King of Egypt Lower and Higher, Lord of Truth, King of the Underworld, He Who Resurrects, Star of the Heavens
The Goetic tradition preserved you as Oriax (also Orias), the fifty-ninth spirit, a Marquis commanding 30 legions, who "knows and teaches the virtues of the stars and the mansions of the planets." The mouths of Yehubor have uttered of you "a spirit who transforms men and grants dignities." The Zevists know the truth: You are OSIRIS (Wsir), the King of Kings, whose constellation Sah (Orion) rules the heavens. He who knows the stars is He whose body became the stars. He who grants dignities is He who crowns the justified dead in the Hall of Two Truths. The name Oriax preserves Osiris through the Greek Orias, and the stellar knowledge attributed to the spirit is the stellar body of the God himself.
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 Osiris's Sigil in the Temple of Zeus, or the one below. Let yourself be immersed and receive energy from Osiris.
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 Osiris's Name in arrangement.
Osiris (Egyptian: Wsir, Greek: Ὄσιρις) is the God of the underworld, the dead, resurrection, and eternal life. Son of Geb and Nut, brother and husband of Isis, father of Horus. The Osirian cycle (murder by Set, dismemberment, reassembly by Isis, resurrection as King of the Duat) is the foundational mystery of Egyptian religion and the archetype of all resurrection theology. The Pyramid Texts (Utterance 219) declare: "O Osiris, you have gone, but you will return; you have slept, but you will awaken; you have died, but you will live." His stellar form is the constellation Sah (Orion), and the star Sopdet (Sirius) belongs to Isis. The annual heliacal rising of Sirius heralded the Nile inundation, connecting Osiris's resurrection to the regeneration of all life in Egypt. In later syncretism, Osiris merged with Apis to become Serapis (Wsir-Hp), worshipped across the Hellenistic and Roman worlds.
(Sources: Pyramid Texts, Utterance 219, 366; Plutarch, De Iside et Osiride; Griffiths, The Origins of Osiris and His Cult, 1980; Wilkinson, The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt, 2003)
The Goetia lists Oriax (also Orias) as the fifty-ninth spirit: a Marquis commanding 30 legions, appearing as a lion riding a horse and holding serpents. His attributed powers (knowledge of stellar mansions, planetary dignities, transformation) correspond to Osiris's identification with the constellation Orion (Sah) and the stellar theology of the Pyramid Texts, in which the dead King ascends to become an imperishable star. The lion-form recalls the Egyptian sphinx and the leonine guardians of the horizon through which the sun (and the dead) must pass. The name Oriax/Orias directly preserves the Greek vocalization of Osiris.
(Sources: Weyer, Pseudomonarchia Daemonum, 1577; Ars Goetia, 17th c.)