• Khabs am Pekht

    From Cori Schnieder@RICKSBBS to All on Fri Apr 3 06:25:14 2026
    Liber CCC

    {Book 300}

    Khabs am Pekht

    This Epistle is important in that it helps place the work of the
    O.T.O. as a temporal organization in perspective. Addressed by The
    Master Therion to his magical Son Frater V.I.O. 8 =3 (Parzival X
    O.T.O.), it has a special relevance to modern times. It first appeared
    in The Equinox I(3) (Detroit: Universal, 1919). Most of the quotations
    are from Liber Legis--The Book of the Law.--H.B.


    AN EPISTLE OF THERION 9 =2, A MAGUS OF A...A... TO HIS SON, BEING AN INSTRUCTION IN A MATTER OF ALL IMPORTANCE, TO WIT, THE MEANS
    TO BE TAKEN TO EXTEND THE DOMINION OF THE LAW OF THELEMA THROUGHOUT
    THE WHOLE WORLD.


    Son,

    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.


    FIRSTLY, let thine attention be directed to this planet, how the Aeon
    of Horus is made manifest by the Universal War. This is the first
    great and direct result of the Equinox of the Gods, and is the
    preparation of the hearts of men for the reception of the Law.

    Let Us remind you that this is a magical formula of cosmic scope, and
    that it is given in exact detail in the legend of the Golden Fleece.

    Jason, who in this story represents the Beast, first fits out a ship
    guided by Wisdom or Athena, and this is his aspiration to the Great
    Work. Accompanied by many heroes, he comes to the place of the Fleece,
    but they can do nothing until Medea, the Scarlet Woman, puts into his
    hands a posset ``drugged with somnolence, Sleepy with poppy and white hellebore'' for the dragon. Then Jason is able to subdue the bulls,
    sacred to Osiris, and symbolical of his Aeon and of the Magical
    Formula of Self-Sacrifice. With these he plows the field of the world,
    and sows therein ``the dreadful teeth of woe, Cadmean Stock of Thebes'
    old misery,'' which refers to a certain magical formula announced by
    The Beast that is familiar unto thee, but unsuited to the profane, and therefore not further in this place indicated. From this seed armed
    men sprung to life; but instead of attacking Him, ``mutual madness
    strikes The warriors witless, and fierce wrath invades Their hearts of
    fury, and with arms engaged, They fell upon each other silently, And
    slew, and slew.'' Now then, the Dragon being asleep, we may step
    quietly past him, and ``rending the branches of that wizard Oak, With
    a strong grasp tear down the Fleece of Gold.''

    Let us only remember not to repeat the error of Jason, and defy Ares,
    who is Horus in his warrior mood, that guardeth it, lest He strike us







    also with madness. Nay! but to the glory of Ra-Hoor-Khuit and the
    establishment of His perfect kingdom let all be done!

    Now, O my son, thou knowest that it is Our will to establish this
    Work, accomplishing fully that which We are commanded in The Book of
    the Law, ``Help me, O warrior lord of Thebes, in my unveiling before
    the children of men!''--and it is Thy will, manifesting as thou hast
    done in the Sphere of Malkuth the material world, to do this same
    thing in an even more immediate and practical way than would naturally
    appeal to one whose manifestation is in the Heaven of Jupiter. So
    therefore We now answer Thy filial petition that asketh good counsel
    of Us as to the means to be taken to extend the Law of Thelema
    throughout the whole world.

    Direct therefore now most closely thine attention to The Book of the
    Law itself. In It we find an absolute rule of life, and clear
    instruction in every emergency that may befall. What then are Its own directions for the fructification of That Ineffable Seed? Note, pray
    thee, the confidence with which we may proceed. ``They shall gather my
    children into their fold; they shall bring the glory of the stars into
    the hearts of men.'' They `shall'; there is no doubt. Therefore doubt
    not, but strike with all thy strength. Note also, pray thee, this
    word: ``The Law is for all.'' Do not therefore `select suitable
    persons' in thy worldly wisdom; preach openly the Law to all men. In
    Our experience We have found that the most unlikely means have
    produced the best results; and indeed it is almost the definition of a
    true Magical Formula that the means should be unsuited, rationally
    speaking, to the end proposed. Note, pray thee, that We are bound to
    teach. ``He must teach; but he may make severe the ordeals.'' This
    refers, however, as is evident from the context, to the technique of
    the new Magick, ``the mantras and spells; the obeah and the wanga; the
    work of the wand and the work of the sword.''

    Note, pray thee, the instruction in CCXX I:41-n-44, 51, 61, 63 k.t.l.
    on which We have enlarged in Our tract The Law of Liberty, and in
    private letters to thee and to others. The open preaching of this Law,
    and the practice of these precepts, will arouse discussion and
    animosity, and thus place thee upon a rostrum whence thou mayst speak
    unto the people.

    Note, pray thee, this mentor: ``Remember ye that existence is pure
    joy; that all the sorrows are but shadows; they pass and are done; but
    there is that which remains.'' For this doctrine shall comfort many.
    Also there is this word: ``They shall rejoice, our chosen; who
    sorroweth is not of us. Beauty and strength, leaping laughter and
    delicious languor, force and fire, are of us.'' Indeed in all ways
    thou mayest expound the joy of our Law; nay, for thou shalt overflow
    with the joy thereof, and have no need of words. It would moreover be impertinent and tedious to call again thine attention to all those
    passages that thou knowest so well. Note, pray thee, that in the
    matter of direct instruction there is enough. Consider the passage
    ``Choose ye an island! Fortify it! Dung it about with enginery of war!
    I will give you a war-engine. With it ye shall smite the peoples; and
    none shall stand before you. Lurk! Withdraw! Upon them! This is the
    Law of the Battle of Conquest: thus shall my worship be about my
    secret house.'' The last phrase suggests that the island may be Great
    Britain, with its Mines and Tanks; and it is notable that a certain
    brother obligated to A...A... is in the most secret of England's War








    Councils at this hour. But it is possible that all this instruction
    refers to some later time when our Law, administered by some such
    Order as the O.T.O. which concerns itself with temporal affairs, is of
    weight in the councils of the world, and is challenged by the heathen,
    and by the followers of the fallen gods and demigods.

    Note, pray thee, the practical method of overcoming opposition given
    in CCXX III:23-n-26. But this is not to Our immediate purpose in this
    epistle. Note, pray thee, the instruction in the 38th and 39th verses
    of the Third Chapter of The Book of the Law. It must be quoted in
    full.

    ``So that thy light is in me; and its red flame is as a sword in my
    hand to push thy order.''

    That is, the God himself is aflame with the Light of The Beast, and
    will himself push the order, through the fire (perhaps meaning the
    genius) of The Beast.

    ``There is a secret door that I shall make to establish thy way in all
    the quarters (these are the adorations, as thou hast written) as it is
    said:

    The Light is mine; its rays consume
    Me: I have made a secret door
    Into the House of Ra and Tum,
    Of Khephra, and of Ahathoor.
    I am thy Theban, O Mentu,
    The prophet Ankh-f-na-khonsu!

    By Bes-na-Maut my breast I beat;
    By wise Ta-Nech I weave my spell.
    Show thy star-splendour, O Nuit!
    Bid me within thine House to dwell,
    O winged snake of light, Hadit!
    Abide with me, Ra-Hoor-Khuit!''

    In the comment in Equinox I(7) this passage is virtually ignored. It
    is possible that this ``secret door'' refers to the four men and four
    women spoken of later in The Paris Working, or it may mean the child
    elsewhere predicted, or some secret preparation of the hearts of men.
    It is difficult to decide on such a point, but we may be sure that the
    Event will show that the exact wording was so shaded as to prove to us
    absolute foreknowledge on the part of That Most Holy Angel who uttered
    the Book.

    Note, pray thee, further, in verse 39, how the matter proceeds:

    ``All this''--i.e. The Book of the Law itself.

    ``and a book to say how didst come hither'' i.e. some record such as
    that in The Temple of Solomon the King.

    ``And a reproduction of this ink and paper for ever'' i.e. by some
    mechanical process, with possibly a sample of paper similar to that
    employed.

    ``--for in it is the word secret and not only in the English--''









    Compare CCXX III:47, 73. The secret is still a secret to Us.

    ``And thy comment upon this the Book of the Law shall be printed
    beautifully in red ink and black upon beautiful paper made by hand;''
    i.e. explain the text ``lest there be folly'' as it says above, CCXX
    I:36.

    ``And to each man and woman that thou meetest, were it but to dine or
    to drink at them, it is the Law to give. Then they shall chance to
    abide in this bliss or no; it is no odds. Do this quickly!''

    From this it is evident that a volume must be prepared as signified--
    Part IV of Book 4 was intended to fulfil this purpose--and that this
    book must be distributed widely, in fact to every one with whom one
    comes into social relations.

    We are not to add to this gift by preaching and the like. They can
    take it or leave it.

    Note, pray thee, verse 41 of this chapter:

    ``Establish at thy Kaaba a clerk-house; all must be done well and with
    business way.''

    This is very clear instruction indeed. There is to be a modern
    centralized business organization at the Kaaba--which, We think, does
    not mean Boleskine, but any convenient headquarters.

    Note, pray thee, in verse 42 of this chapter the injunction: ``Success
    is thy proof: argue not; convert not; talk not overmuch.'' This is not
    any bar to an explanation of the Law. We may aid men to strike off
    their own fetters; but those who prefer slavery must be allowed to do
    so. ``The slaves shall serve.'' The excellence of the Law must be
    showed by its results upon those who accept it. When men see us as the
    hermits of Hadit described in CCXX II:24, they will determine to
    emulate our joy.

    Note, pray thee, the whole implication of the chapter that sooner or
    later we are to break the power of the slaves of the slave-gods by
    actual fighting. Ultimately, Freedom must rely upon the sword. It is
    impossible to treat in this epistle of the vast problems involved in
    this question; and they must be decided in accordance with the Law by
    those in authority in the Order when the time comes. Thou wilt note
    that We have written unto thee more as a member of the O.T.O., than in
    thy capacity as of the A...A..., for the former organization is co-
    ordinate and practical, and concerns itself with material things. But
    remember this clearly, that the Law cometh from the A...A..., not from
    the O.T.O. This Order is but the first of the great religious bodies
    to accept this Law officially, and its whole Ritual has been revised
    and reconstituted in accordance with this decision. Now then, leaving
    The Book of the Law, note, pray thee, the following additional
    suggestions for extending the Dominion of the Law of Thelema
    throughout the whole world.

    1. All those who have accepted the Law should announce the same in
    daily intercourse. ``Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law''
    shall be the invariable form of greeting. These words, especially in








    the case of strangers, should be pronounced in a clear, firm, and
    articulate voice, with the eyes frankly fixed upon the bearer. If the
    other be of us, let him reply ``Love is the law, love under will.''
    The latter sentence shall also be used as the greeting of farewell. In
    writing, wherever greeting is usual, it should be as above, opening
    ``Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.'', and closing
    ``Love is the law, love under will.''

    2. Social gatherings should be held as often as is convenient, and
    there the Law should be read and explained.

    3. The special tracts written by Us, or authorized by Us, should be
    distributed to all persons with whom those who have accepted the Law
    may be in contact.

    4. Pending the establishment of other Universities and Schools of
    Thelema, scholarships and readerships and such should be provided in
    existing Schools and Universities, so as to secure the general study
    of Our writings, and those authorized by Us as pertaining to the New
    Aeon.

    5. All children and young people, although they may not be able to
    understand the more exalted heavens of our horoscope, may always be
    taught to rule their lives in accordance with the Law. No efforts
    should be spared to bring them to this emancipation. The misery caused
    to children by the operation of the law of the slave-gods was, one may
    say, the primum mobile of Our first aspiration to overthrow the Old
    Law.

    6. By all manner of means shall all strive constantly to increase the
    power and freedom of the Headquarters of the O.T.O.; for thereby will
    come efficiency in the promulgation of the Law. Specific instructions
    for the extension of the O.T.O. are given in another epistle.

    Constant practice of these recommendations will develop skill in him
    or her that practiseth, so that new ideas and plans will be evolved continually.

    Furthermore, it is right that each and every one bind himself with an
    Oath Magical that he may thus make Freedom perfect, even by a bond, as
    in Liber III it is duly written. Amen.

    Now, son, note, pray thee, in what house We write these words. For it
    is a little cottage of red and green, by the western side of a great
    lake, and it is hidden in the woods. Man, therefore, is at odds with
    Wood and Water; and being a magician bethinketh Himself to take one of
    these enemies, Wood, which is both the effect and the cause of that
    excess of Water, and compel it to fight for Him against the other.
    What then maketh He? Why, He taketh unto himself Iron of Mars, an Axe
    and a Saw and a Wedge and a Knife, and He divideth Wood therewith
    against himself, hewing him into many small pieces, so that he hath no
    longer any strength against His will. Good; then taketh He the Fire of
    our Father the Sun, and setteth it directly in battle array against
    that Water by His army of Wood that he hath conquered and drilled,
    building it up into a phalanx like unto a Cone, that is the noblest of
    all solid figures, being the Image of the Holy Phallus Itself, and
    combined in himself the Right Line and the Circle. Thus, son, dealeth
    He; and the Fire kindleth the Wood, and the heat thereof driveth the








    Water afar off. Yet this Water is a cunning adversary, and He
    strengthened Wood against Fire by impregnating him with much of his
    own substance, as it were by spies in the citadel of any ally that is
    not wholly trusted. Now then therefore what must the Magician do? He
    must first expel utterly Water from Wood by an invocation of the Fire
    of the Sun our Father. That is to say, without the inspiration of the
    Most High and Holy One even We ourselves could do nothing at all.
    Then, son, beginneth the Magician to set His Fire to the little dry
    Wood, and that enkindleth the Wood of middle size, and when that
    blazeth brightly, at the last the great logs, through they be utterly
    green, are nevertheless enkindled.

    Now, son, hearken unto this Our reproof, and lend the ear of thine understanding unto the parable of this Magick.

    We have for the whole Beginning of Our Work, praise be eternally unto
    His Holy Name, the Fire of our Father the Sun. The inspiration is
    ours, and ours is the Law of Thelema that shall set the world ablaze.
    And We have many small dry sticks, that kindle quickly and burn
    through quickly, leaving the larger Wood unlit. And the great logs,
    the masses of humanity, are always with us. But our edged need is of
    those middle fagots that on the one hand are readily kindled by the
    small Wood, and on the other endure until the great logs blaze.

    (Behold how sad a thing it is, quoth the Ape of Thoth, for one to be
    so holy that he cannot chop a tree and cook his food without preparing
    upon it a long and tedious Morality!)

    Let this epistle be copied and circulated among all those that have
    accepted the Law of Thelema.

    Receive now Our paternal benediction: the Benediction of the All-
    Begetter be upon thee.

    Love is the law, love under will.


    VHRION 9 =2 A...A...


    Given under Our hand and seal this day of An XII, the Sun our Father
    being in 12 42{'} 2" of the sign Leo, and the Moon in 25 39{'} 11"
    of the sign Libra, from the House of the Juggler, that is by Lake
    Pasquaney in the State of New Hampshire.



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