The Ennochian keys are just made up stuff which also don't have fortunate things to them. I am saying this as the language is only known to having been used by John Dee, a British occultist who communicated with "angels".
It's rumored that the Ennochian keys, if used for malicious purposes, as in fact, their angels are malicious, they can open the Apocalypse, or, as we call it here "The Yehuborim World Order".
Don't use Enochian and even though I have not been here from that time back in 2009, still, I am glad to hear that the JoS doesn't use Enochian anymore.
You're absolutely right about John Dee and Enochian. The language itself always seemed very artificial to me and didn't arouse any special feelings in me.
He certainly devoted himself to Judeo-Christian magic and communicated with evil angels via a black crystal ball. Together with another evil magician Edward Kelley, he organized spiritual conferences. Both used the black crystal ball to invoke the angels. "The obsidian mirror or "black stone", which once belonged to Dee, was nicknamed "The Devil's Looking-Glass" by Horace Walpole, a later owner. Beneath it were wax disks engraved with figures and names, which formed part of the table on which lay the crystal that Dee and Kelley used for their fortune-telling. "1
1 Richard Deacon, John Dee. Scientist, geographer, astrologer and secret agent to Elizabeth I, Frederick Muller Ltd, London 1968, p. 230
In his book "John Dee. Scientist, geographer, astrologer and secret agent to Elizabeth I" George Donald King McCormick claims under his pseudonym Richard Deacon, John Dee was the "007" agent for Queen Elizabeth I in Tudor times, as he sealed his secret writings to the Queen with a seal bearing the sign "007".1 Inspired by this, Ian Fleming constructed his "James Bond". However, I doubt this assertion because diligent research on Dee at the Royal College of Physicians, London, has turned up no original documents in which this is the case.
1 Richard Deacon, John Dee. Scientist, geographer, astrologer and secret agent to Elizabeth I, Frederick Muller Ltd, London 1968, pp. 5-7
Hail Satanas!
Hail Luciferus!
Hail Wotanas!