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mon·o·the·ism
Noun
/?män??TH??iz?m/
- The doctrine or belief that there is only one God
In the 19th century, a debate arose among Egyptologists
which was to rage for many years and which is still not
entirely over. The debate was centered around a fundamental
aspect of Egyptian religion and the Egyptian gods;
where there the ancient Egyptians at all time polytheists
or were there times or even ongoing trends in which
Egyptian religion moved slowly but inexorably towards
monotheism?
Believers in
Egyptian gods or an Egyptian god!
In his early 1930s work The
Dawn of Conscience, Egyptologist James Henry Breasted
argued that the religion of the heretic 18th Dynasty
pharaoh, Akhenaten - who attempted to do away with most
of Egypt's traditional gods and to replace them with the
worship of the solar disk or Aten - was nothing less than
a direct precursos of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic
monotheism of later history. From 1934, Egyptologist
Hermann Junker went even further, suggesting that
Egyptian religion had originally been monotheistic and
had eventually degenerated into a morass of separate
cults after the founding of the Egyptian state. Although
the argument for this kind of primative monotheism and
the idea of a single, transcendent deity has long been
discarded, the idea that Egyptians did gradually
developed monotheistic ways of thought has been
more abiding.
Some scholars have seen the successive rise of pre-eminent
deities such as Ra, Osiris and Amun as precisely this kind of
development. Others have said that the Egyptian word for god,
netcher, used without reference to any particular god (which
was especially common in Egyptian wisdom literature or
instructions and in personal names which combined the
word god with some other element) also demonstrated the idea of
an underlying single god in Egyptian religion. In an
influential work published in 1960 Siegfried Morenz drew these
arguments together in support of the idea that behind the
nearly countless Egyptian gods there was among at least
some Egyptians a growing awareness of a single god.
Another side of the story appeared with the publication of an
incisive study by Eric Hornung in 1971, Hornung systematically
examined the question, and found no evidence for an ongoing
movement towards monotheism. Of central importance, he argued
that the word "god" in Egyptian usage never appears to refer to
an abstract deity of higher order than other gods, but it is
rather a neutral term which can apply to any deity, or as
Hornung expressed it, "whichever god you wish". In the same
manner, personal names such as Mery-netcher translated as "whom
god loves", could mean any god and may be found with many
specific parralets such as "whom Ptah loves". From this
perspective, the various expressions of syncretism or the
"indwelling" of one deity in another, are not considered
evidence of a move towards monotheism (some believe it is).
While worshippers may have elected to venerate a given god
above all others, this is merely henotheism, a form of reilgion
in which the other gods remain.
Finally, while it is true that at given times we find a supreme
god at the head of the Egyptian pantheism, the other gods
remain, the qualities of the supreme being are not limited to
any one god, and even within the same period of time we find
many gods being called "lord of all that exists" and "sole" or
"unique".
According to Hornung, only the "heretic" Akhenaten clearly
insisted upon an approach which affirmed one god to the
exclusion of the many, while other scholars have looked at the
context of Akhenaten's religious revolution differently. in his
1997 word Moses the Egyptian, Jan Assmann has pointed out that
the previous creation accounts developed by Egyptians, and the
ongoing process of syncretism, reflect two fundamental but
different approaches to the paradox of "the one and the many"
inherent in all ancient Egyptian religion. Assmann has
characterized these divergent viewpoints as one of generation -
by which the one produces the many (as seen in Egyptian
creation accounts), and one of emanation - in which the one is
present in the many (as seen in syncretism).
These point of views existed concurrently in Egypt throughout
most of the Dynastic Period, but in the religion of Akhenaten
the concept of the emanation of the god Aten is not to be
found. It is through generation alone that the ATen recreates
the world and all is in it. In this view, although visible and
in that sense immanent in his creation, the Aten also
transcended it in the manner found in true monotheism.
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The
Complete Gods and
Goddesses of Ancient Egypt
Book
Since you are interested in
the Egyptian gods and
goddesses, you will certainly
find this book interesting and
very informative. As a matter
of fact, most of the articles
here are inspired by, or even
directly taken from, this
book.
What makes this book so
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Egyptian religious life and
mysterious practices, even it
has a few pages dedicated to
the demons of ancient Egypt. I
strongly recommend this book
for you if you want to get
closer insight of the ancient
Egyptian religious doctrines.
The
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Amazon.
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