Masonic & Occult Symbols Illustrate

from that book: “I am the master of the shadows...and I claim that church as my own. I smell blood, the blood of the Lamb. He’s here. DRIVE HIM OUT! (The Gargoyle comic book, Marvel Comics). ” [Emphasis in the original] In spite of the demonic implications of the gargoyle, one supposedly “Christian” magazine basically told parents not to worry if their child’s Christmas list contained a gargoyle on it. Jolene L. Roehlkepartain said: “If a satanic-looking gargoyle appears on your teenager’s Christmas list this year, don’t scream. Many of the gargoyle reproductions are made into bookends, candlesticks, statues and even are on T-shirts. These gruesome, grotesque gargoyles are going to the top of most 15-to 30-year olds’ Christmas lists as the latest in new fads. “Why the infatuation with these snarling figures? ‘They are shocking, forbidden and mysterious,’ said Mark Thomas, of The Alley, a Chicago gargoyle store. ‘These gargoyles,’ he says, ‘are perceived to be good guys who defend your home from evil.’” Below is a list of some different kinds of nature spirits. “Brownie: In the OCCULT lore of Scotland, the name given to dark-featured nocturnal nature-spirits which haunt country and farm houses; believed to be good-natured and bearers of good omen." “Harpy: In classical mythology, a monstrous, evil, rapacious and vengeful creature with the head and breasts of a woman, the body of a bird and the claws of a lion.” “Fay: Fairy.” Also considered to be an elf.. Fairy: “A tiny imaginary being in human form, depicted as clever, mischievous, and possessing MAGICAL powers.”

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