Queen of Magick, Lady of the Mysteries, Kleidouchos, Trioditis, Phosphoros, She of Three Faces
The mouths of Yehubor have uttered of you "the queen of witches, the mother of sorcery, the patroness of evil." The Zevists know the truth: Hecate is the Soteira (Saviour), Phosphoros (Light-Bearer), the Goddess whom Zeus himself honoured above all others, granting her dominion over earth, sea, and sky (Hesiod, Theogony 411-452). She is the Propylaia, the Guardian Before the Gate, who protects every threshold. The Papyri Graecae Magicae invoke her as the supreme divine power. What they called "witchcraft" is the oldest theurgical science in the world.
We declare the truth of your identity. We recognize you for who you Truly are.
After you are done with this, you can meditate on Hecate's Sigil in the Temple of Zeus, or the one below. Let yourself be immersed and receive energy from Hecate.
It's important to meditate on yourself after the Ritual calmly for a few minutes.

सत्: SAT, real, true, truthful in Sanskrit.
The Symbol that Encapsulates the Sigil: The Shen Ring, Egyptian Hieroglyphic language. The Shen also survived in Chinese tradition as a glyph for Spiritual Force, Divine Force, and God.
The Ancient Greek letters for Hecate's Name in arrangement.
Hecate (Greek: Ἑκάτη) is the Goddess of magic, crossroads, the night, ghosts, necromancy, and the liminal spaces between worlds. Hesiod (Theogony 411-452) gives the oldest and most exalted account: Zeus honoured Hecate above all other deities, granting her a share of the earth, the sea, and the starry heaven, and confirming the privileges she had held since the time of the Titans. She is Trioditis (Goddess of the Three Ways), Kleidouchos (Keeper of the Keys), Phosphoros (Light-Bearer), Propylaia (Before the Gate), Soteira (Saviour), Brimo (the Terrible), and Nyktipolos (Night-Wanderer). In the Papyri Graecae Magicae (PGM IV.2785-2890), she is invoked as the supreme theurgical power, mistress of fire and darkness, holder of the keys to Tartarus and Olympus alike. Her three faces see past, present, and future simultaneously, and her torches illuminate the paths that others cannot see.
(Sources: Hesiod, Theogony 411-452; Euripides, Medea 395-397; PGM IV.2785-2890; Johnston, Hekate Soteira, 1990; Ronan, The Goddess Hekate, 1992)