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04-08-2008, 10:19 AM | #11 |
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The links between early Jewish and early Greek religion are going to be very tenuous at best for this reason: the Greeks were an Indo-European people with beliefs derived from Proto-Indo-European beliefs (such as the idea of the "sky father" originally known as "dyeus"), while Hebrew beliefs oriniginated in Proto-Semitic beliefs. Jewish religion is more closely related to ancient Sumerian and Egpytian beliefs than Greek.
Proto-Indo-European religion: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-I...opean_religion Proto-Semitic religion: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Semitic_religion |
04-08-2008, 07:04 PM | #12 |
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Actually the Jewish god wasn't perfect either. Ironically, the idea of the "perfection" of God was introduced from the Greeks, though from later Greek philosophy. The same Greeks who conceived of a perfect "prime mover" also rejected the traditional Greek pantheon of gods as well.
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04-08-2008, 10:35 PM | #13 | ||
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I theorise that the prototype for the monotheistic "God" spoken of in the Bible is in large part Anu. Or that the overall motif in the story of Jacob-Israel and El is properly a Biblical equivalent to the motif found in the greek story about Cronus and Uranus. Quote:
The story of Uranus, Cronos and Zeus has most likely come through Anatolia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumarbi Where the 14th-13th century BC Hurrian Kumarbi (Cronos/Enlil) castrates his father Anu (Uranus) and his son is the stormgod Teshub (Zeus/Marduk) with his thunderbolts who conspires to overthrow them. Shouldnt we consider "the Descent of Ishtar" to be the likely candidate for a prototype for the allegorical Mystery stories of the search for the lost one in the underworld by Isis, Persephone and Aphrodite? As for similarities between Semitic mythology and Greek mythology, or "equivalent" motifs and dieties, arent there numerous both in and outside the Bible? I would say so. |
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04-09-2008, 05:44 AM | #14 |
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Cesc, you may want to read my posts here:
http://iidb.infidels.org/vbb/showthr...47#post5218147 http://iidb.infidels.org/vbb/showthr...74#post5093674 |
04-10-2008, 01:39 AM | #15 |
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The reasoning of the original post escapes me.
Specifically, the God of the Torah split up into several different gods, each being given a SINGLE representative Torah incident to match a single characteristic of the parent myth. Even if it were valid to divide the Torah/Pentateuch into piecemeal parts, and even if it were valid to discern different gods beyond different parts of it, how could a connection ever be established by a single point of similarity? Generally, I've never really understood the school of study where myth parallels myth and therefore parent fathered child...and therefore we understand something better? If so, what did we get a handle on? I'd really like to understand it sometime in my lifetime, but I'm not there yet. |
04-10-2008, 07:52 AM | #16 | |
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Michael Shermer has made a career of using this principle to examine religious and other beliefs. |
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04-10-2008, 09:12 PM | #17 | |
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There's also the great element of fertility symbolism in the Eden story: the serpent, tree, woman and garden, symbols of creation, sexual desire, reproduction, phallus, seed, womb etc. This is no doubt a reflection of basic near-east fertility symbolism probably not far removed geographically from the worship of Asherah pillars or "groves" and her serpent and great mother aspect etc. I read that Hebrew pronunciation of 'Eve' (chawwah) sounds similar to Aramaic 'serpent' (hawweh). And that Hebrew 'serpent', 'n-g-sh', sounds like 'n-c-sh', 'sexual intercourse'. Perhaps a typical Hebrew wordpun, but is there anyone who can verify this? Peter Kirby, my reasoning in the original post was only to sketch out an overall perspective of the idea, not to make the connection through the single points of similarities posted above. Im not saying any of the three 'fathered' the other. However I do think comparative mythology is vital for Bible history. |
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