Old Testament: The Hebrew Scriptures explicitly forbids worshiping the celestial “host of heaven” (sun, moon, and stars) or making images or symbols of them. The Torah warns Israel:
“Beware lest you raise your eyes to heaven, and when you see the sun and the moon and the stars… you be drawn away and bow down to them and serve them. Any Israelite found worshiping
“the sun or the moon or any of the host of heaven” was to be executed for idolatry. The Decalogue likewise bans making
“a carved image… of anything in heaven above” which includes star-emblems
of any kind.
The Old Testament consistently portrays the use of star symbols in worship as a
grave sin, a form of idolatry denying the one true God.
Prophetic and Wisdom texts: The prophets even name specific star-deities and symbols. Amos rebukes the Israelites for adopting pagan star-symbols during the wilderness period:
“You have taken up Sikkuth your king, and Kaiwan your star-god, your images, which you made for yourselves”
Stephen’s speech (Acts 7) mentioned above recalls Israel’s guilt in honoring a star-symbol.
Jewish apocryphal writings; those included in the Septuagint likewise denounce the worship of stars or their use in cultic practice.
In the
Apocalypse of Abraham (c. AD 1st cent.), young Abram mocks the very idea of treating stars as gods: seeing the evening star, he briefly wonders if it is God,
“but lo, it set; and I said, ‘I shall not worship one that sets”. This narrative (which parallels a tradition later reflected in the Quran) uses Abraham’s example to condemn star-worship as foolish and false. In summary, the pseudepigraphical literature consistently treats astrology, star-worship,
and all star-symbols as part of the idolatry and sorcery that ancient righteous figures (Enoch, Abraham, Moses, etc.) opposed. These texts reinforce the view that
any star symbol used in
idol worship, astrological divination, or magical rites is an abhorrent corruption introduced by demons and rejected by the faithful.
The
Epistle of Barnabas (c. AD 70–130) contains a similar injunction:
“You shall not be an enchanter or an astrologer or a magician, nor even desire to see such things, for this is how idolatry arises” These very early church writings show that the first generations of Christians saw astrology and the use of any
star-symbols as utterly incompatible with worship of God.
Tatian’s
Address to the Greeks (c. 170 AD) thus explicitly denounces the zodiac and its fatalistic star-symbols as a demonic invention, something true Christians
must reject in favor of faith in God’s providence.
The Patristic consensus was therefore unequivocal: any use of a star symbol, whether as an object of worship, a sign for divination, a magical charm, or even as a
banner, was to be
utterly rejected by all Christians.
In conclusion, across
all categories of ancient literature – biblical, apocryphal, pseudepigraphical, and early Christian writings, we find a consistent testimony
against star symbols in religious use. Whether it be a hexagram or pentagram employed in magic, a star-emblem carried in idol processions, or the Zodiac chart consulted for one’s fate, the verdict is the same: these practices are deemed idolatrous, demonic deceptions or “vanities” that true worshipers of God must renounce. Ancient Jews and Christians directed worship to the Creator alone, condemning “the host of heaven” as objects of worship. Any
iconography of stars in a sacred context (apart from biblical metaphor) was automatically suspect. Thus the
star symbol – so often revered in pagan religion as a sign of a god or of cosmic power – was, in the eyes of the early Judeo-Christian tradition,
a sign of infidelity to the one God. From Moses to the Church Fathers, the message resounds:
“Do not worship the stars, do not make sigils of them or serve them” rather, worship
Him who made the stars, and trust His Word above all astrological or magical arts. The ancient sources unanimously uphold that
any use of making star symbols for worship, divination stands under the condemnation of God and the Church.
Across
Scripture,
Apocrypha,
Pseudepigrapha, and the
Early Church Fathers, there is
one consistent verdict:
Star worship, star symbolism, and celestial emblems used in religious contexts are
demonic, idolatrous, and condemned.
What This Means
While the Bible commands, “Worship Him who made the stars,” modern Dispensationalists, blinded by Zionist propaganda venerate a star
never once endorsed in Scripture: a six-pointed, six-triangle, six-sided occult sigil rooted not in Davidic covenant, but in Babylonian sorcery, Molech worship, and the cursed star of Rephan.
That’s not “honoring Israel.”
That’s
bowing to the host of heaven — exactly what Moses, the prophets, the Apostles, and the early Church all forbade under penalty of death or excommunication.
Let’s say it clearly:
God never gave David a star.
Jesus never wore one.
No Apostle or Church Father ever drew one, carved one, or prayed under one.
The only star mentioned in worship?
The
Star of Rephan —
explicitly cursed BY GOD in
Amos 5:26 and
Acts 7:43, associated with
Molech,
child sacrifice, and
demon worship.
So what does this mean?
Modern Christians who defend that sigil are under the veil.
They’ve mistaken a
political idol for the
covenant of God.
They’ve traded the
Cross for a
flag, and the
Spirit of Christ for the
drums of Babylon.
And worst of all?
They cheer for a star that Scripture
explicitly links to demons, death, and judgment…
All while thinking they’re honoring the God of Israel.
We’re not watching a sci-fi horror movie.
We’re living in one.
And the deception is Satanic, down to the very sigil they wave.
None of this would have been possible…
until 1909.
Until Rockefeller cash, Oxford ink, and the Dragon’s breath conjured the Scofield Bible from Hell; replacing the risen Christ with a political idol, crowning it with a cursed star, and unleashing a Zionist gospel so foreign to the Apostles, they’d have torn their garments in horror and collapsed in tears.
Woe to those who wave the cursed star and call it holy… for they do not know what they worship.
The apostasy is not coming, it’s here.
And its banner bears a star God never gave.
You think seminary schools don’t know this? That rabbis haven’t read Amos 5:26 or Acts 7:43?
They all know. Every pastor, scholar, and Oxford-groomed theologian has read it and
they looked away.
They buried the curse.
They dressed it in footnotes.
Then they raised it over the Church and called it holy.
This isn’t ignorance.
It’s a pact with the dragon.
And they’re keeping you blind
on purpose.
Because if the veil ever tears —
the whole temple crashes down.
And what stands beneath it?
Not Christ.
Not Israel.
But a counterfeit throne, a Babylonian war-banner, and a gospel forged in Hell.
We’re not watching "prophecy unfold".
We’re watching the Beast take the pulpit.
Hell is already here.
And its banner bears a star
God cursed.
And now?
There’s nowhere left to run.

