Osiris
Guardian of the afterlife and symbol of eternal life, Osiris represents the resurrection of the spirit. He is the principle that transforms death into rebirth and matter into light. His presence teaches the path to inner immortality.

Osiris is the King of Life who conquered death.
An eternal symbol of regeneration and immortal consciousness, he represents the principle that transforms darkness into light and the end into a beginning.
Osiris, Asar in the language of Kemet, is one of the central deities of Egyptian theology.
Son of Geb and Nut, brother of Isis, Nephthys, and Seth, he was the first divine ruler of Egypt, bringer of civilization, law, and harmony.
Beloved by the people and guardian of justice, he was betrayed by his brother Seth, dismembered, and scattered throughout the Nomes of Egypt.
Isis, moved by love and wisdom, gathered his limbs and, through magical power, restored Osiris to life.
He did not return to the world of the living, but ascended to the invisible realm, becoming the Lord of the Duat, the Judge of the Dead, and the symbol of eternal resurrection.
In him is revealed the highest mystery of Egyptian spirituality:
death as a sacred act of transformation, and consciousness continuing beyond the body.
Osiris is the divine seed that dies within the earth to be reborn as new life.
In the initiatic schools, he represented the state of higher consciousness that every adept must attain — the victory of spirit over matter.
His cult, widespread throughout Egypt, was at the heart of the Mysteries of Abydos — rites of death and rebirth that reenacted his passion and glorification.