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The festivals of the deities provided the structural framework
for many of the important rituals focusing on the Egyptian gods
and on cultic or cosmic renewal. "Festival calendars" or lists
of ritual activities were inscribed on the walls and doorways
of temples and often included the offerings to be made not only
in the regular daily services, but also on all the particular
high days celebrated in the temple's cult.
Renewal is particularly important in these festivals as their
purpose was ultimately directed to the same kind of
rejuvenation or rebirth achieved each day in the constant solar
cycle. Thus, one of the rituals performed on New Year's Day -
also called "the birth of Re" - and most fully recorded in
Ptolemaic times involved carrying the statues of deities up to
the temple room. Here the god or goddess could see and be
united with the rising sun in a moment of shared rebirth. Many
of the same rituals and religious performances were enacted on
a number of key festivals such as those of the first day of the
first month (New Year) and the first day of the fifth month
(celebrating the rebirth of Osiris). Some festivals had their
own particularly focused meanings, of course, but renewal or
rebirth was a predominant theme in a great number of them.
The power of the Egyptian gods was also tapped and order
maintained by means of rituals utilized on unscheduled special
occasions. This could be the kind of ritual employed in the
"opening of the mouth" ceremony in order to animate a temple
statue or it could be one with much wider application. The
goddess Sekhmet, for example, was regarded as a potential
bringer of plague and disease who sometimes had to be
propitiated and her priests were often skilled in medicine.
Placation could be accomplished through large-scale
magico-religious rituals performed in the temples as well as
through more focused rituals directed at individual sufferers.
Thuse rituals for the care of humanity ultimately also served
to care for the Egyptian gods.
Many aspects of the daily services, festivals and special
rituals were described by the Egyptians as "mysteries" (shetau
in Egyptian). In fact, by virtue of its supernatural basis, any
ritual might be said to be a mystery. Most particularly, any
part of a ritual which was conducted privately, beyond the view
of the people at large, was given this name because it was also
hidden and part of the secret knowledge of the priests and
others who were skilled in its performance. A general
atmosphere of secrecy was developed by the priesthood as time
progressed, but in reality the same priests sometimes performed
similar rituals - such as the "opening of the mouth" - in both
hidden and open settings, and the boundaries between formal
temple ceremonies and private ritual were probably blurred to
some degree.
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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
book is available on
Amazon.
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