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Charm School

Have you ever seen something in a Judaica catalog or shop that made you scratch your head? Symbols are always a hot topic in our circles, and often the discussions are full of extremes. In our quest to be willingly obedient to the Word of Adonai, sometimes it's obvious we never went to charm school. Or charm and symbol school.


Frank Houtz, may his memory be for blessing, did an excellent job addressing fears of idolatory in words and symbols in his lecture, “Discerning Between Good and Evil” (2010), and he presents a reliable hermeneutic to identify customs that are indeed evil from those that mean exactly what those who use them believe them to mean. 


In Creation Gospel Workbook Six, we address some of the controversy: “The Magen David (Star of David) is a good example of symbolism that has been appropriated by some pagan religions. Because of that, some believers with a poor hermeneutical skill set have averred that the Magen David is a pagan symbol. Without adding anything but common sense to Houtz’ insightful, careful work with the subject, the obvious questions are, “What is the symbol’s primary source, and what did the Magen David mean to the people who began to identify with it?”


If pagan cultures at some time appropriated the symbol, it has no bearing on what it originally meant to those who began to use it, for the Fourth Day of Creation of sun, moon, and stars antedated by far any pagan identification.  I’m sure no Christian wants Christianity judged by the number of cross necklaces worn in mug shot photos or at lewd, filthy concerts. Just because trees have been worshiped as gods and used as pagan symbols doesn't mean we can have trees in our yards.


The symbol of the Magen David is accepted universally as a symbol of the Jewish people. It is not so much an ancient Israelite symbol, but more cultural and ethnic identity. At this point in history, it is the observance of the Biblical moedim that sets apart Israel from the heathen nations, making the association of the Magen David with paganism antithetical. The Jewish people have long been associated by other nations both with the moedim of Scripture as well as the symbol of the Magen David. Monotheism. (*Scroll down for full communication from Frank)


But what about other symbols, like charms? There is a fine line between a symbol of remembrance or identification and believing the symbol itself has power that belongs to the Creator. For instance, in times past, our congregation was accused of worshiping a Torah scroll. No, we respect the Word; it is valuable to us.


Now if we marched the scroll down to the local ATM, held it up to the machine and believed it would miraculously spit out $10,000 every time, there's a bronze serpent problem.


Twenty-four ornaments of the Bride are based on the richness that Israel used to seduce her lovers instead of her Bridegroom who gave them to her:


  • “...and the LORD will make their foreheads bare. In that day the Lord will take away the beauty of their anklets, headbands, crescent ornaments, dangling earrings, bracelets, veils, headdresses, ankle chains, sashes, perfume boxes, amulets, finger rings, nose rings, festal robes, outer tunics, cloaks, money purses, hand mirrors, undergarments, turbans and veils. Now it will come about that instead of sweet perfume there will be putrefaction; instead of a belt, a rope; instead of well-set hair, a plucked-out scalp...” (Is 3:18-24 NASB)


In the Shabbat livestream, we’ll examine the spiritual significance of each of these bridal ornaments, but one of them, the amulet, is a head-scratcher.  That’s primarily because we’re only familiar with the corruption of the symbol, not the Scriptural, Hebrew meaning of it that makes it an ornament fit for a bride.


  • amulets [lehashim] לַחַשׁ a whisper, i.e. by implication, (in a good sense) a private prayer, (in a bad one) an incantation; concretely, an amulet:—charmed, earring, enchantment, orator, prayer.


Are they forbidden magic and superstition, or is there a more ancient use?

The variety of necklace-type adornments links the wording of how to lay tefillin to wearing a pendant, amulet, necklace, etc.


  • My son, keep my words and treasure my commandments within you. Keep my commandments and live, and my teaching as the apple of your eye.
  • Bind them on your fingers; write them on the tablet of your heart. (Pr 7:1-3)
  • My son, do not forget my teaching, but let your heart keep my commandments; for length of days and years of life and peace they will add to you. Do not let kindness and truth leave you; bind them around your neck, write them on the tablet of your heart. So you will find favor and good repute in the sight of God and man. (Pr 3:1-4)


The above is very much like the description of how Yeshua grew in Scriptures and with people, the exact vertical/horizontal relationship found in the two greatest commandments, love Adonai and love your neighbor. “And Jesus kept increasing in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men.” (Lk 2:52)


  • My son, observe the commandment of your father and do not forsake the teaching of your mother; bind them continually on your heart; tie them around your neck. When you walk about, they will guide you; when you sleep, they will watch over you; and when you awake, they will talk to you. For the commandment is a lamp and the teaching is light; and reproofs for discipline are the way of life... (Pr 6:20-23)


A permitted Bridal amulet should have the Word in some form that draws you to hear the voice of the Ruach guiding you and protecting you from sin. The writing is silent, “whispered,” like the Ruach in a still, small voice. Traditionally, Jewish amulets contain a verse of Scripture. Those containing mystical combinations of Hebrew letters are sketchy because of the Scriptural understanding of an amulet’s function: to remind the wearer of Adonai’s protective power. If the wearer doesn’t understand the words or symbols, it is not the thing to wear because it’s missing the mark. 


Different contexts of lachash, the root of amulet, which is connected to protection from harm:


Positive

“O LORD, they sought You in distress; they could only whisper a prayer, Your chastening was upon them.” (Is 26:16)

“The captain of fifty and the honorable man, the counselor and the expert artisan, and the skillful enchanter*.” (Is 3:3)


Negative

“If the serpent bites before being charmed, there is no profit for the charmer.**” (Ecc 10:11)

“For behold, I am sending serpents against you, adders, for which there is no charm, and they will bite you,” declares the LORD. (Je 8:17)


The Word destroys the venom of the serpent, which is the “trick” of snake charmers. They remove the fangs and venom ducts before training it. If the snake bites before that, it harms. The Bride has no fear of snakebite, for the Word neutralizes venomous lies. The serpent may bite, but it cannot destroy. Shake it off. This enrages the serpent in Revelation.


*The context is honorable people, so likely an orator or Scriptural wordsmith who is skilled with writing prayers for amulets.

**Literally, “master of the tongue”


As an ornament of the Bride, an amulet represents a hushed prayer, a reminder of Scripture for protection. The daily prayer, the Amidah, is prayed in a whisper. Although silent, the amulet connects the wearer with the Scriptural prayer. It's fine to wear a necklace or any other jewelry with Scripture or its symbols if it is a reminder of the One who holds the power.


Why are amulets associated with protection? If we read the contexts around the Proverbs passages concerning the binding of Torah around the neck or fingers, the promise is that it will “keep you from the evil woman, from the smooth tongue of the adulteress.” (Pr 6:20)


Scripture mentions snake charming as the evil example of amulet use. It is not the amulet that will prevent the snake from biting; it is the relationship of the wearer to the Word on the amulet and the One to Whom the prayer is directed. One cannot behave any way one wants and expect the “amulet” of tefillin or a Shema necklace to protect him or her. 


Snake venom is false doctrine...another reason the 24 ornaments should be completed. The number twenty-four represents the original number of the books of the TANAKH. The more we immerse in the Word, the Son of Elohim, the more protection we have against evil. Using it as a magic charm undercuts the actual use of an amulet, a piece of jewelry that reminds us of our intimate relationship with the Bridegroom and the Word He sent us to bind us to Him. A “hamsa hand” charm can no more prevent evil than not stepping on a crack will preserve our mothers’ backs or pointing a cross at a vampire will keep it away. 


If there were vampires. Which there is not.


Except for vampire bats.


There’s those. 


Join us on the livestream tomorrow at approximately 1:30 pm Eastern for more charm school.


Shabbat Shalom!


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Full email from Frank Houtz: “First, a star of David is a symbol. Symbols by their nature cannot have any innate meaning. They mean whatever they mean to whomever they mean it. For example, Latin letters are used in much of the European continent, in America, most of South America, Australia and even heavily throughout Africa. Even so, each letter is not pronounced the same, meaning it does not represent the same sound every time. One can assemble those letters into strings called words. Even there, the meaning of the string can be different. The pronunciation is a symbol as much as the letters. The spoken word represents a concept, but the same sounds can contain several meanings. The German word for yes is Ja, pronounced like Yah. The Hebrew word Yah is the name for God. I suspect God does not develop whiplash turning His head to hear a German, thinking the German is calling on Him with every affirmative answer. So a symbol is anything that represents another thing. It can be a sound, a letter, an emblem, an artwork, a gesture, even a poem and much, much more. It only means what the creator meant for it to mean. To suggest that a symbol will always represent a particular meaning is completely foreign to the nature of symbols.


Let's just say the symbol has the meaning that the culture assigns to it. Some superstitious people have assigned power to a certain symbol. For example, Pennsylvania Dutch would paint hex signs on their barns to ward off evil spirits. Some Roman Catholics carry images of St. Christopher to protect them during their travels. To assign power to a symbol may actually be some form of witchcraft. Isn't witchcraft the assigning power to spells, (a series of words) or amulets (a certain image or charm). If we attribute some innate power to a symbol, we are suggesting that the symbol itself can harbor evil or good and pass those attributes onto its bearer. This is a disturbing analysis of symbols.


To look for the origin of a symbol in order to establish approval or disapproval again is a misunderstanding of the nature of symbols. If a symbol had pagan origins in its history, it does not mean that it is pagan today or even would connect in anyone's mind as being pagan. Even the word pagan has changed in meaning over the years. It once meant a farmer or a peasant. Now it means an idol worshiper or polytheist. If the origin of a word supersedes the present meaning, a pagan is a good person with humble beginnings but a strong worker. The star of David may have had some use by a pagan culture, but it probably also had some use by a righteous culture. The simpler a symbol is, the more likely it has been used multiple times with multiple meanings.


I recently visited the synagogue in Capernaum, Israel. This is the synagogue where Yehoshua once taught (Mark 1:21 and other verses). I found it interesting to find carved in the lintel a Magen David. It seems if this symbol were innately evil, Yehoshua would have shunned a synagogue that had this symbol on it.


I'm not sure we can conclusively prove that the Magen David is an ancient shield of David even though in the archeological digs in Israel, the Magen David was found in a mosaic on Solomon's palace floor. I'm not even certain that the symbol was always thought to be representing a star. It really doesn't look like anything I have seen in the heavens. But whether David used it or not, that does not determine its value. Truly, a sign is just that, a sign. It represents something to some group of people.” (F. Houtz, personal communication, 8/6/15)


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