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Paul Foster Case
October 3, 1884 - March 2, 1954
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Paul Foster
Case was born in Fairport, New York. His mother was a teacher and
his father was the head librarian of the town library, in which
Paul Case was literally born. For a man whose thirst for hidden
knowledge was unquenchable, he could not have been born into more
fortunate circumstances.
Paul learned to read at a very young age. By the
age of four he was found pouring over "forbidden books"
in the attic of his father's |
library. He was also found to have extraordinary musical
talent at an early age, and at the age of three began training in piano
and organ. At the age of nine, he was the organist at the Congregational
Church in which his father was deacon.
At the age of seven, Case began correspondence with
Rudyard Kipling, who verified the "fourth-dimensional" experiences
Case was having as being not merely imaginary, but actual states of being.
At this early age, Case found that he had the ability to consciously manipulate
his dreams.
At sixteen, Case met the occultist Claude Bragdon, as they had both donated
their talents to a charity performance. It was in this meeting that Paul
Case got his first "directive". Bragdon asked Case, "Where
do you think the playing cards come from?" This simple question sparked
an immediate search for the origins and uses of Tarot. Within a very short
period of time, Case had collected every book and every set of Tarot Keys
available. He spent years researching, studying, and meditating on these
archetypal images.
Case described his experience at the time as definitely "guided"
by an inner voice. In his view, the experience with Tarot had stimulated
an "inner hearing", through which he was guided to the many
attributes of Tarot which were published before he was 21 years old. Perhaps
Eliphas Levi's statement on Tarot best summarized its influence on the
young Paul Case: "As an erudite Kabalistic book... A prisoner devoid
of books, had he only a Tarot of which he knew how to make use, could
in a few years acquire a universal science, and converse with unequaled
doctrine and inexhaustible eloquence."
While in New York, Case was approached by Michael Whitty, the Praemonstrator
of the Thoth-Hermes Temple of the Golden Dawn (Alpha et Omega). Whitty,
having heard of Case's extensive knowledge of the Western Mystery Tradition
and having read some of his published works, invited Case into the Order.
Case naturally accepted the offer, and moved through the Outer Grades
quickly. He was initiated into the Second Order on May 16, 1920, with
the magical motto, Perseverantia. Just three weeks later, he was the Third
Adept in the annual Corpus Christi ceremony.
He soon became known as the most knowledgeable occultist in the New York
temple, and succeeded Michael Whitty as Praemonstrator within a year of
his acceptance into the Second Order. Despite Case's attainments, he did
have considerable difficulty with the system of Enochian Magic. Ultimately,
he concluded that the Enochian system was demonic rather than angelic.
His Order, the B.O.T.A., excludes all mention of Enochian from its curriculum.
Because of his quick advancement through the Grades of the Order, Case
may have sparked some jealousy among the other Adepts. Moreover, others
may have thought some of his teachings inappropriate. On July 18, 1921,
Moina Mathers wrote Case regarding complaints she had received regarding
some of his teachings. Apparently, Case had begun discussing the topic
of sex magic, which at the time had no official place in the Order curriculum.
Since no knowledge lectures exist on the subject, whether sex practices
were ever taught in the Golden Dawn has been a long standing question.
In her correspondence with Case, Moina wrote, "...I have seen the
results of this superficial sex teaching in several Occult Societies as
well as in individual cases. I have never met with one happy result."
But to Case, sexuality became an increasingly important subject. In his
Book of Tokens, a collection of inspired meditations on the 22 Tarot Keys
of the Major Arcana, Case comments on the sex function, "You must
wholly alter your conception of sex in order to comprehend the Ancient
Wisdom... It is the interior nervous organism, not the external organs,
that is always meant in phallic symbolism, and the force that works through
these interior centers is the Great Magical Agent, the divine serpent
fire." In his works, The True and Invisible Rosicrucian Order and
The Masonic Letter G, he writes of certain practices involving the redirection
of the sexual force to the higher centers of the brain where experience
of supersensory states of consciousness becomes possible.
Some members also complained about a personal relationship between Case
and a soror, Lilli Geise. Case confessed the matter to Moina: "The
Hierophantria and I were observed to exchange significant glances over
the altar during the Mystic Repast... My conscience acquits me... Our
relation to each other we submit to no other Judge than that Lord of Love
and Justice whom we all adore." In time, Case married Geise, who
died a few years later.
Perhaps Moina's correspondence also touched a sensitive area for Case.
In her July 18th letter, she tells Case, "You evidently have reached
a point in your mystical Way where there would appear to exist certain
cross-roads. The artist in you, which I recognize, and with whom I deeply
sympathize, would probably choose to learn the Truth through the joy and
beauty of physical life." She continued, "You who have studied
the Pantheons, do you know of that enchanting God, the Celtic Angus, the
Ever Young? He who is sometimes called Lord of the Land of Heart's Desire?"
Angus rescued Etain, the Moon, who had been turned into a golden fly.
But Etain had to choose between bodily existence in the land of mortals
and everlasting life. She continued still, "The artist in us may
have lingered in that land for a moment. But you and I who would be teachers
and pioneers in this Purgatorial World must be prepared before all the
Gods to be the servants of the greatest of them all... the Osiris, the
Christ, the God of the Sacrifice of the Self." Moina then asked Case
to resign from his position as Praemonstrator.
Case resigned as Praemonstrator, responding to Moina, "...I have
no desire to be a 'teacher and pioneer in this Purgatorial World.' Guidance
seems to have removed me from the high place to which I have never really
aspired. The relief is great." This seems odd coming from a man who
would, in a few years, abandon his artistic endeavors to start his own
occult school, the Builders of the Adytum (B.O.T.A.). Perhaps this struggle
between his artistic soul and his mystical soul pre-existed his involvement
with the Order, and maybe Moina knew this. Archives at the B.O.T.A. state
that on one occasion years before he joined the Order, Case was approached
by a stranger on the streets of Chicago who called him by name and told
him many things about himself. "Your teacher is my teacher,"
the man told him. He told Case that he must choose between a life of material
comfort as a musician and a life of suffering and renunciation as a vitally
needed teacher of the Mysteries. The former would offer him "more
of this world's goods than most"; the latter, important service to
mankind and eternal life, and that, "In the end, you will not starve
to death."
After Case was expelled from the Order, he pursued the creation of his
own occult school, the School of Ageless Wisdom. This organization failed
within a few years. However, he soon moved to Los Angeles, abandoning
his lucrative career as a musician, and established the Builders of the
Adytum (B.O.T.A.). Still in existence today, it has proven to be a successful
correspondence course on Tarot.
Geise wrote to Moina that students from other temples were flocking to
hear Case speak prior to his being expelled. Mrs. Elma Dame, The Imperatrix
of the Philadelphia Temple, who resigned due to the numerous problems
in the Order at the time, pointed to the need for a knowledgeable teacher
in America. She wrote to Moina: "When you got rid of Mr. Case, you
'killed the goose that laid the golden egg.'" Dr. Pullen Burry, a
former Order member, concluded that Case was the one to bring "the
light of the old R.C. [Rosicrucian] teachings" into the light of
Aquarian consciousness. Case's book, The True and Invisible Rosicrucian
Order, stands as a classic Qabalistic interpretation of the Rosicrucian
Fama Fraternitatis and Confessio.
Case died easily while vacationing in Mexico with his second wife, Harriet.
Fortunately, he left behind extensive writings on Tarot and Qabalah, and
is considered by many to be a true "teacher and pioneer in this Purgatorial
World."
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