855 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
855 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
File: InfoAdms
|
|
|
|
TEMPLE OF SET
|
|
Post Office Box 470307
|
|
San Francisco, CA 94147
|
|
U.S.A.
|
|
MCI-Mail: 314-3953
|
|
Internet: 3143953@mcimail.com
|
|
Telex: 6503143953
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
GENERAL INFORMATION AND ADMISSIONS POLICIES
|
|
(c) 1986-1994CE Temple of Set
|
|
- Updated October 6, 1994 CE -
|
|
|
|
Thank you for your inquiry. The Temple of Set is an institution
|
|
unlike any you have previously encountered. Before you can make an
|
|
informed decision concerning possible affiliation, it is necessary
|
|
for you to consider the history of the Temple, its basic tenets, its
|
|
current design and programs, and the benefits and obligations
|
|
incurred by each Setian.
|
|
|
|
HISTORY OF THE TEMPLE
|
|
|
|
While the Temple of Set as an organization was formally incorporated
|
|
in 1975 CE, its magical and philosophical roots are prehistoric,
|
|
originating in mankind's first apprehension that there is "something
|
|
different" about the human race - a sense of *self-consciousness*
|
|
that places humanity apart from and above all other known forms of
|
|
life.
|
|
|
|
Ancient religions - of which those of Egypt are generally
|
|
acknowledged the eldest - either exalted or feared this self-
|
|
consciousness. Those which exalted it took the position that the
|
|
human psyche is capable of opposition to and domination of the
|
|
forces of nature. Those fearing it warned man that such a
|
|
presumption of independence would be sinful and dangerous.
|
|
Therefore, they said, such "will to power" should be concealed,
|
|
sublimated - and if necessary punished and exterminated - that
|
|
mankind might return to an Eden-like "state of nature" untroubled by
|
|
the burdens of having to take responsibility for decisions,
|
|
judgments, and actions based upon an essentially personal
|
|
determination of "good" and "evil".
|
|
|
|
The psyche-worshipping religions were more intellectually demanding
|
|
than their nature-worshipping counterparts, since it is more
|
|
difficult to reason a path through one's span of conscious existence
|
|
than it is to be swept along by a current of semi-rational stimulus
|
|
and response. The reasoning religions - or schools of initiatory
|
|
philosophy - attained levels of abstract knowledge that made them
|
|
mysterious to the masses. In a few societies, such as Egypt and
|
|
Greece, such groups were respected and admired. More often, however,
|
|
their exclusive elitism and "supernatural" activities made them
|
|
objects of resentment and persecution.
|
|
|
|
While all philosophical schools embraced the psychecentric
|
|
consciousness to some degree, there were a very few that made it
|
|
avowedly and explicitly the focus of their attention. The divine
|
|
personifications ("gods") of such schools have come down to us as
|
|
symbols of what most Western religions, worshippers of non-
|
|
consciousness, consider the supreme "evil": the Prince of Darkness
|
|
in his many forms. Of these the most ancient is Set, whose
|
|
Priesthood can be traced to predynastic times. Images of Set have
|
|
been dated to ca. 3200 BCE, with astronomically-based estimates of
|
|
inscriptions dating to ca. 5000 BCE.
|
|
|
|
The original Priesthood of Set in ancient Egypt survived for twenty-
|
|
five recorded dynasties (ca. 3200-700 BCE). It was one of the two
|
|
central priesthoods in predynastic times, the other being that of
|
|
HarWer ("Horus the Elder"). Unification of Egypt under both
|
|
philosophical systems resulted in the nation's being known as the
|
|
"Two Kingdoms" and in its Pharaohs wearing the famous "Double Crown"
|
|
of Horus and Set.
|
|
|
|
Originally a circumpolar/stellar deity portrayed as a cyclical
|
|
counterpart to the Solar Horus, Set was later recast as an evil
|
|
principle by the cults of Osiris and Isis. During the XIX and XX
|
|
Dynasties Set returned as the Pharaonic patron, but by the XXV
|
|
Dynasty (ca. 700 BCE) a new wave of Osirian persecution led to the
|
|
final destruction of the original Priesthood of Set. When the
|
|
Hebrews emigrated from Egypt during the XIX Dynasty, however, they
|
|
took with them a caricature of Set: "Satan" (from the hieroglyphic
|
|
_Set-hen_, one of the god's formal titles).
|
|
|
|
Originally a sort of "prosecuting angel for YHVH", the Hebrew Satan
|
|
was changed by Christianity into a personification of everything God
|
|
was not - and since God was supposed to be "good", Satan was
|
|
necessarily "bad". Alluring or mysterious deities from religions
|
|
competing with early Christianity - such as the Hellenic/Roman
|
|
Mysteries and the Persian Mithraic faith - were also "bad", hence
|
|
the Christian Satan was decorated with many of their
|
|
characteristics, such as Pan's horns & cloven hoofs. Non-Christian
|
|
gods generally were redefined as Christian "demons" and given a
|
|
place in the Christian "Hell" (another name stolen and perverted
|
|
from ancient Norse mythology).
|
|
|
|
Christian propaganda notwithstanding, there is no record of any
|
|
actual "Satanic religious underground" throughout the course of
|
|
Christian European history. The *myth* of such a "witch cult",
|
|
however, was promoted and actively used by the Christian churches to
|
|
terrorize their followers into docile obedience and to eliminate
|
|
those who could not be threatened. The number of accused "Satanists"
|
|
tortured and burned to death in medieval and Renaissance Europe will
|
|
never be known conclusively, but estimates run as high as 13
|
|
million. Many European museums still display the grisly, almost
|
|
unbelievably cruel devices used in such torture, and detailed
|
|
records of the "trials" and "confessions" of the victims survive in
|
|
shameful abundance.
|
|
|
|
Cases of torture, murder, and genocidal extermination of "infidels"
|
|
and "heathens" in other areas of the world similarly abound - and
|
|
stand collectively in testimony to the appalling legacy of the
|
|
world's major monotheistic religions. It must further be remembered
|
|
that the more "tolerant" climate of modern times did not come about
|
|
through the wishes of conventional churches themselves, but rather
|
|
through their increasing rejection by a mankind exhausted by
|
|
religious warfare and terrified by the wanton viciousness of such
|
|
establishments as the "Holy Office" (better known as the
|
|
Inquisition).
|
|
|
|
If the "Enlightenment" of the 17th and 18th centuries succeeded in
|
|
reducing Christianity - the dominant monotheism of Europe - to a
|
|
secular moral metaphor, it was not until the late 19th century that
|
|
the so-called "Black Arts" began to be tolerated, and then only in
|
|
their most simplistic and socially innocuous forms. From Freemasonry
|
|
came a ceremonial magical offshoot - Rosicrucianism - which became
|
|
increasingly more sophisticated in the Rosicrucian Society of
|
|
England (S.R.I.A.) and then in the famous Hermetic Order of the
|
|
Golden Dawn (G.'.D.'.).
|
|
|
|
In 1904 an Adept of the G.'.D.'. named Aleister Crowley broke away
|
|
from that disintegrating body to form his own Order of the Astrum
|
|
Argenteum (A.'.A.'.). To the Rosicrucian/ceremonial magical
|
|
philosophy of the G.'.D.'., Crowley added first a strong emphasis on
|
|
attainment of the highest level of self-consciousness ("Knowledge
|
|
and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel") and later the
|
|
Masonic/sexual magic practices of Germany's Order of Oriental
|
|
Templars (O.T.O.). The latter practices, together with Crowley's
|
|
cavalier lifestyle, brought him public notoriety. His organizations
|
|
survived his 1947 death only in highly-fragmented and doctrinarily
|
|
simplistic factions.
|
|
|
|
In 1966 a San Francisco sorcerer named Anton Szandor LaVey founded
|
|
the Church of Satan as a medium for the study of the Black Arts and
|
|
as an ethical statement repudiating the religious hypocrisy of
|
|
conventional society. This event marks the creation of Satanism as a
|
|
religion in its own right. Publicly its "Satan" was not the evil
|
|
scarecrow of Christian myth, but rather a champion of anti-hypocrisy
|
|
- a crusader against the corruption and moral bankruptcy of society,
|
|
which LaVey blamed largely upon Christianity. In another, more
|
|
private context, the Satan of the Church of Satan was understood to
|
|
be an authentic metaphysical presence: a being not evil, but rather
|
|
independent, assertive, and creative - a true Prince of Darkness
|
|
after the imagery of Milton, Blake, Baudelaire, and Twain.
|
|
|
|
The Church remained principally a San Francisco phenomenon for its
|
|
first four years, then during 1970-1974 branched out across the
|
|
United States and Canada with local "Grottos" headed by those
|
|
ordained to the Satanic Priesthood (the Priesthood of Mendes - named
|
|
after a city in Ptolemaic Egypt whose hedonistic festivals
|
|
particularly horrified the early Christian church).
|
|
|
|
The Church of Satan's attitude towards magic was more pragmatic and
|
|
utilitarian than that of such mystically-based organizations as the
|
|
G.'.D.'. and A.'.A.'. It saw no need for exhaustive studies into the
|
|
often incoherent and inconsistent concepts of the Cabala, nor did it
|
|
see anything extraordinarily significant in sex-magic. Rather it
|
|
chose to approach the occult arts and sciences more rationally and
|
|
even scientifically, employing "Occam's razor" to design and conduct
|
|
Workings of ritual magic that were simple and direct, yet effective.
|
|
|
|
In this the Church was generally successful, but it continued to
|
|
experience increasing difficulty with the basic nihilism and
|
|
negative connotations of its religious imagery. It could not escape
|
|
the self-assumed limitation of being "anti-Christian" in a society
|
|
in which Christianity - and its "evil scarecrow" concept of Satan -
|
|
were overwhelmingly predominant. Simultaneously the Church began to
|
|
feel constrained by even its own redefinition of Satanism, as the
|
|
parameters of philosophy and metaphysics extend far beyond the
|
|
conceptual and symbolic limits of the Judaic/Christian tradition.
|
|
|
|
The Satanic religion proposes to raise the individual to personal
|
|
godhood, free from enslavement to any other "God" [or gods].
|
|
Unfortunately this is a question not just of power, but also of
|
|
ethics, morality, and psychological maturity. The Church of Satan's
|
|
initial prescriptions - as outlined in LaVey's 1969 book _The
|
|
Satanic Bible_ - were used by some as a basis for metaphysical
|
|
growth, but by others as merely an excuse for egoistic
|
|
irresponsibility. The Church suffered periodically from petty crises
|
|
and scandals among the general membership, and finally Anton LaVey
|
|
lost confidence in its organizational viability. In 1975 he made a
|
|
decision to redesign it as a non-functional vehicle for his personal
|
|
expression, exploitation, and financial income.
|
|
|
|
This decision was emphatically rejected by the majority of the
|
|
Priesthood, who immediately resigned from the Church in protest and
|
|
denied its legitimacy as a true Church of Satan henceforth. The
|
|
senior Initiate, Michael A. Aquino, invoked the Prince of Darkness
|
|
in quest of a new Mandate to preserve and enhance the more noble
|
|
concepts which the Church of Satan had conceived and outlined. That
|
|
Mandate was given in the form of _The Book of Coming Forth by Night_
|
|
- a statement by that entity, in his most ancient semblance as Set,
|
|
ordaining the Temple of Set to succeed the Church. The Temple was
|
|
incorporated in California as a non-profit church in 1975, receiving
|
|
both state and federal recognition and tax-exemption later that same
|
|
year. It has since remained the sole "Satanic" religious institution
|
|
possessing these legal credentials.
|
|
|
|
THE CONTEMPORARY ENVIRONMENT
|
|
|
|
In the United States the 1960-70s CE, despite [and in part because
|
|
of] periodical psychopolitical strains such as the Vietnam War,
|
|
generally represented a period of flourishing liberalism and freedom
|
|
in personal affairs. Exploration and innovation were tolerated and
|
|
encouraged in society. It was a time of breakthroughs in civil
|
|
rights; of increased respect for racial, ethnic, sexual, and
|
|
religious groups. There was controversy; but on the whole it was
|
|
constructive and progressive in tone. By the end of the 1970s,
|
|
despite continued growing pains, Western culture appeared to have
|
|
moved decisively into the utopian "Age of Aquarius".
|
|
|
|
The 1980s, however, heralded a sharp and surprising reversal of this
|
|
climate into conservatism and intolerance. The most primitive,
|
|
fundamentalist branches of Christianity gained converts and sought
|
|
political power. And controversial minority groups were assaulted
|
|
with fresh waves of discrimination and repression.
|
|
|
|
Nowhere did this "new Inquisition" strike more directly than at "New
|
|
Age" religions in general and at Satanism in particular. Invoking
|
|
the same despicable tactics that their predecessors used over the
|
|
centuries against alternative creeds, fundamentalists now began to
|
|
disseminate hate-propaganda accusing "Satanism" of the most hideous
|
|
crimes imaginable: human & animal sacrifice, cannibalism, the
|
|
kidnapping/sexual abuse/murder of children. That none of this was in
|
|
the least true mattered not at all to the accusers. If the Big Lie
|
|
could be repeated loudly & often enough, it would catch hold.
|
|
Suddenly it became dangerous to be an avowed Satanist in communities
|
|
infected with anti-Satanic hysteria. The witch-hunt eventually
|
|
spread to several other countries as well, among them the United
|
|
Kingdom, Italy, New Zealand, Canada, Australia, and Germany.
|
|
|
|
Why should the same post-World War II generation that had grown up
|
|
in the open atmosphere of the 60s-70s tolerate, even encourage a
|
|
relapse into the brutish hatreds and persecutions of the Middle
|
|
Ages? Perhaps for the very reason that it was a generation
|
|
unprepared for what might be termed humanity's "religious impulse".
|
|
During the 60s-70s religion was generally dismissed as something
|
|
quaint and obsolete: superstition embarrassing to an age of science,
|
|
computers, and Project Apollo. "God was dead", and Christianity was
|
|
invoked merely as an excuse for Christmas revelry and other
|
|
entertainments (such as _Jesus Christ Superstar_ & the "Jesus Freak
|
|
revolution" of 1970). Even the formation of the Church of Satan in
|
|
1966 was somewhat anti-climactic: It didn't arise in response to a
|
|
"threatening" Christianity - for Christianity already appeared to be
|
|
a dead horse. The carcass was there to be kicked around a bit for
|
|
the sake of theatre, but there was no expectation that it had any
|
|
energy left to get up and kick back.
|
|
|
|
The "religious impulse" proved to be important to both Satanists and
|
|
non-Satanists. In the case of Satanists it brought about an
|
|
increasing interest in exploring the "human equation" and the
|
|
metaphysical and psychological roots of the great Satanic/psyche-
|
|
centered philosophies of history. Even had Anton LaVey not provoked
|
|
the crisis of 1975, it is clear that the evolution of Church of
|
|
Satan into something like the Temple of Set - a completely non-
|
|
Christianized, positive "high Satanism" - would have proceeded
|
|
inexorably.
|
|
|
|
Non-Satanists, meanwhile, found themselves adrift in a society whose
|
|
Judaeo/Christian moral values had disintegrated into materialistic
|
|
hypocrisy. In such an "arid wilderness of steel and stone", there
|
|
arose a longing for "something/anything spiritual" - and the
|
|
remnants of Christianity were there to offer the appropriate opium
|
|
after various "New Age" fantasies had been tried and found to be
|
|
wanting.
|
|
|
|
In the 1980s, however, there was a difference in Christian
|
|
evangelism. The new herd of converts had *not* received a gradual
|
|
education enabling it to see Christianity in at least some
|
|
historical context. Rather it perceived Christianity as a completely
|
|
novel experience - and so it was far more vulnerable to Christian
|
|
propaganda than the previous, more worldly generation had been. The
|
|
result was an eruption in the 1980s of a fundamentalism as mindless
|
|
and brutish as that of the Middle Ages. Now, as before, it needed a
|
|
scarecrow - and "Satanism" was a word with an appropriately scary
|
|
sound. Christian fanatics who knew [and cared] nothing whatever
|
|
about *actual* Satanism suddenly embarked upon passionate [and
|
|
financially profitable] campaigns brandishing the scarecrow before
|
|
credulous followers.
|
|
|
|
Complicating the situation was the perennial impulse among alienated
|
|
youth and antisocial elements to deliberately shock society by
|
|
flaunting its bogymen. If prudish elements of the community were
|
|
going to terrify themselves with "scarecrow Satanism", then Heavy
|
|
Metal rock music would affect this same image, as would the
|
|
occasional psychotic criminal and teenage gang. Fundamentalists
|
|
happily showcased such aberrations as "proof" of the scarecrow's
|
|
existence.
|
|
|
|
The Temple of Set, now the world's preeminent Satanic religious
|
|
institution, found itself in the awkward position of having not only
|
|
to defend authentic Satanism against the shrill screams of the
|
|
scarecrow-merchants, but also to reject superficial glorification of
|
|
the scarecrow that would return Satanism's image to nothing more
|
|
than anti-Christian "Devil worship". Both challenges have been
|
|
addressed, but not without the cost of time and energy drained from
|
|
the Temple's own magical and philosophical interests.
|
|
|
|
As we enter the 1990s CE the initial danger has been largely
|
|
averted. We have been able to establish the truth about Satanism
|
|
sufficiently to expose the falsehoods of the scarecrow-merchants in
|
|
all but the most ignorant backwaters of society. That same society,
|
|
however, continues to flail about for the moral anchor that the
|
|
large mass-religions claim to offer. Christianity's strength lies
|
|
today, as throughout its history, in the *absence* of intellectual
|
|
education and mental effort which it demands of its sheep. It has
|
|
also become quite accomplished at exploiting humanity's fear of
|
|
death, sexual neuroses, and other irrational hatreds and
|
|
insecurities.
|
|
|
|
This is therefore a time of critical importance for the Temple of
|
|
Set. Our philosophy has never been more sophisticated, yet we pursue
|
|
it in the midst of a confused, superficial, and paranoid social
|
|
environment. It is not the task of the Temple of Set to be a "savior
|
|
of the masses" - but rather to help suitable individuals to
|
|
apprehend and attain their own divinity. The wisdom with which our
|
|
Initiates exercise this divinity may well determine whether humanity
|
|
advances to the stars - or succumbs to the entropy of the universe
|
|
as one more inconsequential curiosity of nature.
|
|
|
|
THE SETIAN PHILOSOPHY
|
|
|
|
Since movements dedicated to the Prince of Darkness have been so
|
|
ill-tolerated by the masses of humanity wherever and whenever they
|
|
have appeared, why have they survived at all? Why do they continue
|
|
to exercise such uncanny attraction, and why now should you consider
|
|
approaching this particular one?
|
|
|
|
The appeal of occultism is much the same as that of conventional
|
|
religion: Logical positivism and scientific materialism, though they
|
|
have made great strides towards explaining the "how" of existence,
|
|
have failed entirely to explain the "why". Hence the curious seek
|
|
answers in metaphysical philosophy or religion. Metaphysical
|
|
philosophy requires a logical base from which various suprarational
|
|
principles are induced. Conventional religion is the simplification
|
|
of such a philosophy into a crude ideology, which adherents need not
|
|
understand, but only accept as an act of blind faith.
|
|
|
|
Conventional religions, with their colorful mythologies analyzed in
|
|
terms of the underlying philosophical principles, represent simply
|
|
the primitive longing of man to feel "at one" with the Universal
|
|
harmony he perceives about him. "White" magic, as advocated by
|
|
primitive pagan and modern institutional religions, offers devotees
|
|
the illusion of "re-inclusion" in the Universal scheme of things
|
|
through various ritualistic devotions and superstitions.
|
|
|
|
The Black Magician, on the other hand, rejects both the desirability
|
|
of union with the Universe and any self-deceptive antics designed to
|
|
create such an illusion. He has considered the existence of the
|
|
individual psyche - the "core you" of your conscious intelligence -
|
|
and has taken satisfaction from its existence as something unlike
|
|
anything else in the Universe. The Black Magician desires this
|
|
psyche to live, to experience, and to continue. He does not wish to
|
|
die - or to lose his consciousness and identity in a larger,
|
|
Universal consciousness [assuming that such exists]. He wants to be.
|
|
This decision in favor of individual existence is the first premise
|
|
of the Temple of Set.
|
|
|
|
The second premise of the Temple is that the psychecentric
|
|
consciousness can evolve towards its own divinity through deliberate
|
|
exercise of the intelligence and Will, a process of *becoming* or
|
|
*coming into being* whose roots may be found in the dialectic method
|
|
expounded by Plato and the conscious exaltation of the Will proposed
|
|
by Nietzsche.
|
|
|
|
Ironically it is the very ease with which any individual can
|
|
apprehend and appreciate his or her personal psyche that has
|
|
frightened the many religions of the world which deny and oppose the
|
|
power of that psyche. Clothed though they may be in riches, ritual,
|
|
and respectability, they always have been and remain obsessed with
|
|
the suppressed knowledge of their own essential falsehood. They
|
|
endeavor to distract attention from this by sponsoring shows of
|
|
mind-numbing drugs, mantras, masses, privations, entertainments, and
|
|
penances to coax or cow their flocks of adherents into a confused,
|
|
apprehensive, but trusting state of faith and automatic obedience.
|
|
They shudder with horror at the psyche; they paint it red and add
|
|
horns, cloven hooves, and a forked tail to dramatize how "dangerous"
|
|
it is. Yet they can never escape it or defeat it, because they have
|
|
never really succeeded in opposing themselves to it - merely in
|
|
distorting and perverting it. How could they destroy something
|
|
which, in the final analysis, is the conscious self of every human
|
|
being?
|
|
|
|
The "worship" of Set is thus the "worship" of individualism. In the
|
|
Church of Satan this was taken to mean *indulgence* in all [legal]
|
|
desires of the body and ego. Since many such desires are impulsive
|
|
and destructive, the Church found itself in the awkward position of
|
|
_de facto_ endorsing many practices which were degrading rather than
|
|
exalting, and which simply accelerated the tensions resulting in the
|
|
eventual crisis of 1975.
|
|
|
|
The Temple of Set determined to preserve the principle of
|
|
individualism, but to add to it the evolutionary "higher self"
|
|
aspirations of Aleister Crowley's pre-O.T.O. philosophy of
|
|
_Thelema_. Glorification of the ego is not enough; it is the
|
|
complete psyche - the entire self or soul - which must be
|
|
recognized, appreciated, and actualized. The process by which this
|
|
exaltation of the psyche is sought is called by the name _Xeper_
|
|
[pronounced "Kheffer"; it is the Egyptian hieroglyphic term for "to
|
|
become" or "to come into being"].
|
|
|
|
The means by which Setians seek to _Xeper_ are many. As a matter of
|
|
principle the Temple declines to standardize its approach to
|
|
Initiates. Each may pursue topics of greatest personal interest with
|
|
whatever emphasis and at whatever rate desired. The Temple seeks
|
|
merely to be a forum for Setians to communicate and cooperate with
|
|
one another constructively and courteously. Many ideas and
|
|
philosophies are discussed within it, but such discussion does not
|
|
constitute the dictation of dogma.
|
|
|
|
Indeed dogma - to include fixed ideology in any form - is repugnant
|
|
to the Temple. We strive rather towards an atmosphere of "best
|
|
possible premises", which are always subject to constructive,
|
|
intelligent examination and criticism. That same atmosphere is
|
|
Socratic, however, in that foolish, pretentious, or destructive
|
|
egotism under the guise of exploration is neither respected nor
|
|
endured.
|
|
|
|
While it is obvious that Setians have more than enough interests to
|
|
occupy an organization with many times our membership and resources
|
|
on a full-time basis, the Temple of Set is not intended to consume
|
|
the energies or lifestyles of its Initiates. Since a truly Adept
|
|
magician must interact constructively and comfortably with
|
|
conventional society, encouragement of monastic isolation within
|
|
Temple circles would be counterproductive to personal development
|
|
and even constrictive of the flexibility necessary to the entire
|
|
Temple. Setians are accordingly advised to pursue as wide a variety
|
|
of secular interests as possible, and to let Setian philosophy apply
|
|
to them only as appropriate.
|
|
|
|
STRUCTURE AND OPERATION
|
|
|
|
The deliberately individualistic atmosphere of the Temple of Set is
|
|
not easily conducive to group activities on a routine or programmed
|
|
basis. There are no congregations of docile "followers" - only
|
|
cooperative philosophers and magicians.
|
|
|
|
Executive authority in the Temple is held by the Council of Nine,
|
|
which appoints both the High Priest of Set and the Executive
|
|
Director. Initiates are Recognized according to six degrees: Setian
|
|
I*, Adept II*, Priest or Priestess of Set III*, Magister/Magistra
|
|
Templi IV*, Magus/Maga V*, & Ipsissimus/Ipsissima VI*.
|
|
|
|
Recognition as an Adept II* constitutes certification by the Temple
|
|
that one has in fact mastered and successfully applied the essential
|
|
principles of Black Magic. The bulk of Temple systems are geared to
|
|
attainment of and subsequent support for the II*, and that is the
|
|
level of affiliation which most Setians will maintain. It is
|
|
understood that this is an organizational principle, as each Adept's
|
|
magical and philosophical evolution will continue as he or she
|
|
continues to energize and actualize it.
|
|
|
|
The III*-VI* are properly seen not as further benchmarks of
|
|
individual attainment, but as specialized religious offices
|
|
conferred by Set alone, and Recognized within the Temple according
|
|
to his Will.
|
|
|
|
The design, care, and operation of the Temple are entrusted by Set
|
|
to the Priesthood. All Initiates of the Priesthood are originally
|
|
highly-qualified Adepts in the Black Arts. Most of your contact with
|
|
them will be in this context. Because they are responsible for the
|
|
integrity of the Temple as a whole, however, they have the authority
|
|
both to evaluate and Recognize Initiates' competence and, if
|
|
necessary, to suspend or expel individuals who have proven
|
|
themselves incapable of maintaining Setian standards of dignity and
|
|
excellence. The Priesthood takes all of these responsibilities
|
|
extremely seriously, since it regards its name literally and its
|
|
trust as sacred. In this respect it stands significantly apart from
|
|
conventional religious clergy, who _de facto_ consider their
|
|
"priesthoods" as social professions and their deities as mere
|
|
symbols and metaphors for their institutional or personal
|
|
exploitation.
|
|
|
|
The knowledge of the Temple of Set is made available through four
|
|
principal avenues: an extensive reading list of published works in
|
|
twenty-four specialized fields; the newsletter _Scroll of Set_, the
|
|
publications of the Temple's various specialized Orders; and the
|
|
series of encyclopaedias entitled the _Jeweled Tablets of Set_. The
|
|
contents of the _Scroll_ and the Order periodicals are time-dated,
|
|
of course, but those of the _Tablets_ change periodically as ideas
|
|
are advanced, improved, or disproved; or as they become more or less
|
|
relevant to the Temple's areas of concern. The _Scroll_, Order
|
|
newsletters, and _Tablets_ are reproduced simply and inexpensively
|
|
[similar to this letter] to preclude excessive membership
|
|
expenditure for frequently-revised publications.
|
|
|
|
Because of the non-group-oriented design of the Temple, many
|
|
Initiates are geographically distant from one another. This
|
|
necessitates an organizational design geared more towards services
|
|
to the individual than to localized "congregations". Recognizing the
|
|
value - and fellowship - of a seminar environment, however, the
|
|
Temple provides for "Pylons" (named after the unique gates of
|
|
ancient Egyptian temples). Pylons are often geographically
|
|
localized, but some are "correspondence" Pylons with global
|
|
membership and interaction. While each Pylon is under the trust and
|
|
responsibility of a II*+ Sentinel, they are emphatically not
|
|
"leader/follower congregations", but rather cooperative and
|
|
interactive forums for individual Initiates. Each new Setian is
|
|
expected to affiliate with at least one Pylon within a year of
|
|
admission to the Temple and Recognition to the II* will normally be
|
|
recommended and/or formalized by that Pylon.
|
|
|
|
Individuals admitted to the Temple are provided with a personal copy
|
|
of the _Crystal Tablet of Set_, which contains a wide range of
|
|
organizational, philosophical, and magical information pertinent to
|
|
qualification as an Adept. There is a two-year time-limit for each
|
|
new Setian to qualify for Adept Recognition. If such Recognition is
|
|
not received by that time, affiliation is cancelled.
|
|
|
|
The Orders of the Temple are entirely different in concept and
|
|
operation from its Pylons. Each Order specializes in one or more
|
|
particular fields of the magical arts and sciences. Such a
|
|
specialization may be transcultural or oriented to a specific
|
|
geographic area, time-period, or conceptual tradition. Within one
|
|
year after II* Recognition, each Adept is expected to affiliate with
|
|
an Order reflective of his or her personal interests and aptitudes.
|
|
The collective knowledge of all of the Orders is available to the
|
|
Temple membership generally.
|
|
|
|
Setians may also communicate with one another by means of a
|
|
regularly-updated InterCommunication Roster, contained in the
|
|
_Crystal Tablet_, and periodic Conclaves are scheduled on a
|
|
regional, national, and international basis.
|
|
|
|
A recent addition to the Temple's structure is Glinda, a computer
|
|
database and bulletin-board system accessible by Setians only.
|
|
Besides offering a means for electronic mail and conferencing,
|
|
Glinda serves as a repository for a constantly growing library of
|
|
Temple documents which Setians can download at their convenience.
|
|
|
|
Personal affiliation with the Temple is kept confidential; your
|
|
admission is known only to the Priesthood. If you desire to meet
|
|
other Setians, you may do so under a magical name if desired. In
|
|
summary, you may apply the services and systems of the Temple as you
|
|
wish, and as you deem most complementary to your _Xeper_; otherwise
|
|
they will not intrude upon you.
|
|
|
|
AN IMPORTANT CLARIFICATION
|
|
|
|
Regretfully there still exist some individuals whose idea of
|
|
"Satanism" is largely a simple-minded synthesis of Christian
|
|
propaganda and Hollywood horror movies. The Temple of Set enjoys the
|
|
colorful legacy of the Black Arts, and we use many forms of
|
|
historical Satanic imagery for our artistic stimulation and
|
|
pleasure. But we have not found that any interest or activity which
|
|
an enlightened, mature intellect would regard as undignified,
|
|
sadistic, criminal, or depraved is desirable, much less essential to
|
|
our work.
|
|
|
|
The Temple of Set is an evolutionary product of human experience.
|
|
Such experience includes the magical and philosophical work of many
|
|
occult individuals and organizations which have preceded us. Some of
|
|
these were socially acceptable by contemporary or modern standards;
|
|
others were not. Some made brilliant discoveries in one field of
|
|
interest while blighting their reputations with shocking excesses or
|
|
tragic failures in others. In examining the secret and suppressed
|
|
corners of history for valuable and useful material, the Temple
|
|
insists upon ethical presentation and use of such discoveries as it
|
|
makes. Setians who are in any doubt as to the ethics involved in any
|
|
of the fields which we explore should seek counsel from the
|
|
Priesthood. All Setians are further expected to display a high
|
|
measure of maturity and common sense in this area.
|
|
|
|
The Black Arts are *dangerous* in the same way that working with
|
|
volatile chemicals is dangerous. This is most emphatically *not* a
|
|
field for unstable, immature, or otherwise emotionally or
|
|
intellectually weak-minded people. Such are a hazard to themselves
|
|
and to others with whom they come into contact. The Temple endeavors
|
|
to not admit them to begin with. If such an individual should gain
|
|
admittance and later be exposed, he will be summarily expelled. In
|
|
cases of doubt the Temple may be expected to place the burden of
|
|
proof on the individual, for the sake of all Setians and the
|
|
Temple's integrity.
|
|
|
|
The Temple of Set evaluates conventional religions as erroneous in
|
|
principle and therefore unworthy of peer status. We feel no need to
|
|
concern ourselves with their activities, or for that matter to
|
|
maintain any sort of "diplomatic relations" with them [as in
|
|
councils of churches]. Our position is that they may serve a useful
|
|
social function as purveyors of soothing myths and fantasies to
|
|
humans unable to attain Setian levels of self-consciousness. Hence
|
|
we ignore conventional religious organizations unless they intrude
|
|
upon our affairs.
|
|
|
|
These warnings are not intended to be oppressive or intimidating,
|
|
but they should be taken seriously. The Temple is a forum for the
|
|
investigation of many subjects which conventional society finds odd,
|
|
mysterious, and even extremely frightening. The Temple will be
|
|
tolerated only to the extent that it is known to be pursuing its
|
|
interests carefully, expertly, and responsibly. It occupies a
|
|
delicate position in a world which is largely unhappy with itself,
|
|
and which is ceaselessly searching for scapegoats. Hence the Temple
|
|
must take care to maintain its social balance with prudence and
|
|
dignity.
|
|
|
|
AFFILIATION
|
|
|
|
The Church of Satan learned that there were many people who wished
|
|
to "visit", to "study", and to "observe" without the least intention
|
|
of a personal commitment. For many years the Church endeavored to
|
|
accommodate such dilettantes on the assumption that, upon exposure
|
|
to its philosophy, they would appreciate its essential requirement
|
|
for such a commitment. Once being in the position to enjoy the
|
|
"accessories" of the philosophy without having to confront its core
|
|
principle, however, such persons continued to vampirize the Church
|
|
indefinitely. They contributed as little as they could, took as much
|
|
as they could, and ultimately constituted the single most
|
|
destructive influence leading to the Church's disintegration in
|
|
1975.
|
|
|
|
The Temple of Set has determined that it will not make the same
|
|
mistake. Its activities, publications, knowledge, and services are
|
|
reserved for those who affiliate with it, or on an individual-case
|
|
basis, for non-Setians who request assistance from the Temple that
|
|
we deem to be in our interests or in the interests of the community
|
|
as a whole. The First Degree (I*) of Temple affiliation is regarded
|
|
as a "status of mutual evaluation" wherein the Initiate and the
|
|
Temple can assess one another's merit from the standpoint of minimum
|
|
investment and involvement. If a I* Initiate should decide that the
|
|
Temple is not, after all, appropriate to his wants or needs, he is
|
|
welcome to depart with our good wishes for satisfaction elsewhere.
|
|
|
|
Aspirants to the Temple should understand that it is not a club or
|
|
fraternal society whose principles may be collected along with those
|
|
of other social affiliations, occult or otherwise. Membership in the
|
|
Temple of Set beyond the I* precludes membership in any other
|
|
religious organization.
|
|
|
|
Members or former members of non-religious occult organizations
|
|
should understand that within the Temple of Set they will be
|
|
expected to respect and observe the Temple's protocol, and that
|
|
literature and other information from the Temple is not to be passed
|
|
to non-Temple individuals or organizations without prior approval of
|
|
the Priesthood. If the Temple of Set can assist other deserving
|
|
organizations or individuals on occasion, it will be pleased to do
|
|
so. But it must exercise reasonable care over the Temple materials
|
|
that are made available - both so that our own Initiates may enjoy
|
|
the fruits of their honest labor [and that of their predecessors]
|
|
and so that the Temple of Set may continue to enjoy its exclusive
|
|
reputation for excellence in the disciplines it has pioneered.
|
|
|
|
Should you have questions which are reasonably pertinent to your
|
|
serious consideration whether or not to apply for admission to the
|
|
Temple, you are welcome to address them to the Executive Director of
|
|
the Temple. If you wish to apply for admission as a Setian I*, there
|
|
are two avenues of approach available to you:
|
|
|
|
(1) If you are already in contact with a Priest or Priestess of Set,
|
|
you may request him or her to sponsor your application. In that case
|
|
you may send a letter to the Executive Director mentioning this
|
|
sponsorship. With your letter enclose a check or money order for
|
|
US$60 (US$70 for overseas applicants), payable to Temple of Set.
|
|
[Please note that this amount must be in U.S. dollars, either drawn
|
|
on a U.S. bank or as an international money order only.] If
|
|
Priesthood sponsorship is verified, approval of your application
|
|
will be automatic.
|
|
|
|
*Important note*: If you are admitted, and if you are an overseas
|
|
resident, your admission packet will be sent to you by surface mail.
|
|
Depending upon the destination, this can take as long as two months.
|
|
If you wish the packet sent via air mail, your application check
|
|
should be for the amount of US$100 to cover the extra air mail
|
|
postage.
|
|
|
|
(2) If you are not known to a member of the Priesthood, write a
|
|
letter to the Executive Director introducing yourself, summarizing
|
|
whatever aspects of your background you feel to be relevant, and
|
|
stating your reasons for deciding to seek entrance into the Temple.
|
|
Enclose the admission fee. The Temple will make a decision and
|
|
respond to you accordingly. If necessary you will be asked for
|
|
additional information. Should your application not be approved for
|
|
any reason, the fee will be refunded. Persons applying for admission
|
|
via this procedure should be as objective and candid as possible in
|
|
their self-assessment. There is no point in misleading the Temple
|
|
concerning one's suitability for admission, which will only result
|
|
sooner or later in the truth coming to light - with the consequent
|
|
waste of both the individual's and the Temple's time. If there are
|
|
crucial areas of possible incompatibility, it is incumbent on the
|
|
applicant to identify them before affiliation so that they may be
|
|
addressed and, if possible, resolved.
|
|
|
|
Whichever method you apply through, please be certain to include:
|
|
|
|
(1) Your full legal name [no pseudonyms] and sex.
|
|
(2) Your complete mailing address.
|
|
(3) Daytime and evening telephone numbers.
|
|
(4) Date of birth.
|
|
(5) Present organizational affiliations.
|
|
|
|
Annual renewal fee for all Initiates is US$50 (US$55 overseas). [The
|
|
first year is pro-rated from the month of your entry.] These fees
|
|
are designed, as is the admissions fee, to cover the cost of
|
|
mailings to you and the administration of the Temple. As a matter of
|
|
policy the Temple is not designed to make a profit on its
|
|
operations, and its assets are used exclusively for benefits to its
|
|
Initiates as a whole. There are no other regular or recurring fees,
|
|
save that Orders and Pylons may set reasonable charges for their
|
|
newsletters or other time/effort services. Special publications of
|
|
the Temple and events scheduled by the Temple are customarily made
|
|
available on a non-profit basis to Initiates who are interested.
|
|
|
|
The only physical requirement for admission is that the aspirant be
|
|
at least 18 years of age. Those below the age of 18 may not visit
|
|
Temple functions, ceremonial or otherwise, whether or not they are
|
|
relatives of Initiates. The Temple has no programs for children. It
|
|
is our position that children and adolescents should not be
|
|
indoctrinated into the assumptions and prescriptions of *any*
|
|
suprarational system, whether it be our own philosophy or the faiths
|
|
and superstitions of conventional religions. Rather their youthful
|
|
years should be a time of *exclusively rational* training and
|
|
education, giving them a sound and meaningful basis by which, as
|
|
adults, they may consider and choose whatever philosophy or faith
|
|
seems most meaningful to them.
|
|
|
|
If your application is approved, you will receive notification from
|
|
the Executive Director's office, together with membership
|
|
identification, certificate, copy of the _Crystal Tablet of Set_
|
|
[including the current reading list & intercommunication roster,
|
|
most recent issues of the _Scroll of Set_ and Order publications [as
|
|
determined by the Order Grand Masters], and Setian I* pendant
|
|
medallion.
|
|
|
|
Then the initiative is yours. The Temple of Set is designed to
|
|
assist you in the ways we have found to be the most practical,
|
|
productive, and factually accurate. But, as helpful as the Temple
|
|
may be, and as proud of it as we are, it is nevertheless properly
|
|
understood as a *tool*. *You* are the one who must put that tool to
|
|
use in a way that will enable you to _Xeper_.
|
|
|
|
Such is the Word of the AEon of Set.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
COMMONLY-ASKED QUESTIONS
|
|
|
|
-----
|
|
Q: If the Temple of Set does not believe in Judaeo/Christianity, why
|
|
do you call yourselves a "Satanic" religion? Isn't Satan a demon
|
|
within J/C mythology?
|
|
-----
|
|
|
|
A: For the last two thousand years most of the social cultures in
|
|
which the Temple of Set currently exists have been dominated by one
|
|
or more branches of Judaeo/Christianity. This influence is far more
|
|
pervasive than most people consciously appreciate, extending into
|
|
these societies' most basic assumptions about group & individual
|
|
relationships, law, justice, ethics, sexual mores, family units,
|
|
cosmology, and metaphysics. It is easy to not be a member of a
|
|
Christian church, or to call oneself a non-Christian; it is far more
|
|
difficult to escape from J/C social conditioning.
|
|
|
|
Within this climate many of the aspects of Set are symbolized in
|
|
religious imagery by the positive, creative attributes of the J/C
|
|
Satan. While Judaism and Christianity created their "Satan"
|
|
distortion of the Set _neter_ of ancient Egypt in order to create an
|
|
"evil scarecrow" to intimidate and control their societies, they
|
|
could not help endowing "Satan" with such Setian attributes as
|
|
independence, creativity, and genius - as these same attributes,
|
|
except in severely circumscribed and approved forms, are "sins
|
|
against God" in J/C culture.
|
|
|
|
Therefore many persons of Setian disposition and potential first
|
|
become aware of their true nature through an unusual interest in and
|
|
attraction to "Satan" and Satanic imagery. [This was also the case
|
|
of the Temple of Set as a whole, which from 1966 to 1975 as the
|
|
Church of Satan was exploring the Left-Hand Path from within J/C
|
|
imagery.] Hence it is initially necessary to use the "Satanic"
|
|
metaphor to communicate with them, and to be comprehensible to them.
|
|
Once they understand a little more what actually lies behind their
|
|
fascination and ambition, they will more easily be able to jettison
|
|
the entire cage of J/C reference-points, enter a much larger
|
|
universe of thought and being, and come into being as Setians.
|
|
|
|
-----
|
|
Q: What is the relationship between the Temple of Set and the post-
|
|
1975 Church of Satan?
|
|
-----
|
|
|
|
A: The Temple of Set considers itself to be the unbroken
|
|
continuation and evolution of the 1966-75 Church of Satan into a
|
|
beyond-J/C idiom. It considers the post-1975 "Church of Satan" to be
|
|
a deliberate fraud.
|
|
|
|
After 1975 Anton LaVey continued to operate the "Church of Satan" as
|
|
a business for his personal financial gain. Although in 1975 he
|
|
insisted that he no longer believed in the actual existence of
|
|
Satan, he continued to use the name as a dramatic advertisement of
|
|
his own egoistic lifestyle. In subsequent years he built up a new
|
|
following of individuals either unaware of his 1975 announcement or
|
|
simply unconcerned about the "Church of Satan" either being an
|
|
actual church or believing in Satan. For him it is simply a
|
|
business. For them it is merely the glamor of the name - ironically
|
|
the result of the 1966-75 international success of the Church when
|
|
it was authentic and sincere.
|
|
|
|
-----
|
|
Q: Will the Temple of Set teach me to do magic?
|
|
-----
|
|
|
|
A: To begin with the Temple of Set will help you to understand just
|
|
what magic is - and indeed there are several different types of
|
|
magic to be learned and distinguished. But as magic enables you to
|
|
influence or change events in ways not understood or anticipated by
|
|
society, before you put it to use you must first develop a sound and
|
|
sophisticated appreciation for the ethics governing your own
|
|
motives, decisions, and actions. Merely using magic for impulsive,
|
|
egoistic desires is not Setian; it must become second-nature to you
|
|
to carefully preevaluate the consequences of what you wish to do -
|
|
then to choose the course of wisdom, justice, and creative
|
|
improvement.
|
|
|
|
-----
|
|
Q: What if I join the Temple of Set and decide that I don't like it?
|
|
-----
|
|
|
|
A: Then you are welcome to resign your membership at any time via a
|
|
letter to the Executive Director, and to depart with our best wishes
|
|
for your satisfaction elsewhere. The Temple never attempts to
|
|
convince former members to change their minds or return to the
|
|
Temple - though some, on their own initiative, have done so.
|
|
|
|
The initiatory system of the Temple of Set is entirely dependent
|
|
upon one's own initiative and potential. By its very nature it
|
|
cannot be forced on anyone, nor would it work for someone
|
|
approaching it insincerely or without understanding. If someone
|
|
enters the Temple and finds it incomprehensible, frustrating, or
|
|
otherwise unsatisfactory, it is probably a sign that he or she is
|
|
not a Setian and should leave to explore other religious or secular
|
|
alternatives.
|
|
|
|
-----
|
|
Q: How private is my membership?
|
|
-----
|
|
|
|
A: The Temple of Set does not give out either membership statistics
|
|
or the name or personal data of any Initiate. To the extent that you
|
|
yourself decide to participate in Conclaves, the InterMember
|
|
Communication Roster or various publications, your name will become
|
|
known to other Setians. All Setians are asked to respect the privacy
|
|
of other members, both within and without the Temple itself.
|
|
Only Initiates of the Priesthood of Set are expected [or authorized]
|
|
to represent the Temple to the public or to the media, based on
|
|
their background, experience, and qualifications to do so
|
|
objectively and accurately.
|