Followers

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Were Cain and Abel Twins?


Alice C. Linsley


Susan Burns, a reader of Just Genesis and a fellow member of Open Anthropology Cooperative, has written an interesting and informative piece on Cain and Abel.  She and I agree that the textual evidence suggests that Cain and Abel were twins. Here is what Susan has written:

Genesis 4: Adam lay with his wife Eve, and she became pregnant and gave birth to Cain. She said, 'I have gotten a man with the help of YHWH'. She again bare his brother Abel. The Hebrew word used for again (yasaph) is an adverb meaning to continue to do a thing. Yasaph implies that Eve gave birth to Cain and continued to do the same thing by giving birth to Abel. In other words, Cain and Abel were twins. The profession of Abel was shepherd and Cain was a farmer and city builder.

The tradition of twins as the progenitors of tribal units or city builders is well documented in ancient cultures. Usually the first born ascends to the throne of his ruler father and the younger is sent away to establish a territory of his own. Most of the heroes of the Bible are sent away sons. Cain, Nimrod, Abraham, Joseph, Moses, David are examples, and all but Joseph were responsible for the death of other people. Cain killed Abel. Nimrod was a mighty hunter and a kingdom builder who forged his territory through conquest. Abraham killed in combat. Moses took the life of an Egyptian slave driver, and David killed Goliath and arranged for the death of Uriah, Bathsheba's husband.

Cain was the first ruler and city builder named in Genesis. Abraham the youngest son of Terah, built his territory between Hebron and Beersheba and Engedi and Gerar. Moses the youngest son of Amram, did not receive a territory. David the youngest son of Jesse, forged a kingdom in Judah and Galilee. Joseph became a ruler in Egypt. Birth order and the status of the man's mother are factors that must be considered in understanding the pattern of sent-away sons as kingdom builders. The firt born son of the ruler's half-sister wife was never sent away. He ascended to the throne of his biological father. The first born son of the ruler's patrilineal cousin/niece bride served as a prime minister in the territory of his maternal grandfather, after whom he was named. Other sons were given gifts and sent away to establish territories of their own (Gen. 25:6).

Coptic twins
The pattern in Bible for twins also involves birth order,but it is the younger twin who receives the blessing over the first born. Such is the case with Rebecca's twins Esau and Jacob (Gen. 25:1-28) and with Tamar's twins Perez and Zerah (Gen. 38). In Jacob's case this switch results from deception. In the case of Tamar's twins, the first to breach the womb had a scarlet cord tied to his arm, but then he pulled his arm in and his brother was born first.

There are many variations on the theme of rivalry between twins. Jacob is fearful that Esau will kill him for attempting to steal his birthright. In Egyptian mythology Geb (earth) and Nut (sky) were twins. Romulus killed Remus, and in Celtic legend Gwyn and Gwythurin duel every May.The Gemini twins, Castor and Pollux, shared a mortal and an immortal existence. Castor was killed on a cattle raid but Pollux persuaded Zeus to allow the brothers to switch places periodically. In Arabian mythology Pollux and Castor were regarded as twin peacocks.

It may be that Peleg and Joktan were twins, but the following wording does not carry the same suggestion as with Cain and Abel. "To Eber were born two sons: the first was called Peleg, because it was in his time that the earth was divided, and his brother was called Joktan. (Gen. 10:25)


Related reading: Twins, Sent-Away Sons, and Heirs to the ThroneSent Away Sons; Noah's Sons and Their Descendants; The Marriage and Ascendancy Pattern of Abraham's People; From Cain to Jesus Christ; Cain's Murder of Abel; The Kushite Marriage Pattern Drove Expansion Out of Africa; Cain as Ruler



Monday, December 27, 2010

The Sun and the Moon in Genesis


Alice C. Linsley

A total eclipse of the moon occurred on Tuesday, December 21, 2010 slowly turning the silver moon into a crimson disk. A total lunar eclipse occurs when the Earth's tilt is such that it casts its shadow on the full moon and blocks the solar rays that reflect off the moon’s surface. This event also marked the winter solstice. It was the first total lunar eclipse to fall on a winter solstice in 372 years.

In the ancient world this celestial event would have been a portent. The principal "as in the heavens so on earth" is also part of the Christian worldview, though we usually don't consider this when we recite these words: "Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name; thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven."

Solar and lunar eclipses occur in cycles known as the Saros, and this was known in antiquity by peoples who kept records over a long period. (Neugebauer, The Exact Sciences in Antiquity. Brown University Press, p. 195)

For the ancient sky-watching priests, the eclipse of the moon was less significant than the eclipse of the sun because in their binary worldview the sun was regarded as superior to the moon. This was not an arbitrary preference for one over the other, but a description of reality since the sun gives light whereas the moon merely reflects the sun's light (refulgent). The sun's superiority is expressed in Genesis 1:16: "God made the two great lights: the greater to rule the day, the lesser light to rule the night."

In ancient Egyptian symbolism, the right eye is the Eye of Ra the Creator and represents the sun. The left is the Eye of Thoth and represents the moon. Together they are the Eyes of Horus, but the left (moon) is weaker than the right (sun). This is consistent with the binary worldview of Abraham's Afro-Arabian people and suggests why Abraham's father was accused of idol worship in Joshua 24:2: “In olden times, your forefathers – Terah, father of Abraham and father of Nahor – lived beyond the Euphrates and worshiped other gods.

The implication is that Terah, whose ancestors were Nilotic ruler-priests, fell into worshiping contrary to the tradition of his Horite Hebrew ancestors while living “beyond the Euphrates.” However, there is no evidence that Terah strayed from that tradition. The word "terah" refers to a Nilotic priest.

Abraham's Horite Hebew ancestors never worshiped the moon as a deity. To them, this was idolatry since the moon was regarded as the lesser celestial power.

The Horite Hebrew worldview was binary, unlike Asian dualism. Within this binary framework there is consideration of the heavenly and hidden Third, so the angelic Three appear to Abraham at the time of his visitation in Mamre. A shrine to the Three God was located at Baal Shalisha. Among the Horite Hebrew of ancient Mesopotamia the Three God was understood as God Father (Anu), God Son (Enki) and God Spirit (Enlil).




In the binary worldview the sun and the moon were male and female. This is why the male rulers of ancient Egypt appeared with darkened skin, but their queens appeared with whitened skin (as shown in these images).

The sun's rays were thought to inseminate the earth over which the sun has dominion. The moon was associated with feminine virtues as the sun's companion. Like a great queen of old, it reflects the ruler's glory. Ancient peoples recognized that the moon influences the woman's monthly cycle.

In the Song of Songs, there is possibly a gender reversal, suggesting a sacred mystery. The royal female is described as dark "as the tents of Kedar".  This was not the normal custom for the Horite Hebrew ruler-priest caste, and in 6:10 she is described as "fair as the moon."

The ancient Horite Hebrew were great observers of the celestial bodies. This was part of their work. Plato reported that the ancient Nilotes had been recording celestial events for 10,000 years.

They imagined a great battle in the heavens between the Light and the Dark. They viewed the Milky Way as the celestial path to immortality. This is why their rulers were buried with scarabs. The scarab is a stylized dung beetle, a creature that navigates at night by the Milky Way.

They believed that the Light is victorious, just as the sun is the greater light (Gen. 1). Solar eclipses were perceived as moments of combat, but Horus, the son of God, was believed to be the victor.

Temple architecture of ancient Egypt provides evidence that Egyptians observed solar eclipses over 4,500 years ago. The Zodiac of Dendera shows two disks in the constellation of Pisces. One is the moon and the other disk contains the Wadjet or Eye of Horus decorated with the markings of the eyes of a falcon, the totem of Horus. When the right eye is shown it indicates a solar eclipse.

David Smith explains that "a nearly total solar eclipse occurred on a date corresponding very closely to the actual depiction of the positions of the planets in the constellations and the position of the disk containing the Wadjet eye in 51 B.C. This symbolism reminds us of the myth of Horus losing an eye in his fight with Set and raises the possibility that this may have had its origins in a very early observation of a solar eclipse." (David G. Smith, Total solar eclipses in Ancient Egypt)

The solar eclipse also is portrayed in the ancient Egyptian myth of Apophis, the cosmic water serpent who attacks the Creator's solar boat in an attempt to devour it.  In ancient Egyptian mythology, Horus is victorious over the enemies of his Father.

The oldest known Messianic texts are not found in the Bible. However, the Bible alludes to them. In Genesis 3:15 where we are told that the divine Seed will trample the enemy, a Messianic reference. Psalm 110:1 alluded to the same: The Lord says to my Lord: “Sit at My right hand until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet.”

This expectation was expressed in the Pyramid Texts about 1000 years before the Psalm. "Horus has shattered (tbb, crushed) the mouth of the serpent with the sole of his foot (tbw)" Utterance 388

Some will argue that this has nothing to do with the Seed of God who was born of Mary. Jesus himself claims to be the Seed when he told his disciples that he was going to Jerusalem to die.

"The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. I tell you the truth, unless a kernal of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds." (John 12:23)



Among the ancient Horite Hebrew the sun was the emblem of the Creator and it was believed to inseminate by overshadowing. When Mary asked the angel how she as a virgin would conceive (virginal conception), Gabriel told her:

"The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God." (Luke 1:35)

Biblical archaeologists have recognized for years that the ancient Horite Hebrew (Abraham's people) regarded the sun as The High God's emblem. They believed that the Moon was the lesser light and, though there was veneration for the Moon as a reflection of God's glory, the Sun was the most sacred symbol. (Read about that here.)

In ancient Horite Hebrew theology the Creator and his Son Horus were worshiped, and Hathor, the mother of Horus, was venerated much as the Virgin Mary is venerated today in Christianity.


Related reading: The Ra-Horus-Hathor NarrativeThe Substance of Abraham's FaithRoles Reversed in the Song of Songs?A Tent for the Sun; The Solar Imagery of the Proto-Gospel; Two Powers in Heaven


Friday, December 24, 2010

Christians are "Christmas People"

Alice C. Linsley


I lived in Iran during the time of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi. I rented an apartment from a Jewish family whose ancestors had been brought to Isfahan by Nebuchadnezzar's conquering army. This family lived on the ground floor of the house and I lived in the flat above. There was an open central area that joined the two residences. It allowed cooking smells and sounds of famiy life to rise and fall, so my experience was more like communal living.

The biggest problem with this arrangement came when we played our music. From below came the sounds of Iranian pop, passionate and guttural, trills abounding. It was foreign to my western ears and at times annoying, but no more annoying than my music must have sounded to my landlords. I listened to Mahalia Jackson, soft jazz, and my favorite Christmas music in December.

The soft jazz and Mahalia Jackson usually had competition from below, but strangely, this never happened when I played Christmas carols. As it turned out, the family knew about Christmas and not only tolerated the music, but actually enjoyed listening to it! 

One day, I ran into the owner as I was leaving the building. He said in broken English:  "You like Christmas?  Christians is people of Christmas, no?"

I nodded and fled to my car parked in the narrow alley. I hoped to avoid a conversation about dueling tunes. What a shame!  I missed an opportunity to share the real meaning of Christmas with a man whose ancestors had been taken from the land where Abraham's Horite people lived in expectation of the appearing of the Son of God.

In truth, Christians are Christmas people and we ought always to be ready to proclaim that the Son of God has come in the flesh and by His flesh He has redeemed the world. Nations rise and fall.  Peoples are separated from their lands. Betrayals abound, but the promise God made in Eden (Gen. 3:15) is fulfilled in Jesus Christ. That, my friends, is good news of great joy!


Related reading:  Egypt in the Christmas Narrative

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

A Word to Pastors

Preaching is one of many pastoral responsibilities, but it is a very important task and one that requires thorough grounding in what the Bible reveals about Jesus Christ, the Son of God and the fulfillment of the Bible's first promise (Gen. 3:15).  The Good News begins in Genesis, yet many pastors overlook the Christology of the first book of the Bible.  This is a mistake.  I'm convinced that the incorporation of Genesis material in sermons is essential to a biblical proclamation of Jesus Christ. 

Pastors should be acquainted with what Genesis tells us about Jesus. To that end, I'm posting links that directly relate to Christ in Genesis and I hope that this will stimulate your thinking as you prepare your sermons.  Other essays that may be helpful are listed alphabetically by topic in the INDEX.

May God bless your preaching!

The Promise of the Messiah
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/11/substance-of-abrahams-faith.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/08/gender-reversal-and-sacred-mystery.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2008/09/messianic-priesthood-of-jesus.html

The Promise Made in Eden (Edenic Promise - Gen. 3:15)
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/11/true-food-for-nativity-fast.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2009/10/why-jesus-visited-tyre.html

Jesus in Genesis
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2007/04/abraham-and-moses.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/11/jesus-from-lamb-to-ram.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/10/eyes-of-horus-speak-of-jesus.html
http://fatherstephen.wordpress.com/kalormiros-on-the-6-days-of-creation-part-1-and-part-2

Christ as Alpha and Omega and Sacred Center
http://biblicalanthropology.blogspot.com/2010/11/christ-as-alpha-and-omega.html
http://biblicalanthropology.blogspot.com/2010/10/sacred-center-in-biblical-theology.html

The Kingdom Delivered to the Son
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/04/sons-and-son.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/10/double-crown-of-horus.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/11/horus-king-of-universe.html

The Blood of Jesus
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2008/03/tracing-scarlet-cord.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2008/08/pleromic-blood-and-gnosticism.html
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2010/10/life-is-in-blood.html

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Lot's Daughters

Righteous Lot flees Sodom with his family
Painter: Jacob Jordaens
[God] rescued Lot, a righteous man, who was distressed by the depraved conduct of the lawless (for that righteous man, living among them day after day, was tormented in his righteous soul by the lawless deeds he saw and heard)— if this is so, then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials..." 2 Peter: 2:7-9

Alice C. Linsley

According to the Rabbis, Lot had four daughters, two of whom were married and two betrothed. The married daughters are said to have died in Sodom, but the Bible indicates that one of Lot’s daughters married Seir, the Horite Hebrew chief.

The two who were said to have sexual relations with Lot were apparently “virgin” daughters, those who were betrothed. The sons of these daughters are the tribal heads of the Moabites and the Ammonites, but the Genesis genealogical information indicates that there was at least one other daughter who named her first-born son after her father, according to the cousin-bride’s naming prerogative.

Lot לוֹט means veil, hidden or covering. It is the same name as Lotan, son of the Horite chief Seir (Gen. 36). One of Lot's daughters apparently married Seir the Horite (Gen. 36) and named their first-born Lotan, after her father. Hori was one of Lotan's sons.

The story of incest between Lot and his daughters is found only in Genesis and appears to be the work of a source much later than the Patriarchs. The casting of the Moabites and the Ammonites as the fruit of incest is intended to scorn these peoples. The great chief Lot becomes drunk and exposes himself to his daughters. This story is the work of the same writer who tells of Noah becoming drunk and exposing himself to his sons (Gen. 9:21-27). These stories of drunken fathers are used to belittle rivals by denigrating their ancestors. It is often the case that where this happens in Scripture, God overrules. This is true in the case of Lot’s descendants, the Ammonites and the Moabites. According to Deuteronomy 23:3, no descendent of an Ammonite or a Moabite was permitted to participate "in the gathering of the nation for religious purposes” yet David appeared in the assembly and he is a descendant of Moab by Ruth. (Remember that Horite ethnicity was traced through the mothers.)

The source that wishes to distance Israel from their Horite ancestors is opposed by a more historically accurate source which reminds the Jews that God gave territory to Lot and intended that Lot's territory remain with his descendants. In Deuteronomy 2:9, we read "And the LORD said unto me, Distress not the Moabites, neither contend with them in battle: for I will not give thee of their land for a possession; because I have given Ar unto the children of Lot for a possession." In Deuteronomy 2:19 we read: "And when thou comest nigh over against the children of Ammon, distress them not, nor meddle with them: for I will not give thee of the land of the children of Ammon any possession; because I have given it unto the children of Lot for a possession."

Genesis 22:20 tells us that Lot's sister married Nahor and gave birth to eight sons. The most notable of Milcah's sons was Kemuel, the father of Aram the Younger. Aram the Elder was one of Shem's sons (Gen. 10:22) and he had a son named Uz. The name Kemuel is found in Numbers 34:24 where a descendent of Kemuel is named as a leader for the Ephraimites. I Chronicles 27:17 tells us that the Ephraimite Kemuel had a son named Hashabiah who was a Levite chief. In I Chronicles 26:30, this same Hashabiah is called a "Hebronite" and is put "in charge of Israel west of Jordan in everything pertaining to Yahweh and to the service of the king."

Clearly, Lot's Ammonite and Moabite descendants were relatives of the Arameans and at least one of them was a Levite. In Patriarchal times the rulers among these peoples would have intermarried. In his commentary on Genesis, E.A. Speiser recognizes this. He believes that the “parallel treatment of the histories of Abraham and Lot is added proof that interrelationship was particularly intimate and important in early times.” (Anchor Bible Commentary, p. 146)  The intermarriage of the Horite clans is probaby the original meaning of the names; Moab means "by father" and Ben-Ammi means "son of kin".

Whether Moab and Ben-Ammi were Lot’s first-born sons by two wives or his grandchildren, he is presented in Genesis as a great chief with the same familial pattern as Terah, Abraham and Jacob. The pattern involves two first-born sons by different women. The first wife is the half-sister (as was Sarah to Abraham) and the second wife is a patrilineal cousin or niece (as was Keturah to Abraham).

A patrilineal cousin is a first cousin who is in the same descent group as her husband. In other words, she and her cousin husband have a common male ancestor. This was the preferred marriage arrangement for rulers among Abraham's Horite people whose religion was Nilotic and point of origin Egypt/Nubia. The name Lot is found in Egyptian records, as in the ruler Nim-Lot.


Related reading: Cousin Brides and their Ruler SonsAbraham's Nephews and Nieces; Moses' Wives and Brothers; The Horite Federation of Uz, Buz and Huz; Abraham's Intercession for Lot; Sodom's Death and the Birth of Sons


Saturday, December 18, 2010

Ark Theme Park: Here Come the Challenges

When Gov. Steve Beshear held a Capitol news conference to announce potential state tax incentives for an amusement park built around a life-size Noah's Ark earlier this month, he cited a feasibility study that predicted the park would attract 1.6 million visitors in its first year.

However, neither Beshear nor other state officials had seen or read the study, which was commissioned by Ark Encounter, LLC, the group building the theme park.

"The press release was a joint effort, and the Ark Encounter provided the numbers for the release based on their own research, much like how we work with companies on jobs announcements — they give us the info about their job numbers and investment and we work together on a release," said Beshear spokeswoman Kerri Richardson in an e-mail.

The state doesn't have a copy of the report, according to responses to requests under the Open Records Act sent by the Herald-Leader to the state tourism and economic development departments and to the governor's office.

Officials with Ark Encounter also declined to give the Herald-Leader a copy of the 10,000-page report, including its 200-page executive summary.

From here.  For more on this, go here.

Related reading:  "Noah's Ark Theme Park"

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Genesis 1 Sets the Scene

Genesis looks at what the culture around it believes about the nature of the material world, and disagrees with it profoundly. -- Jane Williams


Genesis 1 and 2 must be among the most hotly debated texts in the Bible. But our obsession with whether and how they can be reconciled with scientific descriptions of the beginning of the universe is distorting our understanding of where these "creation narratives" fit into the wider concerns of the Book of Genesis. In its printed form, Genesis has 50 chapters, only one and a bit of which directly concern the origins of the universe. They are there to set the scene for what follows.

Genesis is, from beginning to end, a theological book. It opens with God, "the beginning", and everything that follows is based on this assumption of the relationship between God and the world. So when we get on to the main action of Genesis, with God's conversations with Abraham and his descendents, we know that what is happening is not just of local significance. The God who calls Abraham is the one we have just seen, making the world, so we know that Abraham's story is one about the meaning of life, the universe and everything.

Read it all here.

This is an interesting article, though it contains nothing controversial or new.  Williams asserts that Genesis presents a view of the material world unlike the cultures around it. The first question one might ask is "Cultures around whom?" It is meaningless to speak of cultures around a text.  It would be more meaningful to ask "What culture produced this text?"

The second question to ask is this: "If the Genesis creation stories are akin to the Gilgamesh Epic, then in what way do they represent a worldview different from the culture that produced the Gilgamesh Epic?"

In fact, the Genesis creation stories have much closer affinity to the creation stories of the part of Africa from which Abraham's ancestors came. This is evident in motif and in theological detail. We might more accurately speak of these as Afro-Arabian narratives since Abraham's ancestors were Nilotic and spread across the Arabian Peninsula. This is why the Genesis creation stories have close affinity to the creation stories of the Nilotic peoples.


Related reading:  The Genesis Creation Stories; The Christ in Nilotic Mythology; Afro-Arabian Number Symbolism

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

When the Sahara was Wet


Alice C. Linsley


Abraham lived at a time when the Sahara and Mesopotamia were drying out after the Holocene Wet Period which began about 12,000 years ago. Lakes filled basins throughout the region and the larger lakes reached levels sometimes 330 feet higher than their present levels. Around these bodies of water were spongy marshlands which provided channels for navigation for smaller boats. One such dugout, made of black mahogany, was discovered in 1987 in the region of Bor-nu at a depth of 16 feet under clays and sands whose alternating sequence indicated deposition in standing and flowing water. The dugout is 8000 years old. By comparison, Egypt's oldest boat is only about 5000 years old.

Historian and Africanist Roland Oliver has described the Green Sahara as follows:

"[In] the highlands of the central Sahara beyond the Libyan desert,... in the great massifs of the Tibesti and the Hoggar, the mountaintops, today bare rock, were covered at this period with forests of oak and walnut, lime, alder and elm. The lower slopes, together with those of the supporting bastions — the Tassili and the Acacus to the north, Ennedi and Air to the south — carried olive, juniper and Aleppo pine. In the valleys, perennially flowing rivers teemed with fish and were bordered by seed-bearing grasslands."

Petroglyphs of boats found in the Eastern Central Desert of Egypt and Sudan
They date to between 4300 and 2900 BC.

The Sahara saw considerable flooding during the Holocene Wet Period and some believe that this was the time of Noah’s flood. According to local tradition Noah lived in the region of Lake Chad. In fact, this is the only place of the surface of the Earth that claims to be his homeland: Bor-No, meaning “Land of Noah.”

In the time of Noah (about 5,500 years ago), Lake Chad was a much larger body of water. The various footprints of ancient Lake Chad have been confirmed by satellite photography. Petroglyphs of boats found in the Eastern Central Desert of Egypt and Sudan date to between 4300 and 2900 BC. and are a testament to the wet conditions during Noah's lifetime.

The Nile waters swelled from increased rainfall and cut a deeper and wider floodplain, extending well into Sudan to the west. The area attracted merchants from southern Africa who moved their cargo along the rivers and paid tariffs to the chiefs who controlled the river junctions. When the climate began to change and the waters receded, those in power found it more difficult to control larger territories. Afro-Asiatic kingdom builders such as Nimrod, who depended on the large water systems to control their territories, were faced with shrinking territories.

These archaic rulers appear to have been related by blood and intermarriage. The dominion of these ruling houses extended from Nigeria to India. This “Afro-Asiatic Dominion” is referred to in Genesis 11:1 where we are told that all the “world spoke one language.” They charged tariffs for commerce conducted on the parts of the rivers that they controlled and their priests maintained shrines at sacred sites along the rivers. We see this pattern of swollen river systems in the Niger-Benue in Nigeria, the Tigris-Euphrates in Mesopotamia, and the Indus-Sarawati Rivers in India. Some Nile shrines disappeared with the flooding in more recent centuries, but there is ample evidence of their existence, just as there is evidence of the existence of shrines, temples and urban centers under what is now the Bay of Bengal.

From these centers the Nilo-Saharan rulers conducted trade with distant territories. At Hierakonpolis (Nekhen) rulers acquired exotic goods and animals from central Africa and Afghanistan 4000 years ago. At Tomb 100 there are two boats painted on the walls.


Related reading: Boat Petroglyphs in Egypt's Central Eastern DesertGenesis and Climate Change; The Saharan Antecedants of Pharaonic Egypt; Sudan is Archaeologically Rich: The Buduma of Lake Chad by Guy Immega


Saturday, December 11, 2010

Are the Names Enoch and Enosh Equivalent?


Alice C. Linsley


I've been having an interesting conversation with a reader about the linguistic connection between the words Enoch and Enosh (Anoosha in Arabic, suggesting a relationship to the Annu/Ainu). He maintains, on the basis of the Hebrew text, that these names are not linguistically equivalent. I maintain, on the basis of the Old English and my analysis of the kinship pattern of Abraham's ancestors, that the names are linguistically equivalent (as are the names Irad and Jared, following the pattern evident with Lamech and Lamech and Esau and Esau) and that these first-born sons are named after their maternal grandfathers.

Dan: I believe you are in error about Psalm 8:6. The Hebrew does not say "What is henoch (heth-nun-vav-kaph)." It says, "What is enosh (aleph-nun-vav-shin)." "Enosh," of course, means "man, male." "Enoch" does not. (And for Hebrewless readers, note that the two names are much more dissimilarly spelled in Hebrew than in English. They're unlikely to be confused; nor would one serve very well as a pun for the other.)

(Learned about this blog through your interview in Road to Emmaus.)

Alice: Kain's first-born son was named Enoch and Seth's first-born son was named Enosh. These are linguistically equivalent names. The name appears later in Numbers as Ha'noch, the first-born son of Reuben. Here it appears to be a title, perhaps protecting the real name of Jacob's firstborn's firstborn.

The point is that the names Enoch/Enosh/Hanoch stand for the first-born son in the ruling lines. He is the ruler-designate, and an historical figure. He is paralleled in Psalm 8 with Adam, the First Created Man, to whom the mandate was given to "Be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth and subdue it. Be masters of the fish of the sea, the birds of heaven and all the living creatures that move on earth." (Gen. 1:28)

Dan: "Hanoch" and "Enoch" are spelled exactly the same in Hebrew, the only difference being vocalization of the vowels. Therefore, observing that "Enoch" appears in Numbers as "Hanoch" is exactly like saying that "Laurie" (pronounced "low-ri") appears later as "Laurie" (pronounced "law-ri").

"Enosh" is an altogether different matter. I would like to know the basis of your claim that it is "linguistically equivalent" to "Enoch." I don't think any semiticist would agree with you. "Enosh" is a straightforward use of the unambiguous root aleph-nun-shin, which means "man" in several semitic languages. "Enoch" is from the root heth-nun-kaph and probably means either "dedicated one, initiate" or "follower." That root shares only a single letter with "enosh," and while it's possible that the two gutterals aleph and heth could conceivably swap (although unlikely), it's far-fetched to claim that a shin and a kaph would ever do so. That's like saying an "s" became a "k" as a word moved from one European language to another.

In short, I think you need some very strong, hard evidence in order to claim that Enoch = Enosh, however similar they look once Anglicized.

Alice: Hebrew is a relatively recent language, do you agree? It is preceded by Old Arabic and the roots of the Dedanites are Ham and Kush. So we much look to the Nile region for the meaning of the words that apply to these ruler-priests. "Nakht" means powerful in Egyptian and applied to rulers, as in Pepi-Nakht-Heqaib. In Hebrew it takes the form ha-nok, which means the chief. The name probably is connected to the Nok civilization in west central Africa which predates the Chaldeans by at least 4000 years. The closest living language to the words in Genesis 1-12 is possibly Luo, a Nilotic language. Luo consultant John Ogutu explains that Enoch and Enosh are very likely the same name, but "Luos avoid the Sh as they find it difficult to say." He explains that Luos are likley to pronounce the name with the CH, or else they mispronounce it as S." This may explain the spelling of the name in the Septuagint as Enos.

Dan: True, Hebrew is relatively recent and localized compared with other semitic languages, but there is no mystery about its predecessors: Aramaic and Phoenician, which are ancient indeed. The root for the name "Enoch" (heth-nun-kaph) appears in Hebrew, Aramaic, Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic, so it's not as if there isn't any evidence available as to its basic meaning, which is something like "to use for the first time," a meaning which accounts for all of its forms and derivations in all of those languages. It's not certain if that circle expands all the way to Egypt, but if it does, shouldn't you give first consideration to Egyptian roots that retain the heth, like all the other languages do? Some people think Egyptian hnk.t "tribute, offering" is related, and some don't. To lop off the heth and pull out "nakht" as the ultimate source is going to require some hard evidence before any reputable linguist will buy it.

Alice:  As you point out earlier, Enoch and Enosh are Anglicized. In fact, they made their way into modern versions of the English Bible from the Old English Bibles.

It is understood in comparative linguistics that the phonemes ch and sh are often interchangeable (as with the Old French use of ch for the English sh), and that they are sometimes reduced to the phoneme K (as the Old English C almost universally is spelled with a K in the Germanic). As the names Enoch and Enosh are translations from Old English, it can be argued that Enoch (Kain's first-born son, listed in Gen. 4) and Enosh (Seth's first-born son, listed in Gen. 5) are equivalent and can be rendered Nok.

Nok is probably a throne name as it appears in the royal names such as Tef-Nakht and Pepi-Nakht-Heqaib. Nakht applied only to rulers and in Hebrew takes the form ha-nok, which means the chief. Hanock is the name given to the first-born son of Jacob's first-born son, so the name pertains to the ruler-designate. These are the first-born sons by two wives. The first-born son of the sister bride ruled in place of his father and the first-born son of the patrilineal cousin or niece ruled in place of his maternal grandfather (See "The Father of Kain and Seth.")

Analysis of the genealogies of Genesis 4 and 5 reveals that Kain and Seth married the daughters of a ruler named Enoch/ Enosh or Nok. These cousin brides named their first-born sons after their father. Since the sisters had the same father, there is good reason to believe that the names Enoch and Enosh are linguistically equivalent.

Dan:  I would point out that the Hebrew kaph does not represent the phoneme ch. It's not a gutteral; it's a good, dry, hard k. It's the heth that = ch. (I wish I could put a dot under the "h", but I can use a "ch" instead, as the heth is pronounced much like the German ch.) Also, "ha-" meaning "the" uses the he, not the heth.

If I'm following you correctly, you're arguing that at the front of the original word ("nok"), a he was added ("ha-nok," i.e., "the nok"), so presumably we've already taken "nok" into Hebrew at that point, since we're putting a Hebrew "the" on it. The he then turned into a heth (for the name Enoch) and it also turned into an aleph (for Enosh). Meanwhile, at the back end of the word "nok", the Hebrew quite predictably used a kaph (first on "ha-nok", and then "cha-nok" or Enoch), but at some point this kaph turned into a shin, presumably at the same time that the letter in front (either a he or a heth) was turning into an aleph, and that's how we got enosh. But for your "k" to morph into a "sh" I would think you would need an intermediate step, like the "k" becoming a "ch" and then a "sh," unless you have something in comparative linguistics suggesting that a k can turn directly into a sh.

Any one of these phonemic shifts by itself is possible, and some of them are unremarkable, but taken as a whole, doesn't the bumpy pathway you've traced out whereby the names Enoch and Enosh may equal each other, and both of them may equal Egyptian Nok, require an awful lot of special pleading in the absence of hard evidence? Especially since "chanok" and "enosh" are easily derived just as they are from the pool of common semitic roots right there in the Hebrews' back yard?

Alice: Nok was not Egyptian, but his line intermarried with the Nubian rulers who conquered Egypt.  We need to look at both Egyptian and Chadic languages for clues that relate the names.  Since the ruler-priests among Abraham's people were devotees of Horus whose totem was the falcon or hawk owl, we might consider the ancient Egyptian word for owl m-l-k (See Gabor Takacs, Etymological Dictionary of Egyptian, p. 1). The association of the falcon or hawk owl with Horus is the likely source of the Semitic malk or melek, meaning king. In Hausa (a Chadic language) the words horni and hanu are related. Here we have a suggestion as to a possible connection between Horus and Hanoch. (See Dictionary of Hausa, p. 19)

I agree that the etymology of the names has been solidified by the Hebrew text, but Abraham's ancestors lived long before Hebrew developed as a distinct language. Of course, this raises the question: What language did Abraham's ancestors speak?

Thanks for engaging me on this, Dan. You've given me more to think about and research.


+  +  +


The names Enoch and Enosh are linguistically equivalent. Both names can be traced to the word anochi, the title for a ruler-to-be or heir to the throne. Consider these first three words of the Ten Commandments: Anochi, Havayah E-lohecha, meaning I am God, your Ruler.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Water Systems Connected Nile and Central Africa


Alice C. Linsley


New evidence suggests that the Nile's famous floods were much more extensive than previously thought — in fact, they spread nearly 100 miles west of the river and created "mega-lakes" in the ancient desert.


A team of American and Egyptian researchers have used Space Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission (SRTM) data to determine the floods the Nile is famous for started at a much earlier time — 250,000 years ago — and were much more extensive than originally thought.


Newly processed topographic data from the 1980s and 1990s show drainage channels that extend more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) west of the Nile that end abruptly in the desert, where an ancient lake would have had its shoreline.

Read it all here.
 
Ted Maxwell of the National Air and Space Museum believes this is how the Nile Valley and central Africa were once integrated. It took a long time for these water systems to shrink. The region was still wet in the time of Kain and Seth. The connection of the major water ways, controlled by rulers and chiefs, could explain how the House of Nok (Nigeria) and the House of Set (Nubia) became the controlling houses of that region.
 
On the west side, the Nile probably connected with the Chadic Sea which in turn connected to the Benue and Niger Rivers of Nigeria. This is the region of Noah's flood. About 8500 years ago, the Chadic Sea was about 600 feet deep and sustained boating and fishing industries. The average fishermen used canoe dugouts which they could carve themselves, but nobles used boats constructed of marsh reeds lashed together and sealed with pitch. As a ruler, Noah probably had a fleet of boats on constructed in this way.

The western Nile watershed extended well into the Sudan. This explains why the Sudanese always have thought of the Nile as their river. The Sudanese-born BBC commentator, Zeinab Badawi, expresses the Sudanese view of the Nile:
 
"Ideologically, I wouldn't say that there are any huge differences between the Sudanese and the Egyptian governments certainly, and there is a huge affinity between the people. I think that the biggest source of friction and potential tension between Egypt and Sudan has been in the Nile, and how the waters of the Nile are used. The feeling that a lot of northern Sudanese might have is that the Nile actually in a sense runs much more through Sudan than it does through Egypt. Sudan is the biggest country in Africa. It's the tenth biggest in the world, the size of western Europe. It is the land of the Nile, and maybe there is a kind of brotherly resentment by the northern Sudanese that the Egyptians have in a sense claimed the Nile as their own, whereas the Sudanese in a sense feel they are the proper custodians of the Nile, because after all, most of its journey is through the territory of Sudan." (From here.)

African Sheer Zone
Rifting combined with prolonged rains caused this entire region to flood. Lake Chad is located at the boundary of Niger, Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon. Between 12 and 10 thousand years ago, the Nile connected to the Chadic and Niger water systems through a series of shallow lakes in the Sahara Desert. This explains the common plant and animal species found in all three water systems.

The black mahogany Dufuna dugout was found in the Sudan buried 16 feet under clays and sands whose alternating sequence showed evidence of deposition in standing and flowing water. The dugout is 8000 years old. By comparison, Egypt's oldest boat is only about 5000 years old.  Peter Breunig (University of Frankfurt, Germany) has written this description of the Dufuna boat: “The bow and stern are both carefully worked to points, giving the boat a notably more elegant form”, compared to “the dugout made of conifer wood from Pesse in the Netherlands, whose blunt ends and thick sides seem crude”. Judging by stylistic sophistication, Breunig reasons that, “It is highly probable that the Dufuna boat does not represent the beginning of a tradition, but had already undergone a long development, and that the origins of water transport in Africa lie even further back in time.”


Related Reading: An African Reflects on Biblical Names; When the Sahara Was WetBoats and Cows of the Proto-SaharansBoat Petroglyphs in Egypt's Central Eastern Desert; 70,000 Year Settlement Found in Sudan; Mega-Nile was 17374.6 Square Miles

Monday, December 6, 2010

Challenge to Shaye Cohen's Portrayal of Abraham


Professor Shaye Cohen of Harvard admits that the conception of Abraham as the first Jew does not represent historical reality, yet he seeks to perpetuate this "myth" instead of admit that the Horim were Horites.


Alice C. Linsley


Shaye Cohen is the Littauer Professor of Hebrew Literature and Philosophy in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations of Harvard. He is the author of The Beginnings of Jewishness.  In this essay, I will challenge Dr. Cohen's portrayal of Abraham as the archetypical Jew and perpetuates a common myth about Abraham.

When asked in this NOVA interview if Abraham was the first Jew, Dr. Cohen responded, "The biblical narrative gets going with Abraham in Genesis chapter 12. Abraham in turn Isaac, in turn Jacob, in turn Joseph and the twelve tribes, this brings us directly to the people of Israel and the covenant at Sinai. So Abraham is thought of as the first Jew, the archetype."

Region of Eden
Actually the biblical narrative begins with Genesis 1 where we are told that God creates by His generative Word, which John's Prologue identifies as the pre-incarnate second Person of the Trinity.  It moves very quickly to the first biblical promise in Genesis 3:15, the Edenic Promise received by Abraham's ancestors who were rulers in the well-watered region of Eden. This promise is the origin of the Messanic expectation among Abraham's people, who were not Jews, but Horites.

The Horites were a caste of ruler-priests whose origin was the Nile region of Sudan. They were devotees of Horus, who was called "son of Ra" as Horus' mother Hathor-Meri was said to be impregnated by the overshadowing of the Sun.

Horus is the celestial archetype whereby some of Abraham's Jewish descendants came to recognize Jesus as Messiah. Horus' death was mourned and his resurrection celebrated in a five-day festival observed by the Kushites and Egyptians. The first three days were marked by solemnity (as Plutarch noted in Isis and Osiris, 69). The last two days were a time of feasting and rejoicing. Horus is said to have died on the 17th of Athyr. His death was commemorated by the planting of wheat. On the third day, the 19th of Athyr, there was a celebration of Horus’ rising to life. Speaking of his passion, Jesus refers to this when he described his death and resurrection as a grain of wheat falling into the earth and rising to life again (John 12:24).

The double crown of the Israelite high priest was essentially the double crown of Horus worn by the rulers of the Nile Valley. The mitznefet was the white turban of the Upper Nile and the tzitz was the circlet worn around the turban, like the red circlet of the Lower Nile. Narmer (Menes) was the first recorded to wear the double crown. He was the founder of the First Dynasty around 3100 B.C.  Abraham was closely related to the rulers of Egypt. The Babylonian Talmud indicates that his maternal grandfather was a priest of Karnak in Egypt.

Abraham's mother is not mentioned in the Bible, but when we explore her identity we find that she was a high-ranking woman whose father, Karnevo, was associated with the Horus temple at Karnak. In the Karnak birth chapel we find a rendering of the miraculous birth of pharaoh Amenhotep III as the embodiment of Horus. This has led some to believe that Christianity is a conspiracy based on the Horus myth.  However, Amenhotep III died and did not rise from the grave.

While Genesis does indeed trace a direct line from Abraham to Isaac and to Jacob, it also traces the Horite lines of Esau and the Joktanite lines descending from Abraham and his patrilineal cousin-wife Keturah. It is evident also from analysis of the kinship pattern of Abraham's people that Isaac had two wives, one being his half-sister. So the direct line of which Cohen speaks always breaks into two lines with two first-born sons, a pattern which Jews choose to overlook. Given that these ruler-priests intermarried, the Israelites were a mixed people, like their Arab (Ar-ab) brethren. The lines of Kain and Seth intermarried, as did the lines of Ham and Shem, and the lines of Abraham and Nahor.

It is impossible to speak of only one direct line from Abraham to the Israelites because Abraham had nine sons and their descendants intermarried. The genealogical data strongly suggests that Abraham's first-born son was Joktan, the forefather of the Joktanite tribes of Arabia. By Cohen's reasoning, Abraham could as easily be described the first Arab, since most Arabs are descended from him through Joktan.

Abraham's descendants by Ishmael are Egyptians, since Ishmael's mother and wife were Egyptians.

It isn't possible to generalize the kinship pattern of Abraham's people to all Afro-Asiatics or to all the peoples among whom the Horites lived. The Horite ruler-priest marriage and ascendency pattern is distinctive and apparently unique to this caste. We are able to trace Abraham's descendents through the cousin-bride's naming prerogative. These are the ancestors of Joseph and Mary, both of priestly lines. This unique pattern of intermarriage appears to end with Jesus, who was recognized by many Jews of his day as the promised Son who came to save sinners and to restore Paradise. This has been verified by DNA studies which indicate that the unique pattern of intermarriage and ascendency stopped about 2000 years ago.


Cohen Admits to Myth-Building

Cohen admits that his portrayal of Abraham as the father of the Jews lacks historical support. He says, "Historically speaking, of course, this doesn't make much sense. It's hard to talk about Jews living around the year 1800 B.C.E. or anytime near that." This is true. We can speak of Jews only after about 580 B.C.E., when they returned to Judah from Babylonian captivity. However, we can trace expectation of the fulfillment of the Edenic Promise back to about 4000 B.C. which indicates that Christianity is an organic rather than a synthetic religion.  In other words, the Jews didn't invent Messianic expectation and Jesus didn't found Christianity. He fulfilled it.

Cohen's understanding of Abraham as the founder of Judaism is a post-exilic myth and doesn't align with the evidence.  He says, "We don't have any of the institutions, beliefs, social structures in place that will later characterize Jews and Jewishness." This is verifiably false. The hereditary priesthood, blood sacrifice, circumcision, sacred law and the office of the moreh/prophet existed in Abraham's time and before. Abraham consulted a prophet (moreh) at Mamre (Genesis 12: 6-8), between Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. The oak was associated with masculine anatomy and masculine virtues. Likewise, Deborah judged from her palm tree between Bethel to the north and Ramah to the south. Note the association of the female with north-south and the male with east-west, signaling a sacred mystery. The nut of the date palm (tamar) was associated with feminine anatomy and feminine virtues.

Cohen admits that this view of Abraham as the first Jew is of a "mythic kind".  He states, "So in a mythic kind of way we can say that Abraham recognizes God and that Abraham launches the process—biological and social and cultural—that will culminate in the people of Israel, who in turn will become Jews and the purveyors of Judaism." In this statement, Cohen gets one thing right:  Abraham recognized God. The rest is nonsense!  Some of Abraham's descendants by his nine sons became Jews, others became Arabs, and many others are of a mixed racial and religious heritage. Cohen is attempting to sell the myth of Jewish purity.

Cohen notes that "the rabbis of old imagined that Abraham observed the whole Torah, that Abraham observed all the commandments: He observed the Sabbath, he observed the festivals, he observed the laws of culture and food. He observed everything, not just circumcision, which is attributed to him explicitly in Genesis, but everything else as well. Because how can you imagine our forefather Abraham, the founder of Judaism, not observing the Jewish rules, not observing the Jewish laws? This is a wonderful anachronism, a charming conceit. But historically speaking, how could it be?"

The Levitical laws have precedent in older purity laws of the Nile Valley that pertained mainly to ruler-priests and their families for whom purity was especially important. Jews do come from these people which is why Jews call their ancestors and parents "horim." Abraham would have observed these laws. He would have been circumcised, ritually washed, sacrified lambs, shaved his head and performed atonement for blood guilt. On this last point, Genesis tells us that Abraham met with the ruler-priest Melchizedek after the battle of the kings. Doubtless this meeting involved priestly intercession for the relief of blood guilt.

Abraham's faith came not as special revelation, but as a tradition received from his forefathers. The distinctive traits of this tradition align remarkable well with the key features of catholic faith and practice:

  • All-male ruler-priests
  • Blood sacrifice at altars
  • Expectation of the appearing of God
  • "As in heaven, so on earth" - interpreted by prophets according to the celestial pattern
  • Belief in an eternal and undivided Kingdom
When the NOVA interviewer asked if Abraham discovered monotheism, Cohen replied that "The texts in Genesis simply have Abraham talking to God and God talking to Abraham, that's it. Later Jews could not imagine such events without explaining more fully how it was that Abraham came to recognize God and why it was that God chose Abraham."

This is true and the speculations of the rabbis now carries more weight among Jews than the canonical texts. It is from the Talmudic writings that Cohen draws this story: "

"And one of the most famous of these stories recounts how Abraham, the philosopher, sits and contemplates the natural order and realizes that there must be a first cause, that everything has a purpose. And behind the world that we can perceive, there must be some force that we cannot perceive but whose existence we can infer. That's how Abraham came to believe in God. And he went home to his father, Terah, who in the story is an idol maker, and Abraham then smashed all of his father's idols. And numerous Jewish children are convinced to this day that the story is found in the book of Genesis and are always shocked and amazed to discover that it isn't."

Their dismay is understandable. They thought that the rabbis were teaching them from the Hebrew Bible when in fact they were giving instruction from the Talmud. The Talmud itself encourages readers to place it above the authority of the Old Testament. We read this explicit instruction: “My son, be more careful in the observance of the words of the Scribes than in the words of the Torah." (Talmud Erubin 21b)

The NOVA interviewer raised this question: "So is Abraham the founder of monotheism?" Here is Cohen's response: "Ancient Jewish storytellers thought the answer was yes, and following them Christian storytellers thought the same. However, reading historically, we realize monotheism is a very difficult and elusive concept to define. Again, it's far too simple to say that Abraham discovers monotheism."

Indeed "too simple" and entirely misleading.  The truth is that the Horites were henotheists. They believed in a single supreme deity who was the creator and king of the universe. This deity was served by lesser assisting powers (spirits, angels, baals) who are in no way equal to their creator.

The NOVA interviewer ends by asking this:  "Does the Abraham account in Genesis have a central message, a central purpose?"

According to Cohen, "It teaches sacred values, sacred ideas—how to relate to God, to have faith in God. It's also simply a story about our founders. We humans are always curious to know about where we come from. All cultures have stories about their founders or great figures of the past. So here, too, we have stories about our great founder figure, Abraham, who sets the process going that makes us who we are, we meaning the people of Israel, the covenantal people."

Abraham stands as the archetypical Horite ruler-priest who lived in expectation of the birth of a son who would pass through death to life, from weakness to triumph. His faith is the central message.  St. Paul says, "For the promise to Abraham and his offspring that He would be heir of the world did not come through the law but through the righteousness of faith." (Rom. 4:13)

Abraham's faith is exemplified in the binding of Isaac.  As they ascended Mount Moriah, Isaac asked Abraham "where is the lamb" for the sacrifice. Abraham replied that God would provide the lamb, but God instead provided a ram. The ram signaled to Abraham that his offering had been accepted, because the lamb had become the ram. Abraham appears to have believed Isaac to be the Seed of the Woman (Gen. 3:15), but Isaac was spared because God would supply his own Lamb, Jesus Christ, who passed from weakness (kenosis) to fullness of power (resurrection). He is the Ruler-Designate to whom the Father will deliver the eternal kingdom. He is the fulfillment of the Eden Promise.

Abraham likely believed that Isaac was the foretold promised son since many of the circumstances surrounding Isaac align with the ancient Horus myth. Consider the following correspondences:

Isaac was born miraculously (Gen. 21:5) as was Horus, who was said to have been born of a virgin. Issac was not born of a virgin, but Jesus was.

God named Isaac as the son by whom Abraham's Seed would be called (Gen. 21:12). His brother Ishmael was banished. Horus was exalted after being abused by his brother who was banished.

Isaac was sacrificed by the father (by faith) and restored to life (Gen. 22:2-9), since to Abraham he was already given up (holocaust). Horus was restored to life on the third day. This is why many ancient Egyptian funerary amulets were made in the shape of the Eye of Horus.

Isaac received the kingdom from his father (Gen. 25:25) just as Horus/Osirus received a kingdom from his father Ra. Jesus receives the kingdom from the Father. In the Horite myth, Horus/Osiris and Ra are frequently interchangeable - "I and my Father are one", as Jesus explained (John 10:30). They are also all-seeing, even when their eyes are dimmed by blood.

Isaac had two wives who lived in separate settlements with separate flocks. Together these constituted his kingdom. There were practical reasons for this practice. In the event of attack, Isaac's line was more likely to survive if divided into two camps. This fear motivated Jacob to divide his people into two groups when returning to Canaan (Gen. 32). Likewise, Horus is said to have two land holdings as evidenced by one of his titles Har-pa-Neb-Taui, which means "Horus of the two lands."

The association of sheep with the Son of God is found in the Old and New Testaments. Horite priests kept herds from which they took the best to offer as sacrifices. Jesus comes from a long line of shepherds of the priestly lines, on Joseph's side and Mary's side. Keeping sheep was not their only occupation, however. Some were metal workers, others were carpenters, but all were skilled in various enterprises. The rulers of Egypt kept flocks and acknowledged that Jacob's people were especially skilled shepherds. This is why Pharaoh asked Joseph to put the best of shepherd of Jacob's clan in charge of the royal flocks (Gen. 47:6).

Jesus, the Good Shepherd, speaks of having other sheep in another fold (John 10:16). Often the two folds are cast as dispensations: one consisting of those who lived in expectation of the Son of God (Abraham's people) and the other being the witnesses of His resurrection (the Church). Together these comprise the Kingdom of God.

The ruler-priests among Abraham's people were shepherds. The signs of their authority were the shepherd's crook and the flail. These emblems of Pharonic authority have been found in pre-dynastic wall paintings. Hierakonpolis is the site of the most ancient temple and city in Egypt (circa 4000 B.C.). Priests placed invocations to Horus at the fort-summit as the first rays of the sun came over the eastern horizon. Of particular interest is the tomb painting of two men carrying crooks with objects that look like flails, the signs of the rulers of ancient Egypt.

In God's economy, which always gets the order of things right, the shepherds of Bethlehem, a Horite settlement (Hor/Hur) according to I Chronicles 4:4, were the first to receive the news of the birth of the Son of God.

Jesus is spoken of as the Lamb of God. In the story of the binding of Isaac, a ram is sacrificed in place of Isaac. The ram-headed deity, based on the earliest species - Ovis longipes palaeoagytiaca - was known throughout ancient Egypt, especially at Elephantine. So the ram in the story speaks of God's self-sacrifice and would have been confirmation for Abraham that his offering (though not realized) was accepted.

It appears that Abraham believed that Isaac would be raised to life after the sacrifice. The ram  was an ancient Horite symbol of God's rising (from east to west).  Abraham received confirmation that his son was indeed an acceptable offering to God, though Isaac was not the "Son of God" who would fulfill the promise made to Abraham's ancestors in Eden (Gen. 3:15).

Dr. Cohen speaks a good deal of "myth" yet he misses the fact that the core myth of Abraham's Horite people is essentially the core myth of Christianity.  Christianity emerges naturally out of the faith of Abraham's Horite people. This is why Jesus and His Apostles called the religious leaders in Jerusalem hypocrites. They claimed a special status as sons of Abraham but they rejected the faith of Abraham.

Fyodor Dostoevsky was right in declaring: “The most pressing question on the problem of faith is whether a man as a civilized being can believe in the divinity of the Son of God, Jesus Christ, for therein rests the whole of our faith.”


Related reading:  Messianic Jews and the Antecedents of Judaism; Jacob Leaves Beersheba; Mary's Ruler-Priest Lineage; Samuel's Horite Family; Moses' Horite Family; The Horite Ancestry of Jesus ChristThe Afro-Asiatic DominionWhat Language Did Abraham Speak?; Abraham's Faith Central to Genesis; Busting Myths About Abraham

 

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Kentucky to Get Noah's Ark Theme Park


Plan of the Noah's Ark Theme Park


The state of Kentucky is going to contribute tax dollars to the brainchild of Ken Ham and his Young Earth Creationist cronies who publish Answers in Genesis. 

Ham is going to build an 800-acre Noah's Ark theme park in Grant County, Kentucky. It is to feature a “full scale replica” of Noah’s Ark. The theme park is expected to open in 2014. The groundbreaking will be in August 2011.

Some Kentuckians aren't happy about state funding of this venture though Ham has stated that the park will produce jobs in an economically depressed area.

Here is the blurb from the Creation Museum website:

The Ark Encounter, a private Limited Liability Corporation, will be partnering with Answers in Genesis (AiG), a 501(c)(3) organization, the group behind the highly successful Creation Museum. In three years, more than 1.2 million guests have visited the $35-million museum, which was funded by donations from tens of thousands of supporters.

The Ark Encounter will include a full-scale Ark, built according to the biblical dimensions and constructed with materials and methods as close as possible to those of Noah’s time.

More than just the Ark, the project will include a large complex of associated attractions, theaters, amenities, event venues, and ample parking to properly accommodate the expected crowds.

The nine main areas of the Ark Encounter are:

•The Walled City: Along with plenty of shopping and food, guests experience Bible events through various themed venues situated on 40 acres.

•The Ark: A full-size wooden Ark.

•Noah’s Animals: Live shows with animals from around the world, and a large petting zoo.

•Children’s Play Area: A highly themed, interactive environment where kids can explore and play.

•The Tower of Babel: A 100-foot-tall themed building with exhibits and a 500-seat 5-D special effects theater.

•Journey Through History: This themed attraction takes visitors on a trip through events of the Bible, experiencing spectacular special effects.

•The First-Century Village: This attractive area presents a town as it might have appeared in the Middle East.

•Aviary: three bird sanctuaries presented in a natural setting, plus a nearby butterfly exhibit.

•Special Events Area: A venue for large gatherings; this area will also showcase some of the Leader in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) building techniques used to build the Ark complex.

From here.  

For information on the tax incentives, go here.

On challenges to the use of taxpayers' money for the YEC venture.


I wonder if they will reconstruct the Lake Chad region as it would have been about 6000 years ago?  Genesis tells us that Abraham's early ancestors came out of Africa. He was a descendant of the Kushite kingdom builder Nimrod (Gen. 10). 

Noah was a ruler in the region of Lake Chad, the only place on earth claimed by the native peoples to be Noah's homeland. The region is called Borno or Benue, both meaning "land of Noah." The local Kanuri people call Lake Chad Buhar Nuhu, meaning "Sea of Noah."

The ark was made of reed bundles lashed to a wood frame. It was not a huge wooden ship such as proposed by Ham. 


Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Was Abraham the First Jew?


The answer to that question is NO. Abraham was not a Jew and he did not speak Hebrew. He was a Hebrew or Habiru/'Apiru. The Habiru were an ancient caste of ruler-priests who served at the Sun temples of the archaic world long before the time of Abraham.

It is time that the narrative of Abraham as the first Jew go away.  It is entirely false.

Abraham is a pivotal figure of biblical history. He is the ancestor of many peoples and he is a descendant of Nilo-Saharan peoples who dispersed across the ancient world. His ancestors were known by various names: Habiru (Hebrew); Horim (Horite); Shasu of Yahweh, Anu or Hanu (Ainu), and the Tera-neter (priest of God). Tera-neter refers to a ruler-priest of the Anu, a pre-dynastic people of the Upper Nile. Abraham’s father has the title Tera, which means priest. The Ainu spread abroad, taking their religious beliefs and practices with them. They migrated to Northern Japan and into Eastern Canada. In the Japanese language "tera" means priest.

Dr. Shaye Cohen

Here is a NOVA interview with Dr. Shaye Cohen in which he presents the Jewish myth of Abraham.

Q: Was Abraham the first Jew?

Shaye Cohen: The biblical narrative gets going with Abraham in Genesis chapter 12. Abraham in turn Isaac, in turn Jacob, in turn Joseph and the twelve tribes, this brings us directly to the people of Israel and the covenant at Sinai. So Abraham is thought of as the first Jew, the archetype.

Historically speaking, of course, this doesn't make much sense. It's hard to talk about Jews living around the year 1800 B.C.E. or anytime near that. We don't have any of the institutions, beliefs, social structures in place that will later characterize Jews and Jewishness. So in a mythic kind of way we can say that Abraham recognizes God and that Abraham launches the process—biological and social and cultural—that will culminate in the people of Israel, who in turn will become Jews and the purveyors of Judaism. But to call Abraham Jewish simplifies things very dramatically.


Q: In terms of things that characterize being Jewish today, where does Abraham stand?

Cohen: In modern terms, the Jewishness of Abraham fundamentally consists of belief. He communicates with God, and God communicates with him. Now, the rabbis of old imagined that Abraham observed the whole Torah, that Abraham observed all the commandments: He observed the Sabbath, he observed the festivals, he observed the laws of culture and food. He observed everything, not just circumcision, which is attributed to him explicitly in Genesis, but everything else as well. Because how can you imagine our forefather Abraham, the founder of Judaism, not observing the Jewish rules, not observing the Jewish laws? This is a wonderful anachronism, a charming conceit. But historically speaking, how could it be?


Q: Does Abraham discover monotheism?

Cohen: Is Abraham the founder of monotheism? The texts in Genesis simply have Abraham talking to God and God talking to Abraham, that's it. Later Jews could not imagine such events without explaining more fully how it was that Abraham came to recognize God and why it was that God chose Abraham. And one of the most famous of these stories recounts how Abraham, the philosopher, sits and contemplates the natural order and realizes that there must be a first cause, that everything has a purpose. And behind the world that we can perceive, there must be some force that we cannot perceive but whose existence we can infer. That's how Abraham came to believe in God. And he went home to his father, Terah, who in the story is an idol maker, and Abraham then smashed all of his father's idols. And numerous Jewish children are convinced to this day that the story is found in the book of Genesis and are always shocked and amazed to discover that it isn't.

So is Abraham the founder of monotheism? Ancient Jewish storytellers thought the answer was yes, and following them Christian storytellers thought the same. However, reading historically, we realize monotheism is a very difficult and elusive concept to define. Again, it's far too simple to say that Abraham discovers monotheism.

Q: Does the Abraham account in Genesis have a central message, a central purpose?

Cohen: It teaches sacred values, sacred ideas—how to relate to God, to have faith in God. It's also simply a story about our founders. We humans are always curious to know about where we come from. All cultures have stories about their founders or great figures of the past. So here, too, we have stories about our great founder figure, Abraham, who sets the process going that makes us who we are, we meaning the people of Israel, the covenantal people.

From here.


Abraham and his ancestors were ethnically Kushite and belonged to the royal priest caste known as Horites. The Horites are also known in ancient texts as Habiru (Hebrew) and the Shashu of YHWY. The were rulers of the ancient world with a distinctive marriage and ascendancy pattern.


Related reading: Archaic Rulers, Ascendancy and the Foreshadowing of ChristWho Was Abraham?Jacob Leaves Beersheba; Busting Myths About Abraham; Challenge to Shaye Cohen's Portrayal of Abraham; Abraham and Job: Horite Rulers; Moses' Horite Family; Was Abraham Jewish?