LAPIS
the stone, a surname of Jupiter at Rome, as we see from the expression Jovem Lapidem jurare.
It was formerly believed that Jupiter Lapis was a stone statue of the god, or originally a rude stone serving as a symbol, around which people assembled for the purpose of worshipping Jupiter. But it is now generally acknowledged that the pebble or flint stone was regarded as the symbol of lightning, and that, therefore, in some representations of Jupiter, he held a stone in his hand instead of the thunderbolt.
Such a stone (Lapis Capttolinus) was even set up as a symbolic
representation of the god himself. When a treaty was to be
concluded, the sacred symbols of Jupiter were taken from his
temple, viz. his sceptre, the pebble and grass from the district
of the temple, for the purpose of swearing by them. A pebble or
flint stone was also used by the Romans in killing the animal,
when an oath was to be accompanied by a sacrifice and this custom
was probably a remnant of very early times, when metal
instruments were not yet used for such purposes.