>>4373686
If you thing the Eastern star is Satanic - well you are completely incorrect.
You didn't even look into it.
Eastern Star Biblical Heroines
Adah, (Blue), Jephthah's daughter, (from the Book of Judges)
Symbol: A sword and shield, symbolizing how she sacrificed her life to save her father's honor.
Ruth, (Yellow), the widow
Symbol: A sheaf of barley (grain), representative of Ruth, the poor widow in the Bible, who gathered left over barley stalks as her means of survival.
Esther, (White), the wife
Symbol: A crown and scepter. Queen Esther was a great and noble spirited biblical queen, known for her willingness to sacrifice her life for her people.
Martha, (Green) , Lazarus's sister, (from the Gospel of John)
Symbol: The broken column, symbolic of the uncertainties in life.
Electa, (Red) , the mother, (the "elect lady", friend of St. John, from II John)
Symbol: The cup, symbolic of charity and hospitality. Her color, red, is symbolic of love. She accepted God's will in spite of persecution.
Inside the center of the star, a pentagram (5-sided figure) with an altar is the logo's focal point. The open book upon the altar signifies obedience to God's word.
Each of the 5 points of the star are represented by a woman who represents that character within the lectures.
Each woman is dressed in a costume, symbolic of which of the 5 heroines she represents.
Each of these biblical characters share a lesson in the Masonic virtues:
(From Mackey's Revised Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry, page 303, copyright 1929)
Adah - Respect to the binding force of a vow
Ruth - Devotion to religious principles
Esther - Fidelity to kindred and friends
Martha - Undeviating faith in the hour of trial
Electa - Patience and submission under wrong
End of descriptions from Mackey's Revised Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry