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The Dark Forest:The Path of Heroes
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Concerning The Use Of The Word "The Eloheim" Or The Divine Beings.
After watching a video by the YouTube user below, I decided to do a search on the use of the word האלהים in biblical literature. The word is used about 130 times in the Tanach. Below are a few examples of the text with the word consistently translated as would be translated in Gen 6:4 . I was wondering if the word would be correctly translated as such, apart from theological beliefs associated with the literature. The examples below in English are from the Jewish Publication Society Translation 1985, with the words “the divine beings ” inserted into the text by the author of this essay. The rest of the references of its use are posted below.
Genesis 6:4 HOT הנפלים היו בארץ בימים ההם וגם אחרי־כן אשׁר יבאו בני האלהים אל־בנות האדם וילדו להם המה הגברים אשׁר מעולם אנשׁי השׁם׃
It was then, and later too, that the Nephilim appeared on earth — when the divine beings cohabited with the daughters of men, who bore them offspring. They were the heroes of old, the men of renown.
Genesis 6:11 HOT ותשׁחת הארץ לפני האלהים ותמלא הארץ חמס׃
The earth became corrupt before the divine beings; the earth was filled with lawlessness.
Genesis 20:6 HOT ויאמר אליו האלהים בחלם גם אנכי ידעתי כי בתם־לבבך עשׂית זאת ואחשׂך גם־אנכי אותך מחטו־לי על־כן לא־נתתיך לנגע אליה׃
And the divine beings said to him in the dream, “I knew that you did this with a blameless heart, and so I kept you from sinning against Me. That was why I did not let you touch her.
Genesis 22:9 HOT ויבאו אל־המקום אשׁר אמר־לו האלהים ויבן שׁם אברהם את־המזבח ויערך את־העצים ויעקד את־יצחק בנו וישׂם אתו על־המזבח ממעל לעצים׃
They arrived at the place of which the divine beings had told him. Abraham built an altar there; he laid out the wood; he bound his son Isaac; he laid him on the altar, on top of the wood.
Genesis 27:28 HOT ויתן־לך האלהים מטל השׁמים ומשׁמני הארץ ורב דגן ותירשׁ׃
“May the divine beings give you Of the dew of heaven and the fat of the earth, Abundance of new grain and wine.
Genesis 31:11 HOT ויאמר אלי מלאך האלהים בחלום יעקב ואמר הנני׃
And in the dream an angel of the divine beings said to me, ‘Jacob!’ ‘Here,’ I answered.
Genesis 44:16 HOT ויאמר יהודה מה־נאמר לאדני מה־נדבר ומה־נצטדק האלהים מצא את־עון עבדיך הננו עבדים לאדני גם־אנחנו גם אשׁר־נמצא הגביע בידו׃
Judah replied, “What can we say to my lord? How can we plead, how can we prove our innocence? The divine beings have uncovered the crime of your servants. Here we are, then, slaves of my lord, the rest of us as much as he in whose possession the goblet was found.”
Genesis 45:8 HOT ועתה לא־אתם שׁלחתם אתי הנה כי האלהים וישׂימני לאב לפרעה ולאדון לכל־ביתו ומשׁל בכל־ארץ מצרים׃
So, it was not you who sent me here, but of the divine beings; and He has made me a father to Pharaoh, lord of all his household, and ruler over the whole land of Egypt.
Genesis 48:15 HOT ויברך את־יוסף ויאמר האלהים אשׁר התהלכו אבתי לפניו אברהם ויצחק האלהים הרעה אתי מעודי עד־היום הזה׃
And he blessed Joseph, saying, ” of the divine beings in whose ways my fathers Abraham and Isaac walked, of the divine beings who has been my shepherd from my birth to this day —
The rest of the references where the word is used:
Exo_14:19; Exo_19:17; Deu_4:39; Deu_7:9; Deu_10:17; Deu_33:1; Jdg_6:20; Jdg_13:6; Jdg_13:8; Jdg_13:9; 1Sa_4:8; 1Sa_4:18; 1Sa_5:1; 1Sa_5:2; 1Sa_5:10; 1Sa_10:5; 1Sa_14:18; 2Sa_2:27; 2Sa_6:3; 2Sa_6:7; 2Sa_7:28; 2Sa_14:17; 2Sa_15:24; 2Sa_15:25; 1Ki_12:22; 1Ki_13:6; 1Ki_13:7; 1Ki_13:14; 1Ki_13:21; 1Ki_13:26; 1Ki_17:18; 1Ki_18:24; 1Ki_20:28; 2Ki_1:12; 2Ki_4:7; 2Ki_4:25; 2Ki_4:27; 2Ki_4:42; 2Ki_5:7; 2Ki_5:14; 2Ki_5:15; 2Ki_6:9; 2Ki_6:15; 2Ki_7:2; 2Ki_7:18; 2Ki_7:19; 2Ki_8:2; 2Ki_13:19; 1Ch_13:7; 1Ch_13:8; 1Ch_13:14; 1Ch_14:11; 1Ch_14:14; 1Ch_14:16; 1Ch_15:2; 1Ch_15:15; 1Ch_15:26; 1Ch_16:1; 1Ch_17:21; 1Ch_17:26; 1Ch_21:7; 1Ch_21:15; 1Ch_22:1; 1Ch_22:19; 1Ch_23:14; 1Ch_25:5; 1Ch_28:21; 2Ch_1:4; 2Ch_3:3; 2Ch_4:19; 2Ch_10:15; 2Ch_13:12; 2Ch_22:12; 2Ch_23:3; 2Ch_24:7; 2Ch_24:20; 2Ch_24:27; 2Ch_25:7; 2Ch_25:8; 2Ch_25:9; 2Ch_26:5; 2Ch_26:7; 2Ch_30:12; 2Ch_30:19; 2Ch_33:7; 2Ch_36:16; 2Ch_36:18; 2Ch_36:19; Ezr_3:8; Ezr_10:1; Ezr_10:6; Neh_4:15; Neh_5:13; Neh_8:6; Neh_8:8; Neh_8:18; Neh_9:7; Neh_10:29; Neh_12:40; Neh_12:43; Job_1:6; Job_2:1; Psa_136:2; Ecc_3:14; Ecc_5:1; Ecc_5:2; Ecc_5:19; Ecc_6:2; Ecc_7:13; Ecc_7:29; Ecc_8:17; Ecc_12:14; Isa_37:16; Isa_45:18; Jer_35:4; Dan_1:9; Dan_1:17; Dan_9:3; Jon_3:9; Jon_3:10; Jon_4:7;
A link to the video mentioned:
Posted in Ancient Near East, Bible, Jewish, Judaism, Old Testament, Religion, World Religion
Why Most Apologists Cannot Be Honest Historians.
Why Most Apologists Cannot Be Honest Historians.
by A. D. Wayman
“A one sentence definition of mythology? “Mythology” is what we call someone else’s religion”. Joseph Campbell
I have spent the last year collecting videos on religion. I was interested in how people of belief systems viewed the world from a historical perspective. Here is a list of challenges that face those defending their history within their belief systems. Many people end up confusing apologetics with history. At what point to we need to turn off the theological ideas impressed on the literature and history? The goal of this essay and examples are to show that believers and apologists at times have a romanticized view history within their belief system and will minimize the influence of cultural diffusion, while anti religious will maximize it. Here are just a few of the issues I have seen when apologists pose as historians.
Romanticized History:
“Historical reality is always more complex and fascinating than the orthodox of any tradition would like us to believe. The winners rewrite history, and the rewrite is almost always a simplification. Simplifications are helpful to give us an initial grasp, but we should never content ourselves with them.”
-David Noel Freedman, What are the Dead Sea Scrolls and Why They Matter (p. 69).
Every belief system has a romanticized history of its origins and influence in the world. At times these belief systems attribute and embellish certain contributions they believe they made to society. The apologists need to stay within the framework of this romanticized theological view of history in order to be true to the tenants of the belief system. If he strays he is seen as no longer part of the group and may be labeled heretical in some cases.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7HiiIO8ebw&feature=PlayList&p=AC1C2AE7758701C2&index=17
Eisegesis:
Eisegesis is another issue that I have come across. This term means when one places ones own ideas of interpretation, or bias rather then the meaning of the text. However this can also be applied to historical interpretation as well. It is most humorous that many groups charge each other with such claims, and some, while doing it themselves. Below are a few examples on the topic. The first link is to a video where the produce of the video point out the issue using the Hebrew texts of the creations story and the controversy surrounding the plural name of the Hebrew deity “Elohim”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENA1Tx3SQ8c&feature=channel_page
Also, here is an example of a believer of evangelical Christian using eisegesis to interpret the Hebrew text of Job.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7TBsck20oQ&feature=channel_page
In another example we see how some in religion may interpret ancient texts from their own belief system. Here we see a response to the ancient near eastern text of “The Descent of Inanna”:
http://www.tektonics.org/lp/nwjcarr1.html.
Theological World View.
Many in belief system hold a theological world view. The reader may have heard of such views such as the Biblical world view or Islamic world view due to the topics in the media within the last decade. How ever such theological views have shaped how we think about the world and views history. One of the popular debates is the creation verses evolution debate. Also debates on the historical Jesus.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3c-nTBtnlA&feature=channel_page
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjOSNj97_gk&feature=PlayList&p=F2758DCC10EB65E3&index=0
While there are many more example listed here are just three main issues that I personally find when reading and listening to apologists in belief systems. So we might ask are who can be honest?. One example that I found was in an article Contrasting Insights of Biblical Giants ( BAR 30:04, Jul/Aug 2004), Cross states: “ I think that there is a certain schizophrenic aspect to my own relation to the bible. In my work I attempt to deal with the bible as I would deal with any work of literature. And to treat the history of Israel as I would treat the History of England or Russia or China; that is, an attempt at scientific, historical approach.”
It is equally important for scholars to be able to change their minds. From my point of view apologist have a bigger challenge due to the fact that research may go against the theological view points of the belief system. At which point one either has to reconcile the issue or leave. While leaving is more painful, the reconciliation is more damaging because the research then takes on a certain amount of deception and the end ends up justifying the means. So when reading history or commentary on religious literature and translations of texts, be sure to ask questions about the backgrounds of the scholars because it may show in their work (for better or worse) and one may not even know it. Lastly below is an example of a student of biblical literature admitting he made a mistake, one sign of an honest scholar and historian.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7h5o0Ononc&feature=channel_page
Posted in Ancient Near East, atheism, Bible, Christian, Christianity, Islam, Jewish, Judaism, Mythology, New Testament, Old Testament, Religion, World Religion
Hell: Views of the Underworld in Ancient Near Easten Literature
Posted in Ancient Near East, Baal, Bible, Catholic, Christian, Christianity, Gilgamesh, Hell, Iliad, Islam, Jewish, Judaism, Marduk, Mythology, New Testament, Old Testament, Religion, World Religion
On What Are These Things Woven Back And Forth? : Thoughts on Duality.
On What Are These Things Woven Back And Forth? : Thoughts on Duality.
By A.D. Wayman
(A Contribution to the Synchroblogging Project on the topic of Duality)
“He sees, but he can’t be seen; he hears but can’t be heard; he thinks but he can’t be thought of; he perceives but he can’t be perceived. Besides him, there is no one who sees, no one who hears, no one who thinks, and no one who perceives. It is this self of yours that is the inner controller, the immortal. All besides this is grief.”1
Many times in religious literature we find the theme of duality. At times the literature tells us that we may have been cheated or trick out of the solution to the problem from the very start. Eve, being tricked by the serpent, into eating of the tree of “Knowledge of Good and Bad” and being exiled before eating of the tree of life; Gilgamesh falling asleep and having the plant of life stolen by the serpent; Adapa refusing to eat and drink what the gods fed him out of fear, thus missing out on immortality. At times we look for answers to the issue, which religious literature tries to provide. Many times these answers are not answers at all but multiple views on how to enable ourselves to overcome the issue of duality. For some this enabler is Torah, for some Jesus, others it is Atman, and still others may say it is the Buddha in all. Whatever the belief system, many different cultures use theses archetypes, metaphors and symbols to better understand themselves and their role in the world, universe, and society. In this short essay we will discuss a few topics concerning duality. The comparisons are not all that encompassing, but one can get a glimpse, and then pursue the topic in more detail if desired.
In the first example we read some of the conflict that the writer Paul, in the New Testament had to confront. One can almost feel the frustration at the acknowledgement of the polar issues people find themselves consumed by.
“I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate. Now if I do what I do not want, I agree that the law is good. But in fact it is no longer I that do it, but sin that dwells within me. For I know that nothing good dwells within me, that is, in my flesh. I can will what is right, but I cannot do it. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do. Now if I do what I do not want, it is no longer I that do it, but sin that dwells within me. So I find it to be a law that when I want to do what is good, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God in my inmost self, but I see in my members another law at war with the law of my mind, making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death?” (Rom 7:15-24 NRSV)
While the above text shows the writer Paul is torn by this inner conflict within himself; another makes good use of the duality and sees both as a complement to one another. In one of my world religion classes I attended the professor brought up a saying that I loved and carried with me. “Neither this nor that, but both and.” In the Tao-Te-Ching we read that such things can compliment each other and that we may have to do nothing at all!
“All in the world know the beauty of the beautiful, and in doing
this they have (the idea of) what ugliness is; they all know the skill
of the skilful, and in doing this they have (the idea of) what the
want of skill is. So it is that existence and non-existence give birth the one to
(the idea of) the other; that difficulty and ease produce the one (the
idea of) the other; that length and shortness fashion out the one the
figure of the other; that (the ideas of) height and lowness arise from
the contrast of the one with the other; that the musical notes and
tones become harmonious through the relation of one with another; and
that being before and behind give the idea of one following another.
Therefore the sage manages affairs without doing anything, and
conveys his instructions without the use of speech.” 2
In relation to this we find a saying by the Jewish teachers concerning Torah study which like the above shows a hint of the idea of non-action.
One that sits and studies, the Scripture imputes to him as if he fulfilled the whole Thorah, for it is said, He sitteth alone and keepeth silence, because he hath borne it upon him. 3 *
Still others question the issue and lash out at the very tools that we were given to combat such issues. It is perfectly human to do this, we find such issues arise in the conversation between Krishna and Arjuna on the field of truth, in the battle of life. The most beautiful exchanges show the weaknesses that arise when the body and mind are under distress. Another example of this would be the text of the biblical Job. In all his anger Job questions his creator and at times entertains the idea of putting the deity on trial. Like Krishna the deity answers back, but with a little more force.
“And the Lord said to Job: “Shall a faultfinder contend with the Almighty? Anyone who argues with God must respond.” Then Job answered the Lord: “See, I am of small account; what shall I answer you? I lay my hand on my mouth. I have spoken once, and I will not answer; twice, but will proceed no further.” Then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind: “Gird up your loins like a man; I will question you, and you declare to me. Will you even put me in the wrong? Will you condemn me that you may be justified? Have you an arm like God, and can you thunder with a voice like his? “Deck yourself with majesty and dignity; clothe yourself with glory and splendor. Pour out the overflowings of your anger, and look on all who are proud, and abase them. Look on all who are proud, and bring them low; tread down the wicked where they stand. Hide them all in the dust together; bind their faces in the world below. Then I will also acknowledge to you that your own right hand can give you victory.” (Job 40:1-14 NRSV)
In the above text we see Job’s response is cowering before the deity and he is plainly saying “Okay Yahweh, I’ll shut my mouth now.” Here Yahweh is frustrated that Job would even try to understand the workings of the gods and the laws of the earth and heavens. It is somewhat humors that here Yahweh seems to tell Job that if he could do better, Yahweh would be more then happy to let him try. On the opposite side however we find a text attributed to Jesus, that the workings have been given to a few, and here Christ explains why he speaks in parables. Like the opening verses that we used from the Upanishads we see the same theme but in a different environment and used with a different metaphoric “enabler”. It appears Christ is frustrated with those who do not understand the self or the living Torah within. Here Christ believes that the “enabler” has been intentionally turned off.
“He answered, “To you it has been given to know the secrets of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given. For to those who have, more will be given, and they will have an abundance; but from those who have nothing, even what they have will be taken away. The reason I speak to them in parables is that “seeing they do not perceive, and hearing they do not listen, nor do they understand.’ With them indeed is fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah that says: “You will indeed listen, but never understand, and you will indeed look, but never perceive. For this people’s heart has grown dull, and their ears are hard of hearing, and they have shut their eyes; so that they might not look with their eyes, and listen with their ears, and understand with their heart and turn— and I would heal them.’ But blessed are your eyes, for they see, and your ears, for they hear. Truly I tell you, many prophets and righteous people longed to see what you see, but did not see it, and to hear what you hear, but did not hear it”. (Mat 13:11-17 NRSV)
The concept of duality rages through out literature, gods elbowing one another out of power, heroes overcoming against their counterparts, trips to the underworld, cosmic wars and much more. There seems to be a need for balance; the concept of the Chinese Yin and Yang may somehow come into play. However, with issues of fear and suffering such explanations do not enlighten one to the challenges faced when we find ourselves in the belly of the whale, or swallowed by a Tiamat or Mot. As Bart Ehrman discusses in his book “God’s Problem.” There is no one solution and so one may need to look to more then one enabler or mythology to find our place.
1. Patrick Olivelle, trans., Upanishads, Oxford World’s Classics (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998). pg. 44
2. The Texts of Taoism, Part 1: The Tâo Teh King (Tâo Te Ching) of Lâo Dze (Lao Tsu), The Writings of Kwang-dze (Chuang-tse). Translation James Legge. The Sacred Books of the East, Volume 40. F. Max Müller. 1891. From Internet Sacred Texts Archive.
3. Sayings of the Jewish Fathers (Pirqe Aboth) Translated by Charles Taylor [1897]
http://www.sacred-texts.com/jud/sjf/index.htm pg. 43 (* For a more in-dept research on this topic see blog Jewish Myth, Magic, and Mysticism and the post http://ejmmm2007.blogspot.com/2008/02/ain-and-yesh-being-and-nothingness-in.html)
Read more on the topic form the other talented participants of the project:
Jewish Myth, Magic, and Mysticism
Mythprint (all the myth that’s fit to print)
Manzanita, Redwoods and Laurel
Dream Builders: A Figment of Imagination
On the Goddesses of Canaan: A Short Essay.
On the Goddesses of Canaan: A Short Essay.
A essay contribution to the Synchroblog, Women In Greek Myths blog site
By A. D. Waymn

“Then Anat went to El, at the source of the rivers, in the middle of the bed of the two oceans. She bows at the feet of El, she bows and prosternates and pays him respects. She speaks and says: “the very mighty Ba’al is dead. The prince, lord of the earth, has died” Found by C. Schaeffer in 1933
In a recent Biblical Archeology Review magazine article there was a discussion on several finds concerning house shrines. The small house shrine, published by Biblical Archeology Review1, launched even more support for the hypothesis that the deity Yahweh may have had a consort. All throughout Old Testament literature the priestly cast wrote against the worship of a goddess and attempted to remove her and all such ideas from the literature and culture. Later in exilic and post exilic texts, the goddess worship was seen as and compared to adultery. It is in these text the even the very idea of womanhood was look poorly upon.
Else will I strip her naked And leave her as on the day she was born: And I will make her like a wilderness, Render her like desert land, And let her die of thirst. I will also disown her children; For they are now a harlot’s brood, In that their mother has played the harlot, She that conceived them has acted shamelessly — Because she thought, “I will go after my lovers, Who supply my bread and my water, My wool and my linen, My oil and my drink.”
(Hos 2:5-7 NJPS-TNK)
Texts like Isaiah, Hosea, and Jeremiah all speak on such topics, and in their chastisements and laments against corruption and injustice, the topic of adultery is a common theme. However, it must be pointed out that the Asherah pole remained in the Hebrew temple until the reformation of King Josiah, also, the Hebrew texts of the duel between Yahweh and Baal on the mountain with Elijah, where the priests of Baal were killed but the priestesses of Asherah were spared. Such an example shows the presence of and toleration, to some extent, the acknowledgement of a goddess, even if the priestly caste of the state religion, and the Yahweh cult disapproved.
“And then Anat went to battle in the valley,
she fought between the two cities:
she killed the people of the coast,
she annihilated the men of the east.
Heads rolled under her like balls,
hands flew over her like locusts,
the warriors’ hands like swarms of grasshoppers.”2
After the Hebrews took over the land of the Canaanites and started to settle in farming communities, the old warrior deity, Yahweh, started to become obsolete, thought through out the literature he is constantly dueling with Baal his Canaanite counterpart, he also had to share the spotlight with the goddesses also, the most popular being Asherah, Astarte, Anat. Research that covers this struggle and debate can be found in the book, The Hebrew Goddess. by Raphael Patai. In the Ugaritic literature and else where we find others that may have been lesser known goddesses that may have a played small functions. Sifting through such a list is difficult because over time, as with gods, the goddesses also were combined together and played the same role. Below in this short essay we will look two of these lesser known goddesses of Canaan and their functions.
Shapshu, goddess of war and the sun We find references to this goddess in Ugaritic literature where she functions as a messenger of El advises Baal in the epic to go to the underworld with his servants and daughters and fight Mot, the god of Death. When Baal does not return she asks Asherah for a son to set up as king in the place of the mighty Baal but the candidate does not meet the requirements. It humorously appears he was to small to fill the role as the text conveys.
“Listen, Lady Asherah-of-the-Sea:
give me one of your sons; .
I’ll make him king,”
And Lady Asherah-of-the-Sea replied:
“Why not make Yadi-Yalhan king?” But El the Kind, the Compassionate, replied: “He’s much too weak to race,
to compete in spear-throwing with Baal,
with Dagon’s son in contest.” And Lady Asherah-of-the-Sea replied: “Can’t we make Athtar the Awesome king?
Let Athtar the Awesome be king!”
Then Athtar the Awesome
went up to the peaks of Zaphon;
he sat on Baal the Conqueror’s throne:
his feet did not reach the footstool,
his head did not reach the headrest.3
Another little known goddess, or goddesses, Kathirat, were associated with wisdom and also of child birth meets with, also plays an important role in Ugaritic literature. Here in the Ugaritic text of Aqhat, we find the hero Danel in want of a son. He entertains and feasts to the goddess and her helpers seven days and then counts the months to the birth of his son. The request is granted.
“Then Danel, the Healer’s man,
the Hero, the man of the god of Harnam,
slaughtered an ox for the Wise Women,
he gave food to the Wise Women,
drink to the Singers, the Swallows.”4
Such ideas may better help us understand Hebrew poetry such as the Song of Solomon, and the texts concerning Abraham and Sarah, for all have the same themes. Another would be the story of Kathirat and Nikkel. Kathirat brings everything that is needed to the wedding of Nillel , the goddess of the “fruits of the Earth” in her marriage to Yarikh the god of the Moon. 5 Also such ideas and texts such as in Isaiah and such announcements of messianic nature may also be influenced by such ideas.
Old gods and goddesses never die. Any an avid reader of anthropology, mythology, and religion will be able to see these Gods and Goddesses morph into other functions and roles as the needs and influences of the society change. As with the gods, so to the goddesses compete for roles of dominance and elbow their way in and get elbowed out of pantheons by the more powerful. Even though in Hebrew literature the references were minimized and at times possibly edited out, we know that the idea of the goddess played an important role in early Hebrew culture 6. At times texts by the Hebrews may have been written in direct contrast to popular epics of their neighbors. We end with a rather humors reply to Jeremiah which underlies the layperson’s view of the Goddess as compared to the priestly view.
Thereupon they answered Jeremiah — all the men who knew that their wives made offerings to other gods; all the women present, a large gathering; and all the people who lived in Pathros in the land of Egypt: “We will not listen to you in the matter about which you spoke to us in the name of the LORD. On the contrary, we will do everything that we have vowed — to make offerings to the Queen of Heaven and to pour libations to her, as we used to do, we and our fathers, our kings and our officials, in the towns of Judah and the streets of Jerusalem. For then we had plenty to eat, we were well-off, and suffered no misfortune. But ever since we stopped making offerings to the Queen of Heaven and pouring libations to her, we have lacked everything, and we have been consumed by the sword and by famine. And when we make offerings to the Queen of Heaven and pour libations to her, is it without our husbands’ approval that we have made cakes in her likeness and poured libations to her?”
(Jer 44:15-19 NJPS-TNK)
1. See: “A Temple Built for Two Did Yahweh Share a Throne with His Consort Asherah?”By William G. Dever http://www.bibarch.org/bswb_BAR/indexBAR.asp?PubID=BSBA&Volume=34&Issue=2&ArticleID=11
2. Coogan, Michael David. Stories from Ancient Canaan. The Westminster Press. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1978. pg. 90
3. Coogan, Michael David. Stories from Ancient Canaan. The Westminster Press. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1978. pg. 111
4. Coogan, Michael David. Stories from Ancient Canaan. The Westminster Press. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1978. pg. 35
5. Hooke, S.H., Middle Eastern Mythology, Penguin London 1963 pg. 93
6. See the essay by the author on Psalms 23 compared to the text concerning the Canaanite War goddess Anat- http://wayman29.wordpress.com/2007/02/28/psalm-23-you-spread-a-table-for-me-in-full-view-of-my-enemies/
Extra Reading on the topic:
Goddess Worship and Women Priests – http://www.womenpriests.org/classic/swidler3.asp
The Cult of Asherah in Ancient Israel and Judah – http://www.utoronto.ca/wjudaism/journal/spring2002/hadley.html
The Pagan File Blog http://alkman1.blogspot.com/2007/01/canaanite-pantheon.html
A. D. Wayman is the creator of http://www.religionthink.com
Posted in Ancient Near East, Baal, Bible, Judaism, Old Testament, Religion | Tags: goddess, Mythology
The Battle Within: Embarking On The Hero’s Journey.
The Battle Within: Embarking On The Hero’s Journey.
By: A. D. Wayman
It is interesting for sure on what sort of situation people find themselves in when they realize they are caught in the metaphor and either wile embarking on a mission or finding themselves in the middle of one. Here we will view such an example from Hindu, Judaism and Christianity. Each responds in a different way and each will count the costs of embarking on the Hero’s journey some will be successful and others will not, but all will in the end learn from the experience. Such a journey can be a fair and foul thing.
One of my favorite lines written in the Juan Mascaro’s english translation of the Bahagavad Gita publish by Penguin Classics starts as follows
“On the field of Truth, on the battle-field of life, what came to pass, Sanjaya, when my sons and their warriors faced those of my brother Pandu.”
It seems that all such battles with-in start in such a way and here even at the start of the first lines of the Gita it takes us directly to the place where conflicts arise. Arjuna, sitting between the two lines of friends and family on both sides and one looks this way and that across the divide and falls into despair. For one realizes that the mission you were consumed by or found yourself on will cause great consequences for everyone who meet on such a field. In 1:28-29 of the text we can feel the distress of Arjuna at being in the center of such a conflict, a conflict that we may have found ourselves in at some point in our lives.
“When Arjuna thus saw his kinsmen face to face in both lines of battle, he was overcome by grief and despair and thus he spoke with a sinking heart. When I see all my Kinsmen, Krishna, who have come here on this field of battle, Life goes from my limbs and they sink, and my mouth is sear and dry: a trembling overcomes my body, and my hair shudders in horror.”1
Jumping across the spectrum of heroes we find a text about one who seems something other then such, but it speaks volumes on the different reaction to the journey and the trials that face us. Unlike Arjuna, who is distressed and finds himself in the middle of a conflict we find one who decides that running might be an option. Even though he runs, he is still consumed and is forced to take the journey. The task at hand was only delayed for a short time. In the account of Jonah, from the Hebrew Tanakh, we read of the distress of Jonah from the belly of the Whale that again many of us have found our selves in at some point in our lives. Whether it is represented as death or a whale in literature, it is a long, hard, dark, and frightening path to walk.
“Jonah prayed to the LORD his God from the belly of the fish. He said: In my trouble I called to the LORD, And He answered me; From the belly of Sheol I cried out, And You heard my voice. You cast me into the depths, Into the heart of the sea, The floods engulfed me; All Your breakers and billows Swept over me. I thought I was driven away Out of Your sight: Would I ever gaze again Upon Your holy Temple? The waters closed in over me, The deep engulfed me. Weeds twined around my head. I sank to the base of the mountains; The bars of the earth closed upon me forever. Yet You brought my life up from the pit, O LORD my God! When my life was ebbing away, I called the LORD to mind; And my prayer came before You, Into Your holy Temple. They who cling to empty folly Forsake their own welfare, But I, with loud thanksgiving, Will sacrifice to You; What I have vowed I will perform. Deliverance is the LORD’s” Jonah 2:1-9 NJPS-TNK
And as we know from this beautiful piece of literature Jonah then completes his mission, although he is unhappy with the results, which in its self might be a great lesson about what, or how we interpret the outcome of our journeys. It may not always make us happy or turn out the way one expects.
Crossing into more modern times we come to the beginning of the text Dante’s Inferno.
“Midway the path of life that men pursue
I found me in a darkling wood astray,
For the direct way had been lost to view.
Ah me, how hard a thing it is to say
What was this thorny wildwood intricate
Whose memory renews the first dismay!
Scarcely in death is bitterness more great:
But as concerns the good discovered there
The other things I saw will I relate.
In the midway of this our mortal life,
I found me in a gloomy wood, astray
Gone from the path direct: and e’en to tell,
It were no easy task, how savage wild
That forest, how robust and rough its growth,
Which to remember only, my dismay
Renews, in bitterness not far from death.
Yet, to discourse of what there good befel,
All else will I relate discover’d there.” 2
Many other texts would qualify for such a place here, the Epic of Baal, the Decent of Ishtar, the Decent of Ra, the Odyssey of Homer and many more. What is interesting about Dante however as he presses on to the lower depths, he seemingly becomes less and less afraid of the horrible sights he encounters. Possibly he is becoming immune to the horrors of the under world and is becoming desensitized to its horrors? We find a moving passage near the end of the epic poem when Dante climes out of the pit, after scaling Satan himself. Which at times is where such a journey might lead us.
“I clipp’d him round the neck; for so he bade:
And noting time and place, he, when the wings
Enough were oped, caught fast the shaggy sides,
And down from pile to pile descending stepp’d
Between the thick fell and the jagged ice.
Soon as he reach’d the point, whereat the thigh
Upon the swelling of the haunches turns,
My leader there, with pain and struggling hard,
Turn’d round his head where his feet stood before,
And grappled at the fell as one who mounts;
That into Hell methought we turn’d again.”3
And finally we read of the assent into light, the end of the journey.
“To the fair world: and heedless of repose
We climb’d, he first, I following his steps,
Till on our view the beautiful lights of Heaven
Dawn’d through a circular opening in the cave:
Thence issuing we again beheld the stars.” 4
In other literature some heroes are not so lucky and neither are those heroes in the here and now. Each one of us will have a different outcome; each will have a different wars, whales, or Satans to scale. Some never return and we who are left behind only can say they were brave enough to at least start such an epic journey and be inspired by such acts of heroic deeds. Others after having gone so far to find what we are looking far have it stolen along the way such as in the text of Gilgamesh when the serpent steals the plant of everlasting life. But no matter the outcome we may all be heroes one way or another. But we first have to start the journey.
- Mascara, Juan. The Bhagavad Gita. Penguin Classics, New York, NY 1962.
- Cary, Henery F. The Divine Comedy of Dante. Canto I
- Cary, Henery F. The Divine Comedy of Dante. Canto 34
- Cary, Henery F. The Divine Comedy of Dante. Canto 34
Posted in Ancient Near East, Bhagavad Gita, Bible, Christian, Christianity, Hell, Hinduism, Jewish, Judaism, Mythology, Old Testament, Religion, World Religion
When God Began To Create: Thoughts On Religious Texts As Science
When God Began To Create: Thoughts On Religious Texts As Science
By A.D.Wayman
If one were to listen to the most faithful of believers at times you will hear just how accurate the sacred texts are on many topics. Believers talk about the historical accuracy, mathematics and even science. But the author of this essay asks were the texts written to play such a role in society, or do the texts play a separate and far different function then the one commonly believed by the most pious of faith. Does one really need for all things in the texts to be “true” for the texts to have value in our lives? If so, where does the concept of faith come into play? We will try to answer some of these questions in the essay below by discussing the account of the Creation found in the Hebrew Torah.
It has come to the writer’s attention that most evangelicals cannot and do not view the text in the context intended. The literature when read today are heavily saturated with ideas of New Testament theology that even if one were to be able to read some Hebrew, the bias of our denomination, theologies, and belief systems affect the way sacred literature is read. The texts, being multi-functional were meant to be used in a multi-functional way. At times, we forget that the texts were not written to be accurate history books, science books, or financial manuals. The Torah was written to show the relationship between the Deity and his people and explain through aggadah the morel lessons of the laws by stories and accounts of patriarchs that may also serve as allegory. For nothing that happened to the patriarchs did not happen to Israel as a nation. When texts are written in such ways it is at times hard to weed out allegory, metaphors, and symbolism, from the intermixing of historical accounts and places. Many times evangelicals assume that part of the bible to the “True” just because a city or place name of a text is found in archeology. However, they fail to realize that though the place may be true the account may not always be, but may be placed in the text for another reason.
Genesis chapter one, which is written in prose, is clearly an allegorical text. One can see this by the Hebrew word puns. One example of this would be the word Adam. Adam not only is the name of the Hebrew account of the first man but also is the name for mankind. Also according to Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance it means “To show blood (in the face), that is, flush or turn rosy: – be (dyed, made) red (ruddy).” This may hearkens back to the account of Man being created from the soil. So we see here the multi-functional interpretations of the loaded Hebrew word usage. There are many more examples through the Torah and other Jewish literature.
It is most unfortunate that we fail to see the richness of the literature through the curtain of theology and the need to actually prove a text in ways not intended. It seems that in the history of religion at times, when new sprouts from the old, it seeks to establish itself as the original and invalidate the parent from whose womb it sprang. It still uses connections to the parent when most convenient, but apart from such associations it seeks to sever all ties. It would do us more good to view the texts in more productive ways rather then debating scientists, historians, and others until we are blue in the face. It seems that such sacred literature has been hijacked and the texts and the values are being held hostage by those who may not even know what treasures are locked inside. Possibly, those who have come to hate the literature, out of spite to those who claim to represent it, may be able to reconstruct the metaphors once more. One needs Focus the attention on the Creator rather then pleasing the fumbling attempts of those who feel the need to reconcile to prove their belief system valid.
Posted in atheism, Bible, Christian, Christianity, Islam, Jewish, Judaism, Mormonism, Mythology, New Testament, Old Testament, Religion, World Religion
Exchanges And Influences: Thoughts On The Debate Of Common Motifs In Religious Literature.
Exchanges And Influences: Thoughts On The Debate Of Common Motifs In Religious Literature.
By A. D. Wayman
Within the past few weeks the author of this essay has been made aware of a few writings concerning biblical literature and the question of influence. One of the main goals of this essay will be to look at some of the issues concerning Ancient Near Eastern literature and possibly look at some ideas or beliefs concerning influence. It is important, while reading religious literature, that one realizes that there is no such thing as pure culture.
No matter how devoted one is to their religious beliefs or ideas, it still dose not change the obvious literary motifs that were exchanged and borrowed. It is interesting to note here that those with and agenda in favor of the religious aspect of the literature in question will minimize at times the cultural influences, while those who are against maximize the extent of the exchange. This at times, throws the lay person into turmoil due to inner conflict on how to handle such information and still value the writings or accounts as sacred. Also, on the other hand, those who delve into such research at times loose respect for the literature and fail to reflect on the spiritual contribution the texts convey. It is my personal belief that their needs to be a mix, or a compartmentalization, if you will, so that both aspects of the literature can be examined and appreciated.
It has been a personal rule of mine to notice literary motifs, symbols, writing styles, word usage, and other commonalities if they appear and then explore this commonality across the board. Some texts with the same motifs may have exchanged literary elements with each other, while others may have not. It is however important to view the commonality from all sides before jumping to conclusions. We see this issue in the field of biblical archeology, where at times some make biblical literature is made to t fit archeology while others make archeology fit the biblical literature. This web is compounded when those of both literal and metaphorical view points enter the debate. At times these results are due to the misunderstanding of the texts and how they were written. Looking a large variety of texts from a region at times can lay to rest some of these issues while compounding others. An example would be the contributions Ugaritic texts made to understanding Hebrew literature. While some questions were answered still many more were brought to the surface.
It has also been an important rule of mine to value the literature from a spiritual aspect. Whether it’s reading the Vedas, the Gita, or the Tanakh, one must realize that even though their may be apparent exchanges and borrowing these texts were literary productions of a people for a people. At times the motives for producing such texts may be skewed by our own modern day misconceptions about why they were written. It is also important to look at the contribution archeology makes to the literature, which at times dose not align to our traditional views on how the texts are read.
It is perfectly fine to note these issues and research them to better understand the context of the material. Different motifs, though borrowed, may have different spiritual implications to that particular society, which may be far different from the spiritual context of their neighbors. At times it is a common myth, that when such borrowing and exchanges are apparent, this some how makes the texts untrue or less relevant. However, this is not the case because such exchanges can be found globally, and the religious literature functions as it should for when the context or ideas of the literature no longer speaks to the culture it is converted to handle such issues.
Posted in Ancient Near East, Bible, Jewish, Judaism, Mythology, Old Testament, Religion, World Religion
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