“Bryant tells us of Sesostris building a ship 280 cubits long, dedicated
to Osiris at Thebes. This is the most remote inland part of Egypt, where it
made no sense to build a ship; thus it was not a ship, but a temple, built in
the shape or symbol of a ship. Bryant says it was sacred to Osiris at Theba, or
actually was itself called Theba, and the city (Theba) also got its name from
the ark. Theba is the Hebrew word for ark used in Genesis”.
Joe Spears
Joe Spears appears to have identified
successfully, in his 2008 article:
Noah and Family: Myth, Legends,
Ancient History and the Bible
some further intriguing appropriations by
the ancient pagan nations of biblical antediluvian
and early post-diluvian stories: http://www.tasc-creationscience.org/content/noah-and-family-myth-legends-ancient-history-and-bible
…. In mythology,
gods ruled over the realm of men. It thus seems likely that rulers would the
ones to be portrayed as gods. This is confirmed in the well-known case of the
Egyptian Pharaohs, who were considered at least semidivine.
One
interesting psychological observation: a person who gained a position of power
in the ancient world through war(s) of aggression is a person who may have a
desire for power. Indeed, some would say this is blatantly obvious. If this is
the case, it is within the realm of possibility that this desire for power
might manifest itself in the ruler himself claiming his deity. As an example,
some Roman emperors (Caligula, etc.) claimed divinity.
Ancestors
have been worshiped in different cultures, including cultures in India, Africa,
China, Egypt, and others.
Powerful
and mighty men such as Heracles (Hercules) could be thought to be gods, or
accounts of their deeds may have become exaggerated with time to the point that
those deeds became superhuman in nature, and thus, the performer of the deeds
also became superhuman. In fact, Zeus is described by ancient writer Euhemerus
as a mighty warrior, but a man.
What
about long-lived people? What would someone living in the ancient world think
if there was a 500 year old king ruling their country? This king would easily
seem immortal. The ancients did believe such people existed—at least, they
claimed that they did. Josephus mentions this in Antiquities of the Jews,
Book 1, Chapter 3, section 9. He also says that other ancient writers also
claimed great longevity for some of the ancients – Manetho, Berosus, Mochus,
Hestieus, Hieronymus, etc. The Bible also gives accounts of people in ancient
times who lived hundreds of years. Some ancient accounts even claim that some
kings lived thousands of years.
Regardless
of how long such people actually lived, the written accounts do mention very
long lives in ancient times. Some might say we are gullible for believing these
accounts, but whether people really lived that long is not so much the point,
as it is that others who lived long ago believed the accounts. We should bear
in mind that it is their attitude toward real people that would
cause them to deify such people, not the actual age.
The
people who live a long time might be considered immortal—possessing a god-like
quality. One question: wouldn’t everyone at that time also live to the about
same age? To understand this question, let’s examine the lifespans of people as
found in Genesis.
Before
the flood, people—at least the people that Genesis tells us about—lived 800 or
900 plus years. After the flood, there is a gradual decrease in the lifespans
of individuals. A plot of this shows an exponential decay in the lifespans. Why
would ancient writers make up numbers in such a way as to fit a pattern that would
not be described until centuries afterward? Many processes and phenomena in
nature exhibit exponential patterns in their behavior. This gradual decrease in
lifespan is is seen from one generation to the next. But remember, that the
original older ancestors would still be around for many
generations.
So,
we see a gradual decrease in the lifespan of men after the flood. It seems to
level off somewhere near 100 years. It seems that some might think of Noah and
others who were extremely long-lived as apparently immortal, and therefore
gods. Some might question, why would ancient people say some are gods, since
all people had approximately the same lifespan? To explain this, we must
realize there would be a mix of people of various lifespans all living at the
same time. The long-lived would still be around while their
multiple-great-grandchildren would be alive. And the long-lived would be few in
number, while the short-lived would be much larger in number. It appears that
each succeeding generation had shorter average lifespans than the previous
(check the ages given in the Old Testament to see this). So, by the time the
ancient ones were really old, there could easily exist a large number
of relatively short-lived descendants. This is because the number of people in
each succeeding generation would typically get larger, while the lifespan would
get smaller.
So,
there can be many generations during the lifetime of one long-lived ancient
member of Noah's family, each succeeding generation making up a proportionately
larger part of the population than the preceding generation. Thus, the
population could be very large and consist mostly of short-lived people, while
a long-lived ancestor still existed. The vast majority could easily view such a
one as immortal, or as a god. Thus, within a few hundred years after the flood,
assuming the ages given in Genesis to be accurate, there could easily have
existed a handful (or a few dozen) extremely long-lived individuals, a
minority, among a much larger population of much shorter-lived individuals. To
the multitudes, these few long-lived leaders would have seemed immortal and as
gods, for not only were these ancients long-lived, but they were the fathers
and grandfathers of their societies—recall ancestor worship—but they also were
the founders, leaders and rulers of their nations according to ancient
documents (recalll the divinity of kings).
So,
we see a situation with a minority of powerful, longlived rulers. They would
have all of the above-listed characteristics that would make people see them as
gods. Thus, that Noah and his immediate descendants would be transformed into
deities seems reasonable and fits the above reasons for doing it. And we
also have the evidence of the myths themselves and ancient writers such as Euhemerus,
indicating that Noah and family actually were deified and
incorporated into ancient mythology.
Noah and the Deluge
Bryant
wrote: “Among the people of the east the true name of the Patriarch was
preserved…Noas, Naus, …Nous…Anaxagoras spoke of him by the name of Noas or
Nous. …The disciples of Anaxagoras esteem Nous the same as Prometheus … .”
Suidas
and Stephanus tell us Annacus or Nannacus lived 300 years, and then the Deluge
came which destroyed mankind—he prayed for man and was a king. Annacus, Innachus
and Nannacus relate to Noachus and Noah.
According
to Eusebius, who lived around 300 BC and is known as the father of church
history, Inachus would have lived long before the existence of the place he was
supposed to have ruled.
Greeks
combined Dios (god) with Nusus (Noah) as Dio-nusus or Dionysis. The god
Dionysis also is connected with Noah. Dionysis is associated with vineyards and
taught man to plant the vine; Noah planted a vineyard after the flood (Gen.
9:20).
Evidence
of Noah in the ancient world is found in place names. Hesychius, who compiled
the largest dictionary of ancient Greek words and lived about 500 BC in
Alexandria, claimed cities and mountains throughout the world were called
Nusean. These places included Arabia, Ethiopia, Egypt, India, Libya, and more.
Philo
says Deucalion was actually Noah: “The Grecians call the person Deucalion, but
the Chaldeans style him Noe; in whose time there happened the great eruption of
waters.”
Seisithrus
was a king, according to Median and Babylonian archives, as described by
Adydenus and Eusebius. Quoting from Bryant’s New System,
…the
flood began…during the prevalence of the waters Seisithrus sent out birds, that
he might judge if the flood had subsided: but that the birds, not finding any
resting place, returned to him again. This was repeated three times;…he quitted
the ark…1
According
to Bryant, Lucian said,
…those
of the antediluvian world were all destroyed. The present world is peopled from
the sons of Deucalion…from one person…the former brood…were men of violence…
lawless…. On this account they were doomed to destruction: and for this purpose
there was a mighty eruption of waters from the earth, attended with heavy
showers form above…till the whole earth was covered with a flood and all flesh
drowned…Deucalion alone was preserved, to re-people the world. This mercy was
shown to him on account of his justice and piety. …He put all his family, both
his sons and their wives, into a vast ark…animals of every species, boars,
horses, lions, serpents, whatever lived upon the face of the earth, followed
him by pairs…1
Lucian
also says Deucalion raised an altar to God after exiting the ark. Note these
points in agreement between Lucian’s account and the Genesis account:
·
water coming from the earth, not just as rain
·
all today are descendants of the sole survivor
·
the survivor built an altar
·
the survivor was pious and just
·
the world destroyed was evil
·
their evil was the reason for the flood
·
animals were on the ark
·
animals appeared in pairs
The Ark
Berosus
mentions something else in agreement with the Biblical description of the ark.
He said the ancient people used scrapings from the ark’s asphalt as charms. The
Bible says the ark was sealed or coated inside and out.
Theophilus
said the ark was visible in his day on the mountains of Armenia. Interestingly,
the Bible says the ark landed in the mountains of Ararat. Theophilus’ locations
matches the one in Genesis. Chrysostom said the remains of the ark were
preserved in the mountains of Armenia in his time.
In
Egypt the Ship of Isis was called Baris. According to Nicolaus Damascenus,
Baris is the name of the mountain on which the ark rested in Armenia. Here we
see a connection with Egyptian religion, the mythological personage Isis, and
the Ark of Noah.
Bryant
tells us of Sesostris building a ship 280 cubits long, dedicated to Osiris at
Thebes. This is the most remote inland part of Egypt, where it made no sense to
build a ship; thus it was not a ship, but a temple, built in the shape or
symbol of a ship. Bryant says it was sacred to Osiris at Theba, or actually was
itself called Theba, and the city (Theba) also got its name from the ark. Theba
is the Hebrew word for ark used in Genesis. Also, the length, 280 cubits, is
almost exactly the length of the ark given in Genesis. In Genesis it is 300
cubits, but different nations had different measures of the cubit, which could
account for the discrepancy; and the difference is less than 10 %.
Bryant
says:
Sesostris
was Osiris; the same as Dionusus, Menes, and Noah. He is called Seisithrus by
Abydenus, Xixouthrous by Berosus and Apollodorus; and is represented by them as
a prince, in whose time the Deluge happened. He was called Zuth, Xuth, and
Zeus: and had certainly divine honors paid to him.
The
word Zeus, according to Bryant, is associated with making of wine, and Noah is
known as the one who taught man to plant vineyards.
In
several religious mysteries and festivals, an ark or ship is involved.
Pausanias tells of an ancient temple in Ionia; the God was on a float, and came
that way from Phenicia. Aristides tell us that a ship was carried in a procession
at the feast called Dionusia in Smyrna. The name Dionusia is associated with
Noah, as we have seen above.
Plutarch
said, “The vessel in the celestial sphere, which the Greeks call the Argo, is a
representation of the Ship of Osiris, which out of reverence has been placed in
the heavens.” Therefore, this Greek constellation has its origins in Egypt.
There is a star in this constellation, Canopus, which can not be easily seen in
Greece (again consistent with the origin of this constellation’s name as somewhere
other than Greece). This star is bright, is located on the rudder of the ship
in the constellation, and indicates the guiding force. Ptolemy was member of
the temple Ca Noubi, and Noubi refers to Noah. Thus it seems that the guiding
star of the ship, on the rudder, is named after Noah. In this case, the ship
represented by the constellation would obviously be symbolic of the Ark.
History Before the Flood
The
information below is worthwhile and interesting in its own right, but will also
be used later in explaining the relationship of the god Dagon to Noah. Berosus
wrote of a list of ten kings who lived before the flood. This list is over
2,000 years old, and on that list the tenth king lived both before and after
the flood, having survived it. Another list obtained from the Weld Dynastic
Prism is about 4,000 years old. These lists, as well as one from Genesis, are
summarized in Table 1.
Table
1
Bible
|
Berosus
|
Weld Dynastic Prism
|
Adam
|
Alorus
|
Alulim
|
Seth
|
Alaporus
|
Alalmar
|
Enos
|
Amelon
|
Enmeniunna
|
Cainan
|
Ammenon
|
Kichunna
|
Mahalaleel
|
Megalarous
|
Emmengalanna
|
Jared
|
Daonos
|
Dumuzi
|
Enoch
|
Edoranchus
|
Sibzianna
|
Methuselah
|
Amenpsinos
|
Emenduranna
|
Lamech
|
Otiartes
|
Uburratum
|
Noah
|
Xisouthros
|
Zinsuddu
|
There
are some interesting similarities in these lists.
The
third king on the Berosus list, Amelon, is the Babylonian Amilu, meaning “man.”
This corresponds to the Hebrew, Enos, which also means “man.”
Fourth
on the Berosus list, Ammenon, is the Babylonian, Ummanu, meaning “artificer”
and is the equivalent of Kenan (Cainan) which means “smith.”
Eighth
on the Berosus list is Amenpsinos, which is taken to be a corruption of
Amilsinus, i.e., Amil-sin, “the man of Sin” (the Moon God). Methuselah, also
number 8 on the Biblical list, may be a variation of Mutu-sha-Irkhu, “man of
the Moon God,” or if the more original form of the name is Methuselah, “the man
of God.”
Seventh
on the Berosus list probably refers to Emmeduranki, a legendary king of Sippar,
to whom God gave the “table of the gods” and taught the secrets of heaven and
earth. Enoch, also number seven on the Biblical list, was supposed to have been
close to God and to have become the recipient of superhuman knowledge and
revelations of the nature of heaven and earth.
Of
course, number 10 on the Berosus list is the one who survived the flood. Here
are points of similarity between Xisouthros and Noah:3
·
God told them both to build a boat
·
the reason for the boat was a coming flood
·
when water began to subside, both sent out birds
·
the boat landed on/in (a) mountain(s)
Dagon - Oannes
There
is a god named Dagon. He is often drawn as a merman, or part fish, part man.
According to Berosus, he appeared during the reign of the third of the ten
kings listed above. Also, Noah was born during the time of the third from Adam,
who was alive and possibly reigning as king at the time.
Though
a god, Dagon learned from this third king, i.e., from a man. This seems
strange, for a god to be taught by a man. Yet, it makes perfect sense that Noah
would learn, as a child, from one of his ancestors who was still living. This
could explain why this account was included, in spite of the fact that it
didn’t make sense, simply because the myth of Dagon was based on events that
really happened.
Both
Noah and Dagon lived before and after the flood. Also, both are associated with
water—Noah obviously as having built the ship and been on it during the flood,
and Dagon as being part fish, part man.
Lastly,
Dagon taught man useful information for building a civilization. Noah is not
mentioned specifically as doing this, but it makes a lot of sense to assume
that he did. After all, he would have been the leader of the entire population
of the world. He brought animals with him – wouldn’t he also have brought
anything else that might be useful after the flood, such as knowledge? Wouldn’t
his children learn from him? These seem reasonable assumptions. That Dagon is
supposed to have done these things lends support to the idea that he is based
on real events, involving Noah.
Conclusion
We
have seen indications that ancient myths were based on real people. We also
have seen evidence that some of these myths are based on characters named in
the Bible, such as Noah and his family, but also referred to in many documents.
The similarities between Dagon and Noah, between the ten pre-flood kings and
the ten generations from Adam to Noah, are just a few of the clues we have
examined. These clues indicate the existence of a man named Noah, of a real
flood (the stories of Deucalion and others), and other events described in the
Bible, all of which support the truth of the Genesis narrative.
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