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Encyclopedia > Witch of En Dor
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The Witch of Endor: from the frontispiece to Sadducismus Triumphatus by Joseph Glanvill

In the Hebrew Bible, the Witch of Endor of the First book of Samuel, chapter 28:4–25, was a witch, a woman "who possesses a talisman", through which she called up the ghost of the recently deceased prophet Samuel, at the demand of King Saul of Israel. After Samuel's death and burial with due mourning ceremonies in Ramah, Saul had driven all necromancers and magicians from Israel. Then, in a bitter irony, Saul sought out the witch, anonymously and in disguise, only after he received no answer from God from dreams, prophets or the Urim and Thummim as to his best course of action against the assembled forces of the Philistines. The prophet's ghost offered no advice but predicted Saul's downfall as king.


The Witch of Endor may be seen as a survival of archaic Canaanite religion, similar to a sibyl.


Saul sinned further in consulting this woman; the practice of necromancy was forbidden by the Torah.


Interpretations

In Judaism, some rabbis taught that the spirits of the dead hovered around the body for a year after a person died; this made the spirit of the dead person amenable to being truly summoned during this time, and indicated that the spirit so summoned truly was Samuel, and that Samuel was indeed supernaturally summoned by the witch.


The Church Fathers and some modern Christian writers have debated the theological issues raised by this text, however. If you take the Bible literally, it would appear to affirm that it is or was possible for humans to summon the spirits of the blessed dead by magic. Medieval glosses naturally suggested that what the witch actually summoned was not the ghost of Samuel, but a demon taking his shape. Nothing in the text of the story suggests this interpretation, however. Christian author Hank Hanegraaff argues that although it is impossible for humans to summon the dead, Samuel did appear before Saul and the witch by a sovereign act of God. Hanegraaff interprets the passage to mean that the witch was surprised by these events.


Regardless of the reality of the witch's power, the story seems intended to be a satire on Saul. Once Saul was the righteous king who upheld God's law by his sword; having fallen from God's favour, he is reduced to participating in forbidden rituals. He is given no counsel from the ghost of Samuel, who instead appears to confirm his doom.


The tale of the Witch of Endor is likely the inspiration for the name of Endora, Samantha's mother on the TV series Bewitched.


External links

  • Saul and the Witch of Endor (http://www.biblegateway.com/cgi-bin/bible?passage=1+Samuel+28&search=&version=KJV&language=english&optional.x=13&optional.y=13): text in KJV
  • Jewish Encyclopedia (http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=366&letter=E): Witch of Endor; the tale deftly retold and set in context

  Results from FactBites:
 
Christian views on witchcraft - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1183 words)
The words "witch" and "witchcraft" in the Bible are sometimes translated "necromancer" and "necromancy" for this reason.
While a biblical "witch" has much in common with a modern spiritist, some argue that modern "witches" (usually practitioners of Wicca), are completely unrelated to the "witches" condemned in the Bible, however Strong's definition of the word as including anyone who casts spells would certainly include practitioners of Wicca.
Further discussion of people accused of being witches, and of those who claim to be witches, may be found in the articles witchcraft and witchhunt.
Witchcraft (1146 words)
Witchcraft is a term used to describe the practices of witches, and popular beliefs about the practices of witches.
This mural of a naked pagan sexuality/fertility goddess on a distaff suggests that the connection may have originally been a sexual one (sticks and staffs have long been common masturbation devices, orgasm is achieved by rubbing them between the legs against the clitoris).
An example cited is the biblical story of the witch of En Dor (I Samuel 28) who, when she was successful in bringing up Samuel from the dead, screamed out in surprise and fear.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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