Aleister Crowley and the Occult Golden Dawn

The Great Beast was Affiliated With the Clandestine Hermetic Cult

Aleister Crowley - The Great Beast - Public Domain
Aleister Crowley - The Great Beast - Public Domain
Crowley's parents, members of the Plymouth Brethren, gave him an education which imbued him with a hatred of Christianity. He was initiated into the Golden Dawn in 1898.

After Crowley was initiated into the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, an occult society which taught magick, the arcane arts and other hermetic subjects, he rose quickly through the degrees.

In 1890, there was a schism in the cult, so he left England and traveled in the Orient. He founded his own satanic organization. The Golden Dawn would be affected by a major schism among its founding members.

Who was Aleister Crowley?

His mother called him "the Beast" which led to him calling himself "The Great Beast whose Number is 666," the digits of the devil, according to the Bible.

In 1899, he went to Paris and was initiated him into the Second Order, but the London lodge rejected his initiation. Crowley returned to England in 1900, attempting to control the quarters of the Second Order, wearing a black mask and Highland dress with a gilt dagger. He was rejected and was, later, expelled from the Golden Dawn.

He practiced satanism and indulged in drinking, drugs and all types of sexual perversion. Crowley established his Abbey of Thelema that abided by the Law of Thelema, to do whatever one pleased without regard for hurting others. He enjoyed the press’ nickname for him, “The Wickedest Man in the World.”

The Golden Dawn

The organization, founded in 1887 by Dr. William Robert Woodman, Dr. William Wynn Westcott and Samuel Liddell Macgregor Mathers, was a hermetic society whose members are taught the principles of occult sciences and the magick of Hermes, Greek messenger of the Gods and guide to the underworld.

Famous members included A. E. Waite, who created the Rider-Waite Tarot Deck which is the most popular one today, occultist and author Dion Fortune and poet and dramatist William Butler Yeats. Its system was based on the Kabalistic Tree of Life, with ten degrees and an eleventh one for neophytes. According to members, secrecy was mandatory to protect themselves from public exposure, but there are also the elements of power, control and deception.

This was the occultism that the upper middle class German immigrants brought to America with them in the late 1800s and is what distinguishes them from the Pennsylvania Dutch. Incorporated in its teachings were the Key of Solomon, Abra-Melin and Enochian magick, the Egyptian Book of the Dead, William Blake’s prophetic books and the Chaldean Oracles. Lessons were given in astral travel, scrying, alchemy, geomancy, the Tarot and astrology.

The Golden Dawn’s Internal Problems

In addition to Crowley’s expulsion, there was rampant in-fighting among founding members of the organization. Woodman died in 1891 and wasn’t replaced. Mathers produced an initiation ritual for the Adeptus Minor degree. Most of these rituals were based on Freemasonry. Many members thought that he was a little eccentric, possibly a lunatic.

He claimed his wife, Mina, received teachings from the Secret Chiefs through clairaudience, psychic hearing. Mathers translated The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abra-Melin the Mage, which he claimed was bewitched and created by a nonphysical intelligence. He claimed the Secret Chiefs had initiated him into a Third Order and was expelled from the organization. In 1897, members discovered Westcott's questionable activities in founding The Golden Dawn. He resigned. Schisms beyond repair had formed within the organization.

In 1917, it was reestablished as the Merlin Temple of the Stella Matutina which lasted until the 1940s when it declined after the publication of its secret rituals by former member Israel Regardie, Crowley's one-time secretary.

Crowley and the Golden Dawn

The rise and fall of this hermetic organization parallels the history of many occult groups. Highly intelligent people with mystical beliefs found these organizations and attract others who share these qualities. Eventually there are internal conflicts for various reasons. Some splinter organizations of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn still exist. Aleister Crowley, a heroin addict, died in Hastings, England on December 1, 1947 from a respiratory infection. His teachings also live on.

Articles Related to Aleister Crowley and the Occult Golden Dawn

Readers who found this article interesting might enjoy Aleister Crowley – the Great Beast, along with Auditory Hallucinations or Clairaudience and PowWow Pennsy Dutch Arcane Art.

Source:

Time: Secret Societies, Kelly Knauer, ed, (Time Books, 2010).

Jill Stefko PhD, Renaissance Studio

Jill Stefko - I'd rather deal with the paranormal than human abnormal - having dealt extensively with both.

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