Followers

Monday, May 22, 2023

The Cosmology of Abraham's People



Alice C. Linsley 

 Anthropologically, the roots of religion are in the primitive soil of man’s most fundamental experience of and response to earthly phenomena. Early man observed distinctions: hot and cold, night and day, east and west, and male and female. These distinctions ordered their world and observing them was essential for survival. 

The ability to determine direction was important when migrating, and to find hunting grounds, and to mark the boundaries of tribal lands. The cardinal poles are important in all tribal religion, and because all peoples were originally tribal, these continue even today to influence our religious ideas. From the binary oppositions of east-west and north-south, archaic man was able to assign names to phenomena that he perceived as belonging to certain quadrants on a sphere. An example is the designation of winds that proceed from directions between the 4 cardinal poles: a southwest wind or a northeast wind. To each wind was given a name indicating a socio-metaphysical meaning. Winds proceeding from the west were regarded as a positive omen. Theophrastus, a 4th century BC scholar wrote, “Zephyros, the west wind, is the most gentle of all the winds and it blows in the afternoon and towards the land, and is cold.” The east wind (called “Sirocco” in Arabic) was less welcome as it brought heat and dust carried on strong winds. 


In the Afro-Asiatic scheme, quadrant 1 would be that space on earth where sunlight falls as the sun makes its journey from east to north (morning). Quadrant 2 would be that space on earth where sunlight is seen as the sun journeys from north to west (afternoon). Quadrants 3 and 4 would be those associated with the sun’s hidden activity from the setting of the sun (quadrant 3) to before the sun’s rising again (quadrant 4). Thus, according to ancient Egyptian hymns, the sovereign Deity was both immanent and transcendent and “double-concealed.” The key reference points in the cosmology are the sun’s arc and the polar star. The polar or North Star never changes its place in the sky. When you face it, you are always facing north. So east and north are the primary astronomical and religious points of reference and are associated with Divine arousal and judgment. 


Among Abraham's people the sun was the emblem of the Creator. Genesis reveals their cosmology. Were the writers of the Bible from the Paleo-Siberian culture, for example, where there are long periods of darkness and long periods of daylight, we would find a different theological perspective, one reflecting that phenomenon. The cosmology that we find in the Bible pertains to the experience of the biblical Hebrew, a ruler-priest caste known for its wisdom and technological prowess.


It is from them that Jews, Christians and Muslims receive the tradition of facing east in prayer. The notion of the shrine of the heart as the sacred place of the indwelling god is evident in Egypt as early as 1200 BC, when personal piety entailed facing the rising sun, thereby inviting the most sovereign Deity to dwell in the person. Even earlier, the Pharaoh was called “son of Re,” the celestial creative principle whose emblem was the sun. Rulers were not chosen based on hereditary bloodline (Egyptian texts never mention an earthly "father of the king"). Kingship was a manifestation of the solar deity’s cultic overshadowing of noble women. The cosmology of the early Nilotic Hebrew is represented in the Ankh. The loop at the top symbolizes the sun. The cross bar represents the sun's daily journey from east to west. The Ankh has affinity to the Agadez Cross of Niger (shown at left) and to the Sign of Tanit of Carthage (shown below at right.) 


A similar image with the TNT inscription was found in the temple of Eshmun near Sidon. It dates to about the 5 century B.C. Assignment of the name 'Tanit' is guess work, however, since no one knows how TNT should be transliterated. All the images shown here have the solar symbol over a horizontal bar representing the east-west movement of the sun. The sun is shown at the mountain top at the sacred center (high noon - as James explains, "In Him there is no shadow..."). 

Mountains were a meeting place between God and man. Consider the many incidents of biblical heroes ascending mountains and there experiencing theophanies. The horned altar is a negative image signifying the same view of God's sovereignty over the earth, only here the circle has disappeared, and God's presence is evident in the negative space (apophatic). The upright horns are similar to those on the Tanit symbol shown at right. 

Interestingly, the metal working Inadan who live in the Air Desert surrounding Agadez, maintain 2 wives in separate households on an north-south axis, as did the chiefs of Abraham's people. They speak a secret language called TeNeT (National Geographic, Aug. 1979, p. 389). 


The binary distinctions, based most fundamentally on the four directional poles, must have impressed upon early humans the reality of their limitations, since they had no power to make the sun follow a different course or to move the polar star. Early man recognized that a greater Power had established night and day, the seasons, and the rising and the setting of the sun. So it is that the great structures of antiquity were oriented to welcome the rising sun, the symbol of the High God. The layout of the Temple in Jerusalem was arranged taking the path of the sun into account, and the great pyramids of Egypt face east. The metal-working Hebrew knew true north because they had discovered the pattern of polarized iron filings. 

The Hebrew ruler-priests maintained two wives in separate households on a north-south axis rather than an east-west axis, out of deference to the Sovereign God, who journeyed daily between his wives: Dawn and Dust. This sheds light on Lamech (Gen. 5) whose 2 wives were settled on an east-west axis. Lamech’s wives’ names were Adah, related to the word “dawn” and T-Zillah, related to the word “dusk.” Lamech either was guilty of claiming equality with God by placing his wives' separate settlements on an east-west axis, God's territory symbolized by the Sun's daily journey. Or, the separate residences of his two wives (dawn and dusk) are meant to speak of the vastness of Lamech's dominion.

It appears that two wives of Hebrew rulers were an essential part of establishing and maintaining territorial boundaries among royal persons. That this practice pertained to exceptionally high-status persons is evident in that the pattern is associated only with rulers such as Abraham, or ruling families such as that of Jesse, the father of King David and the grandfather of King Solomon.

Consider the Song of Songs which speaks of two royal brides. One bride is described as “dark as the tents of Kedar” (1:5) and the other is described as “fair as the moon” (6:10). This is typical of the territorial claims of high kings in the Ancient Near East. The brides represent the east and the west, the territorial boundaries observed by the solar arc, the symbol of the God’s High rule over the Earth. This was a way of identifying the authority of the high king with the authority of the High God.

 It was this mystical symbolism that guided Abraham in deciding what to do after he had been in the land of Canaan for a while. Genesis 12:8 says that Abraham proceeded “to the mountain on the east of Bethel, and pitched his tent, with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east; and there he built an altar to the Lord and called upon the name of the Lord.” Bethel means “House of God” and is associated with the east, the direction of the sunrise. Yet we are told that Abraham pitched his tent with Bethel to the west and Ai to the east

This mysterious orientation appears to present a reversal. The word Ai suggests a mystical explanation. In Jewish mysticism, “Ain soph” is Hidden God and “Aima” is great reproductive Mother. Ain is one with Aima in a mystical union that signals that something new is about to be born. This is the forward motion of Abraham’s life. Now we must remember that Abraham had come into this land as a stranger and did not possess a territory. He was a sent-away son. In this vicinity was the Oak of Moreh near “the navel of the earth” (Judges 9:37). “Moreh” means instructor or diviner. In other words, Abraham went to the Diviner’s oak for guidance about how he was to become established in the land. 

In Jewish mysticism Ain soph is associated with north and the number 1 and represents the Hidden God. Aima is associated with south and the number 3 and represents creative union. In pitching his tent where he did, the house of Ain (Bethel) has moved to the west, which means that south has moved to the position of north. We have a reversal of directional poles that places south in the position of priority. South presents marriage and reproduction. In the very next verse (Gen. 12:9) we are told that Abraham heads south, making “his way stage by stage to the Negev.” The text appears to be telling us that this is when Abraham took Keturah as his second wife. Now with Sarah in Hebron and Keturah in Beersheba, he was able to establish control over a territory on a north-south axis, following the marriage and ascendancy pattern of his Hebrew forefathers. 

We have further confirmation of the association of 1 with north and 3 with south in 1 Kings 7:23-26 and 2 Chronicles 4:1-4. Here we read that the altar in Solomon’s temple was to rest on 12 oxen: 3 facing north, 3 facing west, 3 facing south and 3 facing east. We note that north heads the list, having the position of priority. Then comes west (associated with the numbers 9 and 10) and then in the third position we have south. 

Are the directional poles the “esse” of Christianity? No, but the Hebrew cosmology foretells Messiah's appearing, and the poles remind us that we must face the only Great God who alone can save, the uncreated, preexistent God who stretched out the heavens and made the sun to shine on the wise and the foolish, the same Eternal One who will make the new heaven and earth. Blessed be his Name! 




2 comments:

Unknown said...

Hey Alice.

Could you explain a bit more about Lamech's wives' being associated with Dawn and Dusk?

The Hebrews for light, day and morning are owr, ereb, and yom. The words for darkness, night and evening are chosek, layil, and boqer. I'm not seeing the correlation between that and Adah and Zillah, unless I'm misunderstanding you?

I do wonder why it is Lamech was bragging to his wives about killing a person. There's a hidden meaning to it that I'm just not getting.

-Tim

Alice C. Linsley said...

The brilliant Bible scholar Theodor H. Gaster noted that the names Adah and Zillah have a relationship to Akkadian words for dawn and dusk, suggesting a celestial or sacred marriage motif. Zillah actually appears as Tzilla. The T symbol represents the solar arc. The suggestion here is that the braggart Lamech set himself as an equal to the One who rides the Sun as his chariot, who drives the clouds before him. It may be that he thought he might be the expected Messiah - See Daniel 7 and Psalm 104.

The T is a very ancient solar symbol found in archaic rock shelters. See this: http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2015/11/symbols-of-archaic-rock-shelters.html

Lamech was of the lineage of the ruler-priests who expected one of their own to be born King of the Universe. The Kushite ruler Sargon attempted to make this claim for himself. He claimed that his mother was of lowly estate and conceived while in the O-Piru (Sun temple) and that he did not know his father. The Pharaoh, likewise, was called "son of Re" which is why Egyptian texts never mention an earthly father of the king. Kingship was a manifestation of the solar deity's overshadowing of the ruler's mother.

It was not unusual for archaic rulers to brag about their greatness by claiming to control all the land from the sunrise to the sunset.