The Seven-Pointed Star: A Symbol of Balance, Connection & Exploration
The seven-pointed star, often called the Elven Star, Faery Star, or Heptagram, is a powerful and versatile symbol that holds deep significance across traditions, cultures, and personal practices. Its beauty lies in its ability to reflect interconnected energies, offering insights into life, balance, and transformation. This star invites us to explore universal themes while also holding space for individual interpretation. Each point carries its own wisdom.
The Seven Points:
🌞 Sun – Connection. The sun symbolizes life, vitality, and the energy that connects all beings. It represents the light within us and our bond with the Universe.
⭐ Stars – Knowledge/Stars inspire us to seek guidance, wisdom, and higher understanding. They remind us of infinite possibilities and the vast unknown.
🕊 Air – Joy/Air brings freedom, clarity, and lightness of being. It invites us to embrace joy and open communication as we move through life.
💧 Water – Balance/Water teaches us flow, harmony, and adaptability. It represents emotional depth and the importance of finding balance within ourselves.
🌙 Moon – Magick. The moon reflects mystery, intuition, and the cycles of transformation. It connects us to magick, inner wisdom, and the unseen realms.
🌍 Earth – Trust/Earth grounds us in stability, resilience, and trust. It calls us to root ourselves deeply in the present and honor the physical world.
🔥 Fire – InspirationFire ignites passion, creativity, and transformation. It fuels our dreams and sparks the inspiration that moves us forward.
🌀 The Center - at the heart of the star lies Balance—the sacred point where all energies converge. It is a reminder that harmony within ourselves and with the world around us is essential for alignment and growth.
The Seven-Pointed Star is rich with layered meanings, In esoteric traditions, it may represent the seven classical planets, chakras, or the Tree of Life. The star’s wisdom allows us to step into deeper connection with ourselves, the Universe, and the flow of life.
This gravestone in Melaten Cemetery, Cologne, Germany is the resting place of Dr. Franz Leuffen(1821-1900), a medical doctor who wrote a book in the 1860s on the subject of post-mortems. He was also a high ranking Freemason which explains the reason for Masonic symbols on his headstone.
Also note the sphinx at the bottom of the funerary monument;
In ancient Egyptian culture, the sphinx symbolised divine kingship, solar power, and the eternal guardianship of sacred space. Unlike its later Greek counterpart, the Egyptian sphinx—typically depicted with a lion’s body and the head of a pharaoh—was not a monstrous riddle-giver but a protective and reverent figure, embodying the strength of the lion and the intelligence of royal authority. It served as a guardian of tombs, temples, and cosmic order (ma’at), stationed at thresholds to ward off chaos (isfet) and preserve the sanctity of divine realms. Closely associated with the sun god Ra, especially in monuments like the Great Sphinx of Giza, it faced the rising sun in eternal adoration, signifying the pharaoh’s alignment with solar divinity. Inscriptions such as the Dream Stela of Thutmose IV reinforced this sacred connection, casting the sphinx as both oracle and protector. Female sphinxes, notably under Hatshepsut, also asserted royal legitimacy within a masculine iconographic tradition. Far from the ominous ambiguity of the Greek sphinx, the Egyptian version conveyed cosmic harmony, sacred kingship, and the enduring presence of divine protection at the boundary between worlds.
To Victorian mourners steeped in classical learning and spiritual speculation, the sphinx served as a silent interrogator of death—a reminder of what lies beyond, unknowable and eternal.
In Masonic funerary rites, the sphinx represents the guardian of sacred wisdom, echoing the temple guardians of lost ancient knowledge. Beauty and terror; contemporary notions of the sublime—the convergence of awe and fear, especially in death’s presence. this context, she becomes a symbol of eternal femininity, mystery, and the fatal pull of the beyond—an alluring guardian at the edge of oblivion











