THe MYSTIC PATH - PATH 11

5:01 PM

Me, my beloved, and a collection of crazy souls are currently engaged in an initiatory Pathworking with the Qabalah Tree of Life. You can read what that is all about here. In the meantime, I have been documenting our work as we explore the Paths.

It is important to know these are brief notes. A true understanding of each Path begs a vital understanding of the Sephiroth connecting them. Further research on your own is highly recommended.

We have previously completed Path 12, now for Path 11 .....
 
This is the final Path in the Pathworking, as well as the first Path on the Tree of Life. It extends from Kether (the Crown of Creation) to Chokmah (the King) and perhaps has more scholarship dedicated to its meaning and symbols that any other Path in the Holy Qabalah. Crowley himself has almost an entire chapter dedicated to the Tarot Trump in The Book of Thoth. Gareth Knight states: “The Tarot Trump is called The Fool and is perhaps the profoundest symbol of the whole Tarot.” (A Practical Guide to Qabalistic Symbolism, Volume II, p.201) So, it is at once understood the profundity of this Path. 

According to Chic and Sandra Cicero, the Path “best reflects the first outflow of pure divine energy from Kether, the ‘Cause of Causes.’” (A Garden of Pomegranates, p. 467) The Ciceros are referring to the Sepher Yeztirah’s description of this Path, which begs a full quotation from the text:

The Eleventh Path is the Scintillating Intelligence, because it is the essence of the curtain which is placed close to the order of the disposition, and this is a special dignity given to it that it may be able to stand before the Face of the Cause of Causes.

 The “order of disposition” refers to Kether, which the curtain is veiling. The curtain itself is referring to Form. “Form is the curtain that hides (though at the same time reveals) the Life-essence, but it is almost pure Force at this point for the 11th Path ‘is the essence of that curtain.’” (Gareth Knight, A Practical Guide to Qabalistic Symbolism, Volume II, p.200)

The Hebrew letter is Aleph, the first letter of the alphabet, which means “ox.” This is an animal that is a prime symbol of the Earth in many traditions (the cow in Hindu mythology, the buffalo of the Native American, etc.) so being the first connection point to Kether—and the ox being a beast of the plough—we can see that Spirit’s aim is always rooted in the Earth, in the material world, in Form. In agriculture, the plough is the tiller of Earth, in which to plant seeds and bring forth fruit. “This is our immediate and paramount task, the civilization of Earth. And he who takes his hand from the plough of his immediate Earthly duty (which is a Cosmic and Spiritual duty also, however much familiarity may tend to breed contempt), will never by that act attain his heavenly home in the stars.” (Knight, p.204)

As stated before, the Tarot Trump is the Fool. Traditionally, the Fool is shown to be stepping one foot off of a cliff, ready to plunge into the unknown; this is representative of Spirit’s plunge from the Beyond and into the process of Creation. The Fool is a symbol of “pure potential not yet set into action. It is potential in search of first experience.” (Regardie, p. 468) Within this resides an innocence one must always tap into no matter what level of attainment in the Great Work . . . in essence, the open mind of a beginner.

The Fool in older times was always one to hold court with the King and to not only provide comic relief, but to be a source of paradoxical wisdom as well. “ . . . an object of some respect—he is a creature of paradox—being at the same time wise as well as a fool.” (Knight, p. 202) As such, often times the Fool was the only one allowed to mock the King: “Fools down the ages have been honored and revered, the gift of laughter is theirs, and the ability to reduce great men to their common denominator. The Fool is as much the Great Leveller as the figure of Death.” (Dolores Ashcroft-Nowicki, The Shining Paths, p.166) Call to mind the Heyokah or Coyote of Native American traditions, both acting as trickster to the people, yet at the same time are some of the more sacred symbols or roles in the community. 

This is where the wisdom of the Fool becomes paradoxical. “For below the Abyss, contradiction is division; but above the Abyss, contradiction is Unity. And there could be nothing true except by virtue of the contradiction that is contained in itself.” (Aleister Crowley, The Vision and the Voice, p. 136) The original French title of this Trump was Le Mat, the madman, and Crowley points out that all Native peoples saw the madman, the wandering lunatic, as one to bear great power and thus salvation for the people. This is why, he says, the number of the card is zero: “It represents therefore the Negative above the Tree of Life, the source of all things. It is the Qabalistic Zero. It is the equation of the Universe, the initial and final balance of the opposites; Air, in this card, therefore quintessentially means a vacuum.” (The Book of Thoth, p. 53)

Dolores Aschroft-Nowicki points out that this vacuum is “an emptiness waiting to be filled.” (p. 167) But, what does this mean for us? Are we the vacuum, or are we that which is filling it? “Simplicity being a keynote of this path,” she says, “it is best left to those treading it to find the symbolism that speaks to them in the right language. At this level on the Tree, one must search for the meanings oneself or they have no meaning at all.” (p.168)

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