https://www.jpost.com/features/judaism-the-magic-of-the-late-rabbi-yitzhak-kaduri
The article is about a famous Rabbi named Yitzhak Kaduri who apparently was able to contact demons. Pretty strange thing for someone who's a devout man of God to do.
Kaduri was the only person capable of writing amulets that have the power to bring success, heal, improve fertility or change reality for the better in some other way.
In Kabbalistic thought it is believed that amulets tap the powers of demons and spirits and use them to perform miracles. In order to harness these supernatural powers, it is normally necessary to force these demons or spirits to take an oath. This is considered incredibly dangerous since the demons and spirits, once released from the oath, seek retribution.
Asked once if he forces an oath on demons when he writes his amulets, Kaduri replied, "God forbid! It is forbidden to force them to take an oath. I only ask nicely. If they want to listen to me, they listen. Most of the time they respect me because I am so old."
Hmmm.
summoning demons
Demon (a spirit); SPIR'IT, noun (Latin spiritus, from spiro) - "to breathe". The spirit is the contract between ONE and ALL for ONE to adhere to the demand of ALL to uphold life over death aka adherence to self sustenance.
Summon; SUM'MON, verb transitive [Latin submoneo; sub and moneo.] - "to call or command another one". What they're referring to by summoning demons is to trick another one to consent by free will of choice to ignore adherence to self sustenance (by believing the offer of another); thereby ignoring his "spirit" contract for the "commands" offered by another one.
oath
OATH, noun - A solemn affirmation or declaration of ONE to the highest authority that is ALL. That refers to ones adherence to self sustenance; thereby adherence to the spirit contract with each breath one makes to uphold life over death.
amulet
AM'ULET, noun (Latin amuletum; amolior, amolitus) - " to remove". That refers to using the contract of belief (an offer) to gain consent by another over the ignorance of self, which gives control over him to the one making the offer. The use the allegory "golem" to describe this...a monster out of clay (In scripture, clay is used to express frailty, liableness to decay and destruction.); controlled from outside. What has been removed is ones comprehension of the sole authority over self; the free will of choice.