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deviadah
02-18-2008, 04:03 PM
http://www.crystalinks.com/akhenatenhat.jpg (http://www.crystalinks.com/akhenaten.html)

Akhenaten has always been a source of passion and mystery for me. For those who don't know much about this great Pharaoh let me just say that he was the King of Egypt during the 18th Dynasty (about 1375 to 1358 B.C.E.). Akhenaten is the earliest known creator of a new religion, and this fact alone makes him extremely important for all kinds of studies.

Both pre- and post-Akhenaten Egypt worshipped many different gods, but he introduced the concept of One God (the Sun, or Aten). Of course he was murdered!

Below I have posted a hymn that shows the essence of this single god. This hymn was discovered in 1890. I have underlined or put in bold the passages I think are the most interesting.

The Great Hymn to the Aten

Thou appearest beautifully on the horizon of heaven,
Thou living Aton, the beginning of life!
When thou art risen on the eastern horizon,
Thou hast filled every land with thy beauty.
Thou art gracious, great, glistening, and high over every land;
Thy rays encompass the lands to the limit of all that thou hast made:
As thou art Re, thou reachest to the end of them;
(Thou) subduest them (for) thy beloved son.
Though thou art far away, thy rays are on earth;
Though thou art in their faces, no one knows thy going.

When thou settest in the western horizon,
The land is in darkness, in the manner of death.
They sleep in a room, with heads wrapped up,
Nor sees one eye the other.
All their goods which are under their heads might be stolen,
(But) they would not perceive (it).
Every lion is come forth from his den;
All creeping things, they sting.
Darkness is a shroud, and the earth is in stillness,
For he who made them rests in his horizon.

At daybreak, when thou arisest on the horizon,
When thou shinest as the Aton by day,
Thou drivest away the darkness and givest thy rays.
The Two Lands are in festivity every day,
Awake and standing upon (their) feet,
For thou hast raised them up.
Washing their bodies, taking (their) clothing,
Their arms are (raised) in praise at thy appearance.
All the world, they do their work.

All beasts are content with their pasturage;
Trees and plants are flourishing.
The birds which fly from their nests,
Their wings are (stretched out) in praise to thy ka.
All beasts spring upon (their) feeet.
Whatever flies and alights,
They live when thou hast risen (for) them.
The ships are sailing north and south as well,
For every way is open at thy appearance.
The fish in the river dart before thy face;
Thy rays are in the midst of the great green sea.

Creator of seed in women,
Thou who makest fluid into man,
Who maintainest the son in the womb of his mother,
Who soothest him with that which stills his weeping,
Thou nurse (even) in the womb,
Who givest breath to sustain all that he has made!
When he descends from the womb to breathe
On the day when he is born,
Thou openest his mouth completely,
Thou suppliest his necessities.
When the chick in the egg speaks within the shell,
Thou givest him breath within it to maintain him.
When thou hast made him his fulfillment within the egg, to break it,
He comes forth from the egg to speak at his completed (time);
He walks upon his legs when he comes forth from it.

How manifold it is, what thou hast made!
They are hidden from the face (of man).
O sole god, like whom there is no other!
Thou didst create the world according to thy desire,
Whilst thou wert alone: All men, cattle, and wild beasts,
Whatever is on earth, going upon (its) feet,
And what is on high, flying with its wings.

The countries of Syria and Nubia, the land of Egypt,
Thou settest every man in his place,
Thou suppliest their necessities:
Everyone has his food, and his time of life is reckoned.
Their tongues are separate in speech,
And their natures as well;
Their skins are distinguished,
As thou distinguishest the foreign peoples.
Thou makest a Nile in the underworld,
Thou bringest forth as thou desirest
To maintain the people (of Egypt)
According as thou madest them for thyself,
The lord of all of them, wearying (himself) with them,
The lord of every land, rising for them,
The Aton of the day, great of majesty.

All distant foreign countries, thou makest their life (also),
For thou hast set a Nile in heaven,
That it may descend for them and make waves upon the mountains,
Like the great green sea,
To water their fields in their towns.
How effective they are, thy plans, O lord of eternity!
The Nile in heaven, it is for the foreign peoples
And for the beasts of every desert that go upon (their) feet;
(While the true) Nile comes from the underworld for Egypt.

Thy rays suckle every meadow.
When thou risest, they live, they grow for thee.
Thou makest the seasons in order to rear all that thou hast made,
The winter to cool them,
And the heat that they may taste thee.
Thou hast made the distant sky in order to rise therein,
In order to see all that thou dost make.
Whilst thou wert alone,
Rising in thy form as the living Aton,
Appearing, shining, withdrawing or aproaching,
Thou madest millions of forms of thyself alone.
Cities, towns, fields, road, and river --
Every eye beholds thee over against them,
For thou art the Aton of the day over the earth....

Thou are in my heart,
And there is no other that knows thee
Save thy son Nefer-kheperu-Re Wa-en-Re,
For thou hast made him well-versed in thy plans and in thy strength.

The world came into being by thy hand,
According as thou hast made them.
When thou hast risen they live,
When thou settest they die.
Thou art lifetime thy own self,
For one lives (only) through thee.
Eyes are (fixed) on beauty until thou settest.
All work is laid aside when thou settest in the west.
(But) when (thou) risest (again),
[Everything is] made to flourish for the king,...
Since thou didst found the earth
And raise them up for thy son,
Who came forth from thy body: the King of Upper and Lower Egypt,
... Ak-en-Aton, ... and the Chief Wife of the King ... Nefert-iti, living and youthful forever and ever. - source (http://www.touregypt.net/hymntoaten.htm)

http://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h18/deviadah/forum/Aye1-7.gif (http://www.rostau.org.uk/Aye/high_res.html)
Great Hymn to the Aten - the monotheism of light without darkness & the Aten of Pharaoh Akhenaten (http://www.sofiatopia.org/maat/aten.htm) by Wim van den Dungen

:cool:

Amur
02-19-2008, 09:48 AM
I think it was actually Akhenaten that introduced the whole concept of the Abrahamic single God, Above all Else. Although the Old testament God and the Sun God (Christ) feels very different from each other. But I do recon than many religions use the metaphor of the Sun as God and how it nourishes everything. But in a way I don't accept the One God metaphor, but yet do. Hard to explain. Someone on Occultforums said that it's better to have a pantheism for learning. In this I do agree, but then again if there is one God who is above all else that is, then I suppose that technology is also superior to that of the other Gods. Then again I like the cycle-theory where things pop up in a cycle becoming stronger and stronger. Imagine how it would be to have a Superior God as a buffer for all the other Gods, that would explode into the other Gods at a specific time-frame giving that technology to those who are worthy of it(with worthy I mean ready to get this technology and not cause a fuss around it).

But I suppose 2012 will tell us how it is, might be good the get the sunglasses ready :cool:

deviadah
02-19-2008, 03:11 PM
Well it is not really the Sun that is the God of Akhenaten but the Light of the Sun... of course one can't know for certain but the evidence points in this direction. And you are correct, he was the first to introduce the concept of monotheism.

It was Freud who connected Akhenaten with Moses... but there is no proof beind his claims other than theory!

:cool:

erilaz
02-20-2008, 10:05 PM
During his rule, Akhenaten was apparently trying to "federalize" Egypt's government and minimize to some extent the power that priests had. Moving his culture closer to monotheism must have been a useful thing.

It might be worth mentioning that some scholars draw parallels between this hymn and the book of Psalms. Victor Matthews and Don Benjamin are two such scholars, although their translation of the hymn seems quite different. They argue Aten and Yahweh have very similar functions i light of these two texts.

deviadah
02-21-2008, 03:22 PM
It might be worth mentioning that some scholars draw parallels between this hymn and the book of Psalms.
Yes that is true, although it is a theory of course. But it can't be dismissed so easily since all religions have originated after Akhenaten - so the possibility of some form of influence will always be present!

Just the fact that Aten is often portrayed like this (the Orb in the center):
http://www.bluedolphinpublishing.com/Egyptian/Aten.jpg

And Jesus like this (and the halo can be seen in Hinduism and Buddhism as well):
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c9/Christus_Ravenna_Mosaic.jpg/217px-Christus_Ravenna_Mosaic.jpg

And the halo kind of reminds me of the Solar Cross:
http://www.guide-to-symbols.com/_images_sn/solarcross2.gif

Which reminds me of:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/34/Broken_crossed_circle.svg/124px-Broken_crossed_circle.svg.png

But there are already two threads that deal with this last symbol...

:cool:

The big difference is that in Akhenaten's day god was not behind man, but above. Seems like latter religions pulled god down towards earth (as seen in the halo behind Jesus).

"Men rarely (if ever) manage to dream up a god superior to themselves. Most gods have the manners and morals of a spoiled child." - Robert Heinlein

Aten differs in this respect since Aten is only a divine light!

Radiant Star
02-28-2008, 03:05 PM
Thats a beautiful Aten pic deviadah. Where is it from?

deviadah
02-28-2008, 04:05 PM
From this place: http://www.bluedolphinpublishing.com/Egyptphotos.html

:cool:

Also an interesting timeline point is that Akhenatens son-in-law Tutankaten (Servant of Aten) changed his name (strongly influenced by the fundamental priests) to Tutankamen (Servant of Amen) after the murder/disappearance of Akhenaten.

One, or the only, surviving architectural reference to Aten is the great Sphinx on the Giza Plain:

http://www.edu.pe.ca/rural/class_webs/art/images/sphinx.jpg

Radiant Star
02-29-2008, 12:43 PM
Thanks dev. Link to an interesting looking book there too.

deviadah
03-16-2008, 11:48 AM
Egypts Golden Empire - Pharaohs of the Sun