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The
Non-Egyptian Origins of Israel's Golden Calf Worship
(Yahweh
is the Golden
Calf ?)
21 June
2001
07 Feb. 2002
Updated and revised
18 Aug. 2002
Updated and revised
The findings
of biblical archaeology have challenged the Hebrew Bible's presentation of
early Israel's origins, causing many Humanist scholars now to understand
that there was no Exodus and no conquest of Canaan as presented in Holy
Writ. The pottery forms of Early Iron I which have been identified as
"proto-Israelite" by some scholars like Dever, do not show any
Egyptianizing techniques or styles, the assemblages are directly drawn
from Late Bronze Age Canaanite typologies, causing many to see Israel's
origins as from within Canaan, not a military conquest by runaway slaves
(who would have been exposed to 400 years of Egyptian pottery
forms).
This of
course, calls into question many assertions made in the Hebrew Bible in
regards to explanations of how certain Israelite religious beliefs came
into being. Humanists today are seeking explanations that sometimes turn
out to be contrary to Holy Writ, but compatible with the archaeological
record.
This brief
article, utilizes archaeological findings to cast a light upon the origins
of some Israelite traditions, and challenges the biblical portrayal of
Israel's "Golden Calf Worship" as coming from Egypt. Instead, it will be
argued that it is derived from Canaanite concepts, which in turn have
modified earlier Syrian and Mesopotamian sources.
We are given
to understand that Moses has requested permission for a "leave of absence"
to go into the wilderness and make sacrifices to the Hebrew God. He
explains to Pharaoh that the Egyptians would be offended by these
sacrifices. As bulls are sacrified to God at Mount Sinai, one can
appreciate Moses' comment that the Egyptians would "stone them" if they
saw a bull (an animal they worshipped) being sacrificed-
"Then
Pharaoh called Moses and Aaron, and said, "Go, sacrifice to your God
within the land. But Moses said, "It would not be right to do so; for we
shall sacrifice to the LORD our God offerings abominable to the Egyptians.
If we sacrifice offerings abominable to the Egyptians before their eyes,
will they not stone us ? We must go three day's journey into the
wilderness and sacrifice to the LORD our God and he will command
us."
(Exodus 8:
25-27)
The
Pentateuchal narrator understands that Israel has recently been released
from a 400 year bondage in Egypt. She gathers at Mount Sinai to witness
God's appearance as a great storm cloud full of thunder and lightning,
then the cloud settles on the mountain and God manifests himself as a
great fire within the cloud (Exodus 19: 9-19). Later, God calls Moses up
to the mountain to receive the 10 commandments. Moses is gone some 40
days, in this interval an impatient nation has Aaron create a Golden Calf,
and they worship it, calling it their god that has brought them up out of
Egypt, thereby rejecting Yahweh (Exodus 32:1-6).
We are later
informed that worship of the Golden Calf was reintroduced by Jeroboam who
becomes the king of a divided nation, he ruling the northern part, called
Israel. He sets up a Golden Calf at two sites, Dan and Bethel, and
appoints a feast in their honor on the 15th day of the 8th month (1 Kings
12:28-33).
"So the king
took counsel, and he said to the people, "You have gone up to Jerusalem
long enough. Behold your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of the
land of Egypt. And he set one in Bethel, and the other he put in Dan...And
Jeroboam appointed a feast on the FIFTEENTH DAY of the eighth month like
the feast that was in Judah, and he offered sacrifices upon the altar; so
he did in Bethel, sacrificing to the calves that he had made." (1 Kings
12:28-33 RSV)
Mercatante
notes three bulls that were worshipped in ancient Egypt-
"Apis. Greek
name for the Egyptian Hapi (Hape or Hap), the sacred bull of Memphis. It
was said that Apis was born of a virgin cow that had been impregnated by
the god Ptah. The CALF was recognized by certain signs, such as a peculiar
white mark on its neck and rump that resembled a hawk's wings and a
scarablike hump under its tongue. The BABY BULL was brought to Memphis
where it each day it was let loose to roam in the courtyard of the temple
for devotees to observe; his movements were believed to foretell the
future...Originally Apis may have been a fertility god concerned with
flocks and herds. At Memphis he became associated with Ptah, the god who
fashioned the world, and with Osiris, the god who blessed kingdom the dead
hoped to enter...In Egyptian art Apis was portrayed as a powerful animal
with massive limbs and body. A triangular piece of silver was fixed on his
forehead, and a disk and the uraeus were placed between his horns. Above
his legs figures of vultures with outstretched wings were outlined, and on
his back, also outlined, was a rectangular cloth with an ornamental
diamond pattern. Other sacred bulls were Mnevis and Buchis." (pp.12-13,
"Apis." Anthony S. Mercatante. Who's Who in
Egyptian Mythology. New York.
Clarkson N. Potter Inc., 1978. ISBN 0-517-53446-0 pbk.)
"Buchis. A
sacred bull worshipped at Hermonthis who was believed to be an incarnation
of the warrior god Menthu. He was also called the "living soul of Ra," as
well as the "bull of the mountains of sunrise and sunset."Buchis was
black...and he was seen as the image of the sun shining in Tuat, the
underworld. In Egyptian art Buchis wore a disk between his horns from
which rose plumes and the uraeus. On his hindquarters was the sacred
symbol of the vulture with outspread wings." (p.25, "Buchis,"
Mercatante)
"Mnevis
(Bull). Greek name for the Egyptian sacred bull Wer-mer worshipped at
Heliopolis. He was believed to be the incarnation of the sun and was often
portrayed as a bull with a disk and the uraeus between his horns." (p.96,
"Mnevis," Mercatante)
Some
scholars have noted that the "Golden Calf" may be a "Young Bull" rather
than a calf, Metzger and May make the following observation-
"The CALF,
OR YOUNG BULL, was a symbol of fertility in the nature-religions of the
ancient Near East." (p.109. Note to Exodus 32:2-3. Herbert G. May &
Bruce M. Metzger. The New
Oxford Annotated Bible With the Apocrypha. Revised
Standard Version. New York. Oxford University Press. 1977)
"Jeroboam
intended the two CALVES of gold (REALLY BULLS) to represent the
LORD...according to the Deuteronomic writer, this was very wrong, since
the bull was also the symbol of Baal..."
(p.436, Note to 1 Kings 12: 25-33. May & Metzger)
In 1982 a
bronze figurine of a horned bull
was found at an Iron I sanctuary by
archaeologists, located in Samaria. It is interesting to note that this
figurine is not described as being a witness to Egypt's being the source
of Israel's Golden Calf worship. The figurine does not display any
Egyptianizing iconography, the sun disk and uraeus or vultures' wings over
the shoulders and hindquarters. It is free of any Egyptian
motifs.
"...the bronze
figure of a bull dating to
Iron Age I that was found east of Dothan at an open air shrine (?) (ilus.
142, Mazar, 1982) may
represent the weather god (Hadad-Baal,
Yahweh ?), even though since this is in the hill country of Samaria, one might also identify this as El (Coogan 1987 1 f.; Ahlstrom 1990; Curtis 1990, 27f.; note the mention of El-Berit at Shechem, Judges 8-9; for the metaphoric language describing El as a bull, see passages such as Numbers 23:22, 24 :8)." (pp.118-9, Othmar Keel & Christoph Uehlinger. Gods, Goddesses ad Images of God in Ancient Israel. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Fortress Press. 1998. ISBN 0-8006-2789-X hdbk.) If Egypt is
not the source of Israel's Golden Calf worship, what place is ? A
possible clue is provided in the statement that Jeroboam set aside the
15th day of the 8th month as a special feast day in honor of the Golden
Calf (1 Kings 12:32). From Mesopotamian myths it has been determined that
the 15th day of the month was considered a holy day and to be observed in
honor of the Moon god, it being the day of the full moon.
Mesopotamian myths state that the moon god is called A CALF (Akkadian
: amar).
Leick on the
Sumerian moon-god being likened to a YOUNG CALF-
"Nanna's
epithets are ashimbabbar, 'the luminous', an allusion to the bright light
of the moon; AMAR, 'CALF,' also AMAR.ban.da.den.lil.a, 'YOUNG CALF of
Enlil,' ma.gur, 'boat.' Both references are allusions to the crescent
shape of the YOUNG MOON, either recalling horns or the slender reed-boats
of the marshes.
The moon-god
in many cultures has associations with fertility; probably inspired by the
menstrual cycle. In Sumer he was closely linked with the fertility of
animals, especially cattle (the shape of the crescent moon is likened to
horns). One hymn declares '(you) make the breed bull and the good bull
mount (the cow) for you, he makes the good seed flow for you'...Nanna was
also called Su'en (later contracted to Sin). In some texts, Su'en referred
to the crescent, NANNA TO THE FULL MOON, and Ashimbabbar to the young
waxing moon, but this was not consistently adhered to."
(pp.125-6,
"Nanna(r), Sumerian Moon-god." Gwendolyn Leick. A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Mythology. London & New York. Routledge. 1991, 1998. ISBN 0-415-19811-9
pbk.)
In Canaanite
myths preserved at Ugarit ( ca. 14th-13th century BCE), we learn that Baal
Hadad (Adad) could take on the form of a bull. He was the god of
thunderstorms and rains. In one myth he mounted his sister, Anat, who
taking on the form of a cow, later gave birth to a bull calf. The myths
note that storm clouds were called ADAD'S CALVES. I find it
interesting that God made himself manifest to the nation at Mount Sinai in
the form a great storm cloud full of thunder and lighting. Had a Ugaritic
Canaanite been at Sinai, he would have understood the storm cloud to be
ADAD'S CALF. Is there a relationship here between a GOLDEN CALF being made
at Sinai and God's appearance as a storm cloud ? The Ugaritic myths
call the supreme god Bull-El and make him the father of the gods and of
mankind. His son Baal-Adad can take on the form of a bull, and his sister
Anat can take on the form of a cow. The calf they produce is associated
with storm clouds. I am of the persuasion that it is Canaanite religious
beliefs dating from Late Bronze Age times (14-13th centuries BCE), that
lies behind Iron Age I (ca. 1200-1000 BCE) Israel's worship of the Golden
Calf, not a 400 or 200 year captivity in Egypt and worship of Egyptian
bulls.
"Storm clouds
were called Adad's `bull calves'." (p.111,
"Ishkur/Adad," Jeremy Black & Anthony Green. Gods, Demons and
Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia- An Illustrated
Dictionary. Austin,
Texas. University of Texas Press. 1992 ISBN 0-292-70794-0
pbk.)
"Adad. His
name is probably etymologically connected with Arabic hadda 'to break' and
haddat, 'thunder.' (p.1, "Adad," Gwendolyn Leick)
"In ancient
Babylonia a particular day of distinctive character was known as
Shabattu (Shapattu), a name
plainly identical with the Hebrew Shabbat. It was
designated specifically as the 'day of the quieting of the heart.' The
precise meaning of this expression is uncertain, but at least the concept
of relaxation is implicit therein." (p.135, Vol. 4, "J. Morgenstern,
"Sabbath." George A. Buttrick, Editor. The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible. Nashville.
Abingdon Press. 1962.)
"Moon
worship flourished
wherever Mesopotamian culture spread, and even after its demise, it
survived at places like Harran." (p.326,
Hallo)
It is worth
noting that Abraham is alleged to have settled for a time at Haran/Harran,
a center of Moon worship, before moving on to Canaan, and Israel is
accused of worshipping the Moon.
"In the end
Enlil met Adad and addressed him: 'O first among thy brothers, thou BULL
OF THE HEAVENS...(p.41, Stephen Herbert Langdon. The Mythology of All Races, Semitic. Vol.5. Boston. Marshall Jones Company 1931)
Langdon on
Yahweh/Yaw being a moon-god or storm-god-
"Some have
argued that the god Yaw was a
moon-god but the
sources both Aramaic and Hebrew indicate his identity with the rain and
thunder god, Adad." (p.41,
Langdon)
I suspect
that to a degree, Yahweh-Elohim is a fusion of both, i.e., Moon and
Rain/Thunder gods.
Jeroboam set
up two golden calves, one at Bethel, the other at Dan, telling the people
they were their gods, echoing the very words of Aaron at Mount Sinai (who,
although making only ONE golden calf, proclaimed it to be Israel's
gods).
"And he
received the gold at their hand, and fashioned it with a graving tool, and
made a molten calf; and said, 'These are your gods, O Israel,
who brought you up out the land of Egypt !" (Exodus 32:4,
RSV)
"So the king
took counsel, and made two calves of gold. And he said to the people, "You
have gone up to Jerusalem long enough. Behold your gods, O Israel,
who brought you up out of the land of Egypt. And he set one in Bethel, and
the other he put in Dan." (1 Kings 12: 28-29)
Eislen,
Lewis and Downey mention in passing, a potsherd found in Samaria inscribed
Egeliah, which means in Hebrew "bull-calf of Yah." If Jeroboam is assocating a bull-calf with Yah rather than with Baal, then perhaps this association harkens back to the Ugaritic myths (13th century BCE) which portray the supreme god, El or Bull-El as the father of the gods and of mankind ? Bull-El dotingly gives his "son" (who would be a bull-calf, as El is a Bull) Yam (Hebrew Yam meaning "Sea") a new name when he proclaims him ruler of the earth in opposition to Baal (Baal-Hadad), Yam's new name is YAW ! Perhaps the Samaritan postherd then, preserves a link to the golden calf or Egeliah, as Ugaritic Yaw (Yam), son of Bull-El, and El has been conflated with Yaw later by the Hebrews in the 9th-6th centuries BCE as Yahweh-Elohim ? Eislen,
Lewis and Downey-
"The name
Egeliah ("bull-calf
of Yah") on a
potsherd from Samaria shows how far reaching was the sin of Jeroboam, the
son of Nebat, who made Israel to sin." (p. 119. F.C. Eiselen, Edwin Lewis,
& D.G. Downey. The Abingdon
Bible Commentary. Garden
City, New York. Doubleday & Company. 1929, reprint, 1957)
Hallo on the
15th day of the month being called Shapattu by the Sumerians-
"...the
terms for the individual lunar phases were translated into Akkadian and
appear together in the Old Babylonian Atrahasis epic as arhu, sebutu u
SHAPATTU, 'the first, seventh, and FIFTEENTH days of the month."
(pp.318-319, William W. Hallo, "New Moons and Sabbaths: A Case-Study in
the Contrastive Approach." Frederick E. Greenspahn, Editor.
Essential
Papers on Israel and the Ancient Near East. New York.
New York University Press. 1991. hdbk.)
Conclusions:
Jeroboam
established the FIFTEENTH
DAY of the 8th
month as a special
feast day in honor of the Golden Calf. We
have noted that this day is
the day of the Full Moon, which was called in Sumerian SHAPATTU, translated
into Akkadian as 'the day of the quieting of the heart,' and that in
Sumerian belief, the Full
Moon was called Nanna, who is also called a YOUNG CALF. The bible condemns Israel and Judah for worshipping the Sun,
Moon, Stars, as
well as the Baals, and Baal Hadad/Adad could take the appearance of a bull
and sire children called Adad's Calves, who are storm clouds, the very
form Yahweh-Elohim assumed at Mount Sinai. A potsherd from Samaria is inscribed Egeliah, "the bull-calf of
Yah," suggesting it is NOT an Egyptian god being honored by Jeroboam like
Apis, Buchis or Mnevis, nor a Syrian god like Baal-hadad, but Yahweh
himself.
Ugaritic
myths call the supreme god "Bull-El" thus I suspect
that Israel's Golden Calf worship is a reflection of a true historical
kernel, Canaanite and Mesopotamian Calf worship, it isn't Egyptian at
all. The Sabbath
is held by some scholars to be related to SHAPATTU, the FIFTEENTH DAY,
when the moon is full, and called Nanna THE YOUNG CALF ! Sooo,
-Sabbath if derived from Shapattu- suggests to me that ancient Israel
originally worshipped the Moon and possessed a Lunar calendar. Calf
worship is then, to my understanding, a form of Sumerian lunar worship
combined with Canaanite motifs of Baal-Hadad, the mighty 'bull of heaven'
who impregnates his sister Anat, called in Egyptian 19th dynasty texts,
"THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN"
! Sooo- it
is the "The Queen of Heaven" who gives birth to the bull-calf which
becomes the storm cloud filled with thunder and lightnings- the very form
Yahweh-Elohim took on in manifesting himself at Mount Sinai to his people
!
A silver
plated bronze figurine of bull-calf has been
found in a temple deposit at Ashkelon, ca. 2000-1500 BCE. As Baal-Hadad
was honored as a diety controlling waters and ships at sea, the Ashkelon
por city's temple may have been dedicated to him.
This
research, if correct in its suppositions, suggests that Yahweh-Elohim as presented in the bible is but an amalgum of
earlier gods and myths, reformatted and sanitized for a later
age. He
supplants the Queen of Heaven, Anat, who gave birth to the calf that
became the storm cloud which brings not only the terrifying thunder and
lightning, but also, the life-giving rain. Yahweh-Elohim is a fusion of
Bull-El, Yaw/Yam and Baal-Hadad. The closest Egyptian association from the
Southern
Sinai, is that
Hathor the
cow-goddess and
sky-goddess, gave birth
every morning to Horus as the Sun which was called a Calf, but no Calves
have been found in the
Egyptian temples of Serabit el Khadim and Timna (said temples being
dedicated to Hathor), cf. my article titled, "Exodus
Memories of Southern Sinai, Connecting the Archaeological Evidence to the
Biblical Narratives."
Archaeologists have found a stele showing a god standing above a
young bull, hurling lightning bolts, whom they have identified as
Baal-Hadad, the god of Thunder and Lightning. Thus some have suggested
that the bronze bull found in Samaria within an Iron I context is but a
"pedestal" for an invisible Yahweh to stand/ride upon as in the Baal-Hadad
stele. Numerous examples are attested of bronze bulls in Late Bronze Age
Canaan, Phoenicia and Syria, yet no examples exist for the Sinai. In a few
cases some of these bronze bull figurines have gold gilt work, mirroring
the Bible's notion of a Golden Calf being created by Israel within a Late
Bronze Age context (the Exodus being dated ca. 1446 BCE, cf. 1 Kings 6:1,
480 years elapsing between Solomon's fourth year and the
Exodus).
Archaeology,
then does attest to the Bible's notion of cast figurine bulls being
worshipped in Canaan in Late Bronze Age times (1560-1200 BCE), as well as
Iron I (1200-1000 BCE). The potsherd found in Samaria inscribed egel-iah,
"bull-calf of Yah," suggests to me that it is associated with Yahweh, its
is his symbol, his animal, not some Egyptian god. Perhaps egel-iah
is but another way of saying that YAHWEH
IS THE GOLDEN
CALF
?
I suspect,
then that the Pentateuchal narrator has correctly preserved the notion
that Israel worshiped the Calf not as a pedestal for Yahweh to stand upon,
but that they worshipped the calf AS A GOD, and that YAHWEH IS
THE GOLDEN CALF.
I note that
in the Ugaritic myths Baal assumes at times the form of a Bull, that is,
the Bull is not his pedestal, its him ! The bull he stands upon is but his animal
manifestation. Ergo, egel-iah is Yahweh's manifestation as a
Calf.
Notes:
Although
Baal (Baal-Hadad) is portrayed as being "bull" when he impregnates Anat in
the form of a "cow," the following verse is important because it likens
the dead Baal to being a "calf. " Was the calf worshipped at Dan and
Bethel, Baal as the calf Anat searched for ? Or is Egeliah,
"the bull-calf of Yah," in competition with Baal the bull-calf for the
hearts and minds of israel ???
"...Anat goes in
search of Baal
('like the
heart of a cow for her calf...so was the
heart of Anat after Baal)." (p.22, "Baal-myths," Leick)
"Inanna...'Lady of
Heaven'...She is
munus.zi 'The Woman,' u.sun.zi.an.na 'the exalted COW OF HEAVEN', who
provides life and sustenance. (pp.86-7, "Inanna," Leick)
"Anat...she
shares many characteristics with the Mesopotamian Ishtar. In Ugaritic
myths she is the daughter of El and sister of Baal whom she always
supports and with whom she has a sexual relationship, only after having
transformed herself into a cow; he mounts her as a bull, and she gives
birth to a BULL-CALF." (P.17, "Anat," Piotr Bienkowski & Alan Millard,
Editors. Dictionary
of the Ancient Near East.
Philadelphia. University
of Pennsylvania Press. 2000. ISBN 0-8122-3557-6 hdbk.)
"The title
"Queen of
Heaven" is applied
in an Egyptian inscription from the 19th Dynasty at Beth-shan to 'Antit",
the Canaanite fertility-goddess Anat, who is
termed "Queen of Heaven and Mistress of the gods." (p.975, Vol. 3, J.
Gray, "The Queen of Heaven," Arthur G. Buttrick, Editor.
The
Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible.
1962)
"...Ishtar,
the goddess of love and fertility, who was identified with the Venus star
and is actually entitled "Mistress of Heaven" in the Amarna tablets." (p.
975, Vol. 3. Gray, "Queen of Heaven")
The Sumerian
Inanna was assimilated to the Semitic Ishtar according to scholars. Inanna
was called "First Daughter of the Moon," Nanna the moon-god being her
father. Ishtar was associated with the Venus star. Thus an amalgum made
the "Queen of Heaven" not only "the Great Cow of Heaven" but also
the fierce warrior goddess associated with the Venus star. Most likely
Anat is a reflex of Inanna and Ishtar, she being a cow that gives birth to
a bull calf of Adad's and she is also a ferocious warrior like Ishtar. It
is interesting that the Jews stationed at Elephantine ca. 430 BCE still
worshipped a goddess called Anat-Yahu (Anat-Yahweh), perhaps Anat-Yahu was
a vestige of the "Queen of Heaven cult" and its associated Calf worship
?
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