© copyright
2003
The Theosophical Society in Australia all rights
reserved
|
The Seal of the
Theosophical Society
THE SEAL of the Theosophical Society
is composed of a number of symbols, all of them having been used
from ancient times to express profound spiritual and philosophical
concepts about humanity and the universe. They may be found in
a variety of forms in the great religions of the world and their
universality is further shown by their appearance in widely separated
cultures.
Each symbol, studied separately,
will yield a wealth of understanding, but none of them can be
interpreted with a narrow precision. Taken together as in the
Society's seal, they represent a unity of meaning, suggesting
a vast evolutionary scheme embracing the whole of nature, physical
and spiritual. Study and contemplation of the emblem as well as
its several component symbols will lead the serious student to
an awareness of some of the deepest mysteries of existence. A
few brief suggestions may be helpful to the enquirer looking at
the seal for the first time.
THE SERPENT
is the timeless symbol of the highest spiritual Wisdom. Swallowing
its tail, it is a symbol of regeneration. It is the selfborn,
the circle of infinite wisdom, life and immortality. The circle
itself is an ancient symbol of eternity and represents the Absolute,
the unmanifested universe containing the potentials of all form.
As representative of the infinite sphere, the "world egg"
of archaic cosmology, this symbol is found in every world religion
and philosophy.
THE INTERLACED
TRIANGLES, one (lighter) pointing upwards and the other
(darker) pointing downwards, symbolise the descent of spirit into
matter and its reemergence from the confining limits of form.
They also suggest the constant conflict between the light and
dark forces in nature as well as the inseparable unity of spirit
and matter. When depicted within the circle of the serpent, the
figure represents the universe and the manifestation of Deity
in time and space. The three lines and three angles of each of
the two triangles may remind us of the triple aspects of spirit:
existence, consciousness and bliss, and the three aspects of matter:
mobility, resistance and rhythm. The glyph can also be seen as
the sixpointed star, embracing spiritual and physical consciousness
and viewed by the Pythagoreans as the symbol of creation.
IN THE CENTRE
of the seal is the ankh or Crux Ansata, an ancient Egyptian symbol
of resurrection. It is composed of the Tau or Tshaped cross surmounted
by a small circle and is often seen in Egyptian statuary and in
wall and tomb paintings where it is depicted as being held in
the hand. The Tau symbolises matter or the world of form; the
small circle above it represents spirit or life. With the circle
marking the position of the head, it represents the mystic cube
unfolded to form the Latin cross, symbol of spirit descended into
matter and crucified thereon, but risen from death and resting
triumphant on the arms of the conquered slayer. So it may be said
that the figure of the interlaced triangles enclosing the ankh
represents the human triumphant and the divine triumphant in the
human. As the cross of life, the ankh then becomes a symbol of
resurrection and immortality.
THE SWASTIKA,
placed in the emblem at the head of the serpent, is one of the
numerous forms in which the symbol of the cross is found. It is
the fiery cross, with arms of whirling flame revolving clockwise
to represent the tremendous energies of nature incessantly creating
and dissolving the forms through which the evolutionary process
takes place. In religions which recognise three aspects of Deity,
the swastika is associated with the Third Person of the Trinity,
who is at once the Creator and the Destroyer: Shiva in Hinduism
and the Holy Ghost in Christianity. Applied to humanity, the figure
may show the human as the link between heaven and earth, one "hand"
pointing toward heaven or spirit and the other toward earth or
matter.
ABOVE THE SEAL,
in Sanskrit characters, is the sacred word of Hinduism, Aum or
Om, a word of profound significance. It may be said to stand for
the creative Word or Logos, the ineffable Reality which is the
source of all existence. We are reminded of the statement: "In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God." Om is a word of power and should be uttered
only with the greatest reverence.
MOTTO: "There
is no religion higher than truth"
Around the seal appears the MOTTO
of the Theosophical Society. Truth is the quest of every theosophist,
whatever his or her faith, and every great religion reflects in
some measure the light of the one eternal and spiritual wisdom.
Each points a way toward the realisation of Truth
THE WHOLE SEAL speaks
to an inner perception, to the intuition and to the heart, calling
forth the divine in each individual who contemplates it. In its
totality, it represents a synthesis of great cosmic principles
operating through involutionary and evolutionary cycles, bringing
us all, in the fullness of time, to the realisation of our divine
nature.
|