Screenshot from today's Urbi et Orbi The Vatican videographer focused and stayed on the inverted star, but never showed the child Jesus, Mary or Joseph. |
Merry Christmas! The masonic cursed star crowns the Vatican creche again, sixth year in a row, as far as I can tell.
Five years ago I noticed the ubiquitous Christmas star in Rome, a five pointed star, pentagram, with a tail. The five pointed star caught my attention because I know that Freemasonry uses that image in its rituals and on its propaganda. Pointing upright it is a Gnostic/Satanic image for "good-luck." Inverted, pointing downward, it is a Gnostic/Satanic curse, a wish for evil, "bad-luck." Noticing it again over the Saint Peter's Square presepio at the Vatican I ask whether it is deliberate. Perhaps someone has designed that inverted pentagram as a curse on the Christian Christmas in Rome, where Freemasonry is undoubtedly very strong these days, even in the Vatican. Note that a much more common traditional Christian star in Catholic iconography has eight points, not five, symbolizing the eighth day, Sunday, the Day of the Resurrection, the Lord's Day.
Question. Why use the redundant and iconographically ambiguous star when every other aspect of the presepe is constructed anew every year? I sense foul play! Please, for Pete's sake, get rid of the inverted pentagram. Surely talented artists can devise countless renditions of a star which do not correspond exactly to a Satanic curse.
The full-screen inverted pentagram is 7:10-7:33 minute.
Notice that the obelisk of Saint Peter's Square is also crowned by a star (actually two eliding stars), eight pointed each, with the top point being the Holy Cross.