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Noah Primeval (Chronicles of the Nephilim)

Page 29

by Brian Godawa

Hermann Gunkel first suggested in Creation and Chaos (1895) that some ANE creation myths contained a cosmic conflict between deity and sea, as well as sea dragons or serpents that expressed the creation of order out of chaos.[52] Gunkel argued that Genesis borrowed this idea from the Babylonian tale of Marduk battling the goddess Tiamat, serpent of chaos, whom he vanquished, and out of whose body he created the heavens and earth.[53] After this victory, Marduk ascended to power in the Mesopotamian pantheon. This creation story gave mythical justification to the rise of Babylon as an ancient world power most likely in the First Babylonian Dynasty under Hammurabi (1792-1750 B.C.).[54] As the prologue of the Code of Hammurabi explains, “Anu, the majestic, King of the Anunnaki, and Bel, the Lord of Heaven and Earth, who established the fate of the land, had given to Marduk, the ruling son of Ea, dominion over mankind, and called Babylon by his great name; when they made it great upon the earth by founding therein an eternal kingdom, whose foundations are as firmly grounded as are those of heaven and earth.”[55] The foundation of Hammurabi’s “eternal kingdom” is literarily linked to Marduk’s foundational creation of heaven and earth.

  Later, John Day argued in light of the discovery of the Ugarit tablets in 1928, that Canaan, not Babylonia is the source of the combat motif in Genesis,[56] reflected in Yahweh’s own complaint that Israel had become polluted by Canaanite culture.[57] In the Baal cycle, Baal battles Yam (Sea) and conquers it, along with “the dragon,” “the twisting serpent,” to be enthroned as chief deity of the Canaanite pantheon.[58]

  Creation accounts were often veiled polemics for the establishment of a king or kingdom’s claim to sovereignty.[59] Richard Clifford quotes, “In Mesopotamia, Ugarit, and Israel the Chaoskampf appears not only in cosmological contexts but just as frequently—and this was fundamentally true right from the first—in political contexts. The repulsion and the destruction of the enemy, and thereby the maintenance of political order, always constitute one of the major dimensions of the battle against chaos.”[60]

  The Sumerians had three stories where the gods Enki, Ninurta, and Inanna all destroy sea monsters in their pursuit of establishing order. The sea monster in two of those versions, according to Sumerian expert Samuel Noah Kramer, is “conceived as a large serpent which lived in the bottom of the “great below” where the latter came in contact with the primeval waters.”[61] The prophet Amos uses this same mythopoeic reference to a serpent at the bottom of the sea as God’s tool of judgment: “If they hide from my sight at the bottom of the sea, there I will command the serpent, and it shall bite them” (Amos 9:3). One Sumerian text, The Return of Ninurta to Nippur, refers to “the seven-headed serpent” that must be defeated by the divine Ninurta to illustrate his power to overcome chaos.[62]

  Perhaps the closest comparison with the Biblical Leviathan comes from Canaanite texts at Ugarit as John Day argued. In 1929, an archeological excavation at a mound in northern Syria called Ras Shamra unearthed the remains of a significant port city called Ugarit whose developed culture reaches back as far as 3000 B.C.[63] Among the important finds were literary tablets written in multiple ancient languages, which opened the door to a deeper understanding of ancient Near Eastern culture and the Bible. Ugaritic language and culture shares much in common with Hebrew that sheds light on the meaning of things such as Leviathan.

  A side-by-side comparison of some Ugaritic religious texts about the Canaanite god Baal with Old Testament passages reveals a common narrative: Yahweh, the charioteer of the clouds, metaphorically battles with Sea (Hebrew: yam) and River (Hebrew: nahar), just as Baal, the charioteer of the clouds, struggled with Yam (sea) and Nahar (river), which is also linked to victory over a sea dragon/serpent.

  UGARTIC TEXTS

  ‘Dry him up. O Valiant Baal!

  Dry him up, O Charioteer of the Clouds!

  For our captive is Prince Yam [Sea],

  for our captive is Ruler Nahar [River]!’

  (KTU 1.2:4.8-9)[64]

  What manner of enemy has arisen against Baal,

  of foe against the Charioteer of the Clouds?

  Surely I smote the Beloved of El, Yam [Sea]?

  Surely I exterminated Nahar [River], the mighty god?

  Surely I lifted up the dragon,

  I overpowered him?

  I smote the writhing serpent,

  Encircler-with-seven-heads!

  (KTU 1.3:3.38-41)[65]

  OLD TESTAMENT

  Did Yahweh rage against the rivers,

  Or was Your anger against the rivers (nahar),

  Or was Your wrath against the sea (yam),

  That You rode on Your horses,

  On Your chariots of salvation?

  (Hab. 3:8)

  In that day Yahweh will punish Leviathan the fleeing serpent,

  With His fierce and great and mighty sword,

  Even Leviathan the twisted serpent;

  And He will kill the dragon who lives in the sea.

  (Isa 27:1)

  “You divided the sea by your might;

  you broke the heads of the sea monsters on the waters.

  You crushed the heads of Leviathan.

  (Psa 74:13-14)

  Baal fights Sea and River to establish his sovereignty. He wins by drinking up Sea and River, draining them dry, which results in Baal’s supremacy over the pantheon and the Canaanite world order.[66] In the second passage, Baal’s battle with Sea and River is retold in other words as a battle with a “dragon,” the “writhing serpent” with seven heads.[67] Another Baal text calls this same dragon, “Lotan, the wriggling serpent.”[68] The Hebrew equivalents of the Ugaritic words tannin (dragon) and lotan are tannin (dragon) and liwyatan (Leviathan) respectively.[69] The words are etymologically equivalent. Not only that, but so are the Ugaritic words describing the serpent as “wriggling” and “writhing” in the Ugaritic text (brh and ‘qltn) with the words Isaiah 27 uses of Leviathan as “fleeing” and “twisting” (bariah and ‘aqalaton).[70] Notice the last Scripture in the chart that refers to Leviathan as having multiple heads just like the Canaanite Leviathan. Bible scholar Mitchell Dahood argued that in that passage of Psalm 74:12-17 the author implied the seven heads by using seven “you” references to God’s powerful activities surrounding this mythopoeic defeat of Leviathan.[71]

  The Apostle John adapted this seven-headed dragon into his Revelation as a symbol of Satan as well as a chaotic demonic empire (Rev 12:3; 13:1; 17:3). Jewish Christians in the first century carried on this motif in texts such as the Odes of Solomon that explain Christ as overthrowing “the dragon with seven heads… that I might destroy his seed.”[72]

  Thus, the Canaanite narrative of Lotan (Leviathan) the sea dragon or serpent is undeniably employed in Old Testament Scriptures and carried over into the New Testament as well.[73]

  And notice as well the reference to the Red Sea event also associated with Leviathan in the Biblical text. In Psalm 74 above, God’s parting of the waters is connected to the motif of the Mosaic covenant as the creation of a new world order in the same way that Baal’s victory over the waters and the dragon are emblematic of his establishment of authority in the Canaanite pantheon. This covenant motif is described as a Chaoskampf battle with the Sea and Leviathan (sometimes called Rahab[74]) in this and other Biblical references.

  Psa. 74:12-17

  You broke the heads of the sea monsters in the waters.

  You crushed the heads of Leviathan;…

  You have prepared the light and the sun.

  You have established all the boundaries of the earth;

  Psa. 89:9-10

  You [Yahweh] rule the raging of the sea;

  when its waves rise, you still them.

  You crushed Rahab like a carcass;

  you scattered your enemies with your mighty arm.

  Isa. 51:9-10

  Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm of Yahweh;

  Awake as in the days of old, the generations of long ago.

  Was it not You who cut Rahab in pieces,


  Who pierced the dragon?

  Was it not You who dried up the sea,

  The waters of the great deep;

  Who made the depths of the sea a pathway

  For the redeemed to cross over?

  Isa. 27:1

  In that day the Lord with his hard and great and strong sword will punish Leviathan the fleeing serpent, Leviathan the twisting serpent, and he will slay the dragon that is in the sea.

  The story of deity battling the river, the sea, and the sea dragon Leviathan is clearly a common covenant motif in the Old Testament and its surrounding ancient Near Eastern cultures.[75] The fact that Hebrew Scripture shares common words, concepts, and stories with Ugaritic scripture does not mean that Israel is affirming the same mythology or pantheon of deities, but rather that Israel lives within a common cultural environment, and God uses that cultural connection to subvert those words, concepts and stories with his own poetic meaning and purpose.

  Chaoskampf and creation language are used as word pictures for God’s covenant activity in the Bible. For God, describing the creation of the heavens and earth was a way of saying he has established his covenant with his people through exodus into the Promised Land,[76] reaffirming that covenant with the kingly line of David, and finalizing the covenant by bringing them out of exile. The reader should understand that the Scriptures listed above, exemplary of Chaoskampf, were deliberately abbreviated to make a further point below. I will now add the missing text in those passages in underline to reveal a deeper motif at play in the text—a motif of creation language as covenantal formation.

  Psa. 74:12-17

  Yet God my King is from of old,

  working salvation in the midst of the earth.

  You divided the sea by your might;

  [A reference to the Exodus deliverance of the covenant at Sinai]

  You broke the heads of the sea monsters in the waters.

  You crushed the heads of Leviathan;…

  You have prepared the light and the sun.

  You have established all the boundaries of the earth;

  Psa. 89:9-12; 19-29

  You rule the raging of the sea;

  when its waves rise, you still them.

  You crushed Rahab like a carcass;

  you scattered your enemies with your mighty arm.

  The heavens are yours; the earth also is yours;

  the world and all that is in it, you have founded them.

  The north and the south, you have created them…

  I have found David, my servant;

  with my holy oil I have anointed him,

  so that my hand shall be established with him…

  and in my name shall his horn be exalted.

  I will set his hand on the sea

  and his right hand on the rivers…

  My steadfast love I will keep for him forever,

  and my covenant will stand firm for him.

  I will establish his offspring forever

  and his throne as the days of the heavens.

  Isa 51:9-16

  Was it not You who cut Rahab in pieces,

  Who pierced the dragon?

  Was it not You who dried up the sea,

  The waters of the great deep;

  Who made the depths of the sea a pathway

  For the redeemed to cross over?...

  [Y]ou have forgotten the LORD your Maker,

  Who stretched out the heavens

  And laid the foundations of the earth…

  “For I am the LORD your God, who stirs up the sea and its waves roar (the LORD of hosts is His name). “I have put My words in your mouth and have covered you with the shadow of My hand, to establish the heavens, to found the earth, and to say to Zion, ‘You are My people.’”

  [a reaffirmation of the Sinai covenant through Moses]

  Isa. 27:1; 6-13

  In that day the Lord with his hard and great and strong sword will punish Leviathan the fleeing serpent, Leviathan the twisting serpent, and he will slay the dragon that is in the sea…

  In days to come Jacob shall take root,

  Israel shall blossom and put forth shoots

  and fill the whole world with fruit…

  And in that day a great trumpet will be blown, and those who were lost in the land of Assyria and those who were driven out to the land of Egypt will come and worship the Lord on the holy mountain at Jerusalem. [the future consummation of the Mosaic and Davidic covenant in the New Covenant of Messiah]

  In these texts, and others,[77] God does not merely appeal to his power of creation as justification for the authority of his covenant. More importantly, He uses the creation of the heavens and earth, involving subjugation of rivers, seas, and dragon (Leviathan), as poetic descriptions of God’s covenant with his people, rooted in the Exodus story, and reiterated in the Davidic covenant. The creation of the covenant is the creation of the heavens and the earth which includes a subjugation of chaos by the new order. The covenant is a cosmos—not a material one centered in astronomical location and abstract impersonal forces as modern worldview demands, but a theological one, centered in the sacred space of land, temple, and cult as the ancient Near Eastern worldview demands.[78]

  It has been noted by scholars that the motif of Chaoskampf is absent from Genesis 1 where God creates the heavens and the earth, painting a very different picture of the Hebrew creation story than its ANE neighbors. However, its very absence in that text is most likely a part of the covenantal polemic in the text. For a close look at the original Hebrew shows us that the word for dragon that we have been talking about (tannin) is in fact used of the “great sea creatures” (tanninim) that God created on Day five:

  Gen. 1:21-22

  So God created the great sea creatures (tanninim) and every living creature that moves, with which the waters swarm… And God saw that it was good. And God blessed them, saying, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the waters in the seas, and let birds multiply on the earth.”

  The ancient Near Eastern audience would read this text and know full well what was being implied against their cultural familiarity with the sea dragon. Apparently, the ANE notion of struggle against the dragon is subverted in this text by depicting God creating the dragon by the mere words of his mouth, rather than wrestling with a preexistent monster for control over the sea. And then God blesses that dragon as one of the many “good” creations that he commands to reproduce. This picture amounts to the reduction of the dragon to a mere domesticated pet in the language of Genesis 1.

  In this text, the conspicuous absence of the struggle of Chaoskampf is evidence of its subversion to the greater purposes of the Hebrew creation story. Sometimes Leviathan is used as a covenantal expression for the establishment of God’s world order out of chaos, and sometimes, it is used as a symbol of God’s authority over pagan religious expressions. In any case, its Biblical meaning is connected to its ancient Near Eastern symbolic context, not to a modern interpretation of a merely physical sea monster.

  Appendix d

  Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography

  in the Bible

  In my novel, Noah Primeval, I depict the universe as it was thought to be through the eyes of ancient Mesopotamians, as a three-tiered universe with a flat disc earth, surrounded by waters, which includes the watery Abyss and beneath that, the underworld of Sheol. Above the earth is a solid dome of the heavens, beyond which is the waters of the “heaven of heavens” where God’s throne sits on the waters. A generic illustration of this cosmography is the old public domain image depicted below. I decided to use this cosmic geography as creative literary license to capture the way the ancients saw and experienced the world. This essay explains the Scriptural expression of this worldview as held by the Biblical writers.

  Cosmography is a technical term that means a theory that describes and maps the main features of the heavens and the earth. A Cosmography or “cosmic geography” can be a complex picture of the universe that includes elements like astronomy, geology, and g
eography; and those elements can include theological implications as well. Throughout history, all civilizations and peoples have operated under the assumption of a cosmography or picture of the universe. We are most familiar with the historical change that science went through from a Ptolemaic cosmography of the earth at the center of the universe (geocentrism) to a Copernican cosmography of the sun at the center of a solar system (heliocentrism).

  Some ancient mythologies maintained that the earth was a flat disc on the back of a giant turtle; animistic cultures believe that spirits inhabit natural objects and cause them to behave in certain ways; modern westerners believe in a space-time continuum where everything is relative to its frame of reference in relation to the speed of light. Ancients tended to believe that the gods caused the weather; moderns tend to believe that impersonal physical processes cause weather. All these different beliefs are elements of a cosmography or picture of what the universe is really like and how it operates. Even though “pre-scientific” cultures like the Hebrews did not have the same notions of science that we moderns have, they still observed the world around them and made interpretations as to the structure and operations of the heavens and earth.

  A common ancient understanding of the cosmos is expressed in the visions of 1 Enoch, used in the novel Noah Primeval. In this Second Temple Jewish writing, codified around the third to fourth century B.C., and probably originally written much earlier, Enoch is taken on a journey through heaven and hell and describes the cosmic workings as they understood them in that day. Here is just a short glimpse into the elaborate construction of this ANE author:

  1 Enoch 18:1-5

  And I saw the storerooms of all the winds and saw how with them he has embroidered all creation as well as the foundations of the earth. I saw the cornerstone of the earth; I saw the four winds which bear the earth as well as the firmament of heaven. I saw how the winds ride the heights of heaven and stand between heaven and earth: These are the very pillars of heaven. I saw the winds which turn the heaven and cause the star to set—the sun as well as all the stars. I saw the souls carried by the clouds. I saw the path of the angels in the ultimate end of the earth, and the firmament of the heaven above.[79]

 

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