Are
genetic defects - Book
of Daniel
|
P106 The
connection of two triangles creates another Masonic symbol a hexagram - a
6-point star known as a seal of Solomon. The
Hexagram is one of the most powerful symbols for witches, wizards and
satanists ! It is used in all kinds of occultism,
because it contains the satan
number ‘666’ (6
ends, 6 small triangles inside and 6 sides of internal
hexagon). It is the most powerful symbol of the satan. Witches
say that the hexagram is
used by wizards and alchemists in
both kind of ceremonies to call up demons and to keep them away *. The
Hexagram is also a
symbol of sex and reproduction. Masonic
author Albert G. Mackey explains in his book « The
Symbolism of Freemasonry »
(p.195) , that the triangle with the point downwards is a female symbol,
triangle inverted up - male's. « When these two triangles are bound, it
represents the union of active and
passive forces of nature; male and female elements ». Masons,
as well as all pagans, worship reproductive
forces of nature,
sexual union the man and woman, and... phallus,
as a symbol of reproduction.
In
the photo: Min –an Egyptian god of sex and fertility. Symbol
of phallus is obelisk ( see also ch. « About
the Prostitute », p. 52) ,
it is in the wide use among masons.
Obelisks were adopted by masons
together with the doctrines of the Egyptian magic. The obelisk
is a challenge to God, this is the worship
of Egyptian sun god Rа
(
Horus ) or satan. Not without a
reason obelisks established under a
direct management of masons stand with its back to West, so that the people
facing the obelisk could look at the East, from where the sun-Ra rises. “Hence
the significance of the phallus, or of its inoffensive substitute, the obelisk,
rising as an emblem of the resurrection by the tomb of buried Deity” **. All Masonic cemeteries are full of obelisks. The largest obelisk in the USA - a monument to J. Washington - the first president – mason of the United States. -------------------------------------------------------------------- *Gary Jennings, Black Magic, White Magic, Eau Claire,
WI, The Dial Press, 1964, p. 51. |