📖 Daily Rambam (1) Hilchos Avodat Kochavim – Chapter 11: Prohibited Imitation of Gentile Practices and the Rejection of Superstition and Occult Arts (Shabbos, 3rd Nissan)

Author: Rabbi Yaakov GoldsteinPublished: March 21, 2026

Subscribe to Receive PDF Hilchos Avodat Kochavim –Chapter 11: Prohibited Imitation of Gentile Practices and the Rejection of Superstition and Occult Arts Halachah 1 — Not Imitating Gentile Statutes It is forbidden to follow gentile customs in dress, grooming, behavior, or architecture. Jews must remain distinct in appearance, conduct, ideals, and character.


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Hilchos Avodat Kochavim –Chapter 11: Prohibited Imitation of Gentile Practices and the Rejection of Superstition and Occult Arts

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 1 — Not Imitating Gentile Statutes

  • It is forbidden to follow gentile customs in dress, grooming, behavior, or architecture.
  • Jews must remain distinct in appearance, conduct, ideals, and character.
  • Practices such as pagan hairstyles, grooming patterns, or constructing stadiums for pagan use are forbidden and punishable by lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 2 — Cutting a Gentile’s Hair

When a Jew cuts a gentile’s hair, he must stop three fingerbreadths away from the gentile’s pagan hairstyle (blorit), so as not to assist in forbidden grooming.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 3 — Exception for Government Service

A Jew serving in a position of authority under a gentile government may dress and groom himself like them when necessary to avoid disgrace or danger.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 4 — Prohibition of Soothsaying

  • Soothsaying—acting or refraining from action based on omens, signs, or superstitions—is forbidden.
  • Anyone who alters behavior based on omens (animals, accidents, sounds, etc.) is liable for lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 5 — Permitted “Good Signs” After the Fact

  • Considering events that already occurred as a favorable sign is permitted, provided no action was taken or withheld because of it.
  • Rejoicing over a verse of blessing or a perceived positive outcome is allowed.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 6 — Definition of Divination

  • Divination refers to inducing a trance or altered state to predict the future through rituals, objects, movements, or incantations.
  • All such practices are forbidden.

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Halachah 7 — Diviners and Those Who Consult Them

  • It is forbidden to divine or to consult a diviner.
  • The diviner himself is liable for lashes; one who consults him receives rebellious lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 8 — Definition of Fortune‑Telling

A fortuneteller predicts auspicious or inauspicious times through astrology or calendars, advising when actions should or should not be taken.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 9 — Prohibition of Fortune‑Telling and Illusion

  • It is forbidden to tell fortunes or to act based on astrological predictions.
  • Those who arrange their actions according to such calculations are liable for lashes.
  • Magicians who deceive observers into thinking they perform miracles are also liable for lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 10 — Casting Spells

  • Casting spells through meaningless incantations, gestures, or objects is forbidden.
  • If accompanied by any action, the caster is liable for lashes.
  • Those who participate by believing in such spells receive rebellious lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 11 — Incantations for Snake or Scorpion Bites

Reciting incantations for a bite is permitted—even on Shabbat—to calm the victim and prevent panic, despite the incantations having no real effect.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 12 — Using Torah Verses as Healing Incantations

  • Reciting Torah verses as medical remedies or charms is forbidden and considered a denial of Torah values.
  • Torah heals the soul, not the body.
  • However, reading verses or Psalms for spiritual merit and protection is permitted.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 13 — Seeking Information from the Dead

  • Seeking guidance from the dead through fasting, sleeping in cemeteries, rituals, or incantations is forbidden.
  • Anyone performing acts to obtain such information is liable for lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 14 — Ov and Yid’oni

  • Practicing divination with an ov or yid’oni incurs stoning.
  • Consulting them violates a prohibition and receives rebellious lashes.
  • Acting on their instructions incurs lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 15 — Sorcery

  • A sorcerer who performs an actual act of sorcery is executed by stoning.
  • If he merely deceives observers without performing real acts, he receives rebellious lashes.

style="text-align: justify">Halachah 16 — The Torah’s Rejection of Occult Beliefs

  • All occult practices are falsehoods and emptiness, not wisdom.
  • Believing in them as true—even while knowing the Torah forbids them—marks a person as foolish and weak‑minded.
  • True wisdom requires complete faith and integrity with God alone.
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