• BAPHOMET XI Book 194

    From Cori Schnieder@RICKSBBS to All on Fri Apr 3 06:24:07 2026
    BAPHOMET XI

    Liber CXCIV

    {Book 194}

    O. T. O.

    An Intimation
    with Reference to the
    Constitution of the Order

    This Intimation is presently being implemented in the United States--
    the most significant recent development was the institution of the
    Electoral College. Unlike the Constitution proper, which has a
    decidedly international emphasis, most of its clauses govern national operations. This Intimation should be closely studied in conjunction
    with the Constitution, the Open Letter and other relevant papers
    published in this volume by those who are concerned with the future
    direction of the O.T.O., in the United States and abroad. It first
    appeared in The Equinox III(1) (Detroit: Universal, 1919). Paragraph
    numbers have been supplied for reference purposes, and it is followed
    by a synthetic, diagrammatic representation of the Intimations
    prepared by the New York Constitutional Study Group.--H.B.

    Issued by Order: BAPHOMET XI O.T.O., HIBERNIAE IONAE ET OMNIUM
    BRITANNIARUM, REX SUMMUS SANCTISSIMUS

    ANY PROVINCE OF THE O.T.O. is governed by the Grand Master and those
    to whom he delegates his authority, until such time as the Order is established, which is the case when it possesses eleven or more
    Profess-Houses in the province. Then the regular constitution is
    automatically promulgated. The quotation is slightly adapted from an
    address in one of the rituals.

    1. This is the Constitution and Government of our Holy Order; by the
    study of its Balance you may yourself come to apprehension of how to
    rule your own life. For, in True Things, all are but images one of
    another; man is but a map of the universe, and Society is but the same
    on a larger scale.

    2. Learn then that our Holy Order has but Three True Grades; as it is
    written in The Book of the Law: The Hermit, The Lover, and the Man of
    Earth.

    3. It is but for convenience that these grades have been separated
    into Three Triads.

    4. The Third Triad consists of the degrees from Minerval to Prince of Jerusalem. The Minerval degree is a Prologue to the First; the degrees subsequent to the Third but pendants to it. In this, the Man of Earth
    series, there are then but Three Degrees; and these Three are One.









    5. The Man of Earth takes no share in the Government of the Order; for
    he is not yet called upon to give his life to it in service; and with
    us Government is Service, and nothing else. The Man of Earth is
    therefore in much the position of the Plebian in Rome in the time of
    Menenius Agrippa. But there is this marked difference; that every Man
    of Earth is encouraged and expected to push on to the next stage. In
    order that the feelings of the general body may be represented, the
    Men of Earth choose four persons, two men and two women, from among
    themselves, to stand continually before the face of the Father, the
    Supreme and Holy King, serving him day and night. These persons must
    not be of higher rank than the Second Degree; they must volunteer for
    this service at the conclusion of that ceremony; and therefore they
    give up their own prospect of advancement in the Order for one year,
    that they may serve their fellows. This is then the first lesson in
    our great principle, the attainment of honour through renunciation.

    6. The degree of Knights of the East and West is but a bridge between
    the first and second series; but it is important, for in that grade a
    new pledge-form must be signed, and the new Knight vowed to devote his
    life to the Establishment of the Law of Thelema.

    7. The members of the Fifth Degree are responsible for all that
    concerns the Social welfare of the Order. This grade is symbolically
    that of beauty and harmony; it is the natural stopping-place of the
    majority of men and women; for to proceed farther, as will appear,
    involves renunciation of the sternest kind. Here then is all joy,
    peace, well-being on all planes; the Sovereign Prince Rose Croix is
    attached equally to the higher and the lower, and forms a natural link
    between them. Yet let him look to it that his eyes are set on high!

    8. In this degree the Most Wise Sovereign of each chapter will appoint
    a committee of four persons, two men and two women, to arrange for all
    social gatherings, banquets, dances, the performance of plays, and
    similar pleasures. They will also endeavour to promote harmony among
    the Brethren in all possible ways, and to compose any disputes by tact
    and friendliness without formal appeal being made to any more
    authoritative tribunal.

    9. The next grade, that which lies between the Fifth and Sixth
    Degrees, is called the Senate. This is the first of the governing
    bodies, properly speaking, and here we begin to insist upon
    Renunciation. For within this body is the Electoral College of the
    O.T.O.

    10. The principle of popular election is a fatal folly; its results
    are visible in every so-called democracy. The elected man is always
    the mediocrity; he is the safe man, the sound man, the man who
    displeases the majority less than any other; and therefore never the
    genius, the man of progress and illumination.

    11. This electoral college consists of Eleven Persons in each country.
    It has full control of the affairs of the Men of Earth, appointing
    Lodge Masters at will. It has however no authority over the Chapters
    of Rose Croix.

    12. Persons who wish to be appointed to this College by the Supreme
    and Holy King must volunteer for the office. The appointment is for
    Eleven Years. Volunteers must renounce for that period all further








    progress in the Order. They must give evidence of first-rate ability
    in

    i(i) Some branch of athletics.

    (ii) Some branch of learning.

    13. They must also possess a profound general knowledge of history and
    of the art of government, with some attention to philosophy in
    general.

    14. They must each live in solitude, without more than the necessary
    speech even to casual neighbours, serving themselves in all respects,
    for three months continuously, once at least in every two years. The
    President will summon them at the four seasons of the year, and if
    necessary at other times, when they will deliberate upon the affairs
    placed in their charge. All applications to pass to the Fifth Degree
    must receive their sanction. Appeal from their decisions may however
    be made to the Supreme Council.

    15. The Sixth Degree is an executive or military body, and represents
    the temporal power of the Supreme and Holy King. Each member is
    amenable to military discipline. Singly or in concert with his
    comrades, each Knight is vowed to enforce the decisions of authority.

    16. The Grade of Grand Inquisitor Commander follows. Here every member
    has the right to a seat on the Grand Tribunal, which body decides all
    disputes and complaints which have not been composed by the Chapters
    of Rose Croix or the Lodge Masters. Its verdicts are without appeal,
    unless a member of the Electoral College give sanction to take the
    case to the Areopagus of the Eighth Degree. All members of the Order,
    even of higher grades, are subject to the Grand Tribunal.

    17. The next grade is that of Prince of the Royal Secret. Every member
    of this degree is devoted to the Propagation of the Law in a very
    special manner; for this grade is the first in which the Beginning of
    the Inmost Secret is declared openly. He will therefore, by his
    personal exertions, induce one hundred and eleven persons to join the
    Order, before he may proceed to the Seventh Degree, except by special
    order from the Supreme and Holy King.

    18. The Seventh Degree is, in military language, the Great General
    Staff of the Army of the Sixth Degree. From its members the Supreme
    and Holy King appoints a Supreme Grand Council.

    19. This Council is charged with the government of the whole of the
    Second Triad, or Lovers. All members of the Seventh Degree travel as
    Sovereign Grand Inspectors General of the Order, and report, on their
    own initiative, to the Supreme and Most Holy King, as to the condition
    of all Lodges, and Chapters; to the Supreme Council, on all affairs of
    the Second Triad; and to the Electoral College, on those of the Third.

    20. The Eighth Degree is a Philosophical Body. Its members being fully instructed in the Principles of the Order, save in one point only,
    devote themselves to the understanding of what they have learned in
    their initiation. They have power to reverse the decisions of the
    Grand Tribunal, and to compose all conflicts between any of the
    governing bodies. And this they do upon the great principles of








    philosophy. For it will often occur that there is contention between
    two parties, both of whom are right from their own point of view. This
    is so important that an illustration is desirable. A man is smitten
    with leprosy; is it right that men should circumscribe his liberty by
    isolating him from his fellows? Another holds back land or some other
    necessity from the common use; is he to be compelled to surrender it?
    Such cases of difficulty involve deep philosophical principles; and
    the Areopagus of the Eighth Degree is charged with the duty of
    resolving them in accordance with the great principles of the Order.

    21. Before the face of the Areopagus stands an independent Parliament
    of the Guilds. Within the Order, irrespective of grade, the members of
    each craft, trade, science, or profession form themselves into a
    Guild, make their own laws, and prosecute their own good, in all
    matters pertaining to their labour and means of livelihood. Each Guild
    chooses the man most eminent in it to represent it before the
    Areopagus of the Eighth Degree; and all disputes between the various
    Guilds are argued before that Body, which will decide according to the
    grand principles of the Order. Its decisions pass for ratification to
    the Sanctuary of the Gnosis, and thence to the Throne.

    22. Epopts and Pontiffs of this exalted grade are bound to live in
    isolation for four consecutive months in every year, meditating the
    mysteries revealed to them.

    23. The Ninth Degree--the Sanctuary of the Gnosis--is synthetic. The
    prime duty of its members is to study and practise the theurgy and
    thaumaturgy of the grade; but in addition they must be prepared to act
    as direct representatives of the Supreme and Most Holy King, radiating
    his light upon the whole world. Yet, from the nature of their
    initiation, they must veil their glory in a cloud of darkness. They
    move unseen and unrecognized among the youngest of us, subtly and
    loftily leading us into the holy ineffable mysteries of the True
    Light.

    24. The Supreme and Most Holy King is appointed by the O.H.O. His is
    the ultimate responsibility for all within his holy kingdom. The
    succession to the high office of O.H.O. is decided in a manner not
    here to be declared; but this you may learn, O Brother Magician, that
    he may be chosen even from the grade of a Minerval. And herein lieth a
    most sacred Mystery.

    25. The Electoral College possesses one most singular power. Every
    eleven years, or in the case of a vacancy occurring, they choose two
    persons from the Ninth Degree, who are charged with the duty of
    Revolution.

    26. It is the business of these persons constantly to criticise and
    oppose the acts of the Supreme and Most Holy King, whether or no they personally approve of them. Should he exhibit weakness, bodily,
    mental, or moral, they are empowered to appeal to the O.H.O. to depose
    him; but they, alone of all the members of the Order, are not eligible
    to the Succession.

    27. The O.H.O., as the supreme authority in the Order, will act, in
    such an emergency, as he may see fit. He may himself be removed from
    office, but only by the unanimous vote of all the members of the Tenth
    Degree.









    28. Of the Eleventh Degree, its powers, privileges, and
    qualifications, nothing whatever is said in any grade. It has no
    relation to the general plan of the Order, is inscrutable, and dwells
    in its own Palaces.

    29. There are certain important financial obligations in various
    grades.

    30. The Electoral College of the Senate is vowed to poverty. All
    property, earnings, or salaries are vested in or paid over to the
    Grand Treasurer General. The members subsist on the charity of the
    Order, which is extended to them in accordance with their original
    rank in life.

    31. These remarks apply equally to the Supreme Grand Council, and all
    higher degrees.

    32. In the Seventh Degree it is a qualification to vest some real
    property in the Order; and no one is admitted to this grade without
    this preliminary.

    33. Those members of the Order who have given all to it must obtain
    the money for their initiation fees and subscriptions from the Third
    Triad, whose honour is thus concerned in the unselfish support of
    those who have abandoned all for their sakes.

    34. The Grand Treasurer General is appointed by the Supreme and Most
    Holy King; he may be a member of any grade whatever; but he must, on
    accepting office, take the vow of poverty. His authority is absolute
    in all financial matters; but he is responsible to, and may be removed
    at will by, the Supreme and Most Holy King. He will appoint a
    committee to assist him and advise him in his work; and he will
    usually select one person from each of the governing bodies of the
    Order.

    Such is a brief outline of the government of the O.T.O. It combines
    monarchy with democracy; it includes aristocracy, and conceals even
    the seeds of revolution, by which alone progress can be effected. Thus
    we balance the Triads, uniting the Three in One; thus we gather up all
    the threads of human passion and interest, and weave them into an
    harmonious tapestry, subtly and diligently with great art, that our
    Order may seem an ornament even to the Stars that are in the Heavens
    at Night. In our rainbow-coloured texture we set forth the glory of
    the whole Universe--See thou to it, brother Magician, that thine own
    thread be strong, and pure, and of a colour brilliant in itself, yet
    ready to mingle in all beauty with those of thy brethren!


    Cori,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
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