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The Seal of
The Theosophical Society

The Seal Of The Theosophical Society was adapted from H. P. Blavatsky's
personal seal, used by her before the Society was founded in 1875. The symbols
it contains are so ancient that nobody knows when they were first used to
express universal ideas. They far antedate any political or other modern
applications, and have nothing to do with any social or political movements.
They are in fact part of the universal mystery-language that can convey
wordlessly to the mind sacred truths of nature. |
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The Serpent swallowing its tail: A very ancient symbol depicting
eternity and the continuity of cyclic time. Like the biblical serpent of
Paradise lost understood mystically, it represents wisdom and, because of
its ability to shed its skin, regeneration and rebirth. As a circular symbol
it signifies to the Hindus the outbreathing and inbreathing of Brahma ("expander"),
the cosmic creator: when Brahma breathes out, worlds come into being; when
he breathes in, all is reabsorbed into the divine essence. The descending
arc of the serpent's body signifies worlds descending into matter; the ascending
arc, their evolution toward spirit. This spiral circulation is eternal,
implying evolution through time. The circle itself represents perfection
and the restoration of universal harmony; also the Boundless from which
all manifestation springs and to which all will return. The symbol is found
also in ancient Egypt, Greece, and West Africa, and among Buddhist and Jains,
Gnostics and alchemists.
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The Swastika: A Sanskrit word meaning "well-being,"
"auspicious" the perennial symbol of good fortune found
in the cradle of ancient cultures of India, China, Japan, and the Americas,
as well as Greece and Rome (including the early Christians). In Scandinavia
it was Thor's hammer and in India Vishnu's discus and the Jaina cross. In
Buddhism, it expresses the "wheel of the law." Symbol of evolution
and perpetual motion, the swastika denotes the ever-churning "mill
of the gods," in whose center is the soul , while the bent arms suggest
the ceaseless turning of the wheels of life throughout universal existence.
When we look at photos of faraway spiral galaxies, we are wonderstruck to
see that they clearly resemble swastikas in their vortical motion. |
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The Interlaced Triangles: Known in the Occident as King Solomon's
seal or star, it was called in India the seal of Vishnu. The interlaced
triangles signify the bipolarity in nature spirit and matter, or
male and female. The apex of the white triangle represents the divine monad;
the apex of the dark triangle, the manifested worlds. The upward triangle
suggests spirit, consciousness and concealed wisdom, which are mirrored
in the downward-pointing triangle representing matter, receptive space,
manifestation, or wisdom revealed. The sides of the dark triangle may stand
for form, color, and substance; the three gunas or fundamental qualities;
and the creative, preserving, and destructive/ regenerative forces of the
Hindu triad, Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva.
Together the triangles represent the manifested universe evolved from
the central point within the serpent-circle of time and space. They also
form the hexagon of six principles, cosmic and human, emanating from and
synthesized by the central point, the seventh and highest self of any evolving
being. Thus they express the sevenfold structure of the universe. The central
cross is the inner person, touching all things from the six sides through
the six triangles. The six points of the star reach outward toward the serpent
of eternity, growing and evolving through time. |
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The Ansated Cross, Ankh, or Tau: A sacred symbol particularly
associated with ancient Egypt, it signifies life, regeneration, and the
descent of spirit from inner realms into the worlds of substance. It can
denote a universe in embryo, the circle representing the cosmic or spiritual
germ or egg hovering over the cross of matter which has issued from it;
or limitless, uncreated space. Astronomically it is the sign of Venus, earth's
sister-planet and guardian of humanity. Applied to the human race, it may
represent the evolution of mankind into the bipolarity of male and female,
as well as the initiate who holds the key to the mysteries when united with
his own spiritual intelligence.
These spiritual symbols forming the seal of The Theosophical Society
together comprise an entire philosophy of the inner workings of man and
universal nature. Taken as a whole, the seal represents the spiritually
reborn person, symbolized by the tau/ cross in the center, evolving through
the six human and cosmic principles and encircled by the serpent of evolution
of spirit in and through matter. On the larger scale, it expresses a universe
expanding into manifestation from cosmic spirit
The seal used on this page is a replica of the
original TS seal, printed in the Society's first Preamble and Bylaws,
October 30, 1875.
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