Saturday, November 18, 2006

Magen David, The Shield Of David

Magen  David,  The  Shield  Of  David The following paragraph is from Dr. Asher Eder’s book The Star of David, which was published in 1987 in English in Jerusalem by Rubin Mass Ltd. The publication here is courtesy of Oren Mass
This version includes corrections and new materials that do not appear on the printed version
Many see the six-pointed Star as King David's personal monogram. They point out that the name David in Hebrew is דוד , daleth-wav-daleth, which can also be read "daleth & daleth" (as the letter wav can also mean "and"). In the old-Hebrew script, used from about the 10th to the 6th Century B.C.E., daleth had the form of a small triangle, similar to the old-Greek letter delta . The combination of the two daleth into a six-pointed star could well express David's achievement in uniting the Northern tribes of Israel (Joseph) with the Southern tribes of Judah (Yehudah)under their one God; or his great aspiration to unite the earthly and the heavenly under the Lord's sovereignty.
All this is underlined by the Hebrew name of the symbol: magen david, translated as "Shield of David" or "Star of David".
Jewish tradition holds that a six-pointed star was engraved on David's battle shield, and that the six outer triangles represented the six aspects of the Lord's spirit: "the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord".
An old Arab tradition, probably deriving from this, says David's battle shield itself was in the shape of a six-pointed star.
The deeper inner meaning of these traditions is that David, both in his personal and in his national struggles "set the Lord always before him", and was shielded by Him even when he failed. Correspondingly, David's weapons in securing the country included both the Divine virtues and the sword of battle.

Jerusalem / Zion

The following paragraph is from Dr. Asher Eder’s book The Star of David, which was published in 1987 in English in Jerusalem by Rubin Mass Ltd. The publication here is courtesy of Oren Mass

This version includes corrections and new materials that do not appear on the printed version

Photo is courtesy of mharrsch who Photographed it at "The Holy Land Experience", Orlando, Florida and published it on Flickr.

The story of this most historic city begins in the days of Melchizedek, King of Salem, a priest of God the Most High, who according to Jewish tradition, was none other than Shem (Sem)1, one of the sons of Noah. Salem, now called Yerushalayim (Jerusalem), is the place where Abram-Abraham met Melchizedek.2
Since these remote days, Jerusalem became a focus for Abraham's descendants, and a counteragent to Babel. Yet there is more to it.
King David, following this Abrahamic tradition, confirmed Jerusalem as the city of acknowledgment and proclamation of the Lord as King over Israel and all nations.
We will better comprehend this proclamation when we realize the significance of Jerusalem’s geographical position. It is located right on top of a north-south stretching mountain range whose western slopes get good winter rain, and are fertile land for farmers, while its rather arid eastern slopes carry the shepherds with their flocks. The territory of the tribe of Yehudah comprises both parts; for, as the ruling tribe, he has also to balance the diverging interests of the farming and the shepherding societies and the respective cultures which they developed (Cain and Abel at the beginning of mankind’s history; and in our present situation, Christianity in the west and north of Jerusalem, and Islam in its east and south); and to establish peace based upon the Divine Law.
Thus, Jerusalem is indeed the apex of the Divine work of guiding and educating Mankind. The proper celebration of the Divine sovereignty on Earth is the main thrust to David's Psalms and of the teaching of the Prophets who came after him.
King Solomon, continuing his father's endeavors, built the Temple in Jerusalem as the House of the Lord, the visible dwelling place of His Name.3
Since the days of David and Solomon, Jerusalem has also been called the "City of the Sanctuary"4 or "Zion".5 These names imply that the earthly Jerusalem is the irrevocable and indissoluble base for the Heavenly Jerusalem. It is so for the benefit of all mankind.
This is strikingly transfigured in Jerusalem's topography, too. "Earthly" Jerusalem started out next to the Gihon spring at the lowest point of the whole area. It was built upon a small hill between the Kidron Valley6 and the Tyropean Valley (now nearly filled with rubble). This hill contained the "City of David", as Jerusalem was called after David's conquest.7 In fact, it is a protrusion (or ophel in Hebrew) coming forth from Mount Moriah. Geographically and geologically, Mount Moriah (also known as the Temple Mount) and the City of David form one unit, with the latter as the lower and the Temple Mount as the upper part. Figure 50a shows the topographical lines of the area; figure 50b, the walled City of David with the Temple Mount in the background, as can be seen in the 1:50 scale model outside the Holy Land Hotel (West), Jerusalem:

Friday, November 17, 2006

Israel and the Nations

Israel  and  the  Nations Magen DavidThe following paragraph is from Dr. Asher Eder’s book The Star of David, which was published in 1987 in English in Jerusalem by Rubin Mass Ltd. The publication here is courtesy of Oren Mass
This version includes corrections and new materials that do not appear on the printed version
Israel, in many ways a nation (goy) like other nations, has been "chosen" and set apart for a special task. This makes it appear in the eyes of the world as separate from it, "dwelling alone, and...not to be reckoned among the nations", as the Gentile seer Balaam put it.
Israel does not separate itself out of self-conceit, as some would have it; its peculiarity is a natural result of the Divine Covenant which was made with the Jews, with its special commandments congenial to its priestly service.
Let us not forget that it was Nimrod who deviated from the order set by Noah, and that by founding Babel he tried to do away with Shem and 'Eber and the Divine teaching they represented. Thus Abraham's exodus from Babel was a necessary step in the process of healing the world.
Within the healing process, Israel is called a "kingdom of priests, and a holy nation." That is to say, Israel fulfills a priestly role for the rest of the world. Since this service is on behalf of the Holy One ("Blessed be His Name"), Israel is also called goy kadosh, "people of the Holy" or "holy people". So the Name of the Lord (Shem) is laid upon Israel, and the Jews pass through history as bearers of the Name, or Semites - visible witnesses to the Divine Covenant.
Neither the Israelites' transgression of the commandments nor their blindness can dissolve the Covenant or annul their priestly position. Only assimilation with other cultures can bring it to naught, as we learn from the fate of the "Ten Lost Tribes" of the Northern Kingdom. They turned away from Jerusalem, built their own sanctuaries, adopted foreign ideologies and practices and disappeared shortly after their deportation by the Assyrians, when they mingled with other nations.
The danger of assimilation was indeed a main concern of the prophets, as reflected in their numerous warnings. In the course of history, the Israelites withstood many attempts to undermine the Covenant which God made with them. Such attempts sometimes came from inside the nation, sometimes from outside, as for instance when Hamor the Sichemite suggested that the children of Israel join with his people. Other examples include the cunning device of, modern missionary practices, and the attempt to tear the Temple Mount and other parts of the ancient homeland away from the Jews (a striking description of such an attempt is found in Psalm 83:3-11
In this context, it should be stressed that Israel is not only a congregation in the religious sense, as are Catholics and Protestants. It is also a specific nation tied to a specific land, with all the attendant consequences, such as the need to develop, administer and defend the country. Israel is not meant to remain aloof from the world; on the contrary, it has to partake fully of it, but without adopting the world's mindset. Nor is Israel meant to preach morality to other nations. Rather, it must teach by example, and work out all the human problems within its own family in the light of the Divine Teaching. To live in the country is, from this perspective, vital for the people's self-fulfillment, and to the healing of the world.
This, "the Holy Land", is for the Jews "the Land of the Sanctuary", "the Land of the Moriah" and "the Land of the Hebrews". These terms serve to identify us as we call for self-fulfillment, thereby providing a foundation for much of Israel's priestly function. It is for this reason that the country was allotted to the people of Israel as an everlasting inheritance from the Lord of the Covenant. Within the framework of its priestly function, Israel's three descents into the world - first Egypt, then Babylonia and now the entire planet - and its subsequent ascents back to the Land of the Fathers, the Torah and the Prophets, are highly important, as they bear witness to God's Hand in history. This ongoing revelation of Divine will is what actually gives meaning and direction to history, which would otherwise appear as a chain of random events, or as another example of the stronger eating the weaker. Moreover, it sets God's existence and might before the eyes of the world.
Thus, Israel's return to the Land of the Fathers should never be reviled as invasion. It rather merits the explanation given by Prophet Jeremiah, who was appointed a prophet to the nations (1:4):
"Hear the word of the Lord, O ye nations,
and declare it [even] in the islands far off,
and say He who scattered Israel will gather
him and keep him, as a shepherd does
his flock... therefore they shall come and
rejoice in the height of Zion." (ch.31:10)

The intention is that Mankind come to recognize its true Lord and Creator, and acknowledge His laws in the physical as well as in the psychic and spiritual realms, in order to "serve Him in one consent" for the sake of peace and for the welfare of all. Knowledge of the Lord goes in tandem with peace and welfare. It is to this end that "the Name of the Lord shall become known to all nations."
To speak in terms of our symbol, Israel, the bearer of the Divine Name, may well be represented by one triangle, and the nations by the other. Both should join into the harmonious six-pointed Star, centered in the One who is Lord over all.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Star of David Chocolate

Star of David Chocolate
Picture is courtesy of Jeanne Fleming, aka chocolate Devi,
Jeanne, together with Jessica Bard is sculpting chocolates by order. One of the designs they offer their customers is a Star of David Chocolate and there’s a special section on their website that tells very gracefully the story of this symbol. Here’s my favorite excerpt:
Story has it that the Star was emblazoned on the Shield that David, the future King of Israel, used when, as a boy, he went up against the giant Goliath on the battlefield in the Valley Elah. But, everyone who knows that story also knows that David defeated the Giant with no protection–he just had his sling shot and his faith. Of course, that is where the shield really does come in. His shield was not a physical object bearing an insignia–his shield was his faith.

From another section, which explains the philosophy behind all this I understood that the Star of David belongs to a family of symbols of:
Love and luxury, joy and happiness, compassion, peace and serenity, healing, and fertility of the body and imagination

Mezuzah

There are many Mezuzah's with Stars of David on them. My hunch is that the reason for this is that they are both protecting their owners. The Mezuzah protects the doors of the house - if one letter is damaged people believe it might bring bad luck. Star of David is also known as a shield that protects from evel eye.
Picture is courtesy of "twohorses" who published it on Flickr.

The Formation Of Israel

The  Formation  Of  Israel tribes Magen DavidThe following paragraph is from Dr. Asher Eder’s book The Star of David, which was published in 1987 in English in Jerusalem by Rubin Mass Ltd. The publication here is courtesy of Oren Mass
This version includes corrections and new materials that do not appear on the printed version
While the biblical story of Abram leaving Babel and becoming Abraham, "father of a multitude of the faithful", is popular, its background is less known. A closer study will help us understand the position of Israel within the Family of Man, and in this context, the meaning of its symbol, the six-pointed Star of David.
Noah set a certain order for Mankind after the Flood, with his three sons Shem, Ham, and Japhet. They are the ancestors of the different nations and tribes, but also represent three basic human aspects; spirit, emotion and intellect.
One of the descendants of Shem (meaning name, spiritual principle) was called 'Eber, עבר, which describes one who lives his life according to the principles of Shem, bearer of the Divine Name. A contemporary of 'Eber, a descendant of Ham (meaning warmth, emotional principle) was called Nimrod, which means "let us revolt". His revolt, appealing to men's egos and to their respective desires to unite, was directed against Shem, the bearer of the Divine Name and ancestor of the priestly tribe among his brethren, and against 'Eber, ancestor of the Hebrews. In the wake of his revolt, Nimrod founded the Kingdom of Babel, the Babylonian name of which, Babel, means God's door. The very name of his kingdom thus proclaimed Nimrod's boast of direct access to God, without Shem or 'Eber, and the qualities they represented. This idea is expressed in Babel's motto: "Come, let us build us a city and a tower whose top (head) will be in heaven, and let us make unto us a name...", thus replacing God's Name by their own, and attempting to usurp His Kingdom.
But such wrong-headed, ego-based doctrines, theologies and ideologies, once established as life principles, seduce their followers into performing actions which are right and just in their own eyes but unright and unjust in God's eyes, leading to a collision with His Laws and with one another, and inevitably then with the people bearing His Name.
Nimrod's attempt to found his own spiritual kingdom caused the splitting up of the world - a fact which 'Eber marked by calling one of his sons Peleg ("For in his days was the earth divided"). This split, however, did not occur only between Shem and 'Eber, on the one side, and Nimrod's followers on the other. The latter were, and still are, split and divided amongst themselves.
We should not think that this division occurred as the result of some cruel curse of an extraterrestrial origin. It is, quite naturally, a direct consequence of putting up gods instead of the One God, of establishing ideals that are either deified natural forces, or simply reflections of their inventors' egos, often in the garb of religions. Since neither of them is an absolute authority, different people express their understanding and opinions about them in different ways, and ultimately go in separate directions, vying, quarreling, confused and confusing others.
Abram recognized the futility of Babel's undertakings. He was the first to answer the Divine call: he left Babel, and the Lord God established the Covenant with him. So begins Israel's history.
In the unfolding of this history, we read in Gen.17:5 that Abram's name was changed into Abraham by inserting the sign ה , heh, in his original name, as mentioned. Likewise Sarai's name was changed into Sarah, by replacing the sign ,י yod, with ,ה heh.

,הheh, stands for the Divine attributes of Grace and Mercy; at the end of a word, it also indicates inclination or direction. Abraham, the key Biblical figure for Mankind after the Flood, is characterized by that sign, and so are Sarah his wife, and Yehudah, the main tribe of the people of Israel.
Right from its start, Israel was called to be ,עם סגולהa peculiar people (Exod.19:5). Merely leaving Babel, or Egypt later on, does not yet form Israel into something particular or peculiar. For instance, Assyria, too, left Babel, but it did not become a peculiar people. In Israel's case, it is the going towards Mount Sinai and into the land of promise which gives this leaving of Babel and of Egypt a positive and unique turn. Without this turn it would not be much different from any other nation.
A crucial expression of this turn we find in the tribe of Levi and what it stands for. To better understand this, let us look into the composition of Israel. As known, Israel is made up of the twelve sons of its Patriarch Jacob (Gen.35:22). The number twelve of these tribes could relate to the twelve signs of the Zodiac and the fullness of the material world it represents. This does not make Israel into something peculiar either. Many other nations relate to this fullness, and even Ishmael is mentioned as being headed by twelve princes (Gen.17:20; 25:16), without becoming a peculiar people. Israel is not meant to subjugate to the power of the Zodiac and the material world it stands for; rather Israel is called to be faithful to the Lord God Creator of all by adhering to the special commandments given through Moses on Mount Sinai (cf. Exod.19:5; Levit.11:43-45; Deut.28:5, and many others).
Moses, as known, came from the very tribe of Levi who was singled out for the priestly service among the people of Israel. While Levi, due to his priestly destination, was exempted from inheriting a particular part of the land, families of this tribe were distributed among the other tribes of Israel to serve there during the time they were not engaged in the temple service.
Exempting Levi from the land allocations, would mean to reduce the number of the land-inheriting tribes from twelve to eleven. This deficiency was balanced by branching the tree of Joseph into two tribes, namely his sons Ephraim and Manasse. By allotting land to them, in accordance with Jacob's special blessing over them, the number twelve remained in force. Consequently, Levi is part of all of them and via them of the land as well, and on the other hand is consecrated fully to its priestly service without being tied to a specific territory.
Levi's significance and his position between the tribes were brought out in a very peculiar way when they were ordered, after entering the country, to single out six of them who had to go up Mount Gerizim to proclaim from there the blessings, while the remaining six had to go up Mount Ebal to proclaim the curses upon those who would transgress the commandments, while the tribe of Levi was positioned in the valley between these two hills. To be more accurate on this latter point, it is not the whole tribe of Levi who occupies the middle field but rather those of that tribe who happened to be on active duty as Cohanim (priests) or Levites.9 Indeed, Levi is also mentioned as one of the tribes who had to go up Mt.Gerizim, while both Ephraim and Manasse came in this instance not as two tribes but as one tribe, Joseph. This is to show us that Levi, although being the priestly tribe, was not neither detached from the land, nor outside the people. He did not inherit a territory similar to the other tribes, rather the Levite families got lands (kind of small holdings) in the territories of the other tribes where they lived, and worked, while not on duty.
What is said here about the tribe of Levi, holds similarly true for the people of Israel in its position as the “Kingdom of Priests” among the nations.
Our hexagram allows, or even calls, for demonstrating this peculiarity in a very beautiful way. We can put the names of the six tribes who were on Mount Gerizim next to the six corners of the hexagram, and the names of the six other tribes into the six ankles, while Levi – those who served - would come into the middle field. This would point out Israel's peculiarity graphically more than anything else:
Summing up Israel's position and task, based upon the Divine teaching, Mal.2:7 says:
"The priest's lips keep knowledge,
and they seek the law at His mouth;
for he is the messenger
of the Lord of hosts."
Without Levi, Israel or any of its tribes would be like any other nation; while Levi without Israel would be like a sect. It is this intrinsic togetherness of Israel's tribes, including Levi, which makes up for her peculiarity.
It is in this peculiarity that Israel serves as the ,ממלכת כהנים kingdom of priests, for the rest of Mankind, irrespective whether in exile or settled in the Land. While in exile, its priestly function and service are partial, and truncated..

Dr. Eder's notes:
The Babylonian word Bab-El comes down in Hebrew to ba-bel, which can either mean "with Bel" (name of the Babylonian deity, Jer.50:2; 51:44), or "with nothing".

Jewish oral tradition says of the citizens of Babel that when building their tower, they didn't care if one of their laborers fell to his death, but if one of the expensive bricks broke, they would put the person responsible to death. This simple story shows that they put material values before the life of human beings.

Entreaty, pushing forward one's own ego, is called idolatry, cf. 1.Sam.15:23.

Assyria left Babel, too. Joining neither Babel, nor Abraham, it looked for a “Third Way”, and build Niniveh, Gen. 10:11. Since there is no third way, ,Assyria became as hostile to Israel as was Babel. “Whosoever is not with us will be against us”, is a true saying, and has been proven throughout the millennia.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

The Sign Aleph

The Sign Aleph Hebrew letter
The following paragraph is from Dr. Asher Eder’s book The Star of David, which was published in 1987 in English in Jerusalem by Rubin Mass Ltd. The publication here is courtesy of Oren Mass
This version includes corrections and new materials that do not appear on the printed version
The diagonal placing of the signs of the word ,אבא abba, in our Star is configured in the sign ,א aleph, itself. If we look at this closely, we see that אis in fact a combination of two Hebrew signs, namely ,וwav, and , י yod (Yota, in Greek), represented twice.
Yod stands for hand, or, as often as not, God's Hand everywhere, so to speak. It is a component of each of the 22 signs (otiot, letters in the Aleph-Beth), indicating that God's Might and Presence are manifest everywhere, whether we notice it or not.
Wavו ,, means hook - on which everything hangs. It is also the sign for the word "and". Symbolically, it stands for the integral man, to whom God entrusted His creation so that we may have dominion over it - in the image of our Creator, and not as a destroyer. Man with his double nature - physical body and spiritual soul - was created for this purpose, and it is he, and only he, who consciously and at will can and should link the material with the spiritual. As the Psalmist says: "Thou [God] hast given him [Man] dominion over the works of thy hands; thou hast put all things under his feet,"
However, in the sign aleph, the wav is not vertical, but occupies a diagonal position. This indicates that Man is in an ongoing process of growth. In this process, he finds himself with God's might hovering over him, as symbolized in א by the ,יyod, right side above; and the Divine spark within him, as symbolized by the ,י yod, left side below. Yet, we can see that the yod below is not exactly the same as the yod above. Maybe this is to remind us that the Divine spark in Man, though in its essence identical with the Creator, is not the Creator Himself.
A drop of water from the ocean is in essence identical with its source, yet it is not the ocean. So the Divine in us is far from being God. Created after His image and likeness, we can take part in His Creation, as co-creators, although without the power to create ex nihilo.
,א aleph, thus symbolizes God's creative spirit both before its manifestation in Creation, and in its manifestation, especially in Man. It is this spirit which raises Man from the animal state to that of true humanity. The Hebrew language brings this out in a beautiful way. It forms the word ,אדםadam, meaning Man or Mankind, by placing the sign ,אaleph, before the word,דם dam, which means blood. Thus , אדם adam , designates a living being of flesh and blood and linked to, and governed by, the spirit of God.


Dr Eder's notes to this chapter:

Interestingly enough, the numerical value of these components of א , aleph, is 26, like that of the tetragrammaton; v. Aryeh Kaplan, Meditation and the Bible, p.82 (Samuel Weiser, Inc; York Beach, Maine, 1978, ISBN 0-87728-364-8).

The Biblical term "let us make Man..." in Genesis 1:27 does not allude to a trinity or other plurality of God; it indicates that the "hosts of heavens" (including the sun, moon, and stars, v. Gen.2:1; Deut.4:19; 17:3) play a role in the process of "Man Making" (see notes 6 of chapter 7, and 8 of chapter 8). God did not say "let me make Man", or "I'll make Man". That would have reduced Man to a passive animal, which at most could be trained for specific limited work. Therefore, we are told: "Be not like a horse or mule, devoid of understanding, bit and bridle their ornaments..." (Ps.32:9).
As true humans, we are "made a little less than God", as said in Ps.8:6