The spirit world - a history before history

Peter1000

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Sorry, that does not constitute a recommendation in my eyes. There are NO "biblical scriptures that testify of this doctrine". Those you have attempted to cite clearly don't teach that doctrine.
You do agree there is a world of spirits that existed before this earth don't you?
 
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Paul of Eugene OR

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You do agree there is a world of spirits that existed before this earth don't you?

There were both physical and spiritual realities before this earth. However, that does not mean or imply that human beings are souls that previously had an existence.
 
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Peter1000

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There were both physical and spiritual realities before this earth. However, that does not mean or imply that human beings are souls that previously had an existence.
Is there even the slightest of possiblilities that the designation, 'sons of God' could be pre-existant spirits of future humans?

I have a hunch you will not think so, so tell me who you think these 'sons of God' were, who existed before the earth was created or populated?? Thank you.
 
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Paul of Eugene OR

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Is there even the slightest of possiblilities that the designation, 'sons of God' could be pre-existant spirits of future humans?

I have a hunch you will not think so, so tell me who you think these 'sons of God' were, who existed before the earth was created or populated?? Thank you.

You need to get over this human only thinking. There are many, many ways of bearing God's image as a created being and being a homo sapiens is only one of them. I suggest you download pictures of galaxies and contemplate what the fact that they exist implies.
 
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Peter1000

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You need to get over this human only thinking. There are many, many ways of bearing God's image as a created being and being a homo sapiens is only one of them. I suggest you download pictures of galaxies and contemplate what the fact that they exist implies.
OK I will, but for now, who do you think the 'sons of God' are who existed prior to the earths completion and population?

For a reference, see Job 1:6 and Job 38:7.

While your at it, look up Psalms 45:7 and tell who Jesus' fellows are?
45 Thou lovest righteousness, and hatest wickedness: therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.

Who are these fellows that God mentions? Could they be other 'sons of God'?
 
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ShamashUruk

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A thread for discussing things like -- cherubim were already existing, Satan had already been created and fallen before Garden of Eden -- in other words, what in the spirit world went on before Genesis 1?

And were our spirits a part of things then, and how?

The origins of "Satan" comes from an Anglicization of the Hebrew common noun שָׂטָן and the noun has been related etymologically to a variety of geminate, third weak and hollow verbs in Hebrew and in the cognate languages. These proposals include verbs meaning 'to stray' (AI ~IT, Heb ~THtEth ~TY, Akk ,SG!U I and Syr ST'), 'to revolt/fall away' (Aram swr, Mandaean sWTand Heb swr), 'to be unjust' (Ar ~TI), 'to bum' (Syr swr and Ar ~YT) and 'to seduce' (Eth ~TY and Reb ~TH). These proposals require discounting the nun of the noun satan as part of the root, and attributing it to an *-an suffix which has been appended to a nominal base. There are two reasons why it is unlikely that the nun should be attributed to an *-tin suffix.

Firstly, the *-an suffix when appended to a nominal base nonnally results in an abstract noun, an adjective or a diminutive. The noun 'satan' fits none of these categories.

Secondly, in Hebrew *-an is typically realized as -on. There are exceptions, but among the standard conditions proposed to explain the atypical retention of *-an, none apply to the noun satan. Therefore it is preferable to regard the nun as part of the root and analyze satan as a noun of the common qatal pattern.

The fact that the geminate, third weak and hollow verbs listed above have meanings that are arguably appropriate to Satan should be viewed as resulting from interaction between popular etymological speculation and developing traditions about Satan.

The root *STN is not evidenced in any of the cognate languages in texts that are prior to or contemporary with its occurrences in the Hebrew Bible. KJ3 (918) incorrectly cites an alleged Akk satanu, but the fonns to which KB refers are St lexical participles of etemuJetenu (AHW, 260). Thus the meaning of the noun satan must be detennined solely on the basis of its occurrences in the Hebrew Bible, where it occurs in nine contexts. In five it refers to human beings and in four it refers to celestial beings. When it is used of human beings it is not a proper name, but rather a common noun meaning 'adversary' in either a political or military sense, or 'accuser' when it is used in a legal context. In the celestial realm there is only one context in which. Satan might be a proper name. In the other three contexts it is a common noun, meaning 'adversary' or 'accuser'. [P.L.D.]

Σαταν and Σατανᾶς are transliterations of the Hebrew satan (cf. 3 Kgdms 11:14.23; Sir 21 :27) or Aram satana and mean 'adversary'. In such instances 8HevXIIgr and the· LXX translate the Hebrew "expression with Diabolos ~Devil, meaning 'the Slanderer'. Ho Sataniis (rarely used without article) thus designates the opponent of ~God. In the NT Satanas and Diabolos can refer to the same supernatural being (cf. Rev 20:2) and can thus be interchanged (cf. Mark 1:13 and Luke 4:2). This highest evil being can also be referred to as ho poneros ('the evil one', cf. Matt 13: 19) and 110 peira:.on ('the tempter' - cf. Malt 4:3: I Thess 3:5). [C.B.l]

Although the noun satan has no cognates in texts that are prior to or contemporary with the biblical texts in which it occurs, there are in Akkadian three legal terms meaning 'accuser' that can have both terrestrial and celestial referents. These terms are bel dababi, bel dini and akil karsi. Each can refer either to a human legal opponent or to a deity acting as an accuser in a legal context,and thus each term functionally parallels the noun satan even though there is no etymological relationship. For example, the deities Nanay and Mar-Biti are charged to guarantee an agreement sworn in their names. Should anyone attempt to alter the agreement, these deities were to assume the role of legal adversaries (EN.MES d;-n;-su [VAS I 36 iiiA». Standing behind this notion of deities playing legal roles with respect to earthly happenings is the wellknown idea of the divine -'council, acting as a judiciary body. The noun satan is used of a divine being in four contexts in the Hebrew Bible.

In Numbers 22:22-35 Balaam, a non-Israelite seer, sets out on a journey, an act that incurs God's wrath. God responds by dispatching his celestial messenger, the malak YHWH, described as a satan, who stations himself on the road upon which Balaam is travelling. Balaam is ignorant of the swordwielding messenger but his donkey sees the danger and twice avoids the messenger, for which Balaam beats the animal. The messenger then moves to a place in the road where circumvention is impossible. The donkey lays down, and is again beaten. At this point Yahweh gives the donkey the ability to speak, and she asks why Balaam has beaten her. A conversation ensues and then Yahweh uncovers Balaam's eyes so that he can see the sword-wielding messenger, and Balaam falls down to the ground. The messenger asks why Balaam struck his donkey and then asserts that he has come forth as a satan because Balaam undertook his journey hastily. The messenger states that, had the donkey not seen him and avoided him, he would have killed Balaam. Balaam then admits his guilt, saying that he did not know that the messenger was standing on the road, and offers to tum back if the messenger judges the journey to be wrong. The messenger gives Balaam pennission to continue, but adjures him to speak only as instructed.

Prior to the work of GROSS (1974) most scholars attributed the above passage to the J source, which would have made it the earliest context in which the noun satan is applied to a celestial being. However, since Gross' study the tendency has been to date the passage to the sixth century BC or later. With the exception of the above story, which obviously ridicules Balaam, he is characterized in an extremely positive way in Num 22-24. Outside those chapters, the first clear indications that he is being viewed negatively are attributable to the P source (Num 31: 16) and Dtr 2 (Josh 13:22), both of which are typically dated to the sixth century. Thus the available evidence suggests that Balaam was viewed positively in earlier, epic tradition, but negatively in later sources. Given that the story under discussion views Balaam negatively, the story most likely stems from a later source. As can be readily seen, the heavenly being who acts as a satan in Numbers 22 has very little in common with later conceptualizations of Satan.

He (satan) is Yahweh's messenger, not his archenemy, and he acts in accordance with Yahweh's will rather than opposing it. Indeed, Yahweh's messenger here, as elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible, is basically an hypostatization of the deity.

Hence, as KLUGER (1967:75) has remarked, the 'real' satan/adversary in Numbers 22 is none other than Yahweh himself.

The opening chapter of the book of Job describes a gathering of the -"sons of God', i.e. a meeting of the divine -'council. Present at this gathering is a being called "Hassatan": this is the common noun satan preceded by the definite nrticle. The definite article makes it virtually certain that satan is not a proper name (contra B. WALTKE & M. O'CONNOR, An Intooduction to Biblical Hebrcw Syntax [Winona Lake 1990] 249).

Most scholars translate "hassatan" as 'the Accuser', which they understand to be a title that describes a specific role or office. However, it should be noted that no annlogous office has been convincingly identified in the legal system of ancient Israel, nor do the divine councils of the surrounding cultures include a deity whose specific assignment is to be an accuser.

Some scholars have argued that professional informers/accusers existed in the early Persian period, and that the satan in Job 1 and 2 is modelled on these informers. The evidence for this is inconclusive. Given the uncertainty of the existence of adducible legal parallels, another possibility would be to understand the force of the definite article differently. For example, in Gen 14:13 a certain person who has escaped from a battle is referred to as happalit. The precise identity of the character is not important to the story. What is important for the narrative is the character's current and temporary status of escapee. The force of the definite article is to deemphasize precise identity and focus on the status of the character as it is relevant to the narrative plot (cf. Ezek 24:26; 33:21 and P. JOOON, Grammaire de I'Hibreu biblique [Rome 1923] 137n). Attributing this force to the definite article of "hassatan" in Job 1:6 would lead us to understand that a certain divine being whose precise identity is unimportant and who has the current and temporary status of accuser is being introduced into the narrative. The advantage of this interpretation is that it is consistent with known Israelite (and Mesopotamian) legal practice in that 'accuser' was a legal status that various people temporarily acquired in the appropriate circumstances, and not a post or office.

When Yahweh asks the satan whether he has given any thought to the exemplary and indeed perfect piety of Job, the satan links Job's piety with the prosperity he enjoys as a result. If the pious inevitably prosper, how do we know that their piety is not motivated by sheer greed? Given that God is responsible for the creation and maintainance of a world order in which the righteous reap reward, what the satan is in fact challenging is God's blueprint for divine-human relations.

In other words, the satan is questioning the validity of a moral order in which the pious unfailingly prosper. The test of true righteousness would be worship without the promise of reward. Yahweh accepts the satan's challenge: he permits the satan to sever the link between righteousness and reward. Although Job is blameless, he is made to suffer, losing first his wealth and his children, and eventually his own good health. In the end a suffering and impoverished Job nevertheless bends his knee to a god whose world order is devoid of retributive justice, thus proving the satan wrong. In Job, the Satan seems clearly to be a divine being, although most scholars would agree that satan is not a proper name.

Though he challenges God at a very profound level, he is nonetheless subject to God's power and, like Yahweh's messenger in Num 22, acts on Yahweh's instructions. He is certainly not an independent, inimical force. The book of Job does not contain references to historical events and hence dating it is problematic. Most modern scholars read it as a response to theological problems raised by the Babylonian exile and consequently date it to the latter half of the sixth century BCE.


My own personal thought is the book of Job is related to the Babylonian books of wisdom, but this would need much more proper research.

In a vision of the prophet Zechariah (Zech 3), the high priest Joshua is portrayed as standing in the divine council, which is functioning as a tribunal. He stands in front of Yahweh's messenger, with "hassatan" on his right-hand side to accuse him. The messenger rebukes the Satan, and orders that Joshua's filthy garments be removed and replaced with clean clothing. In the name of Yahweh the messenger promises Joshua continuing access to the divine council in return for obedience. As in Job 1 and 2, the noun Satan appears with the definite article, and hence is not a proper name. The presence of the definite article also raises the same question as to whether it denotes an office of Accuser in the divine council. See the above section on Job 1 and 2 for a discussion of this problem.

In order to understand Zechariah's vision and the satan's role in it, it's necessary to address the historical context of the vision. While the vision cannot be dated exactly, the general context of Zechariah's prophecy was the Jerusalem community after the return from exile around the time of the rebuilding of the temple (ca. 520 BCE). Those scholars who see this community as basically unified view Joshua as a symbol of the community and interpret his change of clothes as symbolizing a change in the community's status from impure to pure, or sinful to forgiven, in the eyes of Yahweh. In this interpretation, the satan is understood as objecting to the change in the community's status: Yahweh wishes to pardon his people and the satan is opposed. However. This interpretation overlooks evidence that the restoration community was deeply divided over cultic issues. including the issue of the priesthood (HANSON 1979:32-279). When this fact is taken into account it becomes unlikely that Joshua should be understood as a cypher for the whole community. Rather, the vision reflects a rift in the community over the issue of whether Joshua should become the high priest. Zechariah's vision supports Joshua. and implicitly claims that the matter has been decided in Joshua's favour in the divine council itself. with Yahweh taking Joshua's side. In this interpretation, the satan can be described as a projection into the celestial realm of the objections raised by the losing side. If this interpretation is the correct one. then the noun satan is here associated with a division that is internal to the community in question. This interpretation would add support to PAGELS' (1991) theory that the notion of Satan developed among Jews who wished to denounce other Jews whose opinions they did not share. As in Num 22 and Job 1 and 2, salan in Zech 3 is not a proper name. In Zech 3 the satan is clearly not Yahweh's messenger; indeed, the satan and Yahweh's messenger are on opposing sides of the issue of whether Joshua should become the high priest. Hence Num 22 and Zech 3 use the noun satan to describe different divine beings. It is unclear whether the satan of Job 1 and 2 is the same celestial being as the satan of Zech 3. If "hassatan" should be translated 'the Accuser' with the understanding that there is a post or office of Accuser in the divine council. then it is most likely that the same divine being is envisaged in both contexts. However. if the definite article carries the connotations outlined above. then it is quite possible that Job 1 and 2 and Zech 3 do not have the same divine being in view.

So far we have covered that in older cultural traditions such as the Akkadians does indicate where we first see the ideologies of deities acting as accusers. Meaning that "satan" or "Satan" is not an Israelite invention, as the Akkadian's predate the Israelite's. Also, the Bible references so far differing "Satan" or "satan" between Zecharia and the book of Job. Furthermore we see Yahweh as acting as "Satan", "satan" or Yahweh is actually "Satan", "satan" per the story of Balaam.

In 1 Chr 21: 1 the noun satan appears without the definite article. The majority of scholars therefore understand satan to be the proper name Satan. though some maintain that the noun refers to a human adversary and others argue that it refers to an unnamed celestial adversary or accuser. I Chr 21: 1-22: 1 is paralleled in the Deuteronomistic History by 2 Sam 24. Both passages tell the story of a census taken during the reign of David, an ensuing plague and an altar built on the threshing floor of AraunahlOrnan (-Varuna). In 2 Sam 24 the story begins. "and the anger of Yahweh again burned against Israel. and he provoked David against them. saying 'Go number Israel and Judah·... The corresponding verse in Chr reads. "And a satan/Satan stood up against Israel and he provoked David to number Israel." In both versions the act of taking a census is adjudged sinful. Given that the Chronicler used the Deuteronomistic History as a source text. it is clear that the Chronicler has altered his source in such a way as to take the burden of responsibility for the sinful census away from Yahweh. Some scholars interpret this to mean that the Chronicler was striving to distance Yahweh from any causal relationship to sin or to rid Yahweh of malevolent behaviour in general. However, this explanation cannot account for passages such as 2 Chr 10:15 and 18:18-22, where Yahweh is clearly portrayed as sanctioning lies and instigating behaviour that was designed to cause harm. All other explanation notes that, in comparison to the Deuteronomistic History, the Chronicler presents an idealized portrait of David's reign. In general, the Chronicler deletes accounts that cast David in a dubious light. Contrary to this general tendency, the Chronicler was obliged to retain the story of the census plague because it culminated in the erection of what the Chronicler understood to be the altar of the Solomonic Temple, and David's relationship to the Jerusalem Temple is another theme of crucial concern to the Chronicler. Given that the incident could not, therefore, be deleted, the Chronicler modified his source text so that the incident no longer compromised Yahweh's relationship with David, the ideal king. The Chronicler also shifts blame for the sinfulness of the census from David to Joab by stating that the census was not sinful per se, but was sinful because Joab did not take a complete census (I Chr 21 :6-7; 27:24).

It is important to establish why the Chronicler changed his source text because his motivation has implications for how we understand satan in this passage. If the Chronicler was trying to generally distance Yahweh from malevolent behaviour and accomplished this by attributing such behaviour to another divine being, then we can see in this passage the beginnings of a moral dichotomy in the celestial sphere.

If Yahweh is no longer thought to be responsible for malevolent behaviour toward humankind, and another divine being capable of acting efficaciously, independent of Yahweh, is, then it would be quite appropriate to translate satan with the proper name Satan. However, if the introduction of satan into the census story has the more circumscribed objective of portraying the relationship between Yahweh and David favourably, and not of ridding Yahweh of malevolent intent more generally, then even if satan in this passage is a proper name, the tenn is still a long way from connoting Satan, God's evil archenemy. Although there is no consensus position regarding the dating of Chronicles, the most persuasive arguments favour dating the first edition of the Chronicler's history to ca. 520 BCE. If this is correct, then there are two additional reasons against translating satan as a proper name.

Firstly, Zechariah, a contemporary, does not use satan as a proper name. Secondly, the earliest texts that indisputably contain the proper name Satan date to the second century nCE (Ass. Mos. 10:1; Jub 23:29; possibly Sir 21 :27). which would mean that more than 300 years separate the Chroniclers text from the first certain references to Satan.

In Hebrew texts from the Second Temple Period the use of satan is limited. The sinner seeks forgiveness from -.Yahweh, who is asked to prevent the rule of Satan or an unclean spirit (cf. II QPSa Plea 19: 15). Satan's power threatens human beings. Accordingly the time of salvation is marked by the absence of Satan and evil (4 QDibHama 1-2.IV,12; cf. Jub. 23:29; 40:9:46:2; 50:5). Satan is standing among the winds (3 Enoch 23: 16). The council of the Qumran community had a curse in which they imprecated that satan with his hostile design and with his wicked spirits be damned (cf. 4 QBef"l.b). In the LXX 'Satan' as a divine name possibly occurs in Sir 21 :27: "When the ungodly curses Satan, he curses his own life."

Being a transliteration from the Hebrew or Aramaic and almost lacking in the LXX, the Greek form of the name "Satan" is rarely used in Jewish literature of the Second Temple Period (cf. T. 12 Patr., T. Job and Life of Adam and Eve 17: I). Ho Diabolos (Devil), preferred by Life of Adam and Eve, Philo and Josephus, is more common. "Satan" and -·"Belial" are used to refer to the same superterrestrial being (cf. the Dead Sea Scrolls: Mart. Isll. 2: 1.4.7 [= Gk 3:2:3: II] ) and "Satan" and "Devil" are synonymous in their reference (cf. T. Job. 3:3.6 and 16:2 + 27: I with 17: I + 26:6). The incidental use of Satanas in some Greek texts, such as the NT, is a clear Semitism.

According to the various NT authors Satan (in Q the Devil) rules over a Kingdom of darkness. Satan is thus depicted as major opponent of -·Jesus and tries to deceive him (Mark 1: 13). As the opposing force to God, the Synoptic Tradition identifies Satan with Beelzebul, the principal of the devils (Luke 11: 15-19 / Matt 12:24-27 / Mark 3:22- 23.26). Jesus defeats his power by exorcizing -+demons and curing the ill and thus inaugurates the reign of God which ends Satans' rule (Matt 12:28 /I Luke II:20). For Luke, Jesus' ministry is the time of salvation and thus puts a temporary end to the reign of Satan (10: 18). The conversion of the gentiles leads them from darkness to light, from the power of Satan to God (Acts 26: 18). Apostates are handed back to Satan (I Cor 5:5: I Tim 1:20 cf. 5: 15). As principal of the God-opposing forces, Satan poses a threat to the Christian communities (e.g. Rom 16:20: 2 Cor 2: 11). He can still influence the daily life and thwart human plans (I Thess 2: 18). Through demons he causes illness (e.g. Luke 13:16: 2 Cor 12:7); he deceives humans (I Cor 7:5; Rev 20:3) and is even disguised as an angel of light (2 Cor II: 14). Grave errors of members of the community arc ascribed to the influence of Satan. Peter is rebuked as "Satan" intending "the things of man" and thus opposing God (Mark 8:33; Luke 22:31). Judas' betrayal of Jesus (Luke 22:3: John 13:27) and Ananias' fraud (Acts 5:3) for instance, are understood to be caused by Satan. Opposing religiosity, such as the Jewish refusal to accept -+Christ (cf. Rev 2:9; 3:9), heresy (cf. Rev 2:24) or cults which endanger the Christian communities in Asia (cf. Rev 2: 13) are seen as threats coming from Satan. In Jewish apocalyptic tradition, the eschatological fall of Satan is expected (Rom 16:20; Rev 20:7-10). In the post-NT tradition the -·Antichrist is very closely associated with the Devil and Satan. False teaching originates with them (Pol. Phil. 7: I). The "angels of Satan" control the dark way of false teaching and authority, opposing the angels of God, who are guiding to the way of light (Bam. 18: 1. On the Apostolic Fathers, Apologists and Gnostics, see RUSSEL 1981).

Often we will see an equating of "Satan", "satan" to Lucifer, which I did not previously discuss.

Lucifer does not exist until the stroke of a pen in 382 AD. The genealogy is straightforward to plot. First, the apparent name given in Isaiah 14:12 is not Lucifer, but Hêlēl Ben Šaḥar; this is transformed in the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, into Ἑωσφόρος (Heōsphóros): dawn bringer. This is the specific Greek term for the god of the planet Venus when it rises. There is no ambiguity in its astral identification as the morning star. In Greek mythology, Heōsphóros was twinned with Hesperos; they are respectively morning and evening star. Even in identifying these as gods of the star, the planet Venus herself remained that of the love goddess Aphrodite, a distinction which needs to be made. The Septuagint, with its rendition of Heōsphóros, was not, however, used as the basis for the Latin Vulgate, which replaced the earlier translations in circulation, collectively known as the Vetus Latina. The Latin Vulgate was the work of St Jerome in a project which commenced in 382 CE, and became the standard text in the Western Catholic Church for the next 1000 years. Instead of using the Greek Septuagint, Jerome went to the Hebrew texts themselves, and thence made the fatal translation ‘Lucifer.’ This is derived from the Latin lucem ferre, light bearer.

Clearly this differs from the Greek, ‘dawn bringer,’ although it has the same basic meaning, that of Venus, the morning star. It is only when the Latin Lucifer is translated back into Greek that it becomes Φωσφόρος (Phōsphóros). Evidently, dawn-bringer is not a term that can be used interchangeably with phosphoros, which has the more general meaning of ‘light-bringing,’ and is applied to many gods and goddesses, such as torch-bearing Hecate. It does not identify the source or the character of the light. Though phosphoros can be applied as an epithet to Lucifer, it would be more accurate to specify heosphoros. The mystery of Lucifer is explicitly concerned with the light of dawn, and its attendant qualities – the reddening of the sky and the magical properties of the dew, an oft forgotten elixir.

To sum we don't see an adversary until Akkad, in the earlier Sumerian period each "demon" is attributed to an illness or protection. Pazuzu is seen as a protective "demon" as he is a wind spirit. Or, alternatively the Sumerian's would engage in anti witchcraft exorcisms, hence the banishing of the headache demon. We will not see an adversary in Sumer, and the Biblical "satan" isn't written until about 1700 BC by Moses as an adversary, however it is most likely to stand that Bereshit (Genesis) is written by Yahwehist cults.

A member of a city-state (in Sumer; ancient Iraq) would become sick with a stomach ache, the Sumerian Isib priest would then make an elixer of beer, myrrh, and frankincense and pour into the anus of the victim. When the victim was relieved, the Isib priest would perform an exorcism and replace the "udug" demon with a "lil" or angelic (later translated through adoption from culture to culture) demon, spirit as a protector, and then later the Isib priest would banish the protective demon; all the while the Sumerian Gods would intervene, ensuring that the Isib priest performed proper doctrinal practices.

Obviously medicine has come a very long way, and exorcisms are not seen as part of the medical process. However, in ancient culture's this process would often be practiced. Cure the patient, removed the demon that is inflicting the illness and ask the Gods to intervene.

What we don't see in Sumer is an adversary, that concept isn't established until possibly Akkad. Hence, the character satan is a representation of an adversary, which is a pre Israelite invention.

"Sin" is also a concept in Sumer, a personal offense against One's God(s), while sin is adopted later to mean "missing the mark". Yet sin is not attributed to an adversary in ancient Sumer as they have no adversary. Sin is later attributed to the "fall of mankind", which that story is based on earlier Ancient Near East theology.
 
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Peter1000

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Good to hear it.

It is interesting to me that you are a highly intelligent man, but yet you believe in the gods of an ancient people. In fact, you are the only person I know that has a belief like this. I may be stating your belief wrongly, so correct me if I am wrong.

But I would like to know why you are willing to believe in many gods from a people that no longer believe in those gods. Or am I wrong about that too?

Look forward to your response.
 
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ShamashUruk

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Good to hear it.

It is interesting to me that you are a highly intelligent man, but yet you believe in the gods of an ancient people. In fact, you are the only person I know that has a belief like this. I may be stating your belief wrongly, so correct me if I am wrong.

But I would like to know why you are willing to believe in many gods from a people that no longer believe in those gods. Or am I wrong about that too?

Look forward to your response.

I like to stick by a saying "times change, people change, deities do not change".

Cultural adaptations change over time, those people the Sumerian's no longer exist as an actual race. You can't expect people too live 5000 years, however, that being said, they have bloodlines that exist.
 
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Peter1000

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I like to stick by a saying "times change, people change, deities do not change".

Cultural adaptations change over time, those people the Sumerian's no longer exist as an actual race. You can't expect people too live 5000 years, however, that being said, they have bloodlines that exist.
So tell me how the gods of the Sumerians exist today, since they do not change?

This is a ligitimate question, not some kind of witch hunt. I am sincerely interested in your belief system.
 
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ShamashUruk

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So tell me how the gods of the Sumerians exist today, since they do not change?

This is a ligitimate question, not some kind of witch hunt. I am sincerely interested in your belief system.

Cuneiform is a good indicator of the writings of the Sumerian's thus reflecting their belief systems.

In cultures such as Akkad, Babylon, Hurrian/Hittite, Canaan, Israelite the epics of the Sumerian's live on in their writings.

A man named Noah sails the sea on or in a wooden ship, I know that Noah is only a West Semite Stock name and I know that Noah is the much later tale of Ziusudra whom Enki graciously protected him on his boat or ark from the wrath of Enlil who sent a flood to destroy mankind.

I know that Noah is a young version of the flood epic and I know that Ziusudra is a much older epic. How do I know this, because Noah is a Semitic name, and the Sumerian's predate the Semitic people.
 
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Peter1000

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Cuneiform is a good indicator of the writings of the Sumerian's thus reflecting their belief systems.

In cultures such as Akkad, Babylon, Hurrian/Hittite, Canaan, Israelite the epics of the Sumerian's live on in their writings.

A man named Noah sails the sea on or in a wooden ship, I know that Noah is only a West Semite Stock name and I know that Noah is the much later tale of Ziusudra whom Enki graciously protected him on his boat or ark from the wrath of Enlil who sent a flood to destroy mankind.

I know that Noah is a young version of the flood epic and I know that Ziusudra is a much older epic. How do I know this, because Noah is a Semitic name, and the Sumerian's predate the Semitic people.
I understand that, but tell me of Enki, and your belief in him and other gods that you know?
 
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ShamashUruk

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Thank you.

Concerning the "Christian" connection with ancient near east, their is an assertion of the Ebla tablets, there is contention that the Ebla tablets are religious, however, they are not. one can glean information of great value concerning the religion of Ebla around 2,500 BC from a number of particular tablets of the Hall of Archives L. 2769, and also from the documents taken all together. A good idea of the popular religious feeling can be gained from the thousands of personal and place names representing the seventy years or so covered by the tablets. When they are eventually published, the literary texts which have been identified thus far will also afford insight into the religious sentiments of the educated people at Ebla.

The Mormon dispensation approach to history tends to reverse some evolutionary accounts of the development of the temple idea: the building of altars, the offering of sacrifice, the sanctuary-sense, and the conviction of both sacred space and sacred time all predate in some form, on the Mormon view, the biblical record. Furthermore, the intertwining of the temple idea with the types and shadows of messianic expectation predates, in Mormon understanding, the Mosaic period. The discovery of tablets by the thousands in Upper Syria which can be dated at least a thousand years earlier than Moses holds a significance, therefore, of first importance. Though the records are mainly of commercial transactions, they are fingerprinted, so to speak, with social and worship practices of the time. Author (Mitchell Dahood) exemplifies a skill in Northwest Semitic languages and is demonstrated here with examples of sacred names, worship practices, and beliefs which clearly reflect ancient pre-Israelite temple construction and traditions of sacrifice and ceremonial enactment. Not all of Dahood’s linguistic connections and derivations are presently verifiable, but the foundations of further study are here apparent.

For example Irmu and Sišeru, it may be helpful to discuss the god dir-mu in Materiali epigrafici di Ebla (hereafter MEE) 1, n. 1008, and in the personal name i-ti-ir-mu, “With me is Irmu,” in MEE 1, n. 1494. Who is this god whose name is written ir-mu? The answer is probably supplied by Habakkuk 1:16:

‘al-kēn yĕzabbēah leh ermô

wī qatt ēr lemikmartô

kî bahēmmāh šāmēn helqô

ûma’akalo bĕrī’āh

Therefore he sacrifices to his Net,

and burns incense to his Dargnet,

for by these his livelihood is rich,

and his food succulent.

Commentators who seek to explain this passage find the statement “He sacrifices to his Net” puzzling because they do not recognize that hermo the divinized Net; in other words, biblical hermô supplies the initial consonant of Eblaite dir-mu/hirmu/ “Net,” and i-ti-ir-mu/’ittī-hirmu/ “With me is Net.” This may be employed as an example of mutual elucidation: the divine status of dir-mu helps interpret Habakkuk 1:16 hermô as “his Net,” which in turn furnishes the initial consonant of dir-mu.

One gains a further insight into the Canaanite concept of divinity when examining TM.75.G.2238 obv. XII 27–31, 2 u d u dAMA-ra dsi4-šè-lu/sišeru/ “two sheep (in the month) AMA-ra for Sišeru.” Identification of the deity sišeru does not come readily, but comparison with the biblical šāšēr, “red dye, vermilion” (Jeremiah 22:14; Ezekiel 23:14), may prove suggestive. Since vermilion in antiquity was gained from the dried bodies of the females of a scale insect, kermes ilices, which lives on certain oaks on the shores of the Mediterranean and adjacent parts of the Near East, sišeru may have been the divinized kermes ilices. The enormous shipments of multi-colored garments registered in the administrative and economic tablets point to the importance of dyes in the textile operations of Ebla, and since Canaanite red or purple robes were famous in antiquity, the divinization of this source of prosperity becomes comprehensible. Just as the Chaldaean invader offered sacrifices to his Net because it rendered his life prosperous (Habbakuk 1:16), so the Eblaites brought sheep to be sacrificed to sišeru in return for the luxury that this deity provided. One might also direct attention to the deity witnessed in the personal name išx-gi-bù-du/yiśgi-pūtu/ “Lofty is Royal Purple” where put is identified with Ugar. pwt, “red, purple dye.”

Moving beyond these four texts, we can learn more about sacred constructions from those administrative and economic texts which mention toponyms whose first component is the Sumerian é, read bēt, “house, temple,” in Eblaite. Thus é šu-muKI (MEE 1, n. 1671) seems to signify “Temple of the Name,” and bespeaks the local veneration of the divinized Name that corresponds to the veneration manifest in the personal names tù-bí-šum, “My good is the Name” (MEE 1, n. 722, 760), and iš-má-šum, “The Name hears” (MEE 1, n. 5088). The toponym é-ba-rí-umKI (MEE 2, 40 rev. IV 10), “Temple of the Creator,” reveals the belief in a Creator god that has its counterpart in ba-ra-gúKI (MEE 1, n. 1671), “The Voice has created,” and the PN ib-tá-ra-gú (MEE 2, 7 obv: XIV 14), “The Voice has created for itself.” A similar reverence for the Creator is manifested by the place name é-mu-rí-iqKI (TM.75.G.1444), “The Temple of the Greener,” where the form mu-rí-iq is analyzed as the hiphil participle of the root wrq, “to be green,” hence “the one who makes green.” That this was the function of the Creator may be inferred from Genesis 1:30, “And to all the beasts of the earth and all the birds of the air and all the creatures that move on the ground—everything that has breath of life in it—(I give) every green plant (kol yereq ‘ēśeb) for food” (cf. Gen. 9:3).
 
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A thread for discussing things like -- cherubim were already existing, Satan had already been created and fallen before Garden of Eden -- in other words, what in the spirit world went on before Genesis 1?

And were our spirits a part of things then, and how?

A near death experiencer was shown details about the fall of Covering Cherub Lucifer and his one third of the angels that sure made sense to me.

NDE of Dr. Richard Eby verifies old earth and gap theory.


Dr. Richard Eby:
......
"Jesus, tell me about this wondrous music all about me. Who is the composer? How is it made? From whence does it come? It is gorgeous!"

I was not disappointed when he began his answer by again asking me:
"Didn't you read my book? Repeatedly it exhorts my children to praise me with music from strings, trumpets, timbrels and voices. It is and was the prime communication of worship and praise and thanksgiving. Since I am the Creator, I am the composer of heaven's music which you are hearing."

Music became the resulting harmony from all of our creations, both of matter and energy. All resonated in unison with us. The elementary form was of and from and in ourselves. I might explain it as a triad of sub-electronic energy particles with and around which We constructed everything in our universe. The wave-forms we called light; whereas the material-forms we called dust of the Earth and water and air. Out of these, and into these, we created animals and birds and fishes and vegetable life to support them. Over these we created a mankind to supervise them as our appointed custodians made in our special image to act for us on Earth!"

Jesus hesitated as I tried to capture the immensity of his explanations.

"You must understand, my son, that original creation mirrored the composition and perfection of Person-God. All creation vibrated in unison with us! There was total accord and harmony everywhere as the whole creation was resonating with and in God!

"Each separate thing or being thus carried out an appointed task in our scheme for the universe. A heaven-form of music resulted as even the stars sang in their appointed circuits. Here in paradise you are hearing these melodious vibrations directly upon your new mind, undistorted. On Earth you heard distorted sounds through the air waves. Throughout heaven the music flows from my throne, uninterrupted, undefiled, and peace-giving."

Jesus paused again.
"My book tells of the time when Lucifer's rebellion in heaven changed some things. He sought to usurp my Father's throne, assume his position as the most high God, and to rule the universe. For that blasphemy Lucifer was cast from heaven to Earth; in fact, I saw him fall as a bolt of lightning! In a tantrum of hate and rage over being deposed so fast he and his fallen angels disfigured our perfect Earth. It became void and uninhabitable. For punishment befitting his enemy of God, Lucifer was given a new name, Satan, since he was the self-appointed "adversary' of the Almighty. Anything that God had made, Satan would attempt to destroy from then on. As Lucifer he had been created the highest angel about the throne, one of his assignments and talents being the chief musician in charge of worship and music. In his rebellious anger he set about destroying harmony on and in the Earth from then on. That is why the Earth where he operates now is out of harmony with God's other creations. In my book we call this disharmony "sin', because it defies God's will that even the heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament show his handiwork.

"But be of good cheer, my son. The Father has permitted me to overcome Satan's world system of sin, and to destroy the works of Satan, and to re-establish righteousness in the hearts of my friends. Eventually in his chosen time he will restore all creation as it once was, in him!" (Dr. Richard Eby, near-death.com)
 
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