Sorry, I got so distracted by Honi's party trick (rain), I completely forgot why I mentioned him in the first place.
Literally-minded people like these...
http://beginningandend.com/the-circle-m ... he-church/...say that Honi is heretical witchcraft, and can't possibly be accepted, because he's mentioned in the Talmud but not in the Bible. I think they specifically mean the New Testament Bible as we know it, after much editing?
There is a very good reason for that. The Paulian Christianity, as passed to us via Flavius Josephus, had eliminated Paganism and Roman Christianity became the religion of all the inhabitants of the Empire.
Peoples from the Enochian traditions were definitely on the Pagan side of the fence. As was, by that time, some of the things associated with King Solomon.
King Solomon built his famous temple in Jerusalem on a site that was already a Canaanite sacred sanctuary, which involved the Melchizedek priesthood. In the bible, we are told that Solomon adopted many Canaanite customs (and got into trouble for it with the orthodox Jews). These included sacred springs, mountain top and cave sanctuaries, and
megalithic stone circles called Gilgal. While that term applied to any stone circle on Canaan, the Hebrews used it for one specific town that had the most important circle of them all, said to be about two kilometres north of Jericho, where Saul was crowned as the first King of the Jews.

“The stone heap of the wild cate” later known as Gilgal Refaim “wheel of giants”. Which is even more Pagan.
In Kings 18:30-35, we can read how the prophet Elijah repaired a stone circle:
“..Elijah took twelve stones..and built an altar … and he made a trench about the altar, as great as would contain two measures of seed, … and he filled the trench with water.”That sounds like a Henge to me.
Circles, upright stones, trenches and water were part of the esoteric priestly traditions that "missed the cut" and didn't get included in the New Testament.