
The
twelve stones in the breastplate of the ancient Hebrew high
priest can now be identified, with the corresponding tribes
of Israel.
The
Lord instructed Moses to have the names of the twelve sons
of Israel engraved
on twelve stones in the breastplate of the high priest.
The exact order, arrangement, and type of each stone were
explicitly stated (Ex. 28:17-21), but the name to be written
on each stone was not given, perhaps because it was obvious
to Moses. After the destruction of the temple, the knowledge
of which tribe was associated with which stone was lost,
and even the identity of some of the stones has been uncertain. This article attempts to restore this lost
knowledge by use of the birth dates of those twelve sons,
and the correspondence of those dates to the twelve zodiac
constellations, as presented in last month's article.[1]
Birthstones
Do you
have any jewelry containing your birthstone? What is the
origin of the birthstones? Are they just a way for jewelers
to peddle their wares, or is their really some significance
to these twelve stones? And if so, is it the chemical makeup
of the stone that is important, or is it the color, or both?
And should the stones be associated with
months of our Gregorian year, or perhaps the Hebrew months,
or maybe the 30-day signs of the zodiac, or how about the
actual zodiac constellations in the heavens?
What
about the colors associated with certain nations, such as
the colors of their flags? Why are so many of the flags
of Europe colored red, white and blue?[2]
What about the colors in heraldry, the colors on your family
crest? Are they significant? What do colors have to do with
families and nations?
| |
| Figure
1. The high priest's breastplate contained twelve
stones. |
The
origin of our twelve birthstones and their colors is rooted
in the twelve colored stones in the breastplate of the high
priest of ancient Israel.
The fact that our birthstones are not only associated with
different tribes, but also with different months, shows
that there was a strong tradition that each of the twelve
sons of Jacob was born at a distinct time of year. So if
our birthstones trace back to a Biblical origin, the question
arises of just how accurate our modern list of birthstones
is.
The
Problem
Unfortunately,
we have known neither the stones nor the associated tribes,
much less the time of year for each stone. One of the long
unsolved mysteries in the Bible is the identification of
the twelve stones in the breastplate of the high priest.
Most of those stones are mentioned only in that context,
and so they have been extremely hard to identify. Most scholars
have given up the identification as a lost cause. Many lists
have been published, purporting to be authentic, but in
fact they are based only on speculation, such as assuming
that the order of the stones is the birth order of the sons.[3]
As an
example of the confusion of the translation of the stone
names, the fourth stone is called "emerald" in
the King James version, "carbuncle"
in the Greek translation (Septuagint), "turquoise"
in the New American Standard version, and "garnet"
in Strong's dictionary. Note that the colors of those modern
stones are all different (green, red, blue, blackish red),
so we end up confused both on colors and stones. To add
to the confusion, many stones come in a variety of colors:
Sapphires are not just blue, they are also colorless, pink, orange, yellow, green,
purple and black.[4]
And another problem is that some of the ancient names that
we recognize, used to refer to different stones. For example,
before medieval times, "sapphire" referred to
the blue stone lapis lazuli for at least many centuries.[5]
So it has appeared to be a hopeless tangle of yarn that
no one has been able to unravel.
| |
| Figure 2. The twelve stones each had a name engraved
on it. |
These,
however, are some of the most difficult examples. The colors
of some stones in the list are perfectly known, such as
the first one, odem, which
means "red" in Hebrew. In other cases, all translators
agree on the identification of the stone, such as topaz
and amethyst. They might all be wrong, but at least there
is a consensus.
The
Solution
This
paper attempts to provide a definitive correlation of all
twelve stones to their modern names, colors, and tribes
of Israel. The
solution is based on using information from two other sources:
birth dates and birth constellations.
First,
as mentioned above, the fact that there is a strong tradition
that each of the twelve stones is associated with the time
of birth of one of the twelve sons of Jacob is a big clue.
Sometimes a general idea is preserved over time while the
details are lost. The fact that each stone is associated with a different month and
also with a tribe of Israel definitely indicates a tradition that it was the time of birth of
those twelve sons that identified them with a specific stone.
Last month a list of birth dates, derived from sacred calendars,
was proposed for each of the twelve sons of Jacob. They
were spread out during the year, which agrees with this
tradition.
Secondly,
that same article also identified each tribe with a constellation
of the zodiac. That is also a big clue to solve the puzzle,
because the Lord apparently also alludes to several of the
constellations as the same precious stones of the breastplate
of the high priest. He said to the prophet Ezekiel,
Thou
hast been in Eden the garden of God; every precious stone
was thy covering, the sardius,
topaz, and the diamond, the beryl, the onyx, and the jasper,
the sapphire, the emerald, and the carbuncle, and gold:
the workmanship of thy tabrets and of thy pipes was prepared in thee in the day that
thou wast created. (Ezek 28:13).
| |
| Nine
of these stones covered Eden. |
Those
nine stones are nine of the twelve stones of the high priest.
The fact that he says the stones were the "covering"
in the Garden of Eden, suggests that he might be referring
to the canopy of the heavens, and that each of those stones
is associated with a zodiac constellation. This argument
is not compelling, but if this suggestion is not correct,
then just what does the scripture mean? The scriptures do
tell us that some of these stones were found in the Garden
(Gen. 2:12), but when so many of the stones are listed as
a "covering," it seems more likely that it refers
to the heavens.
Let
us now use these two new lists of birth dates and constellations
to identify the stones. Those who wish only to know the
answer can skip the somewhat detailed derivation which follows
to Table 4 near the end of this article.
Unravelling
the Mystery
Let
us now solve the mystery of the stones one step at a time.
The solution is based upon a few postulates.
Postulates
1.
Twelve Tribes. The twelve stones
in the breastplate correspond to the original twelve sons
of Jacob, not to the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh, which
were later adopted as sons, effectively doubling the inheritance
for their father Joseph. That seems to be implied in the
text.
| |
| New Jerusalem has walls of jasper. |
2.
Twelve Foundations. The twelve foundations of the
New Jerusalem are garnished with the same twelve precious
stones, as named by John the Revelator (Rev. 21:19-20).
While those stones are associated with the twelve apostles,
they are also near the twelve gates that are named for the
twelve tribes of Israel.
This postulate is perhaps the most important, because John
is writing in Greek some fifteen hundred years after Moses.
He is referring to stones that he recognized and understood.
Because Greek is so much better known, and those words can
be found in so many other documents, this postulate greatly
simplifies the problem.
You
might ask yourself how well you know gemstones. Suppose
you had had the Revelation given to John. How would you
have described the foundation stones? Most of us know that
rubies are red and emeralds are green, but perhaps not many
more. Apparently John knew his gems well, right down to
recognizing sardonyx as a specific
form of onyx.
3.
Twelve Colors. It is proposed
that it is the twelve colors of the stones that are most
important, and that representative stones were chosen for
those colors. The stones had to be large enough to engrave
the names of the tribes upon, whereas in other contexts,
such as a gem inlaid in a ring, a smaller, more precious
stone could be used to represent the tribe equally well.
4.
Twelve Constellations. It is also
proposed that the twelve zodiac constellations each had
a unique color for the figure and that the twelve stones
also correspond to those colors. This postulate is a key
element that will allow some of the most difficult relations
to be discovered.
5.
Order. The final order discovered
should make sense. That is a vague requirement, but God's
house is a house of order, and the order certainly will
not be random. The trouble is, almost every time the twelve
tribes are listed, they are given in a different order (Gen
27, 49; Num 2; Deut 33; Rev. 7). The names of the tribes
were also engraved on stones on the shoulders of the priest,
with six on each shoulder according to their birth (Ex.
28). That would be the most logical order to assume for
the twelve stones on the breastplate, and indeed, that is
usually the case in most studies, as shown in Figure 2.[6]
This study will not require birth order, but at least some
sort of reasonable order.
Hebrew
Names
Let
us proceed step by step, making
sure the ground is firm beneath our feet before each new
step is taken. One mistake could lead us down a false path.
Table 1 lists the stones in order by Hebrew name in the
first column and the King James translation in the second.
The third column lists the name used in the Greek translation
of the Bible done in the third century B.C. (called the
Septuagint). That is extremely important because it gives
us the understanding of the Hebrews at that time of the
meaning of the stones. We still use nearly all of the same
Greek names today to refer to the same stones, so if that
translation were totally correct, we would just about have
the entire answer we are looking for. The final column lists
other places in the Old Testament where the name of the
stone is used again to describe a color. Unfortunately there
are very few such references; most of the stone names appear
only in the context of being a precious stone, which doesn't
help distinguish one from another.
There
are three lists in the Old Testament of these stones: 1)
when the Lord instructs Moses how to fashion the breastplate
(Ex. 28:17-20), when the breastplate was completed (Ex.
39:10-13), and in a revelation to Ezekiel, when the Lord
compares the Garden of Eden's "covering" with
nine of these twelve stones, given in a different order
(Ezek. 28:13). None of those three references helps us identify
the stones, except that some of the meanings refer to colors.
The stones mentioned in only those three places are listed
with "none" in the column for other references.
| Hebrew
Name |
King
James |
Septuagint |
Color |
Other
Refs. |
| 1.
Odem |
Sardius |
Sardius |
red |
"red"
(Hebrew); not ruby, which is "paniyn"
(Lam. 4:7) |
| 2.
Pitdah |
Topaz |
Topaz |
topaz |
from
Ethiopia
(Job 28:19) |
| 3.
Bareqeth |
Carbuncle
(Garnet) |
Emerald |
green? |
color
of "lightning," (Dan. 10:6), "green"
(Greek) |
| 4.
Nophek |
Emerald |
Anthrax
(Garnet) |
red-black |
precious,
Ezek 27:16, "coal" (Greek) |
| 5.
Sappiyr |
Sapphire |
Sapphire |
blue |
sky
blue, Ex. 24:10 |
| 6.
Yahalom |
Diamond |
Jasper |
many |
none |
| 7.
Leshem |
Ligure |
Ligure |
? |
none;
ligure is unknown |
| 8.
Shebuw |
Agate |
Agate |
many |
none |
| 9.
Aclamah |
Amethyst |
Amethyst |
purple |
none |
| 10.
Tarshish |
Beryl |
Chrysolite |
yellow |
color
of heavenly chariot wheels (Ezek. 1:16, 10:9 ); color
of a heavenly man's body, whose face was like lightning
(Dan 10:6) |
| 11.
Shoham |
Onyx |
Beryl |
white |
"whiten"
(Hebrew); on high priest's shoulders (Ex. 28:9) |
| 12. Jashepheh |
Jasper |
Onyx |
many |
none |
Table 1. Hebrew names of the Twelve Breastplate stones.
Now
let's see what we can learn about the identity and colors
of the stones from this table.
| |
| Odem, meaning red, refers to the sard. |
Odem
(Red). The first stone odem
means "red" in Hebrew[7]
and nearly all translations agree that it refers to a sard
(also called sardius), which is
a very red stone. Note that while some translations list
this stone as a ruby,[8]
one would be hard pressed to find a ruby large enough to
engrave a name on, and even then it would require a diamond
to write it. Moreover, most rubies are not as red as sard.
Thus the first stone and color are well-identified. If all
of the stones were this easy, the puzzle would have been
solved long ago.
| |
| Sapphire
represents blue. |
Sappiyr (Blue). Our word sapphire comes
from the Greek, which in turn comes from the Hebrew sappiyr.
At the time of John the Revelator, the name referred to
lapis lazuli, a very blue stone. The confirmation that the
ancient stone was also this color comes in a vision at the
time of Moses, when the Lord appeared on a pavement of sappiyr,
described as being as blue as a clear blue sky (Ex. 24:10).
| |
| Amethyst is a deep purple. |
Aclamah (Purple). All the translations
agree that aclamah refers
to the amethyst and there seems to be almost no doubt about
this identification. While the scriptures don't specify
that the color is purple, that is the only color of amethyst.
| |
| The
second stone is topaz. |
Pitdah (Yellow Brown). The other stone on which all translations
agree is that the second stone pitdah
is the topaz. Although topaz comes in many colors, the principal
color associated with the most common variety is a very
light yellowish brown color. That is almost certainly the
color implied for this stone.
| |
| Chrysolite was yellow, like this chrysoberyl. |
Tarshish (Yellow). This stone is most
likely a golden color, matching the translation in the Septuagint
of chrysolite ("golden stone"
in Greek). It is the color used by Daniel to describe a
man seen in heavenly vision, who
face is described like lightning (Daniel 10:6). The name
of the third stone is derived from that same word for "lightning"
and is presumably a similar golden color. The name Tarshish is the same as the Mediterranean country (Jonah 1:3,
probably Spain)
and hence also came to mean "Merchant Vessel"
(see 2 Chron. 9:21, Psalm 48:7, Isa. 23:1).
| |
| Beryl
symbolized white or clear. |
Shoham (White). The eleventh stone shoham
almost certainly refers to a white stone because the root
of the name means "to whiten."[9]
It has been translated both as onyx and beryl, both of which
have white varieties.
Thus,
only six of the stones are clearly identified with colors
by the stone itself, by other passages or by name derivations.
Note also that there are some serious questions about some
of the King James translations. "Diamond" almost
certainly is not correct because nothing would be available
hard enough to inscribe the name into it, and it would have
to be a very large diamond! The name Jasper was probably
chosen only because it is similar to the Hebrew word. Nine
of the names of the stones only appear in the context of
being a precious stone, with no clues at all to color or
other identifying characteristics. So let us now turn to
other clues.
Greek
Translation
In the
third century B.C. the Old Testament was translated into
the Greek version called the Septuagint. At that time, the
temple at Jerusalem was functioning, and the breastplate
was not just a memory, but was actually used by the high
priest. This translation is extremely important because
Greek words would be used to describe those gems, words
that should give us excellent understanding of just what
stones are implied. Many of our words for minerals today
derive directly from these very Greek words. We must be
cautious because many have changed in meaning, but they
give us a big step up in understanding. Let's consider what
is implied about the colors of the stones.
Known Colors. Several of the stones have known colors,
either because the Greek word includes the color name, or
is synonymous with that color, or because the stone is well
known and only comes in one color. As listed in the table,
the known colors are: sardius
is red, emerald was a synonym for green, sapphire was a
synonym for blue, amethyst only comes in purple, "chrysolite"
means "golden stone" or "yellow stone,"
and beryl meant only the white or cream colored variety.
Unknown Colors. On the other hand, jasper, agate, and
onyx come in a variety of colors, and often are striped.
And to complicate the issue, the meaning of the Greek "ligure"
has been entirely lost. While that word is used in English,
as in the King James Version, its meaning is unknown, but
it is usually associated with the jacinth. Now let us consider
other color considerations.
Bareqeth (lightning or green?). The third stone bareqeth
derives in Hebrew as the same word for "lightning,"
supposedly because it represents the same color. For example,
Daniel compares the facial color of a man he saw in vision
to that of lightning (Dan. 10:6). But the Greek translation
is "emerald," which was synonymous with "green"
in Greek. Most people would not say lightning is green,
and we could hardly think of an angel with a countenance
like lightning as having a green face. The solution to the
problem proposed in this article explains both translations.
| |
| Carbuncle (glowing coal) usually means garnet. |
Nophek (reddish black). This stone is a great key to the entire
puzzle, which I discovered only after I had solved it the
hard way. The Greek translation of nophek
is "anthrax," which in turn is translated as "carbuncle"
into English. Both are said to mean a dark red stone. "Carbuncle"
also refers to red, inflamed boils, and the sheep disease
"anthrax" was supposedly named for the dark red
streaks and spots that appear. My research showed me that
this was definitely correct and that the stone must be a
dark red color as a substitute for pure black, the color
of the tribe of Dan,[10]
and probably refers to the garnet.
The
origin of both the words "anthrax" and "carbuncle"
describe the color implied very well. Carbuncle comes from
the work carbon, meaning coal, with the "cle" on the end meaning "little," like a "particle"
is a "little part." What was implied was the idea
that it was a hot, "glowing coal," in the sense
that one might speak of barbecuing over the hot "coals"
of a fire. Similarly, "anthrax" also means "glowing
coal." We still use that Greek root in our word "anthracite"
coal. One dictionary definition of "carbuncle"
is "deep-red garnet," deriving the word as meaning
"glowing ember," which indeed described the color
of many garnets perfectly.
"Glowing
ember" also exactly matches the description of one
of the foundation stones, as described in the next section,
which greatly simplifies the puzzle. Just for the record,
I only looked up these meanings after I had solved the puzzle
the hard way, so to me this derivation comes as comforting
confirmation that the solution is correct. It is a lesson
in the importance of understanding the origin of words.
| |
| The
royal blue lapis lazuli. |
Sappiyr (blue). The meaning of sapphire has clearly changed
over the centuries. All agree that sapphire refers to stones
of a blue color, but the exact meaning is unclear. The Greek
word sapphire was derived from the Hebrew sappiyr
(stone #5). Fortunately, we have a clear reference of exactly
what color was indicated. The Lord appeared on a sappiyr colored pavement to the seventy with Moses,
which was compared to the color of a clear blue sky (Ex.
24:10). The Greek word sapphire referred to lapis lazuli,
which is a royal blue stone. And today in English, sapphire
refers to an entirely different blue stone and even to stones
of other colors.
| |
| New Jerusalem has walls of jasper. |
Foundation
Stones
Now
let us look at the twelve stones that John describes as
forming the foundation of the New Jerusalem. All of the
twelve Greek stone names are essentially identical to names
still used today to describe semi-precious stones, so they
are much better understood than the ancient Hebrew names.
According to Postulate 2, they should be identical to the
twelve breastplate stones, or at least be stones of the
same colors.
The
twelve foundation stones are listed in alphabetical order
in Table 2. The order given in Revelation apparently corresponds
to the twelve apostles (Rev. 21:14), and that is not the
subject of this article. Let it now suffice simply to correlate
the stones to the twelve tribes of Israel.
| Greek |
Modern
Stone |
Color |
Other
Refs. |
| Amethyst |
Amethyst |
Purple |
none |
| Beryl |
Beryl |
White
or Cream |
none |
| Chalcedony |
Chalcedony |
Light
Blue |
none |
| Chrysolite
|
Chrysolite |
Yellow
(Gold) |
"golden
stone" |
| Chrysoprase
|
Chrysoprase,
Peridot |
Yellow
Green (Gold) |
"golden
leek" |
| Emerald |
Emerald |
Green |
"green" |
| Jacinth |
Jacinth
(Hyacinth)
or Garnet |
Reddish
Black |
color
of smoke,
Rev. 9:17 |
| Jasper |
Jasper |
Orange
or
Fiery Red |
Yellow-Red,
Rev. 4:3 & Ezek. 1:27. Walls of New Jerusalem,
Rev. 21:11,18. |
| Sapphire |
Lapis
Lazuli |
Royal
Blue |
"blue" |
| Sardius |
Sard |
Red |
"red"
Rev. 4:3 |
| Sardonyx |
Sardonyx |
Red
& White layers |
none |
| Topaz |
Topaz |
Yellow
Brown |
none |
Table 2. The Foundation Stones in alphabetical order, with colors
If we
compare these twelve stones to those given in the King James
translation, we find that eight of them agree (if we equate
sardonyx with onyx). But before
we get too excited about believing all the correlations,
we need to remember that the King James translators had
no clue (literally) as to what many of the stones names
referred to. Often, they simply picked the name of a modern
precious stone (like "diamond") to use in the
translation.
| |
| Cameo
carved from sardonyx. |
Three new stones. If we compare these twelve Greek names
for the foundation stones to the Greek translations of the
breastplate stones given in the Septuagint, we find that
nine are identical. That is very encouraging because the
Greek Septuagint translation was done some three centuries
before John wrote Revelation. It is the fact that most of
them are the same, which lends credence to Postulate 2 —
that all twelve must correspond. The remaining three stones
mentioned in Revelation, which thus need to be matched with
the Hebrew names, are chrysoprase
(yellow-green), chalcedony (light blue), and jacinth (also
called hyacinth, referring to either a red or blue form
of zircon). Gem books note that the original meaning of
jacinth is unclear. The modern meaning refers to a yellow-red
to red-brown from of zircon, but many believe that the ancient
stone was blue. The three stones on the Greek breastplate
list that are not on the foundation list are carbuncle,
ligure, and agate. The two stones
of onyx and sardonyx can probably
be safely equated because sardonyx is merely a special form of onyx in which the layers
are alternately red and white. Sardonyx
is used for making cameos, by cutting away one colored layer
to form a background for the picture. Thus, specifying "sardonyx"
indicates the colors, because onyx can come in many colors,
including not only white, but also black.
Jacinth
is Carbuncle. In Greek, jacinth sometimes refers to
a dark red color and sometimes a dark blue. There is one
scripture that seems to tip the scale as to what color the
stone "jacinth" represented to John the Revelator.
He states,
And
thus I saw the horses in the vision, and them that sat on
them, having breastplates of fire, and of jacinth, and brimstone:
and the heads of the horses were as the heads of lions;
and out of their mouths issued fire and smoke and brimstone.
(Revelation 9:17)
Here
we are told the horsemen had breastplates of fire (red),
jacinth (?), and brimstone (sulfur or yellow). But then
in a parallel construction we are told they breathed out
fire, smoke, and brimstone. That construction strongly suggests
that the color of jacinth corresponds to the color of the
smoke accompanying the fire. That favors the dark red interpretation.
Moreover, now that we know the meaning of "carbuncle,"
it is a perfect with the idea of "glowing ember"
because smoke often contains glowing sparks. So let us equate
jacinth to carbuncle (Greek anthrax).
| |
| Yellow Jasper (silex) has red streaks. |
Yellow/Red Jasper. The stone Jasper comes in a wide
variety of colors, but John gives us enough clues to deduce
that it is the yellow variety with red streaks (silex)
that is indicated. The being on the throne is described
by John as being the color of Sard
and Jasper (Rev. 4:3). Sard is
red, but what color is Jasper? Fortunately, in a parallel
revelation given to Ezekiel, the being is described has
being colored like amber (yellow) filled with swirling fire
(red) in the upper body, and like fire in the lower (Ezek.
1:27). So here again a being with two colors is described,
even as John compared the colors to two stones. Clearly
the red fire corresponds to sard,
which leaves the red swirling within yellow to be the jasper.
As shown in the illustration, the exactly describes one
kind of jasper. Note that this fills in the color wheel
area for "orange," but does so in a more picturesque
fashion than the simple color orange. Similarly, the opal
with an orange color is called the "fire opal,"
which serves well as a gem of this color.
| |
| Chrysoprase is yellow-green. |
Golden-green Chrysoprase. One of the new stones on John's list
is chrysoprase, which means "golden-green"
or "yellow-green" in Greek. This color fits well
to be that of bareqeth (stone
#3) which was described both as like "lightning"
(a golden color) and also as green (emerald). Let us tentatively
make this identification, which refers to the modern gem
stone peridot or olivine.[11]
| |
| Chalcedony is light blue. |
Sky Blue Chalcedony. There are two sacred colors of
blue in the scriptures and there are two blue stones of
those colors, so let us match them. John adds chalcedony
to the list, which is a light blue (sky blue) stone. The
other blue stone he lists is called sapphire in Greek, which
during his time referred to the stone we call lapis lazuli,
which is a royal blue color. In the Old Testament, the stone
sappiyr is compared to
the azure blue sky, so let us equate that stone to chalcedony.
Royal Blue Ligure. In the temple, the blue color used for
the high priest's robe (Ex. 28:31) was a royal blue color
that exactly matches that of lapis lazuli (see Figure 1).
Let us equate the unknown Greek "ligure"
to lapis lazuli. Most translators equate ligure
to the blue form of jacinth (blue zircon), but that would
yield too many blue stones. I propose that about 280 BC,
when that Septuagint was translated, that the Greek "sapphire"
referred to the azure blue chalcedony, the color of sappiyr.
Nearly four centuries later when John wrote, I propose that
the Greek word sapphire had changed in meaning to refer
to the deeper blue lapis lazuli. That seems like a reasonable
conjecture, and as will be seen in the final order, it is
apparently an important key to unlocking the order of these
stones.
| |
| Agate
can be light or dark green. |
Green Agate. By elimination, we are left to equate the
Hebrew shebuw, translated
as "agate" in the Septuagint, with the stone John
describes as emerald. Is that reasonable? It is, because
agate refers to any of a wide variety of colors of quartz
rock, named more for their stripes or variegated patterns
than for their color. One green form of agate is called
moss agate, which could be the foundation stone. Another
possibility is called "emerald quartz." Let's
try equating agate to green and see how well everything
fits together.
| |
| Sardonyx has alternate red and white layers. |
Red/White Sardonyx. It is worth noting how much information
was added by John the Revelator when he named one stone
as "sardonyx" rather
than merely onyx. Onyx refers to a layered rock that usually
has white, red, or black layers. Sometimes it is all white
or all black, so the name onyx alone does not specify color.
But the variety with alternate red and white stripes has
the specific name "sardonyx."
Sardonyx is used to make cameos by carving out one layer to
leave a raised picture. The same is done with onyx made
of black and white layers of stone.
Table
3 lists the twelve breastplate stones with their Greek translations
from the Septuagint, along with the proposed correlation
to the twelve foundation stones, and also to gems of similar
color.
| Hebrew |
Greek |
Foundation |
Gem |
Color |
| 1.
Odem |
Sardius |
Sard |
Ruby |
Red |
| 2.
Pitdah |
Topaz |
Topaz |
Topaz |
Tan |
| 3.
Bareqeth |
Emerald |
Chrysoprase |
Peridot |
Yellow
green
(Golden) |
| 4.
Nophek |
Anthrax |
Jacinth |
Garnet |
Reddish
black |
| 5.
Sappiyr |
Sapphire |
Chalcedony |
Aqua-
marine |
Light
Blue |
| 6.
Yahalom |
Jasper |
Jasper |
Fire
Opal |
Orange |
| 7.
Leshem |
Ligure |
Lapis
Lazuli |
Sapphire |
Royal
Blue |
| 8.
Shebuw |
Agate |
Emerald |
Emerald |
Green |
| 9.
Aclamah |
Amethyst |
Amethyst |
Amethyst |
Purple |
| 10.
Tarshish |
Chrysolite |
Chrysolite |
Chrysoberyl |
Yellow |
| 11.
Shoham |
Beryl |
Beryl,
Onyx |
Diamond,
Beryl |
White |
| 12. Jashepheh |
Onyx |
Sardonyx,
Rose Quartz |
Pink
Tourmaline |
Red/White
stripes, or
Pink |
Table 3.
Identification of the twelve stones and
colors.
Now
let us turn to matching these colors to the constellations.
Constellation
Colors
The
classic constellations were associated with colors, some
of which have been explicitly recorded from antiquity. Others
can be deduced, and some are related to the roles of Jesus
Christ, which were discussed in an earlier article.[12]
Scriptural
Clues
Cornerstone
Constellations. The colors associated with the
four "cornerstone" constellations are the best
established, and were discussed in detail in an earlier
article.[13]
They are that the Lion is red, the Scorpion is black, the
Water Bearer is blue, and the Bull is white. All four of
those colors show up in the colors of the stones, choosing
the royal blue color, which was one of the four principal
colors used in the temple. The black would correspond to
the red-black of garnet, which makes a more beautiful stone
than a straight black color. Similarly, a clear stone like
diamond can probably be substituted for white.
| |
| One of the Fishes (Pisces). |
Purple
Fishes. The four colors of the temple were red,
blue, white and purple. The colors of the four cornerstone
tribes are red (Judah), blue (Reuben), white (Joseph) and
black (Dan). It appears that the four temple colors represent
the four cornerstone tribes, and hence all of Israel,
except that for some reason purple was substituted for black.
I propose that such is the case, perhaps for the reason
that black is not a good temple color (it also having the
connotation of evil, like the black scorpion), and hence
another tribe's color was substituted into its place. What
is the logical tribe to use for temple work? Is it not Levi,
whose tribe was dedicated to temple service? To me it seems
clear that purple must be Levi's color. The constellation
associated with Christ's role as the Great High Priest is
the Fishes (the two fish representing his church), and the
high priest was chosen from the tribe of Levi. Thus, purple
is the proposed color of the fishes.
As long
as we are noting that sometimes black is dropped from the
four colors representing Israel,
the suggestion arises that this might explain why the colors
red, white and blue are so common in the flags of Europe,
where scattered Israel
migrated.
Golden Ram and Scales. The Ram was often called the
Ram with the Golden Fleece, and the ancient Greek authority
Homer referred to the Scales as the "golden scales."[14]
There are two "golden" colors in the constellations,
one being yellow and one yellow-green. Let us associate
those two colors with those two constellations, with the
option of switching them if the resultant order requires
it.
|
|
| Fire
Opal can be orange like jasper. |
Fiery Archer. The archer almost certainly needs to be
the fiery orange color described for the heavenly beings.
The Archer has wings in the older pictures, such as that
at Denderah in Egypt,
but in the modern pictures, taken from the Greek, the wings
were mistaken for a cloak flowing in the breeze above the
Archer.
Tan
Crab. The light yellowish brown (tan) color of topaz
matches the color of the Fiddler crab very well, and hence
is proposed as a tentative identification. It also matches
a common color for the donkey, which is also associated
with these stars.
| |
| The red and white Twins. |
Red/White Twins. Let us match the red and white stripes
of sardonyx with the Twins for two reasons. First, the twins
are associated with the first and second coming of Jesus
Christ. He is usually shown in white in pictures of his
first coming, and yet he will be dressed in red at his second
coming (Rev. 19:13). Moreover, the Twins are the constellation
of Benjamin, and that tribe was split into two halves, part
going with Judah
(red) and part with Ephraim (white). And finally, the red
and white stripes so common in flags (including the U.S.)
may tie to Benjamin.
| |
| Emerald
symbolizes green. |
Green Sea Goat. By elimination, the last constellation
of the Sea Goat must be matched with the color green. That
is not unreasonable because green is a color that can fit
the sea, which is often a blue-green color, and also the
land with green plants.
Let
us now list this tentative correlation in a table, along
with the tribes of Israel
which correspond to these twelve constellations, from last
month's article.
| Hebrew |
Foundation |
Color |
Zodiac |
Tribe |
| 1.
Odem |
Sard |
Red |
Lion |
Judah |
| 2.
Pitdah |
Topaz |
Tan |
Crab |
Issachar |
| 3.
Bareqeth |
Chrysoprase |
Yellow
Green |
Ram |
Zebulon |
| 4.
Nophek |
Jacinth |
Red
Black |
Scorpion |
Dan |
| 5.
Sappiyr |
Chalcedony |
Light
Blue |
Maiden |
Naphtali |
| 6.
Yahalom |
Jasper |
Orange |
Archer |
Gad |
| 7.
Leshem |
Lapis
Lazuli |
Royal
Blue |
Water
Bearer |
Reuben |
| 8.
Shebuw |
Emerald
Quartz |
Green |
Sea
Goat |
Simeon |
| 9.
Aclamah |
Amethyst |
Purple |
Fishes |
Levi |
| 10.
Tarshish |
Chrysolite |
Yellow |
Scales |
Asher |
| 11.
Shoham |
Beryl |
White |
Bull |
Joseph |
| 12.
Jashepheh |
Sardonyx |
Red
& White |
Twins |
Benjamin |
Table 4.
The Twelve stones, colors and tribes.
The
Order
What
is the order of these stones? That is, what is the order
of the tribes as listed in Table 4? Before considering this,
note that many commentators assume is that they must be
listed in order of birth date, and they assign Reuben (the
first born) to odem, and so on, and consider the problem solved by
assumption. This conclusion probably comes from the fact
that on the shoulders of the high priest, the names were
engraved with six names on each of two (white) beryl stones,
with six on each stone, "according to their birth"
(Ex. 28:10). Let's examine even that meaning before proceeding.
Shoulder
Stone Order
When
Moses was told to list the twelve tribes on the two shoulder
stones "according to their birth," what did he
understand that to mean? Was it strictly in order by birth
date? A careful reading of Genesis 29-30 shows that the
actual of order of birth of the twelve sons of Jacob is
not even given. Rather, what is given is the order of birth
by wife. That is, the order of birth of Leah's six sons
was Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah,
Issachar, and Zebulon. Similarly,
the order of birth of Bilhah's
sons was Dan and Naphtali, of
Zilpah's sons was Gad and Asher,
and of Rachel's sons was Joseph
and Benjamin. If you were Moses, how would you arrange these
names onto two stones with six per stone?
| |
| Aquamarine
is light blue like chalcedony. |
If you
say that you would put Leah's six children all on one stone,
with the others on the other stone in the order just listed,
then you agree with the standard Jewish interpretation.
To me, that is almost certainly correct. It is the order
in Genesis, except that all of Leah's children are grouped
together, and it just seems to make to most sense to group
both by family and order of birth. Another nice touch
is that if the priest faced east (the sacred direction),
then his right shoulder would face south, which was Reuben's
direction, and the left would be north, which was Dan's
direction. Thus, the stone on the right shoulder would start
with Reuben's name with Dan leading the list on the left
shoulder. That also fits with Reuben being the firstborn,
which is associated with the son of the right hand. We know
that because of his actions, Reuben lost that blessing of
being the firstborn, but that does not change the birth
order.
| |
| Figure 3. Breastplate reconstruction by A. Paul Davis. |
This
shoulder stone order is usually assumed to be the same order
as the stones on the breastplate. The reproductions shown
in both Figure 2 at the beginning of this article and Figure
3 here both have the names engraved in this order. Note
that the first stone in both cases is in the upper right-hand
corner of the illustration, consistent with Hebrew reading
from right to left.
Encampment
Order
In support
of this shoulder order interpretation, consider the order
of their names when the tribes encamped in a square fashion,
with three tribes in each direction. The order given is
Judah, Issachar, Zebulon (east),
Reuben, Simeon, Gad (south), Ephraim, Manasseh, Benjamin
(west), and Dan, Asher, Naphtali
(north) (Num. 2:3-29). What order are they listed in here?
The order is almost the same as just proposed for the two
shoulder stones. Judah, Issachar
and Zebulon are the last three on Leah's stone in the same
order. Why would Judah's
three be listed first? Perhaps it is because Judah
is associated with the east, and east is the most important
direction. Then Reuben, Simeon and Levi would have been
the next three, except that Levi was removed from this list
when he became head of the priestly tribe, which was protected
in the middle of these armies. It would make sense for Gad,
the first born of Leah's handmaid Zilpah,
to take Levi's place. If so, then the next three are explained.
Asher would then have moved up one place and we'd expect
the north three to be Dan, Naphtali
and Asher. Those are the three encamped on the north, but
I have no explanation for why Naphtali
and Asher have their order reversed. Perhaps it has to do
with when the tribes actually migrated. Finally, the tribe
of Joseph was split into Ephraim and Manasseh, which perfectly
explains the order of the west encampment. Thus, with the
exception of the Naphtali/Asher swap, the encampment order is perfectly explained
by starting with the proposed shoulder order and then replacing
Levi. Note that the four "cornerstone" tribes
of Reuben, Judah,
Dan, and Joseph (Ephraim) are each at the head of one of
the four cardinal directions in the encampment order. That
is in agreement with their each being the leaders for that
direction, and their colors of blue, red, black and white
representing those four directions.
Breastplate
Order
| |
| Ruby is red like sard. |
Now
we are finally prepared to consider the order proposed for
the breastplate. Looking at Table 4, we see that the order
is very similar to the encampment order, but before Levi
was replaced. The first three stones
correspond to Judah, Issachar
and Zebulon, exactly as in the encampment order. The next
three correspond to the north direction, being Dan, Naphtali, and Asher. This time the three are still in the
order expected from the shoulder order, rather than having
Naphtali and Asher swapped. The
next three correspond to south in the exact birth order
expected: Reuben, Simeon and Levi. Finally the last three
also are in perfect order: Asher, Joseph and Benjamin.
Another
way to look at it is that the order is identical to the
shoulder order broken into sets of three, and rearranged
to have Judah head
the list, as in the encampment order. So the order comes
out perfectly, with only a slight modification from the
standard Hebrew interpretation. That this resultant order
would match so closely what was expected, and that it was
derived from considerations about the colors of constellations
and roles of Christ, is totally beyond chance. Thus, it
is proposed that Table 4 indeed lists the correct correlations
of the stones to the constellations, colors, and tribes.
Modern
Birth Stones
How
does all of this relate to our modern list of twelve birthstones?
Jewelers pretty much agree on a list of ancient birth stones
as correlated to months, and also have a similar modern
list. They are presented in Table 5 along with the months
according to the actual birthdates proposed for the twelve
sons of Israel.
The last column lists the gems proposed in this article
to represent each of the twelve constellations and tribes.
| Month |
Modern |
Ancient |
Tribe |
Birthday |
Proposed |
| January |
Garnet |
Garnet |
|
|
|
| February |
Amethyst |
Amethyst |
Levi |
5
Feb |
Amethyst |
| March |
Aquamarine |
Jasper |
Zebulon |
4
Mar |
Peridot |
| April |
Diamond |
Sapphire |
Joseph |
6
Apr |
Diamond |
| May |
Emerald |
Agate |
Benjamin,
Issachar |
25
May,
29 May |
Pink
Tourmaline
Topaz |
| June |
Moonstone |
Emerald |
Judah |
19
Jun |
Ruby |
| July |
Ruby |
Onyx |
|
|
|
| August |
Peridot |
Carnelian |
Naphtali |
17
Aug |
Aquamarine |
| September |
Sapphire |
Peridot |
Asher |
23
Sep |
Chrysoberyl |
| October |
Opal,
Pink Tourmaline |
Aquamarine |
Dan |
9
Oct |
Garnet |
| November |
Topaz,
Citrine |
Topaz |
Gad |
2
Nov |
Fire
Opal |
| December |
Turquoise
or
Blue Topaz |
Ruby |
Simeon,
Reuben |
16
Dec
23 Dec |
Emerald
Sapphire |
Table 5.
Modern, ancient, and proposed birthstones.
| |
| Pink Tourmaline can replace red/white sardonyx. |
One
thing to note from the table, which may be surprising, is
that four of the modern stones seems
to be "correct" in that they match the proposed
stones from this research. Amethyst for February, Diamond
for April, Ruby for July, and Blue Topaz for December all
match the colors well. In the table, Ruby (red) is associated
with late June, but it really fits most of July well too.
But that is how the stones matched the birth dates 3,800
years ago when these 12 men were born. Let us now discuss
why that is not how they would be today.
Constellation
Colors
Let
us now return to the question of whether the stones correlate
to months of our year, or of the Hebrew year, or to the
30 day "signs" used in modern astrology, or to
the actual position of the sun in the zodiac constellation
at the time of birth. Using the twelve sons of Jacob as
a model, the answer is, that it
is the actual position of the sun in the constellation at
the time of birth which determines the stone. Note from
Table 5 that none of the proposed dates for the births of
the twelve sons of Jacob occurs in our modern months of
January or July, nor is there one birth in each Hebrew month.
Moreover, they do not all occur in the twelve equal periods
of astrological "signs," beginning about the 21st
of each month. On the contrary, the proposed dates of birth
for Benjamin, Issachar and Judah
all occurred between May 21 and June 21. But all twelve
of the births do indeed occur when the sun is actually located
in the zodiac constellation associated with that tribe and
the stone is the color of that constellation.
One
motivation for me as an astronomer to solve this puzzle
was simply to be able to create a color picture of the zodiac
constellations. Figure 4 is the result of this labor, with
the position of the sun indicated for the time of birth
of each of the twelve sons of Israel.
Note that the constellations are all different sizes. That
means not all stones get an equal length of time each year,
but that the great constellation of the Maiden has the most
people born at that time, whereas the tiny Scales and Crab
have fewer who can claim those gems.
| |
| Figure 4. The Zodiac Constellations in the proposed
colors. |
Precession
of the Equinoxes
Another
matter that is bound to raise questions has to do with what
is called the "precession of the equinoxes." The
north pole of the earth does not always point to the same
place in the sky, but rather it traces out a circle in the
sky in about 26,000 years. That causes our solar year to
shift through the zodiac constellations by about one constellation
every 2,160 years.
| |
| Figure 5. The sun's position at the spring equinox. |
Figure
5 shows the position of the sun on March 21 (the spring
equinox when the sun rises due east) from 2000 BC to AD
2000 on the small scale beneath Aries and Pisces. At the
birth of Jacob's sons, the sun was in the Ram on 21 Mar,
and then at the birth of Christ it moved into the Fishes,
where it still is. Modern astrologers mostly use the "signs"
(constellations) associated with a birth date back in ancient
times. That is, they say a person in our day born in the
30 days beginning on March 21 is an "Aries" (Ram),
whereas the sun was actually in Pisces (the Fishes).
|
Peridot today is called chrysolite, but is
the color of chysoprase |
Proposed
Stones for Our Day
Some
readers will want to know what the "true" birthstones
are for our age, based on the current position of the sun
in the constellations. Because of the precession of the
equinoxes, they would differ by about two months from the
"Proposed" column in Table 4 for the twelve tribes.
That is, the diamond (or beryl) would be the stone for those
born when the sun was in the Bull, which would now be from
mid-May to mid-June rather than from late March to early
April as at the time of these patriarchs. It is not clear
to me yet how to determine exactly where the boundary lines
are between constellations for this purpose, but I will
venture a preliminary proposal. Judging from the birth dates
of these twelve tribes, it appears that the divisions between
the constellations may be made according to a calendar based
on the 7-day week, such that the sun always enters a zodiac
constellation on a Sunday. Looking at the current position
of the year in the zodiac the following table should suffice
for the current decade.
| Constellation |
Begins
Sunday
on or
after |
Length
(weeks) |
Gem
Stone |
| 1.
Maiden (Virgo) |
12
Sep |
7 |
Aquamarine |
| 2.
Scales (Libra) |
31
Oct |
3 |
Chrysoberyl |
| 3.
Scorpion (Scorpius) |
21
Nov |
4 |
Garnet |
| 4.
Archer (Sagittarius) |
19
Dec |
4 |
Fire
Opal |
| 5.
Sea Goat (Capricornus) |
16
Jan |
4 |
Emerald |
| 6.
Water Bearer (Aquarius) |
13
Feb |
4 |
Blue
Sapphire |
| 7.
Fishes (Pisces) |
14
Mar |
5 |
Amethyst |
| 8.
Ram (Aries) |
18
Apr |
3 |
Peridot |
| 9.
Bull (Taurus) |
9
May |
6 |
Diamond |
| 10.
Twins (Gemini) |
20
Jun |
4 |
Pink
Tourmaline |
| 11.
Crab (Cancer) |
18
Jul |
3 |
Topaz |
| 12.
Lion (Leo) |
8
Aug |
5 |
Ruby |
Table 6. Proposed Birth Constellations and
Gems for current decade.
For
example, in 2005 the day 12 Sep falls on a Monday, so the
sun would enter Virgo on the following Sunday (18 Sep).
On the other hand, 13 Feb falls on a Sunday, so that day
would begin Aquarius. This is only a tentative proposal,
but it should suffice until a more accurate model can be
deduced. The three close birthdays of Benjamin, Issachar
and Judah would be explained if the Crab began at that time
on the Sunday on or after 26 May.
Conclusion
An
identification is proposed of the twelve stones of
the ancient Israelite high priest's breastplate with a)
modern stone names, b) the colors, c) the foundation stones
of the New Jerusalem, d) the associated zodiac constellations
and e) the corresponding tribes of Israel.
The derivation was based on name meanings, stone colors,
traditional zodiac constellation colors and proposed birth
dates for the twelve sons of Israel.
The resultant order of the twelve tribes is entirely compatible
with other Biblical arrangements. Because there is virtually
no possibility that the resultant order could be due to
random chance, it is concluded that these correlations are
correct and that the long-standing puzzle of the origin
of our birthstones has been solved.
Notes
1.
Pratt, John
P., "Twelve
Sons, Twelve Constellations," Meridian Magazine (13 Jul 2005).
2.
The flags
of the United Kingdom, France, the Netherlands, Czech Republic, Norway, Iceland, Luxembourg, Croatia, and Russia are red, white and blue (like the United States). The flags of Denmark, Switzerland, Poland, and Monaco are red and white (like Canada).
3.
The Lord specified
birth order for listing the names of six tribes on each
of the two shoulder stones of the high priest (Ex. 28:10), so many scholars assume the same order for the twelve stones.
4.
Schumann,
Walter, Gemstones of the World (New York: Sterling,
1997), p. 86.
5.
Schumann,
p. 86
6.
The ancient
Jewish historian Josephus explicitly states that the order
of the names on the breastplate stones was the birth order
(Antiquities III.vii.5). But Josephus cannot be trusted
in any detailed information. He lists the order of the stones
differently in each of his books, and that differs from
the order in the Greek version of the Old Testament, the
Septuagint.
7.
Strong, James,
The Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible (McClean Virgina: MacDonald), Hebrew
word 124. The Hebrew odem
also has the same root as the name of "Adam."
In earlier articles we have already identified red as the
color of Judah, the Lion (Leo) as his constellation. Moreover,
Adam was associated with the bright star in the Lion, so
all of this is consistent with Adam also referring to red.
8.
New American
Standard Bible (Carol Stream, Ill.:Creation House, 1973).
9.
Strong, word
7718, "to blanch."
10. Pratt, John P., "The
Lion and Unicorn Testify of Christ, Part I: The Cornerstone
Constellations," Meridian
Magazine (8 Nov 2001). Section 2.7 identifies the four colors
associated with the four principal tribes: Judah is red, Dan is black, Reuben is blue, and Joseph is
white.
11. While peridot today are called chrysolite, there has been a shift in meaning, because it
is clearly the yellow-green color implied by the name chrysoprase.
12. Pratt, John P., " The
Constellations Tell of Christ," Meridian Magazine
(15 Jun 2005), called "The Zodiac Testifies of Christ"
on my website.
13. See footnote 10.
14. Allen, Richard H., Star Names, Their Lore and Meaning
(New York: Dover, 1963), first published as Star-Names
and Their Meanings by G.E. Stechert
in 1899, pp. 78, 271. The quote there from Homer is "Th'
Eternal Father hung His golden scales aloft."