Masonic & Occult Symbols Illustrate
“One of my very close associates and friends whom I met here at Findhorn, a Yugoslavian named Milenko Matanovic who was largely responsible for creating the New Troubadours and much of the music which we sang, worked with me on a three-act musical play....In this play we tried to look, in a comic and a musical way, at the course of human evolution. In the first act of the play, four great beings have gathered together evaluating the situation here on Earth. Three of the beings are actually present and the fourth being is suggested as a being who is trying to be present. The three who are present were: Pan, representing the overlord of nature and all the principles of nature; Lucifer, representing the principle of self and of selfhood and of all that is involved in learning to be separate from the universe in order that you can reunite with the universe; the Logos, who represented the power of that reunion through love. The fourth suggested entity was the one who would appear when these three elements of Pan, Lucifer and the Christ were all blended into a wholeness.” Matanovic also wrote a song entitled “Festival of Light,” which was sung at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. This is a very ungodly place where they took Christ off the cross and put a FEMALE “Christ” (called Christa) in His place on the cross. Returning to the symbolism of the pomegranate, a Masonic book, The Historical Landmarks and Other Evidences of Freemasonry, Explained, declares: “The names of the pillars signified potency and perpetuity; the pomegranates on their capitals were symbols of generation. Hence they were esteemed to be of Phallic reference.” He adds: ‘“The two pillars,’ says Fellows...‘represent two imaginary columns, supposed to be placed at the equinoces (sic) to support the heavens....The one on the left is called Boaz, and indicates Osiris, or the sun, the one on the right is called Jachin, and designates Isis, the symbol both of the earth and its productions, and of the moon.”’ Another name for a four-sided pillar is the obelisk. Pillars have always been worshipped as gods. In Egypt, the obelisk stood for the sun god. The New Age Magazine had an article by 33° Mason, Henry Ridgely Evans, in which he said that Osiris, the god of the underworld, was also depicted in the form of a pillar.
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