SYMBOLICAL SYNONYMS OF
SOLOMON'S SEAL: THE CRESCENT AND STAR
The graphic here is from
Secrets of the Eastern
Star by Cathy Burns. She notes how the Crescent and Star is used
not only by Freemasonry's Eastern Star organization but also by
neo-pagans and
witches, who recognize the ideograph as symbolic of opposite
principles in nature, e.g., male and female, active and passive,
good and evil, etc. Thus, in the occult world, the Crescent
and Star is but one among many symbolical synonyms of the
Seal of
Solomon, because it signifies occult dualism,
which holds that good and evil must be polarized
into equalibrium, i.e., balenced in harmonious
juxtaposing stability as two eternal, mutually dependent,
and complementary aspects of nature and of nature's god.
In other words, the Crescent and Star represents Lucifer (the male
apsect of the androgynous occult god-head) and
Diana (the female
aspect of the same).
This occult
dualism was recently communicated to the mass mind by the movie
trilogy Star Wars, where, according to Yoda
in Revenge of the Sith, the dark and light side of The Force
must be harmonized. In contrast, according to the traditional Christian
paradigm, the purpose of spiritual combat is not to balence good and
evil but to ultimately overcome evil with good. Thus the Christian
eschatology is essencially linear, pointing to an end-time when evil
will be utterly extirpated, whereas the occult eschatology is
circular, an eternal recurrance, where the end is contained in the
beginning and evil is endlessly harmonized or recalibrated to
equalize with good.
According to J.S.M. Ward,
the Freemason who authored The Signs and
Symbols of Freemasonry, the crescent, which is pictured on the
cover of that book, figures prominently in the mystery religions as
the symbol of the godess
Dianna, i.e., Isis in Egyptian lore. Ward:
"In like manner the sign of the horns,
which is still used by
superstitious people, particularly in Italy, to avert the evil
eye, seems undoubtedly to be descended from Classical times and
relates to the crescent moon of Diana." (J. S. M. Ward, Signs
& Symbols of Freemasonry, Land's End Press, NY, 1969, page 3)
Albert
Pike, one of Freemasonry's greatest human icons, wrote in his book
Morals and Dogma how, in contrast, the five pointed star, or
Blazing Star, which figures prominently on many Masonic lodge floors,
signifies the male god Osiris, i.e., the sun god of Egyptian mythology.
Mackey confirms:
"Blazing Star. The blazing star constitutes one of the ornaments
of the lodge...Dr. Hemming quoted by Oliver, says that it refers
to the sun, which enlightens the earth with its reflugent rays,
dispersing blessings to mankind at large, and giving light and life
to all things here below.'" (Lexicon of Freemasonry, Albert G.
Mackey, Barnes and Noble, NY, page 53)
Thus, to use the
qabbalistic terminology of the 19th Century Freemason and
sorceror
Eliphas Levi,
the Crescent and Star, like all symbolic synonyms of
Solomon's
Seal,
including the
Hammer and Sickle,
represents the Black-White Jehovah, i.e.,
the god of reflections (Black Jehovah), as signified by the crescent moon,
and the god of light (White Jehovah), as signified by the five pointed
star.
As can be seen from the Masonic fez cap pictured here,
the Crescent and Star is also used in
Judeo-Freemasonry by the
Shriners
and is
recognized in Masonry as the symbol of Islam. Since,
according to the Masonic paradigm, Islam -- and indeed all religions --
supposedly worship the same God as Masonry, albiet under different rubrics,
Allah is T.G.A.O.U.,
i.e., The Grand Architect of Freemasonry, who is
said to be worshiped, unknowingly, by the Muslim world under a
different name.
No doubt, adept Freemasons would point to the dual
nature of Islam's Crescent and Star ideograph as symbolical corroboration
of their occult wordview.
The Masonic boy's club, the Demolays, to which President Clinton,
Walt Disney, and other noteworthy personages belonged, also uses
the Crescent and star, as pictured here.