For more than four thousand years it has reclined on the plains of
From Babylon , we move
to Egypt , the land of the Nile . The Nile was
much more generous to the people that occupied its shores than the Tigris and Euphrates were to the inhabitants that lived between
them. The land of Egypt
did not have to be conquered, or tamed – in its rich soil, two crops could be
grown in a single year. And natural
barriers surrounding it protected its people from foreign invaders. There were deserts in the west and east,
harsh jungles in the south, and the Mediterranean Sea
in the north. Here, a civilization could
grow and prosper in relative comfort and security. Is it any wonder that an ancient historian
called this land “the gift of the Nile ”?
For the first Egyptians, the Nile was literally the source of life. Each year, the floodwaters of that river
inundated the land, and as they receded, fertile lands were left in their
wake. It is perhaps no surprise, then,
that the Egyptian creation epic begins with a watery chaos, called Nu, or Nun,
and out of Nu everything else was said to have come into being. But the sun was also an important,
overpowering presence, and so from Nu there first arose the great sun god, who
was given a variety of names to match the different attributes of the sun. The rising sun was called Khepri, the great
scarab beetle – an animal sacred to the Egyptians – or Ra-Harakhte, the winged
solar disk. The mid-day sun was Ra, the
powerful, the setting sun Atum, the old man.
As it descended to the horizon, it became Horus. Aten was yet another name for the solar
deity. From the sun god all of the other
gods were descended, beginning with Shu, the god of the air, and Tefnut, the
goddess of moisture. When these two
children were temporarily lost to him, and later recovered, his joyful tears
were said to have produced the first human beings.
We are told that Ra lived on the earth for a time, ruling over his human subjects directly, but as he began to grow old, their reverence for him gave way to disrespect and blasphemous mockery. Angered at their insolence, he called a conference of the gods. Addressing himself to Nu, the primordial god, he said, “Nu, you are first born, oldest of the gods. I am your son, I seek your council. The men that I have created speak evil of me. They anger me, but I will not destroy them before you have spoken.” Nu replied, “ You are a great god, you are greater than I, you are the son who is mightier than his father. If you turn your eye upon the men who blaspheme you they shall perish from the earth.” Following Nu’s advice, Ra turned his wrathful eye upon humanity, forcing them to flee into the shadows. But the other gods were not appeased, and urged him to hunt them down. Ra sent the goddess Hathor-Sekhmet in pursuit, but upon realizing that she would not stop until she destroyed all of humanity, Ra resolved to trick her, as he wished to punish his people into submission, not obliterate them completely. He ordered his attendants to brew a powerful beer, pleasing to the taste and dyed red to attract her interest. Upon drinking it, Hathor-Sekhmet sunk into a deep sleep, and abandoned her bloodthirsty quest.
Ra-Harakhte |
We are told that Ra lived on the earth for a time, ruling over his human subjects directly, but as he began to grow old, their reverence for him gave way to disrespect and blasphemous mockery. Angered at their insolence, he called a conference of the gods. Addressing himself to Nu, the primordial god, he said, “Nu, you are first born, oldest of the gods. I am your son, I seek your council. The men that I have created speak evil of me. They anger me, but I will not destroy them before you have spoken.” Nu replied, “ You are a great god, you are greater than I, you are the son who is mightier than his father. If you turn your eye upon the men who blaspheme you they shall perish from the earth.” Following Nu’s advice, Ra turned his wrathful eye upon humanity, forcing them to flee into the shadows. But the other gods were not appeased, and urged him to hunt them down. Ra sent the goddess Hathor-Sekhmet in pursuit, but upon realizing that she would not stop until she destroyed all of humanity, Ra resolved to trick her, as he wished to punish his people into submission, not obliterate them completely. He ordered his attendants to brew a powerful beer, pleasing to the taste and dyed red to attract her interest. Upon drinking it, Hathor-Sekhmet sunk into a deep sleep, and abandoned her bloodthirsty quest.
The story of ancient
If
In addition to building massive stone monuments, the
pharaoh’s people, under the guidance of the priests, took great pains to
preserve his body, and to supply his tomb with food and drink to sustain his
soul in the afterlife. But the giant
pyramids and elaborate funereal preparations that were created in the service
of Khufu and other pharaohs eventually reduced the people to misery. The central government of Egypt collapsed
after the sixth dynasty, in part because it had exhausted itself from the huge
expenditures required to support its massive building projects, and in part because
the nobility began to demand a greater role in the kingdom. Even the climate itself, which had cradled
this empire for so many years, seemed to rebel against the established order. By 2100 B.C., the united
kingdom of Egypt had dissolved into separate
fiefdoms.
After more than a hundred years of anarchy, the
kingdom was resurrected when the governor of Thebes
began the reunification of Egypt
under the eleventh dynasty. The restored
kingdom, with its capital now at Thebes , ushered
in a golden age for Egypt . The pharaohs now directed their energies to
public works projects that benefited all of the people, such as the
construction of dams and water reservoirs.
And the people enjoyed what was to them a much more important gift –the
pharaoh’s right to eternal life. Temples and new cults
began to appear throughout the land. It
was during this time that another pantheon of gods assumed a special importance
to the Egyptians.
According to legend, two of Ra’s descendants, Geb,
the god of the earth, and Nut, the goddess of the sky, together produced two
sons, Set and Osiris, and two daughters, Isis and Nephthys. Osiris succeeded Ra as king of the earth, and
took his sister Isis as wife. But Set,
who hated his brother and coveted his sister Isis, brutally murdered Osiris,
cutting his body into pieces and throwing them into the Nile . Horus, the son of Osiris, avenged his father
by defeating Set in battle. He gathered
up the pieces of his father’s body when they reached the delta of the river,
and Isis , with the help of the god Anubis,
restored her husband to life. The
resurrected Osirus became lord of the underworld, and Horus assumed his
father’s role as king of the earth.
Osiris, God of the Underworld |
Belief in the death and resurrection of Osiris
offered comfort to the living that there was an afterlife. They believed that Osiris was the great judge
of the dead, judging pharaohs and peasants alike. All had to appear before his tribunal after
death and make an account of what they had done during life. The testimony of each soul was judged by
weighing the heart of the deceased on one side of a balance, and a symbol of
truth and righteousness in the other.
Only those whose heart was not too light on the balance would be
welcomed into the afterlife. The Book
of the Dead, a manual of conduct on how to conduct one’s soul in the trials
of the underworld, became a guide to those who wished to attain immortality:
If this text be known [by the deceased]
upon earth or if he causeth it to be done in writing upon [his] coffin, then
will he be able to come forth on any day he pleaseth, and to enter into his
habitation unrepulsed. Cakes and ale and joints of meat from those which are on
the altar of Ra shall be given unto him, and his homestead shall be among the fields of the
Field of Reeds (Sekhet-Aaru), and wheat and barley shall be given unto him
therein, and he shall flourish there even as he flourished upon earth.
The
need to preserve the body through mummification continued to remain an
important practice. Egyptians believed
that the most important life force was the ka, a psychic element that
accompanied the body in life, and that could not survive after death unless the
body or a likeness of it was preserved.
In addition to the mummified remains of the deceased, wood or stone
replicas of the person were usually left in the tomb in case the mummy was
destroyed. In this way, if the ka
survived the judgment of Osiris, it could then pass on to a glorified existence
in the afterlife. Furniture, books, and
other comforts of life were also left in the tomb so that they could be enjoyed
by the deceased in the paradise of the dead.
But those who were judged unworthy by Osiris were condemned to perpetual
hunger and thirst, or dismemberment at the hands of violent otherworldly
executioners. In Egypt , then, we
see the earliest visions of Heaven and Hell.
This second, or Middle, Kingdom was an age of
enlightened, more beneficent rulers, but it lasted for only 300 years. At the end of this age, for the first time in
their history, Egyptians were overrun by foreign invaders – the Hyksos, who
overwhelmed them with weapons of war that had hitherto been unknown to them:
horses, war chariots, and body armor.
The Hyksos defeated the Egyptians, but they could not conquer them, and
in their wake a new kingdom arose. The
liberator of Egypt
was Tutmoses, who led his armies into victory over the Hyksos in the north, and
the Nubians in the south. His crowning
victory was at the battle of Megiddo
– the Armageddon of our New Testament – where he defeated a rebel prince by
orchestrating a cunning surprise attack against the city. Tutmoses has been called the Napoleon of
Egypt by some modern historians, and he more than lived up to the comparison. Through his military exploits, he fashioned
an empire, having extended his rule as far as Palestine
and Syria ,
and he was a benevolent ruler. And while
he might have resembled Napoleon in height, unlike the little corporal,
Tutmoses never lost a battle. In fact,
through his leadership he revived a nation that was on the brink of destruction
and transformed it into the greatest world power that had ever existed up to
that time.
Tutmoses III |
Under the leadership of Tutmoses and others like
him, Egypt
developed a radically different orientation toward the rest of the world. Having been shaken by the experience of
foreign invasion, and educated by the invaders’ weapons of war, the peoples of
the New Kingdom were more aggressive, and
outward looking. From the eighteenth
through the twentieth dynasties, the Egyptians engaged in a series of
conquests, and two new classes of people appeared in the land: professional
soldiers . . . and slaves. In fact, it
was probably during this time that the Israelites were in bondage until Moses
led them out of captivity. Like the
pharaoh of Moses’ time, the kings of this age were bold, ambitious, arrogant,
and, never modest. Amenhotep III used a
clever method of propaganda to win the admiration and loyalty of his
people. He distributed small statuettes
of scarab beetles throughout the land, and on each one was written summaries of
his accomplishments. And it was during
the New Kingdom that one of the greatest
religious innovators, Amenhotep IV, came to power. During his reign, he introduced the worship
of a single god, Aton. Changing his name
to Akhenaton, which meant “Aton is satisfied”, the pharaoh ordered that all of
the temples worshiping other gods be closed.
He compelled his people to worship him as a living god, who in turn
worshiped the supreme god, Aton. But his
intolerance of other gods provoked a resistance among the people, and he met an
untimely end. His successor, Tutankhamen
– the famous “King Tut”, restored the worship of other gods, bringing this
brief experiment to a close. And just
what was this experiment? Some have mistakenly
called it monotheism – the belief in one god – but this was not what Akhenaton
had attempted. He had never tried to
suggest that there was only one god – he merely wanted to give his god a place
of unique prominence. But for his time,
and his people, this was still a very bold thing to attempt.
The New Kingdom produced great warrior kings, like
Tutmoses, Seti I and Ramses II, and the Egyptians dominated their world until
they met their match in a people called the Hittites, who they first encountered
in 1400 B.C. and continued to fight for more than a century, until both sides
finally wore each other out in the battle of Kadesh in 1274 B.C. Each declared this battle a victory – it’s
probably more correct to say that both sides lost the war. After the twentieth dynasty, the exhausted
Egyptians again found themselves on the defensive and succumbing to waves of
foreign conquerors, becoming for a time a part of the same Assyrian Empire that
had conquered the Sumerians, later falling to Alexander the Great, and finally
becoming a protectorate of the Roman Empire.
The pyramids and other tombs of the great kings were victims to looters
and grave robbers for more than two thousand years, until a new invader arrived
in Egypt
in 1798. His name was Napoleon
Bonaparte, and along with his soldiers he was accompanied by a corps of French
scientists and historians who dedicated themselves to unlocking the secrets of
the pyramids. Napoleon had a fascination
for ancient Egypt ,
and he hoped that by learning more about its glorious past, he might find a key
to his own destiny. Through the work of
his scientists, a new appreciation of Egypt was born, along with a new
field of study, called Egyptology.
Thanks in great part to the work of these scientists and others that
followed in their wake, we have a better understanding of the culture, history,
and religious beliefs of the ancient Egyptians today.
For the Egyptians, as for the
Sumerians, creation began with an act of usurpation, with a younger or newer
god becoming dominant over an older one.
The gods quarreled, and plotted together, and betrayed one another. They succumbed to jealousy, rage, grief, and
all of the other emotions of mortal men.
They may have been more powerful, but they were not necessarily more
perfect, and certainly not more moral, than human beings. And their existences were intimately
intertwined with those of mortals, in every sense of the word. The pharaohs, not unlike Gilgamesh, prided
themselves in having divine ancestors.
But in Osiris we see a special type of god – one who takes a personal
interest in the right conduct of human beings, and rewards or punishes them
accordingly. And the death and
resurrection experience of Osiris himself took on special meaning and relevance
among his human subjects, offering them hope and consolation. The age when men could speak directly to Gods
in their lifetime had long passed in Egypt , even in the time of the
earliest pharaohs, and yet in another way the gods moved closer to
humanity. As the gift of immortality
passed downward, from their direct descendants the pharaohs, to the upper
classes and personal attendants of the kings, to every Egyptian, the conduct of
every man’s life was relevant to Osiris, and would be judged by him. In a physical sense, human beings and gods
had been progressively moving apart. And
we see, in the legends of both the Sumerians and Egyptians, that gods had been
perturbed by the defiance of humanity, nearly being driven to destroy
them. But in a spiritual sense, the gulf
between mortal and divine was actually closing.
Moral law was now beginning to hold sway over the lives of both. Even gods, such as Set, would face punishment
for acts of evil. And in the hope of an
afterlife, as evidenced in the quest of Gilgamesh and eventually in the desires
and expectations of all Egyptians, humanity revealed its first yearnings to
become more like gods. These yearnings
were reinforced by the stories and traditions of the Egyptians. Not only were the pharaohs themselves capable
of being transformed from mortals into gods, but so were other distinguished
human beings, such as Imhotep, the designer of the step pyramid, and Hermes
Trismegistus, the legendary sage credited with authoring the Hermetica,
a multi-volumed work of inspirational writings.
The attainment of wisdom and practice of the good life offered more than
the mere promise of immortality – for the adept, there was the hope of divinity
as well. In these legends and beliefs we
see the beginnings of an idea that the human soul can be perfected, and can
attain to a higher plain of being, perhaps that of godhood itself. Gods could walk on the earth, and mortals
could become gods.
And, just as we saw with the Sumerians, the fortunes
of the gods and goddesses of Egypt
often reflected the fortunes of their followers. When Menes united Egypt
into a single kingdom and established Memphis as
its capital, Ptah, the high god of Memphis ,
was credited with creating the world.
But when the capital moved to Thebes
hundreds of years later, Amon, the chief god of that city, became the “supreme
and invisible creator”. The Egyptian god
Set was once highly venerated in certain parts of Egypt , but eventually lost his
lofty place among the gods, apparently when his followers were conquered by
devotees of Horus. Afterwards, he was
relegated to the status of a diabolical power, rather than a venerated
one. And we have already heard how
Akhenaton later pushed all of these gods aside and gave Aton a special and
supreme standing as the supreme deity, a short-lived preeminence that was lost
immediately after Akhenaton’s death. The
history, status, and fate of the immortals continuously changed as the history
of mortals in Egypt
unfolded.
The Greeks are generally credited
with creating the science of history, but an ancient Egyptian would probably
have scoffed at this. As Egyptian
priests once said to the Greek philosopher Solon: “You Greeks are mere
children, talkative and vain; you know nothing at all of the past.” They explained that in their histories were
preserved accounts of many calamities, of global proportions:
There have been, and will be again, many
destructions of mankind arising out of many causes; the greatest have been
brought about by the agencies of fire and water, and other lesser ones by
innumerable other causes.
The
Nile was the great protector of Egypt ,
allowing its citizens to survive holocausts of both fire and water. When other civilizations rose and fell, Egypt survived.
And whatever happened either in your
country or in ours, or in any other region of which we are informed – if there
were any actions noble or great or in any other way remarkable, they have all
been written down by us of old and are preserved in our temples. Whereas just when you and other nations are
beginning to be provided with letters and the other requisites of civilized
life, after the usual interval, the stream from heaven, like a pestilence,
comes pouring down and leaves only those of you who are destitute of letters
and education, and so you have to begin all over again like children, and know
nothing of what happened in ancient times, either amongst us or among
yourselves.
. . . . you remember a single deluge only,
but there were many previous ones; . . . you do not know that there formerly
dwelt in your land the fairest and noblest race of men which ever live, and
that you and your whole city are descended from a small seed or remnant of them
which survived. And this was unknown to
you, because, for many generations, the survivors of that destruction died,
leaving no written word.
And
although the story of Atlantis has been preserved for us by the Greek
philosopher Plato, according to him it is to the Egyptians that we must credit
this, one of the most ancient and enduring legends that have fascinated
mankind.
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