When Christians, Muslims, and Jews Loved Magic
A
silver scroll found in Jordan is a reminder of how big the market for
‘magic’ objects was in ancient Christianity, Islam, and Judaism.
In
2014 a paper-thin metal scroll was discovered in the ruins of a city
destroyed by an earthquake in Jerash (Jordan) in the mid-8th century. The scroll was unearthed in a battered lead case, but was too fragile to be unfurled. This fall, however, scientists at Aarhus University in Denmark unraveled its secrets.
Using digital imaging of the lettering inside the scientists were able to see the writing. The results appear to be gibberish, but what the discovery does do is tell us a great deal about the market for magical objects in the ancient world.
One of the most interesting things about the amulet is that it is written in a non-language. It resembles Arabic but many of the letter forms are formed with a vertical stroke and a number of commonly used Arabic letters are completely absent. This has led archeologists to conclude that this is pseudo-Arabic nonsense. It is made to resemble Arabic (possibly because the client was an Arab) but it doesn’t convey actual substance. This kind of pseudo-writing is common in magical texts: There are a number of incantation bowls at the British Museum, for example, that are written in pseudo-Aramaic. And, as the study points out, examples of this kind of thing are in the Muslim world as well.
The find is fascinating for what it tells us about religious commerce in Jerash in the 8th century. Amulets like this were professionally commissioned—you needed someone with a facility in metallurgy and letters in order to produce them—and were often tailored to meet the needs of the individual customer. The production of amulets was professionalized and the role of those who made them often overlapped and competed with that of medical practitioners.
Interestingly, the problem with magic is not that it doesn’t work (because it does) but rather that the supernatural powers by magic come from an unsanctioned source. In the apocryphal acts of the apostles (legends about the lives of the Apostles after the death of Jesus), the protagonists often run into difficulties when they encounter other miracle workers. These magicians aren’t as powerful as the 12 apostles but they aren’t charlatans. One, called Simon Magus, can actually fly and has a competition with the apostle Peter. From the perspective of the consumer the reason to side with Peter is that he is more powerful (he can raise the dead), but many of the miracles they perform are actually identical in nature.
The boundary between magic and religion is, as Graham Cunningham points out in his book Religion and Magic, very fluid. In many cases the distinction is about rhetoric. The portrayal of magic as liminal and secretive may represent the social standing of certain ancient healers but it also makes them seen shady and suspicious. Often magic is just code for “bad religion,” and calling a particular practice magic is a way to slander that group. It’s for this reason that nineteenth century Protestants regularly accused Catholics of practicing magic.
The newly discovered scroll may well suggest that Arabs in 8th century Jerash were adopting the religious practices of their Jewish, Christian, Greek, and Roman neighbors. But it also reminds us that one woman’s magic is another woman’s religion.
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