- Life-death-rebirth deity
The category life-death-rebirth deity also known as a "dying-and-rising" or "Resurrection"
deity is a convenient means of classifying the many divinities in worldmythology orreligion who are born, suffer death, an eclipse, or other death-like experience, pass a phase in theunderworld among the dead, and are subsequently reborn, in either a literal or symbolic sense.Male deities among such figures might include
Osiris ,Adonis , Tammuz,Zalmoxis , phoenix,Jesus ,Baldr , andOdin .Female deities who passed into the kingdom of death and returned include
Inanna (also known asIshtar ) whose cult dates to 4000 BC andPersephone , the central figure of theEleusinian Mysteries , whose cult may date to 1700 BC as the unnamed goddess worshiped in Crete.Historically, this category has been most strongly associated with two different approaches to the study of religion. The first, which might be labelled the "naturalist" approach, seeks to explain such myths in terms of parallels with natural processes. The second, which might be labelled the "internal" approach, seeks to explain such myths in terms of individual spiritual transformation or timeless, archetypal truth.
The naturalist approach
Of the two major life-death-and-resurrection approaches to
hermeneutics , the naturalistic explication has more support in ancient sources. These rituals were closely linked to the cycle of seasons, as when Athenian women planted "gardens of Adonis" in pots and then, when the young green growth withered in the heat of the summer, wept for the dead young god. " Osiris beds ", small bed - like / mummiform bundles of cloth, contained soil & seeds, which were watered before sealing an Egyptian tomb, so the plants could grow, magically re - creating Osiris' mystical, albeit temporary, resurrection. Already in antiquity, the rationalizing approach ofAristotle could be elaborated to a rigidly naturalistic interpretation of myth origins as explanations of natural seasonal phenomena. Such a reductionist interpretation was apparently epitomized by Euhemerus (late 4th century BC), giving the term "euhemerist". Rational Stoic Romans likeCicero and Seneca, who saw the official and civil nature of ritual as paramount, were prepared to explain the myths and festivals ofAttis , Adonis and Persephone in terms of natural phenomena. The abduction and return of Persephone, Cicero argued, was symbolic of the planting and growth of crops.In the late eighteenth century, the naturalist interpretation took on renewed vigor, as freethinkers like
Richard Payne Knight sought to explain all religious phenomena in terms of solar activity.Fact|date=March 2007 Thus the tribulations of Jesus andOsiris were both taken to represent the course of the sun through the day, night, and dawn (Godwin, 1994).The naturalist hypothesis reached a further apogee in the works of
James Frazer andJane Ellen Harrison , and their fellowCambridge Ritualists. In their seminal works "The Golden Bough" and "Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion", Frazer and Harrison argued that all myths are only echoes of rituals, and that all rituals have as their primordial purpose the manipulation of natural phenomena by means ofsympathetic magic . The rape and return of Persephone, the rending and repair of Osiris, the travails and triumph ofBaldur would therefore all be rooted in primitive rites to renew the fertility of withered land and crops.The internal approach
By the Victorian era, the solar-phallic ideas of
Richard Payne Knight along with the less risqué work of scholars likeMax Müller had taken strange turns as they made their way into popular discourse. Groups like theHermetic Order of the Golden Dawn were using scholarly parallels between Christ, Osiris and other putative solar dying-and-rising gods to build up elaborate systems ofmysticism andtheosophy .By the twentieth century, this spiritualized turn to the universal-dying-god hypothesis had made its way into the
academic discourse. From his studies ofalchemy and other spiritual systems, the Swisspsychologist Carl Jung argued that archetypal processes such as death and resurrection were part of the transpersonal symbolism of theCollective Unconscious , and could be utilized in the task of psychological integration. Jung's line of argumentation has been followed, with modifications, by scholars likeKarl Kerenyi andJoseph Campbell .Christianity
In academic disciplines such as
Mythography ,Sociology andAnthropology ,Christianity and its symbols are categorized as amyth system , along with all other world religions. The universal dying-and-rising god motif, and the particular existence ofmystery religion s concerned with dying and rising gods around theMediterranean Sea (e.g.Osiris ,Attis andAdonis ), led some scholars, beginning with Francis Cumont, to classify the figure ofJesus Christ (as told in the gospels) as a syncretized example of thisarchetype . This assessment is rejected by Christian scholars. (Nash, 2003)These correspondences are unrelated to the question of the
Historicity of Jesus . Even the interpretation of thecrucifixion of Jesus as a strictly historical event in no way precludes its subsequent mythologization. In particular,C. S. Lewis after his conversion to Christianity believed that theresurrection of Christ belonged in this category of myths, with the additional property of having actually happened in history: "If God chooses to be "mythopoeic" — and is not the sky itself a myth — shall we refuse to be "mythopathic"?" ["Myth became fact", essay published in "God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics", C. S. Lewis, Walter Hooper (Editor), Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company; Reprint edition (October 1994; original copyright 1970 by the Trustees of the Estate of C. S. Lewis) ISBN 0802808689]Some Christian groups do not insist on the historicity of the resurrection but rather postulate it as a tenet of
faith beyond rational verification. For these Christians, this opens up the figure of Jesus to be understood in an academic fashion as one of a group of deities associated with the myth sequence of life/death/resurrection. Understanding of the resurrection as a form of the "risen god" theme is, therefore, for these Christians strictly independent of acceptance or rejection of the historicity of the event.Fact|date=November 2007Criticisms of universality
The chief criticism that has been brought against the universal "life-death-resurrection deity" category is that it is reductionist: in seeking to fit disparate myths into a single box.
Marcel Detienne argues that the hypothesis obscures distinctions that really matter. Furthermore, since death and resurrection are more central to Christianity than some other faiths, Detienne argues that an application of the motif risks making Christianity the standard by which all religion is judged. For extended arguments in this vein, see e.g. Burkert, 1987 and Detienne, 1994.Beginning with an overview of the ritual growing and withering of herb gardens at the Athenian Adonia festival, Detienne theorizes that rather than being a stand-in for crops in general and therefore the universal acknowledgment of the cycle of death and rebirth, these herbs (and Adonis) were part of a complex of associations in the Greek mind that centered around
spice s. He postulates that these associations included seduction, trickery, gourmandise, and the anxieties ofchildbirth . From his point of view, Adonis's death is only one datum among the many that must be used to analyze the festival, the myth and the god. Similarly, a god like Osiris, whose functions relate to crops and the dead rather than spices and love, would call for a very different interpretation, despite the common theme of having died. Such, then, are Detienne's objections to the dying-and-rising-god hermeneutic.List of life-death-rebirth deities
*
Aboriginal mythology
**Julunggul
**Wawalag
*Akkadian mythology
**Tammuz
**Ishtar
*Arabian mythology
**Phoenix
*Aztec mythology
**Quetzalcoatl
**Xipe Totec
*Canaanite mythology
**Baal
*Celtic mythology
**Cernunnos
*Christian mythology
**Jesus
*Dacian mythology
**Zalmoxis
*Egyptian mythology
**Horus
**Osiris
**Amun
**Amun-Min (Amen-Min)
*Etruscan mythology
**Atunis
*Greek mythology
**Adonis
**Cronus
**Cybele
**Dionysus
**Orpheus
**Persephone
*Hindu mythology
**Trimurti
***Brahma
***Vishnu
***Siva
*Japanese mythology
**Izanagi
*Khoikhoi mythology
**Heitsi
*Native American mythology
**Kaknu
*Norse mythology
**Odin
**Balder
**Gullveig
*Phrygian mythology
**Attis
*Religion in ancient Rome
**Mithras
**Aeneas
**Bacchus
**Proserpina
*Slavic mythology
**Veles
**Jarilo
*Sumerian mythology
**Damuzi
**Inanna ee also
*
Osiris-Dionysus
*Mystery religion
*descent to the underworld
*List of virgin births
*Resurrection
*Sparagmos Notes
References
* Burkert, Walter (1987). "Ancient mystery cults". Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-03386-8
* Detienne, Marcel (1994). "The gardens of Adonis: Spices in Greek mythology". Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-391-00611-8
* Frazer, James George (1996). "The Golden Bough ". New York: Touchstone Books. ISBN 0-684-82630-5
* Godwin, Joscelyn (1994). "The theosophical enlightenment". Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-2151-1
*cite book
last = Nash
first = Ronald
title = The Gospel and the Greeks
publisher = P & R Publishing
year = 2003Further reading
*Gaster, Theodor, H., "Thespis: Ritual, Myth, and Drama in the Ancient Near East", Henry Schuman Publishing, New York, 1950. ISBN 0877521883. Cf. Part II, "Seasonal Myths of the Ancient Near East", p. 129. On Baal and "the seasonal motif of the dying and reviving god".
* [http://etor.h1.ru/torpaper.html "Cybele, Attis, and the Mysteriies of the 'Suffering Gods': A transpersonalistic interpretation" by Evgueni A. Torchinov, from "The International Journal of Transpersonal Studies" (1988, Vol 17, No. 2, pp 149–59)] (PDF.)External links
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