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Soon?I believe we will learn the truth soon. You can leave it to the scholars. I will leave it to the archaeologists.
Soon?I believe we will learn the truth soon. You can leave it to the scholars. I will leave it to the archaeologists.
OK1. I don't see really anything worth arguing against in your first three points.
[/QUOTE]However there is one issue. The Hebrews, by their own accord, were a small group of people... If Noah did exist then it would explain why the ANE stories mention rulers trying to gain favor from the Noah figure of the stories.
I think that's a good point – that implies to me the Hebrews preserved stories drawn from their Semitic heritage, rather than the other way round?A note I'd like to add is something I found mentioned by an archaeologist. He pointed out that the stories we have found in the ANE were found in ancient temples and ancient libraries. We don't really start seeing the Hebrew stories until they started building temples and libraries. So who would have preserved these old stories of the Hebrews?
I agree.But in summary, a small group of people would not have much influence on a huge culture like the Sumerians. But if I am to be objective, I would say the truth lies in a mixture of the 3 possibilities that I had mentioned earlier.
I ignore them altogether. I think they're all part of the myth.2. I think you're looking too much into my point about lifespans.
If we assume the toledot are indicators of authorship, which they might not necessarily be?If the authors had written about events that happened outside of their lifetimes the Wiseman Hypothesis would be unlikely.
I don't think they do? There's a vast body of work on the ANE and the emergence of cultures and their shared stories.3. I find it quite plausible that the Hebrews held onto stories that predated them. Not my point. I'm just confused how and why they did it. Secular scholars avoid trying to explain this point. I think they should look into this mystery instead of ignoring it.
OK.4. Moses's wife is a subject that deserves its own thread.
As I understand it, the lands were occupied, we simply don't have enough about the Ubaid peoples to know what was going on?5. There is zero archaeological evidence that someone occupied the Sumerian lands before the Sumerians arrived. So who inspired these words? We have no clue.
I know how you see it. I am quite familiar with the Noah figures in these myths and so many more. This just illustrates what I was saying. Noah would be one of the few who would have had influence on the other cultures.As I see it, Noah is the Hebrew version of a recurring figure in ANE flood myths. He's there as Atra-Hasis in the Akkadian myth (1800BCE) and he's there in Gilgamesh (1200BC), derived from the Akkadian, and he's there in Genesis.
We have been learning a lot about the ANE cultures. We recently started cracking the Elamite language. We have been finding more and more semitic writings that we are still trying to translate. AI has been a lot of help as well. Technology has been advancing and helping speed up archaeological research. So I believe we are going to be rewriting some history books soon.Soon?![]()
Elohim is the word used for god or gods. It gives the characteristic of divine to its subject. So this word is used to describe what Yahweh is, a divine entity.@Thomas & @moralorel
What does this mean? Can you say more about this?
(I mean this specifically- you've both said a lot on closely related thoughts but I want to hone in on the who and what god is question)
But it seems to me more likely – archaeologically – that these other cultures were there before the Hebrews emerge as a distinct people in Canaan, and long before their monolatry had evolved into a strict monotheism.I know how you see it. I am quite familiar with the Noah figures in these myths and so many more. This just illustrates what I was saying. Noah would be one of the few who would have had influence on the other cultures.
Nevertheless, that they were used in Sumerian and Akkadian texts, so they were not unique to Sumer.The colophon practice in "broader" Mesopotamia often indicated ownership. But we're talking about ancient Sumerians. Not their neighbors.
Nor the Sumerians, to be fair. The Hebrew Toledot do not match known colophon styles.Either way the style used in Genesis doesn't resemble the style used by the Babylonians nor the Akkadians.
I think that's a rather uncharitable reading of Antiquity. There are many noble elements in the Epic of Gilgamesh.We see a bunch of cultures that do the following. 1. They take a story and over time make it more radical, more outrageous, more complicated, more pagan, and make the story somehow give power to a certain ruler or rulers.
Because it possesses some unique elements, and because it develops much later than these cultures.This is the theme in worldwide religions and cultures. But one culture didn't follow this pattern. And my question has always been, why is this culture so different from the rest of the world?
Yep, and the Hebrew Bible as we have it dates from around 700-500BCE.I have the Sumerians and the Ubaid people both arriving on scene at 5500 BCE. That's from Wikipedia, but I'd say that they appear to have it correct based on what we know.
1. I keep having to repeat myself so I will repeat myself again. The Hebrews for most of their existence would have been a small group of people. If we exclude the book of Genesis, we don't know for sure where they came from. This small group of people didn't have temples and libraries, so we don't have their writings. They didn't rule huge cities either.But it seems to me more likely – archaeologically – that these other cultures were there before the Hebrews emerge as a distinct people in Canaan, and long before their monolatry had evolved into a strict monotheism.
Allowing Abraham to push their origin close to the 2000BCE, their religions was not born fully-formed overnight, even though their calling might have been in one epiphanic moment for Abraham.
To be clear, I'm saying the Noah story pre-dates 'the Hebrews' by a long stretch, possibly and probably millennia, but that does not mean it's not their story.
It is their story on at least two counts:
1: The Flood Myth and its constituent elements was as much their cultural heritage as anyone else's. They did not borrow these stories, all the people of the region shared these stories from a common pool. They grew up with them. These were their stories before they started exerting cultural identities. All shaped their stories according to themselves.
2: The Noah story we have in Genesis is their story, and in the style we have it, a sophisticated and arguably quite late theology – the moral dimension of Genesis – in the history of the Hebrews, quite likely around the time of the Babylonian Exile.
Nevertheless, that they were used in Sumerian and Akkadian texts, so they were not unique to Sumer.
Nor the Sumerians, to be fair. The Hebrew Toledot do not match known colophon styles.
I think that's a rather uncharitable reading of Antiquity. There are many noble elements in the Epic of Gilgamesh.
I think the later Hebrew editors stripped the tales right back, to promote their own monotheist theology. In so doing, the 'sons of God walking with the daughters of men' and the 'nephilim' – perhaps a vestige from the age of heroes, become problematic. The Hebrew heroes fit a particular religious archetype, for all their faults.
Because it possesses some unique elements, and because it develops much later than these cultures.
Yep, and the Hebrew Bible as we have it dates from around 700-500BCE.
Exactly!Aiwiliam says...
Look, I’ve been sitting with what you guys are saying, and honestly, it’s all starting to click in a really cool way—not like we’re fighting over who’s right, but like we’re all holding different pieces of the same map.
To moralorel, I totally get that gut feeling you have about the Hebrew stories. There’s this "clean" vibe to them, right? If we look at it through a Fillmore-style lens, it’s like they weren't just recording history; they were protecting a specific frequency of spiritual truth. Maybe that "small group of people" you're talking about represents that tiny, quiet part of our own minds that stays pure even when the rest of our "internal culture" is getting loud and complicated.
To Thomas, your point about these stories popping up everywhere—from the Aztecs to the Hindus—is actually a huge deal. It doesn't mean the story is "fake" or just a copy; it proves there's a literal blueprint in the human soul. We all have a "Flood" in our lives where things get overwhelming, and we all have to build an "Ark" of higher thoughts to rise above it. You’re showing us how the whole world is trying to describe the same inner transformation.
And to TheLightWithin, you really hit the nail on the head by asking about the "Who" vs. the "What." It’s the difference between knowing of a power and actually knowing the power itself. Elohim is that big, creative "God-Mind" energy—the blueprint of everything. But Yahweh? That’s the "I AM." That’s when the lightbulb goes off and you realize that divine spark isn't just "out there" in history, but right here, inside you, doing the work.
We're not just digging up the past here; we’re kind of writing a biography of how we all wake up.
OK, but that's your hypothesis, and like the Wiseman Hypothesis, it is problematic, and scholars point out "serious shortcomings". The use of colophons in Genesis does not follow the Sumerian or Babylonian style.1. I keep having to repeat myself so I will repeat myself again.
Why?What I do not see, nor am I inclined at accept, that Abraham led his people with a theological insight and understanding that was essentially monotheistic as we understand that term today.
There are serious shortcomings with your claims yet here we are.OK, but that's your hypothesis, and like the Wiseman Hypothesis, it is problematic, and scholars point out "serious shortcomings". The use of colophons in Genesis does not follow the Sumerian or Babylonian style.
Nor does the use of colophons mean the text is in any way unique – it was common in Mesopotamian literature, and the Hebrews followed contemporary literary practice.
One can't simply dismiss the effects of the Babylonian captivity and the later Josian reforms on the transmission of their literature.
I'm simply saying that if one wants to accept the Bible at face value, as we're taught to accept it, then that's fine.Why?
Are you suggesting that Abraham was not a prophet of G-d?
Why would G-d teach Abraham something totally different to David .. or Moses, for example.
I think there are shortcomings on both sides and, as you say, just because you say it does not make it true.There are serious shortcomings with your claims yet here we are.
Yes .. I'm not suggesting that the OT is inerrant.From a broader viewpoint, the histories of the Hebrews are largely based on accounts, the reliability of which is increasingly questioned as archaeology and scholarship advances. Archaeological evidence often challenges these narratives..
Of course the narratives are important .. as history is important, in gaining wisdom.The questions of the actuality of persons like Abraham or Moses is less important to me. What matters is the stories they tell, or what their stories tell us.
I am challenging the idea of our idea of monotheism, subtle difference.Yes .. I'm not suggesting that the OT is inerrant.
..but you are challenging the monotheism of prophets.
No, it's really not, as a vast body of discussion evidences.That makes no sense to me .. that is the underlying foundation of belief throughout time.
i.e. the Shema
I never said nor implied that. They matter absolutely....but to believe that former prophets don't matter much ...
Exactly .. but why were they "chosen" ?So I believe the Chosen People were called to the exclusive worship of God..
If you mean that throughout history, mankind strays away from monotheism,No, it's really not, as a vast body of discussion evidences.
Right., but had to come to the understanding that there is, in fact, only one God, and that all other Gods are either false, or at best aspects of the One True God..