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Showing posts with label ram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ram. Show all posts

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Rams, Lions, and Royal Ladies

 

A tiny golden ram and a stone lion were found in a tomb at the Gonur Depe archaeological site (2400-1600 B.C.) in Turkmenistan. Gonur Depe, a bronze age town, was discovered in 1972.




Among the early Hebrew the sun, copper, coiled snakes, the celestial bull or ram, horns cradling the sun, twin lions, inner sanctums, east-facing temples, solar boats, winged solar orbs, relic boxes such as the Ark of the Covenant, and green stones were associated with the High God and his son HR (Horus in Greek). In ancient Egyptian HR means "Most High One".

Lions were a symbol of royal authority in the Ancient Near East. They often appear on ancient royal steles. Even today lions appear on the heraldry of noble and royal houses. The lion was the totem of the clan of Judah, a son of the Hebrew ruler Jacob, and a lion appears on the Jerusalem coat of arms.


Royal Ladies?

Excavations at Gonur in the ancient delta of the Murghab River revealed a unique polychrome painting at the Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex. It was found in an unusual grave at Gonur 20. 




Also found at the site are a group of seated female figures wearing robes of green chlorite or steatite. The heads are of white limestone. Among the dispersed Hebrew, green stones, especially malachite, were associated with the High God and Horus.

Among the Horite Hebrew green malachite represented new life and the hope of resurrection. The land of the blessed dead was described as the "field of malachite." Green stones were associated with Horus, whose animal totem was the falcon. The Book of the Dead speaks of how the deceased will become a falcon "whose wings are of green stone" (chapter 77). The protective Eye of Horus amulet was made of green stone. The Ancient Pyramid Texts speak of Horus as the "Lord of the green stone" (Utterance 301).




Saturday, December 16, 2017

Did Abraham Intend to Sacrifice Isaac?


Caravaggio, 1598


Alice C. Linsley

The Binding of Isaac is best explained by early Hebrew beliefs concerning the High God and His son, Hor/Hur/Horus, from the ancient Egyptian HR, meaning "Most High One." In the symbolism of the early Hebrew the Divine Father-Son were represented by the Sun and the solar arc. The Sun was described as rising in the east like a young lamb and setting in the west like a mature ram. As Abraham and Isaac ascended Mount Moriah, Isaac asked his father "where is the lamb for the sacrifice? Abraham replied that God would provide the sacrifice.

God provided a ram. Horus is the single figure shown in ancient iconography with the body of a man and the head of a ram. This animal was sacrificed by the Hebrew at festivals. One such festival commemorated the death and resurrection of Horus. This lasted five days and involved sowing wheat seed in the fields. Another festival involved making a three-day journey into the wilderness (Exodus 3:18; 5:3, and 8:26-28.). This involved the sacrifice of a ram, an animal that the Egyptians did not sacrifice. This explains why Moses said to Pharaoh that the Hebrew clans had to make a three-day journey into the wilderness. "...for the sacrifices that we offer to the LORD our God are an abomination to the Egyptians. If we offer in the sight of the Egyptians sacrifices that are an abomination to them, will they not stone us?”

There is an interesting linguistic connection between the words for ram and soul in ancient Egyptian thought. Both are the same word - ba. No wonder the Egyptians did not sacrifice rams! Yet God provided a ram. The early Hebrew ruler-priests clearly did not hold to the religious syncretism of the Egyptians. Indeed, their faith is rooted in a Messianic Tradition that existed at least 2000 years before Egypt became a political entity.

To understand what the events on Mount Moriah meant to Abraham, we must be aware of his Hebrew beliefs concerning the expected Righteous Ruler who would die and overcome death, rising to immortality.

Horus, the son of Ra (meaning "Father" in ancient Egyptian) was depicted among Abraham's Nilotic ancestors as being one with the Father. He rode with the Father on the solar boat. The boat of the morning hours was called Mandjet and the boat of the evening hours was called Mesektet. While Horus was on the Mesektet, he was in his ram-headed form. The east represented the past and the west represented the future, as with many indigenous peoples even today. 

The narratives that speak about the death of Horus involve being bitten by a scorpion or by a poisonous serpent. Both accounts are fairly late (c.1720-c.1250 B.C.), but the idea of the Seed of God being bitten by a serpent is found in Genesis 3:15. Some have claimed that Horus was crucified. No such narrative exists in the ancient texts. The lack of description of HR's death in ancient texts may be explained by the symbolism of the solar arc in which the ram is connected to the future, an event to take place after Abraham's time.

The ram was the Heavenly Father's substitute for Isaac who Abraham may have believed to be the long-awaited Messiah. That Abraham believed the sign of the ram became grounds for his justification. The ram caught on Mount Moriah symbolized to Abraham that the offering of his heart was accepted. 
ManageJews speak of the "binding of Isaac" as the Akeidat Yitzchak. Most Jews do not believe that Abraham intended to sacrifice his son. In The Binding of Isaac, Religious Murders and Kabbalah, Lippman Bodoff argues that Abraham never intended to sacrifice his son. Rather, he had faith that God had no intention that he should do so.

Genesis Rabbah holds that God "never considered telling Abraham to slaughter Isaac. Rabbi Yona Ibn Janach wrote that this story is about a symbolic sacrifice. Rabbi Yosef Ibn Caspi maintained that Abraham's "imagination" led him astray. Ibn Caspi wrote, "How could God command such a revolting thing?"

Rabbi Joseph H. Hertz maintains that child sacrifice was "rife among the Semitic peoples," and finds it "astounding that Abraham's God should have interposed to prevent the sacrifice, not that He should have asked for it." Hertz's interpretation of Genesis 22 is that God was correcting the practice of human sacrifice among Abraham’s people. Unfortunately, there is little anthropological and archaeological support for this view. The is no evidence that the early Hebrew practiced human sacrifice.

Jacques Kinnaer reports, "The earliest known example of human sacrifice may perhaps be found in Predynastic burials in the south of Egypt, dated to the Naqada II Period. One of the discovered bodies showed marks on the throat from having been cut before having been decapitated."-- Human Sacrifice, Jacques Kinnaer

Kinnaer also provides two definitions of human sacrifice:
  • "The ritual killing of human beings as part of the offerings presented to the gods on a regular basis, or on special occasions."
  • "Retainer sacrifice, or the killing of domestic servants to bury them along with their master."

For the first definition there is no evidence among Abraham's ancestors, and regarding the second definition, there is dispute among Egyptologists. Caroline Seawright has written, "Human sacrifice is not generally connected with ancient Egypt. There is little evidence of human sacrifice during most of the dynastic period of ancient Egypt... but there is some evidence that it may have been practiced in the Nile Valley during the 1st Dynasty and possibly also Predynastic Egypt.

Seawright is referring to subsidiary graves at Abydos, the burial place for the first kings of a unified Egypt. These were Kushite rulers. However, these were the graves of domestics and officials who probably died naturally, not the graves of servants who were sacrificed to serve the ruler in the afterlife. Even the most provocative National Geographic report has to admit that this is probable, lacking hard evidence that the ancient Nilotic peoples sacrificed humans.

The "binding of Isaac" involves a promise. The promise is understood in the exchange of the lamb Isaac asked his father about, for the ram that God provides. For the Horite Hebrew this speaks of the Creator's son, Horus, who was said to rise with the sun as a lamb and set with the sun as a ram in its full strength. That being the case, this story is about God providing His own sacrifice, but in the future (symbolized by the west). The text supports this interpretation.
"Then Abraham raised his eyes and looked, and behold, behind him a ram caught in the thicket by his horns; and Abraham went and took the ram and offered him up for a burnt offering in the place of his son. Abraham called the name of that place The LORD Will Provide, as it is said to this day, 'In the mount of the LORD it will be provided." (Gen. 22:14, 15)
It is apparent that Abraham intended that Isaac should be offered to God, perhaps dedicated to God's service, as Samuel was dedicated to serve in the temple? Genesis tells us that Abraham expected to return with Isaac to his men waiting at the base of the mountain. Abraham the Hebrew expected resurrection and he told the men that both he and Isaac would return (Genesis 22:5).

Abraham knew to expect a son who would overcome death. He likely believed that Isaac would be raised to life after the sacrifice. In other words, he acted by faith. By provision of the ram on Mount Moriah, a site that was sacred to the Horite Hebrew, Abraham received confirmation that his offering was accepted, and he also discovered that Isaac was not the anticipated Ruler foretold in Eden (Gen. 3:15). That one would be revealed in the future.

Paul and James are perceived to be in conflict on the question of justification, yet they both argue based on this story of Abraham and Isaac. There is no conflict in their understandings of this event if they understood that Abraham trusted God to confirm the truth to him. This is the man who posed the great question: "Will not the Judge of all the earth do right?" (Gen. 18:25) This same Abraham believed God's promise concerning the appointed Son who would appear in the future. 

What Abraham discovered on Mount Moriah is that Isaac was not the long-awaited Messiah who would overcome death and lead the people to immortality. That Lamb of God was yet to be born, and He would die a ram (in full strength of manhood) in the future. James tells us that Abraham discovered justification through acting on his Messianic faith... that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only (James 2:21-24).

The Jews call their ancestors "Horim" because they recognize the Horite Hebrew identity of Abraham and his ancestors. The Horite (and Sethite) Hebrew believed in the resurrection, but this fact has been suppressed by rabbinic teaching.

The Horites anticipated that a woman of their ruler-priest lines would miraculously conceive by the overshadowing of God and bring for the Son of God. This explains why their lines intermarried exclusively, as analysis of their marriage and ascendancy pattern shows. Both Joseph and Mary are descendants of the Horite ruler-priest lines. This is attested by the fact that Joseph had to register for the census in Bethlehem. Bethlehem was a Horite town. I Chronicles 4:4 lists Hor as the "father" of Bethlehem.

The Nilotic Horites held an annual a 5-day festival in which they mourned the death of the son of God. He is called Horus, from which come the terms "Horite" or "Hurrian." On the third day, the priests lead the people to the fields where they planted seeds of grain to symbolize his rising to life. This was a custom among Abraham's Nilotic ancestors who hung their hopes on the resurrection of the Righteous Ruler.

Genesis 3:15 speaks of how the Woman would bring for the Seed who would crush the serpent's head. Jesus claimed to be that Seed when He spoke to his disciples about his impending death. He explained: "Except a grain of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit." (John 12:24)

The rabbis do not agree on the meaning of the binding of Isaac, but one thing is certain: the Horite Hebrew did not practice human sacrifice. The biblical evidence indicates that child sacrifice among the Semites developed after Abraham's time because God condemns it between the 8th and 7th centuries BC, about 1200 years after Abraham.

There is little evidence of human sacrifice among biblical peoples. This narrative of Abraham with Isaac isn't about human sacrifice. It is about Messianic expectation of the dying and rising son. The narrative concerning Jephath's sacrifice of his daughter is a moral lesson about not swearing rash oaths (compare James 5:12), and a critique of Canaanite practices surrounding war.


Related reading: Abraham's Faith Lives in ChristianityRam Symbolism in the Ancient WorldJesus: From Lamb to Ram; What Abraham Discovered on Mount Moriah; The Substance of Abraham's Faith