Great Seal > Myth > Pyramid & Eye

Myth and Misinformation
about the Reverse Side of the Great Seal

The reverse side of the Great Seal was not designed with an anagram found by drawing a six-pointed star whose points touch letters in the mottoes to spell MASON.

First of all, the original Great Seal is a written description only – no artwork was submitted to nor approved by Congress in 1782.

Also, drawing a star doesn't spell MASON on the reverse side's first realization (1786) or on the U.S. government's Centennial Medal (1882).

First Realization, 1786 Centennial Medal, 1882
1786                             1882

An anagram happens to work on the realization first seen on the 1935 one-dollar bill, but this version is not the work of America's Founding Fathers and therefore not "proof that the Masons held secret influence over our early nation" as Dan Brown describes the conspiracy theory.

Dollar Bill (1935) with hexagram

Note: The drawing of the reverse side of the Great Seal on the dollar bill appears to be similar to a preliminary drawing done for the 1885 Tiffany Die (whose reverse side was never cut). It also looks similar to Benjamin J. Lossing's drawing published in the July 1856 Harper's New Monthly Magazine. An anagram also works on both of these earlier drawings.

There is no intended significance to the number of stones in the pyramid (nor the shadow it casts). Those details are determined by artists. Although the pyramid has been traditionally shown with 13 steps, no number is specified in the official 1782 description of the Great Seal.

The Great Seal's pyramid is not "truncated." It is specifically described as a "Pyramid unfinished." (Big difference.) Another tip-off that a writer is missing the point of the Great Seal is when its symbolism is framed as "magical, arcane, occult, etc." Sure, there's mystery to history. But that's because the facts are unknown, not because they're unknowable or supernatural.

Beware of vague phrases such as: "It has been suggested..." or "There are some who claim..." or "Conspiracy theorists believe..." These are red flags signaling myth and speculation. A classic example is The History Channel's hour-long commercial program "Secrets of the Dollar Bill" where such phrases are used about twenty times.

The origin of the Great Seal of the United States is neither "hidden" or "little-known." Its history is very well documented. Less is known about the origin of the American flag.

Novus ordo seclorum does not properly translate into "new world order," which is an English phrase that if converted to Latin would not be novus ordo seclorum. Seclorum is a plural form. (New worlds order?)

Thomas Jefferson said, "Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty." Today we should appreciate people who alert us to emerging threats to our freedoms from international (as well as national and local) organizations that manifest the negative consequences of what's termed "the new world order." But they should chose a new symbol, and stop demonizing the pyramid & eye.

The Great Seal was created by the people who gave us our freedom.
It does not represent those currently trying to take it away
.

The Great Seal does not belong to any special group – past or present, covert or overt. It is an original American symbol created in 1782.

Of course, the perception of a symbol's meaning can change. Look what happened to the swastika – an ancient symbol of well-being – after the Nazis started using it. That's why it's crucial for Americans to honor and protect their seal (as they do their flag) and not let it be commandeered by those who distort its meaning by using it as a logo to promote their paranoia.

    NOTE
  • The official description of the Great Seal does not specify a left or right eye.
  • The designers of the Great Seal did not call it an "all-seeing eye." They referred to it as the "eye of Providence."
  • And they never called it the "eye of Horus."

Only four men actually contributed symbolic elements to the final
Great Seal design. These men were not Freemasons.
(Not that there's anything wrong with that.)

Eye One

Recognize Myth and Misinformation about the Eagle side.

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