Tag: Diabolism

The Significance of Baphomet for Diabolists

The glyph known as Baphomet has different meanings to different people, be they Satanists, Wiccans, Thelemites, or ceremonial magicians. Some recognize it to be a satanic symbol, while others cry passionately that it most certainly is not. Baphomet has a specific and dual meaning for Diabolists, which we will consider below, but let us first review where the name and infamous image of the hermaphroditic goat-human hybrid comes from.

The name “Baphomet” comes to us from the heresy trials of the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon, otherwise known as the Templars, which took place in 1307. Many charges were brought against the Templars, ranging from sodomy to apostasy, but what interests us here is the accusation that the Templars participated in the worship of idols, usually in the form of a skull or human head, that was addressed as Baphomet. Many different meanings have been proposed for the name, but most historians now accept that its origin is a corruption of the word “Mahomet.” While the vast majority of scholars believe the charges brought against the Templars were largely erroneous, in the popular imagination the name Baphomet was forever linked to devil worship.

While the name was the subject of speculation over the centuries, it is the author and former Catholic priest Eliphas Levi who forever burnt Baphomet into the occult consciousness of the West with the publication of Dogma and Rituals of High Magic in the middle of the 19th century. This two-volume work included the infamous drawing of Baphomet as a winged, hermaphroditic, goat-human hybrid. For Levi, Baphomet represented pictorially the forces of the universe as an absolute whole.

The goat on the frontispiece carries the sign of the pentagram on the forehead, with one point at the top, a symbol of light, his two hands forming the sign of occultism, the one pointing up to the white moon of Chesed, the other pointing down to the black one of Geburah. This sign expresses the perfect harmony of mercy with justice. His one arm is female, the other male like the ones of the androgyne of Khunrath, the attributes of which we had to unite with those of our goat because he is one and the same symbol. The flame of intelligence shining between his horns is the magic light of the universal balance, the image of the soul elevated above matter, as the flame, whilst being tied to matter, shines above it. The beast’s head expresses the horror of the sinner, whose materially acting, solely responsible part has to bear the punishment exclusively; because the soul is insensitive according to its nature and can only suffer when it materializes. The rod standing instead of genitals symbolizes eternal life, the body covered with scales the water, the semi-circle above it the atmosphere, the feathers following above the volatile. Humanity is represented by the two breasts and the androgyne arms of this sphinx of the occult sciences.

Levi’s description of what Baphomet symbolized maybe genuinely unsatanic, but the material he draws inspiration from is anything but. It’s no accident that his Baphomet so closely resembles The Devil card of the Marseilles Tarot. Likewise, he refers to the figure as the “Sabbatic Goat,” calling to mind the form Satan is said to take when attending the Witches Sabbat.

Levi, like Margaret Murray after him, argues that this he-goat was in fact not Satan, but a horned pagan god whom the Church mistook to be Satan. Thus, any allegations of Devil worship were in fact the survival of ancient pagan practices completely unrelated to the Lord of this World. This idea, while still popular among Wiccans and neo-pagans, has been largely discounted by modern scholars. Whether groups of witches existed historically or not—and I believe they did in small numbers—they did not represent the hidden survival of pagan religion, and the Sabbatic Goat—assuming he existed outside of the Church’s imagination—was not a forgotten fertility god, but the Christian Devil. Levi may have believed he was rehabilitating the image of Baphomet, bringing it closer to what he falsely believed were its true origins, but something like the reverse is actually the case. He inadvertently took an image of Satan and put a veneer on it, making it more palatable for witches and magicians who, as LaVey might put it, were willing to play the Devil’s game but were too afraid to take his name.

For the Diabolist, Baphomet is not so much a discrete entity as a symbol. Its hermaphroditic features reveal one part of its significance. Baphomet represents the Lord and Lady of Hell conjoined. Its breasts and wings are Lilith’s, while its phallus, horns, and cloven hooves belong to Lucifer. With one arm Baphomet points to the Sun, which is the generative power of Satan’s seed, represented in ritual by the Sword. With the other Baphomet points to the Moon, which is the receptive power of Lilith’s womb, represented in ritual by the Chalice. This is why the sigil of Baphomet, a goat’s face with an inverted pentagram superimposed over it, is such an appropriate symbol to display over the altar, for it represents our god and goddess in union. To call upon Baphomet is to call upon the Lord and Lady.

The second meaning of Baphomet, however, is that it symbolizes the Diabolist themselves, or at least what they aspire to be. Baphomet not only represents the union of Lucifer and Babylon, but the child that union produces. The Sabbatic Goat, with one arm pointed to the heavens and the other to the earth, portrays the equilibrium of forces. Creation and destruction. Order and chaos. Earth and wind. Water and fire. The fully realized Diabolist, who knows the daemonic Law stamped upon their soul, has all of these conflicting forces at their disposal, because they sit at the nexus point between the animal and the divine. Baphomet is none other than the Antichrist, whom Lilith births into the world as the black flame that burns with our minds, hearts, and limbs. Thus, the most fitting use of the image of Baphomet in ritual is not to invoke a being separate from ourselves, but to help us establish what we already are.  

The Archons

To help diabolists who might not be familiar with hermetic traditions of magic better understand how we conceptualize the Archons, below is a list that breaks down the planetary association and sphere of influence of each of the Archons. This should help anyone utilizing our system to determine which Archon is appropriate to call upon in various circumstances.

Asmodeus

Planetary equivalent: Luna

Areas under his control: Instincts, intuition, fertility, family, concealment, emotions, mental health, intoxication, animal husbandry, needs and desires, hunting

Azazel

Planetary equivalent: Mercury

Areas under their control: Communication, design, research, writing, diplomacy, subterfuge, exchange, acquiring skills, rhetoric, negotiation, business deals

Astaroth

Planetary equivalent: Venus

Areas under her control: Love, romance, friendship, sex, sensual pleasure, inspiration, painting, sculpture, poetry, music, beauty, glamour, aesthetics

Belphegor

Planetary equivalent: Sol

Areas under his control: Truth, reputation, physical health, vitality, healing, victory, medicine, accomplishment, clear judgment, aid from allies, revelation

Abaddon

Planetary equivalent: Mars

Areas under her control: Violence, war, destruction, revenge, disease, breaking addiction, dissolution, breaking barriers, courage

Beelzebub

Planetary equivalent: Jupiter

Areas under his control: Education, government, justice, abundance, law, philosophy, charity, expansion, wealth, banking, legal matters

Belial

Planetary equivalent: Saturn

Areas under his control: Tradition, limitation, security, solitude, physical shelter, inheritance, ageing, wisdom, agriculture, patience, culture

Lilith

Planetary equivalent: Neptune

Areas under her control: Witchcraft, dreams, seduction, mysticism, healing from trauma, access to power, compassion, motherhood, risk-taking, escape, priesthood, purification, sacrifice, giving birth, death

Satan

Planetary equivalent: Uranus/Pluto

Areas under his control: Initiation, independence, individuality, death and rebirth, reincarnation, mercy and severity, sovereignty, fatherhood, learning from defeat, divine spark, revolution, innovation, destiny, shaping history

The Seven Infernal Virtues: Part 7 – Greed

You have heard it said, do not be lovers of self. But I say to you, within all my children burns a star.

“SERMON OF THE NIGHT QUEEN” THE BOOK OF INFERNAL PRAYER

One of the foundational myths of American history is the story of the Mayflower Pilgrims. While one could certainly quibble about the truth of this or that facet of the tale, the myth is meant to reinforce the American values of religious freedom and cross-cultural co-operation. While it is not stressed in the narrative as taught to children, the historical reality is that the story of the Plymouth colony is also one about how greed eventually saved a community of people. Because the Pilgrims were originally socialists, and that economic policy nearly destroyed them.

As Dr. Harvey Wish writes in Society and Thought in Early America, “[T]he Pilgrims, who had pooled their wealth to purchase the Mayflower, began as communists, sharing their lands in the Biblical spirit of apostolic communism.” The reference to “apostolic communism” references the Book of the Acts of the Apostles, which is a kind of history of the first few decades of the early Christian church. In the second chapter of that book it is said, “All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need.” The demand to give over all of one’s property for the benefit of the community was so serious that the Apostle Peter miraculously struck a married couple dead when they attempted to lie about how much money they had received from the sale of their land (see the 5th chapter of the Book of Acts). While the early Christian tradition of communism would not be stressed among the laity as time went on, it would very much continue in the monastic tradition and would occasionally be revived by various Christian cults throughout history to this very day. The problem for the Pilgrims, as many communist collectives have discovered, is that the system didn’t work.

William Bradford, governor of the Plymouth colony, wrote of this socialism, “For this community (so far as it was) was found to breed much confusion and discontent and retard much employment that would have been to their benefit and comfort.” Young men complained of spending “their time and strength to work for other men’s wives and children without any recompense.” Strong men felt it an injustice that they were forced to shoulder an outsized portion of the workload with no compensation in return. Women, who were forced to cook and clean for husbands and children that were not their own, thought it a kind of slavery. This situation naturally bred resentment, and people became lax and lazy. With the expectation that someone else would or should do the work, less and less work actually got done. As a result, the colony wavered on the brink of collapse. It was the reinstatement of private property that pulled it back. As Bradford wrote:

And so assigned to every family a parcel of land, according to the proportion of their number for that end . . . This had a very good success; for it made all hands very industrious, so as much more corn was planted then otherwise would have been by any means the Governor or any other could use, and saved him a great deal of trouble, and gave far better content. The women now went willingly into the field, and took their little-ones with them to set corn, which before would allege weakness, and inability; whom to have compelled would have been thought great tyranny and oppression.

At the foundation of the infernal of virtue of Greed is a recognition of truths about human nature and existence. The problem with utopian political platforms, whether Communism on one extreme and Libertarian Anarchism on the other, is that they require denying reality to believe they might work. And for the Satanist, acknowledging reality should always be the starting point for deciding which course of action to take. As a god of truth, Lucifer challenges us to see the world for what it is rather than what we wish it to be. The same goes for ourselves.

Some readers might be annoyed that this essay has taken a distinctly political turn. “Keep your politics out of my Satanism.” It is more than fair to say that Theistic Satanism doesn’t require joining one particular political party. There is room in Theistic Satanism for differences in opinion when it comes to political beliefs. Satanism is not amorphous, however. It has philosophical principles that make certain political stances untenable for the faithful. You can’t believe in sexual freedom, for example, while also holding that homosexuality, polyamory, or prostitution should be punishable by law.

The same goes with regard to Greed being in opposition to communist political schemes and ideals. Satanism is an individualistic faith. As such, it is incompatible with any system of governance that systematically favors the collective at the expense of the individual. The fruit of your labors should largely be yours, not your neighbor’s. The responsibility of making decisions about your life should largely be yours, not a centralized planning committee’s. I say largely because, even though we are individuals first, we must always live in tension with the fact that we depend on others and share a common environment every day of our lives. For this reason, Satanism is not a justification for arguing that all taxes are theft, that corporate interests outweigh environmental concerns, that parents have no right to make decisions for the minors under their care, or any other similar nonsense. We hold the individual as primary, but that doesn’t mean we can or should disregard the collective entirely. We encourage individual Greed, but not without limit.

Underscoring the above praise of selfishness, one-time Magister of the Church of Satan, Michael Aquino wrote:

Socialism and communism…place the good of the community before individual desires. …The many unsuccessful individuals resent and envy the few successful ones, and the democratic vote had enabled demagogues to play upon this dissatisfaction, promising equality of result rather than that of opportunity. Frequently the actual consequences of such campaigns are aggravating to the elites (who feel constricted and cheated of the fruits of their abilities) as well as to the masses (who feel humiliated and useless). The elites lose any sense of social responsibility they might have had, and the masses lose their sense of self-reliance… Was it [the endorsement of individualism] also Satanic? Yes, in the sense that Satan’s great “sin” was ultimately that of individualism. In order to follow the dictates of his own will, he broke away from the collective will of God, regardless of its “social beneficence”.         

THE CHURCH OF SATAN

Anton LaVey once described Greed as simply wanting more than what you currently have. A properly constituted sense of Greed (i.e., neither boundless or compulsive) is an integral part of healthy individualism as it is intrinsically self-oriented. It was this self-orientation that led the Church to condemn money making almost entirely, so that St. Jerome remarked, “A man who is a merchant can seldom if ever please God.” Never mind salvation, common wisdom claims that money can’t even buy happiness, but psychological and economic studies suggest otherwise. Daniel Kahneman and Angus Deaton’s 2010 research found that “low income is associated both with low life evaluation and low emotional well-being,” while higher income correlated with better life satisfaction and emotional well-being. They noted, however, that once an individual surpassed an annual income of $75,000 ($90,000 in 2023 terms) they ceased to see gains in perceived happiness. A more recent study by Matthew Killingsworth, however, calls this income ceiling into question. His research found “no evidence of an income threshold at which experienced and evaluative well-being diverged, suggesting that higher incomes are associated with both feeling better day-to-day and being more satisfied with life overall.”

Selfishness is complex and can paradoxically benefit others we never consciously intended to help, a fact that was recognized by Adam Smith, the grandfather of capitalism. I work a job to sustain my own life, but the work I do benefits my employer as well. The products we make benefit our customers, and the materials we purchase to make them benefits the vendors who sell them to us. The money I spend to get back and forth to that job, and that my work spends to make sure I have the tools to succeed, benefits any number of businesses around the world. The money I bring home benefits my children. The taxes I pay benefit my neighbors and fellow citizens. The point is that while my economic intentions are motivated by self-concern, their actual effects are part of a complex and mutually beneficial web of economic relationships.

As with all the infernal virtues, it is of course possible to go too far with one’s pursuit of fortune. When money becomes an end, rather than a means, it is more likely to hollow out our lives than enhance them. Furthermore, how you make your money can play a crucial role in determining your sense of happiness and well-being. Most people don’t get to work their dream job, and I seriously doubt Satanists are any better off in this regard. Sometimes you have to be thankful you have work at all. But, if your work is destroying your health, family, or social life—or involving you in criminal pursuits that imperil your life and freedom—it may make sense to take a pay cut in the pursuit of something that fits more holistically in your life.

Still, more money typically means access to better healthcare, better housing, better education, a better standard of living, and more opportunity to pursue the life one desires to lead. Those are all things you should want for yourself as a Satanist. Go and seize them, and may Lilith and Satan bless your efforts.

The Seven Infernal Virtues: Part 6 – Indulgence

You have heard it said, put to death what is earthly in you. But I say to you, indulgence of the flesh is the pleasure of life.

“Sermon of the Night Queen” The Book of Infernal prayer

Of all the Infernal virtues that have been explored in this series, Indulgence maybe the one I have been the most uncertain of how to approach. This is because the sin that is the basis for this virtue, gluttony, is the cause of an inordinate amount of physical ills in developed societies. Likewise, I venture to guess that more Theistic Satanists struggle with overeating and poor nutrition choices than do not.

The evolutionary basis of our bodies’ desire to overeat is simple enough to understand. When food sources are scarce or undependable, it is more advantageous to be over rather than underweight. You can always burn excess fat when food is hard to come by, but you can’t conjure a meal from thin air. Then problem for those of us in first and second world countries is that food is rarely scarce. Thus, we exist in a continuous time of feasting, with no cycle of famine to naturally balance us out.

The health risks of obesity are well document: increased risk of diabetes, high blood pressure, diabetes, certain cancers, osteoarthritis, depression, and sleep apnea. Cleary, the interests of most Devil worshippers will be better served by restricting their diet rather than going hog-wild.

So, why is this still a virtue? The Brethren of the Morningstar—taking cues from LaVey—partially address this by speaking of Indulgence rather than gluttony, which has a more expansive connotation that can be interpreted from a subjective basis. For some of us, or in certain seasons of life, indulgence may mean overeating. For others, indulgence will require eating a caloric deficit.

What the concept of Indulgence recognizes, and why this is still an infernal virtue, is that our relationship with food and drink is personal and may change over time. Tastes change. Needs change. External circumstances change. What makes sense for one Diabolist may not for another, and what makes sense today may not tomorrow.

What this virtue also negates is the entire religious concept of one diet being objectively more holy than another. Taboos and dietary restrictions are common among a variety of world religions. Jews and Muslims are forbidden to eat pork. Though few sects seem to stress it, the New Testament technically forbid Christians from eating blood and food offered to idols (Acts 15:29). Many Hindus abstain from beef for religious reasons, while some Buddhists and Hindus abstain from meat entirely. Most monastic traditions have rules surrounding how much their members may eat, the rational being that the less you are concern and with and nourished by the material, the better you are able to transcend this world and partake of the spiritual.

For the Devil worshipper there are no ritually unclean foods, nor will starving yourself make you any more or less holy in the eyes of our god and goddess. What you should and should not eat is entirely a matter of personal need and taste. You are free to indulge your culinary desires as you see fit.

Likewise, a Diabolist’s relationship to intoxicants is also a matter of personal choice. Indulge what and when you will, remembering that, for some, sobriety is its own indulgence. No Diabolist should ever feel they are required to partake of any substance they do not desire. If a ritual calls for the use of intoxicants a practitioner is uncomfortable with, an alternate substance can be found, that step of the ritual can be skipped, or the individual can abstain from that particular rite entirely. Let your will be your guide. The only caution I would add with regard to drugs is that more precaution and discernment should be exercised with them as the negative effects are much more acute than with regular food and drink. The risks of prosecution and jailtime must also be taken into consideration where applicable.

Truthfully, all of what has been said applies equally to all the things we consume in the loosest sense of the term. Music, movies, TV, books, pornography—all are materials we are free to consume as our personal tastes and desires dictate. Indulge or abstain to your heart’s content. Only be mindful that what we regularly put into our minds affects us as much as what we put into our bodies. Be further aware that media often contains much more than what is perhaps evident on the surface. Whether consciously or not, most media expresses the worldview of its creators in some form or another. Consume enough of one particular worldview and you will soon find yourself resonating with it and thinking in-line with its terms. What we consume intellectually can, at best and at worst, widen or narrow our horizons accordingly. It can challenge us to grow or sink our feet into the much of the past.

At root, the virtue of Indulgence denies that the truest and best course in life lies along the path of equilibrium. Rather, it instructs us to be embrace our desires and seek out sensual pleasures. The flip side of that coin, however, is that we must also accept that everything has a cost. You cannot lay hold of ecstasy without also laying hold of agony as well. For world-rejecting faiths, the answer to this dichotomy is to cultivate a state of indifferent non-desire. The Diabolist, however, places their feet in the deepest of hells, so that their head may touch the highest of heavens.

As Crowley writes in Liber AL vel Legis, “Remember all ye that existence is pure joy; that all sorrows are but as shadows; they pass and are done; but there is that which remains.” This is not to say that sadness is illusory or less real than happiness. In a sense, they are equally real and equally illusory. What it means is that joy contains both pleasure and pain, and to embrace existence is to wrap our arms around both. When we eat, we consume the body of Leviathan. When we drink, we drain Leviathan’s blood. Satiation and dissatisfaction are equally the manifested gloried of her Spirit within us. Learn to enjoy indulging in both.

The Seven Infernal Virtues – Part 5: Wrath

You have heard it said, love your enemies. But I say to you, no purer love is there than this: to hate your enemies with your whole heart.

“SERMON OF THE NIGHT QUEEN” THE BOOK OF INFERNAL PRAYER

When I was 6 years old, we had a giant pile of rocks and leftover construction materials out in the front yard of our newly built home. My little sister and I would climb that hill of debris, pretending it was a mountain strewn with artifacts and hidden treasures—broken bricks, steel pipes, bits of quartz. We had just moved into the neighborhood and had yet to have much contact with the other local kids. So, I was glad to see my baby sister standing by the pile one afternoon, talking to two boys. I was outraged and panic stricken, however, when those two boys began tossing stones at my sister, causing her to shriek and scream. Without giving it much thought, I ran for the pile, snatched up a length of pipe sticking out of the ground, and cracked one of the boys across the knee with it. While he rolled screaming on the ground, I grabbed my sister’s hand and ran with her back to the house.

Wrath is righteous anger, and it was precisely that emotion which swelled up propelled me to my sister’s aid. Some readers might get squeamish with the use of the word “righteous.” Jehovah is the deity most obsessed with righteousness. But to behave righteously simply means to do what is right in a given circumstance. It could be compared to the Buddhist 8-Fold Path, which prescribes Right Action, Right Speech, and so on as a means of liberation. Of course, Buddhists, Christians, and Diabolists may disagree about what is right in particular situations, but that need not trip us up here. The important point is that the Devil Worshipper, like every human on the planet, recognizes that there is an appropriate time and a place for certain behaviors.

Anger fuels our action in the world in ways few other emotions can.  Whereas sadness and despair often weigh us down and rob us of the capacity to act, anger can be a goad, pushing us to correct wrongs we perceive in our world. This could be addressing a political injustice, a social ill, or a personal slight. Most of us know this already even if we don’t consciously think about it. Apathy is rarely an engine for change, but wrath can move mountains as well as masses.

The potency of wrath, while making it so useful, also makes it exceptionally dangerous. The risk of fury going overboard is famous in literary terms—the entire plot of The Iliad is based on the tragic result when wrath mixes with an over-inflated sense of pride. And certainly, all of us can think of a time we said or did something we later wish we could take back.

Beyond setting us upon a course from which it is impossible to turn back, the volatile nature of wrath also makes it highly susceptible to manipulation by external forces. The entire basis of most political movements is the harnessing, if not outright conjuring, of outrage and indignation. This is all well and good as far as it goes—real world action has to be powered by something—but when a media or political figure seeks to elicit our wrath in connection to a particular issue, the Diabolist would be well served not to take anything that is thus said at face value. While people often act like spin is something new, the truth is that there have always been hidden agendas and mixed motives in politics and journalism. Resist the urge to immediately trust and react to any given source. Ask yourself, why do they want me to act in a particular way? What narrative frame are they pushing or assuming? Who benefits and who loses if I join this cause? Skepticism has its limits, of course, but a healthy dose is more likely to help than harm.

Perhaps most perversely with regard to wrath is our ability to manipulate ourselves. We can be so desperate for a sense of purpose, and the hot rush of moral outrage can be so addictive, that individuals will see injustice when no actual injustice is to be found. This danger is particularly present in cultures where freedom fighters and activists of the past lauded as examples to emulate. If your personal heroes were warriors for justice, and you desperately want to be like them, there is a real risk you might invent enemies if no real struggle is readily at hand.

Wrath should always be tempered with rationality, self-awareness, and a willingness to change your mind when reality turns out to be other than what you first thought. Cultivate the ability to think before acting, and actively seek out opposing viewpoints. Echo chambers are the death of free thought.

Step lightly in your certainty. Sit boldly in your doubt. In the palace of tension, I am found.

“ANNUNCIATION” THE BOOK OF INFERNAL PRAYER

So much for the benefits and dangers of wrath; what shall we say of its exercise? Some evolutionary psychologists believe that revenge served the social function of teaching people which behaviors not to commit. A line is crossed, a punishment is meted out, and the guilty party (hopefully) learns to change their behavior in the future. The line between revenge and justice is blurry indeed.

This negative reinforcement tends to work best in small, localized groups. Punishment need not always be physical, and even in the cases where it is often the accompanying shame of being punished in front of one’s peers is as or more useful in constraining future behavior. Though our populations have perhaps grown too large for this type of conditioning to work on a macro level, this method of behavior modification still works in social groups of a restricted size. I.e., classrooms, workplaces, and family homes. Anyone who has cared for small children knows that giving vent to one’s wrath is not only necessary from time to time, but need not entail anything brutal or vicious. A stern word or the temporary removal of a prized possession can often be enough. Likewise, the Diabolist should determine the appropriate shape their revenge should take, rather than blasting their anger forth indiscriminately.

There is nothing particularly satanic in all of this. Ahh, but what of destroying one’s enemies, particularly through the use of magic? Curses and maledictions are supposed to be the historical witch’s bread and butter, after all.

I will skip the how of casting curses, pointing readers instead to LaVey’s Satanic Bible for instruction to that end. Rather, I will conclude by considering when it is appropriate to destroy one’s enemies.

In 1941 Aleister Crowley wrote a small tract known as Liber Oz. It is short enough that I will reproduce it in its entirety.

“The law of the strong: this is our law and the joy of the world.” AL. II. 2
“Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.” –AL. I. 40
“Thou hast no right but to do thy will. Do that, and no other shall say nay.” –AL. I. 42-3
“Every man and every woman is a star.” –AL. I. 3

There is no God but man.

1. Man has the right to live by his own law—to live in the way that he wills to do: to work as he will: to play as he will: to rest as he will: to die when and how he will.
2. Man has the right to eat what he will: to drink what he will: to dwell where he will: to move as he will on the face of the earth.
3. Man has the right to think what he will: to speak what he will: to write what he will: to draw, paint, carve, etch, mould, build as he will: to dress as he will.
4. Man has the right to love as he will:— “take your fill and will of love as ye will, when, where, and with whom ye will.” —AL. I. 51
5. Man has the right to kill those who would thwart these rights.

“the slaves shall serve.” –AL. II. 58
“Love is the law, love under will.” –AL. I. 57

What we see in this is that each of us has a right to live our life as lead by the dictates of our nature, and that anyone who attempts to deny us that right forfeits their own to live. Granted, just because we are technically justified in a particular action doesn’t mean we ought to take it. LaVey’s warning to never cast a curse upon someone we don’t intend to destroy is essential to remember, and Anton would surely agree that discerning when and when not to act on one’s impulses is a satanic necessity. Nor should it be thought that offensive magic can be used without some personal cost. The sad truth is destroying others, whether by means mystical or mundane, often requires us to destroy in some way ourselves. Let the reader beware, lest they make the mistake of thinking that because they seek to harm someone from afar a curse is somehow less serious or dangerous than a physical attack. I have suffered physically for my own flippantly cast curses in the past. Spare yourself similar anguish by making sure in your own heart a curse is warranted before casting it.

The question arises, “Who, then, would be considered a fit and proper human sacrifice, and how is one qualified to pass judgment on such a person?” The answer is brutally simple. Anyone who has unjustly wronged you – one who has “gone out of his way” to hurt you – to deliberately cause trouble and hardship for you or those dear to you. In short, a person asking to be cursed by their very actions. When a person, by his reprehensible behavior, practically cries out to be destroyed, it is truly your moral obligation to indulge them their wish.

“ON THE CHOICE OF HUMAN SACRIFICE” THE SATANIC BIBLE

To obey their Law is the highest moral obligation for the Diabolist, and thus the removal of impediments to living that Law is perhaps the only justification for all out violence. This, as Crowley puts it, is the “law of the strong,” which is to say those bold enough to lay claim to their freedom and protect it jealously. “The slaves,” after all, “shall serve.” Though that may seem straightforward enough, the moral calculus for resorting to violence is nevertheless often riddled with ambiguity. Two people who are following their respective Law may still come into conflict with one another. In fact, their Law may demand it of each of them.

In such a case, when you are certain you are being true to yourself, and there is no other clear-cut way to decide who is in the right, then you can only do as Uncle Al says. As brothers, fight. Success shall be your proof.  

The Seven Infernal Virtues – Part 4: Pride

You have heard it said, god resisteth the proud. But I say to you, pride is the spur of all virtue.

SERMON OF THE NIGHT QUEEN,” THE BOOK OF INFERNAL PRAYER.

If there is a single sin most readily associated with Satan it is the sin of pride. After all, it was precisely that which got him cast from the heights of heaven. The very verses which caused the Devil to be associated with the name Lucifer are about ambitious hubris specifically.

How you are fallen from heaven,
O Lucifer, son of the morning!
How you are cut down to the ground,
You who weakened the nations!
For you have said in your heart:
‘I will ascend into heaven,
I will exalt my throne above the stars of God;
I will also sit on the mount of the congregation
On the farthest sides of the north;
I will ascend above the heights of the clouds,
I will be like the Most High. - ISAIAH 14:12-14 NKJV

Now the more pedantic of this essay’s readers are no doubt saying, “Well, actually…” at this point, so let’s go ahead and take a small detour and address the fact that these verses, at least as they appear in the Masoretic text of the Jewish bible, are actually about the king of Babylon and not a rebellious angel. Yes, it is technically correct that the connection of the title Satan with the word “Lucifer” originally came about because of misunderstanding in the translation of the Latin Vulgate. But people who take this fact and then jump to the conclusion that Satan and Lucifer are completely unrelated are making a leap too far, in my opinion. I would contend that the historical interweaving of the titles Satan and Lucifer and the power of the subsequent mythology that then developed suggests that this translation mistake was in fact nothing of the sort but diabolically inspired. Furthermore, it is not all that uncommon in religion for historical events to be seen as “types” or shadows of spiritual truths. In fact, the basis for many myths in many cultures are often historical events that are later reframed as having happened in the spiritual realm.

An interesting and important reversal of this process is often seen within the Israelite scriptures which some scholars believe are unique in taking what was previously a spiritual myth and re-writing it as if it were an actual historical event. The exodus from Egypt is perhaps the most obvious example. It is entirely possible that the original audience of Isaiah would have understood chapter 14 as an allusion to a spiritual being they knew from oral tales, whom the king of Babylon’s motivations were similar to. In Islam, where Satan is known as Iblis, the story is similar, though different at crucial points. Here it is still Satan’s pride which is the cause of his downfall, but what he balks at is not bowing to god, but to Adam! In the Quran, when Allah asks Satan why he refuses to do as he is told, Satan replies that is unthinkable to expect him to bow to something so clearly inferior to himself. “I was made of fire,” Satan says. “He of clay.”

Let us proceed then with that understanding that the above passage from Isaiah hints at what would become more fully developed in later versions of the Lucifer legend: that Lucifer was a beautiful and powerful archangel who, on account of his pride, refused to bow the knee to Jehovah. Instead, he rebelled against the heavenly throne in an attempt to assert his own dominance, getting himself and his comrades tossed from Heaven in the process.

Though the details may vary, both traditions agree that Lucifer is the example of pride par excellence. In Christianity, Satan’s pride is not only the first sin ever committed, but the root of all others to follow. “Inordinate self-love,” medieval theologian Thomas Aquinas wrote, “is the cause of every sin.” Or as Augustine put it:

Pride is the commencement of all sin because it was this which overthrew the devil, from whom arose the origin of sin; and afterwards, when his malice and envy pursued man, who was yet standing in his uprightness, it subverted him in the same way in which he himself fell. For the serpent, in fact, only sought for the door of pride whereby to enter when he said, ‘Ye shall be as gods.’

But while Christianity saw pride as the true original sin, and made no distinction between it and hubris, Greek philosophy took a different tack. Aristotle not only distinguished pride from hubris, but considered the former to be the capstone of virtue. Anatole France seemed to feel similarly about pride, as evidenced by the following quote about Satan from his Revolt of the Angels: “[Lucifer] was the most beautiful of all the Seraphim. He shone with intelligence and daring. His great heart was big with all the virtues born of pride: frankness, courage, constancy in trial, indomitable hope.” Lucifer’s pride is said to be the source of his integrity, steadfastness, and faith in himself because, presumably, he knows their opposites—equivocation, cowardice, and vulnerability to despair—are beneath him.

Psychological research backs up how crucial pride is. In The Science of Sin, Dr. Simon Laham writes:

The authentically proud are more extroverted, more agreeable, more emotionally stable, conscientious, and open to new experiences. The list goes on: less depression, social phobia, anxiety, and aggression, and more relationship satisfaction and social support. The proud also have higher self-esteem, which itself has a few things going for it (greater happiness, for one).

Notice that Laham is speaking of those who are “authentically proud.” Inauthentic pride is excessive and ungrounded. It causes us to overestimate our capabilities and downplay our faults. In other words, inauthentic pride is hubris. Additionally, in order for something to be an authentic source of pride it must be something that required real effort to achieve. While it is common today for people to speak about the pride they feel as a result of being a part of a particular demographic—e.g., ethnicity, nationality, sexual orientation, biological sex, or ancestral lineage—these are not acceptable sources of authentic pride as they are all attributes assigned at one’s birth. You cannot be authentically proud of them because you had nothing to do with being them. It would be akin to a trust-fund baby being proud of the fact they’re rich.

Of course, when most people say something like, “I’m a proud black woman,” or, “I’m a proud homosexual,” what they often really mean is “I am not ashamed to be a member of such and such group.” This is a perfectly healthy attitude to have. You can even be proud of displaying this attitude in contexts where others are—explicitly or implicitly—attempting to force you into hiding, denying, or feeling shame on account of those personal attributes. You shouldn’t be ashamed of your ethnicity, nationality, biological sex, and so on. Nor do Diabolists have any business shaming others for them. We judge people by who they are as individuals, not by the demographic their birth has happened to assign them to.

None of this is to say that one can’t hold attributes assigned to them at birth in esteem. Or that they shouldn’t express that self-appreciation outwardly and unabashedly. Nor am I saying that systemic prejudice doesn’t occur, because someone will no doubt draw that conclusion. [0] What I am saying is that pride and self-esteem, while similar and sometimes linked, are different. And as far as Diabolism is concerned, pride can only come legitimately from things you have achieved or actions you take not attributes that were gifted to you by fate.

If an overabundance of pride is hubris, then it’s lack is perhaps best known as meekness. It is an error of judgment in the opposite direction of hubris. It is the underestimation of who you are, what you are capable of, and what you have previously accomplished. Meekness is false modesty. We hear its voice within our heads whenever we wrongly think, “I do not deserve this. I am not strong enough, good enough, pretty enough, smart enough,” and so on. [1]

This is all to say, know what is beyond and what is below you. The lesson of Satan’s pride suggests, however, that when in doubt it is better to err on the side of arrogance than meekness. The problem with excessive humility is that it becomes an excuse to not live as vital and full life as one could. It is the attitude that it is better to resign yourself to a lesser station in life rather than taking on the work and risk of stretching yourself beyond what is possible. It is this kind of meekness that leads people to endure loveless marriages and stay in demeaning jobs, because complacency feels safer than the unknown. Yes, you may fail and make a fool of yourself falling flat on your face or worse. But with the folly of hubris, you can at least take pride that the roots of your failings were in your vigor rather than your impotence.

To paraphrase the Protestant reformer, Martin Luther, if you’re going to sin, sin boldly. And to that we might add, proudly.

[0] The extent of such prejudice, what should be done about it, and whether it is to blame in particular instances is, of course, arguable, but the fact that is does occur is not.

[1] Notice I said, “wrongly.” There’s nothing to criticize in accurately recognizing when something is beyond you.

The Seven Infernal Virtues – Part 3: Lust

You have heard it said, flee thou youthful desires. But I say to you, those who desire but act not breed pestilence.

“SERMON OF THE NIGHT QUEEN” THE BOOK OF INFERNAL PRAYER

When we speak of lust in the context of Diabolism we fundamentally mean sexual desire. There can of course be other forms of lust linguistically speaking—for money, success, and food for example—but these are covered by their own infernal virtues—greed, envy, and indolence respectively. So, when we speak of lust proper, we are talking about the desire to experience sexual pleasure, with yourself or another as the object of that desire.

No one’s predisposition toward the seven infernal virtues will be entirely equal. In fact, which virtues one tends to gravitate toward over others will likely change over the course of a lifetime. This is perhaps most true of lust. For some it will be a matter of high concern for a large chunk of their lives. For many more it will be something they focus on in particular seasons of their lives, their interest waxing and waning with age and circumstance. Some will never find themselves that interested in it at all. Lust is highly personal.

Sex is dangerous. The Diabolists who think otherwise are fooling themselves. The need for it can drive some people to commit the most reckless actions of their lives. Romantic love can warp the mind, blind us to the truth, and cause us in a moment of passion to throw away what has taken a lifetime to build. It can even lead to murder, whether out of possessive jealousy or suicidal despair.

It should be of no surprise then that so many traditional societies have sought to regulate lust and sexual expression through various laws and cultural institutions. This isn’t the concern of one particular religion, but of all human social groupings. Not only because sex can wreak so much interpersonal havoc, but because it has biological consequences most of us would prefer not be ignored. Sex, between men and women at least, sometimes produces offspring. Human babies require a tremendous investment of time and resources to raise. Communities have a vested interest in making sure the appropriate parties take responsibility for those offspring, rather than sloughing them off to become everyone else’s burden.

The Diabolist is not obligated to observe the sexual mores of the culture they were raised or reside in (though neither are they obligated to toss them off with headlong abandon). Love, for the Devil worshipper, should be free. Free to come and go and find its own way without the interference of meddlesome third-parties, be they religious, political, or social. Even one’s own reason must sometimes bow to the dictates of lust. As the Devil (in female form) says to the character of Alvare in Jacques Cazotte’s The Devil in Love:

To stifle a celestial flame, the only resort by which the body and soul can act mutually upon one another and force themselves to concur in the necessary maintaining of their union! That is rather foolish, my dear Alvare! One must regulate these impulses, but sometimes one should yield to them; if they are thwarted they escape all at once, and reason no longer knows where to be seated in order to rule.

Notice, however, that I said reason must sometimes bow to the dictates of lust. All of the infernal virtues are in some sense dangerous. Actions have repercussions, and a reckless Diabolist they may soon find themselves reaping a host of unintended consequences. Because the popular understanding of Devil worship is so centered on sexual lawlessness, however, this danger is perhaps truest of all with regard to lust. If it seems like I am harping more on the negative with regard to this infernal virtue than I have the others, this is the reason why. Fictional portrayals of the Black Mass treat it less as a serious spiritual rite and more of an excuse for decadents to gather and spice up their otherwise staid sex lives. Sadly, many Diabolists willingly swallow this misunderstanding as readily as their non-satanic counterparts. The belief that it will get them laid or at least afford them a glance of bare titty is likely what drew many Satanists—theistic or otherwise—into the fold in the first place.

This isn’t to say Devil worship can’t be sexy, because it most certainly can. But it should be more than just sexy dress up time. Before the Diabolist lie two extremes that each must find their path between. Namely, straight-jacketed Puritanism on the one hand, and mindless hedonism on the other. We do have some general guidance, though, to help us navigate between those two poles.

The bedrock of Satanic sexual ethics is consent. Anton LaVey emphasized the importance of “the mating signal,” which is a colorful way to speak of receiving that consent. Consent is a surprisingly complex topic, which is not only beyond this particular essay but perhaps myself as an individual to cover with anything more than the cursory treatment I am giving it. Some people prefer that consent be explicitly obtained before any sexual contact can occur. For others, consent can be non-verbal and implied. Some people prefer that sex appear non-consensual in order to fulfill their particular tastes and kinks. It’s a broad spectrum.

All that said, the bedrock of consent does mean Diabolists are forbidden from committing rape and pedophilia. Since we live in a time when silence can be construed by some to be a form of political violence, let me perfectly clear that by rape I mean physically coercing someone to participate in a sexual act against their will; performing a sexual act upon someone who is physically unable to register their non-consent, i.e., someone who is unconscious or paralyzed and mute; or having sex with someone who is too mentally impaired to give meaningful consent. While an argument could be made that pre-pubescent children are technically capable of voicing consent, even the ancient and pederastic Greeks agreed that until puberty a young person was unable to understand what they were consenting to. Further, they—along with modern psychology—were also aware of the stultifying affect that pre-pubescent sex has on a child’s later development.

With regard to the sexual lives of others, the Diabolist is duty bound to observe a policy of live and let live. We don’t have to celebrate other peoples’ sexual predilections. We don’t have to like them or even validate them if we don’t feel so inclined. But—excepting pedophilia and rape—the Diabolist can’t use coercion, state sanctioned or otherwise, to stand in the way of another person’s sexual choices.

Consent and liberality—that’s the minimalist gist of our sexual morals. This greatly simplifies the questions a Devil worshipper could have with regard to acceptable sexual practices. If it isn’t rape or pedophilia, it’s perfectly acceptable. Love is the law; love and do what you will. Careful and thoughtful readers may be somewhat uncomfortable how much this leaves open to personal preference and taste. There are some major taboos I have intentionally said nothing about. I challenge readers appalled by that fact to examine where precisely that outrage comes from. Is that their Law speaking or the moral hearsay of their friends, family, and neighbors?

Again, I have heretofore been largely focusing on warnings and criticisms because inexperienced Diabolists are—in my estimation, at least—more likely to fail to give sex the respect it deserves than to be overly uptight about it. Sex is a big deal. It will not do to treat it as some kind of bogeyman like conservative Abrahamists, but neither should we cheapen it the way advertisers and Hollywood movies often do. One of the important psychological insights of the past century is that sexual orientation is a fundamental component of individual identity. The concept of someone being homosexual, bisexual, or heterosexual doesn’t appear to have existed in the ancient world. There have always been people who committed homosexual acts, to be sure, but the ancients would not have conceived of those people as being homosexual in essence. Our relationship to lust should not be taken lightly because it involves one of the basic building blocks of who we each are.

This is true of humans as individuals but it affects our species as a whole as well. A growing of amount of evidence suggests that micro-evolution is not only caused by natural selection but what is termed sexual selection as well. That is, the characteristics that mates within a species prefer will continue over time, while those they do not will die out. Amazingly, these preferred sexual traits do not have to confer any advantage in terms of survival or adaptability in order to be desirable. In fact, they can actually confer a disadvantage as far as natural selection is concerned, but continue nonetheless simply because potential mates appreciate their aesthetic appeal:

[The] evolutionary psychologist Geoffrey Miller of the London School of Economics suggests that [sexual selection] may be responsible for the ornamental aspects of human nature. For Miller, things like art, music, and theatre, which don’t seem to offer much in terms of survival benefits, may make us more attractive to potential mates. These qualities are the human equivalent of peacocks’ tails. We flaunt our intellectual, artistic, and sporting prowess much like the peacock flaunts his tail, and potential mates choose us based on these qualities.

DR. SIMON LAHAMTHE SCIENCE OF SIN 

Sex is powerful. Sex is mysterious. Sex is personal. Sex is sacred. The Diabolist who feels so motivated should absolutely incorporate it into their spiritual life and practice, for it is a potent and entirely appropriate form of worship. Satan himself describes sex as one of the means by which he worships Lilith.

Shall I compare you to a pyre, Lilith?  No, your blaze is brighter than a hundred razed temples, your beauty more stunning than a thousand altars of flesh. I look upon you and my soul nearly bursts with urge and lust. Surely you can feel my gaze upon you, so intense is its ardor. I stiffen at the scent of your passing. I crave to lose myself among the garden of your delights. I, the Prince of the Air, swear by myself: I will be yours. For where I am, there is none greater to swear by. I will lay you down, my fierce Lilith. Your eldritch gem shall be my blasphemous shrine, and there forever shall worship my lecherous tongue.

“THE ELDRITCH GEM” THE BOOK OF INFERNAL PRAYER

Sex is also a potent weapon when wielded properly. Sexual appeal can allure, befuddle, and melt otherwise hard hearts. Anton LaVey includes the utilization of sex appeal as one of the primary forms of lesser magic in The Satanic Bible:

Learning to effectively utilize the command to LOOK, is an integral part of a witch’s or warlock’s training. To manipulate a person, you must first be able to attract and hold his attention… If a woman is attractive or sexually appealing, she should do everything in her power to make herself as enticing as possible, thereby using sex as her most powerful tool. Once she has gained the man’s attention, by using her sex appeal, she is free to manipulate him to her will.

LaVey often assumes that women are more naturally capable of utilizing seduction to a fuller effect than men. He says as much when explaining why warlocks should be fully robed, while witches can be scantily clad during ritual. He also insists only women can serve as a nude altar. While many may want to dismiss all this as LaVey injecting his own heteronormative tastes into Satanism, there is a little more to it than that, which is why Diabolist ritual and scripture more often associates sex and seduction with Lilith than Satan. Repeated studies have shown that, generally speaking, men are more likely to choose a mate based on physical appearance and cues suggesting fertility[1], while women are typically more attracted to a mate’s perceived ability to protect and provide [2]. Biological and social realities—e.g., the fact they’re the one who can become pregnant and will likely be the one raising the child if their mate abandons them—also make women more likely to have ambivalent feelings about sex than men [3]. To put it vulgarly, the fact that men sometimes let their dick’s do the thinking means they are generally more susceptible to being seduced in the traditional sense. This isn’t to say men can’t use seduction to their benefit, only that women and homosexuals will have a much easier go at it. When attempting to seduce a woman, it should be remembered that it was with the offer of knowledge—which is another way of saying power—that Lucifer tempted Eve. 

The properly equipped and knowledgeable Diabolist—assuming they are fully cognizant of how dangerous lust can be—should feel free to use seduction as a legitimate means for getting what they want. The tools at your disposal range from playful flirtation to outright prostitution. Lust is more than just a virtue to be enjoyed and explored, it is a weapon of power—a Chalice of Ecstasy within which swirls the strength born of joy, and by which lovers and enemies, serfs and kings alike may be brought to their knees.  

[1] See for example, David Buss. “Sex Differences in Human Mate Preferences: Evolutionary Hypotheses Tested in 37 Cultures,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[2] Buss. The Evolution of Desire.

[3] This is true across species. Females are likely to be the pickier of the sexes when it comes to mate selection.

The Seven Infernal Virtues – Part 2: Envy

You have heard it said, where envying and contention is, there is inconstancy and every evil work. But I say to you, envy is the genitalia of the soul—its arousal is a compass pointing the direction you wish to go.“SERMON OF THE NIGHT QUEEN” THE BOOK OF INFERNAL PRAYER

When we speak of envy, it is best to first distinguish envy from resentment. To be envious is to see what someone else has accomplished and to want that same thing, or something comparable, for yourself. The object of envy isn’t another person, but what they have achieved or possess. In this sense, who you are envious of is largely arbitrary and irrelevant. They just happened to display a trait or possessed an object that triggered a desire in you.

Resentment, on the other hand, is about other people and your jealous hatred of them. In resentment, it isn’t what they have achieved that you desire to acquire for yourself. Rather, what you truly want is to see the downfall of someone who triggers your own insecurities. Resentment arises from a kind of poisoned and unwanted admiration that one mistakenly concludes can only be alleviated by tearing down whatever triggered that undesired feeling. If you should destroy that person, however, the relief will be fleeting. As Nietzsche says, “Resentment, born of weakness, harms no one more than the weak person himself.”

By this comparison we see that the root of envy is the desire to make one’s self better than what you currently are. Envy is inspiration. It is seeing the skill of a competitor or colleague and wanting to achieve that same level of skill yourself. This is true whether we are speaking of sports, business, the arts, parenting, communication, or any other field of day-to-day life. Rilke’s poem “Archaic Torso of Apollo” describes this revolutionary experience poignantly.

We cannot know his legendary head
with eyes like ripening fruit. And yet his torso
is still suffused with brilliance from inside,
like a lamp, in which his gaze, now turned to low,

gleams in all its power. Otherwise
the curved breast could not dazzle you so, nor could
a smile run through the placid hips and thighs
to that dark center where procreation flared.

Otherwise this stone would seem defaced
beneath the translucent cascade of the shoulders
and would not glisten like a wild beast's fur:

would not, from all the borders of itself,
burst like a star: for here there is no place
that does not see you. You must change your life.

What this poem says to me is that envy is sleeping potential awakened. It is becoming conscious of a desire we have heretofore been ignorant of, suppressed, or forgotten. We see someone enjoying something we want, and now we move to make that thing our own.

Contrary to what pop psychology might suggest, the experience of envy does not make us less happy but in fact happier. In a UCLA study ran by Lisa Aspinwall and Shelley Taylor, it was shown that when students were required to spend time around colleagues with qualities they wished to emulate (academic success, being well-adjusted to college life) they often came away from the experience happier. When students were required to spend time around colleagues who were less successful however (poor academic performance, poor experience of college life), they generally came away feeling worse. The researchers dug deeper into these results found that a common theme among the people who walked away happier was that being around someone enviable gave them a sense of hope. What previously might have seemed impossible had suddenly became obtainable because they met living proof it could be done [0].

It turns out, surrounding yourself with people who better reflect who you would like to be is healthier for your attitude and mental state than surrounding yourself with people you are more likely to pity or despise. Similarly, other studies have shown that envy, besides boosting mood, also increases creativity [1] and performance [2]. From my own experience with strength training and exercise, I always performed better and more consistently when I worked out with people who were either as or slightly more committed to fitness as I was. Envy and competitiveness often go hand in hand. As was stated in the beginning of this essay, the root of this competitiveness should never be resentment, which is generally more about insecurity and hatred of self than it actually is about hatred of another. If we are to replace Blake’s misuse of the word “envy” in an important line of The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, we see that rather than debasing us like resentment, envy can lift us into a state of holiness [3].

Once I saw a Devil in a flame of fire, who arose before an Angel that sat on a cloud, and the Devil utter'd these words:
'The worship of God is: Honouring his gifts in other men, each according to his genius, and loving the greatest men best: those who [resent] or calumniate great men hate God; for there is no other God.'

Envy, like magic, must be realistic in its aims to be beneficial, however. What one envies is of no little importance. To wish to acquire skills or goods you are actually capable of obtaining is to always be preferred to desiring those which you are incapable of. For example, admiring and lusting after the lifestyle of a Hollywood celebrity is, for the vast majority of Diabolists, a waste of time at best and a spiritual poison at worst.

Consider this, most of us who serve Satan and Lilith are neither talented enough, beautiful enough, socially connected enough, or lucky enough to become an international star. Perhaps it is not impossible in the strictest sense, but it is unlikely to the point of being ridiculous to spend much time thinking otherwise. Given this fact, it makes little sense to truly envy celebrities as what you desire is something you have no hope of possessing. To chase after the unobtainable is a good way to leave yourself bitter and stunted, or to waste precious time and energy that could be used on projects that might actually bear fruit. Perhaps most dangerously of all, desiring the unobtainable can create the incentive to fool yourself into thinking you possess what in reality you do not. You will become like Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard, living in a world of delusion. The simulacrum of success will become preferred to the harshness of reality.

Rather than utilizing envy to encourage aiming for specific ends (I want to what this particular award, I want to be loved by this particular person, I want this particular job), it is better to aim in a specific direction. For example, a stage actress sees an awe-inspiring portrayal of Lady Macbeth. She would be better off thinking, “That was incredible—I have to become a better actor,” rather than thinking, “I must give an equal or better performance of Lady Macbeth myself.” Our envious actress may not have it in her to play Lady Macbeth well. Or, perhaps circumstance will make it so that she is unable to ever land that particular part. Regardless of the variables of her life and her current level of skill, however, it is almost certain that she could become a better actress. By channeling her desire in a specific but nonetheless flexible direction will allow her to adapt her efforts in conjunction with her fate, which is, by definition, outside of her hands.

In fact, the less dependent on outside cooperation the Diabolist can make their envy inspired goals the better. I have no almost no hope of becoming the Joel Osteen of the Satanic world (not that I would want to be), nor do I have any control over whether other people gain some benefit from my writing. What I do have a large amount of control over, however, is becoming a more disciplined, devoted, and thoroughgoing writer. I could ask others for criticism and advice. I could learn the skills to be a better all-around communicator. I could learn what it takes to be a competent mentor. And I can make myself available for other Diabolists to make use of as a resource. The success of all these actions might be somewhat out of my control, but the effort is certainly not.

The Diabolist’s reading this maybe thinking, “That’s all well and good, but envy is like love—the heart wants what the heart wants.” That’s true. We feel all sorts of things on a daily basis and the stirrings of envy we feel will not always be constructive. But just because we don’t choose what we initially feel envious about it doesn’t follow we have to submit to whatever feelings come our way. The Diabolist should approach envy as an alchemist. The initial feeling is their raw material. It is up to them to explore it and determine what greater use or deeper truth is locked within that feeling. Once you’ve got a handle on that, then whatever envy arises can be channeled in a more appropriate direction, or accepted and ignored if no appropriate outlet can be identified at that moment. We do not choose what we feel, but we do choose what we do. Furthermore, we can choose to create the conditions where resentment and destructive envy are less likely to be acted upon or even felt at all. We can turn down the heat, so to speak, making the undesired alchemical reactions we’re noticing within ourselves less volatile. That means learning to identify and not dwell on self-destructive thoughts, and to avoid the triggers that consistently bring them up.

Learn to differentiate the good from the bad. That is the key of the knowledge offered by the Serpent in the Garden, after all. Discern the envious urges that are in alignment with your Law, acting upon those that do, and sacrificing those which don’t.

[0] “Effects of Social Comparison Direction, Threat, and Self-Esteem on Affect, Self-Evaluation, and Success,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.  

[1] Camille Johnson and Diederik Stapel, “No Pain, No Gain: The Conditions Under Which Upward Comparisons Lead to Better Performance,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

[2] Hart Blanton et al., “When Better-Than-Others Compare Upward: Choice of Comparison and Comparative Evaluation as Independent Predictors of Academic Performance,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

[3] It is a juvenile oversimplification to suppose that just because followers of the Abrahamic god seek that which is “holy,” then Diabolists must needs be concerned with pursuing the “un-holy.” To call something holy is to merely label it as being sacred. That certain things are sacred and should be held in high esteem is not a matter of disagreement between Abrahamists and Devil worshippers—the disagreement is on precisely what is sacred and what is vulgar.

The Seven Infernal Virtues – Part 1: Languor

There are various lists of virtues amongst the world’s religions and philosophies. Stoicism recognizes four: wisdom, justice, courage, and moderation. Confucianism has Five Constants: humanness (benevolence), righteousness, propriety, knowledge, and integrity. Bushido, depending on the source being cited, recognizes between eight and twelve prime virtues. Perhaps most famously in the West, Christianity has seven: chastity, temperance, charity, diligence, patience, kindness, and humility.

The virtues of Diabolism are derived from the Seven Deadly Sins of medieval Christianity, and, in the crudest sense, can be seen as an inversion of Christian values. I say crudest because the point of Diabolism’s virtues is not to say one’s behavior should always be the reverse of what Christianity teaches. Rather, this inversion is to shock the practitioner—who almost certainly has grown-up in a culture that is derived from the Abrahamic worldview—into the realization that all extremes are open to them. Their personal Law and the particular variables they face determine their course of action, not a pre-determined list of behaviors. To quote the Old Man of the Mountain, “Nothing is true. Everything is permitted.”

One critique of Devil worship is that it is in some sense reacting to or dependent on Christianity, as if the ideal religion should exist in an intellectual and cultural vacuum. The Diabolist recognizes that all things are interconnected and thus any quest for absolute purity—spiritual or otherwise—is doomed from the start. The Devil and Christianity are intertwined, the Seven Infernal Virtues recognizes that fact and proceeds accordingly.  If others wish to pretend like they can or should abstract themselves from the past 2,000 years of history, that isn’t our problem.

The meditations that follow should be taken in that light. They are musings on the implications and application of satanic values, not commands. They are suggestions for what goods and states the Diabolist should hold in esteem and which they should disdain. It is up to the individual to apply them to their own life.

Languor or Indolence

You have heard it said, idleness teacheth much evil. But I say to you, indolence creates time for the work that matters. – “Sermon of the Night Queen”

The saying goes that necessity is the mother of all invention, but a strong case could be made that is in fact indolence that is the true source of ingenuity. The very drive to invent new tools or more efficient ways of performing tasks often arises from a desire to free up more time that can be used to enjoy more pleasant and fulfilling activities. As the aeronautical engineer and science-fiction writer Robert Heinlein said, “Progress isn’t made by early risers. It’s made by lazy men trying to find easier ways to do something.” Indolence says, contrary to the Puritan work ethic, that just because something is hard work doesn’t in and of itself make that thing good. There are many necessities to survival, but a man’s salvation is not found in toiling at the earth anymore than a woman’s lies within the pain of childbirth [0].

To be sure, the things that matter to you in your life will often require hard work, whether to obtain them, maintain them, or both. The purpose of Languor isn’t to propose that you should never labor for anything. On the contrary, by indulging in periods of slothfulness you allow your body and mind precious time to restore their energies. The most efficient predators actually spend most of their time lazing about. This allows them to apply all their strength and cunning in a burst of frenzied activity when the need arises. Slow and steady may win the race sometimes. But, as Sun Tzu writes in The Art of War, when the door of opportunity opens, you must rush through it with the quickness of a hare. Speed and alacrity are nearly impossible to summon if you’re burnt out from constant drudgery.

Physically speaking, the largest component to discuss in relation with this virtue is sleep. Globally, more than 1/3 of adults feel they get an insufficient amount of sleep. [1] Sleep recharges the body, mind, and spirit. It leaves one better equipped to fight off disease, while the lack of or poor-quality sleep compromises the immune system. In babies, sleep is when neurological systems do a large portion of their development. Lack of sleep can affect an infant’s cognitive and linguistic development, their ability to learn and play, and even lead to mood disorders later in life. [2] While a fully-grown adult does not need sleep for the exact same reasons a baby does, since their minds are already developed, they do need sleep to maintain cognitive and physical functioning. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, upwards of 71,000 automobile accidents a year are linked to sleep deprivation, causing an average of 1,500 fatalities. In the short-term, sleep deprivation impairs attention span and memory, while long term effects include higher rates of obesity, diabetes, some cancers, depression, and anxiety [2].

To put it simply, Diabolists are human, and humans need sleep.

Mentally, Languor not only helps us to deal with stress, but also encourages proper mental functioning. In her article on the benefits of laziness, Anne-Laura Le Cunff writes:

Our mind has two modes of thinking: the diffuse mode and the focused mode of thinking. We need to maintain constant oscillation between the two modes in order to be our most creative and productive. Mind wandering, a form of diffuse thinking, is a useful mechanism for our brains to process information—sometimes leading to non-obvious solutions. Another benefit of letting our mind wander without paying any attention to a productive task is a higher focus on long-term goals…

If you have ever realized the solution to a problem while doing something completely unrelated, or remembered something once you actively stopped trying to recall it, you’ve experience the benefits of diffuse thinking.

The quality of your slacking off is as important as quantity, perhaps more so. This goes as much for sleep as it does enjoying one’s downtime, which is more indolence proper. Sometimes a lazy day in bed or vegetating on the couch can do wonders, but regularly setting aside free time to engage in activities you find enjoyable and stimulating is also a way to make the most of slothfulness. It is easy to let the responsibilities of work, family life, and social activities consume the majority of your waking life, and you can’t make the most of your free time if you do not have any to speak of. A Devil worshipper who constantly feels burnt out or like they are spending their days running from one obligation to the next should consider restructuring their life and relationships with the aim of carving out more personal time. How drastic that restructuring needs to be will be a matter of individual circumstance and Law. You may need to insist on firmer boundaries, protecting your personal time as truly yours. Perhaps you need to step back from certain responsibilities, or ask others to carry more of their part of the load. You may need to cut some activities, possessions, or people out of your life entirely. If you recognize that you have an energy vampire sapping your life—and vampires can take a myriad of forms—it’s up to you to remove them from it.

Of course, all the free time in the world won’t do you much good if you’re too stressed out to enjoy it. If anxiety, tension, or emotional disorder prevents you from fully entering into moments of languor you will need to identify and address the roots of these issues. Regular meditation and exercise, along with changes in diet, are all methods of treating the symptoms and increasing your baseline emotional resilience, but these should be used in tandem with efforts to alleviate the source of the disturbance itself. This may mean counseling, seeking medication, moving to a new residence, finding a new job—again, vampires can assume a myriad of forms.

I realize sources of environmental stress may largely be, or at least feel, to be outside of one’s control. Hearing someone say something like, “You should speak to a counselor,” or, “If you hate your high crime neighborhood you should move,” may seem laughable if you’re in severe poverty, and/or dependent on an abusive lover you’re legitimately afraid to leave, or otherwise feel stuck where you’re at. There are often no easy answers for those sorts of situations. Finding a way out of them whatever it takes should likely become your highest priority. Accept that change takes time. Remember that surviving is not the same as living, and it is more commendable from a satanic perspective to risk it all for a better life rather than slavishly accepting what fate has handed you.

Ultimately, indolence is resting in the sheer pleasure of simply being alive. The battles of life are never-ending. Let those precious moments of rest prepare and rejuvenate you for even greater endeavors and more glorious struggles ahead.        

[0] See Genesis chapter 3 and 1 Timothy 2:15.

[1] ‘Philips Index for Health and Well-being: A global perspective’

[2] https://www.enfamil.com/articles/importance-of-sleep-child-development/

[3] Worldsleepday.org

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