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04-07-2003, 06:14 PM | #11 |
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Canaanite more likely, Magus.
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04-08-2003, 01:08 AM | #12 | ||
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What claim did the Jews make about their god that any other religion didn't? Random info on Roman religion... Quote:
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04-08-2003, 03:27 AM | #13 |
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Well, I don't know how seriously the Romans took the Aenied as history (or even whether the Aenied reflects popular Roman myths, or simply Virgil's own imagination - a Roman Lord of the Rings ), but in that work you definitely have the gods intervening in human history. Venus and Jupiter guide Aeneus from Troy to Italy to found Rome (or more acurately the Roman royal line), Juno tries to prevent it.
Then of course you have the Romulus and Remus myth, where Mars plays a key role as father of the twins, and as the guiding force behind the wolf (an animal sacred to him). So I would say Roman mythology makes roughly the same type of claims as Hebrew mythology does: the gods leading the Trojans to Latium is quite similar to Yahweh leading the Hebrews to Canaan. |
04-08-2003, 07:35 AM | #14 | |
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Magus, you seem to seeking to be offended or something. We were discussing how Jewish Religion & History compares to Roman Religion & History. For the Jews, they seem to be more closely intertwined than they were to Romans. -Mike... |
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04-08-2003, 07:48 AM | #15 |
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Here's an interesting thingy--in the Mesha Stele--
"As for Omri, King of Israel, he humbled Moab many days, for Chemosh was angry at his land. Here The Moabite king states that the reason Omri was attacking Moab was related to the displeasure of the God Chemosh at his land. Like in many books of the bible, invasion=divine anger. The same element can be found in books such as the works of Homer, in which historical events(Such as Troy) are greatly exaggerated and part of the drama of the Gods. I think events such as the Jewish war and the destruction of Vesuvius were also said by some early Christians to be "the work of God". The Jewish war is elluded to in the bible, in fact. The latter is strange, since there is some evidence of a small church in the ruins of the two cities. |
04-08-2003, 07:53 AM | #16 | |
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Re: Roman mythology vs. Jewish history
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Melchizedek was also 'King'. He was King of Salem {shaw-lame = perfect, complete, peaceable} which is a spiritual place, no physical place. Melchizedek means The King {meh'-lek} of righteousness {tseh'-dek}. Jupiter is known in Hebrew as Zedek, 'The righteous one' and the attributes of planet Jupiter in astrology are righteousness, peace and perfection since ever. Melchizedek king of Salem he was the minister of the most high God {El} ." Volker |
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04-08-2003, 10:28 AM | #17 |
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Bagong,
I agree with you about the story of Romulus and Remus. That legend is about Jupiter and Mars using Romulus to found the city of Rome; it has no real disadvantage over the legend of Yahweh using Abraham to found Israel. (Unless you think it's necessary to believe that Romulus and Remus were raised by a wolf, and I don't.) Genesis was probably not written soon after Abraham; the gap is probably one of many centuries. But Virgil's Anaeid seems pretty clearly a specimen of historical fiction. Troy fell no later than the fourth century BCE, while Virgil lived in the first century BCE. That's a large chronological gap. That kind of gap is not always found with regard to the books of the Bible. I have always considered the stories of Romulus and Abraham to be on a level with each other; both are true if you accept supernaturalism, and both are false if you don't. But I don't find that wholly satisfying, since what I need is confirmation that Roman religion in general is as historical as Jewish religion in general. |
04-08-2003, 06:31 PM | #18 |
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I think I've figured out the reason why Yahweh was more active in history than Jupiter. Basically, it's this.
Besides the Abrahamic religions, which gods were most active in their cultures' history? Other Middle Eastern cultures, especially Babylon and Egypt. And Yahweh's history of this kind of intervention doesn't hold any weight, you notice, outside the Middle East. I don't see him performing miracles here in America. It's not the power of Yahweh that makes him distinctive, it's the power of his region. In fact, I'm thinking that as you approach the Middle East geographically, the influence of the gods increases. Not that there are modern miracles in the Middle East--I think it's moderately unlikely that there were any ancient ones, or more than a few. Nevertheless, there does seem to be a correlation between closeness to the Middle East, and religiosity. Sorry if that sounds farfetched, but I think of it as much less farfetched than either atheism or Christianity. |
04-08-2003, 06:51 PM | #19 | |
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04-09-2003, 08:38 PM | #20 | ||
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Hardly. Romans and Greeks had separately developed systems until such time as the Greeks came under the Roman Empire. Despite what a lot of Christians would have you believe, Romans were rather indifferent to the religious beliefs of whomever they conquered...and they were particularly compatable to the Greek system, and at some point they, under Empire rule, became intermingled. Upon subsequent Norse invasions, so did Norse mythology, for that matter. Romans didn't persecute Christians because of their religion, they persecuted Christians because they saw 'em as a political threat. Jewish court argument v. Jesus were built on this premise, and the Roman court was convinced. Quote:
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