  |       
ALL-SEEING EYE: A universal symbol representing spiritual     sight, inner vision, higher knowledge, insight into occult mysteries. Look      at your $1 bill.  
 |     
        |       
          ALCHEMY 1:        This simple 17th century "sign"     illustrates the blending of geometric shapes, elemental symbols and   astrological signs. Each part representing the various "elements"   and forces needed for magical work in the quest for physical transformation   and spiritual illumination and immortality. Many medieval alchemists based   their philosophies on mystical traditions rooted in the Kabbala (Jewish   mysticism),   Hermetic magic   and the occult practices of ancient civilizations such as Egypt and China.   See Philosopher's stone and   phoenix.  Compare it with   the next symbol: 
 |     
       |            ALCHEMY 2:        This compound "magical-alchemical symbol"   replaces the above triangle with a  hexagram and adds more shapes within the  magical circle: a cross [in this context it become an   occult counterfeit) and an additional circle with the Hindu   "Bindu" (dot in the center) at the bottom of the hexagram.  |     
        |       AMULET:     A magic charm (such as this little Navajo bear     earring), worn to bring good luck and protection against illness,     accidents and evil forces. Don't believe it!         [See     Establishing a Global Spirituality] |     
       |         ANARCHY:       Popular among school aged children today, this     symbol for anarchy fits the message that pervades the most popular video games,     role-playing games, movies and television. The lines of the "A" often extend     outside the circle.      To many satanists and other fast-growing occult      groups it represents their slogan, "do what thou wilt." A former occultist      explained that it represents the      ASMODEAS:     a demonic force driving teenagers toward sexual      perversion and suicide.  |     
        |                      ANKH:     An Egyptian cross symbolizing a mythical eternal     life, rebirth, and the life-giving power of the sun. |     
       |       ANGEL:      Symbol of good and evil spirits in      religions around the world. This picture shows a Tibetan guardian angel. For      a comparison between Biblical angels and occult angels read     Chapter 8 in A Twist of Faith.      For a summary, see       Touched     by an Angel. |     
             |                 ARROW:      These two pictures shows the astrological sign for the archer (Sagittarius)      --  part of the zodiac. But, through history, the arrow has also symbolized      war, power, swiftness, the rays of the sun, knowledge... as well as deities      such as the Greek god Apollo      and goddess Artemis (both hunters),  the Hindu weather god,      Rudra; and various gods of      sexual attraction: Eros (Greek), Cupid (Roman), Kama (Hindu)....      On ancient Roman coins, it represented the Zoroastrian god, Mithra.      The native American Cheyenne warriors revered the "sacred medicine arrows"      as symbols of male power. Arrows held by skeletons would point to disease or      death. Today, they usually just point in the preferred direction.  |     
       |                            Crystal (Gazing) BALL:               Used for      divination (fortunetelling, scrying, clairvoyance...). When the heavy crystal balls      were too expensive, witches often used glass-ball fishing floats, colored glass balls,      or magic mirrors. One website that markets these balls beckons:      'Why not buy one and try your own free psychic reading."  |     
       |       BAT:     A symbol of good fortune in the East, it represented     demons and spirits in medieval Europe. |     
       |                 BLAIR WITCH:     A five-pointed     compound symbol with a center triangle pointing down. The five lines resemble     the microcosmic man with arms and legs outstretched inside a circle (with a pentagram     in the background)-- a magic symbol or charm among medieval alchemists and     wizards.  |     
       |       
                    BUTTERFLY:     Reminds Christians of the amazing transformation that  takes place through Christ's redemption and regeneration. When "born again," we become "a  new creation." (2 Cor. 5:17)  To many pagans, its mythical meaning is linked to the  soul (of the deceased) in search of reincarnation. See the new, politically correct  meaning at           Butterfly 208:  "There's a theory that says if a single butterfly flaps its wings in, say, China, the air  disturbance may cause a storm in Nunavut, Canada a month later. If that's the case,  imagine the power of your own ideas and others to help improve the quality of life in the  world's 208 countries! The Butterfly 208 contest is a chance for you to create your own  Butterfly effect! 208 = Number of Countries in the World Butterfly + 208 = A totally  interconnected world! A world where even small actions can have a big effect."    
 |     
       |       
         "Sacred" BULL (Egyptian idol):   These ancient Egyptian   idols -- once worshipped as manifestations of gods -- are being revived.   We have deleted a smaller (commercial) bull with horns resemble a crescent moon supporting the divine   sun disc.   Some suggest that this combination -- like the   Chinese  yin yang -- may symbolize  a mythical duality: a union of opposites such as light/dark, sun/moon,  life/death, and male/female.  
        God told His people long ago,   "Do not defile   yourselves with the idols of Egypt."   But they ignored His warning and faced   devastating consequences for refusing to   "cast away  the abominations which were before their eyes." (Ez. 20:7-8) 
 |     
       |                           CHAOS:       Apparently a self-made form of occultism taught through role-playing  games such as      Warhammer. According      to one WH fan, "Chaos is the      opposite of order. Since everything changes, there is no right or no  wrong      -- only the quest for pleasure. The 8-pointed star represents the  many  different directions of chaos and the many ways you can follow it.       We worship deamons and angels..." Another comment: "They got it from    Elric of Melnibone. In it, the force of Chaos had as its symbol an   eight-pointed double-cross (symbols within symbols) with points  representing   the noncommittal and omnidirectional behavior of Chaos." See     Chaos      Magic. However, other Warhammer fans   disagree with the quote above. Read more    here. |     
        |                      CIRCLE    (sun disc, sacred hoop, ring):    An ancient and universal symbol     of unity, wholeness,    infinity, the goddess, female power,   and the sun.     To earth-centered religions throughout history as well as to     many contemporary pagans, it represents the feminine spirit or     force, the cosmos or a spiritualized Mother Earth, and a sacred     space. (See next item) Gnostic traditions linked the unbroken     circle to the "world serpent" forming a circle as it     eats its own tail. (See     serpent) |     
       |            CIRCUMPUNCT   - CIRCLE   with DOT  (BINDU)      in the center:     It represents the sun and a sun god   (called Ra in Egypt), gold (as in alchemy), an (unbiblical) archangel   (Kabbalah), emotional restraint   (Freemasons), and the creative spark of   divine consciousness within people linking everyone to the creative   mind of a universal "god" thus making each persona "co-creator" (astrology). In the complex symbolic system of Hinduism and      Buddhism, the  bindu (dot)  represents the male force. Together, the      circle and the bindu symbolize the spiritual merging of male and female     forces. (See Sun Sign and the above explanation for      CIRCLE) |     
             |                 CIRCLE      (Quartered):          The sacred circle filled with a cross,     four equal lines pointing from the center to the spirits of the      north, east, south, and west -- or to the basic element: earth,     water, air (or wind), and fire. In Native American traditions,     it forms the basic pattern of the MEDICINE WHEEL     and plays     a vital part in major spiritual rituals. Many contemporary pagans consider     it their main symbol for transmitting the energy of the goddess.  (See   sun     wheel)  Churches have used variations of the same popular shape, usually     calling it the   Celtic Cross.   |     
        |       Masonic COMPASS:     The Masonic symbol of the compass and     the T-square represents movement toward perfection and a balance     between the spiritual and physical which resembles Egyptian and     oriental mysticism. The compass (used to form circles) represent     spirit. The ruler (part of a square) represent the physical.     Some public schools pass out pencil cases and other gifts decorated     with this emblem. |     
        |       COW:            It symbolized the sky goddess Hathor to Egyptians,     enlightenment to Buddhists, one of the highest and holiest stages     of transmigration (reincarnation) to Hindus. |     
        |              CRESCENT MOON:            A symbol of the aging goddess (crone) to     contemporary witches and victory over death to many Muslims.     In Islamic lands, crescent can be seen enclosing a lone pentagram.  |     
       
     To grasp the significance of the Biblical cross and its cost to our      crucified and resurrected  
 |       
     CROSS of   Christianity:      While anyone--even pagans--now use the cross as decoration or as an occult      symbol, Christians must continue to treasure the cross of Calvary. But be      careful what kind of cross you wear - and what message you communicate to      others. To understand the Christian significance of the cross and appreciate      its excruciating cost to our crucified and resurrected Christ, read     The Triumph of the      Cross and "The      Cross". 
 
Inverted      cross:      Originally represented the apostle Peter's humility in his martyrdom. He insisted that     he be crucified upside-down, because he felt that he was unworthy to die in the same     position as Christ. But today, especially in the rock music culture, it generally     represents the opposite: satanism and its mockery of Christ. Lucifer continues to     twist God's wonderful truths and works into lies and deceptions.   
 |     
       |       
  CELTIC CROSS:      The symbol for a cultural blend of medieval Catholicism and ancient Celtic   traditions.    Sometimes   this cross is seen with four additional "arms" dividing the circle into   eight instead of four sections. 
 Notice   the similarity between the old Celtic cross and the cross designed by PBS   (tax-funded Public Broadcasting in the U.S.) to represent Christianity (left   side). Do you wonder why PBS would choose a similar cross (right side) to   represent the Quartered Circle   of the earth-centered religions of Aborigenes around the world?  
 The Celtic cross also   represents the neo-pagan followers of the French anti-Christian philosopher Alain de Benoist.  
 |     
     | 
 |         JERUSALEM CROSS:   In medieval heraldry, it symbolized the   "Crusader's Kingdom of Jerusalem" often displayed on shields and banners   after the initial victory in the battle to recapture Jerusalem during the   Crusades. (See the Maltese Cross). Some have linked the four corner crosses   the "holy" wounds of Jesus or the four gospels. Similar shapes can be found   on Hindu and Buddhist temples or coins -- and in various earth-centered   cultures -- with entirely different sets of meanings. (See   circle for relevant references to the four directions) |     
       |       IRON   CROSS (or Cross Patt�e     or EISERNAS KREUZ): Adopted as     the Iron     Cross in Prussia. During the First World War, it appeared on German fighter planes and     tanks. Later, it became a fascist symbol in France, Portugal and other nations.     Compare it with Swastika 3.   |     
       |            CROSS (MALTESE):   CROSS   (MALTESE): This eight-pointed cross   (linking the points of four arrowheads at the center) dates back to the   First Crusade in the 12th century. It was used by the    Knights Templar, the    Knights of Malta, and the    Order of St. John of Jerusalem among others. In 1813, during the War of   Liberation against Napoleon, it was revived by Prussian King Friedrich   Wilhelm III and became an award for acts of heroism, bravery or leadership   skills. |     
       |             U.S.   Missile Defense Agency logo:   Does this   military logo remind you of the Islamic crescent and star? Or President   Obama's campaign symbol, with it blue curve and three converging red lines?   But the similarity may not be intentional:        New government logo |     
       |       Double-headed EAGLE:     A Masonic seal and initiation symbol. The number inside the pyramid over the eagle's     head is 33. The eagle is a universal symbol representing the sun, power, authority,     victory, the sky gods and the royal head of a nation.   |     
       |       DOVE:     Peace. It sometimes accompanies other symbols occasionally representing   the world's vision of universal peace, such as the rainbow, olive branch,  broken cross (see  peace),   globe, and Egyptian  ankh. See      Peace and  Culture of Peace,   which tells us that "'The CULTURE OF PEACE Initiative' is a United   Nations-designated 'Peace Messenger Initiative' - with Participants in all   the world's regions." 
     In the Bible, the Holy Spirit is, for a moment, made   visible as a different kind of dove. It tells us that "Jesus  also was baptized; and while He prayed, the heaven was opened. And the   Holy Spirit descended in bodily form like a dove upon Him, and a   voice came from heaven which said, 'You are My beloved Son; in You I am   vwell pleased.'�   Luke 3:21-22 |     
        |                            DRAGON     :      A mythical monster made up of many animals: serpent,     lizard, bird, lion... It may have many heads and breath fire.     To mediaeval Europe, it was dangerous and evil, but people in     Eastern Asia believe it has power to help them against more hostile     spiritual forces. In the Bible it represents Satan, the devil. |     
             |       DREAMCATCHER     :      An American Indian magic spider-web inside     a sacred circle. After making dreamcatchers in crafts lessons     in school, many children hang them on or near their beds. They     have been told that these occult symbols will block bad dreams     but allow good dreams to pass through the center. Don't believe     that myth! [See     New Beliefs]      |     
        |            ELEMENTS: The four basic elements to many pagans are earth,     water, air (wind or spirit) and fire. Many consider the first     two passive and feminine - and the last two active and masculine. In Wiccan or Native     American rituals, the "quartered circle" (also the Medicine     Wheel) represents a "sacred space" or the sacred earth. The four lines may     represent the spirits of the four primary directions or the spirits of the earth,     water, wind and fire.       (This set of  elements differs from those used in     alchemy.) |     
      |       ETERNITY:   See Infinity and  Uruborus |     
       |             EVIL EYE:    The symbol of a dreadful,   fabled curse (believed to bring sickness, death, bad luck loss...). This   "evil eye" has frightened people in many parts of the world through the   centuries. Here it looks like a female eye on the "Hand of   Fatima," but its   shape varies with the culture. |     
        |             EYE OF HORUS:  A favorite crafts project in schools,     it represents the eye of Egyptian sun-god Horus who lost an eye     battling Set. Pagans use it as a charm to ward off evil. (See   All-Seeing Eye) 
Notice that the picture shows a compound symbol - several     symbols joined together to give a more complex meaning. It includes     an unbiblical cross and, at the bottom, part of a face inside     the rays of the sun. (See Sun) |     
       |         FLEUR-DE-LIS: Also called Lily of   France, it was first an adaptation of the Gaulish lily representing the   Virgin Juno. Among goddess worshippers, it apparently had several meanings,   including the Triple Goddess. It appeared in Arthurian legends as well as on   the French (and other national) "coat-of-arms" and royal or military   emblems. It has also been an emblem for the Boy Scouts. |     
             |       FROG:        A     symbol of fertility to many cultures. The Romans linked it to Aphrodite, the     Egyptian to the shape-shifting goddess Heket who would take the form of a     frog. To the Chinese, it symbolized the moon -- "the lunar,   yin     principle" bringing healing and prosperity.[1]      Since      frogs need watery places, their image was often used in occult rain charms.      |     
       |                 HAND   OF FATIMA (daughter of Muhammad)     or     KHAMSA (five):   Many Muslims believe that the image of the hand with an eye in the   center will protect them from the "evil eye."  While this symbol often appears on   magical charms, amulets, and  jewelry, it is seen in many other places.  See a similar image painted next to the main door to a home     here. This Khamsa seems to be the same as the Jewish Hasma   (below). Many serious Muslims view this as folklore or superstition. See   comments, corrections and explanations   HERE. Compare it with the next   symbol: |     
       |            HAND OF FATIMA or   HAMSA      (five):   Jewish versions of the supposed "hand" of protection (above)   from "evil eye" (Some expect protection   from demons and sorcerers as well). During   the Israelites' exile in Babylonian, some began to blend Old Testament   beliefs with Babylonian myths and mysticism. Such syncretism continued   through the centuries. One of its manifestations was the mystical  Kabbalah -- the heart of many   streams of modern occultism (including the   Order of the Golden Dawn and other secret societies,  Tarot cards   and divination, etc.)    |     
       |            HAND OF... what?      Native American version of two above symbols. Found on a flat, round   sandstone disk during the excavation of an old Indian mound in Alabama, its   original meaning is lost. Perhaps it was used in rituals preparing for   tribal wars.    |     
            |              HEARTAGRAM:   Originally a logo of "Love Metal" band, HIM, whose fans would wear the   symbol --within a  circle -- as a tattoo. But it's popularity has spread   far beyond the band that designed it. To many, it represent the dialectic or   blending of opposites such as love/hate and life/death. See  Pentagram,     Popular Occultism and   Yin yang |     
        |         HEXAGRAM (see                 triangles) or       SIX-POINTED STAR:     When surrounded by a circle,     it represents the "divine mind" (a counterfeit of God's     wisdom) to numerous occult groups through the centuries. Many     still use it in occult rituals. But to Jewish people, it is their     Star of David. |     
           |                     HOOK 'EM HORNS &                HORNED HAND (Mano Cornuto):     "President Bush's 'Hook 'em,   horns' salute got lost in translation in Norway, where shocked people   interpreted his hand gesture during his inauguration as a salute to Satan.   That's what it means in the Nordics when you throw up the right hand with   the index and pinky fingers raised, a gesture popular among heavy metal   groups and their fans in the region....'Shock greeting from Bush daughter,'   a headline in the Norwegian Internet newspaper Nettavisen said."                    "Norwegians   Confused by Bush Salute" |     
       |              INFINITY    (also eternity):   In ancient India and Tibet, it represented perfection, dualism, and unity   between male and female. In the occult tarot it's linked to magic and   represents equilibrium or the balance of various forces. The  uroborus (a circular serpent biting its tail -- a UN   symbol for "Human Settlements") has   been found in this shape. In modern times, it became a secular mathematical   symbol for infinity in numbers, time or space. |     
       |                      ITALIAN   HORN            (Cornu,      Cornicello, Wiggly Horn, Unicorn horn, Lucifier's horn or Leprechaun  staff). The ancient magical charm or      amulet worn in Italy as protection against "evil eye" has also been  linked to Celtic and      Druid myths and beliefs. Other superstitions link it to sexual power  and good luck. It is often worn with a cross (for double protection      or luck?). In pre-Christian Europe, animal horns pointed to the moon  goddess and were      considered sacred. |     
       |       LABYRINTH:    �...predate Christianity by over a millennium.   The most famous labyrinth from ancient times was in Crete... the supposed   lair of the mythological Minotaur.... Turf labyrinths still exist in   England, Germany and Scandinavia, and are thought to be linked with local   feminine deities and fertility rituals.... The patterns of the labyrinth   are similar in design and conception to the mandalas of South Asian   Buddhism, which are physical representations of the spiritual realm designed   to aid in meditation. Labyrinths blend their visual symbolism with the   process of walking, which is similar to the Japanese Zen practice of kinhin,   literally 'walking meditation... In the early 90�s, when Jean Houston, one   of the leading New Age teachers, introduced the Christian world again   to the use of this practice for seeking spiritual enlightenment through   walking the labyrinth." Steve Muse,        Esoteric Christianity  |     
       |       
     LIGHTNING BOLT:      In ancient mythologies from many cultures (Norse, Roman, Greek, Native American, etc.)     the lighting bolt would be hurled by male sky gods to punish, water, or fertilize the     earth or its creatures. Navajo myths linked it to the Thunderbird, the symbol of     salvation and divine gifts. On  children's toys, it represents supernatural power.     Double bolts, popular with contemporary skinheads, symbolize Nazi power.   
 |     
       |       
LION:      An ancient symbol of the sun, dominion, power,   ferocity and bravery, the "king of the beasts" was often used on heraldic   shields, flags or banners by medieval European rulers. In Tarot cards, an   occult system of divination based on the  Kabala, it symbolized strength   or power. In ancient mythology it was identified with sun worship and the   imagined power of both gods and godesses. The lion head ringed by its golden   mane would used in ancient mystery initiations and ritualistic sun worship. 
         While pagan nations used it to represent their mythical views of reality,   the lion was created by God. In the Bible, we see how He used it for His   purposes.  
 |     
       |       LIZARD:       Its     "sun-seeking habit symbolizes the soul's search for awareness." To     the Romans, who believed it hibernated, the lizard meant death and     resurrection.[2]        |     
       |       Magic  MIRROR: Used for "scrying"  (foretelling the future, solve problems, answer questions....) The preferred spectrum  might decorated with "magic signs" during full moon rituals. Rosemary Ellen Guiley  explains: "The ancient art of clairvoyance achieved by concentrating upon an object--  usually one with a shiny surface-- until visions appear....The term scrying comes from the English words descry which means 'to make out dimly' or 'to reveal."  The Encyclopedia of Witches and Witchcraft, 307. |     
       |            MANDALA:       The Hindu term for       circle.      In Hindu and Buddhist meditations, it is used to raise consciousness. In meditation,      the person fixes his or her mind on the center of the "sacred circle." Geometric      designs are common. The center of some mandalas show a triangle with a bindu (dot) inside      a circle. It represents the merging of male and female     forces. |     
        |       MASONS (Freemasons): The Masonic symbol of the compass and     the T-square represents movement toward perfection and a balance     between the spiritual and physical which resembles Egyptian and     oriental mysticism. The compass (used to form circles) represent     spirit. The ruler (part of a square) represent the physical.     Some public schools pass out pencil cases and other gifts decorated     with this emblem. See All-Seeing Eye, Eye of Horus, and Dreamcatcher.     Read "Masonic     Centers are dream catchers," then "Brotherhood     of Darkness" by Dr. Stan Monteith. |     
        |       MASK:     Used by pagans around the world to represent animal     powers, nature spirits, or ancestral spirits. In pagan rituals,     the wearer may chant, dance and enter a trance in order to contact     the spirit world and be possessed by the spirit represented by     the mask. The mask pictured represents the mythical Hindu elephant     god, Ganesha. |     
        |       MEDICINE SHIELD:           A round shield decorated with personal     symbols or pictures of the animal spirit(s) contacted on a Spirit     Quest or through a classroom visualization simulating an American     Indian ceremony. Its basic image is often the form of the "medicine wheel"     or quartered circle. [See  The Earth   Charter's Unholy Ark] |     
       |         MERMAID:  Based on ancient myths in India, Greece, Syria,   Africa and other parts of the world. Seen by some cultures as sea goddesses,   these seductive beings guarded treasures, frightened travelers, and were   eventually featured in alchemy and other occult practices as well as in   fairy tales. By medieval times, the alluring Sirens of Homer's days had   apparently evolved into a promiscuous split-tailed versions that symbolized   mystical sex to alchemists and secret societies. German legends describe a   mystical Nixie -- a fish-tailed female water spirits, daughter of "Mother   Night." In our times, the more benign fairy tales of Hans Christian Andersen   and Disney Studios have generally erased any cultural memory of those occult   roots.                              |     
       |       OM:        Sanskrit letters or symbol for the     "sacred" Hindu sound om (ohm or aum) called "the mother of all   mantras. Apparently, the four parts symbolize four stages of consciousness:   Awake, sleeping, dreaming, and a trance or transcendental state. [See  Heresy in high places] |     
       |       
  OWL:  Cherokee [Indian]   shamans viewed Eastern Screech-Owls as consultants on punishment and   sickness. The Cree believed that the whistle-sounds of the Boreal Owl was a   summoning call to the spirit world. Other Native American traditions hold   that the owl represents vision and insight. In Africa the owl is associated   with witchcraft and sorcery. Australia, China, Greenland, India, Indonesia,   Japan, Russia and Sweden all have cultures or mythical traditions that give   spiritual significance to the owl. Probably one of the most bizarre   occurrences of owl symbolism can be found at the "Bohemian Club." Find this   and more information at   Wise Old Owl 
 |     
        
 |       
PEACE SYMBOL          or a  BROKEN   UPSIDE-DOWN CROSS:        Like many simple symbols, it meant different things at different   times. Some call it   Nero's cross,   linking it to the notorious Roman emperor   who persecuted Christians. Centuries later, it was recognized as an old  Norse Rune. [Notice its image in the lower left corner of this ancient   rune stone. Its reverse image is under the nose of the serpent.][6]    Vikings called it "Toten   Rune (Death Rune)," while some Germanic people labeled it Todesrune (Rune of   Death).[7] After WW2 (1939-1945), it was   found on the tombstones of certain  Hitler's SS troops   and labeled 'The Dead   Man Rune.' [Reference to bottom image of Scandinavian runes at   [8] 
     Revived in the sixties by hippies and others who protested   nuclear weapons, Western culture, and Christian values, it became a   worldwide symbol of a new age of global peace and earth-centered unity. But   many heavy metal rock fans would agree with Nero and have used it to mock Christ   and His followers. 
 |     
        |         PENTACLE       or PENTAGRAM (FIVE-POINTED STAR      pointing up):                 A standard symbol     for witches, freemasons, and many other pagan or occult groups.     To witches, it represent the four basic elements (wind, water,     earth and fire) plus a pantheistic spiritual being such as Gaia     or Mother Earth. The pentagram is also "used for     protection. to banish energy, or to bring it to you, depending on how it's     drawn," wrote a Wiccan visitor. Compare with the next link. |     
        |         PENTAGRAM (FIVE-POINTED STAR      pointing down):            Used in occult rituals to direct forces or energies. Often represents      satanism, the horned god or various expressions of contemporary occultism,      especially when a goat-head is     superimposed on the inverted pentagram within a "sacred"   circle. See   Heartagram,      Baphomet and                 Pentagrams and Pentacles |     
       |       PHILOSOPHERS STONE:     The symbol for the Alchemist quest for transformation and spiritual illumination, it     was also the British title of the first Harry Potter book (the U.S. publisher changed     it to Sorcerer's Stone). The double-headed eagle in the center is a Masonic     seal. See also the Phoenix.   |     
       |                       PHOENIX:     A      universal symbol of the sun, mystical      rebirth, resurrection and immortality, this legendary red "fire bird" was believed to      die in its self-made flames periodically (each hundred years, according to      some sources) then rise again out of its own ashes. Linked to the worship of      the fiery sun and sun gods such as Mexico's Quetzalcoatl, it was named "a      god of Phoenecia" by the Phoenician. To alchemists, it symbolized the the      destruction and creation of new forms of matter along the way to the      ultimate transformation: physical (turn lead into gold) and spiritual (immortality   - an occult alternative to the Christian salvation). The philosopher's stone   was considered the key to this transformation.            |     
            
  |       SCARAB:                Symbol of the rising sun, the Egyptian sun god Chepri (or Khepera), and protection      from evil.  To ancient Egyptians, the dung beetle rolled its dung balls like      Chepri rolled the sun across the sky. The "sacred" symbol adorned popular seals,      amulets and magic charms (worn as protection against evil spirits or to overcome      barreness) first in Egypt, then in Phoenicia, Greece and other Mediterranean lands.        Medieval alchemists used its pattern in their magical diagrams. |     
        |       
               SERPENT                           OR  SNAKE:      Most earth-centered or pagan     cultures worshipped the serpent. It represents rebirth (because     of its molting), protection against evil, either male of female     sexuality, rain and fertility, a mediator between the physical     and spiritual world.... It also represents female energy or lifeforce   in goddess worship, sometimes linked to the eastern Kundalini force or a   supposed "goddess within." The list of meanings is endless, but in the Bible     it usually represents sin, temptation, destruction, and Satan.     (See  dragon) The circular image of the serpent biting     its tail links the mythical significance of the serpent to that     of the sacred       circle.      See uroborus and  spiral. 
     |     
       |            SIKH symbol called the   KHANDRA:       In the middle is a single double-edged sword   pointing to a single God. (The truth about this God is revealed through Ten   Gurus.) The circle -- the Chakra -- refers to the unity of this God and   people. Two single-edged swords frame the Chakra. They represent spiritual   and temporal powers.       |     
        |                  SPIDER:            Linked to treachery and death in many cultures, it was seen as a      "trickster" in ancient Africa, a "spinner of fate" in ancient goddess cultures and --      in ancient Greek myths -- the goddess Arachne turned into a spider by her jealous      rival Athena. "Christian" cultures have linked it both to an evil force that sucked      blood from its victims and to "good luck" because of the cross on the back of some      species. The Chinese have welcomed the spider descending on its thread as a bringer of      joys from heaven.  |     
       |                 SPHINX: Ancient Egyptian and Babylonian guardian of sacred      places --an idol with human head and      a lion's body. The Greek sphinx would devour travelers who failed to answer      her riddle.  According to A New Encyclopedia of Freemasonry     (by Arthur Waite, xii)      the masonic sphinx "is the guardian of the Mysteries and is the      Mysteries summarized in a symbol. Their secret is the answer to her      question. The initiate must know it or lose the life of the Mysteries. If he      can and does answer, the Sphinx dies for him, because in his respect the      Mysteries have given up their meaning." (An occult,      counterfeit view of redemption)             See                    www.srmason-sj.org/web/temple.htm |     
          |                 SPIRAL:            Linked to the circle. Ancient symbol of     the goddess, the womb, fertility, feminine serpent force, continual     change, and the evolution of the universe. (Illustrated at this   website) A common   shape in nature (snail, shells, fingerprint...)   Double SPIRAL:   Linked to earth-centered or mystical faith in a blend of   evolution and devolution -- decay/renewal, life/death/rebirth,   spiritual/physical -- the back and forth flow of earthly and cosmic   changes. With   its focus on the unity of opposites, it resembles the   Yin Yang. |     
        |       SQUARE:      In contrast to the circle which often symbolizes the     sacred and spiritual (including the "sacred" earth), the square represents the physical world.     Like the quartered circle, it points pagans to the four compass     directions: north, east, south and west. While the circle and         spiral      symbolize female sexuality in many earth-centered cultures, the square represents male     qualities. |     
            |            SUN FACE:     The pictured image is part of an 18th century          Masonic ritual     painting, but it illustrates a symbol that has been central to most major      spiritual systems of history. Since the sun god usually reigned over a      pantheon of lesser gods. his symbol played a vital part in pagan worship (and in the      rituals of occult secret societies) around the world. In Inca myths, the sun      was worshipped as the divine ancestor of the nation. For links to      more information, see   Sun face in      our Q&A section. |     
        |       
SUN      & MOON     JOINED AS ONE:           A universal pagan expression of the merging of opposites. Like the   Yin Yang,     the marriage of  the male sun and the female moon represents unity in diversity, compromise instead of conflict, and     conformity to a new consciousness where all is one. (See       The     Marriage of the Sun and Moon)  
 
 |     
        |       SUN and SUN SIGN:     The sun was worshipped as a personified,     life-giving deity in Babylonian, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and     other major civilizations of history. Today's more common symbol     is the familiar face in the center of the sun's rays. This is explained in  Teletubbies. (See sun symbol     below the picture of the Eye of Horus) A dot or point     in the center of a circle symbolizes the blending of male and     female forces. (See air, which also represents spirit,     among the symbols for Elements) Hindus call the midpoint     in a circle the bindu - the spark of (masculine) life within     the cosmic womb. |     
       |            SUN SIGN 2     :     Found in Turkey and believed to represent the sun and the four directions.  (See   Swastika     1 and 2).  Compare the curving lines with the primary lines of Swastika 3,     the iron cross.  Notice also that without the horizontal line, the symbol     resembles the outline of the Yin-Yang.  |     
       |                 SUN WHEEL or RING CROSS     :          A universal symbol     found on ancient slabs in Nordic countries, in pre-Columbian America and in     Mediterranean countries.  "Today, it is used as a log by some new fascist     organizations," according to the Dictionary of Symbols.     [3]      Like the swastika and other sun     symbols, it represents power and supremacy.   See also   Circle     (Quartered)  It serves as a logo for the Swedish national socialist party, Nordiska     Rikspartiets (scroll to drawing     of the sun wheel on a banner), and for the French   Jeune     Nation. |     
               |       
           SWASTIKA 1     :     Ancient occult symbol found in Egypt, China, India. (The lower picture shows   part of a Hindu temple) Chinese versions include a right-handed (yang)   and a left-handed (yin) version -- opposites that "harmonize." It has   represented the sun, the four     directions, movement and change (the four appendages) and union of opposites   (lines crossing). As a pre-Hitler elitist symbol, it was found in the  Skull &   Bones vault at Yale. 
     Revived by Hitler, it represents racism and the "white     supremacy" of neo-nazis. It's often placed within a     circle. There is also a swastika on the gravestone of  John   Ruskin (mentor of  Cecil   Rhodes, who formed the secret Society of the Elect "to take the   government of the whole world" - Ruskin's words). In Time and Tide (1867), Ruskin wrote that "...the Government must have   an authority over the   people of which we now do not so much as dream." Ruskin has been   reported to be involved in the Illuminati.  
 |     
       |       SWASTIKA 2     (Crux     Dissimulata):      An ancient swastika which     symbolized the four winds or directions and their corresponding spirits. It was also a     "fire and sun symbol occurring initially in Asia and later among the Germanic     tribes," according to The Herder Symbol Dictionary.[4]      "The cross inscribed in a circle mediates between the square and the     circle," emphasizing the "joining of heaven and earth.... and "the     perfected human being."  |     
       |            SWASTIKA 3:          A contemporary variation of the many swastikas with     labyrinth patterns. Like the two swastikas above, its arms point counterclockwise     indicating a mystical, lunar and female orientation.  Compare its two     intersecting lines with Sun Sign 2, its curved arms (following     the shape of the circle) with Swastika 2, and its dark areas with the   Iron     Cross.  |     
       |       The   TAO:           An ancient Chinese symbol used originally to   represent a widespread belief in unity, polarity, holism, and magic. See the  Yin-Yang and read a longer   definition in the   Abolition of Man by C.S. Lewis, who   suggested the Tao as an ethical system for our times.  |     
       |       
THEOSOPHY:      A simplified version of the symbol     behind the occult beliefs of UN leader   Robert     Muller (his World Core Curriculum became a worldwide pattern for global education)     and education leader Shirley McCune       [See Star      Wars Joins United Religions at the Presidio and  The   International Agenda]       Notice the   ankh in the     center. The more elaborate version inserts a variety of other symbols such as the OM,     pentagram, cross, etc. (Because of its dark occult meaning and similarity to some     of the complex magical signs used in alchemy and masonic rituals, we prefer not to     post it.) 
 |     
       |       TOAD:            Linked     to witchcraft and other occult practices.  |     
       |                 TONGUE      (protruding): Linked to flame, fire,      fertility, sexual power and spiritual power. In nations around the world,      images of deities or masks with protruding tongues have indicated active and      occupying spiritual forces -- often a union of masculine and feminine      spirits. Such images were vital to pagan rituals invoking [demonic] spirits.      The sexual/spiritual forces represented by gargoyles with protruding tongues      which adorned Gothic cathedrals were believed to protect the buildings from      other spiritual powers.  |     
       |       TOTEM:      Carved, painted representation of power animals     or animal-human ancestors. To American Indians in the Northwest,     who believe that all of nature has spiritual life, the animals     in their totems poles represent the spiritual powers of animal     protectors or ancestors. |     
       |              TRIANGLE       (earring pictured):            Associated with the number three. Pointing upwards,     it symbolizes fire, male power and counterfeit view of God. (See     pyramid) To Christians, it often represents the Trinity. Pointing     down, it symbolizes water, female sexuality, goddess religions     and homosexuality. See chart of symbols in   What     Teletubbies Teach Toddlers.     See a large picture of   Kabbalistic     triangles and how they are used together in ritual magic. |     
       |         TRIDENT:  Called "the devil's pitchfork," it has   symbolized major gods in various pagan cultures. In India, it is linked to    the Hindu "trident-bearer" Shiva, spouse of the skull-bearing goddess Kali.    More recently, this   three-sponged spear   has been used by Hindu militants   in India   to   intimidate Christians. See   article:           "India Local Government OK's 'Anti-Christian' Weapons Distribution" |     
       |       TRINITY [Our Triune   God]: An early Christian symbol for   the Trinity. It is related to the symbol of the fish (vesica piscis)   used by the early -- and often persecuted Christians -- to identify   themselves as belonging to Jesus Christ. Apparently, the word "fish" in   Greek is a combination of the first letters of His name: Jesus Christ, Son   of God, Savior. Like many Christian symbols, the same shape has also been   used by various pagan religions throughout history. See the next symbol: |     
       |       TRIQUETRA:  The triquetra -- with or without the circle --   has been found on runestones in Scandinavia, in ancient  goddess-oriented pagan groups, in   Celtic manuscripts, and on early Germanic coins. It is associated with   numerous   mythical gods and goddesses and has been used as a protective charm by   Wiccans. Sometimes the symbol is reversed -- pointing down rather than up.   The three points may also be round rather than pointed. |     
        |       UNICORN:          To many New Agers, it means power, purification,     healing, wisdom, self-knowledge, renewal and eternal life. Origin: In      the 4th century BC, Greek historian Ctesias told about a wild animal with      healing powers and a spiral horn on its forehead. Medieval myths suggested      it could only be caught with help from a virgin who would befriend it. |     
       |            UROBORUS:       The circular serpent      (yes, the circle represents a serpent with head in upper left corner)   seen here) biting its own tail represents eternity and the cycles or      "circle of life." Medieval alchemists linked it to the cyclical      processes in nature. The uroborus pictured here (encircling the UN      symbol for humanity seen inside a triangle) was the official      symbol on for the 1996 United Nations Conference     on Human Settlements pictured on all its literature. See (Habitat II).                      See  other versions of the Uroborus at      serpent. |     
        |       
     WHEEL:       A universal symbol of or cosmic unity, astrology,     "the circle of life," evolution, etc. The pagan sacred     circle plus any number of radiating spokes or petals form the     wheel - a Wheel of Life to Buddhists, a Medicine Wheel to Native     Americans, a Mandala to Hindus. It symbolizes unity, movement,     the sun, the zodiac, reincarnation, and earth's cycles of renewal.     Pagans use it in astrology, magic and many kinds of rituals.     (See  Medicine Wheel and Quartered Circle) 
      This SUN WHEEL became a magical amulet to the Celtic Gauls or Gaels in   Europe. Later, "Christians adopted the form, changing it slightly, so that   it became a Christ monogram drawn within a circle." [celticrevival.com] 
 |     
       |       Tibetan      Prayer      WHEELS:     "devices for spreading spiritual blessings and well      being. Rolls of thin paper, imprinted with many, many copies of the mantra (prayer) Om      Mani Padme Hum... are wound around an axle in a protective container, and spun around      and around. Tibetan Buddhists believe that saying this mantra, out loud or silently to      oneself, invokes the powerful benevolent attention and blessings of Chenrezig, the      embodiment of compassion." (From The      Prayer Wheel)       |     
       |       WHEEL OF DHARMA:      Buddhist wheel of life and reincarnation. Sometimes it is shown with a   small yin yang symbol in the center.      |     
            
  |                 WISHBONE:               Civilizations dating back to the 4th Century (Etruscans, Romans... Britain,     America) have held turkey or chicken wishbone contest. Pulling the dry turkey     or chicken bone until it snapped ("lucky break"), they believing the     winner's wish or dream would come true. In today's     increasingly superstitious culture, many believe that this symbol will     "catch" their dreams, bring good luck, and make their wishes come true. As     in contemporary witchcraft or magic, the object becomes a channel of "good"     energy. Astrology and horoscopes link it to     Saggitarius. It might also be confused with the Lambda (looks like a lower case, upside-down "y"), the Greek letter adopted by     the International Gay Rights Congress in 1974 as the global symbol of homosexual "pride".  |     
       |       
  WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION (WHO,   a UN agency):  This symbol points back to the days   of Moses, when a dead serpent was displayed on a stake during the Israelites   40-year journey through the wilderness. Instead of trusting God, the people complained,   so "the   Lord sent fiery serpents among the people...and   many...died." When they confessed their sin, God told   Moses to "make a fiery serpent, and set it on a pole." Those who then   looked at the bronze serpent on the stake with confidence in God's promise,   were healed (Numbers 21:4-9).   This became an illustration of the crucifixion through which Jesus bore the   judgment we deserve for our sins. (See   John 3:14)  About 700 BC, faithful king Hezekiah 'broke in pieces the bronze   serpent that Moses had made, since the people worshiped it as an idol and "burned incense to it." (2 King 18:1-5)    
     Brock Chisholm, the first head of WHO, showed   his hatred for our God in a 1946 article in Psychiatry: "We have swallowed all manner of      poisonous certainties   fed us by our parents, our Sunday and day     school teachers..."  More   here.    
 |     
       |       
           WORLD TRIAD:          Originally an oriental symbol, it was "adopted      by western Gnostics as an emblem of cosmic creativity, the threefold      nature of reality or fate, and the eternally spiraling cycles of      time... In Japan it was maga-tama or mitsu tomoe, the world      soul.... In Bhutan and Tibet, it is still known as the Cosmic     Mandala, a sign of the Trimurti."5  Like the yin yang (below), it also represents eternity. This is also      the symbol for                 U.S. Department of Transportation. Another Gnostic symbol is the     uroborus.  
 |     
        |                           YIN YANG:           A Chinese Tao picture of universal harmony and     the unity between complimentary opposites: light/dark, male/female, etc.     Yin is the dark, passive, negative female principle. Yang is     the light, active, positive principle. Since the holistic balance between   Yin and Yang is dynamic and constantly changing, it illustrates  the  consensus process, the vision of   global unity, and the blending of opposing energies at the heart of   Holistic     Health. 
      Since it represent monism     (all is one) and pantheism (all is God), it opposes Christianity,     which shows us that there is only one God (monotheism), and only in Christ can we be one.   See The   Tao   |     
     
COMPOUND SYMBOLS 
 |       
       |       ASTROLOGICAL CHART:           used by medieval alchemists in divination. Notice the symbol of the     intellect and of the planet (and Roman god) Mercury inside the      center triangle. This triangle is surrounded by a hexagram and      two smaller triangles positioned as male and female energy - and seven more      concentric circles. Compound symbols within magical codes and names inside      multiple circles have been used by occultists and sorcerers in many parts of the      world. It is still used in African witchcraft.       |     
            |            All-seeing EYE in the PYRAMID:     The official symbol for                                         DARPA Total Information Awareness,      a surveillance and information system established by they U.S. government.     [See           programs]  Notice how the   masonic all-seeing eye of the new world order covers the planet with its enlightening rays.      [Sometime in December 2002, this symbol was removed from the TIA website.      Perhaps too many people complained. See                 Federal database spy site fading away] |     
       |       
 |     
     | 
 |                  The GREAT SEAL      of the United States of America:      The design for this national emblem was completed      in 1782. Some consider its occult and masonic images an American mission statement.      The inscribed motto,   E Pluribus      Unum means "Out of many, one." The words       Novus Ordo Seclorum mean "a new order of the ages," according to this website:       www.greatseal.com.     The two sides show the symbol of the eagle      (first a phoenix) and the eye in the pyramid. See     All-Seeing Eye &    Eye of Horus &      Great Seal.  But the more correct meaning would be      NEW WORLD ORDER      [novous = new, ordo = order, seclorum = secular or      world] See also      www.greatseal.com        &          A More Perfect Union |     
       |       
 |     
       
 |       
FASCES:  "...a   bundle of wooden rods tied together as a cylinder around an axe. ... The   fasces lictoriae ("bundles of the lictors") (in Italian, fascio littorio)   symbolised power and authority (imperium) in ancient Rome."       www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Fasces    
 |     
     
     You can see the original UR symbol   here: 
 |       UNITED RELIGIONS:      Fourteen religious symbols      form a circle  around   planet Earth. But you can no longer read about each religious symbol by clicking on them.   Apparently, not all the religions represented in that ring are currently supporting UR's plan for   global unity. Those that are working with UR include Bah'i, Buddhism, "First   Peoples" (Native Americans), Islam, Jewish Unitarian   Universalists, and "Rational Faith" - which  rejects Biblical faith.   See   Star      Wars Joins United Religions at the Presidio |