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THE HERMETIC ORDER OF THE GOLDEN DAWN
  As soon as one takes an interest in the Western Magickal Tradition, it is inevitable that they will almost immediately come across references to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. This esoteric order has aroused so much speculation, deliberation and analysis that it has been elevated to the status of a super-society. The reasons behind this are not clear. It may be that since it was the starting or finishing point to the careers of so many renowned occultists that it takes on some of their personal glory. Whatever the reason, the Golden Dawn is firmly etched on the surface of our Magickal Tradition, and as such, I wish to present a brief discourse on its nature, history and significance in perspective.

It is not my aim to present a detailed analysis, since there have been many erudite books on the subject, by far more qualified people than me. The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn was an esoteric society that dealt in ritual magic, the Qabalah, and other mystical matters. Its origins have been the subject of much debate, although there is a general view that it was the product of one man, William Wynn Westcott.

This in itself is not completely accurate, since the two authorities that I hold in the highest regard both have suggested a slightly more complex ætiology. Dr. Westcott, a London Coroner, was a prominent Freemason. He was the Supreme Magus (ruler) of a Masonic side degree, the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia (SRIA), whose purpose was the study of philosophic and esoteric matters. Not content with this order, which did not practice anything that could be truly called magic, he set about inventing a new order.

However, due to the very nature of occult orders, for it to be of note, it needed a defined, authentic origin. Westcott achieved this authentication by 'translating' some cipher manuscripts 'discovered' by a priest (who happened to be a mason) in a second-hand bookshop. These, he claimed, were fragments of magical rituals, with an address in Germany representing an order of Rosicrucian adepts. In 1887, with the co-operation of two other men, Dr. Woodman and Samuel Liddell Mathers, Westcott founded the first Temple of the Golden Dawn, by right of a charter 'granted' by the head of the German order. This they named the Isis-Urania Temple, and it was to meet at Mark Mason's Hall, then in Great Queen Street, London.

The Golden Dawn possessed a hierarchical structure, in keeping with many other occult bodies, including the Freemasons and the Rosicrucian societies.

It was divided into 11 grades or degrees, which represented successively increased learning and ability in magical matters. It's codes for these grades were based upon an esoteric figure known as the Tree of Life, which was part of the Hebrew body of Mysticism known as the Qabalah (From QBLH ­p; received tradition).

The hierarchy was divided up into 3 orders which each represented a certain class. The lowest order was named the Golden Dawn, and comprised those students who had learnt basic magickal doctrines, and had passed exams on these. The second order was titled the Red Rose and Golden Cross, and it was here that the members practised magickal acts. The third and final order was known as the Silver Star, and was composed of those adepts who had crossed the Abyss, and themselves become masters of the magickal arts.

In 1891, in Paris, Mathers, the third leader of the GD claimed to have made contact with the Secret Chiefs (the story is rather apocryphal, with Mathers stating that he met a man in the Bois de Boulogne, who overwhelmed him so with his powers, that blood poured from Mather's nose. Cynics would say that he had got into a fight!). He stated that they had granted him sole authority to rule the order, and he wrested control from Westcott, who resigned in 1897. Meanwhile, the other leader, Dr. Woodman had died. Mathers was now the supreme ruler of the GD.

As for the actual body of the work of the Golden Dawn, this is very well documented. The original 5 grades in the lowest order were primarily academic, in that each grade had a certain number of skills to perfect, and knowledge to acquire. For example, they needed to achieve mastery of the astral plane through meditation and certain forms of Yogic exercises. The knowledge required was primarily Qabalistic, although other forms of occult doctrine were touched upon: the Tarot, Enochian magic and ceremonial magic, to name a few.

The major body of work in the second order was that of achieving conversation with one's Holy Guardian Angel. The individual HGA is a celestial intelligence (some say a Secret Chief) with whom each person is theoretically capable of reaching through meditation. This contact was beneficial as it allowed the adept to reach his true potential, and so ascend to, and cross the Abyss, to become a true Master. This was considered the Great Work of the Order as a whole, and it is interesting to read the differing accounts of adepts who claimed to have achieved it.

In the early part of the 20th century, Mathers was living in Paris. Removed geographically from the Golden Dawn in England, dissent arose. The adepts of the second order started to rebel against his authority over them, demanding proof of his compact with the Secret Chiefs. There was nothing left except to send his protégé Aleister Crowley to wrest control of their London Headquarters. This in itself is a long story, but the outcome was that the original Golden Dawn crumbled into twilight, and Mathers lost control forever. In these latter years the leadership was passed around between several adepts, before the order disappeared. Since this time, many subsequent Golden Dawn's have been formed, all claiming that since they use the original rituals they are justified in using the name. However, the truth is that all of these, to a greater or lesser extent, are pale substitutes for the original.

As regards the original issue of the ætiology of this order, the theory has been thus: The formulation of the Golden Dawn was not in the hands of just Wynn Westcott, but also in those of a certain Kenneth MacKenzie. A complete biography of Westcott has never been written, but a rough character analysis is that he was a rather schizoid type who possessed a rather mediocre intellect, and in himself was not capable of generating the cipher manuscripts, nor the complex Golden Dawn rituals. All the evidence points to MacKenzie as the genius behind the creation of the GD. MacKenzie died in the 1870's so the suggestion is that the GD was a long time in the making, and following MacKenzie's death, Westcott carried on their work to it's conclusion.

Samuel Liddell Mathers is a character fascinating to study, since his persona is similar to that of Aleister Crowley in several key areas. Both these men were social climbers, and both claimed to be nobility. There is an amusing story of the Laird of Boleskine and the Comte de Glenstræ meeting, both in ceremonial Highland dress, although neither of them had a drop of Scots blood in them. Mathers was a powerful man in comparison to the other dilettante members of the Golden Dawn, and this secured his position as leader, although his paranoia of being challenged led to his eventual downfall. One can only guess what would have happened to the Dawn if Crowley had taken control.

COMTE de ST GERMAIN
  Comte de Saint Germain was an 18th-century adventurer known as 'Der Wundermann' - 'The Wonderman'. He was a man whose origin was unknown and who disappeared without leaving a trace. His presumed date of birth was 1690. He supposed died in 1784, but many people in Europe saw him after that date. A few believe that he still lives on.

The commonest hypothesis about his birth is that Saint-Germain was the natural son of the widow of Charles II of Spain and a certain Comte (Count) Adanero, whom she knew at Bayonne. This Spanish queen was Marie de Neubourg, whom Victor Hugo took as the heroine of his Ruy Blas. Those who disliked Saint-Germain said that he was the son of a Portuguese Jew named Aymar, while those who hated him said, in the effort to add to his discredit, that he was the son of an Alsatian Jew named Wolff.

Fairly recently a new genealogy of Saint-Germain has been put forward which seems the most probable of all. It is the work of the theosophists and Annie Besant, who has frequently made the statement that the Comte de Saint-Germain was one of the sons of Francis Racoczi II, Prince of Transylvania. The children of Francis Racoczi were brought up by the Emperor of Austria, but one of them was withdrawn from his guardianship.

Saint Germain never seemed to age. For an entire century he maintained the physical appearance of a man between forty and fifty years old.

He could do just about anything. He was almost too good to be true. He was a magician, a musician, artistry as a violinist, talent as a painter, skill in alchemy and chemistry, a seer who read for and socialised with the rich and famous, had great wealth, and was one of the most mysterious men on the Europe continent. He knew nearly all the European languages. His knowledge of history was comprehensive, and his accomplishments as a chemist, on which he based his reputation, were in many ways considerable.

By far the greatest obvious talents of the Comte de Saint-Germain were connected with his knowledge of alchemy. Yet if Saint-Germain he knew how to make gold, he was wise enough to say nothing about it. Nothing but the possession of this secret could perhaps account for the enormous wealth at his command, though he was not known to have money on deposit at any banks.

He was one of the most celebrated mystics and adventurers of modern times. He was a confidant of two kings of France, a dazzlingly rich and gifted social figure, the subject of a thousand rumours. He enjoyed and sought the company of the pretty women of his day. It appears from the memoirs of Baron von Gleichen that when Saint-Germain was in Paris he became the lover of Mademoiselle Lambert, daughter of the Chevalier Lambert, who lived in the house in which he lodged. And it appears from Grosley's memoirs that in Holland he became the lover of a woman as rich and mysterious as himself.

He was an aristocrat who lived with princes and even with kings almost on a footing of an equal. He gave recipes for removing wrinkles and dyeing hair. His activity and the diversity of his occupations were very great. He was interested in the preparation of dyes and even started a factory in Germany for the manufacture of felt hats.

One of his principal roles was that of a secret agent in international politics in the service of France. He became Louis XV's confidential and intimate counsellor and was entrusted by him with various secret missions.

He had a love of jewels in an extreme form, and he ostentatiously showed off those he possessed. He kept a great quantity of them in a casket, which he carried about everywhere with him. The importance he attached to jewels was so great that in the pictures painted by him, which were in themselves remarkable, the figures were covered with jewels; and his colours were so vivid and strange that faces looked pale and insignificant by contrast. Jewels cast their reflection on him and threw a distorting light on the whole of his life.

The count claimed that he had learned how to turn several small diamonds into one large one and to make pearls grow to spectacular size. He said he could remove flaws from diamonds. He could make a big diamond out of several small stones. The diamonds that he wore in his shoes and garters were believed to be worth more than 200,000 francs. It was widely suspected that he also knew the secret for making gold out of base metal.

Tradition has related that he said he had known Jesus and been present at the Council of Nicea. But he did not go so far as this in his contempt for the men with whom he associated and in his derision of their credulity.

He seems to have become a celebrity in the 1750's as a friend of Louis XV and his mistress Madame de Pompadour, who together spent evenings with him simply for the pleasure of his conversation. Louis XV must have known who he was, for he extended to him a friendship that aroused the jealousy of his court. He allotted him rooms in the Chateau of Chambord. He shut himself up with Saint-Germain and Madam de Pompadour for whole evenings; and the pleasure he derived from his conversation and the admiration he no doubt felt for the range of his knowledge cannot explain the consideration, almost the deference, he had for him. Madam du Housset says in her memoirs that the king spoke of Saint-Germain as a personage of illustrious birth.

Count Charles of Hesse Cassel, with whom he lived during the last years in which history is able to follow his career, must also have possessed the secret of his birth. They worked with alchemy together. Saint-Germain treated him as an equal. It was to him that Saint-Germain entrusted his paper just before his supposed death in 1784.

However, neither Louis XV nor the Count of Hesse Cassel ever revealed anything about the birth of Saint-Germain. The count even went so far as invariably to withhold the smallest detail bearing on the life of his mysterious friend. This is a very remarkable fact, since Saint-Germain was an extremely well known figure.

Whether he was a genius or a charlatan, Saint-Germain had the talent to make himself noticed and the subject of gossip. But in Versailles and Paris he was embraced as the confidential adviser of Louis XV. The position earned him the envy and enmity of the king's ministers, who denounced him as an adventurer with a smooth line of talk.

Matters came to a head in 1760, when the count at the behest of the king involved himself in foreign affairs, going behind the back of ministry. Threatened with arrest, he was obliged to flee to England, where he stayed for a while; possibly for a period of two years.

From England Count Saint-Germain apparently went to Russia, where it is claimed he took part in a conspiracy that put Catherine the Great upon the throne in 1762. After that nothing much is known of the count until 1774, when Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette came to the throne. Saint-Germain then returned to France. It is said that he warned the royal couple of the revolution 15 years in the future, saying, "There will be a blood-thirsty republic, whose sceptre will be the executioner's knife."SECRET SOCIETIES

Secret societies were the fashion in pre-revolutionary France, and some of them recognized Saint-Germain as an 'adept' one who knew the ancient wisdoms hinted at in the rites of the Freemasons, Rosicrucians and Knights Templars. He influenced Freemasonry and the secret societies, though many modern masons have denied this and have even omitted to mention him as a great source of inspiration.

In Vienna he took part in the foundation of the Society of Asiatic Brothers and of the Knights of Light, who studied alchemy; and it was he who gave Mesmer his fundamental ideas on personal magnetism and hypnotism. It is said that he initiated Cagliostro, who visited him on several occasions in Holstein to receive directions from him, though there is no direct evidence for this. The two men were to be far separated from one another by opposite currents and a different fate.

All over the country secret societies sprang up. The new spirit manifested itself in the form of associations. Neither the nobility nor the clergy escaped what had become a fashion. There were lodges for women, and the Princesse de Lamballe became grand mistress of one of them. In Germany there were the Illuminati and the Knights of Strict Observance, and Frederick II, when he came to the throne, founded the sect of the Architects of Africa.

In France, the Order of the Templars was reconstituted, and Freemasonry, whose grand master was the Duke de Chartres, increased the number of its lodges in every town. Martinez de Pasqually taught his philosophy at Marseilles, Bordeaux and Toulouse; and Savalette de Lange, with mystics such as Court de Gebelin and Saint-Martin, founded the lodge of the Friends Assembled.

The initiates of these sects understood that they were the depositories of a heritage that they did not know, but whose boundless value they guessed; it was to be found somewhere, perhaps in traditions, perhaps in a book written by a master, perhaps in themselves. They spoke of this revealing word, this hidden treasure it was said to be in the hands of "unknown superiors of these sects, who would one day disclose the wealth which gives freedom and immortality."

It was this immortality of the spirit that Saint-Germain tried to bring to a small group of chosen initiates. He believed that this minority, once it was developed itself, would, in its turn, help to develop another small number, and that a vast spiritual radiation would gradually descend, in beneficent waves, towards the more ignorant masses. It was a sage's dream, which was never to be realized.

With the co-operation of Savalette de Lange, who was the nominal head, he founded the group of Philalethes, or truth-lovers, which was recruited from the cream of the Friends Assembled. The Prince of Hesse, Condorcet, and Cagliostro were all members of this group. Saint-Germain expounded his philosophy at Ermenonville and in Paris, in the rue Platriere.

It was a Platonic Christianity, which combined Swedenborg's visions with Martinez de Pasqually's theory of reintegration. There were to be found in it Plotinus' emanations and the hierarchy of successive planes described by Hermeticists and modem theosophists. He taught that man has in him infinite possibilities and that, from the practical point of view, he must strive unceasingly to free himself of matter in order to enter into communication with the world of higher intelligences.

He was understood by some. In two great successive assemblies, at which every Masonic lodge in France was represented, the Philalethes attempted the reform of Freemasonry. If they had attained their aim, if they had succeeded in directing the great force of Freemasonry by the prestige of their philosophy, which was sublime and disinterested, it may be that the course of events would have been altered, that the old dream of a world guided by philosopher-initiates would have been realized.

But matters were to turn out differently. Old causes, created by accumulated injustices had paved the way for terrible effects. These effects were in their turn to create the causes of future evil. The chain of evil, linked firmly together by men's egoism and hatred, was not to be broken. The light kindled by a few wise visionaries, a few faithful watchers over the well being of their brothers, was extinguished almost as soon as it was kindled.

SAINT-GERMAIN’S DEATH

Secluded at Eckenforn in the count's castle, Saint-Germain announced that he was tired of fife. He seemed careworn and melancholy. He said he felt feeble, but he refused to see a doctor and was tended only by women. No details exist of his death, or rather of his supposed death. No tombstone at Eckenforn bore his name. It was known that he had left all his papers and certain documents relating to Freemasonry to the Count of Hesse Cassel.

The count for his part asserted that he had lost a very dear friend. But his attitude was highly equivocal. He refused to give any information about his friend or his last moments, and turned the conversation if anyone spoke of him. His whole behavior gives color to the supposition that he was the accomplice of a pretended death.

Although, on the evidence of reliable witnesses, he must have been at least a hundred years old in 1784, his death in that year cannot have been genuine. The official documents of Freemasonry say that in 1785 the French masons chose him as their representative at the great convention that took place in that year, with Mesmer, Saint-Martin, and Cagliostro present. In the following year Saint-Germain was received by the Empress of Russia. Finally, the Comtesse d'Adhemar reports at great length a conversation she had with him in 1789 in the Church of the Recollets, after the taking of the Bastille.

His face looked no older than it had looked thirty years earlier. He said he had come from China and Japan. "There is nothing so strange out there," he said, "as that which is happening here. But I can do nothing. My hands are tied by someone who is stronger than I. There are times when it is possible to draw back; others at which the decree must be carried out as soon as he has pronounced it."

And he told her in broad outlines all the events, not excepting the death of the queen, that were to take place in the years that followed. "The French will play with titles and honors and ribbons like children. They will regard everything as a plaything, even the equipment of the Garde Nationale. There is today a deficit of some forty millions, which is the nominal cause of the Revolution. Well, under the dictatorship of philanthropists and orators the national debt will reach thousands of millions."

"I have seen Saint-Germain again," wrote Comtesse d'Adhemar in 1821, "each time to my amazement. I saw him when the queen was murdered, on the 18th of Brumaire, on the day following the death of the Duke d'Enghien, in January, 1815, and on the eve of the murder of the Duke de Berry."

Mademoiselle de Genlis asserts that she met the Comte de Saint-Germain in 1821 during the negotiations for the Treaty of Vienna; and the Comte de Chalons, who was ambassador in Venice, said he spoke to him there soon afterwards in the Piazza di San Marco. There is other evidence, though less conclusive, of his survival. The Englishman Grosley said he saw him in 1798 in a revolutionary prison; and someone else wrote that he was one of the crowd surrounding the tribunal at which the Princess de Lamballe appeared before her execution.

It seems quite certain that the Comte de Saint-Germain did not die at the place and on the date that history has fixed. He continued an unknown career, of whose end we are ignorant and whose duration seems so long that one's imagination hesitates to admit it.

What happened to the Comte de Saint-Germain after 1821, in which year there is evidence that he was still alive? An Englishman, Albert Vandam, in his memoirs, which he calls An Englishman in Paris, speaks of a certain person whom he knew towards the end of Louis Philippe's reign and whose way of life bore a curious resemblance to that of the Comte de Saint-Germain.

"He called himself Major Fraser, wrote Vandam, "lived alone and never alluded to his family. Moreover he was lavish with money, though the source of his fortune remained a mystery to everyone. He possessed a marvelous knowledge of all the countries in Europe at all periods. His memory was absolutely incredible and, curiously enough, he often gave his hearers to understand that he had acquired his learning elsewhere than from books. Many is the time he has told me, with a strange smile, that he was certain he had known Nero, had spoken with Dante, and so on."

Like Saint-Germain, Major Fraser had the appearance of a man of between forty and fifty, of middle height and strongly built. The rumor was current that he was the illegitimate son of a Spanish prince. After having been, also like Saint-Germain, a cause of astonishment to Parisian society for a considerable time, he disappeared without leaving a trace. Was it the same Major Fraser who, in 1820, published an account of his journey in the Himalayas, in which he said he had reached Gangotri, the source of the most sacred branch of the Ganges River, and bathed in the source of the Jumna River?

It was at the end of the nineteenth century that the legend of Saint-Germain grew so inordinately. By reason of his knowledge, of the integrity of his life, of his wealth and of the mystery that surrounded him, he might reasonably have been taken for an heir of the first Rosicrucians, for a possessor of the Philosopher's Stone. But the theosophists and a great many occultists regarded him as a master of the great White Lodge of the Himalayas.

The legend of these masters is well known. According to it there live in inaccessible lamaseries in Tibet certain wise men who possess the ancient secrets of the lost civilization of Atlantis. Sometimes they send to their imperfect brothers, who are blinded by passions and ignorance, sublime messengers to teach and guide them. Krishna, the Buddha, and Jesus were the greatest of these. But there were many other more obscure messengers, of whom Saint-Germain has been considered to be one

"This pupil of Hindu and Egyptian hierophants, this holder of the secret knowledge of the East," theosophist Madam Blavatsky says of him, "was not appreciated for who he was. The stupid world has always treated in this way men who, like Saint-Germain, have returned to it after long years of seclusion devoted to study with their hands full of the treasure of esoteric wisdom and with the hope of making the world better, wiser and happier."

Between 1880 and 1900 it was admitted among all theosophists, who at that time had become very numerous, particularly in England and America, that the Comte de Saint-Germain was still alive, that he was still engaged in the spiritual development of the West, and that those who sincerely took part in this development had the possibility of meeting him.

The brotherhood of Khe-lan was famous throughout Tibet, and one of their most famous brothers was an Englishman who had arrived one day during the early part of the twentieth century from the West. He spoke every language, including the Tibetan, and knew every art and science, says the tradition. His sanctity and the phenomena produced by him caused him to be proclaimed a Shaberon Master after a residence of but a few years. His memory lives to the present day among the Tibetans, but his real name is a secret with the Shaberons alone. Might not this mysterious traveller be the Comte de Saint-Germain?

But even if he has never come back, even if he is no longer alive and we must relegate to legend the idea that the great Hermetic nobleman is still wandering about the world with his sparkling jewels, his senna tea, and his taste for princesses and queens even so it can be said that he has gained the immortality he sought. For a great number of imaginative and sincere men the Comte de Saint-Germain is more alive than he has ever been. There are men who, when they hear a step on the staircase, think it may perhaps be he, coming to give them advice, to bring them some unexpected philosophical idea.

They do not jump up to open the door to their guest, for material barriers do not exist for him. There are men who, when they go to sleep, are pervaded by genuine happiness because they are certain that their spirit, when freed from the body, will be able to hold converse with the master in the luminous haze of the astral world.

Saint Sermain was as real or as lllusionary as any of us only he knew how to control the illusion and play the game at a higher level than most of us do. He played the roles of Hermes [the Trickster] - who was Thoth the scribe [who write the program which is our reality - Merlin the Magician - Shakespeare among other famous roles.

THE ROSICRUCIANS -- AMORC
  Rosicrucians are members of a worldwide esoteric society whose official emblem combines a rose and a cross. The society was apparently founded in Europe in medieval times and was given impetus by the publication of Fama fraternitatis (Account of the Brotherhood, 1614) and the Confessio fraternitatis (Confession of the Brotherhood, 1615). These pamphlets were probably written by the Lutheran pastor Johan Valentin Andrea (1586-1654).

They describe the initiation into the mysteries of the east (particularly of ancient Egypt) of Christian Rosenkreuz, who was allegedly born in 1378 but is presumed to be an allegorical figure. In the 18th century several Rosicrucian groups were active in Russia, Poland, and Germany.The movement has close links with Freemasonry.

The first Rosicrucian society in the United States was founded in Pennsylvania in 1694. The Ancient Mystical Order Rosae Crucis has headquarters in San Jose, Calif. Founded in 1909 by H. Spencer Lewis, AMORC is an international fraternal order that operates through a system of lodges and fosters the Rosicrucian philosophy of developing humankind's highest potentialities and psychic powers.

FREEMASONRY -- THE NOT SO SECRET SOCIETY
  Freemasonry refers to the principles, institutions, and practices of the fraternal order of the Free and Accepted Masons. The largest worldwide society, freemasonry is an organisation of men based on the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, using builders' tools as symbols to teach basic moral truths generally accepted by persons of good will. It is religious in that a belief in God is the prime requirement for membership, but it is nonsectarian in that no religious test is used.

The purpose of freemasonry is to enable men to meet in harmony, to promote friendship, and to be charitable. Its basic ideals are that all persons are the children of one God, that all persons are related to each other, and that the best way to worship God is to be of service to people.

The basic unit of freemasonry is the lodge, which exists under a charter issued by a grand lodge exercising administrative powers. The lodges are linked together informally by a system of mutual recognition between lodges that meet the Masonic requirements. The lodge confers three degrees: Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft, and Master Mason. Additional degrees are conferred by two groups of advanced freemasonry: the York Rite, which awards 12 degrees, and the Scottish Rite, which awards 30 higher degrees.

In the United States and Canada members have formed a large number of groups to enable them to expand their social and charitable activities. The best known of these groups is the Shriners, who hold festive parades and support hospitals for crippled and burned children. There are also the Order of the Eastern Star for Master Masons and their wives; the Order of De Molay for boys; and the Order of Job's Daughters and the Order of Rainbow for girls.

Many legendary theories exist concerning the origin of freemasonry, but it is generally believed that it evolved from the medieval guilds of the stonemasons. Its present organisational form began on June 24, 1717, when a grand lodge was formed in London. Since that time lodges have spread all over the world with local grand lodges formed whenever enough lodges exist in an area. Lodges first appeared in America in Philadelphia (1730) and Boston (1733).

At various times and places freemasonry has met religious and political opposition. Religious opponents, especially the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, have traditionally claimed that freemasonry is a religion and is a secret organization. A papal ban on Roman Catholic membership in Masonic lodges was rescinded in 1983.

Freemasons hold that the organisation is religious but not a religion, and that it is not a secret organisation since it works openly in the community. Freemasonry has always been suppressed in totalitarian states.

There are approximately 4.8 million Freemasons in regular lodges scattered around the world. Of this number, more than 3 million are to be found in the United States, where there are numerous distinct Masonic groups. Many notable men in history have been Freemasons, including Benjamin Franklin, Mozart, Henry Ford, Rudyard Kipling, Douglas MacArthur, Will Rogers, and George Washington and a number of other presidents of the United States.

THE ORDER OF MELCHIZEDEK
  It amazes me that the editors of the Bible did not delete the various references, in both the Old and New testaments, to Melchizedek because it is quite clear from these various references that this personage was much higher up the spiritual hierarchy than Jesus right from the beginning: [See Hebrews 7:1 – 4 “For this Melchisedec, king of Salem, priest of the most high God, who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the kings, and blessed him; To whom also Abraham gave a tenth part of all; first being by interpretation King of righteousness, and after that also King of Salem, which is, King of peace; Without father, without mother, without descent, having neither beginning of days, nor end of life; but made like unto the Son of God; abideth a priest continually. Now consider how great this man [was], unto whom even the patriarch Abraham gave the tenth of the spoils.”]

And in Hebrews 6.20 “The Lord hath sworn, and will not repent, Thou art a priest forever after the order of Melchisedec.”
Further evidence that Jesus, only after his death and resurrection acchieved the spititual status of Melchizedek, is found in Hebrews 7:5 “And it is yet far more evident: for that after the similitude of Melchisedec there ariseth another priest,” and continuing in Hebrews 7:16 – 22 “Who is made, not after the law of a carnal commandment, but after the power of an endless life. For he testifieth, Thou [art] a priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec. For there is verily a disannulling of the commandment going before for the weakness and unprofitableness thereof. For the law made nothing perfect, but the bringing in of a better hope [did]; by the which we draw nigh unto God. And inasmuch as not without an oath [he was made priest]: (For those priests were made without an oath; but this with an oath by him that said unto him, The Lord sware and will not repent, Thou [art] a priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec:) By so much was Jesus made a surety of a better testament.”

Earlier reference to Melchizedek’s spiritual status is found in Genesis 14: 18 – 20 “And Melchizedek king of Salem brought forth bread and wine: and he [was] the priest of the most high God. And he blessed him, and said, Blessed [be] Abram of the most high God, possessor of heaven and earth: And blessed be the most high God, which hath delivered thine enemies into thy hand. And he gave him tithes of all.”

The following outlines the raison d’etre of a current mystical school.

ORDINATION of INITIATES into the PRIESTHOOD OF MELCHIZEDEK

Why another Priesthood you may be asking, especially as we tend to associate this term with human hierarchies of power and control which sadly have often been abused and corrupted. The Melchizedek Priesthood couldn't be more opposite to this concept however. It is a Fellowship network, it is not man-made, it has no hierarchies because all are considered equal in our Divinity, and the only power and control it recognises is the inner power of our God Self and the self-control we undertake to develop as Initiates!

The Order of Melchizedek itself being the Order of Love prophesied by the last Cathars in 1244AD, is not connected to any one religion, -ism, or path as it is the cosmic impulse and overlighting energy of the spiritual re-awakening of our God-Self. It has been responsible for the fundamental principles underlying all great spiritual traditions, and their teachers such as Moses, Jesus, Buddha, Krishna etc. were all fully-realised Melchizedeks sent to help humanity's soul education and evolution by first "Knowing yourself as an embryo God."

As we move into the Aquarian Age the Priesthood of Melchizedek is once more becoming visible on the earth plane to promote and accelerate a shift into God Consciousness, to teach and to demonstrate the principle of the unity of all things known as the ‘Law of One’ of the eternal and Cosmic Order of Melchizedek. As has always been the case through the millennia and in all traditions, only when we step upon the path of initiation and become dedicated to transforming ourselves, to ascending our consciousness and developing self-mastery as the Ascended Masters have already demonstrated, can we be initiated into the Order of Melchizedek. This is the first step which contains the necessary keys of understandings and Divine Principles of the Priesthood.

Then the Priesthood is open to all Initiates who feel a resonance or an ancient memory stirring deep within, or who hear and answer the call within their heart. They feel or know that they are ready for Ordination, for stepping into their Divine power having made the commitment to serve as a Light Bearer, one who leads by example and courageously steps out in faith. However, it is composed not only of those who have earned a leadership role and accept the responsibility of serving as wayshowers, examples, spiritual teachers, healers, peacemakers, visionaries, communicators with the Higher Realms, facilitators of all kinds but also for those who, as ‘the meek who shall inherit the earth’ show the way by living their lives by Divine Principles and Christ Consciously.

Thus those who are an active part of the Priesthood will be recognised by their humility and a life spent in joyful service helping others. They are protected by the power of St Michael and serve as ‘midwives’ to aid people in the transition into the new Age of the Holy Spirit-Shekinah, thus empowering those who are choosing commitment to the world and to humanity in transformation, who are prepared to transform themselves. The Priesthood serves by example. Its ministry is not limited solely to this third dimension of reality however, but also other realms connected to the earth. It is a part of an ongoing circuitry of energy available at all times to Mother Earth and her inhabitants on many levels.

A Convocation of the Priesthood of Melchizedek therefore is a potent self-empowerment opportunity for those Initiates who are desirous and committed to progressing on to their next level of service and soul evolution. The supportive atmosphere will often facilitate the further release of limiting emotions. Once we are free of them assisted by the energies of St Germain’s 7th Ray of Freedom, we’re able to remember our Life Purpose which we then find is entirely natural, effortless and comfortable to us! As a member of the Priesthood and once we are able to unreservedly accept our mission, we can then begin further intense, ongoing training on the inner planes. This is usually by the Ascended Masters under the Order of Melchizedek together with the Angelic Ophanim and Seraphim, and prepares us for spiritual leadership and planetary service either overtly or quietly in our own personal life.

Although a Convocation is the physical action of coming together to support each other and expand our unified intent to greater service and personal spiritual advancement, so the profoundly moving and powerful Ordination Ceremony is the outward expression of your inner Sacred Vows of Commitment between you and God. This exoteric act established centuries ago is deemed by the Spiritual Hierarchy to be necessary because we are still in physical bodies. Part of its significance is to imprint these eternal vows and commitment into one’s human and cellular consciousness.

Each part of the awesome and sacred physical Ordination Ceremony has an esoteric and ancient symbolic meaning, and follows the format of the Seven Steps of Melchizedek which has been handed down through the true Priesthood. Outwardly, each new Melchizedek Priest will, following their Anointing be offered and will symbolically accept the Mantle of Service, the Initiates Rod of the Divine Power within, the Collar Breastplate of the Priesthood, and lastly the deeply significant Staff of Leadership. Each individual Ordination concludes in the centuries old tradition mentioned in Psalm 110, when each will be declared "... a priest forever after the Order of Melchizedek."

You have an inner knowing that life will never be the same again now that you have sealed your Holy Commitment with YHWH. FROM SYLVIA ..... "I feel both humble and honoured to have received the ‘Calling’ from the Spiritual Hierarchy to conduct physical Ordinations. I hesitated for some time before accepting this very unusual and rare assignment, as Ordination always has been, and still is, primarily an inner commitment one makes to God. After extensive inner questioning however, I was reassured that this was indeed part of my Soul Blueprint. It is something for which I have been prepared in this life, by having already received nearly twenty years of intense, inner and outer training by High Priests of Melchizedek, and of course, in many previous lives as well.”

Typical of the profound feelings all experience are:
"This is what my soul has been longing for." R.H.
"It was an awesome experience, an honour and a privilege."
"I know that being a Priest in the Order of Melchizedek is a lifetime commitment, and I feel excitement, joy and extra strength to carry on my soul journey on this planet. I have never felt so uplifted and special. It was a time in my life that I will never forget - it was so magical, almost unreal - but I realized that at long last I really did belong. I found out who I really was." B.P.
"I experienced such a joy and I felt one with God. The love and the energy was so amazing and on a much deeper level. I was in bliss, in an altered state of consciousness." S.C.
"Being involved in the Melchizedek life has certainly stepped up the evolutionary path for me! I have found myself frequently in spaces where I have to do lightwork – it is a privilege." Dr K.P




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