Annihilationism originated in Egypt!
I was watching a History Channel documentary called, "The Gates of Hell". After being here so long I didn't learn much, but I did learn one thing, that annihilationism started in Egypt.
Timothew always likes to characterize the immortality of the soul, which few Christians believe, as proof that early Christianity was corrupted by the Greeks. It is a weak point since few Christians believe this, but it is even weaker when one realizes that in fact annihiliationism is an import from Egypt.
It is a reoccurring subject of ancient Egyptian paintings and hieroglyphs that I have seen before, where Anubis judges the dead and weighs their heart against a feather. If the sins of the person weigh the heart down more than the feather the person is fed to a beast with the head of a crocodile and body of a lion, who devours the person's soul, annihilating them.
Here is an internet source on the subject:
Egyptian Belief and Moden Thought
While the doctrine of everlasting torment has support
from the monuments of Egypt, the
Annihilationists, or
believers in the final destruction of the wicked, are not
without Egyptian support. Mr. Baring-Gould says, "A
high degree of education must be attained before the
notion of
annihilation can be apprehended." That is an
argument for the intuitional teaching of immortality.
To this Mariette Bey alludes, when he says of the truly
impenitent, "for these a
second death, that is to say, a
definitive
annihilation, is reserved." In another place he
writes: ''The definitive
annihilation in the midst of the
torments of a true hell was the suffering reserved for the
condemned." Rouge writes: "As to the condemned souls,
they are forced to submit to the
second death."
Their sacred writings support this idea.
Annihilation
furnishes the subject of many prayers ; as, " Let me not be
annihilated." In a prayer to Osiris for the departed, it is
said, " He sees in thee and he lives in thee, it is in thee
he will never be
annihilated." In the 93rd chapter of the
Ritual, one reads, " The rebels become immovable things
during millions of years." The worm utterly devours
them ; the fire absolutely consumes them. The man may
be beheaded, or swallowed by a hippopotamus. Madame
Blavatsky, in His Revealed, refers to " the gradual dissolu-
tion of the astral form into its primal elements."
Pierret says : " The tomb is piteously closed upon
those whose faults condemn them to
annihilation."
Lenormant asserts that the wicked, " before being
annihi-
lated, are condemned to suffer a thousand tortures, and,
under the form of an evil spirit, to return here and dis-
turb men, and exert themselves for their injury." Mr.
Cooper, a most competent authority, with similar views,
writes : " The final punishment of the wicked consisted
in utter
annihilation, after a period of frightful torture
in a fiery hell." The opinion, therefore, of the Rev.
Edward White and others, was forestalled in Egypt,
doubtless several thousand years ago. M. F. Lenormant
distinctly affirms : " The
annihilation of being was held by
the Egyptians as the punishment reserved for the wicked."
The Zendavesta of the ancient Persians affirmed, " Hell
shall be destroyed at the resurrection."
M. Deveria indicates a parallel with the Book of the
Revelation, parts of which, at least, are deemed by the
author of the " Book of God," and by others, as copies of
the most ancient sacred writings in the world. The French
Egyptologist says : " The wicked who submit to these pun-
ishments (described on monuments) are condemned to
absolute annihilation, without hope of ever seeing the
living again.
This annihilation is called the second death
in some hieroglyphic texts, as in the Apocalypse."
Full text of "Egyptian belief and modern thought .."