The Red Cap of Liberty

The Red Cap of Liberty is also known as the Phrygian Cap, Mithraic Cap, sacrificial Cap, mitre and in French as the bonnet de laLiberté or bonnet rouge. It symbolizes the sacred acts of Initiation, Sacrifice, Liberty, Revolution, Enlightenment, and Brotherhood.

It has been worn by various Abrahamic priesthoods over the last few thousand years and also newly emancipated slaves since the time of Ancient Rome. The red cap not only an ancient symbol, it is one of the oldest magical talismans that is still in use to this very day by various religions, secret societies, and governments all around the world. (more…)

The Hopi Prophecy of the Red Hat and Red Cloak People

The Hopi are a Native American tribe who descend from the Ancient Pueblo Peoples (Hopi: Hisatsinom or Navajo: Anasazi). They were well known by their large apartment-house complexes that they had built many hundreds of years ago in the Southwest of the United States in places such as northeastern Arizona, northwestern New Mexico, and southwestern Colorado. Today they are currently a sovereign nation mainly residing in northeastern Arizona on a reservation that occupies part of Coconino and Navajo counties, encompasses more than 1.5 million acres, and is made up of 12 villages on three mesas.

The Hopi are known as a mostly peaceful people whose culture is deeply rooted in spirituality, mythology, morality, and ethics. They have maintained for several centuries through an oral tradition various religious. mythological, and prophetical traditions that live on to this very day. The Hopi are famous for their prophecies that are told through their sacred oral doctrines. (more…)

Saint John Himself Was the Father of the Gnostics

33rd Degree Sovereign Master of the Scottish Rite, Albert Pike had written in Morals and Dogma,“The trowel of the Templars is quadruple, and the triangular plates of it are arranged in the form of a cross, making the Kabalistic pantacle known by the name of the Cross of the East. The Knight of the East, and the Knight of the East and West, have in their titles secret allusions to the Templars of whom they were at first the successors. (more…)

Gnostic beliefs of the Knights Templar were passed down through the Founding Fathers

The Secret History of the Knights Templar in America – An excerpt from an interview from Belief.net with authors Tim Wallace-Murphy and Marilyn Hopkins write that the medieval warrior monks of the Knights Templar had trading links with Native Americans in Nova Scotia and New England, and that the European families—who were members of the Templars and claimed to be descended from Jesus—passed their beliefs through Masonic teaching into the U.S. Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.

How does that story connect with Gnosticism?

These families were Gnostics. The church required you to believe in a set of fixed dogma and accept it as fact. It said that if you are not a good boy down here then you’ll burn in hell for eternity; or you could conform to church belief and join the feathered choir in heaven. (more…)

Gnosticism can be found in almost all religions

“Gnosticism can be found in almost all religions, and as such, it can be viewed as more of an esoteric philosophy that unites people across various religions- though some people today claim to be Gnostics as a religion. For example, the ideas associated with a Gnostic Christian are fundamentally almost identical to a Buddha or Boddisatva in the Buddhist religion, Gnanis in Hinduism, an Arif in the Islamic tradition, and a “knower” in the Taoist tradition, and it is for this reason that it is believed that Gnosticsm had an influence on all of these religious philosophies as it spread between Egypt and Tibet, and likewise these other schools contributed to Gnostic doctrine.” – Timothy Hogan

The Gnostics were the first Christian theologists

“The Gnostics were, then, the first Christian theologists, and if it is a cause for reprehension that the real historical side of the new movement was obscured in order to suit the necessities of a religion which aspired to universality, then the Gnostics are the chief culprits.” – G.R.S. Mead Fragments of a Forgotten Faith

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