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how to become rich by joining gconnection brotherhoood occult for money power riches and fame call or whatsapp grandmaster 2348118424737<br>Gconnection Organization was formed in 1996 in Egor (Edo state of Nigeria) by a small group of individuals led by Chief Nana which was later nicked named by members as u201cMugardu201d because of its esoteric teachings and principles. It was a period of hopelessness following the suffering of many people in Nigeria and other parts of the world
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Gconnection Organization was formed in 1996 in Egor (Edo state of Nigeria) by a small group of individuals led by Chief Nana which was later nicked named by members as “Mugard” because of its esoteric teachings and principles. It was a period of hopelessness following the suffering of many people in Nigeria and other parts of the world because of lack of the knowledge of the spiritual world. It was formed with the spirit of uniting people of like-minds, for social interaction and spiritual growth. It was timely and it was well received because of it’s founding principle of “be your brother’s Keeper” embodied in it’s motto: Peace and Abundance for All. Since the initial formation, the membership base has grown like wildfire. Operating as a Club to avoid misinterpretation from people who may not have been adequately instructed spiritually. Gconnection occult society as introduced online and style of admission has been imitated but seldom duplicated. Since the inception, there have been a rash of other groups, associations and Spiritual Organizations, that were formed to compete with the Gconnection Brotherhood, but non of them have been nearly as successful. This continual success and growth is credited to it’s a membership for their love, loyalty and dedication to the Founders and to this elite and powerful spiritual organization. Gconnection Lodge, Chapter, and office: Gconnection temple of Nigeria operates a secret Lodge in the Edo state of Nigeria and in New York City United States, where admission has been taking place until online admission process was introduced. Gconnection occult Protocol: Perhaps more than anything else, it is what Gconnection society of Nigeria from a few other organizations out there. It is what gives it, it’s distinct flavor and elevates it above all other organization of its kind. Gconnection secret occult code of conduct or protocol! Everything in the Gconnection temple follows a certain formality and etiquette. Ebutalium membership is about respect for each other, recognition for each other and adherence to a strict code of social ethics and decorum. Gconnection occult is about class, elegance, and nobility, in the pursuit of happiness. From the stringent process and difficult entrance of members, spiritual teachings arrangement, to the way they talk and when they talk, Gconnection members exude enthusiasm, orderliness, and discipline. They have a superior sense of hierarchy, procedure, and comportment. Gconnection temple does not use try and error spiritual principles. It must be done right. Joining the organization is a matter of determination and a will to success. A Matter of Oath Breaking Recently, Nick Ferrell wrote an article where he criticized the necessity for the oath of secrecy for Golden Dawn initiates. While I am not a Golden Dawn initiate, I do have some opinions about oaths of secrecy and confidentiality. I have also incorporated a kind of oath for members of my own order, but that oath is more engaged with confidentiality and ethics than actual secrecy. Still I can understand the need for such an oath as well as its limitations. The Golden Dawn has been rife over the last century or more with various kinds of individual oath breakers. Certainly, Crowley could be considered one of the first, who published the Golden Dawn lore in his periodical “Equinox.” Then we have Israel Regardie, Dion Fortune, and a host of others. I have to admit that if these individuals had not circumvented their oaths, none of their writings about the Golden Dawn would have been produced. We would have known next to nothing about this secret organization and its precious lore, and there would have been a dearth of popular occultism, paganism, wicca and magick today. Some might have been quite happy if the occult explosion of the last hundred years had not occurred, but I can tell you that I would have been quite unhappy. In
fact, the thought of not being an occultist and having my mono-mania of magick to pursue is quite daunting indeed. (Ha! Maybe I need to get a life and stop being such an occult nerd.) So I can’t either blame or condemn any of these occultists for breaking their solemn oath to the egregore of the Order of the Golden Dawn because I and many others profited from it. However, I can look at what motivated each of these individuals and determine what the driving force was that caused them to take this step. For all of the occultists except Crowley, the reason was selfless. They were driven by the desire to enlighten and inform the public. It doesn’t matter too much that the material was given out of context since it did indeed inform and enlighten many individuals. In fact, it is probably what saved the Order from complete extinction, so perhaps the egregore of the Order was behind these illicit transmissions. Crowley’s reason for publishing the Golden Dawn material was undoubtedly for pure spite. He despised Mathers and the other members of the Order. He also sought to abrogate the lore for his own personal magickal order, and he published some of Mather’s manuscripts and passed them off for his own work. However, Crowley also produced his own stellar work and had many great contributions to the study and practice of magick. However, his intentions were not selfless or positive, even though the final outcome did end up being good. I suspect that Crowley got to taste the full bitterness of his betrayal of a powerful order and its egregore, if we attribute his final days to that consequence. We can also just as well believe that Crowley was just being himself to the very end, brilliant, pathological, addicted, profoundly creative, notorious, and controversial. Despite his final pitiful days, I think that Crowley would be pleased with the number of occultists today who read and study his works. Other occultists have published Golden Dawn material – much of it has been in the public domain for quite some time, so I would assume that such material couldn’t be part of an oath of secrecy and confidentiality. So for this reason I couldn’t condemn someone like David Griffin for being an oath breaker. In fact, I am quite happy that many Golden Dawn initiates have written books for me to read and study. However, where I draw the line is the consideration of the author’s motive. Why are they writing about this material when it properly belongs to the Order of the Golden Dawn. Answering that question is very important, as I have already shown in the examples above. If the motive is a selfless desire to inform and enlighten the public, then it must be a positive development, perhaps one that the egregore has sanctioned itself in some manner. If not, then what is revealed is probably not only illicit but against the spirit of the organization. Nick Ferrell has written a lengthy article that outlines what he thinks is invalid and wrong about the oath of secrecy in the Golden Dawn. There are things that he finds agreeable and things that he doesn’t agree with and feels should be changed. That is all well and good, and probably it would be better stated by someone who has never taken that oath than someone who has. Say you take an oath. Later on you pick it apart to determine which sections are agreeable to you. Those you agree with, you follow, the rest you ignore. Does that make any sense at all? It seems kind of fast and loose to me. It’s almost like getting your driver’s license and then deciding which traffic laws are relevant and which ones can be broken. A lot of drivers get away with ignoring some traffic laws, like coming to
complete stop at a stop sign, but sooner or later either a traffic cop or an accident will force them to change their mind. I believe that if you make an oath, it doesn’t matter how ridiculous it is, or whether you can obey some parts of it and ignore others. If you don’t respect the oath as a whole, then picking it apart will only completely undo it. In other words, if you can’t respect any part of an oath, then you have no business taking it in the first place. Confidentiality is, preeminently, the most important part of an oath. Yet confidentiality extends beyond just the names, addresses and personal characteristics of the members of the organization. It is also includes the daily business and personal interactions of the group, the magick they are jointly working, the rituals and lore that they use, group politics and interactions – all of this is strictly confidential. If materials are not already in the common domain, then they shouldn’t be published except without proper authorization from the organizational heads. I wouldn’t like it if some clown in my local magickal temple decided to publish the group’s rituals and activities without telling the whole group about it and getting our consent. Maybe someone might have good reasons to publish confidential or unpublished information, but if their reasons are good and if they took an oath to retain all such information as confidential, then they need to ask permission and get approval. In our order, such approval is strictly limited to the local temple, and then it is by full consensus. These are matters of ethics, and anyone who is in a formal group should take them quite seriously. Contact us Mobile: +2348118424737 phone : +2348118424737 Email: gconnectiongrandmaster@gmail.com