There's one metal God names 140 times in Scripture — and once used to save an entire nation. Three thousand years later, scientists finally understand why the women who wear it refuse to take it off.
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Gold is the metal of kings. Silver is the metal of trade.
But there's a third metal in Scripture — named 140 times, from Genesis to Revelation — and God gave it a different job entirely.
When He described the Promised Land, He described it by this metal: "a land whose hills you can dig copper out of."
When Solomon built the temple, gold went on the walls — but copper guarded the entrance. The pillars at the door. The great basin where priests washed before approaching God.
Gold was for display. Copper was for the body.
And one moment in Scripture proves it wasn't symbolic.
In the wilderness, thousands of Israelites were dying. No medicine could save them.
God gave Moses one instruction: forge a serpent — out of copper — raise it on a pole, and tell the dying to look at it.
Everyone who looked, lived. (Numbers 21:9)
Fifteen hundred years later, Jesus pointed back to that exact copper serpent to explain His own crucifixion: "Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the wilderness, so the Son of Man must be lifted up."
For 3,000 years, believers have worn copper against their skin because of it. They felt something they couldn't explain.
Copper isn't just a metal your body tolerates. It's a mineral your body requires — for the collagen in your joints, for healthy circulation, for the energy production inside every cell.
Here's the problem: modern soil is depleted, and most women over 40 don't get nearly enough of it.
The symptoms have names you'll recognize — stiff fingers in the morning, hands that struggle with jar lids, tired by mid-afternoon, restless sleep. Most doctors call it "normal aging."
When pure copper sits against the thin skin of your wrist — right at the pulse point — it releases trace copper ions through skin contact, the same way believers have absorbed it for thirty centuries.
But it only works on one condition: the copper must be pure. Plated brass — which is what most "copper" jewelry actually is — puts almost no real copper against your skin at all.
Gold can look flashy. Silver turns cold and grey against mature skin.
Copper does the opposite. Its warmth picks up the natural tones of your skin and gives it a glow — the way candlelight flatters where fluorescent light doesn't.
And because every piece is hand-hammered, each facet catches the light differently. Over time, the copper develops its own patina — no two pieces age alike, just like the women who wear them.
It goes with everything: denim on Tuesday, your Sunday dress on the weekend. Elegant without showing off.
The first Christians had a sign. A simple fish, drawn in the sand, that told a stranger: you're among family.
Something similar is happening with copper.
Women are noticing it on each other's wrists — at Sunday service, in Bible study, in the checkout line — and starting conversations that begin with "is that real copper?" and end with prayer requests.
Over 10,847 women now wear Vera's copper. Most of them found it the same way: another believing woman showed them her wrist.
It's not a fashion statement. It's a quiet "me too."
For 41 years, every bracelet was cut, hammered, and finished by one pair of hands — Vera's — at the same workbench in Sedona, Arizona. The hammer marks on your piece are hers.
Vera is 69 now. Her granddaughters are 3 and 6, and she's promised them her mornings.
Everything left in the workshop is 80% off with free shipping. When the last box ships, that's the end. No restock. No reorders.
And it's risk-free: wear it for 30 days. If you don't feel a difference, every cent comes back.
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