BIBLE HISTORY DAILY

Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols

Zodiac mosaics in ancient synagogues

Jewish Worship Pagan Symbol mosaic pieces

AN INCREDIBLE FIND. In December 1928, a work crew from kibbutz Beth Alpha was digging a drainage channel when mosaic pieces began to appear in their shovel loads.

Ein Harod is a spring that rises in the valley of Jezreel at the foot of Mt. Gilboa. Gideon gathered his men there to sort out the good soldiers from the bad ones (Judges 7). From the pool, the spring makes its weary and meandering way east down the valley for some 18 km, passing through Beth-Shean to empty into the Jordan River.

A thousand years of neglect had resulted in a valley full of silted and blocked-up waterways creating a marshy and swampy landscape as the spring of Harod—and half a dozen other springs that empty into it—filled the land with water faster than the natural outlets—now blocked—could drain it.

That was the scene that greeted the first modern settlers of the valley of Jezreel. And it was obvious that their first task, if they hoped to farm this land, was to drain the swamps. Thus it happened that at the end of December 1928 a work crew from kibbutz Beth Alpha (founded 6 years earlier) was digging yet another drainage canal when someone’s shovel started picking up pieces of mosaic.

Work on the channel stopped at once. They called the Hebrew University (then all of 3 years old!) and within a fortnight Eliezer Lippa Sukenik1 and Nahman Avigad had begun to excavate the site. Work began on January 9, 1929, and continued for 7 weeks, until February 26, despite heavy rains (610 mm instead of the usual 400 mm) that flooded the valley that year.

The mosaic they uncovered was almost complete, its astonishing preservation caused by a layer of plaster, thrown down from the ceiling by the earthquake that destroyed the building, that covered and protected the floor from the damage of falling stones. When it was completely exposed, the mosaic measured 28 meters long and 14 meters wide. It had an inscription at the doorway leading to three panels in the central apse: a rectangular panel, a square panel with a circle in the middle, and then another rectangle at the far end.



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The middle square, the first to be uncovered, was the most spectacular. Figures of four women were at the four corners, with inscriptions (in Hebrew) identifying each as a season of the year. Inside the square was a wheel, 3.12 meters in diameter, with a smaller circle (1.2 m) in its center. The wheel was divided into 12 panels, each with a figure and a name identifying it as a sign of the zodiac. And in the center, a man was pictured driving a quadriga (four-horse chariot) through the moon and stars. Rays of the sun were coming out of his head; it was clear that he was Helios, god of the sun.

pagan symbols of the zodiac

In the square panel of the Beth Alpha mosaic was a zodiac wheel with all 12 symbols and names of the zodiac, surrounded by four female figures at the corners, identifying the seasons of the year. Credit: Art Resource, NY

What had they found? Could this have been the temple of a Jewish community (it had to be Jewish; everything was written in Hebrew and Aramaic) turned pagan? Further digging dispelled that notion, for there, just above the central square of the mosaic, they found a mosaic panel of symbols instantly familiar to any Jew of that century (or this): the Ark of the Covenant (aron kodesh), eternal light (ner tamid), seven-branched candelabrum (menorah), palm frond (lulav), citron (etrog), and an incense shovel (mahta).2

Jewish worship show pagan symbols decorating a synagogue

Many of the symbols included in the uppermost mosaic panel reaffirmed the Jewish nature of the synagogue at Beth Alpha: the Ark of the Covenant at the center (aron kodesh), eternal light (ner tamid), two seven-branched candelabra (menorot; plural, menorah), palm frond (lulav), citron (etrog), and an incense shovel (mahta). From these items it takes the type name of a synagogue panel.

Then, in a third panel, closer to the front door, they uncovered a scene easily recognizable to anyone who knows the Bible. We are in Genesis 22, and Abraham is about to sacrifice Isaac. In case we might have forgotten our Bible class, the names of the principals—Abraham, Isaac and the ram—are spelled out in inscriptions above their heads, and the hand of God stopping the sacrifice is clearly marked with the words “do not put forth your hand [against the lad].”

Genesis story in Jewish worship

In the lower rectangular panel, closer to the door, the familiar story of Genesis 22 is depicted on the mosaic. Abraham is preparing to sacrifice Isaac (at right) as the hand of God reaches from heaven to stop him. Nearby the ram is caught with its horns in a thicket, and a servant waits at far left with the donkey. This type of scene came to be known as a righteous ancestors panel and is found in several other synagogue mosaics.

 


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So this was definitely a synagogue, a Jewish house of worship, in a basilica building that dates to about 520 C.E.3 The building was destroyed in an earthquake soon after it was built,4 hence the near-perfect preservation of its mosaic floor; their misfortune became our good fortune. And because Beth Alpha is the best preserved of the seven synagogues we know, we use it here as the basis for our discussion.5


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Now, of course, we have problems. We know that Jewish life moved to the Galilee after the total destruction of Jewish Jerusalem that followed the Bar-Kokhba Revolt of the 130s C.E. We are, therefore, not surprised to have found—and to keep finding—synagogues from the following centuries all over the Galilee and Golan. It isn’t the synagogues themselves that are the problem; it is the decorations in them. What in heaven’s name were they doing? How could they be making pictures, especially in the synagogue? Didn’t they know the second commandment?

You shall not make for yourself a graven image or any likeness of what is in the heavens above or on the earth below or in the waters under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them” (Exodus 20:4–5)

That problem is not as formidable as it first appears. The second commandment can be read in several ways because the Hebrew original of this text is entirely without vowels and punctuation points. We, writing English, have put in a period after the word “earth.”6 But if the period weren’t there, the verse could be read as a long conditional clause: “make no graven images … which you worship.” In this case it’s not the making that is prohibited, but the worshiping. Historically, the Jewish community often understood that it was acceptable to make images as long as one doesn’t worship them. And there is, consequently, a long and varied history of Jewish art, beginning with the cherubim over the Ark in the desert (Exodus 25:18), recorded presumably not long after the giving of the Commandments, and without protest.

A second problem is less easily resolved. The zodiac is pagan religion. It is what we see in the horoscope in every weekend newspaper on earth, generally the stuff of amusement. We know this system; it is based on the (extraordinary) assumption that the stars control the earth and that what happens on earth is a result of influences from what happens in the sky. All we need in order to understand the earth (that is, about our destiny) is to understand the stars. If, according to this view, one knows the exact date and time of one’s birth, and can chart the exact position of the heavenly bodies at that moment, then forevermore one knows what is fortunate, unfortunate, worth doing, worth avoiding, wise, unwise, etc. Our universe, therefore, is fixed and determined. There are no values, no good, no evil and no repentance. We live in a great mechanical machine of a cosmos.

The conflict of interest is obvious, and we are not surprised to learn that Jews detested that idea. For if the cosmos is like that, why do we need God giving the Law to Moses on Mt. Sinai? The Christians also had their own very strong reservations. If the cosmos is like that, who needed God to sacrifice His son for the sins of the world? Who indeed? The early Church in fact absolutely prohibited the making of zodiacs, and there is not one zodiac mosaic in a church that dates before the Middle Ages, and very few even then. The zodiac/horoscope perception is the antithesis and enemy of monotheistic religion. An ancient and honorable enemy, to be sure, far older than Judaism and Christianity, but still the enemy.


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It is true that one who goes through Jewish literature with a fine-tooth comb can find a citation here and there that seems to recognize the phenomenon of mosaic decoration, presumably zodiac, in synagogues. “In the days of Rabbi Abun they began depicting figures in mosaic and he did not protest against it.”7 More to the point, we find a line in Aramaic translation, “… you may place a mosaic pavement impressed with figures and images in the floors of synagogue; but not for bowing down to it.”8 There is even a Midrash that attempts to justify the zodiac phenomenon: “The Holy One, Blessed be He, said to him [Abraham]: just as the zodiac [mazalot] surrounds me, and my glory is in the center, so shall your descendants multiply and camp under many flags, with my shekhina in the center.”9

But this is surely grasping at straws. The odd line here and there accounts for nothing in view of the overwhelming opposition in rabbinic literature to anything related to the making of pictures of any sort, and doubly so the fierce opposition to anything suggesting idolatry and pagan worship. Indeed, one of the ways to say “pagan” in rabbinical Hebrew is by the abbreviation עכומ[ (ovedei kokhavim u-mazalot, “worshipers of stars and constellations”). The rabbis of the Talmud recognized the popularity of astrology and were even prepared to admit that there might be truth in its predictions, but opposed the whole endeavor on principle. Ein mazal le-Yisrael (literally, “Israel has no constellation”) is perhaps the most commonly quoted opinion on the subject,10 but it is only one of many.

All the more are we astonished by the figure of Helios, Sol Invictus, pagan god of the sun, riding his quadriga right through the middle of the synagogue! This doesn’t look like it belongs here. And we need to ask again, what was this all about?

To set our minds at rest (for the time being), we can say what all this wasn’t. It could not have been astrology (predicting the future, etc.) and it could not have been scientific astronomy, because the seasons in the corners are in the wrong places. The upper right corner at Beth Alpha is marked טבת (Tevet), the winter month, and the upper left corner ניסן (Nissan) the month of Passover in spring. But between them you have the zodiac sign of Cancer, the Crab, which falls in mid-summer, not early spring. The same thing with the sign for Libra, the Scales. The mosaic has placed it between the spring and summer seasons, whereas it belongs in the fall. Clumsy astronomy.

The conclusion is inescapable: whoever did this mosaic hadn’t a clue about real astronomy or astrology, doubtless because he was a Jew and couldn’t care less.11

For the same reason, this mosaic floor could not have been a calendar, an idea that has been suggested by several important scholars of the subject.12 The incorrect placement of the seasons would have made that completely impossible.

Then perhaps it’s all just decoration, pretty pictures, the common designs of the era. That is the most common explanation, the one found in guide books. But it can’t be true. In the first place, the designs were by no means common in the Byzantine era. The Church, as stated, absolutely banned their use. More important, these signs are too loaded with meaning. We might argue “pretty pictures” if Beth Alpha were a solitary, unique find. We could then, at best, say that we had found here a group of Jews who had become so Hellenized that they had slipped over into paganism. But Beth Alpha is not unique; we will visit half a dozen other synagogues before we’re done. In addition, we have found hundreds of Jewish tombstones and catacombs from all over the Roman Empire. And despite the fact that there are countless millions of possible symbols, forms, designs, pictures, animals, etc. they could have used, the fact is that they all use the same 10-12 symbols.13 We are forced to conclude that these were more than pretty pictures.


Were there synagogues before the Romans destroyed the Temple, or did they develop only afterward? Find out by reading “Ancient Synagogues in Israel and the Diaspora” in Bible History Daily.


The Other Three Of “The Big Four”

 

zodiac wheel in a synagogue

Another stunning mosaic was unearthed at the Hammath Tiberias synagogue. It contains a beautifully executed zodiac wheel (interrupted by a later wall on top) and a synagogue panel, but no righteous ancestors theme. Credit: Garo Nalbandian

mosaic with pagan zodiac symbols

In the Hammath Tiberias square mosaic panel containing the zodiac wheel, the four corners are marked with depictions of the four seasons in the corner, as seen here.

Hammath Tiberias is the second most famous (and the most technically accomplished) mosaic synagogue floor.14 We have a zodiac wheel in the middle of the floor,15 a rendering of Helios riding his quadriga through the heavens in the central circle, the seasons in the corners, and the synagogue panel above, between the zodiac and the bema of the synagogue. There is no depiction of the righteous ancestors theme, as there was with Abraham at Beth Alpha.16

Tin pedi synagogue

The synagogue at Ein Gedi contains a mosaic that is even more complete than those at Beth Alpha and Hammath Tiberias, although relatively simpler in decoration. All of the usual elements are present—as well as some new ones—but in written form rather than figural depictions.

Actually, the synagogue at Ein Gedi17 (recently opened as a National Park) is more complete than those of Beth Alpha and Hammath Tiberias. All the elements we usually look for—and some new ones—are here, in mosaic on the floor. Except that they are all in lists. There are no pictures here at all. We have a list of all of the signs of the zodiac. The ancestors (Adam, Seth, Enosh, Keinan, etc.) are listed,18 as are “Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, shalom” and three new righteous ones we haven’t seen before: Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah19 have been added for good measure. The other interesting new element in Ein Gedi is the identification of the zodiac signs with the months of the Hebrew calendar.2 We didn’t see that at Beth Alpha or Hammath Tiberias.

 

Inscriptions, instead of pictures, cover the floor of the Ein Gedi synagogue mosaic. All the signs of the zodiac are listed (and for the first time associated with the corresponding months of the Hebrew calendar), as well as a long list of righteous ancestors, from Adam, Seth and Enosh, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah.

Inscriptions, instead of pictures, cover the floor of the Ein Gedi synagogue mosaic. All the signs of the zodiac are listed (and for the first time associated with the corresponding months of the Hebrew calendar), as well as a long list of righteous ancestors, from Adam, Seth and Enosh, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah.

That leads us to the newest of the synagogue zodiac discoveries, the synagogue at Zippori (Sepphoris) in the lower Galilee.21 Discovered only in 1993, this floor is the most elaborate of the seven floors we know and contains items not to be found in any of the others. Unhappily, it is in a very bad state of preservation and most scenes are only fragmentary.

The synagogue at Zippori (Sepphoris) provided the most recent of the zodiac mosaic discoveries, although unfortunately it is not very well preserved. In the center of the zodiac wheel, Helios once again drives his four-horse chariot, but rather than the figure of a man, the god is depicted as the sun itself.

The zodiac is elegant indeed. Each constellation has its own name and the name of its corresponding calendar month written right in the panel. So, for example, we find Scorpio (עקרב) together with its Hebrew month Heshvan (חשון), Sagittarius (קשת) together with Kislev (כסלו), and so forth.

 

As at Ein Gedi, each sign of the zodiac at Zippori is associated with the corresponding month of the Hebrew calendar, both written in Hebrew. In the close-ups at top, Scorpio shares a panel with the month Heshvan (above), while Sagittarius is together with the month Kislev. The close-ups at right show the seasons in the four corners, as we have seen elsewhere, but here they are labeled with both Greek and Hebrew inscriptions.

As at Ein Gedi, each sign of the zodiac at Zippori is associated with the corresponding month of the Hebrew calendar, both written in Hebrew. In the close-ups at top, Scorpio shares a panel with the month Heshvan (above), while Sagittarius is together with the month Kislev. The close-ups at right show the seasons in the four corners, as we have seen elsewhere, but here they are labeled with both Greek and Hebrew inscriptions.

There are seasons in each of the four corners, but a new element has been added here too: Greek inscriptions defining the seasons in addition to the Hebrew ones we have seen before. And, as in Beth Alpha and Ein Gedi, the righteous ancestor theme has been well and truly represented. Again we find Abraham binding Isaac. The scenes are very poorly preserved, but we have a fragment of the ram caught in the thicket and at least part of the picture of two servants holding the ass (Genesis 22:5) while Abraham and his son went off to Moriah. Helios rides his quadriga in the central circle but, extraordinarily, there is no male figure in the picture; just the sun itself driving the chariot.

Although poorly preserved, the Zippori synagogue mosaic clearly contained a panel of the binding of Isaac to complete the righteous ancestors theme. All that remains are fragments showing the servants holding the donkey (above) and the ram caught in the thicket.

The synagogue panel, divided here into three sections, is quite well preserved. The two candelabra flank the Ark of the Covenant with the ram’s horn, palm frond and citron, and incense shovel in place below. The Zippori synagogue floor, however, provides several other elements not found elsewhere: scenes of the ornaments, instruments and sacrifices of the Temple and an additional (very fragmentary) scene of the angels visiting Abraham and Sarah (Genesis 18). Pity it’s all in such bad condition. And how fortunate we have been to have found Beth Alpha so perfectly preserved!

Unlike much of the rest of the Zippori mosaic, the synagogue panel, divided here into three sections, is quite well preserved. The two candelabra flank the Ark of the Covenant with the ram’s horn, palm frond and citron, and incense shovel in place below. Credit: Gabi Laron/Courtesy Zeev Weiss

These are the “Big Four” sites we needed to visit. There are three others that are very fragmentary indeed-some destroyed or changed in antiquity, others looted and destroyed in modern times, some both.


Read Hershel Shanks’s First Person column “The Sun God in the Synagogue” on Bible History Daily for free.


The “Little Three”

Little remains of the synagogue at Na’aran, which was discovered when a Turkish artillery shell fell on the spot during World War I, revealing the mosaic. Much of the mosaic was badly defaced, but enough was found to suggest the presence of the zodiac wheel, including Helios in his chariot (only one wheel remains), the four seasons in the corners, and the Ark flanked by candelabra.

Very little is left of the synagogue at Na’aran, now in the Palestinian Authority area some 5 km northwest of Jericho.22 Hardly surprising, the mosaic floor was discovered when the British army was camped in Na’aran during the First World War and a Turkish artillery shell fell on the spot, uncovering the mosaic!23 There was a zodiac wheel here once, and one sees the lines dividing the panels, but the panels themselves have been defaced. One may find remains of the claws of Cancer, the Crab, and at least one other sign, Aries, is identifiable because the caption is preserved even though the picture is gone.24 Old Helios is gone too, but we find one wheel of his chariot (older pictures by archaeologists show two wheels) in the central circle. There were four seasons in the four corners, badly defaced, and two candelabra flanking the Ark were seen by Père Vincent, excavator of the site, who sketched them at the time.25

 

The mosaic at Na’aran was badly damaged, but one can still make out the legs of Cancer on the zodiac wheel (left) and one of the four seasons in the corner of the square panel (right).

The mosaic at Na’aran was badly damaged, but one can still make out the legs of Cancer on the zodiac wheel (left) and one of the four seasons in the corner of the square panel (right).

Even less remains in Sussiya. This is a mysterious place, a large Jewish town high in the Judean hills south of Hebron on the way to Beersheba. It is a town without a name and without a history—we use the Arabic name for the place for lack of an alternative—but it was a big place and it lasted a long time. Very odd. The synagogue building, large and well built, also lasted a long time, and that longevity was the undoing of its mosaic floor. Fashions change, and when it was no longer acceptable to put pictures in synagogues,26 the floor was ripped out and a new “carpet” of geometric patterns, itself changed and repaired over time, was laid in its place. But there was a zodiac wheel here; a piece of the outer arc of the wheel is still in place. And we know the building was a synagogue because at least two elements we recognize from other places, the candelabra and the Ark, are still quite recognizable. The survival of a fragment of the righteous ancestors panel is even more unexpected. But it is indeed there on the floor: the tail of an animal and two Hebrew letters “-el” (אל). Surely that is Daniel in the lions’ den.

 

The sussiya building was identified as a synagogue because the so-called synagogue panel of the mosaic was still quite visible, containing the Ark flanked by two candelabra.

The well-built synagogue at Sussiya lasted for a long time, which was ultimately the downfall of some of its mosaics. As tastes changed, new mosaic floors were paved over the old one. Still, there are glimpses of the traditional elements, such as the inner circle (now filled with a rosette, not Helios) and a portion of the outer arc of the zodiac wheel (visible a few feet below the inner circle).

Barely a hint of the righteous ancestors panel remains at Sussiya, but the tail of a lion and the end of a Hebrew inscription “-el” is enough to reconstruct the scene of Daniel in the lions’ den.

We have nearly reached the end of our survey. One more site is left, and it is so obscure that only the smallest fraction of the synagogue mosaic remains. The area was a construction site in the Druze village of Usifiyya, east of Haifa on Mt. Carmel.27 A mosaic synagogue inscription, flanked by two candelabra,28 was discovered during construction, together with one corner of a zodiac wheel. The smiling face of one of the seasons, not identified by an inscription, and a piece of two zodiac panels— one of them obviously Cancer, the other unidentifiable—are all that’s left of the zodiac.

The last example of a synagogue zodiac mosaic consists of only a few fragments. This corner from the square panel shows the smiling face of the one of the seasons in the corner, as well as the edges of two zodiac segments, one of which can be identified as Cancer (the other is unclear).

A Search for Meaning

What have we found? We have found seven places in Israel where Jews put zodiac wheels, Helios, the four seasons, a panel of synagogue objects, and sometimes remembrance of righteous ancestors in mosaic on the floor of their synagogues. For the record, we have never found a zodiac in a Jewish context outside of Israel, and every zodiac found in Israel was in a synagogue.
That fact tells us what we already knew: that these zodiacs were certainly not just decorations or pretty pictures. Nor were they attempts at astrology (predicting the future) or astronomy. The Ark, candelabrum, shofar, etc. were put in synagogues (and on tombstones, lintels, doorposts and catacombs), the most serious of places for the Jewish community. And the inscriptions on the zodiacs themselves were invariably in Hebrew, even if the common languages of the day, Aramaic or Greek were added. That is, the zodiacs were important and meant something to the people who made them. The question is: What? It is time to suggest some conclusions.

The evidence indicates that we are in the presence of a mystical Hellenistic-Byzantine Jewish tradition, a tradition that Talmudic Judaism either ignored or suppressed,29 a tradition we would not know anything about (for it left no literature) were it not for the discovery of this artwork, these symbols.30 The mosaics are in fact the literature of the movement. We need to learn how to read them.

Historically, the mosaics were made at a time when what is sometimes called normative, or Talmudic, Judaism—the Judaism of the rabbis—was just developing. And it was going a different way.31 We might say that Talmudic Judaism was moving horizontally: A man walks a path, with God giving him the Law to tell him what to do and what not to do, how to stay straight on the path and not stray off. God is pleased when man obeys and angry when he disobeys. This is the religion of the Hebrew Bible, and it is what normative Judaism became in the Talmud, the Middle Ages and, for the most part, up to our own time.

But there was, and still is, a different kind of religion, much older than the Judaism we have just described. We can call it vertical. Men always knew that their life depended on higher powers. First and most obvious, life depended on nature—on seed and growth, rain, sun, moon, land, wind and fire. That was natural religion; it was what primitive man did. It was only a short step from there to making each of these elements into a god. Ancient man thus prayed to rain and sacrificed to earth, worshiped the moon and adored the sun.


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The cosmos was chaotic at first. The gods were busy having arguments (and orgies) with each other. In between the arguments they could torture and abuse men, and seduce women as they liked. But nature became orderly as the Greeks developed science—biology, astronomy and physics—and tamed the cosmos. They defined the forces influencing other forces; wind influences clouds, clouds influence rain, rain influences earth, and earth influences men. Thus the ladder of cosmic power was taking shape.

On this issue there is bad news and good news. The bad news is that the regular cycle of nature was pretty grim, not to mention completely predestined. There was no good and no evil—no value—which is why the Jews never bought into it. The good news is that the cosmos was also consoling. Nature was no longer random or dependent on the whim of the gods. Indeed, the regularity of the cycle of growth and death and rebirth in nature did give hope for immortality.32 And when Greek philosophy, following Plato, organized the forms and powers into a proper hierarchy, with the Highest Form, the First Uncaused Cause, being God, then the spiritual ladder was firmly in place.

And that, we suggest, is what they were doing by walking into the synagogue. We see the worshipers climbing the mystical ladder from the mundane and transient things down here at the entrance—who made the floor, when, and how much it cost—to a union with God at His holy Ark up there at the far end.

The first step was through our righteous ancestors. Their good deeds atone for our sins.34 Then, as we walk farther into the synagogue, we begin to climb the ladder, encountering the earth and its seasons. We are among friends; the seasons have friendly, sometimes smiling, women’s faces. We progress even higher, through the stars and constellations (the Hebrew word mazal, “constellation,” means luck). But the vertical path of Jewish mysticism is beyond luck, beyond the stars. It is beyond even the strongest and most fearful of all natural powers, the sun. Here is the sun, indeed at the center of the universe, in a chariot controlled by a charioteer,35 in a vision recalling Ezekiel’s vision of the divine chariot (Ezekiel 1). The charioteer is God,36 in control of the four horses, over and above the stars and the constellations, that is, over fate and destiny. This is the God who rules over the moon and the seasons, the rain, the land and the elements. Four elements like the four horses: earth, air, fire and water. This is the God who has graciously made a covenant and given Torah to His people Israel, whose sins are atoned for by the righteousness of their ancestors.

And that understanding brought the worshiper to the holy symbols of the synagogue, which is God’s house. That is why, in all of the synagogue mosaic panels37 depicting the symbols of God’s house, the Ark of the Covenant is always in the center of its panel, and the panel is always located right at the foot of the Ark itself.

We have come through our stages of ascent. We are in front of the Ark, the dwelling place of God’s Torah. Yet the door is always closed. God, inside, is still a mystery. But our long mystical journey to salvation is almost over.

All uncredited photos courtesy of the author.


Walter Zanger is a well-known Israeli tour guide who is often featured on Israeli TV.


 

Notes:

1. E.L. Sukenik, The Ancient Synagogue of Beth-Alpha, (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, 1932)
2. The incense shovel was a universally recognized Jewish symbol in the Byzantine era. It disappeared from the Jewish iconographic lexicon because the Jews stopped using incense when the Christians started.
3. The Aramaic inscription at the front door was damaged. It says that the mosaic was made “during the … year of the reign of the emperor Justinus”. The exact year is missing. The reference is probably to the emperor Justin I (adopted uncle and immediate predecessor of Justinian the Great) who ruled from 518-527 C.E. and whose coins were found on the site. It is of course possible that the building was older than the mosaic floor.
4. The earliest possible “candidate” was a major quake that hit the country on July 9, 551. It was the earthquake that finally destroyed Petra. More likely was an earthquake of lesser magnitude but located closer to the site which did great damage to the Jordan Valley in 659/660.
5. We have not entered into a discussion of the artistic merits of this work of art. It is the writer’s opinion that this work, with its naive and primitive style, has a child-like immediacy and freshness that makes it one of the masterpieces of world art.
6. Thus the new JPS Tanakh. The King James translation puts a colon after the word “earth”, while the New American Bible (Catholic) and the Revised Standard Version (Protestant) translations both use a semi-colon instead of period at this point.
7. From a Geniza manuscript of JT Avoda Zarah
8. In the Pseudo-Jonathan Targum to Lev. 26:1
9. From a Geniza fragment of Midrash Deut. Rabba) These quotations are cited by Michael Klein, “Palestinian Targum and Synagogue Mosaics,” Jerusalem, Immanuel 11 (1980)
10. The matter is discussed in BT Shabbat, 156a
11. At Beth Alpha the signs and the seasons both progress counter-clockwise, although they are misaligned. The Hammat Tiberias zodiac shows both signs and seasons also rotating counter-clockwise, and in correct alignment with each other. At Na’aran the seasons run counter-clockwise, as above, but the signs go clockwise!
12. That position was argued by Prof. Avi-Yonah, among many others, and by the excavator of Hammat Tiberias. See Moshe Dothan, Hammath Tiberias, (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1983). Hammat Tiberias is the only mosaic we know where the signs and seasons are correctly aligned, which may have influenced the excavator’s judgment as to its purpose
13. The cataloging of all of these finds and the interpretation of what they might mean constitute the magnum opus of Erwin Goodenough (1893-1965), Professor of Religion at Yale and one of the greatest scholars of religion America ever produced. Goodenough’s 13 volume study, E.R. Goodenough, Jewish Symbols in the Greco-Roman Period, (New York: Pantheon, 1958), form the core text for the study of this subject, Everyone who has subsequently dealt with the subject is in his debt. The book has been re-issued in a 1-volume paperback, abridged and edited by Jacob Neusner (Princeton: Bollingen Series, 1988)
14. Dothan, op cit. See endnote 6, above.
15. We are amazed to discover that later generations built a wall right through the middle of the zodiac!
16. A complete description of the 4 mosaics known at the time of publication: Beth Alpha, Hammat Tiberias, Na’aran and Usifiyya, together with a comprehensive bibliography, may be found in Rachel Hachlili, “The Zodiac in Ancient Jewish Art,” Bulletin of the American Society for Biblical Research, 228, (1977) , pp. 61-77
17. Dan Barag, Yosef Porat and Ehud Netzer, “The Synagogue at ‘Ein Gedi”, Ancient Synagogues Revealed, (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1981), pp. 116-119.
18. The text is copied from I Chron. 1:1
19. They are the 3 “children in the fiery furnace”, Shadrach, Mishach and Abednego, in the book of Daniel.
20. There are, of course, many groups of 12 in the Bible and throughout ancient literature: 12 sons of Jacob, 12 tribes of Israel, 12 disciples of Jesus, 12 signs of the zodiac, 12 months of the year, etc.
21. The synagogue floor is thoroughly discussed in Ze’ev Weiss and others, The Sepphoris Synagogue, (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 2005), In this writer’s opinion, however, the authors have completely missed the point by beginning at the top, the Ark and the holy synagogue objects, and working their way back out the front door. The spiritual progression which we discuss requires exactly the opposite course.
22. The Bible called the place both Na’arah (Joshua 16:7) and Na’aran (I Chronicles 7:28). Josephus knew it as Nearah (Antiquities. book 17, ch. 13, para. 1) and the Talmud called it Na’arah (Lamentations R.1:17 No 52)
23. The site was examined in 1919 by the British staff archaeologist, studied again by Père Vincent & M.J. Lagrange in 1921, and published by Prof. Sukenik in his book on Beth Alpha (see endnote 1, above)
24.The Hebrew word is טלה (taleh), which in modern Hebrew means lamb. But it was always used for the Ram in the zodiac.
25. This writer has seen the remains of a figure of a man, 2 arms raised to heaven , with the inscription “Dani[el] shalom”. But that fragment is not to be found on the site any more. The menorot are said to be at the École Biblique in Jerusalem
26. The iconoclastic movement in Judaism and Christianity was certainly in influenced by the uncompromising iconoclasm of militant Islam. But the trend in Judaism may have been a parallel rather than a dependent development.
27. The remains of site, identified as ancient Huseifa, were excavated in 1933 and published the following year by Prof. Michael Avi-Yonah and M. Makhouly in The Quarterly of the Department of Antiquities in Palestine, 3, 1934.
28. The inscription, which is incomplete, reads שלום על ישראל (shalom al yisrael), and is on display in the Rockefeller Museum in Jerusalem. The zodiac fragment is in the collection of the Hebrew University, Jerusalem.
29. Only the works of Philo and Josephus, together with some mystical apocalypses, survive as the literature from the Hellenistic Jewish world. They survive because of the Christians, who preserved them, not the Jews, who ignored them. There is no other mystical literature from the period of the mosaic making which might help us understand what the mosaic makers meant to say.
30. It would be a safe bet to say that 9 out of 10 Jews living today (especially orthodox Jews) don’t know, and never knew, that such a Judaism ever existed.
31. This formulation, from Goodenough (q.v.), ch. 1, has been extraordinarily useful to this writer.
32. The Jews were not much interested in immortality, but everybody else was!
33. We are not surprised to discover that the oldest known manifestation of what we might call “religion” is the decorated skull of an ancestor found under the floor of a house in pre-pottery Neolithic Jericho.
34. There are any number of examples of pious Jews venerating the tombs of saints and forefathers. A visit to any tomb of a holy man in the Galilee, to Elijah’s cave on Mt. Carmel, or indeed to a cemetery where someone of special interest to one or another Hassidic group is buried provides a fascinating glimpse into a Judaism which we of the liberated western world did not know still existed.
35. The origin and symbolism of the Divine quadriga and its connection to merkava mysticism are discussed in a monograph by James Russell in the Jewish Studies Quarterly, vol. 4, no. 4, (Tubingen 1997).
36. We recall that in the Zippori zodiac the quadriga is driven by the sun itself, without the figure of a man. Compare Is.60:19ff.
37. Some ancient synagogues, as in Beth-Shean, show only the synagogue panel without any of the other elements.


This Bible History Daily article was originally published on August 24, 2012.


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61 Responses

  1. Robert Mandel says:

    After the destruction of the Temples by Greek and Roman armies, the Jews turned to Traditional Rabbical Judaism by their captors teaching them idol worship. To this day, the orthodox Jewish communites use Roman amulets, head covers (like the Pope and his people) and pads on their arms and hands. Ezekiel 13:18-21 speaks of G-d’s anger that the covenant people have been led astray. The Creator has brought wars, pogroms, plagues, holocausts, and continued antisemitism because of the continued belief in men who reinterpreted His Torah. “and say: Thus said the Sovereign GOD: Woe to those who sew pads on all arm-joints and make covers for the head of every person, in order to entrap! Can you hunt down lives among My people, while you preserve your own lives? You have profaned My name among My people in return for handfuls of barley and morsels of bread; you have announced the death of persons who will not die and the survival of persons who will not live—lying to My people, who listen to your lies. Assuredly, thus said the Sovereign GOD: I am going to deal with your pads, by which you hunt down lives like birds, and I will tear them from your arms and free the persons whose lives you hunt down like birds.

  2. David Wray says:

    Michael Molnar uncovered the numismatic key to Jewish and Early Christian Astrology, which David Wray explored further and Prof. James Tabor posted on his blog and on YouTube. Look up these lectures if you’d really like to understand how astrology and religion coexisted in the first half of the first century and were used to convey spiritual meaning. A huge amount of information about Early religion can be found in these symbols when you abandon modern prejudices about ancient Jews and Christians and look at the symbols with an open mind. Look for Tabor and Wray on YouTube! You will be surprised what has been uncovered!!!

  3. […] Walter Zanger, “Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols”, Biblical Archaeology Society. […]

  4. […] Walter Zanger, “Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols”, Biblical Archaeology Society. […]

  5. ndm says:

    So, paganism is embedded in all religions, including Judaism of the old.

    1. Kitty says:

      Paganism has always been a problem, even today. As far as the Zodiac goes, they were used as identifiers. It’s not astrology where one worships the stars. See Joseph’s dream, Gen. 37:8-11

  6. David says:

    It’s nice to read a piece by Walter; I used to enjoy his biblical commentary on documentaries, and was motivated to look him up.
    I was sorry to see that he had passed away two years ago.

  7. Gwen says:

    Great article…will anyone be conducting future research about what the zodiacs meant to the Jewish people?

  8. romad says:

    Monotheistic Judaism evolved out of a polytheistic culture. Out of the many gods and goddesses of the older ancient religion, one god, Yaweh, and one goddess, Astarte/Ashera replaced all the others. Then, as the religion became more patriarchal, the goddess figure was minimized and eventually discarded.

    BTW, this also happened in Islam but at a much faster and more deliberate pace. When Mohammad decided to start a new religion, he took his basis from Monotheistic Judaism and selected one of the gods, Allah, from the pantheon of polytheistic Arabian culture.

  9. Jessie Yehudi says:

    The problem is when you have people assuming that Jews in any way think/ believe like Christians. Judaism is a religion that is RADICALLY different in ALL ways than Christianity. Judaism has many many many ideas in it that can be seen or perceived by someone unfamiliar with Judaism in one way even though it is not that way. Zodiacs in a synagogue — surprise — NO BIGGY. So long as Jews don’t WORSHIP those symbols and there is no indication that they did, there is nothing antithetical to Judaism about it. This is simply a celebration of GOD/ UNIVERSE/ EXPANSION/ nature and all that is in it. Period. Jews celebrate the new moon — surprise. Jews celebrate on the full moon. Surprise. Jews celebrate in the Spring. Surprise. Jews celebrate the first fruits of the harvest season. Surprise. etc. etc. The Torah and Psalms is full of celebration of this world and nature and all that is in it.

  10. David says:

    The flimsy straw theoretical edifice constructed by this author is ridiculous. The descriptions of the mosaics are great; the author’s conclusions, unfounded. As has been said in these comments, astrology was part of the Jewish cosmology – at least since the Second Temple, if not earlier. Having a zodiac in the synagogue merely portrays it as part of G-d’s plan and order in creation.

  11. Silent Eagle says:

    Biblical Numerology & Confirmations
    Subject Matter: The Future Queen of Israel
    “Prophecy” in Jewish Gematria Equals 666
    “Ophir” in Jewish Gematria Equals 207
    666 – 207 = 459
    Psalm 45:9 (Cross Reference Passages: Luke 24:44 Hebrews 1:8,9)

  12. Karl says:

    Here is a brief article discussing the entry “Star Worship” from the Jewish Encyclopedia along with many citations to biblical references in one of the best books on this subject I’ve ever read:

    Star Worship of the Ancient Israelites
    http://astrotheology.net/star-worship-of-the-ancient-israelites/

    This article and book should be widely circulated.

  13. Shiloh says:

    Why does the church refuse to acknowledge that The Queen in Gold of Ophir in Psalm 45:9 is an actual historical figure? There is a stronger case outlined in The Bible to prove her actual historical existence than there is to disprove it. The church claims this Queen represents and symbolizes the bride of christ, the church. The church’s interpretation of Psalm 45 is pure speculation and guess work. In Genesis 10:29, there is a reference to Joktan’s 11th son “Ophir”. From a practical, rational, literal approach, this Queen in Psalm 45:9 seems to be a direct descendant of Joktan’s 11th son Ophir in Genesis 10:29. How can the church continue to dispute this and ignore these passages? The Queen in Gold of Ophir is The King’s consort (Psalm 45:9,10,11) What’s so hard to figure out? Approaching scripture with preconceived ideas and notions can lead to unsubstantiated assumptions and inaccurate conclusions. Beware of false teachers with large ministries. “Did not Solomon send ships to Ophir to fetch gold? 1st Kings 9:26,27,28. There are many scriptures in the Bible that mentions “Ophir” and yet the church refuses to acknowledge these passages in reference to The Queen in Gold of Ophir. As a matter of fact, it’s never even mentioned or discussed. Why? Because it’s not part of the agenda.

  14. Synagogue of satan - Christian Chat Rooms & Forums says:

    […] think it may have more to do with what they found in some synagogues Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols – Biblical Archaeology Society God is not the God of the dead, but the living. Matt.22:32 Reply With […]

  15. yosef says:

    the tanach(old testament) makes it preety clear that idol worship was always a massive and rampant problem in isreal so the discovery of idols in isreal should come as no suprise to anyone nor mean anything in fact a lack of idols would be a problem

  16. Jean Stanley says:

    Dont you know that God created the Zodiac r8ght from the beginning this is why it is shown in ancient hebrew findings. Its all about the gospel story of a virgin giving birth to a son that would one day rule the world. So its not pagan but goes back further when God created all the stars.

    1. Right you are! It’s the “gospel in the stars” and has been described very well by many commentators, including D. James Kennedy. It has been “hi-jacked” by the astrologers and for too many folks has lost its truthful story.

  17. Kurt says:

    What Are Pagan Deities Doing on the Floors of Ancient Synagogues?
    What is astonishing at [two of the best-preserved synagogue mosaics] is the large centerpiece, depicting the wheel of the zodiac, a blatantly Hellenistic-Roman device. It is populated with human figures, seemingly in defiance of the Second Commandment. Four female figures, representing the four seasons of the year (often with their season’s bounty at hand), inhabit the corners of the square frame. Several of the twelve signs of the zodiac are human, with two in [the synagogue at] Hammat Tiberias—Libra and Aquarius—fully naked.
    But the real surprise lies at the center of the wheel. Here, in the very heart of the synagogues, is a representation of Helios, the Greek sun god, in the form of a charioteer, whip in hand, riding his four-horse quadriga across the sky. What is the image doing here? . . .
    http://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/2015/01/what-are-pagan-deities-doing-on-the-floors-of-ancient-synagogues/

  18. Dennis Studd says:

    An interesting series of comments; to begin with, the modern astrology of newspapers is very different form to that of the Magi, for example, who were astrologers, not kings. Their knowledge of the stars was on a priestly scale, since they were among the most knowledgable in this field.
    Very briefly, the zodiac itself is an image of the relationship between our planet and the rest of the Universe, as it is affected by the moon’s gravitational pull.
    The Moon not only affects the tides, but also the Earth”s axis, which wobbles like a spinning top. This produces the natural process called precession [sometimes called precession of the equinoxes]. The great year lasts about 25690 yrs, and is used as the outer circle of the zodiac. The constellations appear in reversed order [retrograde motion] in the order shown in the twelve sections of what is essentially a star map. Each section lasts about 2100 years.
    The zodiac is not satanic, it is not pagan, it is just a picture of what happens naturally to our planet. The names of the constellations change on a language basis, but all have similar meanings.
    The people who wrote the Bible did not know that Earth was a planet orbiting the Sun. They thought that the Earth was flat, and that the Sun orbits the Earth, just as the Catholic Church did for centuries.
    In case you are wondering, I have been a Christian for over forty-five years.

  19. Winnie says:

    The problem here is the complete ignorance of Judaism. Astrology has always had a place within Judaism, though it is prohibited to use astrology to look at the future. Go educate yourselves. It is christians who are the pagans with their dying and rising magical sin eating man god and who think the statement ‘G-d is One’ is about numbers. There is nothing beside G-d. That includes the heavens and the stars, morons.

  20. marshall silva (not related to Flavius Silva) says:

    Israel si the most intricate history in the world? You must be joking truely, not serious are you? Look at the bust of Nefrititi done 1330BC & these poor folks could barely do stick figures, which is probably why they gave up on graven images, they lacked any skills to create any. From borrowed laws ethics, morals, proverbs, mythologies & cosmologies, if Samson isnt a knock off of Hercules verbatim by these hill tribes, i wouldn’t know what is. Or did you miss that tile fresco at the ongoing excavation at a synagogue in Huqoq? The humorous part is they refer to 500ad as “ancient”, you fellows have a very narrow view of the span of real human civilzations & emergence, Israel is a tiny grain of sand. http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/united-with-israel/ancient-mosaic-depicting-samson-uncovered-in-a-galilee-synagogue/2013/07/04/

  21. Serapio says:

    I see a different solution: The `dogma´ “it had to be Jewish; everything was written in Hebrew and Aramaic” is wrong. Despite the Bible tries to avoid to mention it, there was a multi-religious society. These `Synagoges´ where in fact temples for every local group of faith.

  22. Ana Mendibles says:

    The Hebrew people were from Mesopotamia and were idol worshippers before God Yahweh spoke to Abram. Also the zodiac calendar was used to keep the time of year it was, the Hebrews used the Constellations as forms of signs from God and to tell what season it was.

  23. Luis says:

    Did any of you stop to think that maybe Jews HAD to do this to deter Greeks and Romans into thinking that that was not a place of worship as they did with Hanukkah when they would play the dreidels on the sabbath to make it think that they were performing some kind of work? If it was really adapted as some of you mentioned then it would be haven forbid mainstream Judaism today and you would grind them in ALL synagogues.

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    Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols – Biblical Archaeology Society

  25. Johnna Houseman says:

    Also, This knowledge was passed to Abraham and down to Daniel who God had him show the Babylonians or Nebuchanezzar. The Ancient Babylonian star names are scripture of the Holy Bible as the Lunar Mansions reveal the Revelations and the Beasts of revelations 13. The beasts are governments. The beast from the sea is Islam and the beast from the earth is the U.S. government. open for correction. Our president has changed Gods law of marital relationships.he has done evil in the sight of the Lord.So God is keeping His promise Deuteronomy 32;23 I will heap disasters on them, I will spend My arrows on them. Read all of this chapter. God told us the end from the beginning. This is wordwide. The blood moons begin on the 14/15. I pray this will awake people and all find salvation. Please,this is real,it is now. I love all you and hope for all.

  26. Johnna Houseman says:

    Psalms 147:4, He made all the stars and calls them by name. Job 38:31-32, can you bind the cluster of the Pleiades, or loose the belt of Orion? Can you bring out Mazzaroth in its season? ( Mazzaroth is the Zodiac) Genesis; God created the stars on the 4th day for SIGNS, seasons,days and years. Before the Deluge, Egypt was not Egypt as he was Noahs grandson. Josephus recorded in the Antiquities of the Jews 1.2.3. of Seth down to Enoch building pillars of brick and stone inscribed with their knowledge of the celestial science revealed to them from God. The 3 Pyramids of Giza align with Orions belt and are made of brick and are exactly opposite the earth from the stone Pyramids of the Aztecs that are surrounded with the worlds largest serpents or snakes that are symbolic of satan. the 3 Giza Pyramids are a witness of God and built by Seth and his descendants and inscribed in the denderah temple and the temple of Hathor is the Zodiac. The Spynx is the key to where to begin the endless circle of the Zodiac. The head and breast of the woman is Virgo the Virgin and the body of the Lion is Leo the Lion. God commanded Moses their beginning of months would begin the month Abib,which is March -April of the Gregorian calendar and the sign Virgo. Virgo the Virgin Mary and ending with Leo the Lion of the tribe of Judah. The Denderah zodiac shows the constellation coma as the infant Jesus ( the greeks changed it to berenices hair perverting the Word of God written with the stars). This also proclaims Jesus the First and Last. The ancient Egyptians show the picture of the zodiac beginning with the Virgin and ending with Leo.This is proclaiming Gods Salvation through Christ as Godloved His people so that He would come in the flesh as Jesus for the Salvation of man. The Judgment shown in the temple of Hathor shows people going to God and in front of each being is a seal that is engraved with who the person is and their judgment. Their hearts are weighed against a feather. A bent Lotus means a man and a duck means woman. The statue found with the man on the thrown with the 2 little people,one a male has a bent lotus inscribed and the female has the duck. Since Egyptians had to use pictures to communicate you have to understand the pictures as in a duck will care for its children and comfort them and protect and lead them. The lotus drops the seed thaty brings the new plants ,male and female plants. The seed look like what they would be if they survive to adulthood. They fall to the bottom of the waters into the mud (earth) and have to grow through the dirty water if they don’t drown,symbolically growing through the world without drowning in sin, and thus the strongest breaks through the water into the sunlight on top of the water and have a waxy coating keeping off the dirty water. Saints understand the relation between this and people.These ancient Egyptians carry the cross that is open at the top. They carry their cross as they knew of the coming of Jesus. Their cross is open at the top meaning they have to go through the cross. CSome of the hieroglyphs are the short signs of the zodiac constellations in the sky.Scorpio is exactly opposite Orion as the pyramids are opposite. There is a lot more to all this but I am tired and need to take a break. blessings and peace from our Lord Jesus and God our Father and me.

  27. SMK says:

    The Jewish Religion is actually a synthesis of age-old beliefs, only crystallized in the familiar dogmatic monotheistic manner, during the reign of Josiah/Joshiyahu of Judah (641–609 BC):

    1. Moses’ god, probably Aten (also grew into the canaanite Adon), and/or Amun-Re (with Seth/Satan as an anti-god, or just a god of mischief)..

    2. Midianite/Kenite/Judaean/Moabite Polytheism (Chemosh (a local version of the widely revered Ashtarte/Ashtar/Ishtar/Aphrodite), Nebu/Nabu, Peor (a phallic god))

    3. Yahweh/Iakkhos/Bacchus/Dionysos, probably originating from a minoan prototype!

    4. El, in plural Elohim, originally the western semitic pantheon of the Canaanites, Adon, Dagon, Asherah, Lilith and the Baalim included…

  28. Mary Anne says:

    G-D made the stars and constellations for signs, seasons etc for us here on Earth. Also D.James Kennedy wrote an interesting book on the zodiac with the premise that G-D ordered the constellations, stars etc to tell the story of man, sin, virgin birth of Messiah ( from Lion), redemption, etc. before He gave the Torah to Moses. His creation was ‘very good’, but man’s sinfulness corrupts everything good and started worshipping the creation instead of the Creator. G-D’s plan and story is told in the stars. It’s very thought -provoking to say the least………

  29. David Morse says:

    From what I’ve heard, Judaism did allow for astrology; it was just forbidden to Jews. There’s a famous story in the Talmud of an astrologer who predicted that a passing man would die. When he returned, the astrologer said that he must be a Jew, since we are controlled directly by G-d and can avert an evil decree with charity.
    As for a “suppressed” Judaism, that’s more for a Dan Brown book than BAR. I’m pretty sure this article is just about artwork.

  30. Brigitte Youngblood says:

    it seems to me that I have often heard that the zodiac is just the fact of the universe’s arrangement and that each of the 12 tribes when wandering in the desert was to have its particular place around the ark (shakena glory cloud) and also direct access to it by each family. That ideal all had to be modified when the “fall” of the golden calf happened but this modification was a buffer zone separating the tabernacle from the people via the priests (meant to be temporary until the next redemptive effort (noah’s flood waters, red sea, christ’s baptism)
    That said, the tribes I have been associated with their symbol from the zodiac…Jesus is a Lion of Judah (Leo is his family line)
    the star of david is also this same arrangement of camps…12 equally spaced bits in a cielestial form (star rather than groups of stars) the cosmos figures in profoundly as the restoration of man also involves the natural works he was to dominate. This is why st thomas goes to great lengths to explain the disruptions. Just as the images issue can be resolved by the question “into what do you place your love” so also can the zodiac issue…it is always a disordered sense of love that introduces each and every sin into the world…a disordered sense of the end and final object of everything we do. Parousia is the right ordering when god will be all in all and that just means the ideal of the zodiac restored with the glory cloud in the center for each man to gaze upon. Catholics call this tabernacle the true presence.

  31. The Offense of the Cross | Aliyah of a Soul says:

    […] to Walter Zanger in “Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols,” the zodiac wheel was adapted in an alternate (and later suppressed) branch of Judaism as a […]

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  34. Howard says:

    WRONG! F- The tale of the Redeemer is outlined in the Zodiac. It is not hard information. EW Bullinger, JA Seiss, Chuck Missler and even D. James Kennedy have written on the topic. Indeed all of creation declares the glory of God. God set the stars in the sky for SIGNS.

  35. Word for word bible comic says:

    The Babylonian zodiac was adopted from the earlier Jewish traditions for details search for Chuck Misslers talks call “signs in the heavens” . It could be that these Jews had it from ancient tradition

  36. Jewish pagan symbols – zodiac mosaics in ancient synagogues | ŠAKTI says:

    […] called the Hebrew University (then all of 3 years old!) and within a fortnight Eliezer Lippa Sukenik1 and Nahman Avigad had begun to excavate the site. Work began on January 9, 1929, and continued for […]

  37. Michael Ledo says:

    The conclusion I came to in my book was that Judaism was an astro-religion, no different than any of the religions in the area. I outline every story in the OT to its corresponding constellation or stars and compare it to known cosmic myths. Until the so called scholars come to realize the OT was simply a guide to astrology, they will continue to struggle with this discovery as they have with so many others.

  38. Sharon Leighton says:

    Very interesting article. I’d like to point out that the view of astrology is biased and highly colored by later religious views. How differently the question looks when one says: Astrology teaches that when God created the earth and the stars, He graciously allowed the planetary patterns to carry information for humans for their guidance, so that they may recognize their strengths and weaknesses and learn to shape their own destinies by using the former and rising above the latter. It is, in this way, similar to the most common “fortune-telling” of our day, i.e., meteorology; when you listen to the weather forecast, you are not usually subscribing to the view of a mechanistic universe, you are simply deciding whether or not to wear a coat.

  39. David Z says:

    I’m not sure why you’re trying to invent a new religion there… There is no indication that there ever was such a religion, whether or not “suppressed” by the Talmud (which does nothing to suppress the Sadducees or Sicarii, among others). Instead, wouldn’t the simplest explanation be that it is art, albeit “telling” a story similar to the one you mention? Why on Earth invent a new heresy on such scant evidence? And one that was supposed to be parallel to normative Judaism all along (since you gave it such hoary credentials).

    As to the graven images thing, why not point out that Talmudic law (assumedly fairly accepted by that time) allows depictions of humans who are not worshiped and limits the verse to “graven images”–that is carvings. To my recollection, the Talmud specifically allows impressions (and pictures) but not reliefs or sculptures to be made. and used. Obviously some have been more strict than others over history, but this is normative Talmudic law and would certainly fit into what the schuls were doing. It’s not even a question. The issue is, as you raised, what the human forms were depicting (idols rather than forefathers).

    And on a side not. Wow. Some of those commentors are scary folk!

  40. Brent Kaufman says:

    Astrology isn’t pagan. It is, and has always been, a part of Judaism. Christianity sees it as paganism, but that is from their point of view. Christian views shouldn’t be assumed to be those of Judaism, whose theology is 180 degrees from that of Christianity.

    1. Christianity has its roots in Judaism. They are not 180 degrees opposed, They share the same true God Jahweh, and Jeshua, Christ Jesus, is the King of the Jews. The bulk of Jews (with the exception of Messianic Jews) have missed it entirely. They cling to the demands of the Law and miss out on the supply of grace!

  41. Music of the Spheres: Star of David | Bible for Love says:

    […] (For further information, see the discussion by the Biblical Archaeology Society: http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/ancient-cultures/ancient-israel/jewish-worship-pagan-symbol…). […]

  42. marilyn kohn says:

    This is by far the most helpful discussion of synagogue zodiacs in the ancient world that I have found so far.

  43. drturi says:

    Google dead sea scrolls secrets by dr. turi

  44. Jeff says:

    Or perhaps they were hiding the fact that it was a synagogue. 527 A.D. Byzantine Emperor Justin I names his nephew Justinian I as co-ruler and successor to the throne. This was a “lose-lose” proposition for the Jewish people. When Justin I assumed the throne he adopted a policy of rigorously enforcing the anti-Jewish laws promulgated by Theodosius including excluding Jews from “all posts of honor” and banning the construction of new synagogues.

  45. Jeff says:

    May 20, 526: An earthquake, with an epicenter in Syria that reportedly killed 300,000 people, is felt throughout much of the Near East including at least two towns now located in the modern state of Israel – Acre and Beit Jann. Perhaps this is the earthquake that caused the damage?

  46. david says:

    that is not a ram in the thicket as it does not have split hooves or ram horns and also looks much like a donkey.

  47. Robert says:

    1. Are we seeing the effects of Solomon’s 700 dancing girls, three temples to their Gods and the fact that Solomon’s Court was larger than the First Temple .. Solomon lost his wisdom and sinned.
    2. Zodiacs tell the story of two Nations in your Womb .. Orion and the Virgin .. Taurus the Bull is the silent vowel place holder for Adoni Himself. The place holder (Sphinx) indicates a lot about the views of the builder.
    3. The fact that there are over 3,000 Hebrew inscribed artifacts in the USA and not one major Israeli University has bothered to sail over here and study them makes me equate “Israeli Confusion” with cover up. You are not confused at all. You are a modern smoke screen LaOLam.

    I live in Idaho USA .. Yada Ho .. Praise Him and NBC will not discuss this with me or try and investigate Chief Joseph, Saakawajia, Lo Lo Pass or the Kamas Prairie .. Place of Danger. All Hebrew words.

  48. Jeremiah says:

    The zodiacs in the synagogues, (G-D’s personal name here) and “his Ashera”, all this findings (and many more) are proof of ancient Isreal’s idolatry, which has caused G-D’s fierce judgments on his people, as we know it today.
    Instead of glorifying them we should rather speak out against them and guard our own souls and minds from these apostate things, lest we fall under the same condemnation!

  49. this went thru my mind | says:

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  51. Pat says:

    The article’s statement ” But if the period weren’t there, the verse could be read as a long conditional clause: “make no graven images … which you worship.” In this case it’s not the making that is prohibited, but the worshiping” is somewhat a matter of interpretation. Although this article is a fine piece of history uncovered, I lean more toward what the scriptures say as far as “Thou shalt not make..” Truly, it was (and is) a serious matter of the “making” and the “worshiping” of those images. Thank you for this in-depth amount of history thus found.

  52. Zodiacs in Synagogues — A Great Article | HolyLandPhotos' Blog says:

    […] Zanger’s article “Zodiac mosaics in ancient synagogues” examines all (including ones at Tiberias and Bet Alpha, etc.) of the examples found in […]

  53. Symbolseeker says:

    Many of these images are much older in their origin than this mosaic. They could well be ancient “pagan” images adopted into Jewish tradition.

  54. Judith Abeles says:

    It isn’t any more ridiculous to believe that the stars control our destiny than that a single supernatural power does. Belief in one omnipotent god or many still leaves us with the problem of free will vs. predestination. The truth is: the universe is neutral; you’re on your own.

  55. Lee McDonald says:

    It has been a number of years since a rabbi chaplain in the U.S.Army gave several of us chaplains a tour of some synagogues and schools in Brooklyn, NY. I had seen them at Tiberias, but I was taken back at the time why there were signs of the zodiac in one of the more modern synagogues and I asked about it, but the rabbi was unclear on their origin in a synagogue. I do not think that these are the only places where these signs can be found. Check out Brooklyn! Thanks for this very interesting article!–Lee Martin McDonald

  56. Jim Moyers says:

    Fascinating! I have wondered how zodiacs were allowed in synagogues. There are so many aspects of historical religion that have been lost as orthodoxy was established.

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61 Responses

  1. Robert Mandel says:

    After the destruction of the Temples by Greek and Roman armies, the Jews turned to Traditional Rabbical Judaism by their captors teaching them idol worship. To this day, the orthodox Jewish communites use Roman amulets, head covers (like the Pope and his people) and pads on their arms and hands. Ezekiel 13:18-21 speaks of G-d’s anger that the covenant people have been led astray. The Creator has brought wars, pogroms, plagues, holocausts, and continued antisemitism because of the continued belief in men who reinterpreted His Torah. “and say: Thus said the Sovereign GOD: Woe to those who sew pads on all arm-joints and make covers for the head of every person, in order to entrap! Can you hunt down lives among My people, while you preserve your own lives? You have profaned My name among My people in return for handfuls of barley and morsels of bread; you have announced the death of persons who will not die and the survival of persons who will not live—lying to My people, who listen to your lies. Assuredly, thus said the Sovereign GOD: I am going to deal with your pads, by which you hunt down lives like birds, and I will tear them from your arms and free the persons whose lives you hunt down like birds.

  2. David Wray says:

    Michael Molnar uncovered the numismatic key to Jewish and Early Christian Astrology, which David Wray explored further and Prof. James Tabor posted on his blog and on YouTube. Look up these lectures if you’d really like to understand how astrology and religion coexisted in the first half of the first century and were used to convey spiritual meaning. A huge amount of information about Early religion can be found in these symbols when you abandon modern prejudices about ancient Jews and Christians and look at the symbols with an open mind. Look for Tabor and Wray on YouTube! You will be surprised what has been uncovered!!!

  3. […] Walter Zanger, “Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols”, Biblical Archaeology Society. […]

  4. […] Walter Zanger, “Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols”, Biblical Archaeology Society. […]

  5. ndm says:

    So, paganism is embedded in all religions, including Judaism of the old.

    1. Kitty says:

      Paganism has always been a problem, even today. As far as the Zodiac goes, they were used as identifiers. It’s not astrology where one worships the stars. See Joseph’s dream, Gen. 37:8-11

  6. David says:

    It’s nice to read a piece by Walter; I used to enjoy his biblical commentary on documentaries, and was motivated to look him up.
    I was sorry to see that he had passed away two years ago.

  7. Gwen says:

    Great article…will anyone be conducting future research about what the zodiacs meant to the Jewish people?

  8. romad says:

    Monotheistic Judaism evolved out of a polytheistic culture. Out of the many gods and goddesses of the older ancient religion, one god, Yaweh, and one goddess, Astarte/Ashera replaced all the others. Then, as the religion became more patriarchal, the goddess figure was minimized and eventually discarded.

    BTW, this also happened in Islam but at a much faster and more deliberate pace. When Mohammad decided to start a new religion, he took his basis from Monotheistic Judaism and selected one of the gods, Allah, from the pantheon of polytheistic Arabian culture.

  9. Jessie Yehudi says:

    The problem is when you have people assuming that Jews in any way think/ believe like Christians. Judaism is a religion that is RADICALLY different in ALL ways than Christianity. Judaism has many many many ideas in it that can be seen or perceived by someone unfamiliar with Judaism in one way even though it is not that way. Zodiacs in a synagogue — surprise — NO BIGGY. So long as Jews don’t WORSHIP those symbols and there is no indication that they did, there is nothing antithetical to Judaism about it. This is simply a celebration of GOD/ UNIVERSE/ EXPANSION/ nature and all that is in it. Period. Jews celebrate the new moon — surprise. Jews celebrate on the full moon. Surprise. Jews celebrate in the Spring. Surprise. Jews celebrate the first fruits of the harvest season. Surprise. etc. etc. The Torah and Psalms is full of celebration of this world and nature and all that is in it.

  10. David says:

    The flimsy straw theoretical edifice constructed by this author is ridiculous. The descriptions of the mosaics are great; the author’s conclusions, unfounded. As has been said in these comments, astrology was part of the Jewish cosmology – at least since the Second Temple, if not earlier. Having a zodiac in the synagogue merely portrays it as part of G-d’s plan and order in creation.

  11. Silent Eagle says:

    Biblical Numerology & Confirmations
    Subject Matter: The Future Queen of Israel
    “Prophecy” in Jewish Gematria Equals 666
    “Ophir” in Jewish Gematria Equals 207
    666 – 207 = 459
    Psalm 45:9 (Cross Reference Passages: Luke 24:44 Hebrews 1:8,9)

  12. Karl says:

    Here is a brief article discussing the entry “Star Worship” from the Jewish Encyclopedia along with many citations to biblical references in one of the best books on this subject I’ve ever read:

    Star Worship of the Ancient Israelites
    http://astrotheology.net/star-worship-of-the-ancient-israelites/

    This article and book should be widely circulated.

  13. Shiloh says:

    Why does the church refuse to acknowledge that The Queen in Gold of Ophir in Psalm 45:9 is an actual historical figure? There is a stronger case outlined in The Bible to prove her actual historical existence than there is to disprove it. The church claims this Queen represents and symbolizes the bride of christ, the church. The church’s interpretation of Psalm 45 is pure speculation and guess work. In Genesis 10:29, there is a reference to Joktan’s 11th son “Ophir”. From a practical, rational, literal approach, this Queen in Psalm 45:9 seems to be a direct descendant of Joktan’s 11th son Ophir in Genesis 10:29. How can the church continue to dispute this and ignore these passages? The Queen in Gold of Ophir is The King’s consort (Psalm 45:9,10,11) What’s so hard to figure out? Approaching scripture with preconceived ideas and notions can lead to unsubstantiated assumptions and inaccurate conclusions. Beware of false teachers with large ministries. “Did not Solomon send ships to Ophir to fetch gold? 1st Kings 9:26,27,28. There are many scriptures in the Bible that mentions “Ophir” and yet the church refuses to acknowledge these passages in reference to The Queen in Gold of Ophir. As a matter of fact, it’s never even mentioned or discussed. Why? Because it’s not part of the agenda.

  14. Synagogue of satan - Christian Chat Rooms & Forums says:

    […] think it may have more to do with what they found in some synagogues Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols – Biblical Archaeology Society God is not the God of the dead, but the living. Matt.22:32 Reply With […]

  15. yosef says:

    the tanach(old testament) makes it preety clear that idol worship was always a massive and rampant problem in isreal so the discovery of idols in isreal should come as no suprise to anyone nor mean anything in fact a lack of idols would be a problem

  16. Jean Stanley says:

    Dont you know that God created the Zodiac r8ght from the beginning this is why it is shown in ancient hebrew findings. Its all about the gospel story of a virgin giving birth to a son that would one day rule the world. So its not pagan but goes back further when God created all the stars.

    1. Right you are! It’s the “gospel in the stars” and has been described very well by many commentators, including D. James Kennedy. It has been “hi-jacked” by the astrologers and for too many folks has lost its truthful story.

  17. Kurt says:

    What Are Pagan Deities Doing on the Floors of Ancient Synagogues?
    What is astonishing at [two of the best-preserved synagogue mosaics] is the large centerpiece, depicting the wheel of the zodiac, a blatantly Hellenistic-Roman device. It is populated with human figures, seemingly in defiance of the Second Commandment. Four female figures, representing the four seasons of the year (often with their season’s bounty at hand), inhabit the corners of the square frame. Several of the twelve signs of the zodiac are human, with two in [the synagogue at] Hammat Tiberias—Libra and Aquarius—fully naked.
    But the real surprise lies at the center of the wheel. Here, in the very heart of the synagogues, is a representation of Helios, the Greek sun god, in the form of a charioteer, whip in hand, riding his four-horse quadriga across the sky. What is the image doing here? . . .
    http://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/2015/01/what-are-pagan-deities-doing-on-the-floors-of-ancient-synagogues/

  18. Dennis Studd says:

    An interesting series of comments; to begin with, the modern astrology of newspapers is very different form to that of the Magi, for example, who were astrologers, not kings. Their knowledge of the stars was on a priestly scale, since they were among the most knowledgable in this field.
    Very briefly, the zodiac itself is an image of the relationship between our planet and the rest of the Universe, as it is affected by the moon’s gravitational pull.
    The Moon not only affects the tides, but also the Earth”s axis, which wobbles like a spinning top. This produces the natural process called precession [sometimes called precession of the equinoxes]. The great year lasts about 25690 yrs, and is used as the outer circle of the zodiac. The constellations appear in reversed order [retrograde motion] in the order shown in the twelve sections of what is essentially a star map. Each section lasts about 2100 years.
    The zodiac is not satanic, it is not pagan, it is just a picture of what happens naturally to our planet. The names of the constellations change on a language basis, but all have similar meanings.
    The people who wrote the Bible did not know that Earth was a planet orbiting the Sun. They thought that the Earth was flat, and that the Sun orbits the Earth, just as the Catholic Church did for centuries.
    In case you are wondering, I have been a Christian for over forty-five years.

  19. Winnie says:

    The problem here is the complete ignorance of Judaism. Astrology has always had a place within Judaism, though it is prohibited to use astrology to look at the future. Go educate yourselves. It is christians who are the pagans with their dying and rising magical sin eating man god and who think the statement ‘G-d is One’ is about numbers. There is nothing beside G-d. That includes the heavens and the stars, morons.

  20. marshall silva (not related to Flavius Silva) says:

    Israel si the most intricate history in the world? You must be joking truely, not serious are you? Look at the bust of Nefrititi done 1330BC & these poor folks could barely do stick figures, which is probably why they gave up on graven images, they lacked any skills to create any. From borrowed laws ethics, morals, proverbs, mythologies & cosmologies, if Samson isnt a knock off of Hercules verbatim by these hill tribes, i wouldn’t know what is. Or did you miss that tile fresco at the ongoing excavation at a synagogue in Huqoq? The humorous part is they refer to 500ad as “ancient”, you fellows have a very narrow view of the span of real human civilzations & emergence, Israel is a tiny grain of sand. http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/united-with-israel/ancient-mosaic-depicting-samson-uncovered-in-a-galilee-synagogue/2013/07/04/

  21. Serapio says:

    I see a different solution: The `dogma´ “it had to be Jewish; everything was written in Hebrew and Aramaic” is wrong. Despite the Bible tries to avoid to mention it, there was a multi-religious society. These `Synagoges´ where in fact temples for every local group of faith.

  22. Ana Mendibles says:

    The Hebrew people were from Mesopotamia and were idol worshippers before God Yahweh spoke to Abram. Also the zodiac calendar was used to keep the time of year it was, the Hebrews used the Constellations as forms of signs from God and to tell what season it was.

  23. Luis says:

    Did any of you stop to think that maybe Jews HAD to do this to deter Greeks and Romans into thinking that that was not a place of worship as they did with Hanukkah when they would play the dreidels on the sabbath to make it think that they were performing some kind of work? If it was really adapted as some of you mentioned then it would be haven forbid mainstream Judaism today and you would grind them in ALL synagogues.

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    Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols – Biblical Archaeology Society

  25. Johnna Houseman says:

    Also, This knowledge was passed to Abraham and down to Daniel who God had him show the Babylonians or Nebuchanezzar. The Ancient Babylonian star names are scripture of the Holy Bible as the Lunar Mansions reveal the Revelations and the Beasts of revelations 13. The beasts are governments. The beast from the sea is Islam and the beast from the earth is the U.S. government. open for correction. Our president has changed Gods law of marital relationships.he has done evil in the sight of the Lord.So God is keeping His promise Deuteronomy 32;23 I will heap disasters on them, I will spend My arrows on them. Read all of this chapter. God told us the end from the beginning. This is wordwide. The blood moons begin on the 14/15. I pray this will awake people and all find salvation. Please,this is real,it is now. I love all you and hope for all.

  26. Johnna Houseman says:

    Psalms 147:4, He made all the stars and calls them by name. Job 38:31-32, can you bind the cluster of the Pleiades, or loose the belt of Orion? Can you bring out Mazzaroth in its season? ( Mazzaroth is the Zodiac) Genesis; God created the stars on the 4th day for SIGNS, seasons,days and years. Before the Deluge, Egypt was not Egypt as he was Noahs grandson. Josephus recorded in the Antiquities of the Jews 1.2.3. of Seth down to Enoch building pillars of brick and stone inscribed with their knowledge of the celestial science revealed to them from God. The 3 Pyramids of Giza align with Orions belt and are made of brick and are exactly opposite the earth from the stone Pyramids of the Aztecs that are surrounded with the worlds largest serpents or snakes that are symbolic of satan. the 3 Giza Pyramids are a witness of God and built by Seth and his descendants and inscribed in the denderah temple and the temple of Hathor is the Zodiac. The Spynx is the key to where to begin the endless circle of the Zodiac. The head and breast of the woman is Virgo the Virgin and the body of the Lion is Leo the Lion. God commanded Moses their beginning of months would begin the month Abib,which is March -April of the Gregorian calendar and the sign Virgo. Virgo the Virgin Mary and ending with Leo the Lion of the tribe of Judah. The Denderah zodiac shows the constellation coma as the infant Jesus ( the greeks changed it to berenices hair perverting the Word of God written with the stars). This also proclaims Jesus the First and Last. The ancient Egyptians show the picture of the zodiac beginning with the Virgin and ending with Leo.This is proclaiming Gods Salvation through Christ as Godloved His people so that He would come in the flesh as Jesus for the Salvation of man. The Judgment shown in the temple of Hathor shows people going to God and in front of each being is a seal that is engraved with who the person is and their judgment. Their hearts are weighed against a feather. A bent Lotus means a man and a duck means woman. The statue found with the man on the thrown with the 2 little people,one a male has a bent lotus inscribed and the female has the duck. Since Egyptians had to use pictures to communicate you have to understand the pictures as in a duck will care for its children and comfort them and protect and lead them. The lotus drops the seed thaty brings the new plants ,male and female plants. The seed look like what they would be if they survive to adulthood. They fall to the bottom of the waters into the mud (earth) and have to grow through the dirty water if they don’t drown,symbolically growing through the world without drowning in sin, and thus the strongest breaks through the water into the sunlight on top of the water and have a waxy coating keeping off the dirty water. Saints understand the relation between this and people.These ancient Egyptians carry the cross that is open at the top. They carry their cross as they knew of the coming of Jesus. Their cross is open at the top meaning they have to go through the cross. CSome of the hieroglyphs are the short signs of the zodiac constellations in the sky.Scorpio is exactly opposite Orion as the pyramids are opposite. There is a lot more to all this but I am tired and need to take a break. blessings and peace from our Lord Jesus and God our Father and me.

  27. SMK says:

    The Jewish Religion is actually a synthesis of age-old beliefs, only crystallized in the familiar dogmatic monotheistic manner, during the reign of Josiah/Joshiyahu of Judah (641–609 BC):

    1. Moses’ god, probably Aten (also grew into the canaanite Adon), and/or Amun-Re (with Seth/Satan as an anti-god, or just a god of mischief)..

    2. Midianite/Kenite/Judaean/Moabite Polytheism (Chemosh (a local version of the widely revered Ashtarte/Ashtar/Ishtar/Aphrodite), Nebu/Nabu, Peor (a phallic god))

    3. Yahweh/Iakkhos/Bacchus/Dionysos, probably originating from a minoan prototype!

    4. El, in plural Elohim, originally the western semitic pantheon of the Canaanites, Adon, Dagon, Asherah, Lilith and the Baalim included…

  28. Mary Anne says:

    G-D made the stars and constellations for signs, seasons etc for us here on Earth. Also D.James Kennedy wrote an interesting book on the zodiac with the premise that G-D ordered the constellations, stars etc to tell the story of man, sin, virgin birth of Messiah ( from Lion), redemption, etc. before He gave the Torah to Moses. His creation was ‘very good’, but man’s sinfulness corrupts everything good and started worshipping the creation instead of the Creator. G-D’s plan and story is told in the stars. It’s very thought -provoking to say the least………

  29. David Morse says:

    From what I’ve heard, Judaism did allow for astrology; it was just forbidden to Jews. There’s a famous story in the Talmud of an astrologer who predicted that a passing man would die. When he returned, the astrologer said that he must be a Jew, since we are controlled directly by G-d and can avert an evil decree with charity.
    As for a “suppressed” Judaism, that’s more for a Dan Brown book than BAR. I’m pretty sure this article is just about artwork.

  30. Brigitte Youngblood says:

    it seems to me that I have often heard that the zodiac is just the fact of the universe’s arrangement and that each of the 12 tribes when wandering in the desert was to have its particular place around the ark (shakena glory cloud) and also direct access to it by each family. That ideal all had to be modified when the “fall” of the golden calf happened but this modification was a buffer zone separating the tabernacle from the people via the priests (meant to be temporary until the next redemptive effort (noah’s flood waters, red sea, christ’s baptism)
    That said, the tribes I have been associated with their symbol from the zodiac…Jesus is a Lion of Judah (Leo is his family line)
    the star of david is also this same arrangement of camps…12 equally spaced bits in a cielestial form (star rather than groups of stars) the cosmos figures in profoundly as the restoration of man also involves the natural works he was to dominate. This is why st thomas goes to great lengths to explain the disruptions. Just as the images issue can be resolved by the question “into what do you place your love” so also can the zodiac issue…it is always a disordered sense of love that introduces each and every sin into the world…a disordered sense of the end and final object of everything we do. Parousia is the right ordering when god will be all in all and that just means the ideal of the zodiac restored with the glory cloud in the center for each man to gaze upon. Catholics call this tabernacle the true presence.

  31. The Offense of the Cross | Aliyah of a Soul says:

    […] to Walter Zanger in “Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols,” the zodiac wheel was adapted in an alternate (and later suppressed) branch of Judaism as a […]

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  34. Howard says:

    WRONG! F- The tale of the Redeemer is outlined in the Zodiac. It is not hard information. EW Bullinger, JA Seiss, Chuck Missler and even D. James Kennedy have written on the topic. Indeed all of creation declares the glory of God. God set the stars in the sky for SIGNS.

  35. Word for word bible comic says:

    The Babylonian zodiac was adopted from the earlier Jewish traditions for details search for Chuck Misslers talks call “signs in the heavens” . It could be that these Jews had it from ancient tradition

  36. Jewish pagan symbols – zodiac mosaics in ancient synagogues | ŠAKTI says:

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  37. Michael Ledo says:

    The conclusion I came to in my book was that Judaism was an astro-religion, no different than any of the religions in the area. I outline every story in the OT to its corresponding constellation or stars and compare it to known cosmic myths. Until the so called scholars come to realize the OT was simply a guide to astrology, they will continue to struggle with this discovery as they have with so many others.

  38. Sharon Leighton says:

    Very interesting article. I’d like to point out that the view of astrology is biased and highly colored by later religious views. How differently the question looks when one says: Astrology teaches that when God created the earth and the stars, He graciously allowed the planetary patterns to carry information for humans for their guidance, so that they may recognize their strengths and weaknesses and learn to shape their own destinies by using the former and rising above the latter. It is, in this way, similar to the most common “fortune-telling” of our day, i.e., meteorology; when you listen to the weather forecast, you are not usually subscribing to the view of a mechanistic universe, you are simply deciding whether or not to wear a coat.

  39. David Z says:

    I’m not sure why you’re trying to invent a new religion there… There is no indication that there ever was such a religion, whether or not “suppressed” by the Talmud (which does nothing to suppress the Sadducees or Sicarii, among others). Instead, wouldn’t the simplest explanation be that it is art, albeit “telling” a story similar to the one you mention? Why on Earth invent a new heresy on such scant evidence? And one that was supposed to be parallel to normative Judaism all along (since you gave it such hoary credentials).

    As to the graven images thing, why not point out that Talmudic law (assumedly fairly accepted by that time) allows depictions of humans who are not worshiped and limits the verse to “graven images”–that is carvings. To my recollection, the Talmud specifically allows impressions (and pictures) but not reliefs or sculptures to be made. and used. Obviously some have been more strict than others over history, but this is normative Talmudic law and would certainly fit into what the schuls were doing. It’s not even a question. The issue is, as you raised, what the human forms were depicting (idols rather than forefathers).

    And on a side not. Wow. Some of those commentors are scary folk!

  40. Brent Kaufman says:

    Astrology isn’t pagan. It is, and has always been, a part of Judaism. Christianity sees it as paganism, but that is from their point of view. Christian views shouldn’t be assumed to be those of Judaism, whose theology is 180 degrees from that of Christianity.

    1. Christianity has its roots in Judaism. They are not 180 degrees opposed, They share the same true God Jahweh, and Jeshua, Christ Jesus, is the King of the Jews. The bulk of Jews (with the exception of Messianic Jews) have missed it entirely. They cling to the demands of the Law and miss out on the supply of grace!

  41. Music of the Spheres: Star of David | Bible for Love says:

    […] (For further information, see the discussion by the Biblical Archaeology Society: http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/ancient-cultures/ancient-israel/jewish-worship-pagan-symbol…). […]

  42. marilyn kohn says:

    This is by far the most helpful discussion of synagogue zodiacs in the ancient world that I have found so far.

  43. drturi says:

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  44. Jeff says:

    Or perhaps they were hiding the fact that it was a synagogue. 527 A.D. Byzantine Emperor Justin I names his nephew Justinian I as co-ruler and successor to the throne. This was a “lose-lose” proposition for the Jewish people. When Justin I assumed the throne he adopted a policy of rigorously enforcing the anti-Jewish laws promulgated by Theodosius including excluding Jews from “all posts of honor” and banning the construction of new synagogues.

  45. Jeff says:

    May 20, 526: An earthquake, with an epicenter in Syria that reportedly killed 300,000 people, is felt throughout much of the Near East including at least two towns now located in the modern state of Israel – Acre and Beit Jann. Perhaps this is the earthquake that caused the damage?

  46. david says:

    that is not a ram in the thicket as it does not have split hooves or ram horns and also looks much like a donkey.

  47. Robert says:

    1. Are we seeing the effects of Solomon’s 700 dancing girls, three temples to their Gods and the fact that Solomon’s Court was larger than the First Temple .. Solomon lost his wisdom and sinned.
    2. Zodiacs tell the story of two Nations in your Womb .. Orion and the Virgin .. Taurus the Bull is the silent vowel place holder for Adoni Himself. The place holder (Sphinx) indicates a lot about the views of the builder.
    3. The fact that there are over 3,000 Hebrew inscribed artifacts in the USA and not one major Israeli University has bothered to sail over here and study them makes me equate “Israeli Confusion” with cover up. You are not confused at all. You are a modern smoke screen LaOLam.

    I live in Idaho USA .. Yada Ho .. Praise Him and NBC will not discuss this with me or try and investigate Chief Joseph, Saakawajia, Lo Lo Pass or the Kamas Prairie .. Place of Danger. All Hebrew words.

  48. Jeremiah says:

    The zodiacs in the synagogues, (G-D’s personal name here) and “his Ashera”, all this findings (and many more) are proof of ancient Isreal’s idolatry, which has caused G-D’s fierce judgments on his people, as we know it today.
    Instead of glorifying them we should rather speak out against them and guard our own souls and minds from these apostate things, lest we fall under the same condemnation!

  49. this went thru my mind | says:

    […] Jewish Worship, Pagan Symbols: Zodiac Mosaics in Ancient Synagogues by Walter […]

  50. An Untold Story From the Talmudic Era says:

    […] BibArch Tweet reddit_url = "http://finkorswim.com/2012/08/27/an-untold-story-from-the-talmudic-era/"; […]

  51. Pat says:

    The article’s statement ” But if the period weren’t there, the verse could be read as a long conditional clause: “make no graven images … which you worship.” In this case it’s not the making that is prohibited, but the worshiping” is somewhat a matter of interpretation. Although this article is a fine piece of history uncovered, I lean more toward what the scriptures say as far as “Thou shalt not make..” Truly, it was (and is) a serious matter of the “making” and the “worshiping” of those images. Thank you for this in-depth amount of history thus found.

  52. Zodiacs in Synagogues — A Great Article | HolyLandPhotos' Blog says:

    […] Zanger’s article “Zodiac mosaics in ancient synagogues” examines all (including ones at Tiberias and Bet Alpha, etc.) of the examples found in […]

  53. Symbolseeker says:

    Many of these images are much older in their origin than this mosaic. They could well be ancient “pagan” images adopted into Jewish tradition.

  54. Judith Abeles says:

    It isn’t any more ridiculous to believe that the stars control our destiny than that a single supernatural power does. Belief in one omnipotent god or many still leaves us with the problem of free will vs. predestination. The truth is: the universe is neutral; you’re on your own.

  55. Lee McDonald says:

    It has been a number of years since a rabbi chaplain in the U.S.Army gave several of us chaplains a tour of some synagogues and schools in Brooklyn, NY. I had seen them at Tiberias, but I was taken back at the time why there were signs of the zodiac in one of the more modern synagogues and I asked about it, but the rabbi was unclear on their origin in a synagogue. I do not think that these are the only places where these signs can be found. Check out Brooklyn! Thanks for this very interesting article!–Lee Martin McDonald

  56. Jim Moyers says:

    Fascinating! I have wondered how zodiacs were allowed in synagogues. There are so many aspects of historical religion that have been lost as orthodoxy was established.

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