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Spiritual

ChiValry

An Introduction
to the
Knights Templar

Beloved Seeker:
A fortunate circumstance has led you to the threshold of a Great Work.
You now stand in the outer courtyard of The Order of the Knights
Templar. In this regard, this informational booklet is designed to share
our perspective on the spiritual quest, our history, our mission, our
methods- all in the hope that you are one of those rare individuals who
has heard the Call and would delight in joining in our labors. "Great is the
harvest", it has been said, "but few indeed are the laborers".

Our Perspective on the Spiritual Quest


Templar Spirituality can be a daunting undertaking. It requires that those
who are accepted into our ranks must strive to live an inner monastic life
of disciplined compassion while, at the same time, laboring amongst the
multitude in the outer world of daily affairs, for this is the essence of
Spiritual Chivalry. Spiritual Chivalry requires supreme mental and
emotional discipline plus the willingness to sacrifice all in the name of God
and to the benefit of humanity. For a Templar is one who is pledged to
finding the way to the perfect blending of the spiritual and material
aspects of life, and is willing to do his or her utmost to protect those
striving to attain a state of enlightened inner tranquility. A Templar is one
who lives in this world and yet, is not of it! Few indeed are they who labor
at defending themselves against the bandits and brigands of false belief,
of personal bias, of greed, envy, and fear, all of which menace and maim
those on the way to that Holy Inner Place where dwells sublime spiritual
awareness. If you are one who is numbered among this rare but willing
few, if you are pledged to undertaking the daunting task of seeking and
finding your way to the Holy Land of Inner Peace and liberation from all
attachments, if you are pledged to the ideals of Spiritual Chivalry, then I
bid you listen!
Wisdom and virtue are strengthened by fraternity. They that are received
into our Order must dedicate their lives to the service of others. They
must strive never to permit ought to pass their lips save the strictest truth.
They must exercise justice and equality in their dealings with all people.
They must endeavor to conduct their lives from the source of all life,
therefore having no need for wasteful passions, expressing benevolence
and compassion to all. They must pledge to obey the laws of the land in
which they are privileged to be citizens. They must endeavor neither to

abuse nor misuse power. They must prepare their minds such that they
become impervious to falsehood and greed, and they must examine
everything minutely and conscientiously and then seek to focus only on
accentuating the positive elements without ignoring the negative. They
must choose only that which is useful and good in life and use that for the
good of themselves and others, learning to think before they react to the
world. Finally, aspirants accepted into our Order must dedicate themselves
to serving God above all else!
In this regard, Templar Spirituality rests upon four simple but fundamental
principles:

1. The power and teaching we seek and need to sustain


us on our pilgrimage to the Holy Land of Inner Peace
and Tranquility are already alive and vibrant within us;
2. Spirituality is simply the expression of such virtues as
understanding, tolerance, charity, forgiveness,
kindness, altruism, and love in our every thought
word, and deed, without compromise;
3. As essentially spiritual beings our only responsibility
Individually - is to seek and find the best way possible
for us, as individuals, to express the ideals of love,

understanding, tolerance etc. in our daily thought,


word, and deed - without compromise and
without regard to race, religion,
political persuasion, gender or social status;

4. That which separates us from the power and teaching


of our own essential spiritual nature and, therefore,
interferes with the daily expression of our innate
spirituality, isour own personal psychology.
As a consequence, from a Templar point of view, the spiritual quest is
simply a matter of bringing our personal psychology into proper alignment
and harmony with the spiritual laws of the Universe.

Grand Master Jacques De Molay


Served 04/20/1292 to 03/18/1314

Our History
The fact that your path has led you to this fortunate circumstance in your
quest suggests that perhaps you already know something of the history of
our Order.
Many books recount story of
the Nine Knights who banded
together in Jerusalem after
the First Crusade and become
the nucleus of one of the
most powerful institutions of
the Middle Ages. But there is
a more private history that
might be of interest to you.
So far as most historians are
concerned, it all began on
Tuesday, November 28, 1095
A.D when Pope Urban II had a clever idea. Instead of Christian Knights
fighting each other and being a general nuisance to everybody, why not
have them join forces and work off their aggressions on capturing
Jerusalem, the Christian City par excellence (which at that time was being
administered quite nicely by the Muslims)? Christendom would reclaim its
spiritual birth place and Europe would become a safer place to live.
With great gusto, Urban painted a picture to the assembled multitudes of
atrocities and indignities being perpetrated daily on the Christians who

lived in the Holy Land. "Take the road to the Holy Sepulchre", he cried
"and tear the land from the hands of these abominable people!" Hardly
had he finished than the crowd rose as one person and shouted God wills
it! God wills it! God wills it!" Thus was born the First Crusade.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes and unknown to history, other minds had
already been working on the problem, and sought to divert the inevitable
disaster that was going to befall the Crusades. Certain representatives
from the Christian and Islamic traditions got together and reasoned
somewhat as follows. The two dominating passions (or "notes") of the age
were fighting and religion, but they had not been properly integrated. Nor
could these trends be stopped, but they could be directed towards more
useful consciousness development. Fighting in Europe (less so in Asia
Minor) was done largely for sport and land. Religion, on the other hand,
was too other worldly - it led to withdrawal from the legitimate needs and
functions of society. Therefore, the high representatives of an Order of
Brothers from the Orient drew up a plan to integrate the two passions
so that humanity would be raised one step higher on the ladder of
spiritual evolution.
Fighters would learn to temper their passions and drives according to what

to them were spiritual goals, while religious persons would learn how to

translate spiritual ideals into hard political realities. I'm sure the high
representatives understood something of the explosive nature of the
passions involved. It couldnt have been an easy decision. But they also
knew that in order to keep the consciousness evolution of humanity on
track they had to go forward with the plan. Along these lines, it was also
hoped that by working together they could divert the potential bloodshed
that was inevitably going to be spilled by those who wanted to fight for
the sake of material possession.

Notice how this information throws new light on some of the historical
events which followed. The First Crusade and those subsequent to it may
be thought of as a purposeful merging of the religious and fighting
instincts of the age. They provoked an analogous response in the Islamic
world where there were similar needs. But while the Crusades and the
Muslim response gave the integration of sword and spirit a strong popular
base, such mass movements were unavoidably crude and fanatical, as well
as temporary.

A new organization was needed that would carry out the integration on a
much higher level, an organization whose members would at one and the
same time pray as monks and fight as knights - protecting the sacred,
regardless of the religious source. Such an idea was totally unheard of at
the time. It sounds no less odd today. Nonetheless, whatever one may
think of it, that was the founding idea of the Order of the Temple as laid
down by the High Council and established by the Order of Brothers of
the Orient.

The Order was secretly

Templar Tomb in Istanbul


(Formerly Constantinople)

established in 1096 in
Constantinople, in
preparation for an
official public
announcement in 1118
A.D. The Order was
established under the
leadership of a French
Knight named Hughes
de Payens, (whose
grandfather Thibault de
Payens le Maure de
Gardille, was a Moorish
Shiite Muslim, and some
say a Sufi).

The Order was immediately recognized by King Baudouin (Baldwin) II of


Jerusalem and given quarters in a building near the Dome of the Rock, on
the supposed site of the Temple of Solomon, whence came the appellation
Poor Knights of the Temple of Solomon or Templars. The historical record
likewise shows that the Islamic hierarchy of neither Makkah nor Cairo
made any military or verbal move to prevent the Templars from taking
charge of the Dome of the Rock, which was regarded as the second most
holy site in Islam. In fact, Islamic records of the eleventh century on from
these territories referred to the Knights Templar as the Templar Knights
of Islam, and the Order, likewise possessed a Fatwa from a Muslim
leader in Seville confirming that it would be safe to allow the Templars to
take charge of the Dome of the Rock.
In 1128, Hughes de Payens travelled back to Europe and there enlisted
the support of Bernard de Clairvaux, the most influential European Cleric

of his day, to draft a Rule to be eventually approved by the Pope.


Propelled by Bernard's formidable energies, and his secret desire to unite
the doctrines and teachings of the various branches of the Primordial
Tradition, the Order became a sensation in Europe. While publicly being
viewed as a Christian security force, it privately worked to collect,
understand, and unite spiritual doctrines from outside Europe. Within a
century, the Order held Commanderies and extensive land holdings
throughout the then known world. The Order's interior discipline, its
fierceness on the battle field in defense of pilgrims of all faiths, its piety,
as well as its immense wealth and virtual independence from both Church
and State (all guaranteed by the Rule), made it an object of veneration
and awe, but also of envy and distrust. Of the latter, we would reap the
bitter fruits years later.
The Holy Land was lost by the Christians (much to the relief of the Islamic
inhabitants) in 1291. No one in Europe was especially interested in taking
it back. The Order successfully fulfilled its secret mission of integrating the
teachings of the three major religions (Muslim, Jewish, and Christian), as
well as having amassed and studied the spiritual doctrines of other more
obscure traditions. However having lost its public raison detre, the
Templars - after having introduced Europe to the Qabbalah of the Jews,
Alchemy of the Muslims, and Gnosticism of the Eastern Christians and
Druze, and modern banking practices from their extensive business and
trading exposure to eastern merchants - became vulnerable to the
machinations of their enemies.
In 1307, King Philip the Fair of France, being unable to repay his debt to
the Templars and having been refused entry into their ranks, ordered the
simultaneous arrest of every Templar in France and confiscated what he
believed to be the Order's holdings. He compiled a list of damning
confessions (extracted under torture) for the Pope (whom he had
conspired to have elected to the position) and compelled the Pope Clement V - to declare an official Bull disbanding our Order. So far as the
outer world was concerned, the Order ceased to exist when the last public
Grand Master, Jacques de Malay, whom we hold dear in memory, perished
in the flames of the Inquisition on a tiny island in the middle of the Seine
river in Paris across from Notre Dame Cathedral.
But we do here state that Jacques de Molay was not the last Grand
Master of our Order. Nor did the Order cease to exist with his death. In
one form or another, through a series of different lineages, it exists to this

day. Neither is it proper to say that the outer form of the Order was
destroyed; better to say that it was closed by its leaders, its outer mission
temporarily ended.
What was the mission of The

Order?

On the surface, it was to secure the Holy


Land against the Saracens and to
protect pilgrims on their way from the
West. Taking into account the political
and logistical difficulties of the mission,
the Templars may be said to have
performed superbly. But there was also
the higher mission of integration
mentioned earlier.
The Templars were to integrate the
religious and militant instincts of the
age, and to unite the esoteric and
Old Templar Abraxas Seal
spiritual doctrines of the primary
religious movements. They were to also
secretly research and explore the sciences and spiritual doctrines which
had largely been suppressed and were unknown in Europe. Through
negotiations, ambassadorial work, archeology, and other means they were
to secure sacred texts and artifacts that could help propel Europe out of
the dark ages in the short run, and help lead to a global spiritual
renaissance in the long run.
They were to demonstrate that chivalry (the new synthesis dramatized by
the Grail Legends) actually works and that it can be applied on a large
scale over long periods of time. Did they succeed? I think so, but we won't
know for sure until the story is over. That is, until we modern Templars
put the finishing touches on our own mission.

Our Collective Mission


CIRCES is a French acronym that stands for The International Circle for
Cultural and Spiritual Research. Animated by the same compassion which
compelled the Nine Original Templars to dedicate themselves to the Divine
and ''to protecting the pilgrims on their way to the Holy Land", CIRCES
International is an outer Templar vehicle for the expression of Spiritual
Chivalry in today's world. As an International Circle of Seekers and
Doers, CIRCES is open to all sincere aspiring initiates, without regard to
language, ethnic origins, religion, gender, or political persuasion. Though
we largely recruit initiates from other spiritual traditions and esoteric
Orders, we are also open to considering sincere spiritual aspirants who
have not received prior initiation in a formal esoteric Order or school, but
who have demonstrated that they are spiritual workers in the world.
Our Order is committed to living the commandment: Love ye one another!
and, is dedicated to the ideals of Chivalry, World Peace, and the reduction
of Human Suffering through the integration of the spiritual and scientific
technologies. Carrying forward the process of integration initiated by our
forbearers, CIRCES has a mission to contribute to the spiritual evolution
of humanity by effecting a viable integration of the two dominant forces in
the world today, namely the spiritual and scientific sentiments of the Soul.
In this regard, it is interesting to note, however, that although it presents
itself as a movement of spirituality and initiation, CIRCES teaches neither
doctrine nor dogma but, instead, presents techniques whereby each
member may awaken to the Teachings which already reside within him or
her, and come to know personal Mastery. In this, CIRCES spares no
effort in contributing to the Personal Integration of each member, and it
works to support the esoteric community as a whole. Therefore, an aspect
which is truly original with CIRCES is that its members are enabled to
participate directly and individually in the common work of human

consciousness evolution, but always in perfect harmony with their


personal knowledge and aptitudes. In short, the personal experience of
each member is brought to bear directly upon the Mission of CIRCES
International.
CIRCES, the outer vehicle of our branch of Templar activity, was founded
on February 19, 1988 in Paris, France, under the leadership of one of the
foremost esotericists and mystics in the Western World today, Raymond
Bernard, former Grand Master of the French Rosicrucians, and he became
our Templar Sovereign Grand Master. In the mid 1950's Grand Master
Bernard was received in to that branch of The Order of the Temple which
traces its lineage directly back to Jacques de Molay via Jean-Marc
Larmenius, who received his mandate directly from Jacques de Molay
while the latter had been imprisoned by Philip the Fair. Some ten years
after his reception into The Order in Italy, Grand Master Bernard was
assigned the difficult task of inaugurating a new phase of public Templar
activity in preparation for the events foreseen to unfold during the next
century. CIRCES International is the result of his efforts to create an
outer Order expression of the Templar work whose utility is to tackle the
challenges of the modern world. As such, the CIRCES motto is
spiritualizing the material and materializing the spiritual.
Without waxing too apocalyptic, can anyone today doubt that the world
and our planet are in crisis? One has only to piece together the various
trends - biological, economic, social, spiritual- to arrive at a somewhat
forbidding prognosis of the future. We are in trouble, and at one level or
another everybody knows it.
Do not suppose it is the mission of the Templars somehow to avert this
crisis. Such is not and has never been the spiritual mission of any spiritual
movement, and people must always learn from their own mistakes!
Instead, with other spiritual movements which also have missions to
contribute in ways consistent with their own nature, CIRCES
International and the Templars, are required to prepare the way for
those who are willing to qualify themselves to meet the crisis - any crisis! with equanimity and inner poise centered in the knowledge of their
inherent spiritual nature. In Biblical terms, we are to help in the
establishment of "the New Jerusalem" which, rather than being a political
and social system, is a state of being which, in time, will engender a more
equitable, humane, and chivalrous social order.

Our Individual Mission


Thus, because any value which contributes to the common good, the
Summum Bonum, is actually a spiritual value, virtues such as Peace,
Tolerance, Understanding, Forgiveness, Altruism, and Charity, all
constitute spiritual values. Of course, the greatest of all spiritual values is
LOVE - unconditional LOVE! Within CIRCES, therefore, the Spiritual Quest
for each of us consists in seeking the most effective means whereby
spiritual values may be expressed in daily life without compromise. As a
consequence, each member of CIRCES is required to find his or her own
personal path toward this inner state which, indeed, is a State of Grace.
However, because each of us has his or her own set of experiences and/or
challenges to work through, the Path to this State of Grace cannot be
identical for all of us we must each find our way after our own fashion.
CIRCES is committed to assisting
each of its members in finding his or
her own path. It is for this reason
that we only present a set of tools
and ideas whereby each member
may be enabled to align his or her
psychology with the source of his or
her being.
Now, the fact that we each have our
own path does not mean we all do a
good job, on our own, of finding
and following it. Most of us get side
tracked at various points along the
way and either go wandering

around on other people's paths or just sit down and don't do much of
anything. But because "wisdom and virtue are strengthened by fraternity",
within CIRCES you find yourself surrounded by a rich and perceptive
circle of friends who do whatever they can to help you realize your talents
and surmount your difficulties. This circle of friends becomes a circle of
colleagues, companions, family, who will walk with you to the bitter end
and value your life as if it were their own. In time, you yourself become
the steadfast friend to others. And so we all support each other, and
before long the goal of spiritual wholeness is achieved.

This Quest, individual and collective, has a name in our Tradition, and
you already know it. We call it the Quest for the Holy Grail

Our Methods
The Ordre Souverain du Temple Initiatique (the OSTI) is the spiritual
heart of CIRCES. It is here that the inner work of the organization is
conducted and it is here that the member pledges him or herself to labor
ceaselessly in the name of God and to the benefit of humanity, and to
commit their life to working as a Templar. Nevertheless, out of respect for
individual difference and individual choice, members of CIRCES may
either remain in secret labor within the OSTI or they may go out into the
world to serve. Choice notwithstanding, more often than not, members
choose to go forth and serve in their local and/or remote community.
Traditionally, all members of The Order were Templars although not all
Templars were Initiates. Therefore, we fully recognize that there are
certain occasions on which the candidate for membership may feel that he
or she is not quite ready to undergo the rigors associated with intense
inner work of the OSTI. As a consequence, as is traditional and out of
respect for the wishes of such candidates, in applying for membership in
CIRCES, each candidate is expected to study and work in the CIRCES
curriculum prior to being considered to be made a Chevalier of the OSTI
Templar Lineage. That being said, it should be stressed that all
members of CIRCES are considered working Templars, whether or not
they have been received into the OSTI. And since each new member is
assigned a sponsor whose responsibility is to assist him or her in finding a
viable orientation in his or her new spiritual environment, subsequent
questions regarding eventual consideration for the OSTI can always be
accommodated.

Raymond Bernard

Dr. Onslow H. Wilson

The International Headquarters for the OSTI is currently located in the


United States of America, in part due to the dedication and commitment of
Dr. Onslow Wilson (who was an internationally known researcher and
esotericist in his own right). We are now well established and will be
expanding Grand Commanderies in other countries and languages. These
Commanderies will remain operationally autonomous but under the
auspices of the Maison Chevetaine Internationale (MCI) (International
Headquarters) in the United States. Within each Grand Commandery is a
network of Commanderies and Preceptories where members meet
regularly to draw up their plans and to discharge their spiritual and
ritualistic duties. The whole assemblage is coordinated, guided and
ordered by a Templar Rule, a copy of which each Chevalier receives upon
being received into the OSTI. Within the simple guidelines of the Rule,
each Preceptory or Commandery (also called a House) has ample latitude
to elect its own Officers and to define its own agenda.
Members work as volunteers. No one is forced to do anything that he or
she does not wish to do. Nevertheless, the work inevitably entails a

significant commitment of time, energy, and (to a certain extent) money for dues, special projects, and occasional travel. The work also requires a
rough-and-ready willingness to meet the needs of the moment, sharply
distinguishing it from more passive forms of membership in other esoteric
organizations. Our members are cheerful, uncomplaining, alert to the
needs of the day, and are not afraid to express themselves and be leaders
in the esoteric community. In fact, they are heartily encouraged to do so -

but with Chivalry!

In homage to the injunction, wisdom and virtue are strengthened by


fraternity, our members are expected to participate regularly in the work
of The Order. Local membership is organized into groupings known as
Preceptories, consisting of a minimum of three (3) and a maximum of
nineteen (19) members, and Commanderies consisting of nineteen (19)
or more members. It is within the ritualistic work of the Preceptory or the
Commandery that the traditional teachings of the Templars are presented.
Therefore, because the Oral Tradition is strictly respected, regular
attendance at group functions is strongly encouraged. Templars who, for
whatever reason, have not yet been received into the OSTI, must also
participate regularly in the work of their local Preceptory or Commandery
through the regular and consistent performance of the Home Ritual of
Work and Worship, as well as by regularly attending the General
Research Council meetings which are held on the same day on which the
ritualistic inner work of the Preceptory or Commandery takes place. During
these Council Meetings members present their own personal researches,
either in discussion or in open debate. These presentations are made in an
orderly, disciplined, but kindly manner, hence no member needs be fearful
of expressing his or her point of view since chivalry, in the most sublime
sense of the word, is the modus operandi of Templar Research activity.
The International Headquarters also will hold regular gatherings near the
equinoxes and solstices for the purpose of presentations led by
researchers from both in the Order itself, and special guest speakers from
other spiritual traditions we work with, and for the purposes of temple
activity and initiations.
It should be noted, however, that because of the vastness of human
interest, it is impossible to delimit and define in precise terms the arena of
CIRCES research activities or even those of its members. Nevertheless, it
is important to bear in mind that a member of CIRCES is, above all, a
builder. Therefore, all suggestions, all aptitudes, and all talents are
important in bringing the services of CIRCES to the world.

The Ourobourus has many


definitions, Self Reflection,
the ALL in the ALL, Eternity,
the Great Work.
The purpose of Circian Research is
to facilitate each member's journey
on his or her chosen path; it is to
assist each of us in our personal
quest for Enlightenment. This
should not, in any way, be taken to
mean that our individual
discoveries will not be helpful to
other aspirants on their chosen
path. Quite to the contrary, the
whole idea behind sharing and
expressing, in a practical way, what we have discovered through personal
effort is to assist others. Nevertheless, the simple fact is that one cannot
truly assist others until one has succeeded in assisting oneself. In other
words, one cannot hope to change the world until one has changed
oneself! As Lao Tzu said, if you want to change the world for the better,
then quietly go to work on yourself. Therefore, research, from our point
of view, is the Path to Wholeness, for indeed, Enlightenment- or Gnosis,
comes only to those of disciplined minds and chivalrous hearts.
Clearly, because of differences in life experiences, because of differences
in educational backgrounds, because of differences in interests, and
because of differences in understanding, there will necessarily be
differences in the nature and intellectual profundity among individual
research efforts. For the self same reasons, it can be stated with equal
emphasis that there will also be great differences in the emotional
profundity among individual research efforts. This natural variation
becomes quite understandable when we realize that those who pursue
intellectual matters do so for purposes of their own evolution at this time,
just as those who pursue the more feeling and emotional disciplines are
equally obliged to do so by virtue of their evolutionary needs. Therefore,
what is of utmost importance in any research effort, regardless of the
arena in which this may occur, is the inner transmutation that the

individual's research interests and efforts will effect in the consciousness


of that particular individual. Consequently, a Templar has no need to
defend, nor to apologize for his or her interests in life.
In explaining our methods, I believe that a few words are in order
regarding the use of Ritual which can be quite extensive in our Order. In
today's world, the word "ritual" has acquired a bit of a sour taste, and
many good people shy away from it on that account. The reason, I
suppose, is that when most people are exposed to ritual it is done badly
and without spirit and by people whose motives are not "quite right". We
are led to think that ritual is what one does when one lacks the creativity
to do something better. But permit me to ask you, is a Shakespeare play
or a musical concert something one performs from lack of creativity? Is a
marriage ceremony - that most serious exchange of solemn vows something one does out of mere habit? Is a church ritual - be it
Protestant, Catholic, or otherwise - some form of weird rite? For the
thinking person the answer would be a resounding No! Well, the same can
be said of a Templar ritual! A ritual - any ritual - is a play or drama
designed to transmit meaning not easily transmissible by mere words, and
whose action has ceased to be make-believe. It lights up in the emotional
nature the full import of the moment and, when properly performed,
transcends the limitations of words and the intellect. Ritual accords
significance where significance is due!
But before leaving the subject of Our Methods, I
should mention one last, important point. There is
more to the OSTIs mission, more to its interior
structure, than I have heretofore indicated.
Embedded within the OSTI and protected by it
are three other Orders, one of which is
Pythagorean. At times you will hear this
Pythagorean note in our work, and you will come
to take comfort in it. The OSTI is likewise
committed to protecting the work of LOrdre
Martiniste, and many of our CIRCES members are
likewise invited to participate within Martinism, if they have not already
done so. The third traditional Order that the OSTI protects is one only
known by the initiated and it is best for it not to be spoken of in an
informational booklet such as this...

The Tree of Alchemy of Raymond Lull

Personal Preparation
Preparation for the Great Work of CIRCES takes place during the first
three years of active CIRCES membership. During this period the member
is presented with study materials and fraternal assistance designed to
facilitate self-enfoldment and the discovery of his or her personal mission
within the larger mission of CIRCES.
During the first year of membership, Templars observe a traditional Period
of Silence. While in this Period of Silence the new CIRCES member may
participate fully in General Council Meetings, but during temple meetings
must restrict his/her questions to him/herself by recording them and any
inner responses s/he may receive in his/her Circian Journal. During this
period of Silence, however, the new Templar may discuss openly with his
or her Sponsor, who will be a Templar in the OSTI.
During each of the three years of preparation each member receives
eleven Cahiers (Handbooks) for a total of 33 over a period of 33months.
These are designed to assist the student in coming to an understanding
and recognition of those unconscious factors which impede mastery of the
Soul and its attributes. At the end of the third year the member may be
invited into the OSTI, or may remain as a member within CIRCES,
depending on their own individual effort.

Avenues of Service
Our Order has many avenues of service - far more than can be listed here.
We research the cultural and spiritual traditions of the world's peoples,
which has been the secret Templar mission all along. We put on public
seminars, workshops and conferences dealing with pertinent issues of the
day, such as improving the education of our children. We promote nonviolence on the streets and in schools. We work as ambassadors in the
world, meeting with political and religious leaders to promote
understanding and peace. We publish papers and books on esoteric and
scientific subjects. We work to support other spiritual and esoteric
traditions that our members are leaders of. Our members help the aged
and infirm. They design new technologies. They do medical research and
work with the chemically dependent. They do mathematical work in the
field of psychometrics. They do economic analyses. Many of our members
likewise serve in the military or law enforcement, and seek to utilize skills
to create a more peaceful world. To co-ordinate our researches, and
expose them to the public, we offer courses. We also have more private
self paced courses and classes by knowledgeable members on various
subjects within an internet web forum that connects brother and sister
Templars around the world.
We also have more subtle forms of service. Members are sometimes called
upon to develop and exercise their "psychic faculties". With these we learn
to heal ourselves and others, to disseminate useful thought-forms into the
collective unconscious of humanity, and to receive them from others. We
learn to raise and rekindle the energies of our work places. We learn to
locate the unknown workers who are the hidden backbone of our world~
and make their jobs easier by lightening their load. We learn to work as
Agents of Omneity, helping to educate people on living in a balanced
world order, in harmony with nature, and promoting the highest potential
of human consciousness. Naturally, this type of work is done with the
utmost discretion.

Where Do You Fit In This Picture?


I hope that I have given you enough information to make an informed
decision about whether or not you should petition to join our ranks and
become a Templar. After all, that is precisely what this exercise has been
all about! Certainly you understand now that CIRCES is not, and cannot
be, for everyone. You now know something of our perspective on the
spiritual quest, our history, our mission, our methods of operation. In your
heart, are you a Templar? Are you among the rare few who have heard
the Call? If in your heart you feel eager to proceed with an application for
membership into our Order, then I invite you to complete the
Membership Application Form which is found with this booklet. Send
the completed application to the address printed on the application, and
initiate the process today!
And thus, O Seeker, having discharged my responsibility, I leave you with
a prayer.

Non nobis, Domine, non nobis, sed nomini Tuo da Gloriam

Sealed the 19th of January, 2011, by the Grand Master

OSTI Grand Master

CIRCESInternational,Inc.
P.O.Box462172
Centennial,CO80046
UnitedStatesofAmerica

Notes

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