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101 Myths of the Bible: how ancient scribes - Conscious Evolution TV

101 Myths of the Bible: how ancient scribes - Conscious Evolution TV

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58<br />

yth #25:<br />

There were o<strong>the</strong>r beings in <strong>the</strong> Garden <strong>of</strong> Eden before<br />

Adam and Eve.<br />

The Myth: Let us make man in our image …And <strong>the</strong> LORD God said, Behold,<br />

<strong>the</strong> man is become as one <strong>of</strong> us…. (Gen. 1:26, 3:22)<br />

The Reality: Genesis preserves traces <strong>of</strong> Atum’s conversations with Nun in <strong>the</strong><br />

Heliopolitan Creation myth.<br />

On two occasions in <strong>the</strong> second Creation story, God talks to one or more o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

beings <strong>of</strong> a non-human nature. Before he made Adam, he said,“let us make man in our<br />

image.” And later, after Adam and Eve ate <strong>the</strong> forbidden fruit, he said,“man is become<br />

as one <strong>of</strong> us.” Who is this“us”?<br />

Once again, we have an obvious indication <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r deities in <strong>the</strong> Creation story. As<br />

<strong>the</strong> second Creation story draws upon <strong>the</strong> Heliopolitan myths, C<strong>of</strong>fin Text 80 provides<br />

a reasonably good clue as to whom God was speaking. In that text, Atum (<strong>the</strong><br />

Heliopolitan Creator) and Nun (a personification <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> primeval waters) carried on<br />

a conversation.<br />

Then said Atum to <strong>the</strong> waters (i.e., Nun): “I am floating, very weary, <strong>the</strong> natives<br />

inert….”<br />

The Waters (i.e., Nun) said to Atum: “Kiss your daughter Order [i.e., Tefnut, who<br />

signified moral order.]”<br />

The“us” in <strong>the</strong> Genesis story would originally have referred to Atum and Nun. As<br />

<strong>the</strong> Hebrew Creator replaced Atum in <strong>the</strong> Creation process, <strong>the</strong> story went through<br />

transformations. The retention <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> “us” preserves a remnant <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> poly<strong>the</strong>istic<br />

Heliopolitan source for <strong>the</strong> biblical account.

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