-
Recent Posts
Archives
Categories
- Adi Da Samraj
- Adidam
- Albert Pike
- Aleister Corwley
- Alex Grey
- Animism
- Arab Spring
- Architecture
- Artistic Works by Others
- Atenism
- Auguste Rodin
- Baha'i Faith
- Bivins
- Buddhism
- Catholicism
- Christianity
- David Chaim Smith
- Egypt
- Egyptian Religion
- Freemasonry
- General Mysticism
- Gnosticism
- Harold Bloom
- Hermeticism
- Hinduism
- Holidays
- Internal Revenue Service
- International
- Isis
- Islam
- Απoκρυφον
- θέλημα
- James Turrell
- Judaism
- Kabbalah
- Ken Wilber
- Khalil Gibran
- Lord Byron
- Manichaeism
- Mesopotamian
- Music
- Natural Phenomena
- Nicolas Roerich
- Occult
- Octavio Paz
- Pablo Neruda
- Paulo Coehlo
- Poetry
- Politics
- Prose
- Psychedelic Experiences
- Religion
- Rumi
- Science
- Scientology
- Scottish Rite
- Sculpture
- Sufism
- Taoism
- The Book of the Scribe
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- The City by XIX
- The Foundation
- The Prophet
- The Song of God
- Thoricatha
- Time Cube
- Time Cube
- U.S.
- Urantia Book
- Visual
- Wallace Stevens
- Works by XIX
Meta
Category Archives: Albert Pike
Does Thelema need an ecclesiastical hierarchy? (with my thoughts on how Crowley got it wrong)
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law. This is an expansion of a discussion I began on Twitter. I posited the following open question: Do you believe that there is an actual need for an ecclesiastical hierarchy … Continue reading
Posted in Adidam, Albert Pike, Animism, Atenism, Baha'i Faith, Buddhism, Christianity, Egyptian Religion, Freemasonry, General Mysticism, Hermeticism, Hinduism, Islam, θέλημα, Ken Wilber, Occult, Religion, Scientology, Scottish Rite, Taoism, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Urantia Book
Tagged Aleister Crowley, Christianity, Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica, Esoteric and Occult, Hierarchies, Hierarchy, Occult, Ordo Templi Orientis, Protestant Reformation, Religion, The Book of the Law, Thelema, Usenet
13 Comments
Albert Pike on the Essentiality of Doubt
“Doubt, the essential preliminary of all improvement and discovery, must accompany the stages of man’s onward progress. The faculty of doubting and questioning, without which those of comparison and judgment would be useless, is itself a divine prerogative of the … Continue reading
Posted in Albert Pike, Freemasonry, Occult, Religion, Scottish Rite
Leave a comment