Phae Metta Khea Kwai Fapha (Metta Goat) BE2533 Luang Phor Ruem Wat Chukkacher

Phae Metta Khea Kwai Fapha (Metta Goat) • BE 2533

Luang Phor Ruem (LP Ruem) • Wat Chukkacher, Chonburi • With T-Amulet Certificate

Overview — Phae Metta Khea Kwai Fapha (Metta Goat) BE2533, Luang Phor Ruem, Wat Chukkacher, Chonburi (with T-Amulet Certificate)

Overview — “Metta Goat” from BE2533, a famous charm line associated with loving-kindness, social warmth, and protective presence (traditional belief).

Phae Metta Khea Kwai Fapha (Metta Goat) • BE2533 • Luang Phor Ruem (LP Ruem)
Wat Chukkacher, Chonburi • With T-Amulet Certificate

Collector Lens

The Metta Goat sits in a special category of Thai talismans: small, direct, and social in its “felt” function. Collectors describe it as an amulet you wear when your world requires people — clients, bosses, colleagues, partners — and you need a smoother atmosphere. It is not marketed as aggressive power; it is a soft influence piece: warmth, persuasion, and the ability to pass through tension without friction (traditional belief framing).

Collector Identity Card
Amulet: Phae Metta Khea Kwai Fapha (“Metta Goat”)
Master: Luang Phor Ruem Paramo (LP Ruem)
Temple: Wat Chukkacher, Chonburi, Thailand
Year: BE2533 (1990 CE)
Certificate: T-Amulet Certificate included
Focus (belief): Metta Mahaniyom • social grace • protection • smooth fortune
Price: SGD 688

Historical Significance

Consecrated in BE2533, this Metta Goat is associated with Luang Phor Ruem of Wat Chukkacher, Chonburi — a lineage remembered for practical, lived-in talismans that devotees actually carried for work, trade, travel, and daily negotiation. In Thai amulet culture, “goat” charms are often grouped under the broader family of metta and attraction pieces, valued for interpersonal harmony rather than theatrical displays of force.

Photo Set (Study Views)

Study View 1 — Metta Goat BE2533 (LP Ruem, Wat Chukkacher)

Study View 1 — overall form and surface character.

Study View 2 — Metta Goat BE2533 (LP Ruem, Wat Chukkacher)

Study View 2 — close look at contours and polish.

Study View 3 — Metta Goat BE2533 (LP Ruem, Wat Chukkacher)

Study View 3 — material tone and edge details.

Contextual Insight: Goat talismans are commonly read as “social tools” in Thai belief — they don’t fight the world; they soften it. When your life needs goodwill, repeat customers, cooperation, or forgiveness, metta-type charms are often chosen for their quiet influence rather than force.

The Legacy of the Metta Goat (Your Notes, Curated)

The Phae Metta Khea Kwai Fapha — widely called the Metta Goat — is revered for its association with metta (loving-kindness) and the kind of charm that changes the mood of a room. This piece is attributed to Luang Phor Ruem Paramo of Wat Chukkacher, Chonburi, consecrated in BE2533 (1990). In collector circles, it is treated as a “cornerstone” goat charm from the Eastern Province lineage — prized not only for belief, but for the identity of the master and the story of its materials.

Craftsmanship & Materials

Your source tradition describes these amulets as crafted using mystical materials such as black buffalo horn and albino buffalo horn from buffaloes said to be struck by lightning. In Thai spiritual culture, “lightning-struck” material is often treated as carrying a special protective signature — a symbolism sometimes explained by the saying that lightning does not strike the same place twice (traditional belief). The design is also linked by collectors to the goat-amuletry style of Luang Phor Am (Wat Nong Krak), with distinct enhancements in LP Ruem’s handling and finishing.

Consecration & Spiritual Intent

In your narrative line, Luang Phor Ruem’s wicha (sacred sciences) is what elevates the Metta Goat beyond a carved form. The consecration is described as meticulous — chanting, focused ritual handling, and spiritual sealing intended to transmit: goodwill, personal protection, and harmonious outcomes. The goat itself is read as a symbol of resilience, prosperity, and the ability to “stand firm” while staying friendly.

Lineage Influence: Luang Phor Am (Wat Nong Krak)

Your text links the Metta Goat current to Luang Phor Am of Wat Nong Krak (Rayong), remembered as a legendary figure for goat talismans and metta workings. The “Old Boat” story (Tao Kae Yong challenging him to sell an old boat at the price of a new one, and the buyer choosing the old boat after ritual blessing) is preserved in oral tradition as a parable of metta influence — not coercion, but the subtle turning of preference through blessing and confidence (traditional belief framing).

Passing on Sacred Knowledge (Discipline Test)

Another lineage tale in your notes describes a discipline test before the wicha was passed on: hands bound behind the back, seated on a stump in a cemetery setting, and freeing oneself through focused incantation. In collector writing, these stories are kept not as “proof,” but as lineage memory — showing the seriousness of training, the courage expected of a disciple, and why devotees trust the hand that consecrates.

Ritual Chants (Traditional Method)

In your original notes, the maintenance approach is simple and devotional: begin with Namo Tassa (3 times), then recite the lineage mantra used for blessing and protection, and a short protective recitation for lightning symbolism. As always, the heart of practice is steady intention: keep precepts, speak well, and carry the amulet with respect — the “metta” is strengthened by the wearer’s conduct (traditional framing).

Rarity & Collectibility

Metta Goat pieces are known to circulate with heavy imitation pressure due to popularity. Collector preference usually leans toward stable surface tone, confident carving/finishing, and documented provenance — and in this listing, the T-Amulet Certificate functions as a practical supporting layer for confidence and study.

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Disclaimer: This article supports cultural and academic appreciation of Thai Buddhist heritage. Spiritual benefits are presented as traditional beliefs and oral-lineage narratives, not guarantees.