Acts 7:43 of the King James Version of 43 And you took up the tent of Moloch, and the star of the god Remphan, the figures which you made to worship; and I will remove you beyond Babylon.
Another verse is that of Amos 5:26, where the word "Chiun" represents Remphan, which reads:
26 But ye have borne the tabernacle of your Moloch and Chiun your images, the star of your god, which ye made to yourselves.
Remphan is a rendering of the Ancient Greek, [ρ]εμφαν. Various manuscripts offer other transliterations, including Ancient Greek: [Ῥ]ομφά, [Ῥ]εμφάν, [Ῥ]εμφάμ, [Ῥ]αιφάν, & [Ῥ]εφάν. It is part of a reference to Amos 5:26, which reads in Hebrew as "Chiun", "Kewan", "Kaiwan", "Kiyuwn", or "Kijun". The Septuagint's reading of Amos is "raiphan" or "rephan". The Greek forms may be based on a transliteration of the Hebrew, k (qoppa) having replaced r (resh), ph having been substituted for y (yod), and u (vowel waw) having been replaced by a (alpha). "Kēwān" is another pronunciation of the Old Persian word of Kayvân, meaning Saturn.
The Jewish community of Prague was the first to use the Star of David as its official symbol, and from the 17th century on the six-pointed star became the official seal of many Jewish communities and a general sign of Judaism, though it has no biblical or Talmudic authority.