A while after I published this video, archaeologists found and published a seal from Tel Hazor in Israel that shows a deity fighting a seven-headed serpent. I have a community post here: ua-cam.com/users/postUgkx1ROibkCD1n1Ox2L-QfXRVt9zPr1XGWDJ
As a Jew, I really appreciate this in-depth look at where many of the stories come from. It honestly makes all the myths and stories feel more alive than just reading them plainly and literally. You can see the evolution of ideas, cultures, and values. The culture was alive, and in a sense still is. And I think it's important we recognize where we came from
Judaism was a reaction to Egyptian regime...Canaan was under Egyptian rule and the Cannonite pagan tribes United under one God over time to solidify a confederacy and overthrew the Egyptian occupation of the lavant. There's no evadence for a exodus out of Egypt, but we know that the Egyptian empire ruled over the Levant. A common god is good politically so El and Yaweh and Shadi become one god. I think this theory fits the known facts better and Judaism I is a gumbo of all the Cannonite tribes that joined the confederacy against Egypt, probably the Moabites didn't. People relighting history all the time expessally for religious reasons. This is the best presentation about leviathan I have found yet. Great channel.👍🏽 This is the best working theory.
@@TheProphetofLogic Job chap. 41. The Lord continues to address Job (Earth). "Canst thou draw out leviathan with a hook?" or "bore his jaw with a thorn?" Here is a grand conundrum. The "leviathan " is conjectured to have been a crocodile, a Cetus, or whale, a hippopotamus, a dragon, a crooked serpent, etc., any huge and frightful object, no matter what, so it gratified the morbid taste of the ignorant and superstitious multitude - anything but the truth, which theologians seldom seek. *It is really amusing to read the endless comments and glosses which have been written on this word 'behemoth.' '' Common sense would suppose the object of the writers was simply to avoid the plain and obvious meaning of the text. The truth that cattle eat grass like oxen, was too simple to be seen by learned theologians, most of whom, seeking to fill their own bellies, never think of an ox, except in the form of steak, as it comes smoking hot upon their platters - let alone the ox eating grass like an ox. Etymology, which is our great sheet-anchor and only sure guide in mythology, shows us that "leviathan" is a compound of three distinct roots - levi = joining together, jah- the Sun, and than = a, serpent. Leviathan is that portion of the Sun's ecliptic called summer. In winter leviathan is cast into the sea to be hooked out in the spring. The dreaded season of winter may be denoted by any great animal, any of the above-named; the whale which swallowed Jonah, or the Sun, being the one most likely meant. In 3.8, this word leviathan is translated mourning, as testified by the marginal reading. The translation is so distorted that much attention is required in reading it, to get at its meaning. The English should run thus: Let them that curse the day, and who are ready to haul up leviathan, curse the night also, i.e., on the return of spring let winter, cursed winter, pass away. The Whale and the Ram rise together. If the Sun come in conjunction with them, summer follows - leviathan is hooked out of the sea. Leviathan, we are told, sometimes meant Pharaoh; at other times it referred to Sennacherib, etc. (see Smiths Bib. Dict, Art. Leviathan). In Isa. 27.1, leviathan “is" that crooked serpent." What "crooked serpent?" Are not all serpents "crooked," one as well as another? Why this distinction? The adjective must refer to some permanent characteristic of the serpent spoken leviathan is the Sun's ecliptic, or, what is the same thing, the Earth's orbit. This serpent is here shown. He may be seen in the frontispiece to Mallet's s Northern Antiquities. So, this "leviathan" is a terrible fellow. He will not make a covenant with you - will not come between God and Noah, for the constellations are beyond our solar system; still we use him as a "servant," as a means to denote the time of the year. Don't play with him as with a bird, nor fill his skin with " barbed irons" or his head with fish spears; but lay thy hand upon him gently (vs. 8) - let the warm weather come. He has terrible teeth, for he (time) devours all things. His scales (bits of time) are so near together that no air can come between them. By his "neesings," sneesings, or radiations, light is sent forth, and sorrow (winter) is turned to joy (summer). He esteems Iron (winter) as straw; but he beholdeth high things, and is king over all the children of pride (summer).
@@InquisitiveBible I could not agree more with your conclusion about people missing the beauty of the evolution of thought about creation. It should teach us a lesson to allow our faith room to grow and change with the knowledge of our day. I think holding on too tight to ideas that can be easily refuted only leads to Inquisitive readers having a faith crisis or worse loss of faith all together. That was me for a while.
Fun fact but on Chinese New Year many observers mistakenly believe there is a 'lion dance' but traditionally and as far back as it's known, this is a story about 'Nian' who is a terrifying sea creature that lives in the ocean. A few days a year it would come up onto the land to feed on people. It was unstoppable in any physical way, no warrors, no spears, no traps could stop Nian. the hero of the story figures out that Nian is scared of bright red lights and hates loud popping noises. The next time Nian comes from the ocean they release red lanterns, light fires and bang pots (later to be firecrackers) and Nian panics and flees back to the ocean. A modern Japanese version 'Godzilla' is more like the original story idea. Today 'Nian' is often like a Kiran or even a 'Pixar' type Oaf with a single horn or something.
I never get tired of learning about parallels between ancient religions and beliefs. It helps put things in perspective. I appreciate your neutral approach to simply offering information without commentary on your personal thoughts.
Hello! I want to express how appreciative I am in all your hard work in breaking down these verses and correlating/mapping them to other verses! You also provided all of your citations to us and allowed transcriptions on your videos! WOW! This helps me on so much in my own personal endeavor of truth that no words exist other than thank you! 🙂
I don't think Fire From Heaven is automatically to be understood as lightning. That's a stretch. What Elijah is calling down is pretty obviously a unique phenomenon since they immediately kill all the Priests of Baal after they see it.
Nicely done video. Simple but effective graphics with clear and understandable narrative with few simple sound bites. What software did you use to make your video?
Thanks for the comment. I design most of the elements in Photoshop or Illustrator, animate them in After Effects, and do the final editing in Premiere Pro. So just a basic Adobe pipeline.
This was a real treat to watch and very enlightening! If you haven't already, I recommend you look at Uehlinger's article published this past year in Near Eastern Archaeology as "Mastering the Seven-Headed Serpent" which explores some more of the mytheme's history including the Eshnunna impression and early versions from Mesopotamia and its geographical transmission. I believe it's available via open access. Thanks so much!
Thanks for the nice comment. I actually posted about that article on my community tab when it came out. Link here: ua-cam.com/users/postUgkx1ROibkCD1n1Ox2L-QfXRVt9zPr1XGWDJ I don't know if it's open access now, but I had to pay about $20 for it at the time. :)
@InquisitiveBible I've been smoking too much lately, I forgot a comment about your post is how I found out about the article in the first place 😭 I forget where, but a little googling led me to an open source for it. Great stuff in any case, I've been going down the rabbit hole with Canaan, the Israelites, and the creation of the Hebrew Bible and I could die happy if I had a lifetime's supply of these videos
Great video! One possible minor errata at 9:21, I think you may have the wrong reference listed for the "Because you smote Leviathan..." part of the Baal Cycle. I'm not seeing that text in KTU 1.2.iv, but instead in KTU 1.5.i.1 It caught my attention because I've seen that part of the Baal Cycle quoted before in commentaries as either being part of a shared tradition with or source text for Isaiah 27:1.
You're right, it looks like I forgot to change the citation from the text about Baal fighting Yam. Thanks for catching it! I'll put a note in the description.
So, when Enlil or Yahweh send the flood, it covers the earth with water, kind of like it was in the beginning. I've never heard anyone relate the flood as reverting to creation through the chaos serpent, though, despite the storming waters of death everywhere basically equaling chaos and sea serpents.
Thanks for the comment. Within Genesis, it is mainly the priestly version of the Flood that describes it in cosmic terms as an undoing of creation, with the water coming through the windows in the firmament and so on. But the priestly author was probably writing in the Persian period, at a time when the Leviathan motif was no longer as important in creation theology.
Ya the fact that the gods are Not the Creator- but war amongst each other and man- can’t wait for all this chaos to be over once and for all. No Religion for me- as soon as ya make whatever god upset he’s out for vengeance 🩸.
Learning the inspirations behind the biblical myths is always so interesting. I feel like it makes the whole compilation of books much more interesting, and the Chaoskapmf/Leviathan stories are always fun. Also, great to hear Anat get name-dropped. Definitely my favorite goddess.
@@QuestionThingsUseLogic Biblical Levi is the bond/band of stars connecting the two fishies in Pisces. At one time, the northern fishy was a birdie. Joshua/Jesus was fathered by Nun (fish/Pisces). The father of Nun the fishy was Caleb (dog) aka Canis major.
The reason the first part of Genesis is considered early writing is because it references the Elohim, children of the God El, as the creators rather than Yahweh. Yahweh was a son of El as Baal Hadad was, then it references both of them, or all of them. This was all very interesting theory. I have heard the Sumerian god Ningishzida connected to the serpent of the Garden of Eden. A dying-and-resurrecting snake god who had dominion over vegetation like trees and vines (wine), he somehow guarded the gate to the sun god as well as living in the netherworld of death. A serpent and tree that stretches from the netherworld to the stars reminds me of Yggdrasil, the world tree, and Nidhoggr, the serpent who gnawed at its root. Could the dying-resurrecting god of trees who guarded the gate to the sun also be connected to the serpent who guarded the golden apple tree of the Hesperides nymphs, Daughters of Evening (who for some reason turned into trees in the Argonaut story)?
"A serpent and tree that stretches from the netherworld to the stars reminds me of Yggdrasil, the world tree, and Nidhoggr, the serpent who gnawed at its root." These ideas certainly do seem to be deeply rooted (forgive the pun) in human consciousness. I have quite a bit more research to do before I can address Eden, the serpent, and the Tree of Life properly. The Tree of Life in particular is all over the place in Mesopotamian art.
@@InquisitiveBible Its mythological telephone! I just realized, serpent imagery might be connected to river myths. If you look down at a river from on high, it appears to be a serpent.. Just speculating, but if you 'slay' the river, do you feed its 'blood' to farmlands through irrigation?
@@Badficwriter Yeah, that's an interesting perspective. I think one scholar suggested that the multiple heads originated as multiple rivers converging, but I can't remember who it was or find it in my notes. It's also been suggested that people were inspired by mountain ranges in Lebanon and Bashan that resembled the corpse of a great dragon.
Normally, researchers say that there are only two creation stories in the Bible, but I have counted that there would actually be more than ten of them. It's good that we amateurs bring these other stories and point them out when researchers don't.
Rant add: some religious people might say, all other religions copied the Israeli one. However major powers like Persia, Babylon, Egypt, Greece, Rome usually influence others never the other way around from dominated cultures. Religion always mixes with neighbouring cultures
There's still influence from less dominating cultures to more dominating ones though. The Romans simping the Greeks a lot is the most obvious example. And there were religious traditions that came from other places that then blended more with the local culture
@@didack1419 true true, i should have said more blending/ mix of neighbouring cultures as you stated... though Roman culture took Greek cause Rome at the time was just in italy if I'm right, Greece was the dominant in society, philosophy
I will argue that you're also neglecting the overall biblical narrative. And that is God created the world and all other gods that ever came afterwards we're just knock off images. Also there is this issue where Israel is actually the underdog of the entire Old testament and even Christ is very much a sacrificial lamb in the New testament and the church to this day is still to this day both in the state of weakness and prevalence. The only God to be described as not having an actual description and hating any competition because it's all considered fake telling everyone not to do witchcraft because it's also fake and being completely and totally atheistic except for the one true God who also acts simply through miracles of power over creation which he created, no actual witchcraft practices or suggestion that man-made sorcery is the main stay of everything. Diminishing humanity over and over again in favor of the gods is not unique however it is very severe and strange particularly in the old testament. Christ himself is very strange and that he does do the thing that is required by the entire Old testament law to sacrifice for the sake of sins going all the way back to the oldest story in Genesis about crushing the snake The offspring of a woman. There is way too much consistency continuity and the survival rate is just ridiculous to simply dismiss that the idea of one true powerful God over every other God who realistically in the end has every other religion surrounding it copying small details from a very minimalistic and straightforward text about how it was nothing and then it was something there was no man then there was man and then a spirit being named God watch this mankind destroyed himself. All by choices and actions and through deceit. This comparison is not enough. Especially if God as Yahweh is the original Who is copied by all the other religions. The least dominant culture is specifically chosen for a reason in the OT. God displays power through weakness repeatedly. The major cultures surrounding Israel being major unfortunately encourages this OT testimony. Also why would the dominant cultures in their spiritual weakness not fail to adopt the belief in Yahweh, Eve and Pandora, and so much more. I like Lovecraft. He wrote mythology. But this is kind of a fact we need to consider. If there is one Singular Truth to the most ancient origins of our world, the world will remember it in diverse ways. Yet if there is a revealing God, he will show Himself one time again and again and preserve that revelation as He has done, at least as a logical character if interested in Mankind, where Lovecraft's monsters aren't. But I think this is good comparison because we forget the actual debate is whether there is a very genuine Monomyth that is in fact MonoTruth from which Myth derives it's nature. This is not some Lovecraftian idea. This unfortunately is what the Biblical narrative not only says, but is uncanny for self awareness in asserting no these are the knockoff deities I am the true one. It raises questions about Leviathan and whether there is more here about God than we normally presume. Also, yeah, a Plesiosaurus that is fire breathing Leviathan and then is imagined or did indeed at one have 7 heads like the Hydra... Unfortunately we still have creatures that once existed on earth that match the description, and not any evidence to back up millions of years except for presupposition. Again, uncanny. I have often wondered if Hydra and Leviathan were related. We do end upw ith multiheaded snakes in life. Also if a reference to Satan it is possible that it is like the idea of the Serpent in the Garden itself...The Devil creating or acting as a multiheaded Plesiosaurus monster the way he chose a serpent in the beginning. Careful about conclusions and perspectives as human beings. Be more objective than to say yes or no to bias.
Where did you find the Eshnunna tablet image in top right of screen, at 14:28? The one from circa 2400 BCE. I can’t find a source for that image anywhere. I would love to learn more about it, but I’m not sure where to check.
I originally found it in "The Leviathan in the Ancient Near East" by Korpel and De Moor (p. 4, see bibliography in description), and they got it from Westenholz, *Dragons, Monsters, and Fabulous Beasts*, 2004, p. 191. But the drawing I used is from Batto (2013), p. 32, and he got it from ANEP (Ancient Near Eastern Pictures), where it is tablet No. 671. I don't have access to ANEP myself, but that book should have the full details. It was excavated from Tell Asmar (ancient Eshnunna) and belongs to the Early Dynastic Period of Mesopotamia. I believe the artifact itself ended up in the collection of the late Elie Borowski, but I don't know where it is at the moment.
Another new episode! Tell you the truth, I had no idea that the Levant was the likely source for Babylonian story, but this video explains very clearly why we believe this to be the case. I always learn a lot in these videos.
*The Enuma Elish would later be the inspiration for the Hebrew scribes who created the text now known as the biblical Book of Genesis.* Prior to the 19th century CE, the Bible was considered the oldest book in the world and its narratives were thought to be completely original. In the mid-19th century CE, however, European museums, as well as academic and religious institutions, sponsored excavations in Mesopotamia to find physical evidence for historical corroboration of the stories in the Bible. ***These excavations found quite the opposite, however, in that, once cuneiform was translated, it was understood that a number of biblical narratives were Mesopotamian in origin.*** *Famous stories such as the Fall of Man and the Great Flood were originally conceived and written down in Sumer,* translated and modified later in Babylon, and reworked by the Assyrians ***before they were used by the Hebrew scribes for the versions which appear in the Bible.*** ***In revising the Mesopotamian creation story for their own ends, the Hebrew scribes tightened the narrative and the focus but retained the concept of the all-powerful deity who brings order from chaos.*** Marduk, in the Enuma Elish, establishes the recognizable order of the world - *just as God does in the Genesis tale* - and human beings are expected to recognize this great gift and honor the deity through service. *"Enuma Elish - The Babylonian Epic of Creation - Full Text - World History Encyclopedia"* *"Sumerian Is the World's Oldest Written Language | ProLingo"* *"Sumerian Civilization: Inventing the Future - World History Encyclopedia"* *"The Myth of Adapa - World History Encyclopedia"* Also discussed by Professor Christine Hayes at Yale University in her 1st lecture of the series on the Hebrew Bible from 8:50 to 14:30 minutes, lecture 3 from 28:30 to 41:35 minutes, lecture 4 from 0:00 up to 21:30 minutes and 24:00 up to 35:30 minutes and lecture 7 from 24:20 to 25:10 minutes. From a Biblical scholar: "Many stories in the ancient world have their origins in other stories and were borrowed and modified from other or earlier peoples. *For instance, many of the stories now preserved in the Bible are* ***modified*** *versions of stories that existed in the cultures and traditions of Israel’s* ***older*** *contemporaries.* Stories about the creation of the universe, a cataclysmic universal flood, digging wells as land markers, the naming of important cultic sites, gods giving laws to their people, and even stories about gods decreeing the possession of land to their people were all part of the cultural and literary matrix of the ancient Near East. *Biblical scribes freely* ***adopted and modified*** *these stories as a means to express their own identity, origins, and customs."* *"Stories from the Bible"* by Dr Steven DiMattei, from his website *"Biblical Contradictions"* ------------------------------------------------------------------ In addition, look up the below articles. *"Yahweh was just an ancient Canaanite god. We have been deceived! - Escaping Christian Fundamentalism"* *"Debunking the Devil - Michael A. Sherlock (Author)"* *"The Greatest Trick Religion Ever Pulled: Convincing Us That Satan Exists | Atheomedy"* *"Zoroastrianism And Persian Mythology: The Foundation Of Belief"* (Scroll to the last section: Zoroastrianism is the Foundation of Western Belief) *"10 Ways The Bible Was Influenced By Other Religions - Listverse"* *"January | 2014 | Atheomedy"* - Where the Hell Did the Idea of Hell Come From? *"Retired bishop explains the reason why the Church invented "Hell" - Ideapod"* Watch *"The Origins of Salvation, Judgement and Hell"* by Derreck Bennett at Atheologica (Sensitive theists should only watch from 7:00 to 17:30 minutes as evangelical Christians are lambasted. He's a former theist and has been studying the scholarship and comparative religions for over 15 years) *"Top Ten Reasons Noah’s Flood is Mythology - The Sensuous Curmudgeon"* *"Forget about Noah's Ark; There Was No Worldwide Flood | Bible Interp"* *"The Search for Noah’s Flood - Biblical Archaeology Society"* *"Eridu Genesis - World History Encyclopedia"* *"The Atrahasis Epic: The Great Flood & the Meaning of Suffering - World History Encyclopedia"* Watch *"How Aron Ra Debunks Noah's Flood"* (8 part series debunking Noah's flood using multiple branches of science) *"The Adam and Eve myth - News24"* *"Before Adam and Eve - Psychology Today"* *"Gilgamesh vs. Noah - Wordpress"* *"Old Testament Tales Were Stolen From Other Cultures - Griffin"* *"Parallelism between “The Hymn to Aten” and Psalm 104 - Project Augustine"* *"Studying the Bible"* - by Dr Steven DiMattei (This particular article from a critical Biblical scholar highlights how the authors of the Hebrew Bible used their *fictional* god as a mouthpiece for their own views and ideologies) *"How do we know that the biblical writers were* ***not*** *writing history?"* -- by Dr Steven DiMattei *"Contradictions in the Bible | Identified verse by verse and explained using the most up-to-date scholarly information about the Bible, its texts, and the men who wrote them"* -- by Dr. Steven DiMattei
Leviathan is a real creature just as bohemian and mammoth . Leviathan was a moseosaurius, behemoth was a sauroposiden , a mammoth was a mastodon or actual mammoth. The descriptions in Bible meet the known structures of these creatures. Plus dinosaurs are Dragons ! Byball discretion. The word dinosaurs was given in 1800's prior to that all large reptilian type creatures where called dragons . They where never mythological creatures. One still exists with its true name kamodo Dragon
The Mosasaurus, which was no doubt a fearsome creature, went extinct 66 million years ago. Prognathodon and Liopleurodon were just as big, and Megalodon was even bigger. But there's no good reason to think the author of the book of Job or the people of Ugarit had any knowledge of extinct aquatic creatures such as those.
Has anyone thought it’s possible that every culture is telling the same creation story through their own cultural lens? Is it possible that there really is 1 God who told the same story to each different people, and they all interpreted it in their own way and recorded? To me this just proves God is real.
Thanks for the comment. There are a number of theological approaches you can take, and I tend not to avoid those questions because they're too subjective. My focus is only on the biblical text and where these ideas - the combat with Leviathan and the forces of chaos as a creation theme - come from. They are very specifically limited to this region of the world, and we can see in the archaeological record how they evolved from storm god veneration in ancient Amurru to the sea monster stories of Ugarit, Israel, Babylon, the Hittites, and the Greeks. It's not something you see in, say, Egyptian mythology.
Love seeing attempts to tie history together as a progressive whole (rather than "believe this and only this, and questions are sacrilege...). I also love that you took time to answer questions (@wannabe...) and give references/sources. Big TY!
Interesting, makes sense, and I am Native American and very familiar with the Bible and may other writings. Book of Enoch is a good book to and explains many things. Wonder why it is excluded from the holy writings???!
Thanks for the comment, Joe. The book of Enoch is a huge topic, and I plan to make a video covering its contents and how it fits into Judaism and Christianity.
Amazing video!!! Just 2 questions that I had while watching this. 1. It seems that Yahweh assimilated all of this imagery from Baal but I often hear that before he was merged with El he was already a storm deity. If this is the case why is all the storm imagery from after they were merged? 2. Why is the Gen 2 creation account so alien to the others? There's no mention of water (besides the lack of rain on the land) and everything there just seems so hot and dry. This feels like a huge departure from these other creation accounts, why is this the case? Also do you think this account would be older than the chaoskampf creation motifs?
Thanks as always for watching and commenting. 1. I think the simplest answer is that Yahweh didn’t lose any of his storm-god attributes just because he took on El’s characteristics as well. Marduk also remained a storm-god after becoming the chief Babylonian deity. And I think the rich storm and fertility imagery associated with Yahweh was too good for later Jewish writers to ignore. 2. Yeah, good question. The Eden story is related to an entirely different set of myths connected with historiography (stories about early humanity) unlike the storm-god combat myth, which is more political and concerned with kingship and fertility/harvest festivals. The Eden stuff is a bit more complicated to unravel and deserves its own deep dive video.
Actually they were not entirely wrong in that account of an ocean beneath the earth nor above it, in a sense. .. Below the earth, close the the outer mantle crust of the core there is a large chasm like region that has large pockets of open spaces hundreds of miles wide and long. Within these large pockets is a liquid like ocean but it is not salt water, it's more like a concentrated petroleum liquid mixed with oil, phosphate and sulphur. It's been called the firmament before and they say it is what China is drilling the hole in the crust trying to reach. So they say.
excellent info and editing! now, i dunno why scholars insist on imposing a post exile framework on a pre exile torah when both exodus and leviticus explicitly say that the month of the aviv is the head of the year; it was in exile where the jews adopted the custom of the 7th month as the head of the year.
Calendars are a fascinating topic to me even though they leave me hopelessly confused most of the time. It's crazy that we don't even know the names of all the pre-exilic Hebrew months, as far as I know.
@@InquisitiveBible yes, to me they are very interesting for their symbolism. like what you said about creation, passover is celebrated in aviv, and the killing of the passover lamb works as a foundation for the new world, which theme was later taken by the apostles when they said that Messiah was sacrificed before the foundation of the world. and about month names, only aviv received the name of that state of barley growth, while the rest of the months only seemed to have ordinal names after the first one.
All of these myths are about the planets/Gods/Elohim that sat very close to earth in ancient times. Every culture gave these planets stories and anthropomorphized them. Ine planet has many names in all cultures. To know this is a key to what the bible is really talking about
The only issue I have w this video is that “Rahab” in these texts refers to Egypt. This has definitely been the case according to famous Jewish sage Rashi. Hence, why the mentions of “Rahab” are always combined w drying up of the waters, the miracle in Exodus. Is it not possible; plausible even; the sages who wrote this literature were familiar w other nearby poetic myths; & simply expressed this into their poetic style of giving praise to Yah-Whey? I think it’s best to be accurate here.
Existence of minor gods subordinate to Yahweh is fascinating. Also I heard somewhere that God has a wife called Asherah. So then is Jesus the son of Yahweh or not? I'd love to know more about this Hebrew pantheon. Amazing video. Loved every bit of it.
This is exactly what an academic biblical interpretation is. I hope people will come to the realization that an academic lens (though helpful in what it can provide) is still just humans attempting to reasons its way into Divine Reason. Such provides grand intellectual content at the creaturely level but it lacks spiritual insight at a Divine level.
That's the difference between biblical studies (higher/lower criticism) and hermeneutics. I just want to figure out what the text means and how it was produced. How you interpret and apply the Bible in your own faith tradition (which could be Judaism, Christianity, or even something else) is a separate and more personal matter.
The word God being singular replaced the word Elohim which is plural in the English Bible and God comes from the German word Gott who is Odin of Norse mythology that represents white folk and not Semitic people who Nazis committed a holocaust on so what happened to the Lord of the Semetic people, is YHWH and God the same being?
The Bible is a copy of the older Pre-Hebrew Canaanite Lotan where Baal Hadad defeats a great sea monster. Back in the days when Yaweh was a minor Anannaki warrior/storm god, the Hebrews were polytheistic, and only later adopted Yaweh as their one true god after they fell under the control of Babalonian influence. The Torah only goes back to 700BC, so know the original sources from 2600 years earlier.
The Judaeans living in Elephantine in Egypt identified Anat as Yahweh's partner perhaps in recognition of their alliance against Leviathan. The OT writers also identified Egypt with the dragon Rahab. Is the dividing of the sea by Yahweh in the Moses narrative cognate with Marduk splitting Tiamat in the Babylonian texts.
I think there is something to the idea that the splitting of the "Red Sea" echoes the splitting of the sea dragon. There is also a major question on exactly ‘Yam Suph’, the name of the sea the Israelites cross, really means. Not all scholars accept the usual reading of "Red Sea", but I need to dig into that more before I can say much about it.
Yeah those are the people Isaiah and Jeremiah and Elijah are speaking to when they say to stop saying crazy pagan stuff is true and stop doing all this weird pagan stuff because its an abomination to God. They're why The Judgment fell on Israel and they were exiled into Babylon.
The Judaeans and Israelites living in Egypt who venerated Anat and other gods/goddesses alongside Yahweh did so in the Persian and Hellenistic periods, after the exile. We have a cache of letters and documents from them that are older than any Bible manuscript.
That Leviathan that is Khronis on the greater world is not common knowledge...we, this realm exists within that Leviathan in the real world. How do You know about this?
Actually ancient Greeks didn't believe the earth was flat. Perhaps they did at some point. But is well known from around 500 B.C. onward at least elite and educated greeks believed the earth to be spherical. In 240 B.C. Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the globe and that concept or idea quickly spread among educated folk in the old world.
Thanks for the comment. Yeah, the Greeks already knew the earth was round by the time of Plato, but they didn't in the time of Homer and Hesiod, so I was careful to specify pre-Classical Greece.
Leviathan was a real sea dragon creature/species but it was made as a type or should i say in Archetype of Helel Ben’shahar who is its counterpart. God told Job mystery “the father of the children of pride”
Do any of the ancient texts mention a "storm God"? I ask this because I suspect its a title given in relatively recent times and is inaccurate. "Sky God" is i think, misleading too. When we say "storm god" the god is in danger of becoming associated with storms and nothing else. And he (usually depicted as a male) is more than just a "sky" god. This god is the God of Heaven. The meaning of the word Heaven has probably changed. Now it is a make believe place where angels fly around but it once was what we now call the sky and outer space, i.e it was a reality and could be seen. (There was a higher spiritual dimension too where good souls went and angels fly around which couldnt be seen). Anyway, this God of Heaven is boss of Heaven and everything in it; the clouds, rain, storms, the Sun, moon, planets and stars. And it is Heaven that rules Earth. The life of Earth can not exist without rain from Heaven and warmth/light from the Sun of Heaven. This God of Heaven (not merely a "sky god" or "storm god") is (or was) know as Yahweh/Zeus/Jupiter/Dyaus Piter/Thor (not Odin)/ Tengri etc etc etc. To us in the English speaking world he is known as "God".
“Storm-god” is the accepted designation among anthropologists for a deity with a specific set of characteristics concerned with storms and fertility that differentiates them from other deities. German scholarship uses the term Wettergott (weather god) for the same category.
@@InquisitiveBible Yes I know it's the accepted...but welcome to the prickly, outside the box, free thinking, sometimes ingenious, unaccepted unless proven right, tiny minority 😁
I did some more reading of Daniel Schwemer, who seems to be the foremost scholar in the field, and he says that “typological labels such as ‘storm-god’ have no direct counterpart in the various ancient Near Eastern languages.” However, Schwemer continues, a sort of storm-god category did exist, because the cuneiform languages continued to use the Sumerogram IŠKUR to write the name of whoever the local storm-god was (Adad, Hadad, Baal, Taru, Tarhunt, etc.), implying that they were regarded as belonging to the same typological category. In particular, when you include iconography and other attributes assigned to the deity, there was a clearly identifiable category of Near Eastern gods, distinct from other gods, for which modern historians and anthropologists use the label storm-god or Wettergott. In other words, although the label is a modern one, it's used to describe an important distinction that really existed in the typology of ancient gods. Now, the storm-god was not necessarily the *highest* or supreme god (what the members of Abrahamic religions today simply call "God"). See, for example, Deuteronomy 32:8, which in its oldest attested version (evident in the LXX and Dead Sea Scrolls) clearly has YHWH as one of the sons of El.
@@InquisitiveBible ok, thanks for that. Interesting. I still think that the designation "storm god" is misleading. It paints a picture in many minds of a god of storms and nothing else. "He" is responsible for far more than this. He is probably Heaven itself and so is Lord of everything in it and everything that comes from it; the planet Gods, including Sun and Moon, storms, wind, rain. The great mother Earth is completely dependent on what is sent from Heaven. And so Heaven is the great father, Earth the great mother. The Sun is (in certain myths) son of Heaven and Earth. Mary is probably the Earth, although Mary linguistically refers to the sea...
If a seven-headed creature appears in myths involving storm-gods and the creation of the world, that is by definition mythological. The rise of this motif and the importance of the storm-god in the ancient religions of the Levant is closely tied to the environment and the reliance on capricious storms to bring fertility to the land and their crops.
The Babylonian tablet is famously known as the Babylonian Map of the World, and the cuneiform labels on it indicate regions other than Babylon. The Euphrates runs through the middle of the map, and the Bitter River is the salty ocean that encircles the world. The triangles around the edge are the mountains that hold up the sky.
@@wannabe_scholar82 That is exactly what I’m warning against. The authors of the Flood story did not have a modern conception of a planet. They were apparently not aware of lands beyond the 70 nations listed in Genesis and they thought the land was overall flat
@@scienceexplains302 Right but to the authors of the flood story everyone besides Noah and his family was destroyed. Although the Hebrew word just means land the point is trying to get across is that this was universal in nature. Keeping it translated as land in the English could lead to a misconception that in the text it's only talking about a small portion of humanity when in reality all of humanity was in view of being destroyed here.
@@wannabe_scholar82 Are you sure? Because two generations after the Flood, Nimrod was ruling a kingdom of several cities. “Universal” is another phrase more modern than the Flood story. You’re arguing that they thought that all the world was flooded when they didn’t know how big the world was. In the Tower of Babel story, “all” the languages were created (except whatever the people had previously spoken). “All” effectively meant “all we know of”. I don’t think the Flood story was written to be believed as a historical (in the modern sense of the word) event, but the context indicates to me that we should let “all the land” stand and not insert our modern knowledge into the words of the text.
@@scienceexplains302 True, but we must remember that in the Torah there's a number of different contradictions because of a difference of traditions and sources (the two creation accounts, flood stories, etc.) so we can't really take the narrative at face value as you seem to be there to make that point. Also showing this is a separate tradition, the table of nations presupposes the nations already being split from each other before the story of Babel, were likely working with a different tradition here. I'm not arguing that they had a concept of "all the world" as a globe, I'm saying if we went back in time and told them about how there's X amount of nations in the world and how the world is Y shape and then asked them if the flood would've encompassed all of this they would likely say yes. The whole purpose of the story is to show that the humanity that God created is now wiped out and ONLY Noah and his family remains. Such was the nature of every other ANE flood story. This is like saying when an author wrote God is Lord over all the eretz he was just referring to him being Lord over all of Israel, we know the author had no idea that the whole globe existed but we know the scope of what he was trying to get across here.
The sea of confusion/chaos/disorder aka Tehom/Tiamat stretches from the autumn equinox to the spring equinox (Libra thru Pisces) aka the six "nights" in Genesis one. Ra (sun - phallus) rode across this celestial sea of stars in a barque (crescent moon - vagina).
IN MY OPINION,,,It was mainly Canaanite than Babylonian because, most likely, the early tribes of Israelites were indeed, Canaanites. They moved into the destroyed cities after the bronze age collapse. They set up shop and tried to make a name and origin for themselves. Since the bronze age collapse brought destruction to Egypt and the surrounding areas, they came up with a story of a god that destroyed Egypt and the Canaanites so they can possess the land. Pretty clever if u ask me, and in some kind of way I ended up worshipping that same god for 36yrs before I came out of religion all together.. As I joined Messianic Judaism, I did all of the customs, sabbath and feast days. I taught their origin stories . But all I did was participate in the continuation of Canaanite and Mesopotamian religions. Deciding to leave was very depressing because I spent so much time truly believing in this myth. I lost friends and slowly got shunned away from my family over this religion. Yeah, it hurts, but I have found peace.
Yahweh /enlil was a storm god in every civilization and mythology. This is why our ancestors was so confused when they met other nations with the same god description. Which made converting not such a big deal when conquered . Everything is a retold annunaki story because they rule this world. ❤
Yahweh appears to have been copied from Jupiter Olympus. As summer, he is the giver and is opposite winter, the taker aka Jupiter Stygius. Jupiter is the one who gives and takes away. IU Piter (double-sexed god) has no J sound.
@@InquisitiveBible Well this is only in the bible what you got wrong is in 5:10 rahab is a name of a prostitute thats in the bible (kjb) also none of these leviathan beasts are sea creatures. also the word leviathan is a title for incredibly enormous creatures like job 41 named leviathan, the dragon king.
@@randomguyodst46 Thanks for the reply. Rahab the sea monster (רַהַב) is different from Rahab the harlot (רָחָב) in Joshua, and they are spelled slightly differently in Hebrew. When Isaiah 51:9 says “Was it not you who cut Rahab in pieces, who pierced the dragon?” that’s obviously not talking about a Canaanite prostitute. As for Leviathan, literally every Bible scholar who has studied the matter regards him as a sea creature, and he always occurs in a context involving the sea and water. I think you would need a compelling reason to argue otherwise.
@@InquisitiveBible I only use the King James Bible which is God’s perfect translated word, the modern versions are corrupted. Anyways I think you mean wounded the dragon specifically the dragon king from job 41. Did these scholars pay attention to detail in job 41? I found out the beast can talk, laughs like human beings and he boils the ocean like a pot of ointment and breaths fire, Something extremely hot doesn’t belong in the ocean. He also has scales and no weapon can hurt him due to his incredible enormous size. I would argue that he’s a fiery Drake, a fire dragon with no wings.
Psalm 74.12-17 when it’s said that God gave the leviathan to the people of the wild beast for food. Those people of the wild beasts are not us humans. You will find no writings referring to humans anywhere as that so what I’m starting to figure out is it’s talked about the hairy men the Sabe / Sasquatch or the Edomites just as Esau was a mighty hunter who was covered in red hair whom Jacob took his blessing and Esau was blessed to be away from the fatness of earth and to live outside where the dew of heaven to fall upon him. There’s many more references about them in the Bible also but this is all for now because this is enough information for many to start digging and figure it out.
While I was working on this video, I looked up what several scholars say about that phrase. The vocabulary is obscure and hard to interpret; John Day think it's just a poetic way of describing the wild beasts. The Septuagint translates it as "to the Ethiopians" of all things, showing that even the post-exilic Jews had difficulty making sense of it. It's possible there is some other legendary background to it.
I've long wondered if there is some connection between Jacob/Esau and Gilgamesh/Enkidu and if these stories could be ways of talking about contrasts between settled and nomadic forms of living.
Also; the Leviaton, is still a MAJOR part of Jewish mythology. The Leviatjon currently holds up the world from the oceans. Also the end of the world as we know it happens when Leviathon & the Shoar HaBoor, strike each other with death blows & their dead bodies; will be served as the messianic feast. But, if that ever happened, Orthodox Jews would have to wash the fish & serve it before the meat; as fish & meat can be eaten in the same meal; just not on the same plate… don’t wanna choke on fish bones (even if ur eating gefilte fish aka fish w no bones) lol
@@InquisitiveBible ur welcome. I’m actually a graduate of The Rabbinical College of America; & learned so much I realized I could not; in good conscience; be an orthodox Rabbi. If u have anymore vids on the Leviathan or anything from the Torah.. id love to help
I could certainly use the help of a consultant such as yourself when I need to confirm various points of Jewish belief. Feel free to send me your email address or preferred form of contact.
Thanks for the comment. I understand the motivation to find ways in which ancient language can be treated as metaphors for modern science, but I think this approach fails to appreciate what ancient texts actually say and what ancient people actually believed. For one thing, there's no such thing as "under the earth" unless you mean inside the earth. Yes, there is water in the mantle, but it is not an ocean of liquid water. It consists of superheated molecules bound up by rock. Aquifers, which exist much closer to the surface, consist of porous rock that is water-logged. Again, not liquid oceans. Atmospheric rivers are narrow filaments of concentrated water vapor in the air. They are not liquid oceans. The people of the ancient Near East did not understand these advanced geological and meterological concepts. They did not know the earth was a sphere composed of a solid crust, liquid mantle, and metallic core. They literally thought there was an ocean of liquid water above the solid firmament and below the disc of the earth.
The secular year would end and begin at the autumn equinox. The sacred year would end and begin at the spring equinox. We also have the creation myth keyed to the solstices. The six "days" could begin at any point. The "end times" are the last days that precede a change in one calendar year to another. Note in Genesis one where Juno (Air) broods over the waters. Her "eggs" hatch out at the spring equinox as the gods proclaim "let there be light." We find the sacred seven in the tale of the white horse (Jupiter/Fire/Aries) and the black horse (Juno/Air/Libra). This sacred seven (Aries thru Libra) is found in Freemasonry with Cancer being the keystone. This is the constellation where we find the two asses (stars) that Jesus (the sun) rides on into Jerusalem (summer solstice). Cancer is assigned to Issachar (translates to Bacchus) and is opposite Capricorn where we find Zebulun and his Argo navis.or ship-sun (sion). This is the barque (crescent moon) that Ra (sun) rides across the celestial seas. Think vagina and phallus (ring and dagger).
Well, it's not exactly new, but that's how scholars think YHWH, the primary name of the god of Israel and Judah, was pronounced. Any time an English Bible reads “LORD” in all caps, the underlying Hebrew actually says YHWH. For historical accuracy, I prefer to use the actual name rather than “Lord”.
Battle of Jericho (Lunar Month.) Joshua, having obtained all necessary information by means of his two spies (the two days to be added to each of the twelve lunar months), and having staked off, by the twelve stones, the Sun's ecliptic into as many equal parts, and taken every other precaution necessary to insure success, was now prepared for his ensuing campaign. His first battle was against Jericho. This is a collective name, having for its root, jerah = the moon. Jericho may, therefore, mean the four quarters of the moon, or the four weeks of the lunar month. The two spies, as before noted, went to Rahab, who received and lodged them. Rahab, who personifies the fornix, or the great vault of heaven, is thus said to commit fornication, and so gets her surname of harlot. But Jericho was straitly shut: "none went out, and none came in" (Joshua 6. 1). The Lord (Sun) however, gave it into Joshua's hands. Seven priests (seven summer constellations) were appointed to bear as many trumpets of rams' horns (Aries during each of these seven months) about the devoted city (lunar month). These rams' horns the priests tooted about the city every day (month) for six days (months). On the seventh day (month) they compassed the city seven times, tooting their rams' horns as they went, i.e., they recalled all the summer months to view (feast of tabernacles, or of the ingathering) in that one month, when the city (summer) fell down flat, and the people at the command of Joshua, shouted " Amen (Oh, Ram), glory to the Ram,” as he went down in the west. All that was in the city was utterly destroyed, save Rahab (or Virgo, which became a day constellation), whom notwithstanding her slip of chastity, Joshua saved alive with all her household, and all that she had, and she dwelleth in Israel (i.e., she is one of the four constellations of summer) unto this day (6.25). Thus, perished Jericho, or the lunar month, and the calendar month of 30 days being firmly established, the year consisted of 360 days. Milton Woolley,, Hebrew Mythology or Science of the Bible. The 13 years that Solomon builds his temple (year) = 13 x 28. This became 12 x 30 or one solar year of 360 days. The five intercalary days are the Amorites (spoken in days). Here the year begins and ends at the winter solstice. The first month (not year) of building the temple begins with April. The temple is "destroyed" in its final month of completion = end of summer and beginning of winter. Another example of the year divided into seven (summer) and five (winter) is found in Rev. 9.5. This is where the scorpion (Scorpio) is the leader of Sagittarius (Fire), Capricorn (Earth), Aquarius (Air), and Pisces (Water).
See Shamesh/Shemesh/Ha Shem (Sun god) holding ring and dagger/rod (female/Nekebah and Zakar (male) creative organs in his right hand @2.14. This same rod (phallus) is found in depictions of Aquarius (Moses/Ganymede). His Phallus was so huge that it required helpers to hold it upright. The rod and arm become one phallus aka serpent. Moses is back with us as the January rains (weeping) of thirty days. Aquarius is aka Moab (water father). This is the constellation that made "god" so angry that he ordered a flood (rainy season/winter). This "winter" is the five signs/months of Rev. 9.5. aka Scorpio thru Pisces. Nun the fish (Pisces) gives birth to Joshua (Aries). The "father" of Nun the fish is Canis major (better known as Caleb in the bible). Levi is the band/bond of stars connecting the two fish in Pisces. At one time the northern fish was a bird (probably Isis).
Thanks for the comment. I hope I can clear up a few things. > rain didnt come from firmament came from moisture after flood in clouds Many ancient people did believe rain originated with the water above the firmament. Genesis 7:11 says, in reference to the beginning of the flood, “on that day all the springs of the great deep burst forth, and the windows of the heavens were opened.” The windows of heaven opening to cause rain strongly implies that the rain came from the firmament. In Genesis 8:2, God stops the rain by “plugging” the windows of the heavens. (That’s literally what the Hebrew says.) The famous theologian Hermann Gunkel, in his commentary on Genesis (p. 108), remarks: “The dome of heaven-as we know only an optical illusion- is, in the viewpoint of antiquity, a firm structure based on columns (Job 26:11) with doors and windows (Gen 28:17; 2 Kgs 7:2). It is comparable to a tent, a house, or a city. Its substance is comparable to a mirror or to sapphire. Above the heaven, however, is an inexhaustible sea of heavenly water (Psa 148:4). Where would the rain come from otherwise?” The biblical text does not say it never rained before the flood. The rare word ’ed in Genesis 2:7 is probably related to Akkadian id, which means “river”. Nearly all Bible scholars think some kind of spring or river that gushes up from the ground is being described here. The statement of Genesis 2:5 that there were no plants because it hadn’t yet rained and there was no one to till the ground is explicitly describing the very first day of creation, before God created the man and the garden in Eden. Rain is an inevitable result of how water vapor interacts with the air and the heat from the sun. It is ecologically silly to propose that the entire world had no rain for its entire history until about 2250 BC, unless you think everything outside of Eden was a permanent desert like Arrakis in the novel Dune. Fossil records and geological strata clearly show this is not true.
A while after I published this video, archaeologists found and published a seal from Tel Hazor in Israel that shows a deity fighting a seven-headed serpent. I have a community post here: ua-cam.com/users/postUgkx1ROibkCD1n1Ox2L-QfXRVt9zPr1XGWDJ
Paul, when I see that you drop a video, I drop everything to watch it. ❤
Hi Derek!
Thanks, Derek! Your support means a lot.
Holy cow, this video was amazing. Super informative, great narration, great visuals, and well organized
As a Jew, I really appreciate this in-depth look at where many of the stories come from. It honestly makes all the myths and stories feel more alive than just reading them plainly and literally. You can see the evolution of ideas, cultures, and values. The culture was alive, and in a sense still is. And I think it's important we recognize where we came from
Thanks the comment. That's exactly what I'm after.
Judaism was a reaction to Egyptian regime...Canaan was under Egyptian rule and the Cannonite pagan tribes United under one God over time to solidify a confederacy and overthrew the Egyptian occupation of the lavant.
There's no evadence for a exodus out of Egypt, but we know that the Egyptian empire ruled over the Levant.
A common god is good politically so El and Yaweh and Shadi become one god. I think this theory fits the known facts better and Judaism I is a gumbo of all the Cannonite tribes that joined the confederacy against Egypt, probably the Moabites didn't.
People relighting history all the time expessally for religious reasons.
This is the best presentation about leviathan I have found yet. Great channel.👍🏽
This is the best working theory.
@@TheProphetofLogic
Job chap. 41. The Lord continues to address Job (Earth). "Canst thou draw out leviathan with a hook?" or "bore his jaw with a thorn?" Here is a grand conundrum. The "leviathan " is conjectured to have been a crocodile, a Cetus, or whale, a hippopotamus, a dragon, a crooked serpent, etc., any huge and frightful object, no matter what, so it gratified the morbid taste of the ignorant and superstitious multitude - anything but the truth, which theologians seldom seek.
*It is really amusing to read the endless comments and glosses which have been written on this word 'behemoth.' '' Common sense would suppose the object of the writers was simply to avoid the plain and obvious meaning of the text. The truth that cattle eat grass like oxen, was too simple to be seen by learned theologians, most of whom, seeking to fill their own bellies, never think of an ox, except in the form of steak, as it comes smoking hot upon their platters - let alone the ox eating grass like an ox.
Etymology, which is our great sheet-anchor and only sure guide in mythology, shows us that "leviathan" is a compound of three distinct roots - levi = joining together, jah- the Sun, and than = a, serpent. Leviathan is that portion of the Sun's ecliptic called summer. In winter leviathan is cast into the sea to be hooked out in the spring. The dreaded season of winter may be denoted by any great animal, any of the above-named; the whale which swallowed Jonah, or the Sun, being the one most likely meant.
In 3.8, this word leviathan is translated mourning, as testified by the marginal reading. The translation is so distorted that much attention is required in reading it, to get at its meaning. The English should run thus: Let them that curse the day, and who are ready to haul up leviathan, curse the night also, i.e., on the return of spring let winter, cursed winter, pass away. The Whale and the Ram rise together. If the Sun come in conjunction with them, summer follows - leviathan is hooked out of the sea.
Leviathan, we are told, sometimes meant Pharaoh; at other times it referred to Sennacherib, etc. (see Smiths Bib. Dict, Art. Leviathan). In Isa. 27.1, leviathan “is" that crooked serpent." What "crooked serpent?" Are not all serpents "crooked," one as well as another? Why this distinction? The adjective must refer to some permanent characteristic of the serpent spoken leviathan is the Sun's ecliptic, or, what is the same thing, the Earth's orbit. This serpent is here shown. He may be seen in the frontispiece to Mallet's s Northern Antiquities. So, this "leviathan" is a terrible fellow.
He will not make a covenant with you - will not come between God and Noah, for the constellations are beyond our solar system; still we use him as a "servant," as a means to denote the time of the year. Don't play with him as with a bird, nor fill his skin with " barbed irons" or his head with fish spears; but lay thy hand upon him gently (vs. 8) - let the warm weather come. He has terrible teeth, for he (time) devours all things. His scales (bits of time) are so near together that no air can come between them. By his "neesings," sneesings, or radiations, light is sent forth, and sorrow (winter) is turned to joy (summer). He esteems Iron (winter) as straw; but he beholdeth high things, and is king over all the children of pride (summer).
@@TheProphetofLogic
Moab = water father = Aquarius aka Moses, Osiris, Noah, Thoth, Hermes, Bacchus....................
@@harveywabbit9541 all religions are chimaeras of older religions.
Always great to see a new video from you. There’s so many stories that I’m hoping you’ll cover one day.
I'm so excited for a new video from you. Thanks!
Thanks for watching!
@@InquisitiveBible I could not agree more with your conclusion about people missing the beauty of the evolution of thought about creation. It should teach us a lesson to allow our faith room to grow and change with the knowledge of our day. I think holding on too tight to ideas that can be easily refuted only leads to Inquisitive readers having a faith crisis or worse loss of faith all together. That was me for a while.
Fun fact but on Chinese New Year many observers mistakenly believe there is a 'lion dance' but traditionally and as far back as it's known, this is a story about 'Nian' who is a terrifying sea creature that lives in the ocean. A few days a year it would come up onto the land to feed on people. It was unstoppable in any physical way, no warrors, no spears, no traps could stop Nian. the hero of the story figures out that Nian is scared of bright red lights and hates loud popping noises. The next time Nian comes from the ocean they release red lanterns, light fires and bang pots (later to be firecrackers) and Nian panics and flees back to the ocean. A modern Japanese version 'Godzilla' is more like the original story idea. Today 'Nian' is often like a Kiran or even a 'Pixar' type Oaf with a single horn or something.
It is still today the word for "year." 年
Don't forget the jörmungandr from nordic mythology
I never get tired of learning about parallels between ancient religions and beliefs. It helps put things in perspective. I appreciate your neutral approach to simply offering information without commentary on your personal thoughts.
Great video! Dr. Daniel Schwemer was recently interviewed by the channel “What Your Pastor Didn’t Tell You” on the Syrian and Anatolian storm-gods!
Thanks! I just discovered Dr. Schwemer's work while researching this video, so I'll have to check that out.
My guy new to Makin vids and you’re already killing it. This. Was interesting and informative
This is probably my favorite video of yours, out of many excellent videos.
Hello! I want to express how appreciative I am in all your hard work in breaking down these verses and correlating/mapping them to other verses! You also provided all of your citations to us and allowed transcriptions on your videos! WOW! This helps me on so much in my own personal endeavor of truth that no words exist other than thank you! 🙂
Thanks for the wonderful comment, Staci! It's very encouraging to hear that my videos are helping people.
Man I look forward to your videos and your posts on your page like it's my birthday, thank you so much and keep it up 💪🏻🙏🏻❤️👏🏻
MythVision sent me 😆 Love it!!
Excellent video
Best discussion on this topic I've seen so far.
Absolutely love your work my friend 😁 thank you as always for such a scholarly take
Thanks as always for watching!
I don't think Fire From Heaven is automatically to be understood as lightning.
That's a stretch.
What Elijah is calling down is pretty obviously a unique phenomenon since they immediately kill all the Priests of Baal after they see it.
Nicely done video. Simple but effective graphics with clear and understandable narrative with few simple sound bites. What software did you use to make your video?
Thanks for the comment. I design most of the elements in Photoshop or Illustrator, animate them in After Effects, and do the final editing in Premiere Pro. So just a basic Adobe pipeline.
Really good that you attribute each point as required. Top scholarship.
Thanks! I think it's important that people can see what my sources are, and I also want viewers to realize that none of this is my original work.
This was a real treat to watch and very enlightening! If you haven't already, I recommend you look at Uehlinger's article published this past year in Near Eastern Archaeology as "Mastering the Seven-Headed Serpent" which explores some more of the mytheme's history including the Eshnunna impression and early versions from Mesopotamia and its geographical transmission. I believe it's available via open access. Thanks so much!
Thanks for the nice comment. I actually posted about that article on my community tab when it came out. Link here: ua-cam.com/users/postUgkx1ROibkCD1n1Ox2L-QfXRVt9zPr1XGWDJ
I don't know if it's open access now, but I had to pay about $20 for it at the time. :)
@InquisitiveBible I've been smoking too much lately, I forgot a comment about your post is how I found out about the article in the first place 😭 I forget where, but a little googling led me to an open source for it. Great stuff in any case, I've been going down the rabbit hole with Canaan, the Israelites, and the creation of the Hebrew Bible and I could die happy if I had a lifetime's supply of these videos
Great video! One possible minor errata at 9:21, I think you may have the wrong reference listed for the "Because you smote Leviathan..." part of the Baal Cycle. I'm not seeing that text in KTU 1.2.iv, but instead in KTU 1.5.i.1 It caught my attention because I've seen that part of the Baal Cycle quoted before in commentaries as either being part of a shared tradition with or source text for Isaiah 27:1.
You're right, it looks like I forgot to change the citation from the text about Baal fighting Yam. Thanks for catching it! I'll put a note in the description.
You made a really good informative video here. I subbed. Look forward to more.
Great stuff, very well explained.. Derek (myth vision) sent me here.
Thanks for the nice words!
Very fascinating stuff indeed! I've always been intrigued by those ancient myths and their connections to each other.
So, when Enlil or Yahweh send the flood, it covers the earth with water, kind of like it was in the beginning. I've never heard anyone relate the flood as reverting to creation through the chaos serpent, though, despite the storming waters of death everywhere basically equaling chaos and sea serpents.
Thanks for the comment. Within Genesis, it is mainly the priestly version of the Flood that describes it in cosmic terms as an undoing of creation, with the water coming through the windows in the firmament and so on. But the priestly author was probably writing in the Persian period, at a time when the Leviathan motif was no longer as important in creation theology.
New subscriber here - appreciating what I am finding. Btw - Myth Vision sent me. 😉
Great to hear it!
Very well done. Thank you.
Great job on this one ... Answers so many questions
Ya the fact that the gods are Not the Creator- but war amongst each other and man- can’t wait for all this chaos to be over once and for all. No Religion for me- as soon as ya make whatever god upset he’s out for vengeance 🩸.
Learning the inspirations behind the biblical myths is always so interesting. I feel like it makes the whole compilation of books much more interesting, and the Chaoskapmf/Leviathan stories are always fun. Also, great to hear Anat get name-dropped. Definitely my favorite goddess.
How about Esther, aka Venus?
@@QuestionThingsUseLogic
Biblical Levi is the bond/band of stars connecting the two fishies in Pisces. At one time, the northern fishy was a birdie.
Joshua/Jesus was fathered by Nun (fish/Pisces). The father of Nun the fishy was Caleb (dog) aka Canis major.
It’s not a myth it’s true
@@user-followyeshua
Correct, the father of Joshua/Jesus was a fish. This is why Catholic biggies wear fish caps. Don't forget Oannes.
What on earth is this comment section?
Great vid. Rich with detail. Thanks. ❤
The reason the first part of Genesis is considered early writing is because it references the Elohim, children of the God El, as the creators rather than Yahweh. Yahweh was a son of El as Baal Hadad was, then it references both of them, or all of them.
This was all very interesting theory. I have heard the Sumerian god Ningishzida connected to the serpent of the Garden of Eden. A dying-and-resurrecting snake god who had dominion over vegetation like trees and vines (wine), he somehow guarded the gate to the sun god as well as living in the netherworld of death. A serpent and tree that stretches from the netherworld to the stars reminds me of Yggdrasil, the world tree, and Nidhoggr, the serpent who gnawed at its root. Could the dying-resurrecting god of trees who guarded the gate to the sun also be connected to the serpent who guarded the golden apple tree of the Hesperides nymphs, Daughters of Evening (who for some reason turned into trees in the Argonaut story)?
"A serpent and tree that stretches from the netherworld to the stars reminds me of Yggdrasil, the world tree, and Nidhoggr, the serpent who gnawed at its root."
These ideas certainly do seem to be deeply rooted (forgive the pun) in human consciousness. I have quite a bit more research to do before I can address Eden, the serpent, and the Tree of Life properly. The Tree of Life in particular is all over the place in Mesopotamian art.
@@InquisitiveBible Its mythological telephone! I just realized, serpent imagery might be connected to river myths. If you look down at a river from on high, it appears to be a serpent.. Just speculating, but if you 'slay' the river, do you feed its 'blood' to farmlands through irrigation?
@@Badficwriter Yeah, that's an interesting perspective. I think one scholar suggested that the multiple heads originated as multiple rivers converging, but I can't remember who it was or find it in my notes. It's also been suggested that people were inspired by mountain ranges in Lebanon and Bashan that resembled the corpse of a great dragon.
I’m here from MythVision…now subscribed
Normally, researchers say that there are only two creation stories in the Bible, but I have counted that there would actually be more than ten of them. It's good that we amateurs bring these other stories and point them out when researchers don't.
Rant add: some religious people might say, all other religions copied the Israeli one. However major powers like Persia, Babylon, Egypt, Greece, Rome usually influence others never the other way around from dominated cultures. Religion always mixes with neighbouring cultures
There's still influence from less dominating cultures to more dominating ones though. The Romans simping the Greeks a lot is the most obvious example.
And there were religious traditions that came from other places that then blended more with the local culture
@@didack1419 true true, i should have said more blending/ mix of neighbouring cultures as you stated...
though Roman culture took Greek cause Rome at the time was just in italy if I'm right, Greece was the dominant in society, philosophy
I will argue that you're also neglecting the overall biblical narrative. And that is God created the world and all other gods that ever came afterwards we're just knock off images. Also there is this issue where Israel is actually the underdog of the entire Old testament and even Christ is very much a sacrificial lamb in the New testament and the church to this day is still to this day both in the state of weakness and prevalence. The only God to be described as not having an actual description and hating any competition because it's all considered fake telling everyone not to do witchcraft because it's also fake and being completely and totally atheistic except for the one true God who also acts simply through miracles of power over creation which he created, no actual witchcraft practices or suggestion that man-made sorcery is the main stay of everything. Diminishing humanity over and over again in favor of the gods is not unique however it is very severe and strange particularly in the old testament. Christ himself is very strange and that he does do the thing that is required by the entire Old testament law to sacrifice for the sake of sins going all the way back to the oldest story in Genesis about crushing the snake The offspring of a woman. There is way too much consistency continuity and the survival rate is just ridiculous to simply dismiss that the idea of one true powerful God over every other God who realistically in the end has every other religion surrounding it copying small details from a very minimalistic and straightforward text about how it was nothing and then it was something there was no man then there was man and then a spirit being named God watch this mankind destroyed himself. All by choices and actions and through deceit. This comparison is not enough. Especially if God as Yahweh is the original Who is copied by all the other religions. The least dominant culture is specifically chosen for a reason in the OT. God displays power through weakness repeatedly. The major cultures surrounding Israel being major unfortunately encourages this OT testimony. Also why would the dominant cultures in their spiritual weakness not fail to adopt the belief in Yahweh, Eve and Pandora, and so much more. I like Lovecraft. He wrote mythology. But this is kind of a fact we need to consider. If there is one Singular Truth to the most ancient origins of our world, the world will remember it in diverse ways. Yet if there is a revealing God, he will show Himself one time again and again and preserve that revelation as He has done, at least as a logical character if interested in Mankind, where Lovecraft's monsters aren't. But I think this is good comparison because we forget the actual debate is whether there is a very genuine Monomyth that is in fact MonoTruth from which Myth derives it's nature. This is not some Lovecraftian idea. This unfortunately is what the Biblical narrative not only says, but is uncanny for self awareness in asserting no these are the knockoff deities I am the true one. It raises questions about Leviathan and whether there is more here about God than we normally presume.
Also, yeah, a Plesiosaurus that is fire breathing Leviathan and then is imagined or did indeed at one have 7 heads like the Hydra... Unfortunately we still have creatures that once existed on earth that match the description, and not any evidence to back up millions of years except for presupposition. Again, uncanny. I have often wondered if Hydra and Leviathan were related. We do end upw ith multiheaded snakes in life. Also if a reference to Satan it is possible that it is like the idea of the Serpent in the Garden itself...The Devil creating or acting as a multiheaded Plesiosaurus monster the way he chose a serpent in the beginning. Careful about conclusions and perspectives as human beings. Be more objective than to say yes or no to bias.
Excellent dissertation! The bibliography of this video is a semester’s study!
Outstanding 👏👏👏
Simply splendid! Many thanks.
Fantastic video!
Thanks as always for watching!
Where did you find the Eshnunna tablet image in top right of screen, at 14:28? The one from circa 2400 BCE. I can’t find a source for that image anywhere. I would love to learn more about it, but I’m not sure where to check.
I originally found it in "The Leviathan in the Ancient Near East" by Korpel and De Moor (p. 4, see bibliography in description), and they got it from Westenholz, *Dragons, Monsters, and Fabulous Beasts*, 2004, p. 191. But the drawing I used is from Batto (2013), p. 32, and he got it from ANEP (Ancient Near Eastern Pictures), where it is tablet No. 671. I don't have access to ANEP myself, but that book should have the full details. It was excavated from Tell Asmar (ancient Eshnunna) and belongs to the Early Dynastic Period of Mesopotamia. I believe the artifact itself ended up in the collection of the late Elie Borowski, but I don't know where it is at the moment.
@@InquisitiveBible Thank you so much! Excellent work, my friend.
If people love this they should listen to Michael Heiser’s Naked Bible and read his blog. I wouldn’t call this information deconstruction
Yeah, anyone who's read Heiser's stuff probably knows a lot of this already.
Another new episode! Tell you the truth, I had no idea that the Levant was the likely source for Babylonian story, but this video explains very clearly why we believe this to be the case. I always learn a lot in these videos.
16:16 I'm hyped
*The Enuma Elish would later be the inspiration for the Hebrew scribes who created the text now known as the biblical Book of Genesis.* Prior to the 19th century CE, the Bible was considered the oldest book in the world and its narratives were thought to be completely original. In the mid-19th century CE, however, European museums, as well as academic and religious institutions, sponsored excavations in Mesopotamia to find physical evidence for historical corroboration of the stories in the Bible. ***These excavations found quite the opposite, however, in that, once cuneiform was translated, it was understood that a number of biblical narratives were Mesopotamian in origin.***
*Famous stories such as the Fall of Man and the Great Flood were originally conceived and written down in Sumer,* translated and modified later in Babylon, and reworked by the Assyrians ***before they were used by the Hebrew scribes for the versions which appear in the Bible.***
***In revising the Mesopotamian creation story for their own ends, the Hebrew scribes tightened the narrative and the focus but retained the concept of the all-powerful deity who brings order from chaos.*** Marduk, in the Enuma Elish, establishes the recognizable order of the world - *just as God does in the Genesis tale* - and human beings are expected to recognize this great gift and honor the deity through service.
*"Enuma Elish - The Babylonian Epic of Creation - Full Text - World History Encyclopedia"*
*"Sumerian Is the World's Oldest Written Language | ProLingo"*
*"Sumerian Civilization: Inventing the Future - World History Encyclopedia"*
*"The Myth of Adapa - World History Encyclopedia"*
Also discussed by Professor Christine Hayes at Yale University in her 1st lecture of the series on the Hebrew Bible from 8:50 to 14:30 minutes, lecture 3 from 28:30 to 41:35 minutes, lecture 4 from 0:00 up to 21:30 minutes and 24:00 up to 35:30 minutes and lecture 7 from 24:20 to 25:10 minutes.
From a Biblical scholar:
"Many stories in the ancient world have their origins in other stories and were borrowed and modified from other or earlier peoples. *For instance, many of the stories now preserved in the Bible are* ***modified*** *versions of stories that existed in the cultures and traditions of Israel’s* ***older*** *contemporaries.* Stories about the creation of the universe, a cataclysmic universal flood, digging wells as land markers, the naming of important cultic sites, gods giving laws to their people, and even stories about gods decreeing the possession of land to their people were all part of the cultural and literary matrix of the ancient Near East. *Biblical scribes freely* ***adopted and modified*** *these stories as a means to express their own identity, origins, and customs."*
*"Stories from the Bible"* by Dr Steven DiMattei, from his website *"Biblical Contradictions"*
------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, look up the below articles.
*"Yahweh was just an ancient Canaanite god. We have been deceived! - Escaping Christian Fundamentalism"*
*"Debunking the Devil - Michael A. Sherlock (Author)"*
*"The Greatest Trick Religion Ever Pulled: Convincing Us That Satan Exists | Atheomedy"*
*"Zoroastrianism And Persian Mythology: The Foundation Of Belief"*
(Scroll to the last section: Zoroastrianism is the Foundation of Western Belief)
*"10 Ways The Bible Was Influenced By Other Religions - Listverse"*
*"January | 2014 | Atheomedy"* - Where the Hell Did the Idea of Hell Come From?
*"Retired bishop explains the reason why the Church invented "Hell" - Ideapod"*
Watch *"The Origins of Salvation, Judgement and Hell"* by Derreck Bennett at Atheologica
(Sensitive theists should only watch from 7:00 to 17:30 minutes as evangelical Christians are lambasted. He's a former theist and has been studying the scholarship and comparative religions for over 15 years)
*"Top Ten Reasons Noah’s Flood is Mythology - The Sensuous Curmudgeon"*
*"Forget about Noah's Ark; There Was No Worldwide Flood | Bible Interp"*
*"The Search for Noah’s Flood - Biblical Archaeology Society"*
*"Eridu Genesis - World History Encyclopedia"*
*"The Atrahasis Epic: The Great Flood & the Meaning of Suffering - World History Encyclopedia"*
Watch *"How Aron Ra Debunks Noah's Flood"*
(8 part series debunking Noah's flood using multiple branches of science)
*"The Adam and Eve myth - News24"*
*"Before Adam and Eve - Psychology Today"*
*"Gilgamesh vs. Noah - Wordpress"*
*"Old Testament Tales Were Stolen From Other Cultures - Griffin"*
*"Parallelism between “The Hymn to Aten” and Psalm 104 - Project Augustine"*
*"Studying the Bible"* - by Dr Steven DiMattei
(This particular article from a critical Biblical scholar highlights how the authors of the Hebrew Bible used their *fictional* god as a mouthpiece for their own views and ideologies)
*"How do we know that the biblical writers were* ***not*** *writing history?"* -- by Dr Steven DiMattei
*"Contradictions in the Bible | Identified verse by verse and explained using the most up-to-date scholarly information about the Bible, its texts, and the men who wrote them"* -- by Dr. Steven DiMattei
Thanks for the comment. Dr. DiMattei's blog has a lot of good articles and discussions about puzzling passages in the Pentateuch.
Leviathan is a real creature just as bohemian and mammoth . Leviathan was a moseosaurius, behemoth was a sauroposiden , a mammoth was a mastodon or actual mammoth. The descriptions in Bible meet the known structures of these creatures. Plus dinosaurs are Dragons ! Byball discretion. The word dinosaurs was given in 1800's prior to that all large reptilian type creatures where called dragons . They where never mythological creatures. One still exists with its true name kamodo Dragon
The Mosasaurus, which was no doubt a fearsome creature, went extinct 66 million years ago. Prognathodon and Liopleurodon were just as big, and Megalodon was even bigger. But there's no good reason to think the author of the book of Job or the people of Ugarit had any knowledge of extinct aquatic creatures such as those.
MythVisionPodcast sent me.
What are stars?
Has anyone thought it’s possible that every culture is telling the same creation story through their own cultural lens? Is it possible that there really is 1 God who told the same story to each different people, and they all interpreted it in their own way and recorded? To me this just proves God is real.
Thanks for the comment. There are a number of theological approaches you can take, and I tend not to avoid those questions because they're too subjective.
My focus is only on the biblical text and where these ideas - the combat with Leviathan and the forces of chaos as a creation theme - come from. They are very specifically limited to this region of the world, and we can see in the archaeological record how they evolved from storm god veneration in ancient Amurru to the sea monster stories of Ugarit, Israel, Babylon, the Hittites, and the Greeks. It's not something you see in, say, Egyptian mythology.
Thank U, Infinite Intelligence 🙏
I wonder if the name Baal has any connection to the word Bell.
No different than Marduk vs Tiamat
Love seeing attempts to tie history together as a progressive whole (rather than "believe this and only this, and questions are sacrilege...). I also love that you took time to answer questions (@wannabe...) and give references/sources. Big TY!
Thanks for the nice comment.
I think the timeline may be incorrect. It makes more sense if Leviathan was killed when the Ark landed so as to feed the survivors.
Interesting, makes sense, and I am Native American and very familiar with the Bible and may other writings. Book of Enoch is a good book to and explains many things. Wonder why it is excluded from the holy writings???!
Thanks for the comment, Joe. The book of Enoch is a huge topic, and I plan to make a video covering its contents and how it fits into Judaism and Christianity.
nice one
Interesting
Amazing video!!! Just 2 questions that I had while watching this.
1. It seems that Yahweh assimilated all of this imagery from Baal but I often hear that before he was merged with El he was already a storm deity. If this is the case why is all the storm imagery from after they were merged?
2. Why is the Gen 2 creation account so alien to the others? There's no mention of water (besides the lack of rain on the land) and everything there just seems so hot and dry. This feels like a huge departure from these other creation accounts, why is this the case? Also do you think this account would be older than the chaoskampf creation motifs?
Thanks as always for watching and commenting.
1. I think the simplest answer is that Yahweh didn’t lose any of his storm-god attributes just because he took on El’s characteristics as well. Marduk also remained a storm-god after becoming the chief Babylonian deity. And I think the rich storm and fertility imagery associated with Yahweh was too good for later Jewish writers to ignore.
2. Yeah, good question. The Eden story is related to an entirely different set of myths connected with historiography (stories about early humanity) unlike the storm-god combat myth, which is more political and concerned with kingship and fertility/harvest festivals. The Eden stuff is a bit more complicated to unravel and deserves its own deep dive video.
Thank you.
Actually they were not entirely wrong in that account of an ocean beneath the earth nor above it, in a sense. ..
Below the earth, close the the outer mantle crust of the core there is a large chasm like region that has large pockets of open spaces hundreds of miles wide and long. Within these large pockets is a liquid like ocean but it is not salt water, it's more like a concentrated petroleum liquid mixed with oil, phosphate and sulphur. It's been called the firmament before and they say it is what China is drilling the hole in the crust trying to reach. So they say.
excellent info and editing!
now, i dunno why scholars insist on imposing a post exile framework on a pre exile torah when both exodus and leviticus explicitly say that the month of the aviv is the head of the year; it was in exile where the jews adopted the custom of the 7th month as the head of the year.
Calendars are a fascinating topic to me even though they leave me hopelessly confused most of the time. It's crazy that we don't even know the names of all the pre-exilic Hebrew months, as far as I know.
@@InquisitiveBible yes, to me they are very interesting for their symbolism. like what you said about creation, passover is celebrated in aviv, and the killing of the passover lamb works as a foundation for the new world, which theme was later taken by the apostles when they said that Messiah was sacrificed before the foundation of the world.
and about month names, only aviv received the name of that state of barley growth, while the rest of the months only seemed to have ordinal names after the first one.
For the algorithm gods.
All of these myths are about the planets/Gods/Elohim that sat very close to earth in ancient times. Every culture gave these planets stories and anthropomorphized them.
Ine planet has many names in all cultures. To know this is a key to what the bible is really talking about
15:41, it’s Jesus all glory to the Lord in Jesus name amen.
The only issue I have w this video is that “Rahab” in these texts refers to Egypt. This has definitely been the case according to famous Jewish sage Rashi. Hence, why the mentions of “Rahab” are always combined w drying up of the waters, the miracle in Exodus. Is it not possible; plausible even; the sages who wrote this literature were familiar w other nearby poetic myths; & simply expressed this into their poetic style of giving praise to Yah-Whey?
I think it’s best to be accurate here.
Isn't it funny how the story is similar to the story of Marduk and Tiamat.
However, the sumarian version pre dates the bible by thousands of years.
Existence of minor gods subordinate to Yahweh is fascinating. Also I heard somewhere that God has a wife called Asherah. So then is Jesus the son of Yahweh or not? I'd love to know more about this Hebrew pantheon. Amazing video. Loved every bit of it.
I think I heard somewhere that Asherah's title was "Queen of Heaven," which is today the title Catholics confer upon Mary. Maybe not a coincidence?
This is exactly what an academic biblical interpretation is. I hope people will come to the realization that an academic lens (though helpful in what it can provide) is still just humans attempting to reasons its way into Divine Reason. Such provides grand intellectual content at the creaturely level but it lacks spiritual insight at a Divine level.
That's the difference between biblical studies (higher/lower criticism) and hermeneutics. I just want to figure out what the text means and how it was produced. How you interpret and apply the Bible in your own faith tradition (which could be Judaism, Christianity, or even something else) is a separate and more personal matter.
The word God being singular replaced the word Elohim which is plural in the English Bible and God comes from the German word Gott who is Odin of Norse mythology that represents white folk and not Semitic people who Nazis committed a holocaust on so what happened to the Lord of the Semetic people, is YHWH and God the same being?
The Bible is a copy of the older Pre-Hebrew Canaanite Lotan where Baal Hadad defeats a great sea monster. Back in the days when Yaweh was a minor Anannaki warrior/storm god, the Hebrews were polytheistic, and only later adopted Yaweh as their one true god after they fell under the control of Babalonian influence. The Torah only goes back to 700BC, so know the original sources from 2600 years earlier.
The Judaeans living in Elephantine in Egypt identified Anat as Yahweh's partner perhaps in recognition of their alliance against Leviathan. The OT writers also identified Egypt with the dragon Rahab. Is the dividing of the sea by Yahweh in the Moses narrative cognate with Marduk splitting Tiamat in the Babylonian texts.
I think there is something to the idea that the splitting of the "Red Sea" echoes the splitting of the sea dragon. There is also a major question on exactly ‘Yam Suph’, the name of the sea the Israelites cross, really means. Not all scholars accept the usual reading of "Red Sea", but I need to dig into that more before I can say much about it.
Yeah those are the people Isaiah and Jeremiah and Elijah are speaking to when they say to stop saying crazy pagan stuff is true and stop doing all this weird pagan stuff because its an abomination to God.
They're why The Judgment fell on Israel and they were exiled into Babylon.
The Judaeans and Israelites living in Egypt who venerated Anat and other gods/goddesses alongside Yahweh did so in the Persian and Hellenistic periods, after the exile. We have a cache of letters and documents from them that are older than any Bible manuscript.
The thing with his name is a mystery with the Levites,They were Yahwehs favorite tribe and Yam and Yahweh leviathan have the same back grounds.
That Leviathan that is Khronis on the greater world is not common knowledge...we, this realm exists within that Leviathan in the real world. How do You know about this?
Actually ancient Greeks didn't believe the earth was flat. Perhaps they did at some point. But is well known from around 500 B.C. onward at least elite and educated greeks believed the earth to be spherical.
In 240 B.C. Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the globe and that concept or idea quickly spread among educated folk in the old world.
Thanks for the comment. Yeah, the Greeks already knew the earth was round by the time of Plato, but they didn't in the time of Homer and Hesiod, so I was careful to specify pre-Classical Greece.
Gods are so authoritarian.
Leviathan was a real sea dragon creature/species but it was made as a type or should i say in Archetype of Helel Ben’shahar who is its counterpart. God told Job mystery “the father of the children of pride”
MythVision sent me.
Do any of the ancient texts mention a "storm God"? I ask this because I suspect its a title given in relatively recent times and is inaccurate. "Sky God" is i think, misleading too. When we say "storm god" the god is in danger of becoming associated with storms and nothing else. And he (usually depicted as a male) is more than just a "sky" god. This god is the God of Heaven. The meaning of the word Heaven has probably changed. Now it is a make believe place where angels fly around but it once was what we now call the sky and outer space, i.e it was a reality and could be seen. (There was a higher spiritual dimension too where good souls went and angels fly around which couldnt be seen). Anyway, this God of Heaven is boss of Heaven and everything in it; the clouds, rain, storms, the Sun, moon, planets and stars. And it is Heaven that rules Earth. The life of Earth can not exist without rain from Heaven and warmth/light from the Sun of Heaven. This God of Heaven (not merely a "sky god" or "storm god") is (or was) know as Yahweh/Zeus/Jupiter/Dyaus Piter/Thor (not Odin)/ Tengri etc etc etc. To us in the English speaking world he is known as "God".
“Storm-god” is the accepted designation among anthropologists for a deity with a specific set of characteristics concerned with storms and fertility that differentiates them from other deities. German scholarship uses the term Wettergott (weather god) for the same category.
@@InquisitiveBible Yes I know it's the accepted...but welcome to the prickly, outside the box, free thinking, sometimes ingenious, unaccepted unless proven right, tiny minority 😁
My original question was not addressed. "Storm god"; is the term used in ancient texts. I'll look into it best I can...
I did some more reading of Daniel Schwemer, who seems to be the foremost scholar in the field, and he says that “typological labels such as ‘storm-god’ have no direct counterpart in the various ancient Near Eastern languages.” However, Schwemer continues, a sort of storm-god category did exist, because the cuneiform languages continued to use the Sumerogram IŠKUR to write the name of whoever the local storm-god was (Adad, Hadad, Baal, Taru, Tarhunt, etc.), implying that they were regarded as belonging to the same typological category. In particular, when you include iconography and other attributes assigned to the deity, there was a clearly identifiable category of Near Eastern gods, distinct from other gods, for which modern historians and anthropologists use the label storm-god or Wettergott. In other words, although the label is a modern one, it's used to describe an important distinction that really existed in the typology of ancient gods.
Now, the storm-god was not necessarily the *highest* or supreme god (what the members of Abrahamic religions today simply call "God"). See, for example, Deuteronomy 32:8, which in its oldest attested version (evident in the LXX and Dead Sea Scrolls) clearly has YHWH as one of the sons of El.
@@InquisitiveBible ok, thanks for that. Interesting. I still think that the designation "storm god" is misleading. It paints a picture in many minds of a god of storms and nothing else. "He" is responsible for far more than this. He is probably Heaven itself and so is Lord of everything in it and everything that comes from it; the planet Gods, including Sun and Moon, storms, wind, rain. The great mother Earth is completely dependent on what is sent from Heaven. And so Heaven is the great father, Earth the great mother.
The Sun is (in certain myths) son of Heaven and Earth. Mary is probably the Earth, although Mary linguistically refers to the sea...
Mythological creature?
Where do you get the theory that it was/is only mythological?
If a seven-headed creature appears in myths involving storm-gods and the creation of the world, that is by definition mythological. The rise of this motif and the importance of the storm-god in the ancient religions of the Levant is closely tied to the environment and the reliance on capricious storms to bring fertility to the land and their crops.
the babylonian diagram is not of the earth . it is a circular illustration of the city with the mesopotamian rivers around it.
Most people never dreamed of any more than they could see from their own hovels.
The Babylonian tablet is famously known as the Babylonian Map of the World, and the cuneiform labels on it indicate regions other than Babylon. The Euphrates runs through the middle of the map, and the Bitter River is the salty ocean that encircles the world. The triangles around the edge are the mountains that hold up the sky.
I would leave Eretz as the literal translation - land, not “Earth,” which carries other connotations in modern English
I would agree but in some instances earth captures the scope of what the authors were intending (for example the flood).
@@wannabe_scholar82 That is exactly what I’m warning against.
The authors of the Flood story did not have a modern conception of a planet.
They were apparently not aware of lands beyond the 70 nations listed in Genesis and they thought the land was overall flat
@@scienceexplains302 Right but to the authors of the flood story everyone besides Noah and his family was destroyed. Although the Hebrew word just means land the point is trying to get across is that this was universal in nature. Keeping it translated as land in the English could lead to a misconception that in the text it's only talking about a small portion of humanity when in reality all of humanity was in view of being destroyed here.
@@wannabe_scholar82 Are you sure? Because two generations after the Flood, Nimrod was ruling a kingdom of several cities.
“Universal” is another phrase more modern than the Flood story.
You’re arguing that they thought that all the world was flooded when they didn’t know how big the world was.
In the Tower of Babel story, “all” the languages were created (except whatever the people had previously spoken).
“All” effectively meant “all we know of”.
I don’t think the Flood story was written to be believed as a historical (in the modern sense of the word) event, but the context indicates to me that we should let “all the land” stand and not insert our modern knowledge into the words of the text.
@@scienceexplains302 True, but we must remember that in the Torah there's a number of different contradictions because of a difference of traditions and sources (the two creation accounts, flood stories, etc.) so we can't really take the narrative at face value as you seem to be there to make that point. Also showing this is a separate tradition, the table of nations presupposes the nations already being split from each other before the story of Babel, were likely working with a different tradition here.
I'm not arguing that they had a concept of "all the world" as a globe, I'm saying if we went back in time and told them about how there's X amount of nations in the world and how the world is Y shape and then asked them if the flood would've encompassed all of this they would likely say yes. The whole purpose of the story is to show that the humanity that God created is now wiped out and ONLY Noah and his family remains. Such was the nature of every other ANE flood story. This is like saying when an author wrote God is Lord over all the eretz he was just referring to him being Lord over all of Israel, we know the author had no idea that the whole globe existed but we know the scope of what he was trying to get across here.
Yes is called a polemic.. fulfilment of prophecy is how we know if scripture is inspired
The sea of confusion/chaos/disorder aka Tehom/Tiamat stretches from the autumn equinox to the spring equinox (Libra thru Pisces) aka the six "nights" in Genesis one.
Ra (sun - phallus) rode across this celestial sea of stars in a barque (crescent moon - vagina).
IN MY OPINION,,,It was mainly Canaanite than Babylonian because, most likely, the early tribes of Israelites were indeed, Canaanites. They moved into the destroyed cities after the bronze age collapse. They set up shop and tried to make a name and origin for themselves. Since the bronze age collapse brought destruction to Egypt and the surrounding areas, they came up with a story of a god that destroyed Egypt and the Canaanites so they can possess the land. Pretty clever if u ask me, and in some kind of way I ended up worshipping that same god for 36yrs before I came out of religion all together.. As I joined Messianic Judaism, I did all of the customs, sabbath and feast days. I taught their origin stories . But all I did was participate in the continuation of Canaanite and Mesopotamian religions. Deciding to leave was very depressing because I spent so much time truly believing in this myth. I lost friends and slowly got shunned away from my family over this religion. Yeah, it hurts, but I have found peace.
Thanks for sharing your story.
Yahweh /enlil was a storm god in every civilization and mythology. This is why our ancestors was so confused when they met other nations with the same god description. Which made converting not such a big deal when conquered . Everything is a retold annunaki story because they rule this world. ❤
Yahweh appears to have been copied from Jupiter Olympus. As summer, he is the giver and is opposite winter, the taker aka Jupiter Stygius. Jupiter is the one who gives and takes away. IU Piter (double-sexed god) has no J sound.
you got a lot of incorrect things about leviathan beasts.
Feel free to elaborate.
@@InquisitiveBible Well this is only in the bible what you got wrong is in 5:10 rahab is a name of a prostitute thats in the bible (kjb) also none of these leviathan beasts are sea creatures. also the word leviathan is a title for incredibly enormous creatures like job 41 named leviathan, the dragon king.
@@randomguyodst46 Thanks for the reply. Rahab the sea monster (רַהַב) is different from Rahab the harlot (רָחָב) in Joshua, and they are spelled slightly differently in Hebrew. When Isaiah 51:9 says “Was it not you who cut Rahab in pieces, who pierced the dragon?” that’s obviously not talking about a Canaanite prostitute.
As for Leviathan, literally every Bible scholar who has studied the matter regards him as a sea creature, and he always occurs in a context involving the sea and water. I think you would need a compelling reason to argue otherwise.
@@InquisitiveBible I only use the King James Bible which is God’s perfect translated word, the modern versions are corrupted. Anyways I think you mean wounded the dragon specifically the dragon king from job 41.
Did these scholars pay attention to detail in job 41? I found out the beast can talk, laughs like human beings and he boils the ocean like a pot of ointment and breaths fire, Something extremely hot doesn’t belong in the ocean. He also has scales and no weapon can hurt him due to his incredible enormous size. I would argue that he’s a fiery Drake, a fire dragon with no wings.
Psalm 74.12-17 when it’s said that God gave the leviathan to the people of the wild beast for food. Those people of the wild beasts are not us humans. You will find no writings referring to humans anywhere as that so what I’m starting to figure out is it’s talked about the hairy men the Sabe / Sasquatch or the Edomites just as Esau was a mighty hunter who was covered in red hair whom Jacob took his blessing and Esau was blessed to be away from the fatness of earth and to live outside where the dew of heaven to fall upon him. There’s many more references about them in the Bible also but this is all for now because this is enough information for many to start digging and figure it out.
While I was working on this video, I looked up what several scholars say about that phrase. The vocabulary is obscure and hard to interpret; John Day think it's just a poetic way of describing the wild beasts. The Septuagint translates it as "to the Ethiopians" of all things, showing that even the post-exilic Jews had difficulty making sense of it. It's possible there is some other legendary background to it.
I've long wondered if there is some connection between Jacob/Esau and Gilgamesh/Enkidu and if these stories could be ways of talking about contrasts between settled and nomadic forms of living.
Yeah...Enter Ivan Panin...the silver bullet bearer for all these werewolf versions of creation from antiquity
Their model of the world is accurate
He would not have to struggle against the laviation if he was the true creator, the old testement is not about the father, jesus himself says so.
It wasnt a struggle.Its says the levithan is but a mere plaything for God,more like a pet
Also; the Leviaton, is still a MAJOR part of Jewish mythology. The Leviatjon currently holds up the world from the oceans. Also the end of the world as we know it happens when Leviathon & the Shoar HaBoor, strike each other with death blows & their dead bodies; will be served as the messianic feast. But, if that ever happened, Orthodox Jews would have to wash the fish & serve it before the meat; as fish & meat can be eaten in the same meal; just not on the same plate… don’t wanna choke on fish bones (even if ur eating gefilte fish aka fish w no bones) lol
Thanks, Baruch. That's very interesting.
@@InquisitiveBible ur welcome. I’m actually a graduate of The Rabbinical College of America; & learned so much I realized I could not; in good conscience; be an orthodox Rabbi. If u have anymore vids on the Leviathan or anything from the Torah.. id love to help
I could certainly use the help of a consultant such as yourself when I need to confirm various points of Jewish belief. Feel free to send me your email address or preferred form of contact.
Leviathan is most likely Abaddon from the bottomless pit kingdom covenant just did an amazing video on it
Theres entire oceans under the earth tho
And an actual 'atmospheric river'
So IDK WTF youre saying
Thanks for the comment. I understand the motivation to find ways in which ancient language can be treated as metaphors for modern science, but I think this approach fails to appreciate what ancient texts actually say and what ancient people actually believed.
For one thing, there's no such thing as "under the earth" unless you mean inside the earth. Yes, there is water in the mantle, but it is not an ocean of liquid water. It consists of superheated molecules bound up by rock. Aquifers, which exist much closer to the surface, consist of porous rock that is water-logged. Again, not liquid oceans.
Atmospheric rivers are narrow filaments of concentrated water vapor in the air. They are not liquid oceans.
The people of the ancient Near East did not understand these advanced geological and meterological concepts. They did not know the earth was a sphere composed of a solid crust, liquid mantle, and metallic core. They literally thought there was an ocean of liquid water above the solid firmament and below the disc of the earth.
The secular year would end and begin at the autumn equinox. The sacred year would end and begin at the spring equinox. We also have the creation myth keyed to the solstices. The six "days" could begin at any point. The "end times" are the last days that precede a change in one calendar year to another. Note in Genesis one where Juno (Air) broods over the waters. Her "eggs" hatch out at the spring equinox as the gods proclaim "let there be light."
We find the sacred seven in the tale of the white horse (Jupiter/Fire/Aries) and the black horse (Juno/Air/Libra). This sacred seven (Aries thru Libra) is found in Freemasonry with Cancer being the keystone. This is the constellation where we find the two asses (stars) that Jesus (the sun) rides on into Jerusalem (summer solstice). Cancer is assigned to Issachar (translates to Bacchus) and is opposite Capricorn where we find Zebulun and his Argo navis.or ship-sun (sion). This is the barque (crescent moon) that Ra (sun) rides across the celestial seas. Think vagina and phallus (ring and dagger).
What's with this new name yahweh ??
Well, it's not exactly new, but that's how scholars think YHWH, the primary name of the god of Israel and Judah, was pronounced. Any time an English Bible reads “LORD” in all caps, the underlying Hebrew actually says YHWH. For historical accuracy, I prefer to use the actual name rather than “Lord”.
@@InquisitiveBible Original Hebrew definitely does not use Yahweh . It's a made up name that everyone using today .
Are you arguing that the tetragrammaton YHWH does not appear in the original texts, or something else? I don't quite follow you.
Release the Kraken!
Battle of Jericho (Lunar Month.)
Joshua, having obtained all necessary information by means of his two spies (the two days to be added to each of the twelve lunar months), and having staked off, by the twelve stones, the Sun's ecliptic into as many equal parts, and taken every other precaution necessary to insure success, was now prepared for his ensuing campaign. His first battle was against Jericho. This is a collective name, having for its root, jerah = the moon. Jericho may, therefore, mean the four quarters of the moon, or the four weeks of the lunar month.
The two spies, as before noted, went to Rahab, who received and lodged them. Rahab, who personifies the fornix, or the great vault of heaven, is thus said to commit fornication, and so gets her surname of harlot.
But Jericho was straitly shut: "none went out, and none came in" (Joshua 6. 1). The Lord (Sun) however, gave it into Joshua's hands. Seven priests (seven summer constellations) were appointed to bear as many trumpets of rams' horns (Aries during each of these seven months) about the devoted city (lunar month). These rams' horns the priests tooted about the city every day (month) for six days (months). On the seventh day (month) they compassed the city seven times, tooting their rams' horns as they went, i.e., they recalled all the summer months to view (feast of tabernacles, or of the ingathering) in that one month, when the city (summer) fell down flat, and the people at the command of Joshua, shouted " Amen (Oh, Ram), glory to the Ram,” as he went down in the west.
All that was in the city was utterly destroyed, save Rahab (or Virgo, which became a day constellation), whom notwithstanding her slip of chastity, Joshua saved alive with all her household, and all that she had, and she dwelleth in Israel (i.e., she is one of the four constellations of summer) unto this day (6.25). Thus, perished Jericho, or the lunar month, and the calendar month of 30 days being firmly established, the year consisted of 360 days.
Milton Woolley,, Hebrew Mythology or Science of the Bible.
The 13 years that Solomon builds his temple (year) = 13 x 28. This became 12 x 30 or one solar year of 360 days. The five intercalary days are the Amorites (spoken in days).
Here the year begins and ends at the winter solstice. The first month (not year) of building the temple begins with April. The temple is "destroyed" in its final month of completion = end of summer and beginning of winter.
Another example of the year divided into seven (summer) and five (winter) is found in Rev. 9.5. This is where the scorpion (Scorpio) is the leader of Sagittarius (Fire), Capricorn (Earth), Aquarius (Air), and Pisces (Water).
Yes!
See Shamesh/Shemesh/Ha Shem (Sun god) holding ring and dagger/rod (female/Nekebah and Zakar (male) creative organs in his right hand @2.14.
This same rod (phallus) is found in depictions of Aquarius (Moses/Ganymede). His Phallus was so huge that it required helpers to hold it upright. The rod and arm become one phallus aka serpent.
Moses is back with us as the January rains (weeping) of thirty days. Aquarius is aka Moab (water father).
This is the constellation that made "god" so angry that he ordered a flood (rainy season/winter). This "winter" is the five signs/months of Rev. 9.5. aka Scorpio thru Pisces.
Nun the fish (Pisces) gives birth to Joshua (Aries). The "father" of Nun the fish is Canis major (better known as Caleb in the bible). Levi is the band/bond of stars connecting the two fish in Pisces. At one time the northern fish was a bird (probably Isis).
Yahweh is Ba’al
rain didnt come from firmament came from moisture after flood in clouds, defore flood it didnt rain there was a mist
Thanks for the comment. I hope I can clear up a few things.
> rain didnt come from firmament came from moisture after flood in clouds
Many ancient people did believe rain originated with the water above the firmament. Genesis 7:11 says, in reference to the beginning of the flood, “on that day all the springs of the great deep burst forth, and the windows of the heavens were opened.” The windows of heaven opening to cause rain strongly implies that the rain came from the firmament. In Genesis 8:2, God stops the rain by “plugging” the windows of the heavens. (That’s literally what the Hebrew says.)
The famous theologian Hermann Gunkel, in his commentary on Genesis (p. 108), remarks: “The dome of heaven-as we know only an optical illusion- is, in the viewpoint of antiquity, a firm structure based on columns (Job 26:11) with doors and windows (Gen 28:17; 2 Kgs 7:2). It is comparable to a tent, a house, or a city. Its substance is comparable to a mirror or to sapphire. Above the heaven, however, is an inexhaustible sea of heavenly water (Psa 148:4). Where would the rain come from otherwise?”
The biblical text does not say it never rained before the flood. The rare word ’ed in Genesis 2:7 is probably related to Akkadian id, which means “river”. Nearly all Bible scholars think some kind of spring or river that gushes up from the ground is being described here. The statement of Genesis 2:5 that there were no plants because it hadn’t yet rained and there was no one to till the ground is explicitly describing the very first day of creation, before God created the man and the garden in Eden.
Rain is an inevitable result of how water vapor interacts with the air and the heat from the sun. It is ecologically silly to propose that the entire world had no rain for its entire history until about 2250 BC, unless you think everything outside of Eden was a permanent desert like Arrakis in the novel Dune. Fossil records and geological strata clearly show this is not true.