) is the causing of change to occur in the SU in

  accordance with the will. This change in the SU may cause a similar and

  harmonious change in the OU.

  Examine this definition. A deliberate effort is made to alter one’s subjective frame of

  reference, so that a thing which used to be conceptualized one way is now conceptualized in

  another. A distasteful situation may be adjusted to produce a favorable outcome; a live enemy

  may be adjusted to be neutralized or nonexistent; a desire of any sort may be realized or

  dispelled.

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  Magical manuals from the medieval grimoires to the Satanic Bible have discussed the use

  of imagery as an aid to this process. Perhaps the most stereotypical example of this is the

  sticking of pins into a wax effigy to cause harm [the origin of the quip “stick it to him/her”]. In

  Walt Disney’s Dumbo the little elephant was given a feather to hold with his trunk. He was told

  that it was a magic feather which would enable him to fly - and he did so by flapping his ears.

  When he eventually lost the feather, he started to fall, until he was told that the feather was

  really nothing more than an ordinary feather. As soon as he realized that he was the source of

  the “magic”, he flapped his ears again and regained altitude.

  Photographs, wax images, talismans, music, fires, swords, statues, and indeed entire ritual

  chambers have no more intrinsic magic in
them than Dumbo’s feather. Their effectiveness in

  magic, again like that feather, comes from their significance to the magician. If he grants

  them certain powers in his SU - if he credits them with atmospheres, auras, curses, or blessings -

  they will assuredly have them. They will possess these qualities absolutely in the SU.

  Once this occurs, the phenomenon of the magical link (ML) between the SU and OU will

  transfer a portion of the quality to the items’ objective mass. The potency and endurance of the

  transfer depends upon the skill and willpower of the consecrating magician, the scope of the

  working, the amount of distortion in the OU attempted, and a wide variety of physical and

  environmental factors which may range from sunspot activity to a sore toe which intrudes upon

  the magician’s concentration. Perception and activation of the imbued qualities by another

  magician will similarly depend upon the skill and willpower which he brings to bear upon such

  objects.

  The implications of this principle are fascinating. Among other things it explains why

  sophisticated magical workings based on a variety of different gods or pantheons have worked. It

  makes no difference whether the gods be socially generated (like those of ancient Greece) or

  personally created (like those of H.P. Lovecraft). It makes no difference whether the Enochian

  Keys be phrased in honor of YHVH (as in John Dee’s diaries), in honor of Satan (as in the

  Satanic Bible), or in honor of Set (as in the Word of Set). Accusations of heresy, blasphemy, and/

  or inauthenticity - whether historically justified or not - are simply barking up the wrong tree

  from a magical standpoint.

  Another implication of the operational principle of GBM is that there is a large amount of it

  “loose” in the OU by individuals who are generating it without calling it by that name and

  without even realizing what they are doing. Every time we have an “objective impression” of

  something possessing a quality which its physical characteristics do not substantiate, we are

  sampling the results of a GBM operation on the OU.

  To take a few common examples: Snakes and rats are usually thought to be sneaky and evil,

  birds and cats beautiful; smog and sludge unnatural, trees and flowers natural. Many SUs agree

  upon and reinforce such interpretations, and in the OU it becomes increasingly difficult to

  identify the phenomenon in question without the subjectively-imposed “overlay”. [Such overlays

  may also be called “biases”, “prejudices”, or “points of perspective”.]

  We are thus the victims of a worldwide GBM epidemic which has manifest itself as political

  ideologies, artistic æsthetics, advertising, social morality, etc. We cannot honestly say that we

  “live” in the OU, but rather in a crazy-quilt of SU overlays on the OU. The first thing the

  magician must do is realize this; the second thing he must do is attempt to see and understand

  the actual OU through all the layers. The third thing he must do is attempt to change parts of the

  OU carefully and precisely through his own magical workings, both LBM and GBM.

  The “unconscious” GBM of profane society works because of sheer mass, as a herd of

  buffalo will break through a fence that would easily stop any one of them. At the same time this

  profane effort is chaotic, unreliable, and ultimately random in its consequences.

  - 228 -

  Attempts to control such massive social forces have been made by many political and

  religious leaders throughout history. All have failed in whole or in part, even when the illusion of

  control could be created. The individual Black Magician cannot change the OU through raw

  force; his is only a single, isolate will. He does possess, however, an understanding of how GBM

  works and the consequent ability to narrow his use of it to a precise, directed focus. It is this

  focus that enables his workings to succeed.

  If you have never undertaken GBM Workings before, some of the preconditions for them

  may strike you as unnecessary, even adolescent. Be patient, and you will come to see why they

  are not.

  You may think that you possess great powers of imagination, particularly if you have some

  skill at art, music, writing, or similar form of creative expression. Consider, however, that your

  soul - which communicates with the OU through your brain - constantly receives reinforcement

  of OU reality through your five physical senses. This reinforcement tends to act as a kind of

  “shock absorber” to your mind, cushioning and compensating for all ideas that do not

  correspond to OU parameters.

  What you will be doing in a formal GBM working is to change the signals which are received

  by your five senses, bringing them into synchronization with the concept on which you intend to

  focus. Thus you prepare for a working by constructing an artificial environment in the OU most

  closely attuned to it: a ritual chamber.

  There is no “official” design, nor required contents for a Setian ritual chamber. Our Reading

  List exemplifies how widely our interests vary, and a working emphasizing any one category of

  that List [or any other concept] would require appropriate accouterments.

  Thus a “classic Black Mass” in the most decadent tradition of Gothic horror novels might

  recreate the atmosphere of a gloomy, medieval crypt. A ritual utilizing spacial/dimensional

  concepts might make use of odd, Expressionistic angles, optical illusions, mirrored or irregular

  lighting effects, and atonal or inharmonious sound effects. Workings concerned with space may

  take place under the starry sky in a desert, where the absence of reflected light from cities reveals

  the cosmos in all its glory ... or in planetariums, observatories, or astrophysics laboratories.

  The more care you take to find or create the proper environment, the more potent the

  working itself will be. This is not just because a more elaborate ritual chamber is more exciting

  and evocative, but also because the very act of preparing it and anticipating the working

  contributes to the momentum of the working proper.

  The “ritual chamber” is not merely the room or open area in which you operate. The

  concept extends to everything apart from your self - including your physical body. You must be

  in good health, or sufficiently in control of your mental state of being not to allow physical

  maladies to intrude upon your concentration during the working. You must be awake and alert.

  You must be visibly [to others, if it is a group working] and mindfully [to yourself] clothed and/

  or costumed as appropriate. Your goal is to exclude all sensations which clash with the focus of

  the working, and to reinforce all sensations which enhance that focus.

  Address all five of the physical senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch, and taste. At the very

  least, take steps to ensure that no distracting sensation intrudes. As you become increasingly

  familiar with GBM, you will become more expert at creating environments to facilitate it. Do not

  expect to get everything exactly right the first time. And, of course, there may be circumstances

  rather beyond your complete control, such as mechanical background noise in urban areas - or

  crickets in rural ones!

  You have prepared yourself and your ritual chamber. It is the appropriate time of day or

  night [or you have blocked out all sensory inputs dictating
the time], and your invited assistants

  and/or fellow magicians are present. You are ready to commence the working itself.

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  You may use a full script or an outline, or you may proceed extemporaneously. Each has

  advantages: the script for formality and a sense of historical accuracy, extemporaneous speech

  for its sincerity and spontaneity, and an outline for a blending of both. Make your decision not

  on some assumption of what you “ought” to do, but rather on the basis of what feels right to

  you. You might use the text of a 4,000-year-old Egyptian incantation - but you may wish to

  change two words in it. Do so! Use a pre-prepared selection of gods and/or dæmons, or create

  some new ones yourself. Neither type is “inauthentic”. Gods exist as they are evoked to

  meaningful existence by the individual psyche.

  Every thought, statement, and action during the working should be directed towards its

  object. If your preparations have been thorough, you will find that you can attain far greater

  concentration - and maintain it for a longer span of [objective or subjective] time - than you

  suspect. Following the ritual you should not be surprised to feel correspondingly exhausted and

  drained of energy.

  It is not uncommon for a magician to find himself carried away by a ritual he is doing. The

  experience is so impressive, so wonderful, so overwhelming that he becomes transfixed by it

  both during and following the working. There is a very simple rule of thumb which should be

  applied in situations such as this, and it is: Bear in mind that the ritual itself is/was a

  personal, SU experience. If you wish to impress other magicians with it, you must translate

  that experience into a form that is comprehensible and meaningful to them. If you succeed, they

  will share your interest and enthusiasm, at least to a degree. If they are not interested or

  enthusiastic, do not condemn them for it. Either you have not explained it carefully enough to do

  justice to it, or it simply isn’t as relevant to their SUs as it is to yours. If you become

  antagonistic or resentful, you will accomplish nothing save to lessen your stature in their eyes.

  As discussed in Chapter #19, human beings are accustomed to projecting particular

  pictures of themselves into others’ SUs. This is a common LBM phenomenon. In GBM the

 

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