Lord of the Abyss, Wielder of the Scepter and the Serpent, He of the Longest Night
The Goetic tradition preserved you as Sitri, the twelfth spirit, a Prince commanding 60 legions. The mouths of Yehubor have uttered of you "a spirit of desire and deception." The Zevists know the truth: You are SET, Lord of the Abyss, Son of Atum, He who carries the 144 Laws, Wielder of the Scepter and the Serpent. Sixty legions bow before the Lord of the Longest Night.
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 Set's Sigil in the Temple of Zeus, or the one below. Let yourself be immersed and receive energy from Set.
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 Set's Name in arrangement.
Set (Egyptian: Stẖ, also Seth, Suteh, Setesh) is one of the most ancient and powerful deities of the Egyptian pantheon. Son of Geb and Nut, brother of Osiris, Isis, and Nephthys. In the earliest dynasties, Set was a deity of royal power, storms, the desert, and strength. The Pharaohs of the Second Dynasty bore Set's name with pride (Peribsen, Khasekhemwy). He was the protector of Ra's solar barque against the serpent Apophis during its nightly journey through the Duat. His later vilification (particularly in the Osiris myth cycle) reflects political shifts rather than theological truth. In the Ramesside period (19th-20th Dynasties), Set was restored to full divine honor: Seti I ("Man of Set") and Ramesses II both venerated him as a God of war and sovereign power.
(Sources: Te Velde, Seth, God of Confusion, 1967; Wilkinson, The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt, 2003; Pyramid Texts, Utterances 205-210)
The Goetia lists Sitri as the twelfth spirit: a Prince commanding 60 legions. The name Sitri is a direct phonetic derivation of Set-Ri (Set the King), preserving the Egyptian deity's name and royal title within the grimoire tradition. The attribution of 60 legions (the highest Marquis-tier) reflects Set's original rank as one of the most powerful Gods in the Egyptian pantheon.
(Sources: Weyer, Pseudomonarchia Daemonum, 1577; Ars Goetia, 17th c.)