Idle musings by a once again bookseller, always bibliophile, current copyeditor and proofreader. Complete with ramblings about biblical studies, the ancient Near East, bicycling, gardening, or anything else I am reading (or experiencing). All more or less live from Red Wing, MN
Wednesday, January 03, 2024
The ANE Worldview
Although Mesopotamian theological thinking is manifest in diverse traditions that were probably, at least in their initial phases, independent of one another, it nevertheless betrays a systematic approach, as Lambert postulates. This approach is typified, among other factors, by a theological concept in which no distinction is made between cosmic and natural phenomena and man-made achievements: “The distinction we make between phenomena of nature, such as rivers, and human products, such as canals, was not part of their thinking.” [Lambert, “Ancient Mesopotamian Gods,” 119, 125, 127] In this kind of world-view a separation between a divine entity and its natural or man-made emanations is rather improbable. Consequently, the idea of the classification of deified stars, plants or constellations into a special category not included within the personified divine realm, as postulated by Bottéro, is hardly convincing. Moreover, looking at the systematic religious thinking of Mesopotamia as a holistic world-view, one may suggest that in cases of a deification of objects upon which the human imprint cannot be traced, the conceptual paradigm for such non-anthropomorphic divine agents was also centered in, and fitted to a human model.—Tallay Ornan in What Is a God?, 99
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