What is the source of the Magen Dovid (Star of David) in Rabbinic Judaism?
When was it first used, and for what?
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What is the source of the Magen Dovid (Star of David) in Rabbinic Judaism? When was it first used, and for what? |
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And:
source: Wikipedia |
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R' Moshe Feinstein wrote in Igros Moshe (O"Ch 3:15) that:
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One of my (non-Jewish) childhood friends was interested in magic and the Kabbalah. I remember reading in a book of his that the normal and inverted triangles in the Shield of David represent elemental Fire and Water, and that their combination in the symbol represented peace between opposing forces. (Brings to mind עוֹשֶׂה שָׁלוֹם בִּמְרוֹמָיו...) I mention this merely as a cute idea I have encountered, and give it minimal credence. |
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Gershom Scholem has an essay entitled "The Star of David: History of a Symbol", in The Messianic Idea in Judaism (New York: Schocken Books, 1995), 257-281. In this essay, he chronicles the development of different theories that accounted for its origin (in David's shield, in Solomon's signet ring, etc), its usage in Christian and Islamic art and its frequent appearance (even in Jewish art) alongside either the Hindu swastika or the pentagram. So far as its actual origins are concerned, it first appears about 600 BCE on the seal of a certain Yehoshua ben Asaiah, and is not again attested until the 2nd or 3rd century CE, when it appears alongside a swastika in a synagogue in Capernaum. There is a flourishing of usage in the Middle Ages, though particularly in what Scholem terms "magical" texts - texts like Sefer Raziel, from which the previous contributor added a picture. Subsequent to its magical development was its kabbalistic development (a distinction that I am not clear about, but which Scholem does explain elsewhere), though this appears to have been something that came about after the 16th century and that was subsequently retrojected onto the writings of the Arizal - particularly in terms of reconfiguring his layout of the Seder Plate, erev Pesach. The real flourishing in the use of this symbol is architectural, and Scholem mentions examples of its usage on gates, in windows and as part of synagogue (and church!) adornments. He concludes by noting its being adopted by the Zionists at such a time as it was beginning to be entirely divested of any real meaning, but then closes on a more chilling note:
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