CHAPTER XV
I
OF THE INVOCATION
In the straightforward or "Protestant" system of Magick there is very little
to add to what has already been said. The Magician addresses a direct petition to the
Being invoked. But the secret of success in invocation has not hitherto been disclosed. It
is an exceedingly simple one. It is practically of no importance whatever that the
invocation should be "right". There are a thousand different ways of compassing
the end proposed, so far as external things are concerned. The whole secret may be
summarised in these four words: "Enflame thyself in praying."
This is Qabalistically expressed in the old Formula: Domine noster, audi tuo servo!
kyrie Christe! O Christe!
The mind must be exalted until it loses consciousness of self. The Magician must be
carried forward blindly by a force which, though in him and of him, is by no means that
which he in his normal state of consciousness calls I. Just as the poet, the lover, the
artist, is carried out of himself in a creative frenzy, so must it be for the Magician.
It is impossible to lay down rules for the obtaining of this special stimulus. To one
the mystery of the whole ceremony may appeal; another may be moved by the strangeness of
the words, even by the fact that the "barbarous names" are unintelligible to
him. Some times in the course of a ceremony the true meaning of some barbarous name that
has hitherto baffled his analysis may flash upon him, luminous and splendid, so that he is
caught up unto orgasm. The smell of a particular incense may excite him effectively, or
perhaps the physical ecstasy of the magick dance.
Every Magician must compose his ceremony in such a manner as to produce a dramatic
cilmax. At the moment when the excitement becomes ungovernable, when then the whole
conscious being of the Magician undergoes a spiritual spasm, at that moment must he utter
the supreme adjuration.
One very effective method is to stop short, by a supreme effort of will, again and
again, on the very brink of that spasm, until a time arrives when the idea of exercising
that will fails to occur.
This forgetfulness must be complete; it is fatal to try to "let oneself
go" consciously.
Inhibition is no longer possible or even thinkable, and the whole being of the
Magician, no minutest atom saying nay, is irresistibly flung forth. In blinding light,
amid the roar of ten thousand thunders, the Union of God and man is consummated.
If the Magician is still seen standing in the Circle, quietly pursuing his invocations,
it is that all the conscious part of him has become detached from the true ego which lies
behind that normal consciousness. But the circle is wholly filled with that divine
essence; all else is but an accident and an illusion.
The subsequent invocations, the gradual development and materialization of the force,
require no effort. It is one great mistake of the beginner to concentrate his force upon
the actual stated purpose of the ceremony. This mistake is the most frequent cause of
failures in invocation.
A corollary of this Theorem is that the Magician soon discards evocation almost
altogether --- only rare circumstances demand any action what ever on the material plane.
The Magician devotes himself entirely to the invocation of a god; and as soon as his
balance approaches perfection he ceases to invoke any partial god; only that god
vertically above him is in his path. And so a man who perhaps took up Magick merely with
the idea of acquiring knowledge, love, or wealth, finds himself irrevocably committed to
the performance of The Great Work.
It will now be apparent that there is no distinction between magick and meditation
except of the most arbitrary and accidental kind.
There is the general metaphysical antithesis that Magick is the Art of the
Will-to-Live, Mysticism of the Will-to-Die; but --- "Truth comes bubbling to my brim;
Life and Death are one to Him!".
II
Beside these open methods thee are also a number of mental methods of Invocation, of
which we may give three.
The first method concerns the so-called astral body. The Magician should practise the
formation of this body as recommended in Liber O, and learn to rise on the planes
according to the instruction given in the same book, though limiting his
"rising" to the particular symbol whose God he wishes to invoke.
The second is to recite a mantra suitable to the God.
The third is the assumption of the form of the God --- by transmuting the astral body
into His shape. This last method is really essential to all proper invocation, and cannot
be too sedulously practised.
There are many other devices to aid invocation, so many that it is impossible to
enumerate them; and the Magician will be wise to busy himself in inventing new ones.
We will give one example.
Suppose the Supreme Invocation to consist of 20 to 30 barbarous names, let him imagine
these names to occupy sections of a vertical column, each double the length of the
preceding one; and let him imagine that his consciousness ascends the column with each
name. The mere multiplication will then produce a feeling of awe and bewilderment which is
the proper forerunner of exstasy.
In the essay "Energized Enthusiasm" in No. IX, Vol. I of the Equinox
The earliest and truest Christians used what is in all essentials this method. See
"Fragments of a Faith Forgotten" by G.R.S.Mead, Esq. B. A., pp. 80-81.
There is a real connexion between what the vulgar call blasphemy and what they call
immorality, in the fact that the Christian legend is an echo of a Phallic rite. There is
also a true and positive connexion between the Creative force of the Macrocosm, and that
of the Microcosm. For this reason the latter must be made a pure and consecrated as the
former. The puzzle for most people is how to do this. The study of Nature is the Key to
that Gate.
is given a concise account of one of the classical methods of arousing Kundalini. This
essay should be studied with care and determination.
 
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