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#5928087 / #1 | |
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Newcomer
Join Date: November 2005
Location: Dovunque
Posts: 59
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I'm sure I read a thread a day or two back which mentioned the above, which got me thinking... and led me to find this...
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Thanks. |
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#5928146 / #2 |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: December 2008
Location: Hillsborough, NJ
Posts: 721
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That's a long statement.
There's a group on yahoo that discusses whether the Hebrew divinities were Canaanite or Egyptian in origin. Both positions seem very strong to me. One guy places Moses in the 12th dynasty and makes a reasonable case that the Egyptian he killed was a pharoh. This is talking 1900+ BCE. The goddess Sekhmet has a name which is strikingly similar to Shekhina which is a Jewish concept for a feminine aspect of god. These two names can be googled together. Regarding your post, there's a lot of stuff in there that will be very interesting to look into. The David note is interesting, especially as it concerns the Tel-Dan Stele, where there is some debate on whether "bytdwd" means "House of David" or something else. Great stuff, thanks for posting this. |
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#5928166 / #3 |
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Newcomer
Join Date: November 2005
Location: Dovunque
Posts: 59
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![]() I didn't wish to post the whole of the missive I read but it's here if anyone's interested... http://www.assatashakur.org/forum/ke...haracters.html |
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#5928794 / #4 |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: February 2004
Location: Indiana
Posts: 3,982
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Tehuti/Thoth corresponds to Enki in the Sumerian myth. Enki was the god that told the Sumerian version of Noah to build a boat. He was also called "Ea" pronounced "yah".
This is all very interesting, but isn't etymology kind of tricky though? |
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#5928836 / #5 | ||
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Veteran Member
Join Date: July 2004
Location: Sweden
Posts: 3,114
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"Shekhina" is written sh-k-y-n-h. The kh in Sekhmet perhaps isn't a k either, so there's one or zero common consonants, and in most cases we don't know what the Egyptian vowels were. The seemingly common "e" might for example have been an "a" in Sekhmet. The greatest similarity is that both female names surprisingly have the feminine ending, -h in Hebrew and -t in Egyptian. |
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#5929289 / #6 |
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Regular Member
Join Date: April 2008
Location: Europe
Posts: 176
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The shekinah is a later (post 70 AD) invention, I believe. But its a noun constructed from the verb "shakah" (or something like that). Its the Hebrew verb "to dwell" which is used in Bible in connection with the Spirit "dwelling" in God's earthly house (tabernacle or temple). So Shekinah could be translated as "dweller".
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#5929306 / #7 | |
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Join Date: March 2005
Location: to and fro
Posts: 1,183
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#5929983 / #8 | ||
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Regular Member
Join Date: April 2008
Location: Europe
Posts: 176
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Whether they had the goddess Asherah in mind specifically, I dont know. I believe the role of Asherah in the old days, Jahweh's wife the fertility goddess, is what later largely became in the Bible "the spirit/glory/presence of God". Which they then much later unified as the Shekinah concept. |
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#5931499 / #9 | ||
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Veteran Member
Join Date: December 2008
Location: Hillsborough, NJ
Posts: 721
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Asherah seems to be in the dog house before the 1st exile, then makes a possible stunning comeback with Esther-Asherah-Ishtar. This goddess type activity seems to have been going on for quite awhile. |
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