THE RITUAL OF THE SPHINX
AND INSTRUCTIONS
By David Cherubim.
Copyright © 1991.

THE RITUAL OF THE SPHINX
By David Cherubim, 1989 e.v.
In the Center of his Temple, facing East, let the Magician give the Sign of
Horus, and say:
In the Sign of the Supreme and Terrible Lord,
Crowned and Conquering and Most Adored,
I proclaim His Mighty Word for All:
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law!
Let the Magician return in the Sign of Silence, then advance to his Altar,
ignite the fire, and seeing its radiant glory, let him say:
I stand before this Altar of Flame
With courageous soul, body and brain!
To do my Will and to extol
The One Great Work of Living Sol!
Let the Magician now drink the Wine, and tasting its vital essence, let him say:
I drink this Holy Wine of Love
In aspiration to the Lord Above!
To fill my soul with Ecstasy Sublime
To partake of the secret Joy of the Divine!
Let the Magician now ignite the incense, smelling its inspiring scent, and let
him say:
I breathe in my body a sweet scent of bliss
More subtle and informing than Hell’s own Kiss!
To inspire my mind with the Knowledge of The One
And to nourish my Spirit with the Liberty of the Sun!
Let the Magician now touch himself with Abramelin Oil, and feeling its fiery
sensation thrill through his body, let him say:
I touch my body with the Holy Oil
To awaken the Serpent to Uncoil!
To embrace my aspiring and reverent Heart
With the subtle Force of this Ritual of Art!
Let the Magician now strike the Bell 3-5-3, and hearing its sound thrill in the
depths of his spirit, let him say:
I hear the sound of the Sacred Bell
Casting upon me its Mystick Spell!
To arouse and awaken me To Go,
As I will, above and below!
Let the Magician now take hold of his Wand, and trace in the East, above the
Altar, the Sigil of the Sphinx, and let him say:
In search of True Liberty, Love and Light,
And the sacred splendor of the One True Life,
I swear and I promise to Will and to Know,
To Dare and to Keep Silent the Life Ineffable!
Let the Magician now give the Sign of the Sphinx, and let him say:
As a Magician these things I shall never forsake
To the glory and worship of the Great and Holy Snake!
Who embraces me in the mighty grip of His power
That I may accomplish my Will in this hour!
Let the Magician now give the Sign of Horus, and let him say:
In the Sign of the Supreme and Terrible Lord,
Crowned and Conquering and Most Adored,
I swear to perform the Four Powers of Skill:
Knowledge, Courage, Silence, and Will!
That I may accomplish the Great Work of Sol
And partake of the Four Glories of the Law!
To attain to the Knowledge and Conversation
Of the Holy Angel of this Great Invocation!
To Go upon my Way with holy zeal,
For Love is the law, love under will!
Let the Magician return in the Sign of Silence, advance to the Altar, strike the
battery 3-5-3, and say:
ABRAHADABRA.
CONCERNING THE
RITUAL OF THE SPHINX
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
The Ritual of the Sphinx is a Magical Rite of Consecration. Consecration is the
active dedication of a thing to a single purpose. The Ritual of the Sphinx is
specifically designed to dedicate the Magician unto the Great Work of doing
his/her True Will, to unite him/her with his/her Holy Guardian Angel, which Holy
Angel is represented by the Sphinx. The Sphinx is a universal symbol of the Holy
Guardian Angel; it can be applied by all to represent their True Self, to invoke
in their consciousness the dynamic realization of their essential nature, to go
forth and do their True Will and accomplish the Great Work.
The Ritual of the Sphinx is a Supreme Rite of Self-Initiation containing
fundamental magical formulae by which the Magician can consecrate his/her
elemental vehicles to the Supreme Operation of the Great Work. These elemental
vehicles are the five senses, that is, sight, taste, smell, touch, and hearing;
and these five senses are called in Magical Philosophy the five Elements of
Fire, Water, Air, Earth, and Spirit. In this Magick Ritual the Magician
activates the four lesser Elements of Fire, Water, Air and Earth, and then are
these Elements concentrated and synthesized in the greater Element of Spirit,
also called Aethyr.
The four lesser Elements correspond with the Four Powers of the Sphinx and with
the Four Glories of the Law of Thelema. The Four Powers of the Sphinx are "to
Know, to Dare, to Will, and to Keep Silent." The greater Element of Spirit
corresponds with the fifth Power of the Sphinx called "to Go." To go is the true
function of a god; it is the act of doing one’s True Will, like a star flaming
forth on its own self-determined orbit, free to fulfill its cosmic destiny in
the celestial scheme of the Infinite Universe. The five Elements and Powers of
the Sphinx are linked with the five points of the Pentagram, which is the Sign
of the Magician who has transcended the elements by the proper application of
the Powers of the Sphinx and who is therefore able to direct the elements
according to the essential scheme of his/her True Will, and who is thus united
with his/her True Self.
The Pentagram and Sphinx both symbolize the Supreme Attainment in Magick, that
is, the Great Work of attaining the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy
Guardian Angel, which lofty attainment is made possible by way of doing one’s
True Will, for the True Will is the True Self in action. By observing the course
of the True Will we can see into the core of our own natures, perceiving the
sublime essence of our own Inner Angel. Action is the fundamental means by which
to attain the knowledge of the True Self, for action is experience and
experience is knowledge.
To attain the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel can only be
achieved by action which is, in its most glorious sense, a true sacrament of
love, a uniting of the self with the Universe; it is a mighty ritual and
invocation of the Inner Self; it is a vehicle of expression for that True Self.
To act is to see; to see is to know; and to know is to be. Action is one meaning
of the word "Tantra." Tantra is divine knowledge in action; it is the act of the
divine in manifestation. "Tantra" also connotes "ritual" and "method". Tantra is
the method, ritual and act of the Divine in manifestation. The Ritual of the
Sphinx is indeed a Tantric Rite. Its magical formulae are Tantric in various
subtle ways, as well as being profoundly Thelemic. The Law of Thelema is the Law
of Action! The Ritual of the Sphinx is a Magick Rite by which the True Self is
realized by way of the True Will which is the True Self in Action.
In the Ritual of the Sphinx fire is used for sight, wine (or water if you are
under twenty-one years of age) is used for taste, incense is used for smell, oil
is used for touch, and the bell is used for hearing. In this way all of the
elements are activated and balanced. By activating an element you initiate a
subtle current that vitalizes its corresponding power of the Sphinx within you
and thus you can experience its corresponding Glory. If you activate Fire you
will vitalize and nourish the power to Dare and you will experience Light; if
you activate Water you will vitalize and nourish the power to Keep Silent and
you will experience Love; if you activate Air you will vitalize and nourish the
power to Know and you will experience Liberty; if you activate Earth you will
vitalize and nourish the power to Will and you will experience Life. These are
all then harmonized in Spirit for the lofty attainment of the supreme power to
Go.
The Ritual of the Sphinx is most applicable to the Zelator, but we should not
limit it to his/her use alone; all may partake of its holy Magick; it can be
used by the Neophyte, Zelator and Adepts as a daily Rite of Consecration. For
within this Royal Ritual is contained certain magical formulae which are
essential to the beginner as well as to the more advanced. It is a Ritual that
can be employed in the magical scheme of the self-initiation of all, as a
practical method of dedicating the soul, mind and body to the Great Work. Even
the more advanced Adepts of Magick are in need of always invoking the highest by
way of magical consecration; it is, in fact, an eternal operation of infinite
importance, a perpetual sacrament and a constant means of uniting the mind of
the Magician to the One Idea of his/her True Self and its True Will.
This royal ritual incorporates Thelemic principles in its application to assist
the Magician in his/her essential progress to go forth and do his/her True Will
and to unite with his/her True Self. Its first proclamation is the Law of
Thelema and it ends with a further proclamation concerning the nature of that
Law. It contains magical formulae that can directly inspire the Magician to do
his/her True Will, to express the dynamic current of his/her own True Self. This
is the obligation of the Zelator. S/he is bound by Oath to do his/her True Will,
and this very act of limitation is his/her magical means to freedom, to be and
to express his/her True Self. The force of limitation is Saturn; but this force
is also the source of freedom when we are able to use limitation instead of
being used by it.
To take an Oath is a binding of the Will to a self-determined course of action;
it is a limiting of one’s concentration so that one may attain the object of
one’s Magick Oath. Just as a writer must concentrate his/her mind on writing
without intruding thoughts regarding other matters, so must the Magician bind
him/herself to a single course of action, and the only sensible course of action
for him/her to obligate him/herself to is the course of his/her True Will, to
realize his/her True Self, since the Magician is a follower of the Path of the
Universe, conforming with Her Laws on all planes; and the True Will of the
Magician is the Universal Will, and the True Self of the Magician is the
Universe itself.
In the Ritual of the Sphinx the Magician takes an Oath to exercise the Four
Powers of the Sphinx, that is, to Know, to Dare, to Will and to Keep Silent, so
that s/he may attain the lofty power to Go, to do his/her True Will and to
realize his/her True Self. All else contributes to this dynamic course of
action, cultivating Light, Life, Love and Liberty. The Oath is the Word and the
Will; it is our vehicle of creative power and our magick link to freedom.
As stated before, the Sphinx represents the Supreme Attainment in Magick, that
is, the accomplishment of the Great Work. Now the Sphinx is a combination of
Lion and Woman. The Lion is the Masculine Principle or the Sun; the Woman is the
Feminine Principle or the Moon. To unite the Sun and Moon is the accomplishment
of the Great Work, thus the Sigil of the Sphinx used in this Magick Ritual is
the Sigil of the Sun and Moon Conjoined, and the Sign of the Sphinx used in this
Magick Ritual is the Sign of the Sun and Moon Conjoined. This sacramental union
of the Sun and Moon cannot take course without the essential activation and
synthesis of the magical elements. By activating and synthesizing the magical
elements of Nature, the Forces of the Sun and Moon are harmonized and nourished
with love, cultivating their sublime union. Therefore in the Ritual of the
Sphinx do we activate and synthesize the magical elements before we make the
Sigil and Sign of the Sun and Moon Conjoined. We must first consecrate our
vehicles of sense before we can attain the Union of the Sun and Moon. This same
union is symbolized by the Hexagram, which is a symbol of fire and water united.
But it is further a symbol of WoMan and God(dess) united, or of the microcosm
and macrocosm. In this sense, the Moon is the human self or WoMan (microcosm)
and the Sun is the Holy Guardian Angel or True Self (macrocosm). To unite the
Sun and Moon is the attainment of the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy
Guardian Angel. In this Royal Ritual of the Sphinx the Magician consecrates
his/her vehicles of sense to that grand attainment of spiritual illumination.
This magical operation is the same that we find used in Tantric Yoga, which also
consecrates the five senses to the Deity of one’s worship. It is actually an
operation that is used in various ways in various systems of spiritual
illumination. It is an operation that is most essential to the Great Work; we
cannot realize our True Self if our senses are bound to the material world; they
must become the vehicles of the True Self, applied to the realization of that
Inner Self and used in the act of doing one’s True Will. The senses must be
dedicated to the Great Work if we are to attain its lofty splendors; and this
dedication must not be partial, but whole.
The senses are the instruments which we must use in the operation of the Great
Work; they are the creative vehicles of our personal expression in the world
which need to be consecrated to the True Self by way of action which is ritual.
The senses are not evil; on the contrary, the senses are most holy when
dedicated to the grand performance of the Great Work. When WoMan conforms
his/her elemental vehicles to the Divine Operation of Cosmic Evolution, s/he
then reunites all his/her elements and attains a new species of consciousness
that is above and beyond mere earthly existence. The senses are divine; they are
the creative vehicles of the True Self, its means to experience and to know
itself. All material forces are divine products of a spiritual power, and these
material forces are all created for a spiritual necessity. We are here in our
bodies for an essential work of spiritual significance; our bodies are fit
vehicles for a task of supreme importance.
Without our bodies and their senses we could not fulfill our True Will. Now, in
this very moment, our body and our senses are made manifest for us to accomplish
a great task of individual and collective significance. The body is the Chariot
of the Mind and the link between the soul and the Universe. Therefore neglect
not your body with its holy senses, for these are your instruments by which to
do your True Will, to accomplish your Great Work.
There is much talk in Buddhism and Hinduism of the necessity to eliminate desire
for the realization of Truth, for the salvation of the soul. Desire has been
defined as the fruit of the senses and as the cause of all suffering and
ignorance. Freedom from the desires has been a principal theme of many men and
women seeking the religious life. They would cut themselves off from the world
of the senses by desiring nothing in the hope of spiritual perfection. But these
things are, in proper measure of understanding, purely null. We need not
overcome the senses by avoiding them, by becoming begging monks or floating
yogis. If we would simply take a little time to think, to use our little brains,
it will become very apparent how silly this whole scheme is of becoming pure by
avoiding the desires of the elemental senses.
The senses are a dynamic source of both positive and negative currents of force;
they can be used for either constructive or destructive ends. If the senses are
in control of a WoMan, then is s/he no better off than the simple animal of
Nature who knows not where it goes. Of course it is an insult to the animal
kingdom to include all animals in this analogy; the only animal that should be
applied -- and this by way of analogy only -- is the sheep. But if the Soul of
WoMan reclaims its Lordship over the senses, then do they become perfect tools
in the hands of the Lord of the Body, and WoMan becomes a veritable master of
his/her universe, a mighty goat or god if you will.
Let no WoMan feel obligated to the unessential task of giving up his/her
material way of life, with its multitude of desires, for the attainment of the
Great Work. All that is needed is for you to cultivate control over your senses,
to acknowledge that you are beyond them and that you have the power to regulate
them. The senses are your instruments, perfect tools that you can use to
accomplish the Great Work. Try not to be identified with the desires of your
senses, but stand outside of them as an observer, a witness; then take control
of them, refine them, and balance them, and so shall you consecrate your
elemental vehicles, dedicating your physical self to your spiritual Self.
If a WoMan can witness something, it means that s/he is beyond that thing, for
awareness is transcendence. We are always witnessing our senses in the form of
desires, usually becoming identified with them. We take into account no measure
of the Self that is beyond the senses and desires, but instead we become what
our senses tell us. When this course of action takes place, then ignorance
prevails and sorrow is due. But if we go within and acknowledge our True Self
beyond our senses and desires, and become a witness rather than an animal, then
do we transcend our senses and gain the power to control them, that is, direct
them in the proper manner to the proper spiritual object.
When we stand above the senses we obtain control over the elements, so that they
become forces in our command. This means that we can, according to the direction
of our True Will, transmute them into veritable mediums of perfect expression on
earth for the manifestation of our True Self. The Magick Pentagram represents
the Lordship of the Self over the elemental senses. The top point of the
Pentagram represents the True Self (Spirit), whereas the other four points
represent its material vehicles. The True Self must stand above its material
vehicles to direct them according to the dynamic current of its True Will. The
Pentagram and Sphinx both represent this magical operation.
This can all be summed up in the Hindu concept of stepping out of an
ever-turning wheel. The wheel is the senses with their innumerable desires, and
only by stepping out of the wheel can we transcend and direct it. What is
outside of the wheel is the True Self, represented by the Sphinx on top of the
Wheel of Atu 10 of Tarot. The True Self is the source of that which is the
producer of the elements, therefore is it necessary to be the True Self to stand
above them and to direct them. Yet to step out of the wheel does not mean that
we have to give up our senses with all their delicious desires. It is all a
matter of what we are identifying with, our True Self or our desires. We are not
our desires, but they are a part of our personality, which is the divine
expression of our soul.
To be identified with our True Self, beyond the personality and its desires, is
to transcend the wheel and realize who we really are. We then become
non-attached to the senses and we achieve the sublime experience of the
spiritual Self. When this is the case, we can then freely indulge in all the
desires that we so will, according to our true natures. Our senses will then be
perfect mediums of expression for the creative liberty of the soul and nothing
can do us wrong. Think not evil of the senses, but rather your misuse of them;
for they are your divine instruments by which you will accomplish the Great
Work.
But know that in essence you are not your body and senses. This is a simple
truth based upon the fact that you are witnessing their activities as an
observer. Anything you are witnessing is just an object of perception cast upon
the screen of your mind. All things that you perceive are thoughts of your mind,
and you are just as much beyond your thoughts as you are beyond your body and
senses. All thought is derived from sense perceptions, and indeed you stand
above them all. They are your manifestations and not your True Self, which is,
in essence, beyond all thought.
Think of your True Self as the head of your body which regulates the movements
of your arms and legs. You control your body; it is your animal to train and
transcend. Once you know this, and you are certain of its truth, you then purify
your mind of its dross rubbish, and you are then able to consecrate your senses
to the performance of the Great Work. In the Ritual of the Sphinx we use the
senses to transcend the senses; we do not avoid them in our holy Magick. Your
body, which is your greatest gift, is the Laboratory wherein to perform your
Great Work. It is the Temple of your god; it is the home of your Universe.
Therefore worship it and make it a fit vehicle for you to go forth and achieve
the victory of your True Will!
The Magician should commit to memory the Ritual of the Sphinx prior to its
performance. It is a simple process to do so, for it is a very short ritual; and
it can be performed within a period of 30 minutes or less. Before performing the
ritual, the Magician should duly banish by way of the Lesser Banishing Ritual of
the Pentagram or by way of the Ritual of the Star Ruby (Liber XXV). The symbols
of the senses, that is fire, wine, incense, oil and the bell, should be
positioned in their appropriate places on the Altar, that is, fire in the South,
wine in the West, incense in the East, oil in the North, and the bell in the
Center of it all. The Magician should be robed as s/he deems fit for this Holy
Rite of Consecration, and s/he should have at his/her command a Magick Wand to
draw the Sigil of the Sphinx at the appointed time. Drawing a symbol of Sol
surmounting a Lunar Crescent makes the Sigil of the Sphinx. The Sign of the
Sphinx is made by forming a Circle of Sol around the head with the arms, with
hands crossed above the head forming a Crescent of Luna.
Love is the law, love under will.
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