Since the beginning of time free thinking can be define as anyone who did not conform to status qua-wherever was social, political or any kind though outside, like Jews refusing to accept Christianity or Islam prescription of the Messiah or political moments from the right or left in19 century. The Blog follows the spirit of Spinoza which challenge not only his own Hebrew roots, but also Christianity with the tolerance of Montaigne. We dedicate this blog to all them were burn for dare to ask.
Friday, June 08, 2018
Friday, June 01, 2018
The origin and Mythology of Monotheism
Porpola in The Assyrian Tree of Life: Tracing Origins of Jewish Monotheism and
Greek Philosophy (Journal of Near East Studies Vol 52, 1993 pp: 161-208) trace
the belief is rooted in polytheistic, moreover the trace base on the Sumerian,
Assyrian Gods. The ten Sefirot are
actually the hierarchy of the Semitics Gods (and the for the Assyrians
represented the total order control by the King (the King is representing God Assur) as seeing Ashurnasispal palace in Calah
in order words divine order in this world—the king was the perfect man
represented in the tree of life, justifying the divine ruler and absolute rule
of the Empire—the meaning of the symbols and powers was transmitted orally).
The Sefirot similarity to the tree life is
not lost, the divine rule of the King—in his perfection was not lost in the
tree of life, ones again the Mesopotamians gods in the tree of life coincided
the manifestations of the Sefirot Ea the
god of Wisdom is place in the same position of the Sefiro of Wisdom, Sin with
Understanding, Marduk with Mercy, Samas with Judgement, Istar with beauty (lady of love), Nabu, Ninurta with Victory, Anu
(we should come back to Anu), Enlil
Crown.
The numerical
correlation, not just Geometry distribution of the tree of life, so Ea has value 40, 50 and 60, Adad has value 6 and 10, Samas 10 and 20. The number interchange
like 10 has to do with sacred day of Ada combinations of 6 and 10. The sums of
the numbers give the sacred names which appear in the middle of the Assyrian
Empire. Anu had 1 and Mumu 0, Ea 60, Samas 20, Marduk 50, Istar 15, Ada 10, Nabu 40 and Nergal 14 each of the correlated to the divined manifestation of
the Sefirot.
Anu was the
epitome of all the Gods, in the period of Tiglath-Pieleser
I all these relationships appear in Assyrian Royal encryptions and time Ashurnasispal II become
standardize, where the tree of live have
upper and lower faces and Istar the
heart.
The mysticism of
the Assyrian Gods do not end with the tree of life, the idea of Marduk riding the sun the creation—since
was consider the creator, where he was the endless light En sof Or.
One
consideration is the numbers are based on sexagesimal
system, where the number on the right are bigger than the numbers on the left,
the need to subtract according to the Polar system the left is negative. The
total number of the branches (4x30=120) and addend the numbers
(1+10+14+15+……+60=240) given 360 the Assyrian calendar and universe express in
degrees. Istar is the beauty the middle.
In the Sefirot the same to maintain equilibrium
left side is negative needs to subtract, the 360 degrees, 360 days and Zodiac
all correlated. The book of creation is solely base on the Mesopotamia
theology—polytheistic.
In Emuna-Elis described the birth of the
Gods, born in a mathematical process, the legend begin in the nothingness (Apssu+Mummu+Tiamat which was
the emptiness), when birth occurred the mathematical system become binary (Lahmu, Lahumu) in the infinity universe (Anssar or Assur) included
his negative (Kisar). Assur emanated (reflected) heaven Anu is the first manifestation become
the world. The mystical number Sin was
obtained from Ea divided by two.
The Etana myth (Shekhinah) referred to the Unio
Mystica, the individual acceding to the heaven, this ascended is the
Mysticism of the Chariot, and where the only explicated was Abulafia. The story of Etana was found in the Akkadian period
of 2300 BC.
Elephantine Papyri consist of 175 documents from the Egyptian border
fortresses of Elephantine and Syene (Aswan), manuscripts dating from the 5th century BCE. The papyri
come from a Jewish community at Elephantine,
then called Yeb, the island in the
Nile at the border of Nubia, which was probably founded as a military
installation in about 650 BCE during Manasseh's
reign to assist Pharaoh Psammetichus
I in his Nubian campaign, fragments on papyrus are much older, the largest
number of papyri are written in Aramaic,
the Elephantine documents include letters and legal contracts from family and
other archives: divorce documents, the manumission of slaves, and other
business, and are a valuable source of knowledge about law, society, religion,
language and onomastics.
The Passover
letter of 419 BCE (discovered in 1907), which gives detailed instructions for
properly keeping the passover is in the Egyptian Museum of Berlin. Further Elephantine papyri are at the Brooklyn Museum,
the documents were first acquired in 1893 by New York journalist Charles Edwin Wilbour. After lying in a
warehouse for more than 50 years, the papyri were shipped to the Egyptian
Department of the Brooklyn Museum.
What is
significant the Temple, a letter from the Elephantine Papyri, requesting the
rebuilding of a Jewish temple at Elephantine. The Jews had their own temple to
Yahweh evincing polytheistic beliefs, which functioned alongside that of Khnum.
Excavation work
done in 1967 revealed the remains of the Jewish colony centered on a small
temple. Petition to Bagoas
(Sayce-Cowley collection) is a letter
written in 407 BCE to Bagoas, the
Persian governor of Judea, appealing for assistance in rebuilding the Jewish
temple in Elephantine, which had recently been badly damaged by an antisemitic
rampage on the part of a segment of the Elephantine community.
Now our forefathers built this temple in the fortress
of Elephantine back in the days of the kingdom of Egypt, and when Cambyses came
to Egypt he found it built. They (the Persians) knocked down all the temples of
the gods of Egypt, but no one did any damage to this temple.
The community
also appealed for aid to Sanballat I,
a Samaritan potentate, and his sons Delaiah
and Shelemiah, as well as Johanan ben Eliashib. Both Sanballat and Johanan are mentioned in the Book of Nehemiah, 2:19, 12:23.
There was a
response of both governors (Bagoas
and Delaiah) which gave the
permission by decree to rebuild the temple written in the form of a memorandum.
You may say in Egypt ... to
(re)build it on its site as it was formerly...
By the middle of
the 4th century BCE, the temple at Elephantine had ceased to function. There is
evidence from excavations that the rebuilding and enlargement of the Khnum
temple under Nectanebo II (360–343)
took the place of the former temple of YHWH.
The papyri
describe the Jews as worshiping Anat-Yahu
(or AnatYahu). Anat-Yahu is described as either the wife (or paredra, sacred consort).
The origin of
the worship Anat, can be trace on the
second development, Josephus the Jewish against Apion, the latest deal as a rebuttal to, where Apion connect the Jews to the Hyksos
and the Egyptian priest Matheos.
Matheos said the departure of the Jews from Egypt to the places whither they
went occurred in the time of king Amosis, under the leadership of Moses.
Amosis lived in the time of king Inachus (Ahmose
and the name was used for the first king of the 18th Dynasty)
Josephus on
Apion's blood libel (Against Apion 2:8):
Apion becomes other men's prophet upon this occasion,
and says that Antiochus found in our temple a bed, and a man lying upon it,
with a small table before him, full of dainties, from the [fishes of the] sea,
and the fowls of the dry land... he fell down upon his knees, and begged to be
released; and that when the king bid him sit down, and tell him who he was, and
why he dwelt there, and what was the meaning of those various sorts of food
that were set before him the man made a lamentable complaint, and with sighs,
and tears in his eyes, gave him this account of the distress he was in; and said
that he was a Greek and that as he went over this province, in order to get his
living, he was seized upon by foreigners, on a sudden, and brought to this
temple, and shut up therein, and was seen by nobody, but was fattened by these
curious provisions thus set before him; and that truly at the first such
unexpected advantages seemed to him matter of great joy; that after a while, he
inquired of the servants that came to him and was by them informed that it was
in order to the fulfilling a law of the Jews, which they must not tell him,
that he was thus fed; and that they did the same at a set time every year: that
they used to catch a Greek foreigner, and fat him thus up every year, and then
lead him to a certain wood, and kill him, and sacrifice with their accustomed
solemnities, and taste of his entrails, and take an oath upon this sacrificing
a Greek, that they would ever be at enmity with the Greeks; and that then they
threw the remaining parts of the miserable wretch into a certain pit.
Now this is such a most tragical fable as is full of
nothing but cruelty and impudence; how comes it about that we take an oath, and
conspire only against the Grecians, and that by the effusion of their blood
also? Or how is it possible that all the Jews should get together to these
sacrifices, and the entrails of one man should be sufficient for so many
thousands to taste of them, as Apion pretends? Or why did not the king carry
this man, whosoever he was, and whatsoever was his name, [which is not set down
in Apion's book,] with great pomp back into his own country? when he might
thereby have been esteemed a religious person himself, and a mighty lover of
the Greeks, and might thereby have procured himself great assistance from all
men against that hatred the Jews bore to him. But I leave this matter; for the
proper way of confuting fools is not to use bare words, but to appeal to the
things themselves that make against them...
The question
rises with the idea Hyksos, according
to the Egyptian tradition, They are people from Western Asia arriving in the
Nile Delta around 1650 B.C.E and the Caanites are found in Egypt in 12th
Dynasty (between 1800 B.C.E. or 1720 B.C.E). Part of the controversial aspects
the Hyksos name means heqau khaswet
(or heqa-khaset: rulers [of] foreign lands),
but Matheos name meaning king
shepherd (Ap. I,14).
Josephus debates the synchronism between the Biblical account of the Exodus of
the Israelites from Egypt and two Exodus-like given by Manetho (ca. 300 BC) apparently mentions. Josephus identifies the
Israelite Exodus with the first exodus mentioned by Manetho, when some 480,000 Hyksos
(also referred to as just shepherds,
as kings and as captive shepherds) left Egypt for Jerusalem.
Apion identifies a second exodus mentioned by Manetho when a renegade Egyptian priest called Osarseph led 80,000 lepers to rebel against Egypt. Apion additionally conflates these with
the Biblical Exodus, and contrary to Manetho, even alleges that this heretic
priest changed his name to Moses. Many scholars do not interpret lepers and
leprous priests as literally referring to a disease, but rather to a strange
and unwelcome new belief system.
One
characteristic mention by the Egyptians regarding the Hyksos the practiced horse
burials, and their chief deity, their native storm god, Baal, where for the Egyptians
storm and desert god, Set.
Manetho's account, as recorded by Josephus, describes the appearance of the Hyksos in Egypt as an armed invasion by a horde of foreign
barbarians who met little resistance, and who subdued the country by military
force, where Hyksos burnt their
cities, destroyed temples, and led women and children into slavery, Hyksos the ascendancy in their influx
into the new emporia being established in Egypt's delta and at Thebes in
support of the Red Sea trade. Herbert Eustis Winlock describes new military
hardware, such as the composite bow, as well as the improved recurve bow, and
most importantly the horse-drawn war chariot, as well as improved arrowheads,
various kinds of swords and daggers, a new type of shield, mailed shirts, and
the metal helmet.
Another
explanation, the Hyksos migration,
with little or no war and, the Egyptian rulers of the Thirteenth Dynasty were
preoccupied with domestic famine and plague, and they were too weak to stop the
new migrants from entering and settling in Egypt. Even before the migration, Amenemhat III carried out extensive
building works and mining, and Gae
Callender notes that:
the large intake of Asiatics, which seems to have
occurred partly in order to subsidize the extensive building work, may have
encouraged the so-called Hyksos to settle in the delta, thus leading eventually
to the collapse of native Egyptian rule.
By around 1700
BC (just over a hundred years later), Egypt was fragmenting politically, with local
kingdoms springing up in the northeastern delta area. One of these was that of
King Nehesy, whose capital was at Avaris; he ruled over a population consisting
largely of Syro-Canaanites who had settled in the area during the 12th Dynasty,
and who were probably mainly soldiers, sailors, shipbuilders and workmen. His
dynasty was probably replaced by a West-Semitic-speaking Syro-Canaanite dynasty
that formed the basis of the later Hyksos
kingdom, able to spread southwards because of the unstable political
situation while aided by an army, ships, and foreign connections.
Josephus, quoting Manetho, described
more:
of an Egyptian
assimilation to the corrupt ways of the emporia, followed by a rebellion of
those who wished to perpetuate native Egyptian centered culture, rather than
any kind of military struggle.
By main force they easily seized it without striking a
blow; and having overpowered the rulers of the land, they then burned our
cities ruthlessly, razed to the ground the temples of gods… Finally, they
appointed as king one of their number whose name was Salitis. He had his seat
at Memphis, levying tribute from Upper and Lower Egypt and always leaving
garrisons behind in the most advantageous positions.
Archaeological
evidence finds at Edfu could perhaps
establish that the Hyksos 15th
Dynasty was already in existence at least by the mid-13th Dynasty reign of king
Sobekhotep IV. In a 2011 paper by Nadine Moeller, Gregory Marouard and N.
Ayers, discuss the discovery of an important early-12th Dynasty (Middle
Kingdom) administrative building in the eastern Tell Edfu area of Upper Egypt, which was in continual use into the
early Second Intermediate Period until the Seventeenth Dynasty, when its
remains were sealed up by a large silo court. Fieldwork by these Egyptologists
in 2010 and 2011 led to the discovery of a large adjoining hall which proved to
contain 41 sealings showing the cartouche of the Hyksos ruler Khyan together
with 9 sealings naming the 13th Dynasty king Sobekhotep IV.
The secure and
sealed contexts of these seals likely demonstrate that Sobekhotep IV and Khyan were
contemporaries. This would mean that the 13th Dynasty did not control all of
Egypt when Sobekhotep IV acceded to
power and that there was a significant overlap between the 13th and 15th
Dynasties since Sobekhotep IV was
only a mid-Thirteenth Dynasty ruler.
The ceramic
evidence in the Memphis-Faiyum region
of Lower Egypt also argues against the presence of new invading foreigners.
Janine Bourriau's excavation in Memphis of ceramic material retrieved from Lisht and Dahshur during the Second Intermediate Period shows a continuity of
Middle Kingdom ceramic type wares throughout this era. She finds in them no
evidence of intrusion of Hyksos-style
wares. Bourriau's evidence strongly suggests that the traditional Egyptian
teaching, long espoused by Manetho,
that the Hyksos invaded and sacked
the Memphite region and imposed their
authority there, is fictitious.
Not until the
beginning of the Theban wars of
liberation during the Seventeenth Dynasty are Theban wares again found in the Faiyum. Some texts indicate that while
the Hyksos controlled the delta region administratively, the Thebans were too
busy mining gold and making money off the Red Sea trade to care. Lower Egypt
and Thebes functioned autonomously, and shared limited contact with each other
Bourriau argues
that Manetho's description of Hyksos
rule is confirmed by the evidence in the Kamose texts: Kamose's rejection of
vassal status, the strict control of the border at Cusae, the imposition of taxes on all Nile traffic, and the
existence of garrisons of Asiatics led by Egyptian commanders.
Supporters of
the peaceful takeover of Egypt claim there is little evidence of battles or
wars in general in this period. They also maintain that the chariot didn't play
any relevant role, no traces of chariots have been found at the Hyksos capital
of Avaris, despite extensive
excavation.
Mummified head
of Seqenenre Tao, bearing axe wounds.
The common theory is that he died in a battle against the Hyksos.
The revolt which
drove the Hyksos from Upper Egypt
began in the closing years of the Seventeenth Dynasty at Thebes. Later New
Kingdom literary tradition has brought one of these Theban kings, Seqenenre Tao, into contact with his Hyksos contemporary in the north, Apepi.
In Canaan part
of the Gods Parthenon found and in the wife of Joseph, Asenath (Hohy Anat), the
worship oldest plausible recorded occurrence of Yahweh is as a place-name, land of Shasu of YHW, in an Egyptian
inscription from the time of Amenhotep
III (1402–1363 B.C.E), the Shasu being nomads from Midian and Edom in
northern Arabia. In this case a
plausible etymology for the name could be from the root HWY, which would yield the meaning he blows, appropriate to a weather divinity.
Israel emerges
into the historical record in the last decades of the 13th century BCE, at the
very end of the Late Bronze Age when the Canaanite city-state system was
ending. The milieu from which Israelite religion emerged was accordingly
Canaanite.
El, the kind, the compassionate, the creator of creatures, was the chief
of the Canaanite gods, and he, not Yahweh,
was the original God of Israel—the
word "Israel" is based on
the name El rather than Yahweh.
El lived in a
tent on a mountain from whose base originated all the fresh waters of the
world, with the goddess Asherah as
his consort. This pair made up the top tier of the Canaanite pantheon; the
second tier was made up of their children, the seventy sons of Athirat. Prominent in this group was Baal, who had his home on Mount Zaphon. Baal became the dominant
Canaanite deity, so that El became
the executive power and Baal the military power in the cosmos.
El and his sons
made up the Assembly of the Gods, each member of which had a human nation under
his care, and a textual variant of Deuteronomy 32:8–9 describes El dividing the
nations of the world among his sons, with Yahweh receiving Israel.
The Israelites
initially worshipped Yahweh alongside
a variety of Canaanite gods and goddesses, including El, Asherah and Baal. In the period of the Judges and
the first half of the monarchy, El and Yahweh became conflated in a process of
religious syncretism:
As a result, ’el (אל) became a generic term meaning God, as opposed to the name of a worshipped deity, and epithets
such as El Shaddai came to be applied
to Yahweh alone, diminishing the
worship of El and strengthening the
position of Yahweh.
Features of Baal, El and Asherah were
absorbed into the Yahweh and Asherah possibly becoming embodied in
the feminine aspects of the Shekinah or
divine presence, Baal's nature as a
storm and weather god becoming assimilated into Yahweh's own identification with the storm.
In the next
stage the Yahweh religion separated
itself from its Canaanite heritage,
first by rejecting Baal-worship in
the 9th century, then through the 8th to 6th centuries with prophetic
condemnation of Baal, the asherim, sun-worship, worship on the high places, practices pertaining to the
dead.
Iron Age Yahweh was the national god of the
kingdoms of Israel and Judah. After the 9th century BCE the tribes and
chiefdoms of Iron Age I were replaced by ethnic nation states, Israel, Judah,
Moab, Ammon and others, each with its national god, and all more or less equal.
Chemosh was the god of the Moabites, Milcom the god of the Ammonites, Qaus the god of the Edomites, and Yahweh the God of Israel (no God of Judah is mentioned anywhere in
the Bible).
In each kingdom the king was also the head of
the national religion and hence the viceroy on Earth of the national god; in
Jerusalem this was reflected each year when the king presided over a ceremony
at which Yahweh was enthroned in the Temple.
The centre of Yahweh's worship lay in three great
annual festivals coinciding with major events in rural life: Passover with the birthing
of lambs, Shavuot with the cereal harvest, and Sukkot with the fruit harvest.
Probably pre-dated the arrival of the Yahweh religion, but they became linked
to events in the national mythos of Israel: Passover with the exodus from
Egypt, Shavuot with the law-giving at Sinai, and Sukkot with the wilderness
wanderings.
Yahweh's worship involved sacrifice, but many scholars have
concluded that the rituals detailed in Leviticus 1–16, with their stress on
purity and atonement, were introduced only after the Babylonian exile, and that
in reality any head of a family was able to offer sacrifice as occasion
demanded.( number of scholars have also drawn the conclusion that infant
sacrifice, whether to the underworld deity Molech
or to Yahweh himself, was a part
of Israelite/Judahite religion until the reforms of King Josiah in the late 7th
century BCE). Sacrifice was presumably complemented by the singing or recital
of psalms, but again the details are scant. Prayer played little role in
official worship.
Bible gives the
impression that the Jerusalem temple was always meant to be the central or even
sole temple of Yahweh, but this was
not the case: the earliest known Israelite place of worship is a 12th-century
open-air altar in the hills of Samaria featuring a bronze bull reminiscent of
Canaanite Bull-El (El in the form of
a bull), and the archaeological remains of further temples have been found at
Dan on Israel's northern border and at Arad in the Negev and Beersheba, both in
the territory of Judah. Shiloh, Bethel, Gilgal, Mizpah, Ramah and Dan were also
major sites for festivals, sacrifices, the making of vows, private rituals, and
the adjudication of legal disputes.
Yahweh and the rise of monotheism
Image on a
pithos sherd found at Kuntillet Ajrud below the inscription Yahweh and his Asherah. Pre-exilic
Israel, like its neighbours, was polytheistic, and Israelite monotheism was the
result of unique historical circumstances. The original god of Israel was El,
as the name demonstrates—may El rule. In the early tribal period, each tribe would
have had its own patron god; when kingship emerged, the state promoted Yahweh as the national god of Israel,
supreme over the other gods, and gradually Yahweh absorbed all the positive
traits of the other gods and goddesses. Yahweh
and El merged at religious
centres such as Shechem, Shiloh and Jerusalem.
Asherah,
formerly the wife of El, was worshipped as Yahweh's
consort or mother; potsherds discovered at Khirbet el-Kôm and Kuntillet Ajrûd make reference to Yahweh and his Asherah, and the statues
were kept in his temples in Jerusalem, Bethel, and Samaria.
Yahweh may also have appropriated Anat, the wife of Baal, as his consort, as Anat-Yahu
mentioned in 5th century B.C. E in the Jewish colony at Elephantine in
Egypt. A goddess called the Queen of Heaven was also worshipped, probably a
fusion of Astarte and the
Mesopotamian goddess Ishtar, possibly
a title of Asherah. Worship of Baal and Yahweh coexisted in the early period of Israel's history, but they
were considered irreconcilable after the 9th century B.C.E, following the
efforts of King Ahab and his queen Jezebel to elevate Baal to the status of national god.
The worship of Yahweh alone began at the earliest with
Elijah in the 9th century B.C.E, but more likely with the prophet Hosea in the
8th; even then it remained the concern of a small party before gaining
ascendancy in the exilic and early post-exilic period. The early supporters of
this faction are widely regarded as being monolatrists
rather than true monotheists; they did not believe that Yahweh was the only god in existence, but instead believed that he
was the only god the people of Israel should worship. Finally, in the national
crisis of the exile, the followers of Yahweh
went a step further and outright denied that the other deities aside from Yahweh even existed, thus marking the
transition from monolatrism to true monotheism.
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