According to anthropologists, when our human ancestors first emerged from the animal world and made their first tentative steps toward humanity, one of the first things they did to distinguish themselves from a primal existence was to make things 'beautiful' - an instinct to gather an art, as Charles Darwin himself says. Certainly, among the breakthrough objects made by early humans was used to adorn themselves: the first ornamental and religious jewelry.
Ever since these first steps, the form and function of jewelry changed a lot. The materials and the techniques for making them are unrecognizable and very much distinct from the primordial techniques. Yet the primal instinct that guided the prehistoric caveman is still the same instinct that guides every one of us in the gift - a deep desire to make things beautiful, a longing maybe to make our surroundings more 'livable' and to make ourselves more presentable to the world.
Religious Jewelry
This is no way distinct even in our option of religious artifacts. When intended for religious purposes though, jewelry is regularly more ornate than those for personal use. maybe this is one way of respecting the spiritual world, as embodied by religious jewelry. There is no way to glorify God and the spiritual than to make and offer only the best jewelry and art pieces for them.
Aside from this mystique, an early form and function of religious jewelry was the amulet or talisman, which is a trinket used as a magical safety against evil or disease. If jewelry can embody the power of the gods, literally it can also ward off evil beings. Although most of us nowadays do not believe in the magical nature of amulets, this convention nevertheless persists.
For example, there are still bracelets that promise to ward off the evil eye. There are also trinkets that are marketed as 'lucky charms.' There are also bracelets, metal bands, and other body ornaments that promise the wearer relief from obvious illnesses. Strictly speaking, this mystical use of objects could still qualify as 'religious jewelry' - the defining factor, it seems, is what we accept as 'religious' convention or not.
Religious jewelry today
There are of policy as many ideas on the use of jewelry in religion as there are religions on earth. Each of the major faiths today has widely varied ideas on the use of jewelry. In Jewish and Islamic traditions, for example, symbolizing God or the Divine in the form of jewelry or any art may be considered sacrilegious or idolatrous, while many (but not all) Christian churches use religious imagery in their rituals.
Also, many spiritual traditions emphasize simplicity and frown on vanity, including the use or overuse of jewelry. But one lively contemporary trend is to wear what used to be religious jewelry for non-religious purposes - that is, solely for ornamental purposes.
Traditionalists may be appalled by such use of their sacred symbols, but mostly the effect is unifying rather than alienating people. After all, either consciously or not, we are still driven by the same forces that impelled our ancestors to forge religious jewelry - the instinct to gather an art.
Religious Jewelry: Prehistoric But Persistent emblem of SpiritualityVisit : อวาเคลียร์
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