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The
Pre-biblical Origin of the Sabbath (Shabbat)
and its
derivation from
The
Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh and Atrahasis
Original draft: 20
April 1999
Revised and
Expanded: 27 July 2000 01 July 2003; 10 Sept. 2004; 16 Sept. 2004;
Please Scroll down to end of article for the 21 and 26 Sept 2004; 17 Oct 2004; 08 Nov 2004, 09 Dec 2004, 20 Dec 2004, 12 Jan 2005 Updates
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It will be argued
in this brief article that Genesis' Garden of Eden and its concept of a
resting God setting aside a seventh day as a Sabbath rest day is derived
-in part- from the Epic of Gilgamesh and to a degree, the Atrahasis
Flood Story.
"In a
nutshell," I understand that the Hebrew Shabbat (English: Sabbath) is an
"_INVERSION_" of events, as well as religious motifs, and concepts
regarding mankinds' relationship with the Gods, appearing in the Mesopotamian
Flood Myth preserved in the Epic of Gilgamesh as well as the Atrahasis Epic.
In that account,
murderous gods in 6 days and nights set out to destroy the earth and all that
dwells upon it in order to annihilate all of mankind. On the 7th day the Flood
waters abated, the rain and storm ended and man was gone. Now, on the 7th day,
the Sebittu day, ALL the gods "rested", for they could not rest by
day nor sleep by night because of mankind's noise on the earth. I am proposing
here that a Hebrew savant, took the 6 days of destruction of the earth, man's
demise being accomplished on the 6th day, and transformed it into a new story
via an
"_INVERSION_",
of a merciful, loving caring God who in 6 days and nights labored to create a
wonderous earth for man, his pinnacle of creation, whom he made on the 6th day
vs. the destruction of of mankind on the 6th day in the Mesopotamian myth. The
7th day, when ALL the gods rested after man's annihilation, became a day for
only ONE God to rest upon.
The Hebrew Bible
suggests that the Sabbath or 7th day was not only God's rest day, it was
intended by God to be a rest day for mankind, personified in ALL of Israel. I
"suspect" that the notion of the god-ordained rest day for man is
-in part- derived from certain motifs associated with the Flood myths
found in the epics of Gilgamesh and Atrahasis.
The Atrahasis Flood
myth noted that "the reason for the Flood" was mankind's incessant
noise or clamor which disturbed the Gods' ability to rest by day and sleep by
night. This myth also explained that the reason for man's clamor was that he
was given NO REST FROM HIS GOD IMPOSED toil on the earth. Man had been created
to grow and harvest food for the gods, then he was to feed them this food via
temple sacrifices. These gods refused to give mankind any rest from this toil.
Instead of giving man some rest from agricultural toil, they decided to
eliminate his clamor by annihilating ALL of mankind with a Flood ! I
thus understand that a Hebrew savant took this Mesopotamian concept, and via
an INVERSION, created a God WHO WOULD GIVE MAN A REST from his toil.
Some may be aware
that a few scholars in their search for "the pre-biblical origins"
of the Sabbath (Hebrew: Shabbat) have proposed that it might be related to the
Mesopotamian Shapattu Day, the 15th day of the Lunar month, the day of the
Full Moon. This article does not cover this topic. It is addressed however in
another of my articles. If this subject interests you please click here
for the "Shabbat
= Shapattu Controversy".
The Epic of
Gilgamesh is a story about a man's unsuccessful search for immortality. It
exists in various recensions from between the 21st to 6th centuries BCE. A
clay tablet fragment written in Akkadian (Babylonian) has been found at
Megiddo in Palestine dated to the 15th century BCE.
The key to
unlocking the mystery of the Sabbath has been provided by W.G. Lambert who
made the following observation:
"The authors
of ancient cosmologies were essentially compilers. Their originality was
expressed in new combinations of old themes, and in new twists to old ideas."
(p.107, Wilfred G.
Lambert, "A New Look at the Babylonian Background of Genesis,"
[1965], in Richard S. Hess & David T. Tsumra, Editors, I Studied
Inscriptions From Before the Flood. Winona Lake, Indiana, Eisenbrauns,
1994)
I understand that
Genesis' Garden of Eden and the Sabbath itself are the result of "new
combinations of old themes and new twists to old ideas," to paraphrase
Lambert's penetrating observation. Both themes are found in the Epic of
Gilagmesh but in a different format and with a different sequence of events.
First, the Garden
of Eden:
In the Gilgamesh
story a paradise on earth is set aside for the hero and his wife of the flood
myth, called Utnapishtim. Many scholars have noted that Noah appears to be
drawn from Utnapishtim with some modifications. I understand that Utnaspishtim
and his wife are -in part- also one of the sources for the
characters Adam and Eve. Utnapishtim and wife are placed in an earthly
paradise by the Gods, just as Adam and Eve are in an earthly paradise. Neither
couple have to do any back-breaking toil. In both stories, Utnapishtim and
Adam are associated with a theme of man's having some kind of knowledge of how
to go about obtaining immortality. Adam looses out in his bid, while
Utnapishtim's immortality has been assured because of his faithfulness.
Utnapishtim is
famous for his wisdom for only he knows the secret of how to attain
immortality, a similar theme exists about Adam's involvement with attaining
wisdom. Gilgamesh seeks out Utnapishtim because his wisdom will lead, he
hopes, to an acquisition of immortality. Please click
here for a picture of Gilgamesh and his companion Enkidu from the Old
Babylonian Period.
The various names
given to the Sumerian or Babylonian "Noah" suggest to me, themes
related to Adam who lived faraway in the East in a Garden of Eden and who
sought a long life and immortality which were granted the Babylonian
character, who also lived faraway in the East, at Dilmun, a paradise of sorts.
The Babylonian
Noah's name appears in the following historical sequence from the ancient
texts, first as Ziusudra (Sumerian), then Atra-hasis, Ut-napishtim, and
finally Xisuthros (the Greek rendering of Ziusudra).
Dr. Robert Whiting
has noted that Zi-u-sud-ra means "Life of Distant Days," alluding to
his obtaining immortality. Atrahasis means "Very Intelligent," he
being famed for his wisdom. Utnapishtim appears to be a form of Ziusudra
"He Found Life ?" (napishtim = life ?), alluding to his obtaining
immortality. Xisuthros is the Greek rendering of Ziusudra by the Babylonian
historian, Berossos (My thanks to Dr. Robert Whiting for his observations on
these names).
There are, of
course, modifications and transformations at work in the later Hebrew
retelling of this story. Paradise was set aside for man after the flood in the
Gilgamesh scenario, whereas it was set aside before the flood in Genesis. I
attribute this rearrangement to putting "a new twist on an old
story." Both stories then, have a man and wife placed in an earthly
paradise by a god, and they are associated with possessing wisdom about how to
obtain immortality.
A serpent,
responsible for depriving Gilgamesh of an herb that will restore him to
youthful vigor, has a "new twist," a serpent associated with a fruit
who deprives Adam of immortality.
Now, The Sabbath:
The Sabbath and its
paradise motif in the Genesis story appear before the flood. In the Gilgamesh
scenario, the earthly paradise and accompanying Sabbath or resting day of the
gods, occurs only after all mankind has been destroyed (with the exception of
those on Utnapishtim's boat) with the flood. We are told that the flood in its
fury fought mankind like an army at war, the raging waves and pouring rains
and lightning all ended on the seventh day of the flood; we are told that on
the seventh day the waters became calm, the sun came out, the earth was in
stillness, peace and quiet reigned over the earth, for man had been swept from
off the face of the earth and drowned in the flood, because his
"noise" had disturbed the god's rest ! The gods could not rest by
day nor sleep by night because of man's noise, according to the myths (Gilgamesh
and Atrahasis).
"Six
days and nights
the wind blew, and the deluge and flood overwhelmed the land. THE
SEVENTH DAY,
when it came, the storm ceased, the raging flood, which had contended like a
whirlwind, quieted, the sea shrank back, and the evil wind and deluge ended.
I noticed the sea making a noise, and all man had turned to corruption. Like
palings the marsh reeds appeared I opened my window, and light fell upon my
face, I fell back dazzled, I sat down, I wept, over my face flowed my
tears." (p.105. "The Flood." Theophilus G. Pinches. The
Old Testament In the Light of the Historical Records and Legend of Assyria and
Babylonia. London. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. 1908)
I would argue that
the seventh day of the flood which saw the demise of mankind, the calming of
the flood waters, and the easing of the rage in the gods' hearts (Sumerian:
"Sa-bat), was given a "new twist" and transformed into a
gracious God who wants only man's well-being, and who is desirous of faithful
worship.
Please note, the
Sumerian story has the Babylonian Noah tearing down his house made of
"marsh reeds" to make his boat from and he is a king of Shuruppak.
Excavations at that city determined that all its flood deposits were
freshwater laid (microscopic analysis being undertaken), causing the
excavators to understand that the Flood/s was/were caused by the Euphrates
river. Succeeding generations embellished the story till it was a flood
destroying the whole world.
Exodus 35:2 ordered
the execution of any who violated the Sabbath day- now we know the origin of
the death penalty, it was because of man's fear of vengeful gods. Fear that
the gods' who had destroyed mankind for violating their rest, would do so
again with another flood. The Hebrew "new twist", had God assuring
Noah that never again would he bring a flood to destroy man.
Hebrew Shabbat is
sought in a cognate meaning "to cease or desist". On the seventh day
the flood ceased. On the seventh day man ceased, on the seventh day the gods'
desisted in their murderous rage and now achieved their rest.
I note that the
word for 'seven' in Akkadian, i.e., Babylonian, is sebittu (p.162,
"Seven," Jeremy Black and Anthony Green, Gods, Demons and
Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia, An Illustrated Dictionary, British Museum
Press, University of Texas, Austin, 1992, ISBN: 0-292-70794-0 ). The
flood calmed down on the "sebittu day", i.e., the seventh day, man
was no more, and at long last with the arrival of the sebittu day, the Gods
rested.
Sumerian Sa-bat
refers to "heart-rest" in the sense that the god's angry hearts, are
assuaged. Perhaps like the anger in the gods' heart was assuaged when
mankind's noise ceased on the seventh day and thereby achieved their rest (see
p.527, sibitu, meaning seventh, and Sa-bat meaning 'heart rest,'
in Theophilus G. Pinches, The Old Testament, in Light of the Historical
Records and Legends of Assyria and Babylonia, London, Society for
Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1908, 3rd edition).
Pinches on Sumerian
Sa-bat (the diacritical over the "s" rendering "Sha-bat"):
"...Sumerian sa-bat,
"heart-rest" which Pinches and Delitzsch rendered in its Akkadian
(Babylonian) form as "um nuh libbi, day of the rest of the
heart" (p.526-7, Pinches)
I would argue that
the Hebrews by use of a word punning, transformed either the Akkadian Sebittu
or the Sumerian Sa-bat (Sha-bat) into Hebrew Shabbat
(English: Sabbath), noting, that man "ceased" to exist and the flood
ended and the gods rested, their 'heart-rest" (Sha-bat, the anger
in their hearts being assuaged) was achieved.
I thus propose that
God's 7th day of rest, is then derived from the 7th day when the gods rested
after destroying mankind with a flood.
The idea that a god
needs to rest seems to be a rather odd notion according to the views held by
some modern interpreters. God is generally understood to be all-powerful,
all-knowing, and he never sleeps, and is always awake and aware of everything
taking place in his created Universe.
The ancient Hebrews
were not hatching up out of thin air, the notion that God needs to rest, they
were merely following along in well-established Mesopotamian traditions that
allowed succeeding generations to creatively re-interpret the ancient myths
into new religious ideas.
Lambert has pointed
out that his studies have indicated that the Mesopotamians were of a mind to
re-interpret and transform older myths into newer religious concepts. It would
appear that the Hebrews, Jews and Christians weren't doing anything new in
their transformation of the earlier ancient myths:
"The authors
of ancient cosmologies were essentially compilers. Their originality was
expressed in new combinations of old themes, and in new twists to old ideas.
Sheer invention was not part of their craft." (p. 107, Wilfred G.
Lambert, "A New Look at the Babylonian Background of Genesis,: [1965], in
Richard S. Hess and David T. Tsumura, Eds., I Studied Inscriptions From
Before the Flood, Winona Lake, Indiana, Eisenbrauns, 1994)
Lambert's article
(cf. above) was an attempt to account for the origins of motifs found in
Genesis by his study of Ancient Near Eastern concepts. He noted that while the
search for the origins of the Hebrew Sabbath is a still elusive "will of
the wisp," traditions about gods needing to rest were verifiable:
"The sabbath
has, of course, been the subject of much study, both in the institution and
the name. My own position, briefly, is that the Hebrew term shabbat,
meaning the completion of the week, and the Babylonian term shapattu,
meaning the completion of the moon's waxing, that is the fifteenth day of a
lunar month, are the same word...There is, however, another approach to the
question. The Hebrews left two explanations of the Sabbath. The first is that
of Genesis 1-2 and Exodus 20, that it repeats cyclically what God did in the
original week of creation. The second, in Deuteronomy 5, regards it as a
repeated memorial of the Hebrews' deliverance from Egypt. This divergence
suggests that historically the institution is older than the explanations. On
this assumption the use of the week as the framework of a creation account is
understandable as providing divine sanction for the institution, but
unexpected in that God's resting hardly expresses the unlimited might and
power that are his usual attributes: "See, Israel's guardian neither
slumbers nor sleeps." It is generally assumed that the use of the week as
the framework of the account simply required that God rest on the seventh day.
But there was no compulsion to have a week of creation at all. Furthermore,
this implies that the development of the doctrine of God's rest came from,
pure, deductive reasoning, which I doubt very much. The authors of ancient
cosmologies were essentially compilers. Their originality was expressed in new
combinations of old themes, and in new twists to old ideas. Sheer invention
was not part of their craft. Thus when the author tells us that God rested, I
believe he drew on a tradition to this effect. Therefore in seeking parallels
to the seventh day, one must look not only for comparable institutions, but
also for the idea of deities resting.
Here Mesopotamia
does not fail us. The standard Babylonian accounts of man's creation is not
found in Enuma Elish, but in the Atra-hasis epic. An earlier form of this myth
occurs in the Sumerian Enki and Ninmah. The essentials of the story are that
the gods had to toil for their daily bread, and in response to urgent
complaints man was created to serve the gods by providing them with food and
drink. On the last point all the Mesopotamian accounts agree: man existed
solely to serve the gods, and this was expressed practically in that all major
deities at least had two meals set up before their statues each day.
Accordingly, man's creation resulted in the god's resting, and the myths reach
a climax at this point. Even in the Enuma Elish this is clear, despite much
conflation. At the beginning of tablet VI Ea and Marduk confer on what is
called "the resting of the gods," and thereupon man is created and
the gods are declared free from toil. This common Mesopotamian tradition thus
provides a close parallel to the sixth and seventh days of creation. Since the
particular concept of the destiny of man goes back to the Sumerians, but is
unparalleled in other parts of the ancient Near East, ultimate borrowing by
the Hebrews seems very probable." (pp.106-107, Wilfred G. Lambert,
"A New Look at the Babylonian Background of Genesis.")
Professor Andreasen
(currently President of Andrews University, Berrien Springs, Michigan, a
Seventh-day Adventist seminary) noted in 1972, that attempts to identify the
pre-biblical origins of Sabbath had reached an impasse :
"The interest
in extra-biblical origins of the Sabbath has now subsided. It is generally
agreed that the seventh-day Sabbath is old, dating back to pre-monarchial, and
undoubtedly to Mosaic times. Beyond this point scholars now proceed with a
great deal of tentativeness. It is recognized that the various hypotheses
regarding Sabbath origins have exhausted the available source material without
providing any final conclusions. The origin and early history of the Sabbath
thus continue to lie in the dark. This does not mean that the quest for the
original Sabbath has been completely in vain, for it has provided
illustrations of special days which demonstrate some similarity of the
biblical seventh-day Sabbath, which may have influenced it, or even helped
formulate it, but this latter process is unknown. It is not surpising,
therefore, that Sabbath studies should shift their attention from the
extra-biblical to the biblical sources, and that is precisely what has
happened." (pp.8-9. Neils-Erik A. Andreasen. "The Old Testament
Sabbath: A Tradition-Historical Investigation." Missoula, Montana.
University of Montana, in the periodical, Society of Biblical
Literature. 1972)
Twenty years later
in 1992, the late Gerhard F. Hasel (another Seventh-day Adventist scholar)
made the following observations:
"The
relationship between the noun shabbat and the Hebrew verb shabat,
to stop, cease, keep (sabbath) in the Qal, "to disappear, be brought to a
stop," in the Nip`al "to put to an end, bring to a stop," in
the Hip`il, remains disputed. Scholars have argued that the noun derives from
the verb or that the verb derives from the noun. While there is no conclusive
answer, it seems certain that the noun shabbat cannot be derived from
the Akkadian term shab/pattu(m). A possible connection of shabbat
with the number "seven," has been left open. In this case the
Akkadian feminine form sibbitim, "seventh," may be considered
as an ancestor of the Hebrew noun shabbat, "sabbath," also a
feminine form, which, if the relationship holds, may have originally meant
"the seventh [day]." On this supposition "the seventh day"
in Genesis 2:2-3 would receive further light." (p. 849. Vol 5. Gerhard F.
Hasel, "Sabbath." David Noel Freedman. Editor. The Anchor
Bible Dictionary. New York. Doubleday.1992)
After reviewing
various scholarly proposals, Hasel concludes, echoing somewhat Andreasen's
earlier observations :
"In spite of
extensive efforts of more than a century of study into extra-Israelite Sabbath
origins, it is still shrouded in mystery. No hypothesis whether astrological,
menological, sociological, etymological, or cultic commands the respect of a
scholarly consensus. Each hypothesis or combination of hypotheses has
insurmountable problems. The quest for the origin of the Sabbath outside of
the Old Testament cannot be pronounced to have been successful. It is,
therefore, not surprising that this quest has been pushed into the background
of studies on the Sabbath in recent years." (ABD 5.851)
Hallo observed that
Lambert saw a relationship between the Hebrew Shabbat and and the
Babylonian Atrahasis story.
Hallo:
"W.G. Lambert
...argues for an original seven-day creation in which the creation of man on
the sixth day and God's rest on the seventh are counterparts to the creation
of man so that the gods might rest from their labor in the Atrahasis epic; see
"A New Look at the Babylonian Background of Genesis." Journal
of Theological Studies vol. 16. 1965. p. 295 f." (p. 329.
Footnote 50. William W. Hallo. "New Moons and Sabbaths." Frederick
E. Greenspahn. Editor. Essential Papers on Israel and the Ancient Near
East. New York. New York University Press. 1991)
As has been noted
by other scholars, the motifs appearing in Genesis 1-9 are paralleled in
Ancient Near Eastern myths in a somewhat different format. The Babylonian
Enuma Elish mentions the creation of the heavens and earth by Marduk, and
after their completion, the making of mankind, similar notions that exist in
the same sequence of events in Genesis (Ge 1:1-27). Marduk made man to till
the earth to provide food for the gods, Adam's job is to take care of the
garden on God's behalf, both are then portrayed as engaged in agricultural
pursuits of some sort.
As noted by
Tsumura, Lambert does NOT share many of his colleagues' notion that the
Babylonian "Creation Epic," the Enuma Elish, shares much with
Genesis 1-11, he sees more compelling parallels in the Epic of Gilgamesh (I
see borrowings from both Gilgamesh and Enuma Elish):
"According to
Lambert, who is extremely careful with regard to the Mesopotamian influence on
the Genesis Creation story and does not admit the Hebrew borrowing from the
Babylonian "Creation" story, "Enuma Elish," too easily,
"the flood remains the clearest case of dependence of Genesis on
Mesopotamian legend. While flood stories as such do not have to be connected,
the episode of the birds in Gen 8:2-12 is so close to the parallel passage in
the XIth tablet of the Babylonian Gilgamesh Epic that no doubt exists."
(p.53. David Toshio Tsumura. "Genesis and Ancient Near Eastern Stories of
Creation and Flood: An Introduction. pp. 27-57. Richard S. Hess & David
Toshio Tsumura. Editors. "I Studied Inscriptions from before the
Flood", Ancient Near Eastern, Literary, and Linguistic Approaches to
Genesis 1-11. Winona Lake, Indiana. Eisenbrauns. 1994. ISBN
0-931464-88-9)
Adam's experiences
in Eden parallel themes in the Mesopotamian myth of Adapa and the South Wind,
who loses a chance at immortality for failing to eat the food which would
confer it on him. Utnapishtim and wife, placed in an earthly garden, at Dilmun,
are immortal, one assumes the fruits in that garden sustains them, just as the
gods must be sustained by food grown on the earth (according to the
Mesopotamian myths).
The Bible notes
that the purposes of the sacrifices and burnt offerings at the Temple in
Jerusalem are for the purpose of feeding God (Ezekiel 44:7, "..when you
offer me my food, the fat and the blood." RSV), quite in agreement with
the Mesopotamian notions that man was created to feed and serve the gods, so
they don't have to work and can enjoy their "rest."
Carpenter was of
the conviction that whatever the true origins of the Sabbath were, they were
not as portrayed in the biblical account. He argued that there was no need to
set aside a 7th day as a day of rest created by a god for mankind's
refreshment, he was sure the real origin lay in the fact that it was
originally a "Taboo Day" which, overtime, was transformed into the
biblical explanation:
"At some early
period, in Babylonia or Assyria, a very stringent taboo on the Sabbath
arose...It is quite likely that this taboo in its beginning was due not to any
need of a weekly rest-day...but to some superstitious fear...It is probable,
however that as time went on and society became more complex, the advantages
of a weekly rest-day...became more obvious and the priests and legislators
deliberately turned the taboo to a social use." (p.194, Edward Carpenter,
The Origins of Pagan and Christian Beliefs [first published as Pagan
and Christian Creeds: Their Origin and Meaning, 1920], London, Senate
[an imprint of Random House UK], 1996, ISBN 1-85958-196X, paperback)
Pinches noted that
in Babylonia, the 7th day was a "Taboo Day," or "Lucky-Unlucky
Day" :
"The nearest
approach to the Sabbath, in the Jewish sense, among the Babylonians, is the u-khulgala
or umu limmu, "the evil day," which, as we know from the
Hemerologies, was the 7th, 14th, 21st, 28th, and 19th day of each month, the
last so called because it was a week of weeks from the the 1st day of the
foregoing month. It is this, therefore, which contains the germ of the idea of
the Jewish Sabbath, but it was not that Sabbath in the true sense of the term,
for if the months had 30 days, the week following the 28th had 9 days instead
of 7, and weeks of 8 and 9 days therefore probably occurred twelve times each
year. The nature of this original Sabbath is shown by the Hemerologies, which
describe how it was to be kept in the following words:
(The Duties of the
7th Day) :
The 7th day is a
fast of Merodach and Zer-panitum, a FORTUNATE DAY, an EVIL DAY. The Shepherd
of the great peoples shall not eat flesh cooked by fire, salted (savory) food,
he shall not change the dress of his body, he shall not put on white, he shall
not make an offering. The king shall not ride in his chariot, he shall not
talk as a ruler; a seer shall not do a thing in a secret place; a physician
shall not lay his hand on a sick man; (the day) is unsuitable for making a
wish. The king shall set his oblation in the night before Merodach and Ishtar,
he shall make an offering, (and) his prayer is acceptable with god.
For the 14th, 21st,
28th and 19th, the names of the deities differ, and on the last-named the
Shepherd of the great peoples is forbidden to eat "anything which the
fire has touched." Otherwise the directions are the same, and though
generally described as a lucky or happy day, it was certainly an evil day for
work, or for doing the things referred to. It is to be noted, however, that
there is no direction that the day was to be observed by the common
people." (p.528, "The Sabbath," Theophilus G. Pinches, The
Old Testament In the Light of the Historical Records and Legend of Assyria and
Babylonia. London, Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1908)
Modern scholarship
is divided about the Sabbath's origins. While noting the above Taboos
concerning the 7th day, the reason for making it "a god's rest-day "
had yet to be explained. I believe my research has identified "the
resting of the gods on the 7th day" after the Flood as being the source
for the later Hebrew re-working of Babylonian myths. Probably the 7th day
taboos, above noted, came to be absorbed into the Sabbath as well. In other
words, both were almagamated and transformed into "a joyful day of
rest" for Man (Perhaps "expanding upon" the Babylonian notion
that the day was not only an evil day, but also a "FORTUNATE DAY" ?
).
I note some
interesting variations with "new twists" on themes contained within
the Babylonian 7th day taboos, as appeared later in Jewish observance of the
Sabbath, which suggest a possible relationship. Jews did not light fires on
the Sabbath, it being considered work (Meals prepared by contact with
"fire" is mentioned as Taboo in Babylon). Jews did not travel great
distances on the Sabbath (the king shall not "ride" in his chariot);
Jewish Sabbath service begins at Sunset (the king shall not place an offering
before the god during the day, but "at night"); Jewish physicians
did not heal on the Sabbath, Christ being accused of healing on the Sabbath (A
physician shall not lay his hand on the sick).
Gilgamesh in
seeking out Utnapishtim, sought not only the secret of immortality, but also
by what means he could enter into "the rest" from toil enjoyed by
the gods and Utnapishtim (I am indebted to Randall Larsen [17 July 2000] for
this observation).
Randall Larsen (of
the University of Hawaii) :
"Another item
of interest, Gilgamesh's visit to Utnapishtim was to learn the secret of how
to enter into his rest [to be exalted to "recline with the
gods"]."
Heidel's
translation of Gilgamesh's observation of Utnapishtim's freedom from toil,
lying about on his back (implying his entering into "the rest" from
toil enjoyed by the gods):
"Gilgamesh
said to him, to Utnapishtim the Distant: "I look upon thee, Utnapishtim,
thine appearance is not different; thou art like me. Yea, thou art not
different; thou art like unto me. My heart pictured thee as one perfect for
the doing of battle; [but] thou liest (idly) on (thy) side, (or) on thy back.
[Tell me], how didst thou enter into the company of the gods and obtain life
(everlasting) ?" (cf. p.80, Alexander Heidel, The Epic of Gilgamesh
and Old Testament Parallels. Chicago, University of Chicago Press,
[1946], 1993, ISBN 0-226-32398-6)
The Mespotamian
myths explained that the Flood which destroyed all mankind had been brought
about because man's "noise or clamor" was disturbing the god's rest
by day and sleep by night, year after year without let-up. These myths also
noted that in the beginning the 7 great Anunna Gods of Heaven had imposed
back-breaking labor making and clearing irrigation ditches, by day and by
night, without rest, on the Igigi gods confined to the earth. These gods are
described as muttering, complaining and constantly creating "a
clamor," which at first is ignored by the Anunna gods. The threatened
rebellion by the Igigi gods is forstalled by making man from the ringleader of
the Igigi, slaughtering him and mixing his flesh and blood with the clay. The
myths at this point stress that with the making of man, not only do the Igigi
gods get to enter into "the rest from toil," enjoyed by the Anunna
gods, but that "their clamor," their noisey complaining about
hardwork is transferred to man. In otherwords, man's "noise" is
because he is overworked and not allowed to have "rest" from his
god-imposed toil (cf. pp.52-62, "The Story of the Flood," [The
Atrahasis version], Benjamin R. Foster, From Distant Days, Myths Tales
and Poetry of Ancient Mesopotamia. Bethesda, Maryland, CDL Press,
1995, ISBN 1-883053-09-9, paperback)
Foster:
"When the gods
were man, they did forced labor, they bore drudgery. Great indeed was the
drudgery of the gods, the forced labor was heavy, the misery too much: The
seven (?) great Anunna-gods were burdening the Igigi gods with forced
labor...[The gods] were digging watercourses, canals they opened, the life of
the land...They heaped all the mountains. [ years] of drudgery, [ ] the vast
marsh. They counted years of drudgery, [ and] forty years too much ! [ ]
forced labor they bore night and day. They were complaining, denouncing,
muttering down in the ditch, "Let us face up to our foreman the
prefect, He must take off this our heavy burden upon us ! (pp.52-3, Foster)
The Anunna gods
acknowledge the burden of the Igigi and their "clamor":
"Ea made ready
to speak, and said to the gods [his brethren], what calumny do we lay to their
charge ? Their forced labor was heavy. [their misery too much] ! Every day [ ]
the outcry [was loud, we could hear the clamor]. There is [ ] [Belet-ti, the
mid-wife], is present. Let her create, then a human, a man, let him bear the
yoke...[let man assume the drud]gery of god...She summoned the Anunna, the
great gods...Mami made ready to speak, and said to the great gods, "You
ordered me the task and I have completed (it) ! You have slaughtered the god,
along with his inspiration. I have done away with your heavy forced labor,
I have imposed your drudgery on man. You
bestowed
(?) clamor
upon
mankind..."
(pp.58-59, Foster)
The Igigi gods in
gratitude fall at her feet, kissing them, she having freed them from toil, and
declare a new name for her "Mistress of All the gods" (Belet-kala-ili).
Now the gods
complain that man's "clamor" disturbs them, resulting in a decision
to send a Flood to destroy man and obtain peace and quiet and their longed-for
"rest."
"Twelve
hundred years had not gone by, the land had grown wide, the peoples had
increased, the land bellowed like a bull. The god was disturbed with their
uproar, Enlil heard their clamor,
he said to the great gods, The clamor
of mankind has become burdensome to me..." (p.62)
"I am
disturbed at their clamor,
at their uproar sleep cannot overcome me..." (p.65)
The gods try
various ways to reduce mankind's clamor by decimating mankind's numbers, and
in the end they resolve upon a Flood to destroy them all. However, one god
stands apart as man's friend, he is Enki. An enraged Enlil accuses Enki of
thwarting the agreed-upon plan of the gods, that man should toil ceasely, he
accuses him of lightening man's burden, allowing him to enjoy the fruits of
his labor, the fruits to be harvested for the god's food, and providing shade
for him as he toils in the hot sun :
"All we great
Anunna-gods resolved together on a rule. Anu and Adad watched over the upper
regions, I watched over the lower earth. You went, you released the yoke, you
made restoration. You let loose produce for the peoples. You put shade in the
glare (?) of the sun." (pp.69-70)
Enlil, not trusting
Enki, tries to get him to swear an oath not to betray the god's plan to
destroy man with a flood. Enki agrees, but slyly lets Atrahasis (Utnapsihtim)
know by addressing "the wall" of the house he lives in, thus not
directly revealing the flood decision to a man, "face to face."
(p.71, Foster)
Dalley on Ea's (Enki's)
speaking to "a reed hut and brick wall" to warn Utnapishtim :
"Ut-napishtim
spoke to him, to Gilgamesh...let me tell you the secret of the gods. Shuruppak
is a city that you yourself know,situated [on the bank of] the Euphrates. The
city was already old when the gods within it decided that the great gods
should make a flood. There was Anu their father, warrior Ellil their
counselor...farsighted Ea swore the oath (of secrecy) with them, so he
repeated their speech to a reed hut, "Reed hut, reed hut, brick wall,
brick wall, listen reed hut and pay attention brick wall: (This is the
message:) Man of Shuruppak, son of Ubara-Tutu, dismantle your house, build a
boat. Leave possessions, search out living things. Reject Chattels and save
lives ! Put aboard the seed of all living things, into the boat." (pp.
109-110. "Gilgamesh Tablet XI." Stephanie Dalley. Myths From
Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh and Others. New York.
Oxford University Press. 1989, 1991. ISBN 0-19-281789-2. paperback)
The notion of God's
advising Noah of a Flood is being drawn evidently from this myth. Enki has
become in the Hebrew re-telling, Elohim (El or Yahweh).
Below, is another
mythical variation of how and why mankind came to be created by Enki. In
this account he is sleeping through the commotion on the earth's surface,
caused by the earth-dwelling gods who labor ceaselessly to provide food for
the heaven-dwelling gods. He is awakened from his sleep in his underwater Abzu
dwelling called the E-engur, by his mother who asks him to end the commotion.
He creates man from clay above the Abzu transfering the burden of agricultural
toil from the earth-dwelling gods to mankind. In the Bible God makes man of
dust and places him in Eden to tend God's garden. Enki's "sleeping"
recalls to mind the Psalmist portraying Yahweh-Elohim "sleeping"
while Israel's enemies destroy her (cf. Ps 44:23; 78:65)
The Enki and Ninmah
Myth:
In those days, in
the days when heaven and earth were created; in those nights, in the nights
when heaven and earth were created; in those years, in the years when the
fates were determined; when the Anunna gods were born; when the goddesses were
taken in marriage; when the goddesses were distributed in heaven and earth;
when the goddesses ...... became pregnant and gave birth; when the gods were
obliged (?) ...... their food ...... for their meals; the senior gods oversaw
the work, while the minor gods were bearing the toil. The gods were digging
the canals and piling up the silt in Harali. The gods, dredging the clay,
began complaining about this life.
At that time, the
one of great wisdom, the creator of all the senior gods, Enki lay on his bed,
not waking up from his sleep, in the deep engur, in the flowing water, the
place the inside of which no other god knows. The gods said, weeping: "He
is the cause of the lamenting!" Namma (Nammu), the primeval mother who
gave birth to the senior gods, took the tears of the gods to the one who lay
sleeping, to the one who did not wake up from his bed, to her son: "Are
you really lying there asleep, and ...... not awake? The gods, your creatures,
are smashing their ....... My son, wake up from your bed! Please apply the
skill deriving from your wisdom and create a substitute (?) for the gods so
that they can be freed from their toil!"
At the word of his
mother Namma, Enki rose up from his bed. In Hal-an-kug, his room for
pondering, he slapped his thigh in annoyance. The wise and intelligent one,
the prudent, ...... of skills, the fashioner of the design of everything
brought to life birth-goddesses (?). Enki reached out his arm over them and
turned his attention to them. And after Enki, the fashioner of designs by
himself, had pondered the matter, he said to his mother Namma: "My
mother, the creature you planned will really come into existence. Impose on
him the work of carrying baskets. You should knead clay from the top of the
Abzu; the birth-goddesses (?) will nip off the clay and you shall bring the
form into existence. Let Ninmah act as your assistant; and let Ninimma, Cu-zi-ana,
Ninmada, Ninbarag, Ninmug, ...... and Ninguna stand by as you give birth. My
mother, after you have decreed his fate, let Ninmah impose on him [mankind]
the work of carrying baskets." ( "Enki and Ninmah." <http://theoldpath.com/senkimah.htm>
cf. also Black, J.A., Cunningham, G., Robson, E., and Zólyomi, G., The
Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature, Oxford. 1998.)
Conservative
scholarship has provided, I suspect, the correct insights as to the reason for
God's portrayal and his Sabbath, the Hebrews wanted to transform the
capricious, fickle gods into a Loving, Caring God, who wanted only the best
for Man, his pinnacle of creation. So Genesis is a polemic against the
Babylonian concepts of the gods and their despising man and destroying him
because he violated their rest with their noise. They made man to serve them
in toil and fear, to obtain their rest from labor. Genesis sees God in a
completely different light, as noted by Wenham:
"Viewed with
respect to its negatives, Gen 1:1-2:3 is a polemic against the mythico-religious
concepts of the ancient Orient...The concept of man here is markedly different
from standard Near Eastern mythology: man was not created as the lackey of the
gods to keep them supplied with food; he was God's representative and ruler on
earth, endowed by his creator with an abundant supply of food and expected to
rest every seventh day from his labors. Finally, the seventh day is not a day
of ill omen as in Mesopotamia, but a day of blessing and sanctity on which
normal work is laid aside.
In contradicting
the usual ideas of its time, Gen 1 is also setting out a positive alternative.
It offers a picture of God, the world, and man...man's true nature. He is the
apex of the created order: the whole narrative moves toward the creation of
man. Everything is made for man's benefit..." (p.37, Vol. 1,
"Explanation," Gordon J. Wenham, Genesis 1-15
[Word Biblical Commentary, 2 vols.], Word Books, Waco, Texas 1987, ISBN
0-8499-0200-2)
In the original
version (the Gilgamesh myth) we are given to understand that in 6 days and
nights a world was destroyed by vengeful gods bent on man's annihilation. I
understand that the Hebrew author deliberately re-interpreted this hatred into
a "reversal" or "inversion" of a loving God who cared
about man, so he took the 6 days of destruction and transformed them into 6
days of creation. The gods who sought man's harm with this dreadful event were
transformed into a loving caring God who created the world for man's benefit.
God was one to be loved by man, not held in "terror, dread and horror
of," by man.
Of interest here,
is that in the Epic of Gilgamesh account the gods succeeded in destroying all
of mankind -except those on Utnapishtim's ark- by the 6th day with the Flood.
It appears to me that the notion that Yahweh's having made Man on the
6th day in the Genesis account (Ge 1: 26-31) is an "inversion" of
the Mesopotamian account, the 6th day being the day the murderous gods,
despising man, destroyed him with their Flood.
The Atrahasis myth
portrayed ONLY _ONE_ GOD, Ea (Aya/Ayya/Enki), as "caring" for man's
welfare, he "suffered" the anger, rage and abuse of the other gods
who wanted man to toil ceasely, they even begrudged man any of the fruits of
his labor (or food he was cultivating for them) and he risked the displeasure
of his fellow gods in warning Utnapishtim of the Flood. I suspect that these
themes, of a _SINGLE_ god who cared about man and who wanted his
workload reduced, inspired the Hebrew author to envision a Single God in place
of the many gods who sought man's demise. This ONE god, Aya/Enki, may also
have wanted to provide man with a rest day, as Enki did realize that the Iggi
god's rebellion was in part because they had no rest from their toil. The
notion of God's (Elohim's) "suffering" because man (Adam)
"turns on him," (by not obeying him) and not appreciating all he has
done for him, "grieveing his heart," is being drawn from Aya/Enki
who "suffers on man's behalf." So, I understand that the ONE GOD Aya/Enki
was transformed into the ONE God Yahweh-Elohim because both are suffering and
caring gods, both of whom wanted to alleviate the toil of mankind, and seeking
his welfare. God provided abundant food for Adam in the Garden of Eden, Aya/Enki
risked the displeasure the gods by letting man enjoy some the fruits of his
toil. God doesn't have Adam toil for food in Eden, as man had to in the
Atrahasis myth (I would characterize this "a new twist"to an old
theme). Aya/Enki in another myth, "Adapa and the South Wind,"
permits man to obtain "forbidden" knowledge and wisdom (Aya/Enki is
the god of Wisdom), but _denies_ him immortality. In the Bible Yahweh-Elohim,
allows Man (Adam) to obtain forbidden knowledge, but _denies_ him immortality.
It is a Lower Mesopotamian Aya/Enki
who lurks behind the biblical presentation of Yahweh-Elohim in the Genesis
account (Moses' ehyeh asher ehyeh, "I AM that I AM..."Tell
them Ehyeh [I AM] has sent you" Hebrew: hayah, Exodus 3:13-14)
Leick on Enki's
assimilation with Ea/Ayya :
"Ea - also 'Ay(y)a;
Akkadian god
The name of this
god is probably Semitic, although no reliable etymology has yet been found.
Ancient Babylonian scribes derived it from Sumerian E.a, 'house of the water'.
In the texts from the Old Sumerian and Sargonic periods Ea/Ayya occurs mainly
in Akkadian personal names. The pronunciation Ea (Ay-a) is attested
since the Ur III period. The original character of this god is impossible to
assess because of his syncretism with the Sumerian god Enki, which probably
occurred as early as the Sargonic period. Ea's functions in the Babylonian
and Assyrian tradition are therefore essentially the same as Enki's. He is
a water god (bel naqbi, 'lord of the Spring') a creator (ban kullat,
'creator of everything') a god of wisdom (bel uzni, 'lord of wisdom'),
the supreme master of magic (mash.mash ilani, 'incantation specialist
of the gods'), the protector of craftsmen and artisans." (p. 37.
"Ea." Gwendolyn Leick. A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern
Mythology. London. Routledge. 1991, 1996, 1998)
We see now, that
Genesis has preserved several "key concepts" albeit, in a
transformed and somewhat re-interpreted manner, from the ancient Mesopotamian
myths about man's creation; the theme of gods needing to rest; the importance
of attaining rest for mankind who now "clamors" and desires "a
rest" from his god-imposed toil, and how a Flood was resorted to, to end
man's "clamor for a rest," because the gods could not themselves
attain their rest by day nor sleep by night.
To recapitulate,
according to the Mesopotamian Atrashasis myth, the Iggi gods' clamor or noise
was because they had no rest from their god-imposed agricultural toil upon the
earth. The Annuna gods' (or Enki's/Aya's/Ayya's/Ea's) "solution" to
end this clamor and threatened rebellion was to make man as the new slave or
servant, taking over the Iggi gods' labor, allowing the Iggig gods an eternal
rest from toil. But the Iggi gods' clamor was also transferred to man, who now
had "no rest" from god-imposed toil. One would have thought that the
Mesopotamian mythographers would have solved the Clamor problem by having a
"new" creature perform the labor, "giving rest to
mankind," but of course, _this was impossible_, because this motif was an
explanation for WHY man had been made by the gods, he was made to
be their slave/servant, harvesting and presenting food for them and giving
them eternal rest from toil upon the earth. After the Flood, as noted in
the Gilgamesh Epic, the gods crowded about the sacrifice made by Utnapishtim
like hungry flies. They had come to realize that they NEEDED man to grow food
and feed them- they realized it was foolish to destroy mankind, for they would
have to return to the earth and grow and harvest their food and "give
up" THEIR ETERNAL REST from toil. The 7th day of the Flood became a day
of foreboding for the Mesopotamians, recalling that on that day ALL the gods
had obtained their rest via man's annhilation. No where in the Mesopotamian
mths do we find a story about the gods providing a day of rest for a toiling
mankind, who clamors for a rest from toil, only that a Flood was resorted to
to end the clamor.
It was probably a
Hebrew Savant, perhaps either Terah or Abraham, who, while dwelling in
"Ur of the Chaldees," observed that these peoples had myths about
a 7th day being a sacred day of rest for ALL the gods, a day that was not to
be violated or the gods would be angered again. Perhaps he created a new
relationship between god and man, and, via an INVERSION, created a GOD who
WOULD give mankind a "temporary" rest from toil, that rest day being
the 7th day, when ALL the gods had rested after man's demise accomplished by
the Flood. The 6 days and nights of the earth's destruction via another
INVERSION became 6 days of creation of the earth for man by a God who LOVED
man, and who sought his well-being.
It is worth noting
here, that the Hebrews accepted without question the Mesopotamian notion that
gods needed a place to dwell in on the earth and daily food presentations.
Yahweh ceased receiving his daily food and drink offerings with the
destruction of the Temple of Solomon under the Romans circa 70 CE (AD) when
Titus, the son of Vespasian, destroyed Jerusalem.
Christianity, still
later, picks up on this ancient theme of man entering into a "God's
rest," (Hebrews 3:11,18; 4:1-11) a type of "Sabbath" if you
will, where the righteous will, after death, no more have to toil, they will
wander the banks of the river of life flowing from under God's throne in
Jerusalem to the Dead Sea, and feed off the trees of life lining the river's
banks, rather like Adam did in the Garden of Eden (cf. Revelation 22:1-2).
They will, according to this myth, at long last, enter into "the
rest" enjoyed by the gods as portrayed in the ancient Mesopotamian myths,
a rest which according to those myths, had originally been "denied to
man." And so, the myth of a "Sabbath and a Rest" for God and
his creation, mankind, has come "full-circle," with the Christian
re-interpretation of the ancient Mesopotamian myths, giving hope to
millions over the ages.
End-Note: The
Garden of Eden story possesses a theme of a serpent telling Eve, she will
acquire knowledge and be like a god, then God intervenes to prevent Adam and
Eve from eating of the fruit of the Tree of Life. These motifs are being drawn
from a combination of other ancient Mesopotamian myths. But that is another
paper, another subject.
Important
correction: Dr. Whiting has informed me that Pinches (1908) was in error,
there is no such word as Sa-bat/Sha-bat in Sumerian. So, the Sebittu (seventh)
may be a punning into Hebrew Shabbat/Sabbath ?
Update 21 Sept.
2004
We are told in the
Bible that Abraham's family ORIGINALLY was of Ur of the Chaldees (Genesis
12:31) which is identified by some scholars with a site, modern Tell Muqqayyar
in Lower Mesopotamia, and I concur with this identification. If
Abraham's family was originally of this location, then we have a possible
connection for the "pre-biblical origin" of the Sabbath.
The Epic of
Gilgamesh and Atrahasis located the Flood as occuring in this region at the
nearby city of Shurrupak, the "Sumerian Noah" being the local king
called alternately Ziusudra, Utnapishtim or Atrahasis. It was the Mesopotamian
god Ea or Ayya (Enki) who warned Ziusudra of the coming Flood, telling him to
save himself and family by building an ark or boat. Was Ea/Ayya/Enki
transformed via another INVERSION into Ehyeh/Yah/Yahweh
?
Perhaps God's
"revelation" to Abraham while at Haran (Genesis 12:31) in northern
Mesopotamia, alludes to Abraham's family's _INVERSION_ of the 6
days and nights in which the Gods destroyed the Earth, seeking the
annihilation of a mankind that they "abhorred," and who's noise
prevented them from resting by day and sleeping by night ? Perhaps this
"new vision" or "revelation" (INVERSION) was
"rejected" by the local inhabitants, which necessitated Terah's or
Abraham's family migrating to a new location, Haran, where a less hostile
community might be open to a new concept of a single God creating the world in
6 days and nights for man, his pinnacle of creation, and resting on the 7th
day, the Sebittu day ? That is to say, perhaps either Abraham's father Terah
or Abraham himself, are the originators of the INVERSION ? To the degree that
they are portrayed as being "Arameans" dwelling at Ur, perhaps this
is the reason they took "liberties" in reformatting the local myths
?
I am somewhat
reminded here of the Prophet Mohammed who founded a new religion, Islam. He
too, like Abraham, had a "new vision" of how to worship God, a
vision, that was rejected by the local populace of Mecca as perhaps happened
at Ur of the Chaldees to Terah and Abraham. He, like Terah and Abraham, moved
to another location, Medina, and found a more tolerant and open audience to
expound his ideas to. Another prophet, Brigham Young, also had a "new
Vision" of how to worship God which was rejected by many and he too
migrated like Terah, Abraham and Mohammed to another less hostile environment.
26 September
2004 Update :
Kramer noted that
the Mesopotamian Flood Epic existed in more than one recension and that
details "differed" between the Sumerian and Babylonian versions. Of
particular note is that the earlier Sumerian account had a Flood lasting 7
days and 7 nights, while the later Babylonian account had the Flood lasting 6
days and 7 nights. It it my understanding that it is the Babylonian account
that lies behind the Biblical account of God making the earth in 6 days,
transforming the 6 days of destruction of the earth by the Gods. Noah's
release of birds to determine the degree of abatement of the Flood waters in
Genesis also appears to be indebted -in my opinion- to the Babylonian account,
as this motif does not appear in the Sumerian version.
Kramer (Emphasis
mine):
"The Sumerian
flood episode is part of a poem devoted primarily to the myth of the
immortalization of Ziusudra, and this myth was artfully used by the Babylonian
poets for their own purposes. Thus, when the weary Gilgamesh comes before
Utnapishtim (the Babylonian Ziusudra) and questions him concerning the secret
of eternal life, the Babylonian poets did not let him answer briefly and to
the point; instead, they took advantage of this opening to insert their
version of the deluge myth. The first (the creation) part of the Sumerian
myth, they omitted altogether as unneccessary to their theme. They retained
only the deluge episode ending with Ziusudra's immortalization. And by making
Utnapishtim (Ziusudra) the narrator, and putting the narration in the first
person instead of the third, they changed the Sumerian form, in which the
narrator was a nameless poet.
In addition we find
variation in details. Ziusudra is described as a pious, humble, god-fearing
king, but Utnapishtim is not thus described. On the other hand, the Babylonian
version is much more lavish with details concerning the building of the boat,
and the nature and violence of the flood. In the Sumerian myth the flood
lasts seven
days and seven nights;
in the Babylonian version it lasts six
days and seven nights.
Finally, the sending of the birds to test the degree of water abatement is
found only in the Babylonian epic."
(p. 191. "The
First Case of Literary Borrowing." Samuel Noah Kramer. History
Begins At Sumer: Twenty-seven "Firsts" in Man's Recorded History.
Garden City, New York. Doubleday Anchor Books. Doubleday & Company,
Incorporated. 1959. paperback edition [1st edition in 1956 by Falcon's Wing
Press])
The Sumerian Flood
version :
"...a flood
will sweep over the cult centers to destroy the seed of mankind...[it] is the
decision, the word of the assembly of the gods, by the word commanded by An
and Enlil...All the windstorms, exceedingly powerful, attacked as one, at the
same time, the flood sweeps over the cult centers. After, for seven days
and seven nights, the flood had swept the land, and the huge boat had been
tossed about by the windstorms on the great waters, Utu [the sun god] came
forth, who sheds light on heaven and earth, Ziusudra opened a window on the
huge boat, the hero, Utu brought his rays into the giant boat. Ziusudra, the
king, prostrated himself before Utu, the king kills an ox, slaughters a
sheep...Ziusudra, the king, prostrated himself before An and Enlil. An and
Enlil cherished Ziusudra, life like a god they gave him; Breath eternal like a
god they bring down for him. Then Ziusudra the king, the preserver of the name
of vegetation and of the seed of mankind, in the land of crossing, the land of
Dilmun, the place where the sun rises, they caused to dwell." (pp.
154-154. "The First Noah." Samuel Noah Kramer. History Begins
At Sumer: Twenty-seven "Firsts" in Man's Recorded History.
Garden City, New York. Doubleday Anchor Books. Doubleday & Company,
Incorporated. 1959. paperback edition [1st edition in 1956 by Falcon's Wing
Press])
The Babylonian
version of the Flood in the Epic of Gilgamesh (Pinches, 1908) :
"Six
days and nights
the wind blew, and the deluge and flood overwhelmed the land. THE SEVENTH
DAY, when it came, the storm ceased, the raging flood, which had contended
like a whirlwind, quieted, the sea shrank back, and the evil wind and deluge
ended. I noticed the sea making a noise, and all man had turned to corruption.
Like palings the marsh reeds appeared I opened my window, and light fell upon
my face, I fell back dazzled, I sat down, I wept, over my face flowed my
tears...The first day and the second day the mountain of Nisir seized the
ship, and would not let it pass...The seventh day, when it came I sent forth a
dove, and it left, the dove went, it turned about, but there was no resting
place, and it returned. I sent forth a swallow, and it left, the swallow went,
it turned about, but there was no resting place, and it returned. I sent forth
a raven, and it left, the raven went, the rushing of the waters it saw, it
ate, it waded, it croaked, it did not return. I sent forth (the aimals) to the
four winds, I poured out a libation... Then Ellilia, when he came, he saw the
ship. And Ellila was wroth, filled with anger on account of the gods and the
spirits of heaven. "What, has a soul escaped ? Let not a man be saved
from the destruction." Ninip opened his mouth and spake, he said to the
warrior Ellila: 'Who but Ae has done the thing and Ae knows every event."
Ae opened his mouth and spake, he said to the warrior Ellila: "Thou sage
of the gods, warrior, verily thou hast not taken counsel, and hast made a
flood. The sinner has committed his sin, the evil doer his misdeed, be
merciful -let him not be cut off- yield, let him not perish. Why hast
thou made a flood ? Let the lion come, and let men diminish. Why hast thou
made a flood ?...Let the hyaena come, and let men diminish. Why hast thou made
a flood ? Let a famine happen, and let the land be destroyed. Why hast thou
made a flood ? Let Ura (pestilence) come, and let the land be devastated. Why
hast thou made a flood ? I did not reveal the decision of the great gods- I
caused Atrahasis to see a dream, and he heard the decision of the gods."
When he had taken counsel (with himself), Ae went up into the midst of the
ship, he took my hand and he led me up, even me he brought up and caused my
woman to kneel (?) at my side; He touched us, and standing between us, he
blessed us (saying): "Formerly Pir-napishtim was a man; now (as for)
Pir-napishtim and his woman. let them be like unto the gods, (even) us, and
let Pir-napishtim dwell afar at the mouths of the rivers." He took me,
and afar at the mouths of the rivers he caused me to dwell." (pp.105-108.
"The Flood." Theophilus G. Pinches. The Old Testament In the
Light of the Historical Records and Legend of Assyria and Babylonia.
London. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.1908)
Heidel (1946) slips
in, in brackets, "six days and [six] nights" for the Flood :
"Six days
and [six] nights the wind blew, the downpour, the tempest, (and) the
flo[od] overwhelmed the land. When the seventh day arrived, the tempest, the
flood, which had fought like an army, subsided in (its) onslaught. The sea
grew quiet, the storm abated, the flood ceased. I opened a window, and light
fell upon my face. I looked upon the sea, (all) was silence, and all mankind
had turned to clay...I bowed, sat down and wept, my tears running down over my
face." (pp. 85-86. "The Gilgamesh Epic." Alexander Heidel. The
Gilgamesh Epic and Old Testament Parallels: A translation and interpretation
of the Gilgamesh Epic and related Babylonian and Assyrian documents.
Chicago. The University of Chicago Press. 1946, 1949, reprint 1993. Paperback.
ISBN 0-226-32398-6)
Dalley suggests (?)
seven nights and six days for the Flood :
"For six days
and [seven (?)] nights the wind blew, flood and tempest overwhelmed the land;
when the seventh day arrived the tempest, flood and onslaught which had
struggled like a woman in labour, blew themselves out (?). The sea became
calm, the imhullu-wind grew quiet, the flood held back. I looked at the
weather; silence reigned, for all mankind had returned to clay." (p. 113.
"Gilgamesh XI." Stephanie Dalley. Myths From Mesopotamia:
Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh and Others. New York. Oxford University
Press. 1989, 1991. ISBN 0-19-281789-2. paperback)
Did Ellila (En-Lil,
the wind god) come to transformed into the Hebrew El-Elohe Israel,
"El the God of Israel" (Ge 33:20) ? Is Eden's association with
four rivers an echo of the "mouths of the rivers" the Euphrates and
Tigris, where lay the paradise called Dilmun ? Is Ae (Ayya or Enki) Ehyeh
(Hebrew Hayah) ? Did Atrahasis and wife become Adam and Eve ? Did the wife's
kneeling at "the side" of Atrahasis, become Eve being "made
from" Adam's side or rib ? The kneeling of the woman becomes womankind's
"kneeling subservience" to mankind or Adam ? Did Atrahasis' libation
at the end of the flood become a drunken Noah ? A strange statement is
made about Noah in the Bible : "Out of the ground which the Lord has
cursed this one shall bring us relief from our work and the toil of our
hands." (Ge 5:29) Might this be an echo of the Mesopotamian notion that
ONLY the Flood survivor attained freedom from toil in Dilmun, an agricultural
toil that had been transferred to man from the Lesser Gods or Iggi by Enki ?
17 October 2004
Update :
Highly reccomended
to the reader is a scholarly article exploring Genesis' Flood and the Epic of
Gilgamesh and Atrahasis accounts by Professor Tikva Frymer-Kensky. She was in
1977 an Assistant Professor of Near Eastern Studies at Wayne State University,
Detroit. The article is titled "The Atrahasis Epic and Its Significance
for Our Understanding of Genesis 1-9."
The Biblical
Archeologist. December 1977. pp. 147-55; available "on-line"
at the following url
She is currently
Professor of Hebrew Bible and the History of Judaism in the Divinity School;
also in the Law School and the Committees on the Ancient Mediterranean World
and Jewish Studies at the University of Chicago.
Frymer-Kensky
proposed that Genesis _rejected_ the Mesopotamian notion that the Flood's
purpose was to limit mankind's population on the earth :
"Unlike
Atrahasis, the flood story in Genesis is emphatically not about
overpopulation. On the contrary, God's first action after the flood was to
command Noah and his sons to "be fruitful and multiply and fill the
earth" (Gen 9:1). This echoes the original command to Adam (1:28) and
seems to be an explicit rejection of the idea that the flood came as a result
of attempts to decrease man's population. The repetition of this
commandment in emphatic terms in Gen 9:7, "and you be fruitful and
multiply, swarm over the earth and multiply in it," makes it probable
that the
Bible consciously rejected the underlying theme of the Atrahasis Epic,
that the fertility of man before the flood was the reason for his near
destruction.
It is not
surprising that Genesis rejects the idea of overpopulation as the reason for
the flood, for the Bible does not share the belief of Atrahasis and some other
ancient texts that overpopulation is a serious issue. Barrenness and
stillbirth (or miscarriage) are not considered social necessities, nor are
they justified as important for population control. On the contrary, when God
promises the land to Israel he promises that "in your land women will
neither miscarry nor be barren" (Exod 23:26). The continuation of this
verse, "I will fill the number of your days," seems to be a
repudiation of yet another of the "natural" methods of population
control, that of premature death. In the ideal world which is to be
established in the land of Israel there will be no need for such methods, for
overpopulation is not a major concern."(Tikva Frymer-Kensky. "The
Atrahasis Epic and Its Significance for Our Understanding of Genesis
1-9." The Biblical Archeologist December 1977, pp. 147-55)
cf. http://home.apu.edu/~geraldwilson/atrahasis.html
She also understood
that God sent the Flood because of mankind's sinfulness, NOT his
overpopulation of the earth :
"Genesis
states explicitly that God decided to destroy the world because of the
wickedness of man (Gen 6:5)." (Tikva Frymer-Kensky. "The Atrahasis
Epic and Its Significance for Our Understanding of Genesis 1-9." The
Biblical Archeologist December 1977, pp. 147-55)
Genesis 6:5-14 RSV
"The Lord saw
that the WICKEDNESS of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination
of the thoughts of his heart was ONLY EVIL continually. And the Lord was sorry
that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the
Lord said, "I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the
ground. man and beast and creeping things and birds of the air, for I am sorry
that I have made them." But Noah found favor in the eyes of the
Lord...Noah was a righteous man...Now the earth was corrupt in God's sight,
and the earth was filled with violence...And God said to Noah, " I have
determined to make an end of all flesh; for the earth is filled with violence
through them, behold I will destroy them with the earth."
I would
"qualify" Frymer-Kensky's above observation about the Atrahasis
Flood being an attempt at "population control." The texts suggest
for me the real complaint was not population size, it was about mankind's
incessant clamor or noise because he was denied any rest from his god imposed
toil, disturbing the gods' ability to rest by day and sleep by night. Had
there been no clamor, there would be no need to limit population size.
I have earlier
noted that the six days and nights in which vengeful gods destroy the earth in
order to annihilate mankind and end his clamor is drawing from the Babylonian
version of the Flood, rather than the earlier Sumerian account which has a
duration of the Flood of 7 days and nights. I have also noted that the
Babylonian version has various birds being released to observe the abatemnet
of the Flood waters which seems to be mirrored in Genesis.
For me, another
"clue" to Genesis' indebtedness or reformatting of the Babylonian
Gilgamesh Flood account is the reason given for the Flood. The Sumerian
account does NOT explain WHY the gods want to destroy mankind (cf. above,
Kramer's translation), but the Babylonian account DOES (cf. above, Pinches'
translation). The reason is man's SINFULNESS or EVIL, which seems to be
mirrored in Genesis. Please note, it is ONLY in the Atrahasis account that we
learn that the gods sent the Flood because of mankind's "constant clamor
or noise" which DIFFERS from the Babylonian Gilgamesh Flood account
noting man SINFULNESS as the reason for the Flood. The Babylonian account also
notes a plea to the god Elilla NOT to ever attempt to destroy all of mankind
again with another Flood, but to reduce mankind's population by other less
drastic means. Genesis has Yahweh informing Noah that never again will he seek
all of mankind's demise with a Flood.
The Babylonian
Flood account in the Epic of Gilgamesh (Pinches, 1908) :
Then Ellilia, when
he came, he saw the ship. And Ellila was wroth, filled with anger on account
of the gods and the spirits of heaven. "What, has a soul escaped ? Let
not a man be saved from the destruction.' Ninip opened his mouth and spake, he
said to the warrior Ellila: 'Who but Ae has done the thing and Ae knows every
event. Ae opened his mouth and spake, he said to the warrior Ellila: 'Thou
sage of the gods, warrior, verily thou hast not taken counsel, and hast made a
flood. The sinner
has committed his
sin,
the evil
doer his
misdeed,
be merciful -let him not be cut off- yield, let him not perish. Why
hast thou made a flood ? Let the lion come, and let men diminish. Why hast
thou made a flood ?...Let the hyaena come, and let men diminish. Why hast thou
made a flood ? Let a famine happen, and let the land be destroyed. Why hast
thou made a flood ? Let Ura (pestilence) come, and let the land be devastated.
Why hast thou made a flood ?"
Yahweh's
"mercifulness" in not seeking the perishment of all mankind again
because of his "evil heart" :
Genesis 8:21-22;
9:11,15 RSV
"...I will
never again curse the ground because of man, for the imagination of man's
heart is evil
from his youth; neither will I ever again destroy every living creature as
I have done."
"I establish
my covenant with you, that never again shall all flesh be cut off by the
waters of a flood, and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the
earth...the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all
flesh."
The Sumerian
account makes no mention of "rivers" in association with the land of
Dilmun, where the Flood survivor and wife are placed, but the Bablyonian
account does. We are told that Dilmun is located "at the mouths of the
rivers." Most scholars understand that "the rivers" are the
Tigris and Euphrates which empty into the marshlands south of present day
Qurnah, where modern Arab traditions locate the
Garden of Eden. Genesis, like the Babylonian account, associates the
Tigris and Euphrates with a paradise garden. Some scholars have noted that
Genesis suggests a great spring (Hebrew: ed) existed in Eden to water
the garden, and that this spring became a river which left the garden and
became four rivers, the Pishon, the Gihon, the Tigris and the Euphrates. The
word for river in Akkadian (Babylonian) is ed. In Mesopotamian myths, Enki
dwells in a subterranean house in the depths of the apsu or abzu,
the freshwater ocean under the earth. He is portrayed as the god whose semen
fills the river beds and canals of Lower Mesopotamia (water being seen as a
fertilizing agent of the earth, creating crops). His main temple is at Eridu
on the edge of the marsh lands and he enjoys punting his boat in the marshes.
The Israeli
professor Cassuto argued that Eden might mean "a place well watered"
from Ugaritic 'dn. I suspect he is correct, and that the marshands near
Qurnah and Eridu "fit" the description "of a place
well-watered."
Cassuto :
"The suggested
explanations of the name that connect it either with the Sumero-Akkadian word edinu
('the steppe-land, wilderness') or with the expression ha`okhelim lema
`adhannim ['those who feasted on dainties'] (Lam. iv 5) are
unacceptable...in Ugaritic we find the stem `dn, with an ordinary `ayin,
whose signification is well-suited to our theme. In the Epic of Baal, for
example, it is stated (Tablet II AB, V, lines 68-69): wn `p `dn mtrh b`l
y`dn `dn [to be rendered according to some authorities: and now also the
moisture of his rain/Baal shall surely make moist': y`dn `dn are
derived from the root `dn] in connection with the watering of the
ground. In this connotation it is possible to find the root adhan also
in Hebrew: and Thou givest them to drink from the river of Thy watering [ `adhanekha;
E.V. Thy delights] (Psa xxxvi 9); and in rabbinic language: `rain water,
saturates, fertilizes and refreshes [me adden] (B. Kethuboth 10
b); 'Just as the showers come down upon the herbs and refresh [me`addenin]
them', etc. (Sifre Deutr 32:2). The etymological meaning of the name Eden
will, accordingly be: a place that is well watered throughout; and thus
we read further on: that it was well watered everywhere like the garden of
the Lord (xiii 10)." (Vol. 1. pp.107-108. Umberto Cassuto. A
Commentary on the Book of Genesis. [2 Vols.]. Jerusalem. The Hebrew
University. The Magnes Press. [1944], 1986.
Terah and Abraham,
according to the Bible dwelt ORIGINALLY at Ur of the Chaldees and this site is
identified by some scholars with Tell Muqhayir, and I concur. If one
troubles to take the time to look at a map, Ur is located between Eridu which
is Enki's principal residence and Shuruppak where the Flood warning is given
to Utnapishtim by Enki. Please
click here for a map showing the proximity of Ur to Shuruppak (to Ur's
north), Eridu (to Ur's south) and the marshlands or wetlands, "a place
well-watered," and Qurnah.
When the Assyrians
conquered this area in the 8 century BCE they noted the presence of Arameans
dwelling in the region. Perhaps this accounts for the notion of Terah and
Abraham being Arameans and dwelling at Ur of the Chaldees ?
Dion noted that the
beginning of the Iron Age witnesses Arameans
on the move, invading new lands.
"Aramaean
Expansion-
For the Aramaeans,
the beginning of the Iron Age was a time of forceful expansion, and
Tiglath-pileser did not succeed in curbing their progress. For more than a
hundred years, the shadowy figures that succeeded him were unable to cope with
this situation, and the same was true of Babylonia after Nebuchadnezzar I. In
Babylonia the Aramaeans were to remain a major ethnic ingredient, alongside
the related Chaldeans and the longstanding Akkadian population; 8th century
Assyrian sources list 36 of their tribes. Like unsubmissive elements of all
times, in resisting imperial authorities they are branded as bandits. In a
text in which Sargon II boasts of having successfully hacked his way through
to Babylon, he names Aramaeans in one breath with lions and wolves as sources
of insecurity." (Vol. 2. p. 1282. Paul E. Dion. "Aramaean Tribes and
Nations of First-Millennium Western Asia." Jack M. Sasson. Editor. Civilizations
of the Ancient Near East. Peabody, Mass. Hendrickson. 1995)
Update 08
November 2004 :
Lambert suggested
that knowledge of the Mesopotamian creation and flood myths came to Canaan no
earlier or later than the Egyptian Amarna era, the late 18th Dynasty, the
period of Amenhotep IV and his succesors, who changed his name to Akhenaten
upon declaring only ONE GOD was to be worshipped, the Aten/Aton or Sun disk (Akhenaten
reigned ca. 1350-1334 BCE) :
"The
differences are indeed so great that direct borrowing of a literary form of
Mesopotamian traditions is out of the question. But if the case for borrowing
is to be established, at least a suggestion of the manner and time of
transference must be made. The Exile and the later part of the Monarchy are
out of the question, since this was the time when the Hebrew traditions of
creation and the early history of mankind were being put in the form in which
they were canonized...one is forced back at least to the time of the Judges,
and even this may be too late...The present writer's opinion is that only the
Amarna period has any real claim to be the period when this material moved
westwards. This is the period when the Babylonian language and cuneiform
script were the normal means of international communication between countries
from Egypt to the Persian Gulf. From within this period the Hittite capital in
Asia Minor has yielded a large quantity of fragments of Mesopotamian
literature, both Sumerian and Babylonian, including the Gilgamesh Epic. A
smaller quanity of similar material has been yielded by Ras Shamra [ancient
Ugarit], including a piece of the Atra-hasis Epic. Megiddo has
given up a piece of the Gilgamesh Epic, and Amarna itself
several pieces of Babylonian literary texts. This spread of Babylonian
writings at this period of history is not only the result of the use of
cuneiform writing for international communication, but also is owed to the
cultural activities of the Hurrians, for they were great borrowers from all
the peoples in which they moved and settled, so much so that they were rapidly
absorbed and lost their identity. Thus in the Amarna age the Hittites not only
had Babylonian and Sumerian literature in addition to native texts, but also
works translated from West Semitic. Cultural barriers were indeed broken down
in Syria and adjacent lands at this time. Nor was knowledge of borrowed
Mesopotamian works restricted too the small number of scribes competent in
cuneiform. Among the Hittites the Gilgamesh Epic was available
in both Hittite and Hurrian translations. Also that version of Nergal
and Erishkigal from Amarna is so completely different from the
traditional Mesopotamian one in its wording as to give the impression that
oral tradition alone will explain it.
Earlier borrowing
of the material is ruled out, in the present writer's opinion, because Genesis
shows no knowledge of Mesopotamian matters prior to 1500 BC, a point of
considerable importance. The description of Nimrod's kingdom and the account
of the Tower of Babel both presume a period when legends were clustering
around the city of Babylon. Up to the sudden and unexpected rise of Babylon
under Hammurabi (ca. 1750 BC) it was an utterly unimportant and obscure place.
One must surely allow a century or two before it could become the centre of
legends about early times, as indeed it did in Mesopotamia by about 1200 BC.
Negatively the case is equally strong: Genesis shows no knowledge of
Mesopotamian matters prior to 1500. The very existence of the Sumerians is
nowhere hinted at. While borrowing may have been altogether more involved and
complex than we have suggested, all the known facts favour the idea that the
traditions moved westwards during the Amarna period and reached the Hebrews in
oral form." (pp. 108-109. W. G. Lambert. "A New Look at the
Babylonian Background of Genesis." pp. 96-113. Richard S. Hess and David
Toshio Tsumra. Editors. "I Studied Inscriptions from before the
Flood," Ancient Near Eastern, Literary, and Linguistic Approaches to
Genesis 1-11. Winona Lake, Indiana. Eisenbrauns. 1994.
ISBN 0-931464-88-9)
Professor Millard
on the issue of the Hebrews borrowing Mesopotamian concepts and motifs and
reformatting them (Emphasis mine) :
"There can be
no doubt that the concept of a history of man from his creation to the Flood
is similar both in Babylonian and in Hebrew. Any future consideration of
possible origins of the Hebrew story must take this into account, and not
treat Creation and Flood separately. Thus it is no longer legitimate to
describe the Hebrew Flood story as "borowed" from a Babylonian
"original" without including its complementary Creation
account." (p. 125. A. R. Millard. "Observations on the Babylonian
and Hebrew Accounts Compared." in his article "A New Babylonian
"Genesis" Story."pp. 114-128. Richard S. Hess and David Toshio
Tsumra. Editors. "I Studied Inscriptions from before the
Flood," Ancient Near Eastern, Literary, and Linguistic Approaches to
Genesis 1-11. Winona Lake, Indiana. Eisenbrauns. 1994.
ISBN 0-931464-88-9)
Tsumura noted :
"In light of
the literary structure of "Creation-Rebellion-Flood" in the "Atrahasis
Epic," some scholars have suggested that the primeval history in Genesis
stretches from the creation story through the end of the Flood story, namely
Genesis 1-9, rather than Genesis 1-11." (pp. 48-49. David Toshio Tsumura.
"Genesis and Ancient Near Eastern Stories of Creation and Flood: An
Introduction. pp. 27-57. Richard S. Hess & David Toshio Tsumura. Editors. "I
Studied Inscriptions from before the Flood", Ancient Near Eastern,
Literary, and Linguistic Approaches to Genesis 1-11. Winona Lake,
Indiana. Eisenbrauns. 1994. ISBN 0-931464-88-9)
I find the above to
be a very important observations, Genesis 1-9 should be seen, _in my opinion_,
as a re-working of earlier Mesopotamian Creation-Flood accounts regarding the
relationship between god/s and mankind. The Gilgamesh Epic Flood account
portrays man's sin as why the Flood occurred, which as I noted earlier (above)
is mirrored in Genesis' notion of mankind's "evil heart."
The need for man to
have a rest day in the Pentateuch echos the clamor of mankind for a rest
from their god-imposed toil in the Atrahasis myth, which the gods denied him (Atrahasis
is a Creation-Flood myth, explaining why the gods made man and why they later
sought his destruction with a Flood). Other articles on my website trace
various motifs and concepts found in Genesis 1-11 such as the Garden of Eden,
and eating of a tree to acquire knowledge, man's nakedness in Eden with
Enkidu's nakedness in Edinu "the steppe" as being nothing more than
later reworked and transformed Mesopotamian myths.
As is to be
expected, the defenders of Holy Writ, believing the Bible to God's Holy Word,
either DENY or DOWNPLAY any "borrowing and reformatting" of
Mesopotamian concepts by the Hebrews. The most common stratagem they employ is
to note that numerous details differ between Genesis 1-11 and the Mesopotamian
myths. In addition the morals drawn about the relationship between god/s and
man differ as well. Ergo, for Bible-believing Conservative scholars any
parallels between the two cultures are dismissed as nonsense, God REALLY DID
reveal to Moses what to write about how Man came to be created by God and
later destroyed in a Flood. Millard's "Christian Conservatism" is
apparent in his preference for Genesis' Creation-Flood theme being
"earlier than" the Mesopotamian account
Millard challenges
Lambert's above proposal as to when Mesopotamian Creation/Flood myths came to
be known in the West, at Syrian Alakah and Byblos (Emphasis mine):
"Did the
Hebrews borrow from Babylon ? Neither an affirmative nor a negative reply to
the question can be absolutely discounted in the light of present knowledge.
Reconstructions of a process whereby Babylonian myths were borrowed by the
Hebrews, having been transmitted by the Canaanites, and "purged" of
pagan elements remain imaginary. It has yet to be shown that any Canaanite
material was absorbed into Hebrew sacred literature on such a scale or in such
a way. Babylonian literature itself was known in Palestine at the time of the
Israelite conquest and so could have been incorporated directly. The argument
that borrowing must have taken place during the latter part of the second
millennium BC because so many Babylonian texts of that age have been found in
Anatolia, Egypt, and the Levant, cannot carry much weight, being based on
archaeological accident. The sites yielding the texts were either deserted or
destroyed at that time, resulting in the burial of "librarie" and
archives intact. Evidence does exist of not inconsiderable Babylonian scribal
influence earlier (e.g., at Alakah and Byblos).
However, it has
yet to be shown that there was borrowing, even indirectly. Differences
between the Babylonian and Hebrew traditions can be found in factual details
of the Flood narrative...and are most obvious in the ethical and religious
concepts of each composition. All who suspect or suggest borrowing by the
Hebrews are compelled to admit large-scale revisionism, alteration, and re-interpretaion
in a fashion which cannot be substaniated for any other composition from the
Ancient Near East...If there was borrowing then it can have extended only so
far as the "historical" framework, and not included intention or
interpretation...The two accounts [Hebrew and Mesopotamian] undoubtedly
describe the same Flood, the two schemes relate the same sequence of events. If
judgement is to be passed as to the priority of one tradition over the other,
Genesis inevitably wins for its probability in terms of meterology,
geophysics and timing alone...In that the patriarch Abraham lived in
Babylonia, it could be said that the stories were borrowed from there, but not
that they were borrowed from any text now known to us." (pp.127-128.
Millard)
09 Dec 2004
Update:
The on-line
Wikiepedia notes on the Shabbat/Sabbath that the word connotates CEASING
rather than "resting" (Emphasis mine) :
"The Hebrew
word Shabbat comes from the Hebrew verb shabat, which literally means "TO
CEASE", in the sense of ceasing from doing something. Although Shabbat or
its anglicized version "Sabbath" is almost universally translated as
"rest" or a "period of rest", a more literal translation
would be "CEASING", with the implication of "CEASING from
work". Thus, Shabbat is the day of CEASING from work; while resting is
implied, it is not a necessary connotation of the word itself.
Incidentally, this
clarifies the often-asked theological question of why God needed to
"rest" on the seventh day of creation, as related in the Genesis
account. When it is understood that God "CEASED" from his labour
rather than "rested" from his labour, the usage is more consistent
with the Biblical view of an omnipotent God who does not need
"rest". Notwithstanding this clarification, this article will follow
the far more common translation of Shabbat as "rest".
Shabbat is the
basis of the English words "sabbath" and "sabbatical". (A
common linguistic confusion leads many to believe that the word means
"seventh day". Though the root for seven, or sheva' , is similar in
sound, it is spelled differently."
Please note the
concept of CEASING in Epic of Gilgamesh's Flood account (Emphasi mine) :
"Six days and
[six] nights the wind blew, the downpour, the tempest, (and) the flo[od]
overwhelmed the land. When the seventh day arrived, the tempest, the flood,
which had fought like an army, subsided in (its) onslaught. The sea grew
quiet, the storm abated, the flood CEASED. I opened a window, and light
fell upon my face. I looked upon the sea, (all) was silence, and all mankind
had turned to clay...I bowed, sat down and wept, my tears running down over my
face." (pp. 85-86. "The Gilgamesh Epic." Alexander Heidel. The
Gilgamesh Epic and Old Testament Parallels: A translation and interpretation
of the Gilgamesh Epic and related Babylonian and Assyrian documents.
Chicago. The University of Chicago Press. 1946, 1949, reprint 1993. Paperback.
ISBN 0-226-32398-6)
"Six
days
and
nights the
wind blew, and the deluge and flood overwhelmed the land. The SEVENTH DAY,
when it came, the storm CEASED, the raging flood, which had contended
like a whirlwind, quieted, the sea shrank back, and the evil wind and deluge
ended." (pp.105-108. "The Flood." Theophilus G. Pinches. The
Old Testament In the Light of the Historical Records and Legend of Assyria and
Babylonia. London. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.1908)
20 Dec. 2004
Update :
The Sumerian Flood
account has the rain-storm lasting 7 days and nights, the later Babylonian
account has the rains ending on the 7th day as well. I wonder if perhaps these
"motifs" have been preserved in the Genesis account as an
"INVERSION" ? God is portrayed as announcing that in 7 days
time the rains will begin and continue for 40 days. In other words, following
a period of 7 days of NO RAIN, the Flood will begin. I would argue, then, that
the 7 days of rain in the Sumerian and Babylonian accounts were INVERTED into
7 days of NO rain in the later Hebrew account; that is to say, the rains
_ending_ on the 7th day have been transformed into rains _beginning_ on the
7th day.
Genesis 7:4 RSV
"For in SEVEN
DAYS I will send rain upon the earth forty days and forty nights..."
12 Jan 2005
Update :
Of interest here,
is that in the Bible, we are told that the Flood commenced in the 600 th year
of Noah, I note that the Atrahasis myth suggests that the Flood occured at the
end of a 600 year interval too. It appears _to me_ that the Hebrews have
preserved Atrahasis' 600 year interval of time elapsing before a Flood
commences and reformatted this motif as occurring in Noah's 600th year.
I wonder if the
Flood's commencement in the 600th year of Noah's life is a reformatiing of the
"catchline" or "repeating refrain" of the Atrahasis Epic
that implies for 600 years the gods have endured man's noise and now seek his
demise ? In the epic, every 600 years (at last 3 or 4 times) Atrahasis
receives advisement about the god's efforts to decimate mankind.
Genesis 7:11-12 RSV
"In the six
hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of
the month, on that day all the fountains of the great deep burst forth, and
the windows of the heavens were opened. And rain fell upon the earth forty
days and forty nights."
Dalley:
"600 years,
less than 600, passed and the country became too wide, the people too
numerous. The country was as noisy as a bellowing bull. The god grew restless
at their clamor, Ellil had to listen to their noise. He addressed the great
gods, "The noise of mankind has become too much. I am losing sleep over
their racket." (p. 18. "Atrahasis." pp.1-38. Stephanie Dalley.
Myths From
Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh and Others. New York.
Oxford University Press. 1989, 1991. ISBN 0-19-281789-2. paperback)
Disease decimates
the populaton (p.18. Dalley)
(Catchline)
"600 years,
less 600 passed (p. 20. Dalley)
"Tablet II :
600 years, less
than 600, passed and the country became too wide, the people too numerous. The
country was as noisy as a bellowing bull. The god grew restless at their
clamor, Ellil had to listen to their noise. He addressed the great gods,
"The noise of mankind has become too much. I am losing sleep over their
racket." (p.20. Dalley)
3 year famine
attempted (pp.20-22. Dalley)
"[600 years,
less than 600, passed and the country became too wide, the people too
numerous...He grew restless at their noise. Sleep could not overtake him
because of their racket." (p.23. Dalley)
"Six hundred
years is a round number in the sexagesimal system used by the ancient
Mesopotamians. as a numerical unit, 600 was the simple noun neru in
Akkadian. Repetition of a number seems to occur as a literary device..(Note
22. p. 37. "Atrahasis Notes." Dalley)
"Note the
literary strategem which defies literal chronology by featuring Atrahasis as
the same mortal in recurrent crises 600 years apart." (note 32. p. 38.
"Atrahasis Notes." Stephanie Dalley. Myths From Mesopotamia:
Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh and Others. New York. Oxford University
Press. 1989, 1991. ISBN 0-19-281789-2. paperback)
Biography on Dalley
:
"Stephanie
Dalley has worked on various excavations in the Middle East and has published
cuneiform tablets found there by the British Archaeological Expedition to Iraq
as well as a book for the general reader about those discoveries. Mari
and Karan (1984). She taught Akkadian at the Universities of Edinburgh
and Oxford and is now Shillito Fellow in Assyriology at the Oriental
Institute, Oxford, and a Senior Research Fellow of Somerville College. She is
editor and main author of The Legacy of Mesopotamia (Oxford
University Press). (cf. inner flyleaf of Myths from Mesopotamia)
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