Every OCCULT Symbol Christians Should Avoid Explained in 12 Minutes - YouTube
Transcripts:
The pentagram. The inverted pentagram with five points turned downward is a symbol of rebellion. In satanic ritual, it represents the triumph of flesh over spirit, of earth over heaven. It's carved into ritual blades or branded on the skin of those who dedicate themselves to darkness. Even in Wikah, the upright pentagram sits at the center of spellwork used to channel the elements and open spiritual gateways.
But flip it and the meaning changes from harmony to defiance. Anton Leave cemented that change when he placed the inverted pentagram inside the sigil of Baffomet, the official emblem of the Church of Satan. And since then, it hasn't just been mystical. It's been openly satanic. And now it's everywhere. From shirts to album covers, disguised as style, but rooted in ritual.
What was once hidden in shadows now parades in plain sight. But the meaning never changed. Only the audience. Even if worn casually, it was created as a mark of allegiance. And that allegiance is not neutral. The inverted cross. This symbol signals open rejection of Christ and his crucifixion.
In satanic rituals, the inverted cross is carved into altars, worn as jewelry, and displayed as a statement of open rebellion. It mocks the crucifixion and rejects the name of Christ outright. Yet, it wasn't always used this way. According to church tradition, the Apostle Peter was crucified upside down out of humility, believing he wasn't worthy to die in the same manner as his savior.
But what once symbolized devotion has long been twisted into blasphemy. Today, the inverted cross appears in desecrated communion rights and even crime scenes tied to spiritual abuse. But it's also slipped quietly into pop culture away from its disturbing origins. But for those deep into a cult practice where it shows up, something sacred is being challenged.
And for people of faith, that's not just disturbing, but it's also dangerous. The allseeing eye, an ancient occult emblem that is often linked to secret orders and dark traditions. The all-seeing eye appears in ancient occult orders and secret symbols, all claiming it grants insight or enlightenment. But to occultists, it represents something darker.
Lucifer, the so-called lightbringer, watching over their work and granting forbidden knowledge. In ritual magic, initiates fix their gaze on eye symbols while reciting invocations, hoping to awaken their third eye and gain spiritual vision. But what they open themselves to isn't truth, but deception. As many describe visions, or even evil possessions that follow.
Occult texts treat it as a gateway that leads not to wisdom but to submission. At present, the eye shows up in different forms of art. But for those who know its origin, it means something far more calculated. It's a mark of allegiance, a sign that you're open to being watched spiritually. And once that eye is on you, it doesn't look away.
The sigil of Lucifer. Unlike ancient emblems that were passed down through centuries, the sigil of Lucifer is a relatively modern creation. It was born from 16th century grimoirs and later adopted by the Church of Satan as a signature of allegiance. Its design looks abstract, intersecting lines, angles, and curves, but it's all intentional.
The Vshapes point downward, representing the descent of Lucifer. The infinity symbol below hints at power without end. And the whole thing is meant to mock the cross while replacing it. Occultists don't just draw it, they use it. It appears in rituals where Lucifer is invoked as a source of wisdom or rebellion.
Some believe it awakens the self. Others know it opens a door. But the symbol's purpose hasn't changed over the years. It still signals defiance and invites influence. And the more it's worn or welcomed, the more it works. Because a symbol like this doesn't need belief to affect someone. It just needs to be present. Baffomet. The most recognizable symbol in modern Satanism.
The Baffomet has the body of a man, the head of a goat, and a child staring up at it with awe. The image Satanists have placed in public spaces as both a symbol and an altar. Originally drawn by a cultist Elephus Levi, Baffomet wasn't created to inspire thought, as it was made to provoke. It blends male and female, human and animal, heaven and hell, mocking every line God drew in creation.
In satanic rituals, it becomes a centerpiece of blood offerings and unholy acts that are performed at its feet to gain power through rebellion. But its power isn't just in what it represents. It's in what it invites. Practitioners meditate on its image, believing it can unlock forbidden knowledge and transform them into something beyond human.
But what they become is often far less than what God intended. The symbol represents a total inversion of God's order wherein holiness is weakness and sin is power. And wherever this symbol appears, something sacred is being defiled. The hexog, the six-pointed star, is often associated with Jewish identity as the star of David.
But in a cult practice, it takes on a very different role. Ritual texts like the Key of Solomon describe drawing hexogs and circles, sealing them with blood, and using them to summon and bind spirits. Inscribed on metal or parchment, they become talismans for curses or conjuring. Some even carve the six-pointed star into their skin, believing it marks them forever to the powers they serve.
This use is very different from the star of David in Judaism, which is a sacred symbol of identity and covenant. In the occult, the same shape is twisted into a tool of manipulation. Practitioners believe each point gives them command over creation, but the control is an illusion. Spirits may be called, but they don't obey. They corrupt.
This is why occultists rever the hexog not as a shape, but as a spiritual weapon. One that turns geometry into a gateway and the body into an altar. And for Christians, that's not a shape to overlook. It's a sign that something's being manipulated behind the scene. The ankh. Shaped like a cross with a loop at the top.
The ankh is one of ancient Egypt's most recognizable symbols. In ancient times, it was used in rituals to honor the gods of the dead and to promise access to the afterlife. Priests carried it in ceremonies for pharaohs, believing it opened a path between the earthly and the spiritual. Over centuries, the symbol moved beyond Egypt into modern occult and new age practices.
It appears in goddess worship, energy rituals, and mysticism that claims to unlock healing or spiritual awakening. Today, it's worn as jewelry and featured in films. Often mistaken as a decorative variation of the cross, but its meaning stayed the same. The ank comes from a system that worshiped many gods, replacing the creator with forces tied to death and illusion.
For Christians, that resemblance to the cross makes it more dangerous. Not a mark of life, but a counterfeit. The Uraboros, a serpent swallowing its own tail, is one of the oldest occult symbols. The Ura Boros claims there is no end, no beginning, only the cycle of self. First seen in ancient Egypt and later embraced by Gnostics and modern occultists.
The symbol represents eternal return, life feeding death, death giving life. It blends opposites, light and dark, creation and decay. While teaching that divinity comes from within, that you create yourself and no higher power exists beyond the circle. Christianity declares God as the beginning and the end, the alpha and the omega.
The Uraoros denies that, trapping its followers in a cycle that cuts him out entirely. That's why it isn't just an ancient drawing. It's a statement of rebellion dressed as wisdom. The triple moon symbol. Three moon phases placed side by side, the waxing crescent, the full moon, and the waning crescent form what is called the triple moon.
The triple moon symbol represents the goddess in Wikah and neopaganism, maiden, mother, and crone. Together, they symbolize feminine energy and hidden wisdom. But at its core, it's about worship. And those who use it call on a divine feminine force to replace the god of scripture. practitioners place it in wherever rituals are done to invoke intuition or ancient wisdom.
They don't pray to the creator, but they call on the moon and on the spirit of womanhood as supreme. And that's the danger. It doesn't simply add meaning to the moon. It rewrites worship itself. What seems elegant and empowering becomes a spiritual anchor that shifts focus from God to a false presence. And once embraced, it quietly reshapes belief until it honors a presence that was never meant to be followed.
The swastika. Long before it became infamous in the 20th century, the swastika was used in ancient cultures as a symbol of the sun and cosmic order. It appeared in ancient cultures from Hindu temples to pagan Europe. But its meaning took a darker turn when 19th century occultists and theosophists revived it as more than a cultural relic.
They treated it as a magical key, believing it tapped into hidden energies and awakened dormant power within the self. The Nazis later twisted it into their emblem, merging mystical ideas with racial supremacy and visions of rebirth through destruction. What followed was not only war, but an ideology fueled by a cult belief in a new world forged by fire without mercy, without Christ.
Today, the swastika still appears in esoteric books and some new age circles that claim to seek light while playing with shadows. Wherever it turns up, it carries more than history. It carries a spirit and not one you want near your soul. The Black Sun, an occult emblem of hidden power often associated with Nazi mysticism and pagan worship.
The Black Sun was carved into the floor of a Nazi castle, a place tied to occult rituals and dark invocations. But its roots go deeper as it was found in ancient pagan designs and later revived by occultists who saw it as more than a symbol. They believed it was the key to a hidden force.
The sun behind the sun, a source of destruction that purifies and chaos that creates. Modern groups still use it, often treated as mysterious, even empowering. But its message has always been the same. Transformation through collapse, power through chaos, light replaced with shadow. That's why it's so deceptive. It looks like a radiant star, but it's a counterfeit, pointing not to illumination, but to corruption.
Wherever it appears, it signals allegiance to a power that denies grace and exalts only destruction. The Leviathan cross. This is a satanic symbol that represents rebellion against God and the rejection of morality. It's made of two parts. A double cross resting above an infinity loop. Originally used in alchemy to represent sulfur, an element associated with fire and decay.
It was later adopted by the Church of Satan as a symbol of absolute freedom where man answers to no higher authority. The double cross stands for questioning every moral code. The infinity symbol beneath it represents the eternal self and together they represent the belief that truth is personal, morality is a myth, and the self is the only god worth serving.
You'll see the Leviathan cross in occult circles in literature that promotes total rebellion against divine order. It invites its followers to destroy boundaries, spiritual and even ethical ones. And when the lines between right and wrong are erased, what's left isn't freedom, it's chaos, making this symbol an emblem of war against everything sacred.
And that wraps up some of the most common occult symbols Christians should avoid. If this helped you see how these signs of rebellion hide in plain sight, give it a like, subscribe for more breakdowns on Christianity, and hit the bell so you don't miss what's next.