The
Gnostic Mass
From
Thelemapedia
Aleister Crowley wrote The Gnostic Mass—technically called
Liber XV or "Book 15"—in 1913 while travelling
in Moscow. In many ways it is similar in structure to the Mass
of the Roman Catholic Church. However, the comparison ends there,
as the Gnostic Mass is a celebration of the principles of Thelema.
The ceremony calls for five officers: a priest, a priestess, a
deacon, and two acolytes, called “children”. The end
of the ritual culminates in the consumation of the eucharist,
which is a glass of wine and the host, called a Cake of Light,
after which the congregant proclaims “There is no part of
me that is not of the gods!”
It is the central rite of Ordo Templi Orientis and it's ecclesiastical
arm, Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica. The Gnostic Mass will be performed
at the Babalon Rising Festival by [presenter].
As for why Crowley wrote the Gnostic Mass, he explains in Confessions:
While dealing with this subject I may as well outline its scope
completely. Human nature demands (in the case of most people)
the satisfaction of the religious instinct, and, to very many,
this may best be done by ceremonial means. I wished therefore
to construct a ritual through which people might enter into ecstasy
as they have always done under the influence of appropriate ritual.
In recent years, there has been an increasing failure to attain
this object, because the established cults shock their intellectual
convictions and outrage their common sense. Thus their minds criticize
their enthusiasm; they are unable to consummate the union of their
individual souls with the universal soul as a bridegroom would
be to consummate his marriage if his love were constantly reminded
that its assumptions were intellectually absurd.
I resolved that my Ritual should celebrate the sublimity of
the operation of universal forces without introducing disputable
metaphysical theories. I would neither make nor imply any statement
about nature which would not be endorsed by the most materialistic
man of science. On the surface this may sound difficult; but in
practice I found it perfectly simple to combine the most rigidly
rational conceptions of phenomena with the most exalted and enthusiastic
celebration of their sublimity.
Crowley published the text of the Gnostic Mass three times: in
1918 in a publication called The International, in 1919 in The
Equinox (III:1), and in 1929 in Magick in Theory and Practice.
It was privately performed while Crowley was at the Abbey of Thelema,
and it's first public performance was March 19, 1933 by Wilfred
T. Smith and Regina Kahl in Hollywood, California at the first
Agape Lodge.
Table of Contents
There are six component ceremonies within the Gnostic Mass:
The Ceremony of the Introit
The congregation enters the temple, the Deacon presents the Law
of Thelema, and the Gnostic Creed is recited. The Priestess and
the Children enter from a side room. The Priestess raises the
Priest from his Tomb.
The Ceremony of the Rending of the Veil
The Priestess is enthroned at the High Altar and the veil is
closed. The Priest circumambulates the temple and he ascends to
the veil. The officers give their orations, including the Calendar
by the Deacon. The Priest then opens the veil and takes his place
at the High Altar.
The Collects
Eleven prayers addressed to the Sun, Moon, Lord, Lady, Saints,
Earth, Principles, Birth, Marriage, Death, and the End.
The Consecration of the Elements
The preparation of the Eucharist.
The Anthem
Of the Anthem, Crowley writes in Confessions:
During this period [i.e. around 1913] the full interpretation
of the central mystery of freemasonry became clear in consciousness,
and I expressed it in dramatic form in The Ship. The lyrical climax
is in some respects my supreme achievement in invocation; in fact,
the chorus beginning: “Thou who art I beyond all I am...”
seemed to me worthy to be introduced as the anthem into the Ritual
of the Gnostic Catholic Church.
The Mystic Marriage and Consummation of the Elements
The Eucharist is perfected and consumed. The Priest gives the
final benediction. The officers exit.

The Narrative of the Gnostic
Mass
The People enter into the ritual space, where the Deacon stands
at the Altar of Incense (symbolic of Tiphareth on the Tree of
Life). She takes the Book of the Law and places it on the super-alter
within the great Veil, and proclaims the Law of Thelema in the
name of IAO. Returning, she leads the People in the Gnostic Creed,
which announces a belief (or value) in the Lord, the Sun, Chaos,
Air, Babalon, Baphomet, the Gnostic Catholic Church, the communion
of Saints, the Miracle of the Mass (i.e. the Eucharist), as well
as confessions of their birth as incarnate beings and the eternal
cycle of their individual lives.
The Virgin then enters with the two Children, and greets the
People. She dances in a serpentine manner around the Altar of
Incense and the Font (symbolizing the unwinding of the Kundalini
Serpent which is twined around the base of the spine) before stopping
at the Tomb. She tears down the veil with her Sword, and raises
the Priest to life by the power of Iron, the Sun, and the Lord.
He is lustrated and consecrated with the four elements (water
and earth, fire and air), and then envested with his scarlet Robe
and crowned with the golden Uraeus serpent of wisdom. Finally,
she gently strokes his Lance eleven times, invoking the Lord.
The Priest lifts up the Virgin and takes her to the High Altar,
seating her upon the summit of the Earth. After he purifies and
consecrates her, he closes the Veil and circumabulates the temple
three times, followed by the remaining officers. They take their
place before the Altar of Incense, kneeling in adoration (along
with all the People), while the Priest takes the first step upon
the Dais before the Veil. In this symbolic crossing of the Abyss,
the Priest begins with his first oration, invoking Nuit, the goddess
of the infinite night sky. The Priestess calls to him as Nuit,
enticing the Priest to ascend to her. He then takes the second
step, and identifies as Hadit, the infinitely condensed center
of all things—the Fire of every star and the Life in every
person. The Deacon has the congregation rise and she delivers
the Calendar. The Priest takes his third and final step, invoking
Ra-Hoor-Khuit, the Crowned and Conquoring Child of the new Aeon.
With his Lance, he parts the Veil, revealing the now-naked Priestess
who sits upon the High Altar. He greets her with the masculine
powers of Pan and she returns it with eleven kisses on the Lance.
He kneels in adoration.
The Deacon then recites the eleven Collects, which includes the
Sun, Moon, Lord, Lady, Saints, Earth, Principles, Birth, Marriage,
Death, and the End.
The Elements are then consecrated by the Virtue of the Lance,
transforming the bread into the Body of God and the wine into
the Blood of God. Of these, the Priest makes a symbolic offering
to On, being our Lord the Sun.
The Priest and all the People then recite the Anthem, which was
taken from Crowley’s allegorical play "The Ship,"
and represents the legend of the Third Degree of Masonry.
The Priest blesses the Elements in the name of the Lord, and
also states the essential function of the entire operation, which
is to bestow health, wealth, stength, joy, peace, and the perpetual
happiness that is the successful fulfillment of will. He breaks
off a piece of one of the hosts, and, placing it on the tip of
the Lance, both he and the Priestess depress it into the Cup,
crying “Hriliu” (which Crowley translated as “the
shrill scream of orgasm”).
The Priest intreats Baphomet—the Lion and the Serpent—to
be “mighty among us.” He then speaks the Law of Thelema
to the People, who return with “Love is the law, love under
will.” He finally partakes of the Eucharist with the words,
“In my mouth be the essence of the life of the Sun”
(with the Host) and “In my mouth be the essence of the joy
of the earth” (with the Wine). He turns to the People and
declares, “There is no part of me that is not of the Gods.”
The People then follow in Communication, one at a time, much
as the Priest did, by partaking a whole goblet of wine and a Cake
of Light, and making the same proclimation of godhood. Afterwards,
the Priest encloses the Priestess within the Veil, and delivers
the final benediction:
+ The LORD bless you.
+ The LORD enlighten your minds and comfort your hearts and sustain
your bodies.
+ The LORD bring you to the accomplishment of your true Wills,
the Great Work, the Summum Bonum, True Wisdom and Perfect Happiness.
The Priest, Deacon, and Children then retire to the Tomb and
return the torn veil. The People exit.