• kromem@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    15
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Over the pandemic I picked up a hobby of digging really deep into the history of the Bible.

    It’s so much more interesting than I would have ever thought, and so opposite what everyone (on both sides of the topic) tends to think.

    An early history of powerful women peeking through a patriarchal rewrite.

    A likely foreign introduction of an Exodus tale from the sea peoples.

    A famine story turned into a flood from Babylonian influence.

    A generic ‘adversary’ term (‘Satan’) during conversion from a polytheistic story to monotheism leading to the most extensive fanfiction in history.

    A version of Jesus referring to contemporary ideas around evolution and atomism in Leucretius being declared false heresy by the group that goes on to be canonized.

    Yet again empowered women having their history rewritten by patriarchal opposition.

    For someone who has always enjoyed solving little puzzles, it’s been a gift that keeps on giving.

    • Today@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 year ago

      I would like to do this. I checked out audio recordings from a priest about apocalypse stories as a genre and the use of numbers in the Bible, and I’ve looked at Bible as Literature classes but never signed up. Did you follow a course or study guide?

    • Contramuffin@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 year ago

      I’ve watched a couple videos from Esoterica. His videos are wild. Who could have expected that the biblical God came from a storm-warrior god?

      • kromem@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        Sort of. One of the things I see as a common mistake in analyzing the Bible is the attempt to harmonize the different books of the Bible into a single picture of the origin and nature of a figure in it.

        So yes, the storm god that shows up in Job is almost certainly coming from the ANE storm god stories which had that god defending a sea monster.

        But that isn’t necessarily where ‘Yahweh’ was originating, as much as perhaps a later syncretism with local mythos.

        And ultimately, I’d argue for a case that the significance of Yahweh was mostly as consort, potentially mirroring the Shasu (the only bronze age association with Yahweh) having had a real world political marriage to a high priestess of the Queen of Heaven, which was typically Yahweh’s wife in early archeology and was elsewhere in the ANE married to the storm god who slayed the sea beast.

        That marriage is later overwritten and regarded as a corruption of an earlier monotheistic tradition, but such monotheism is anachronistic for that earlier period when it is archeologically evidenced as widely polytheistic.

        So while I do think it’s helpful with videos like that broadening people’s horizons from what they might hear by modern believers in the texts, the actual picture is potentially far more complicated than a direct transmission of ANE parallels.

        Even a story like Noah’s Ark, which fits with a storm god, appears to be a later incorporation of Babylonian flood mythos on top of an earlier Noah story as the hero of a famine story, not a flood story (Idan Dershowitz has a compelling paper on this).

      • kromem@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Years of participation in /r/AcademicBiblical leads to a lot of knowledge. If you have a specific item you want more on, I can point you to more information.

        • cubedsteaks@lemmy.today
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          2
          ·
          1 year ago

          Yeah, I grew up as a Jehovah’s Witness. Do you have info on where they got their lore?

          it’s a shame I left reddit when there’s stuff like that on there.

          • kromem@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            2
            ·
            1 year ago

            Unfortunately not really. My focus was on 1450 BCE to around 450 CE, so while I can talk a lot about dead sects, for the nuances of modern ones I’m not much more informed than the average person.

            • cubedsteaks@lemmy.today
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              2
              ·
              1 year ago

              That makes sense. They only started around 1944 I believe and had several different names before they stuck with Jehovah Witnesses.

              A lot of their teachings come from Christian beliefs though and a lot of it is similar. They believe Jesus died for our sins and what not.

              Can I ask how anyone has info from as far back as 1450 BCE? Like is it guesses based on ancient artifacts?

              Forgive me if these kinds of questions are already answered on reddit.

              • kromem@lemmy.world
                link
                fedilink
                English
                arrow-up
                2
                ·
                1 year ago

                It depends on the culture. Ancient Egypt had centuries of records by 1450 BCE which have survived until today. Other cultures writing on parchment that didn’t survive we know almost nothing about first hand.

                So it’s a mixture of secondhand reports from people alive during the period those records may have existed, but who didn’t have good methodology for reporting history (so you need to take with a giant grain of salt) or primary records which survived, to extrapolating from archeology records.

                For example, a few years ago in Tel Rehov an apiary was found active from the 10th-8th centuries BCE.

                Until that find, scholars assumed “land of milk and honey” wasn’t referring to actual bee honey.

                In that apiary was an altar to an unknown goddess where honey was burnt, and that altar had four ‘horns’ on the corners.

                The style of a four horned altar is instructed to the Israelites in the Bible, but this altar was one of the earliest archeologically evidenced, Leviticus make explicit mention of banning burning honey as a sacrifice, and the apiary was destroyed and not rebuilt but the surrounding structures were not at that time, so it looks like it was explicitly targeted. Also, the bees themselves were shown through DNA analysis to have been imported from Anatolia.

                So even without any primary written records, we can see that certain aspects of this imported tradition may have been syncretized into the pre-8th century Israelites, but that then there was a reform that resulted in opposition to it and its destruction.

                Given the time period it was destroyed was around when Asa allegedly deposed his grandmother the Queen Mother and hired mercenaries to conquer the northern kingdoms reforming against goddess worship, we might even fathom a loose guess as to what events triggered that shift.

                It’s certainly much easier when there’s detailed records like in Egypt though, where you even have papyrus records of legal proceedings, etc.

                • cubedsteaks@lemmy.today
                  link
                  fedilink
                  arrow-up
                  1
                  ·
                  1 year ago

                  Other cultures writing on parchment that didn’t survive we know almost nothing about first hand.

                  When I was growing up, that was referred to as the “lost scrolls” which is where Jehovah Witnesses claim to get a lot of their info from. I don’t know if they do anymore as they have changed a lot of their teachings but they also use to mention that, because stuff that was written down long ago and translated over and over, they tried their best to get the most accurate translations for their bible - but the also cut a lot of stuff out. They claim other religions added versus to scriptures that were unnecessary.

                  I tried to do some digging once on the ones they removed and they seemed to be mostly related to angel sightings or angels talking to humans and apparently that didn’t happen as often other religions might say it did? But all I did was try to compare King James version of the bible to their JW bible.

                  It’s super interesting that for a long time we all just thought a phrase wasn’t meant to be literal like that but it really was about honey. That makes me wonder how much other stuff there is in religion where people thought there was some grand explanation when really, its probably just playing telephone with translations over thousands of years and not understanding things until actually digging into it more.

                  Are there any records of people talking to God? I feel like Egypt would be the place to look too as most of the bible I remember takes place in Egypt.

                  • kromem@lemmy.world
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    arrow-up
                    2
                    ·
                    1 year ago

                    There are many records of people claiming to talk to gods.

                    My favorite at the moment is in the boundary stelae of Amarna.

                    The young Pharoh explicitly claims that it wasn’t his wife or anyone else who told him to put the city there, but the god Aten directly that told him.

                    For context, elsewhere in that inscription it describes his wife Nefertiti as getting everything she asked for, she was the only woman in all of Egypt’s history to be depicted in the “smiting pose” and prior to that inscription she and her daughter were recorded in inscriptions communing with the Aten without the Pharoh.

                    So while it’s claimed that he was talking directly to a god, my money would be on it having been his wife’s idea after all and that he was adding a denial to the inscription to put to rest rumors of that being the case.

                    In general, context can add a lot to claims of divine communication. For example, Moses was said to talk face to face with God in the tabernacle and when he would do so everyone knew because a cloud would appear at the door.

                    But that process of anointing oneself and then going into a tent sounds a lot like the Scythian ritual in Herodotus where they anointed themselves and went into a tent where they burned cannabis. And indeed, just a few years ago there was a discovery of burning cannabis in the holy of holies of an 8th century BCE Judahite temple in Tel Arad.

                    So perhaps that ‘cloud’ appearing when communicating with the divine shortly after first finding the ability to do so through a burning bush has more to it than face value.

                    And yeah, most traditions claim some sort of secret access to knowledge. But the times where those documents turn up they tend to be disappointingly unbelievable, where they may have ended up ‘secret’ because to those not deeply invested in the tradition their revelation would have pushed people away (like the Xenu stuff in Scientology).

                    It’s one of the things I like about the “put the lamp in the window and not under the bed” or “shout from the rooftops” in early Christianity. That was during a period when mystery traditions and secret teachings were very popular, and it was refreshing to see someone saying to instead put it all out there. Unfortunately secrecy creeps back into Christian traditions not long after both canonically and extra-canonically.