Lucifer's transgression is examined, as well as the penetrating and
trangressive nature of his radiance. In the popular imagination, the
fallen angel Lucifer evokes such concepts as heresy, rebellion, pride,
liberation from the bonds of demiurgic oppression, and impetus for human
evolution. From his earliest origins, the Proud Angel has been hailed by
religious and artistic countercultures as a patron saint of
enlightenment --his most essential quality embodying overthrow of
ignorance and the inspired process of revelation. Allied to ancient
Gnostic Christian cosmological conceptions, the fallen angel has also
found dominion within occult traditions, folk magic, philosophy, as well
as art and literature. Lucifer has also, in many enduring mystical
traditions, assumed a female form in the guise of Lucina, Lucia and
Diana Lucifera. In his guise as the Serpent of Eden, he bestowed the
magical philosophy of the Luciferian Woman, she who was not born of the
clay, and was therefore especially receptive to the forbidden powers
which would render one 'as God.'