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- The Old Testament is a compilation, and like every compilation it has a
- wide variety of contributors who, in turn, have their individual
- influence upon the final work. It is no surprise, then, that there exist
- certain parallels between the Enuma Elish, the cosmogony of the
- Babylonians, and the Book of Genesis, the first part of the Pentateuch
- section of the Bible. In fact, arguments may be made that other Near
- Eastern texts, particularly Sumerian, have had their influences in
- Biblical texts. The extent of this 'borrowing', as it were, is not
- limited to the Bible; the Enuma Elish has its own roots in Sumerian
- mythology, predating the Enuma Elish by nearly a thousand years. A
- superficial examination of this evidence would erroneously lead one to
- believe that the Bible is somewhat a collection of older mythology
- re-written specifically for the Semites. In fact, what develops is that
- the writers have addressed each myth as a separate issue, and what the
- writers say is that their God surpasses every other. Each myth or text
- that has a counterpart in the Bible only serves to further an important
- idea among the Hebrews: there is but one God, and He is omnipotent,
- omniscient, and other-worldly; He is not of this world, but outside it,
- apart from it. The idea of a monotheistic religion is first evinced in
- recorded history with Judaism, and it is vital to see that instead of
- being an example of plagiarism, the Book of Genesis is a meticulously
- composed document that will set apart the Hebrew God from the others
- before, and after.
-
-
- To get a clear picture of the way the Book of Genesis may have been
- formed (because we can only guess with some degree of certainty), we must
- place in somewhere in time, and then define the cultures in that time.
- The influences, possible and probable, must be illustrated, and then we
- may draw our conclusions.
-
- If we trace back to the first appearance of the Bible in written form, in
- its earliest translation, we arrive at 444 B.C.. Two texts, components of
- the Pentateuch referred to as 'J' and 'E' texts, can be traced to around
- 650 B.C. Note that 'J' refers to Yahweh (YHVH) texts, characterized by
- the use of the word 'Yahweh' or 'Lord' in accounts; 'E' refers to Elohist
- texts, which use, naturally, 'Elohim' in its references to God.1 But 650
- B.C. isn't our oldest reference to the 'J' and 'E' texts; they can be
- traced, along with the other three strands of the Pentateuch, to at least
- 1000 B.C. Our first compilation of these strands existed in 650 B.C.. We
- must therefore begin our search further back in time.
-
- We can begin with the father of the Hebrew people, Abraham. We can deduce
- when he lived, and find that he lived around 1900 B.C. in ancient
- Mesopotamia2. If we examine his world and its culture, we may find the
- reasons behind certain references in Genesis, and the mythologies they
- resemble.
-
- The First Babylonian Dynasty had begun around 1950 B.C. and would last
- well into the late 16th century B.C.. The Babylonians had just conquered
- a land previously under the control of the Assyrians, and before that,
- the Summering. Abraham had lived during a time of great prosperity and a
- remarkably advanced culture. He was initially believed to have come from
- the city of Ur, as given in the Bible as "...the Ur of Chaldees". Earlier
- translations read, however, simply "...Land of the Chaldees"; later, it
- was deduced that Abraham had come from a city called Haran3. In any case,
- he lived in a thriving and prosperous world. Homes were comfortable, even
- luxurious. Copies of hymns were found next to mathematical tablets
- detailing formulae for extracting square and cube roots.4 The level of
- sophistication 4000 years ago is remarkable. We can also deduce that it
- was a relatively stable and peaceful society; its art is characterized by
- the absence of any warlike activity, paintings or sculptures.5
-
- We also have evidence of an Israelite tribe, the Benjamites, in
- Babylonian texts. The Benjamites were nomads on the frontier of its
- boundaries, and certainly came in contact with Babylonian ideas- culture,
- religion, ethics. The early tribes of Israel were nomadic, "taking with
- them the early traditions, and in varying latitudes have modified it"6
- according to external influences. The message remained constant, but the
- context would subtly change. In addition to the Benjamites in
- Mesopotamia, there were tribes of Israel in Egypt during the Egyptian
- Middle Kingdom period7, which certainly exposed these people to Egyptian
- culture as well as Babylonian culture as a result of trade between the
- two kingdoms. Having placed Abraham and certain early Semites in this
- time, we can now examine the culture they would have known.
-
- The Babylonian Dynasty had as one of its first leaders a man known as
- Hammurabi. In addition to being the world's first known lawgiver, he
- installed a national god for his people named Marduk 8. Marduk's story is
- related in the Enuma Elish:
-
- It begins with two primordial creatures, Apsu and Tiamat. They have
- children, who are gods. These children became too noisy and disruptive to
- Apsu, who wished to kill them. One of these gods, Ea, kills Apsu first.
- Tiamat becomes enraged, and increasingly threatening towards Ea and the
- remaining gods for killing her mate. One by one, the gods seek to quiet
- Tiamat, but each fails. However, one god, Marduk, agrees to stop Tiamat,
- but only if he is granted sole dominion over all other gods. They agree,
- and Marduk battles Tiamat, killing her and creating the world from her
- corpse. In addition, Marduk slays one of the gods who allied himself with
- Tiamat, and from this dead god's blood, Marduk creates man. 9
-
- On the surface, it looks and sounds nothing like Genesis. However, we can
- begin to draw our parallels as we go into more detail. For example,
- Babylonian poetry has no rhyme, but it has meter and rhythm, like Hebrew
- 10. Notice the similarity in the next two passages:
-
- "Half of her he set in place and formed the sky... as a roof. He fixed
- the crossbar... posted guards; He commanded them not to let her waters
- escape" 11
-
- and
-
- "Then God said, 'Let there be a dome... to separate one
-
- body of water from the other.'" Genesis 1:6
-
- "All the fountains of the great abyss burst forth, and the floodgates of
- the sky were opened..." Genesis 7:11 Also compare the creation of days
- and the special significance conferred upon the seventh:
-
- "Thou shalt shine with horns to make six known days, on
-
- the seventh with... a tiara." 12
-
- From Genesis (1:31-2-1):
-
- "Evening came and morning followed- the sixth day...
-
- "So God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it He rested
- from all the work he had done in creation."
-
- We can summarize the similarities like so: each created the firmament,
- dry land, the celestial bodies, and light. Each makes man the crowning
- achievement. On the seventh day, God rests and sanctifies the day. In the
- seventh tablet of the Enuma Elish, the gods rest and celebrate. These
- similarities strongly suggest a common knowledge of the Enuma Elish among
- writers of the Book of Genesis (each section of Genesis is composed of
- four different sets of writers). In addition to Babylonian influence,
- look at the following taken from the Egyptian Book of the Dead, which can
- be traced back to 3000 B.C.:
-
- "I am Re.. I am the great god who came into being by himself..."13
-
- Compare that to the familiar "I am who am." These similarities are of
- secondary importance, however; we now begin to see the departures. For
- one, if Marduk is all-powerful, why does he do battle with Tiamat, when a
- word would suffice? For example:
-
- "Then God said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light.
-
- "Then God said, 'Let there be a dome in the middle of the
-
- waters, to separate one body of water from the other.' And so it
- happened..." Genesis 1:3, 1:6
-
- God's word alone is sufficient to render unto the world any change He
- wishes. This is a radical innovation in a world where pantheistic
- religion more closely resembles a super-powered family that doesn't get
- along very well. The Egyptian god Re may have been self-created, but he
- is by no means all-powerful, and not at all the only of his kind. Marduk
- is a warrior who can defeat primordial serpents, but the Hebrew god has
- but to speak:
-
- "...and it was; He commanded, and it stood fast." Psalms, 33:9
-
- The word of God is all-powerful.. And here we begin to see our greatest
- departures. We have a monotheistic religion, the first of its kind,
- created amidst a culture that, in the case of the Babylonians, has up to
- fifty gods!14 Not only is there but one god, but he is all-powerful, so
- much so that he does not find it necessary to wrestle with nature or
- defeat mighty primordial gods. He simply speaks and it is done. It is our
- first occurrence of divine will impose upon the world. Furthermore, it is
- a god without a precursor, without creation. He is something apart from
- this world. Tiamat and Apsu lived in a world already created (and by
- whom?); the Egyptian gods have a multitude of births of gods in their
- texts15.
-
- In fact, there was once a debate on the translation of a single verb in
- the Bible, "bara", meaning "to create". Later translations modify this to
- "bero", meaning
-
- "to create from nothing". When written in Hebrew, only careful scrutiny
- would distinguish the two. The distinction is important, however, because
- it changes the implications involved in creating. Does God create the
- world from something or nothing? In the following passage,
-
- "When God began to create heaven and earth- the earth being a
-
- desolate waste, with darkness upon the abyss and the spirit of
-
- God hovering over the waters- God said, 'Let there be light!' And
-
- there was light."
-
- it is inferred that God is creating with something. The next translation,
-
- "When God began to create the heaven and earth, the earth was a
-
- desolate waste and darkness was upon the abyss and the spirit of
-
- God was hovering over the waters. And God said, 'Let there be light!'
-
- And there was light..."
-
- implies that God began by creating a desolate waste, then creating light,
- then shaping the waste, and so forth. All this as a function of one
- verb16. As another departure, examination of creation stories by
- Summering and Babylonians show that they begin with subordinate clauses
- such as "when" or "On the day of."17 Genesis clearly diverges from this:
- "In the beginning" clearly sets apart the text from any other, making it
- the actual start of all time and space as we know it. It also puts the
- Hebrew god outside of time and space.
-
- There would be no point in arguing that the Old Testament was influenced
- by the contemporary cultures of its writers; the facts clearly point to
- innumerable external sources of inspiration. But while we can acknowledge
- these similarities, we must also acknowledge that the writers of the Book
- of Genesis are making a radical departure from the norm: they have
- created a monotheistic religion, and their god is all-powerful, beyond
- the scope of human comprehension. Typically, gods are represented as
- something akin to humans on a grander scale; the Hebrew god is simply not
- measured or scaled; He is an unknown quantity, set apart from the bounds
- of human knowledge. These similarities serve a function as a contrast to
- the differences between these religions. It would seem that the writers
- acknowledged these other religions, and addressed each one by creating a
- god that surpasses all others. The god that creates himself is one of
- many; the Hebrew god stands alone in his might. The god that created the
- world defeated another god, and formed the earth from the corpse; in
- Genesis, God speaks and his words transform into actions. God exists
- before the matter He shapes to His will. The writers have then, in fact,
- minimized the actions of all other gods in comparison to one all-powerful
- deity such as this. By drawing comparisons to other texts, the message
- can be lost in attempting to find the roots of certain ideas. But the
- origins of the stories are not nearly as important as the overall message
- being stated, and while the ideas they resemble may be old, the message
- is clear and unique: there is but one, and He is beyond all that is. His
- will alone suffices, and He predates even time itself. And that message
- has changed the world.