n the
world of the occult, many symbols are imbued with power by the
magician working in conjunction with the demonic spirit world.
The Wiccan leader Starhawk, founder of the Covenant of the
Goddess, knows that well. "To cast a spell is to project energy
through a symbol," she wrote in The Spiral Dance, her
popular manual for witchcraft.
Since the
occult use of symbols have spread like epidemic across the
Western world, we want to exercise caution. Therefore, when we
began to add pictures to the original list of symbols, we
decided to leave out certain images – particularly satanic
symbols that obviously represent evil. Though many were already
familiar to children in public schools, we didn’t want to risk
implanting those images on a child’s mind. (We will explain why
in another note.) We also left out the theosophical symbol, some
of the more complex masonic symbols, and other symbols typically
used for magic and alchemy. To explain, let me share an
important lesson I learned about five years ago.
I was
speaking at a Bay Area Sunday School Convention (BASS) in
California on the topic, "The Unholy Power of Charms and
Symbols." Parents and teachers were still crowding into the
small auditorium, when I began showing transparencies of simple
symbols such as the yin-yang, the peace symbol,
and the ankh. We discussed why these symbols were important to
people long ago – and why their popularity has skyrocketed
today.
Then we
looked at more universal symbols such as the pentagram, the
lightening bolt, the sun, and the circle -- including the Wiccan
quartered circle, the Native American medicine wheel, and the
Buddhist wheel of life. "Why are they considered universal?" I
asked. "What mythical themes do they echo from around the world?
Why are they so important to multicultural education?" (We will
post a chapter from A Twist of Faith which answers these
questions.)
Finally,
we looked at compound symbols. (You can see an example at the
end of the current list of symbols.) The day before the
conference, I had been searching for a particular combination of
symbols found in a Theosophical emblem. By the time I did find
it, it was too late to put it on a transparency. Then I had made
a foolish decision: I prepared to draw the occult image onto the
transparency in front of the class.
Putting
the clear transparency on the projector, I drew a large circle,
then added two overlapping triangles (one pointing up, one
pointing down), forming a hexagram. I began to fill in various
single symbols: the pentagram, swastika…. Suddenly, something
dark and heavy hit me in the chest. For a moment I lost both my
balance and my breath, then, in a flash, I knew what was
happening. I had unwittingly performed an occult ritual common
to Buddhist and Native Americans traditions as well as to
medieval alchemy. By the very act of drawing the symbols, I had
invoked a spiritual entity.[1]
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End note:
[1] This website has
a strong Christian message, which the visitor may or may not
agree with. However, the meaning of the symbols remain the same
no matter belief system. Wes Penre,
www.illuminati-news.com