• ``Blasphemy''

    From Cori Schnieder@RICKSBBS to All on Sun Apr 5 06:22:49 2026
    ALEISTER CROWLEY

    Concerning ``Blasphemy''
    in General

    & the
    Rites of Eleusis
    in Particular

    This essay by Crowley first appeared in The Bystander during his
    staging of the Rites of Eleusis at Caxton Hall, London in 1910 E.V.
    This republication is dedicated to Senator Jesse Helms of North
    Carolina.--H.B.

    PIONEERS, O PIONEERS!


    WHENEVER it occurs to anyone to cut a new canal of any kind, he will
    be well advised to look out for trouble. If it be the ishthmus of
    Suez, the simple-minded engineer is apt to imagine that it is only a
    question of shifting so much sand; but before he can as much as strike
    the first pickaxe into the earth he finds that he is up against all
    kinds of interests, social, political, financial, and what-not. The
    same applies to the digging of canals in the human brain. When Simpson introduced chloroform, he thought it a matter for the physician; and
    found himself attacked from the pulpit. All his arguments proved
    useless; and we should probably be without chloroform to-day if some
    genius had not befriended him by discovering that God caused Adam to
    fall into a deep sleep before He removed the rib of which Eve was
    made.

    THE ABUSE OF THE GUTTER


    NOWADAYS a movement has to be very well on the way to success before
    it is attacked by any responsible people. The first trouble comes from
    the gutter. Now the language of the gutter consists chiefly of
    meaningless abuse, and the principal catch-words, coming as they do
    from the mouths of men who never open them without a profane oath or a
    foul allusion, are those of blasphemy and immorality. The charge of
    insanity is frequently added when the new idea is just sufficiently
    easy to understand a little. There is another reason, too, for these
    three particular cries; these are the charges which, if proved, can
    get the person into trouble, and at the same time which are in a sense
    true of everybody; for they all refer to a more or less arbitrary
    standard of normality. The old cry of ``heresy'' has naturally lost
    much of its force in a country nine-tenths of whose population are
    admittedly heretics; but immorality and insanity are to-day almost
    equally meaningless terms. The Censor permits musical comedy and
    forbids Oedipus Rex; and Mr. Bernard Shaw brands the Censor as immoral
    for doing so. Most people of the educated classes will probably agree
    with him.









    INSANITY AND BLASPHEMY


    AS FOR INSANITY, it is simply a question of finding a Greek or Latin
    name for any given act. If I open the window, it is on account of claustrophobia; when I shut it again, it is an attack of agarophobia.
    All the professors tell me that every form of emotion has its root in
    sex, and describe my fondness for pictures as if it were a peculiarly
    unnatural type of vice. It is even impossible for an architect to
    build a church spire without being told that he is reviving the
    worship of Priapus. Now, the only result of all this is that all these
    terms of abuse have become entirely meaningless, save as defined by
    law. There is still some meaning in the term ``Forger,'' as used in
    general speech; but only because it has not yet occurred to any
    wiseacre to prove that all his political and religious opponents are
    forgers. This seems to me a pity. There is, undoubtedly, a forged
    passage in Tacitus and another in Petronius. Everyone who studies the
    classics is, therefore, a kind of accomplice in forgery. The charge of blasphemy is in all cases a particularly senseless one. It has been
    hurled in turn at Socrates, Euripides, Christ, El-Mansur, the Baab,
    and the Rev. R. J. Campbell.

    THE MORALITY RED HERRING


    LEGAL BLASPHEMY is, of course, an entirely different thing. In the
    recent notorious case where an agent of the Rationalist Press
    Association, Harry Boulter by name, was prosecuted, the question
    proved to be not a theological one at all. It was really this, ``were
    the neighbours being annoyed?'' ``was the man's language coarse?'' and
    the Judge and Joseph McCabe agreed that it was. But in modern times no
    one has ever been prosecuted in any civilised country for stating
    philosophic propositions, whatever may be their theological
    implicatons. We have no longer the Casuists of the Inquisition, who
    would take the trouble to argue from Bruno's propositions of the
    immanence of God that, if that were so, the doctrine of the
    Incarnation was untenable (and therefore he shall be burned). It is
    only the very narrowest religious sects that trouble to call Herbert
    Spencer an Atheist. What the man in the street means by Atheist is the
    militant Atheist, Bradlaugh or Foote; and it is a singular
    characteristic of the Odium Theologicum that, instead of arguing
    soberly concerning the proposition, which those worthies put forward,
    they always try to drag the red herring of morality across the track.
    Of all the stupid lies that men have ever invented, nothing is much
    sillier than the lie that one who does not believe in God must be
    equally a disbeliever in morality. As a matter of fact, in a country
    which pretends so hard to appear theistic as England, it requires the
    most astounding moral courage, a positive galaxy of virtues, for a man
    to stand up and say that he does not believe in God; as Dr. Wace
    historically remarked, ``it ought to be unpleasant for a man to say
    that he does not believe in Jesus''; and my dislike to Atheism is
    principally founded on the fact that so many of its exponents are
    always boring me about ethics. Some priceless idiot, who, I hope, will
    finish in the British Museum, remarked in a free-thinking paper the
    other day, that they need not trouble to pull down the churches,
    ``because they will always be so useful for sane and serious
    discussion of important ethical problems.'' Personally, I would rather
    go back to the times when the preacher preached by the hour-glass.









    THE POT AND THE KETTLE


    I HAVE ALWAYS been very amused, too, in this connection of blasphemy
    by the perusal of Christian Missionary journals, on which I was
    largely brought up. They are full from cover to cover of the most
    scandalous falsehoods about heathen gods, and the most senseless
    insults to them, insults penned by the grossly ignorant of our
    religious population. It is only in quite recent years that the
    English public have discovered that Buddha was not a God, and it was
    not the missionaries that found this out, but scholars of secular
    attainment. In America, particularly, the most incredible falsehoods
    are constantly circulated by the Missionary Societies even about the
    customs of the Hindoos. To read them, one would suppose that every
    crocodile in India was fed with babies as the first religious duty of
    every Indian mother; but, of course, it is most terribly wicked for
    the Hindoo to make fun of the deities of the American. For my part,
    who have lived half my life in ``Christian'' countries and half my
    life in ``heathen'' countries, I cannot see much to choose between the different religions. Their arguments consist, in the end, of
    passionate assertion, which is no argument at all.

    RELIGION AND DRAW-POKER


    THERE IS an excellent story--much better known in India than in
    England--of a missionary, who was explaining to the poor heathen how
    useless were his gods. ``See!'' said he, ``I insult your idol, he is
    but of dead stone; he does not avenge himself, or punish me.'' ``I
    insult your God,'' replied the Hindoo, ``he is invisible; he does not
    avenge himself, or punish me.'' ``Ah!'' said the missionary, ``my God
    will punish you when you die''; and the poor Hindoo could only find
    the following pitiable answer: ``So, when you die, will my idol punish
    you.'' It was from America, too, that I obtained the first principle
    of religion; which is that four to a flush are not as good as one
    small pair.

    ORGIES!


    STILL, I SUPPOSE it is useless to contest the popular view that anyone
    whom any fool chooses to call an Atheist is liable to conduct
    ``orgies.'' Now, can anyone tell me what orgies are? No? Then I must
    reach down the Lexicon. Orgia, only used in the plural and connected
    with Ergon (work), means sacred rites, sacred worship practised by the initiated at the sacred worship of Demeter at Eleusis, and also the
    rites of Bacchus. It also means any rites, or worship, or sacrifice,
    of any mysteries without any reference to religion; and Orgazio means, therefore, to celebrate Orgies, or ceremonies, or to celebrate any
    sacred rites. It is really a poor comment upon the celebration of
    sacred rites that the word should have come to mean something entirely different, as it does to-day. For the man in the street Orgie means a
    wild revel usually accompanied by drunkenness. I think it is almost
    time that someone took the word Orgie as a Battle Cry, and, having
    shown that the Eucharist is only one kind of orgie to restore the true enthusiasm (which is not of an alcoholic or sexual nature) among the
    laity; for it is no secret that the falling away of all nations from








    religion, which only a few blind-worms are fatuous enough to deny, is
    due to the fact that the fire no longer burns in the sacred lamp.
    Outside a few monasteries there is hardly any church of any sect whose
    members really expect anything to happen to them from attending public
    worship. It a new Saint Paul were to journey to Damascus, the doctor
    would be called in and his heavenly vision diagnosed as epilepsy. If a
    new Mahomed came from his cave and announced himself a messenger of
    God, he would be thought a harmless lunatic. And that is the first
    stage of a religious propaganda.

    THE STATIONS OF THE CROSS


    NOW THE REAL MESSENGER of God can always be distinguished in a very
    simple way. He possesses a mysterious force which enables him to
    persist, heedless of the sneers and laughter of the populace. It then
    strikes the wiser people that he is dangerous; and they begin on the
    blasphemy and immorality tack. In the life of our Lord, this will be
    noticed. In the first place, there was just the contemptuous ``he hath
    a devil,'' which was the equivalent of our ``he's just a crank,'' but
    when it was found that this crank had adherents, men of force and
    eloquence like Peter, to say nothing of financial genius like Judas
    Iscariot, the cry was quickly changed into wild accusations of
    blasphemy and allegations of immorality. ``He is a friend of publicans
    and sinners.'' A sane Government only laughs at these ebullitions; and
    it is then the task of the Pharisees to prove to the Government that
    it is to its interest to suppress this dangerous upstart. They may
    succeed; and though the Government is never for a moment blind to the
    fact that it is doing an injustice, the new Saviour is crucified. It
    is this final publicity of crucifixion (for advertisement is just as
    necessary in one age as another) that secures the full triumph to him
    whom his enemies fondly suppose to be their victim. Such is human
    blindness, that the messenger himself, his enemies, and the civil
    power, all of them do exactly the one thing which will defeat their
    ends. The messenger would never succeed at all if it were not that he
    is The Messenger, and it really matters very little what steps he may
    take to get the message delivered. For all concerned are but pawns in
    the great game played by infinite wisdom and infinite power.

    ORDERLY, DECOROUS CEREMONIES


    IT IS, therefore, a negligible matter, this abuse, from whatever
    source it comes. It should waste my time if I were to prove that the
    rites of Eleusis, as now being performed at Caxton Hall, are orderly,
    decorous ceremonies. It is true that at times darkness prevails; so it
    does in some of Wagner's operas and in certain ceremonies of a
    mystical character which will occur to the minds of a large section of
    my male readers. There are, moreover, periods of profound silence, and
    I can quite understand that in such an age of talk as this, that seems
    a very suspicious circumstance!



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