In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
-
Upload
ahlussunnahvsalimirza -
Category
Documents
-
view
219 -
download
0
Transcript of In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
1/36
1
1
Concerning the ancient Egyptian religion during the time of the Pharaohs, the Qur'an reports
three interesting statements. Firstly, when Prophet Moses calls Pharaoh to worship one true God,
the call is rejected. nstead Pharaoh collects his men and proclaims that he is their !ord, most
high.
Hath the story of Moses reached thee? Behold, thy Lord did cal l to him in the sacred valley of Tuwa, "Go thou
to Pharaoh for he has indeed transgressed all bounds !nd say to him, #ouldst thou that thou shouldst be
$urified %from sin&? ' !nd that ( guide thee to thy Lord, so thou shouldst fear Him?)" Then did %Moses& show
him the Great *ign+ But %Pharaoh& reected it and disobeyed %guidance&- .urther, he turned his bac/, striving
hard %against God&+ Then he collected %his men& and made a $roclamation, *aying, "( am your Lord, Most
High"+ 01ur)an 2345'678
"econdly, when Moses goes to Pharaoh with clear signs, they are rejected as #eing $fa%e$.
Pharaoh then addresses his chiefs #y saying that he %nows of no god for them e&cept him.
Pharaoh said "9 :hiefs; no god =8
he last(hirdly) statement comes in connection with the *ictory of Prophet Moses o*er the
magicians of Egypt. +ere the chiefs of Pharaoh say to him that this *ictory of Moses o*er the
magicians could result in an a#andonment of you i.e., Pharaoh- and your gods ra#ic/ wa
yadaraka wa ālihataka- in fa*our of the God of Moses.
!nd the chiefs of Pharaoh)s $eo$le said "o you leave Musa and his $eo$le to ma/e mischief in the land and
to forsa/e you and your gods
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
2/36
2
2
n order to support their claim of $direct contradiction$, they 5uote Muhammad sad, a well6
%nown Qur'an translator, who considers that the Qur'an 01/21 should not #e $ta%en literally$ as
the Egyptians also worshipped many gods. (4) Gi*en the fact that sad is #etter %nown for his
translation of the Qur'an rather than his scholarship in the religion of ancient Egypt, the
missionaries then go on to e&plain the alleged $discrepancy$ without any recourse to relia#le,
*erifia#le historical sources. s one na*igates the jum#led ma7e of *er#iage one encounters
apparently innocuous 5uestions such as/
id the @gy$tians have many gods or only one god? *ince this may not have been the same at all times, we
would have to as/ more s$ecifically #hat was the religion of the @gy$tians at the time of the @Aodus?
0These we have borrowed from (slamic !wareness8
The Euestion is that why the missionaries have used such material to shew that there are internal
contradictions in Holy 1urCan+? This is because their enmity of 1urCan has reached to its maAimum+ (f such a
$roblem has been in their beloved boo/s they would have tried to solve the $roblem instead of claiming
obections as one may see in the case of several obections on their beloved boo/s+#e do ho$e that even
:hristian scholars of maor :hristian sects li/e :atholism , 9rthodoA , and Protestant , shall second us that
these obections on the TeAt of !yat are wrong and incorrect+
www+(slamic' awareness +org have tried to ma/e res$onse it its own way and we have tried to res$onse in
another way+
#e have tried to discuss the $roblem in another way+
The Basic @rror in the 9bectionF
The missionaries have some how assumed that the Monotheism and Polytheism in !ncient @gy$tian eligion
0!@8 were as o$$osites as in *emitic eligions 0*8 nounly 0namely8 udaism,:hristianity and (slam which
are Pure Monotheistic eligions+ Thus all the cases of claims of :ontradictions are based on the basic
assum$tion that the !ncient @gy$tian eligion 0!@8 was a Pure Polytheism+ (fthis assum$tion is wrong and
incorrect then all the claims of contradiction are not only falsified but dis$roved+
!@ is some how a Henotheism or Kathenotheism instead of Pure Monotheism [PM] andPure Polytheism [PP].
Their idea about God and gods was not so simple and it is not a correct scholarshipthat they are attempted to be studied in light of !.
"ncient #gyptian !eligion ["#!] may be studied in the light of $indu Te%ts since itwas much close to $enotheism as Ma&or $indu ects [M$] are.
1 "t 'rst sight( $induism seem to be une)ui*ocally Pure Polytheistic+ there are
certainly many gods. ,ndra is the -ing of the Gods and God of the rain much li-e his
Gree- and !oman cousins /eus and ,upiter0 aruna the God of the hea*enly *ault
and the moral law related to the Gree- 3uranos0 "gni the God of 're cf. the 4atin
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
3/36
5
5
ignis( and the #nglish 6ignite70 and so forth. #ach indi*idual worshiper would -now(
and might use( se*eral di8erent poems to di8erent Gods. "lways there was an
awareness of the multiplicity of the gods. "t time of war( or drought( one prayed to
,ndra in a sacri'ce( one in*o-ed "gni the sacri'cial 're0 and so forth. 9e can
detect both what might be called P#!3:"4 polytheism one person worshipping
se*eral gods0 and ;ommunal polytheism se*eral people worshipping se*eral godsand respecting( or at the *ery least ac-nowledging the e%istence of( one another
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
4/36
J
J
wise spea- of what is 3ne in many ways they call it "gni( Eama( Matarish*an.7
[1.1J.J] 1 The idea that one could choose between members of a pantheon of
gods was integral to edic religion. >or e%ample( each stanDa of one edic poem
ends with the )uestioning refrain( 69ho is the god whom we should worship with
the oblationL7 5 Thus+ 6$e by whom the awesome s-y and the #arth were made
'rm( by whom the dome of the s-y was propped up( and the sun( who measured outthe middle realm of space who is the god whom we should worship with the
oblationL7 [1C.121] The "thar*a eda( too( a fourth eda composed in around BCC
=;#( as-ed not only who the god was( but how many gods there might be+ 69ho
and how many were those Gods who fastened together the chest and nec- of the
Prime*al ManL $ow many '%ed his breastsL 9ho formed his elbowsL $ow many
&oined together ribs and shouldersL7 [1C.2.J] The te%ts that followed the edas(
called the =rahmanas mythological( philosophical( and ritual glosses on the edas0(
were composed at a time c. @CC =;#0 when the =rahmin priests had ta-en on
greater control and inIuence troubled by the openAended refrain of the !ig edic
poem( they in*ented a god whose name was the interrogati*e pronoun 9ho ;aNKa(
cognate with the 4atin )uis( >rench )ui(,:T#!#T,:G4E there is a dogma of Ka in
"ncient #gypt as well.0. !ead bac- into the edic poem as it was in later edic
commentaries 2 0( this resulted in an aOrmati*e statement+ 6,ndeed( 9ho is the god
whom we should honor with the oblation(7 somewhat reminiscent of the famous
"bbott and ;ostello routine 9hoFs on 'rstL0. This sacerdotal arrogance closed
down some of those openings through which fresh theological air had Iowed in the
eda. The )uestion became the answer.
n this way it is clear that E8 was not a Polytheism #ut a +enotheism .n the ancient Egyptian
8eligion the same idea was used . he Egyptian Monarchs were #elie*ed to #e Gods or Gods9
ncarnates (ncarnations-:f God). n this case when Pharaoh claimed "9 :hiefs; no god do ( /nowfor you but myself+++ 01ur)an 6=>=8, he did say it in the very same sense as in Henothiesm religions+
6Eou( ishnu( are the only godHGod ,F*e e*er worshiped you are the only one.7 6Eou(
aruna( are the only godHGod ,F*e e*er worshiped you are the only one.7
*o it is some how evident that there are some common elements in all Henotheistic religions, eAam$les of
which has been $rovided+
*o if Pharaoh said that he was the only God
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
5/36
Q
Q
63ne7 is the emblem not of monotheism but of Rpanishadic monism( which
assumes that all li*ing things are elements of a single( uni*ersal being often called
brahman0( reached by indi*idual meditation( a philosophy often contrasted with the
polytheistic world of group sacri'ce to multiple gods. The doctrine of the
Rpanishads is also sometimes characteriDed as pantheism in which God is
e*erything and e*erything is God0 or( at times( panentheism in which Godencompasses and interpenetrates the uni*erse( but at the same time this God is
Greater then the ,ni*erse and other than it.
The *ague monism of the edas was sharpened by the more systematiDed edantic
monism of the Rpanishads. ;oming bac- to #gypt from ,ndia it is some what clear
that #gyptian also belie*ed in 3ne God along with multitudes of GodsHgods.
Ancient Egyptians often did chose to worship some or one of the many Egyptian gods/Gods, but
at the same time they continue to acknowledge the existence of the other Egyptian gods whom
they did not worship. This type of worship of one god/God (! some gods/Gods" among many
gods/Gods is not #onotheism $ut %enotheism ,rather a form of %enothiesm, since there are
se&eral forms of it. %enotheism is the belief in and the worship of one god while accepting the
existence of other gods.'or worshipping some gods while accepting other gods which are not
worshipped . This may be termed as oly)%enotheism or olyhenotheism*.
+t is pointed out that the many gods /Godsof Ancient Egyptians were simply &arious forms, appearences,
culminations,menifestations,incarnations and emanations" of a ingle upreme $eing (God". This is where the idea
of monotheism comes in. A belief in a ingle upreme $eing is #onotheism. $ut the belief that the many gods is
olythiesim e&en if they are all included in the ne, ingle, upreme $eing. Therefore, , this -ogma of
#anifestation is oly)#onotheistic. hese Egyptian ;Gods;gods eg +orus ,:siris, e*en 8a himself, were #elie*ed to #e
$manifestations, , or personified attributes of Only One God $, the in*isi#le"upreme
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
6/36
6ayade&a Goswami7s Gita Govinda (circa twelth century" also proclaims 8ord 9rishna7s primary position
among incarnations 'of God*, reinforcing the teaching of the Bhagavatam. After listing ten prominent
incarnations of ishnu in the book7s first chapter, 6ayade&a concludes by stating that 9rishna is their
source. +n fact, 6ayade&a implies 9rishna7s preeminence throughout the Gita Govinda and states it
explicitly in Act :, erse :; (daśakriti-krite krishnaya tubhyam namah"4
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
7/36
and philosophies of sectarian $induism. $ere we encounter the se*eral a*atars
incarnations0 of ishnu( which ma-e ishnu a -ind of wal-ing oneAgod polytheism
at times he appears as a 'sh( as a boar( as *arious human beings !ama( Krishna(
e*en the =uddha0( all of which were originally indi*idual deities who later became
absorbed into the o*erarching 'gure of ishnu. $is incarnations are often said to be
6partial7+ while ishnu appears as Krishna( for instance( the god ishnu also remainsin his hea*en( entirely complete. ,n contrast with the complete li*es that ishnu
ta-es on in his a*atars( the god hi*a becomes multiple by manifesting himself in
*arious forms( usually during relati*ely brief mas)uerades. "n other rather simple
e%planation of Monism Polytheism amalgam is that There is only 3ne God
[=armhH=rahman] 9ho Manifested in "ngel or ;herub li-e characters ishnu ( hieu(
=arhama. This is the prime Manifestation PM0.
>/ +t is the Bhagavatam, in fact, that makes the most famous declarati&e statement about 9rishna7s
primary position +3 !E8AT+3 T T%E!
#A3+2ETAT+3,AEA!E3=E,=>8#+3AT+3,+3=A!3AT+3 2 G-.4
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
8/36
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
9/36
B
B
A number of Indian Scholars of Sanskrit Scriptures believe that Krisnais the human Incarnation of Vishnu who is in turn is the anelic or
bodil! incarnation of "armh or "rahman#
So if an incarnation calls himself as $he "armh or "rahman then thismeans that the Incarnation is predicatin its own self to the %ne thatis Incarnated or &anifested of both#
'"( %e who knows #e as the unborn, as the beginningless, as the upreme 8ord of allthe worlds)he, undeluded among men, is freed from all sins.
')*:+,-(
'C( + am the source of all spiritual and material worlds. E&erything emanates from #e.The wise who know this perfectly engage in #y de&otional ser&ice and worship #e with
all their hearts.
')*:.(
These words cannot be said e&en by ishu or heu . ince only $armh or $rahman %ath the right to say
it. $ut +f 9rishna who is a human +ncarnation of uperhuman/angelic +ncarnation then the only possible
way to understand these words is be supposing the prereuisite that +ncarnations whether prime or
secondary or tertiary can be predicated to the $armh or $arhaman.
'-* Aruna said4 0ou are the upreme $rahman, the ultimate, the supreme abode and
purifier, the Absolute Truth and the eternal di&ine person. 0ou are the primal God,
transcendental and original, and 0ou are the unborn and all)per&ading beauty. All the
great sages such as 3Irada, Asita, -e&ala, and yIsa proclaim this of 0ou, and now
0ou 0ourself are declaring it to me.
':4:@):?
This is sufficient enough to pro&e that atleast some %indus interpret this &erse as thepredications stated abo&e.
'E**
+ndeed, 0ou alone know 0ourself by 0our own potencies, origin of all, 8ord of all
beings, God of gods, upreme erson, 8ord of the uni&erseJ':4@K*
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
10/36
1C
1C
'2* + am the elf, Gud LIkeMa, seated in the hearts of all creatures. + am the beginning,
the middle and the end 'A8%A A3- #EGA*of all beings.
=hapter :, erse @
'/( f the edas + am the Ima)&edaN of the demigods + am +ndraN of the senses + am
the mind, and in li&ing beings + am the li&ing force 'knowledge*.
=hapter :, erse @@
This &erse is &ery important henotheistic &erse since it shews that all other
manifestations and incarnations are less than the incarnation known as
9rishna.
'%* 1. , am the father of this world( the mother( the dispenser of the fruits ofactions( and the grandfather the one0 thing to be -nown( the puri'er( the sacred
monosyllable 3m0( and also the !igA( the amaA and Ea&ur edas.
[1
[,] 11. >ools disregard Me( clad in human form( not -nowing My higher =eing as the
great
!ord of all- #eings.
These are the complex cases of %enotheism ,#onolatrism and
Kathenotheism where a particularmanifestation or a particular incarnation ofSupreme Being [God/god] is predicated tothe Supreme Being or the Supreme Being ispredicated to the said Incarnation orManifestation or Culmination.
This aspect of enotheism! Monolatrism!Kathenotheism etc. are still a "eld ofresearch. #$amples from Gita ma% &einterpreted di'erentl% &% di'erent induSects and Cults! &ut the general impression
http://asitis.com/10/20.htmlhttp://asitis.com/10/22.htmlhttp://asitis.com/10/20.htmlhttp://asitis.com/10/22.html
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
11/36
11
11
of Mahah&harat(a) and its part Bhag*at Gitais that Krishna was a ruler and a human&eing [at least in appearance] who claimed to
&e the Supreme Being. The humanIncarnation i.e the &od% of Krishna as seen&e the *iewers in Gita and Bharata ispredicated &% Krishna to Supreme Being.+ow if the human person Krishna is notden%ing ,edic Gods/ gods the onl% possi&leconclusions are as follows-
] e is predicating is own Self to SupremeBeing.
0] e is 1redicating Supreme Being to isownSself.
2] e is declairing him self as most highincarnation among all
Incarnations!Menifestations!andCulminations.
ne may read entire $hag&at Gita with this approach and it is most likely to second this
&iew that in %enotheis,#onolatry and 9athenotheism an +ncarnation or a #anifestation
or a =ulmination of the upreme $eing 'God/god* is predicated to the upreme $eing
and &ise &ersa. The redication may be termed as redicatheism .
As the upreme $eing is considered as the only upreme $eing, the #anifestation or
+ncarnation or =ulmination whether as a human being or an angelic or super humanbeing in the predication is the %enotheistic only God/god and not the #onotheistic only
God/god.
type of +enotheism implies that the principal god;God e&ists in a conte&t of
other gods;Gods.
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
12/36
12
12
#etter the religions (with all their cults and sects) that we find in ancientndia and
ncient Egypt then the simple Pure Polytheism.his type is termed as "ummodeism.
Summodeism0 ma! be defined as the worship of a Supreme "ein
who sits at the head of a pantheon of other /ods1ods who are 2ust smanifestations 0 incarnations0culminations etcof this 3ih od1/od or
Supreme "ein # $hus0 in a summodeistic s!stem0 the existence of
multiple ods onl! occurs because a sinle0 hih od1/od is able to
incarnate0 to manifest and to culminate into man! different
/ods1ods#
A form of Summodeism is common with 4redicatheism#
$his is the belief that is found in "havat /ita# 5hich is the irrefutableevidence that such believes did exist in the ancient world#
F45 6eason4
E&en +f 9rishna is either a uniue #anifestation/2orm/%ypostase of upreme $eing yet at se&eral times
9rishna peaks as if %e is the ery upreme $eing %imself and not ust as a #anifestation/%ypostasis in
the Essence,3ature,2orm,ubstanceExistence ($eingness" and Godhead of the upreme $eing. The
only reason which may be gi&en is that each one of the Essence,3ature etc f upreme $eing is highly
communicable to each one of the 2orms, #anifestations, %ypostases, =ulminations, Appearances et
cetera of the upreme $eing. A manifestation or an +ncarnation or a =ulmination was predicated to the
$eing which 1as #anifested or =ulminated or +nacarnated, and &ice &ersa. This was the reason that
when an +ncarnation like 9rishna con&ersed with his de&otees say Arun(a", he spoke as if %e is the ery
upreme $eing +tself not ust an +ncarnation of the upreme $eing.
=oming back to Egypt it may be said that haraoh was not a hilosopher yet he did know his
%enotheistic belie&es and his courtiers must also know their %enotheistic belie&es. haraoh must ha&eknown his belie&es and he must ha&e known the %enotheistic !eligion of Egypt. +t need not to be a
hilosopher to belie&e in a religion whether it is olytheistic or #onotheistic or %enotheistic or
=athenotheistic etc. Ancient Egyptian and Ancient +ndians both did not belie&e in the plurality of upreme
$eings.
1hat haraoh did say was that he was the greatest #anifestation f upreme $eing. haraoh at that
was speaking as if he was not a #anifestation of upreme $eing but the &ery upreme $eing %imself.
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
13/36
15
15
redicating himself as a #anifestation to the upreme $eing,
45 #onism is some time considered as a kind of #onotheism. $ut #onism may be olytheistic or
#onotheistic or %enotheistic or 9athenotheistic. imilarly #onotheism may be #onistic or 3on #onistic,
olytheism may be #onistic or 3on #onistic etc. The same is true for antheism and pinoDaism.
O45 Pharaohs ha*e often #een characteri7ed as gods;Gods on earth. ?hile the %ingship as an
institution may ha*e continued fairly constantly throughout more than 2,@@@ years of history of
ancient Egypt, just what the office signified, how the %ings understood their role, and how the
general populace percei*ed the %ing do not constitute a uniform concept that span the centuries
without change. n other words, the ancient Egyptians' *iew of the %ing, implied #y *arious
historical references, was not static. t underwent changes during the more than 2,@@@ years of
Egyptian history.(0) From the early times the epithet nt ṭr referred directly to the %ing as a god."ometimes the term occurred alone and at other times it appeared with a modifying or
descripti*e word.(2)
n ancient Egypt pro*ides a *ery important piece of nformation (the Great emple at #u
"im#el, "eeFigure 0). t does shew the $!ord of wo !ands ABsermare6setpenre9$ 8amesses
- offering to $8amesses6meryamun$ 8amesses -. :#*iously, 8amesses is worshipping
8amesses here. +owe*er, we also note that the worshipper and the one who is worshipped
ha*e two different names and that these names are pronomen and nomen of 8amesses ,
respecti*ely. closer loo% at the iconography re*eals that the worshipper and he who is
worshipped are not identical. +e, to whom the offering is made, is adorned with a sun6dis% and
has a cur*ed horn around his ear, depicting his di*inity. herefore, 8amesses is not simply
worshipping himself, #ut his di*ine;Di*ine "elf;self.(41)
nother words the "elf of incarnation of God and "elf of ncarnated God are in close relation
with one another. his is just an attempt to represent this concept in form of picture.
s one can see from the e&les just discussed, the Pharaoh e&alted himself as !ord. From an
ncarnation of God to the ncarnated God +imself .hat is he used to predicate his self to the
"upreme
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
14/36
1J
1J
s wesee "ome rishna worshippers that rishna is not only predicated to =ishnu #ut also to the
P$"!"3$
"]"Pharaohs were belie*ed to be Ui*ine from the *ery beginning.$ow e*er the
emphasis on their Godhood was di8erent in di8erent times.
. Generally the Egyptian %ings were not considered as e5ual to ha*eanly
asGods;gods li%e :siris, 8e mun,ten etc.
he Di*inity of the dead %ings is more o#*ious than the Di*inity of the a li*ing %ing,
?hile what we might call full deification occurred for some monarchs within their
lifetimes,
it was usually in death that this state, howe*er, was reached and a good deal of
e*idence seems to show that the deceased Egyptian %ing was *enerated as a Afull9
god;God.9.
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
15/36
1Q
1Q
descripti*e words. nother epithet from early times referred to the %ing as a
descendant of a god J s’ R’ , Ason of 8e.
hroughout the :ld ingdom the %ings were said to ha*e the powers of the
Gods;gods/ +u di*ine utterance-, "ia di*ine %nowledge- and +e%a di*ine energyand %nowledge of magic-.
he God;god who was generally #elie*ed in the incarnation of the %ings was 8e, the
creator and preser*er of the world.lthouth he was himself a Menifestation of the
"upreme
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
16/36
1
1
he Pharaoh God;god Bnas was said to eat some Gods;gods in after life.
hese shew that Pharaohs were #elie*ed to #e lesser than some celestial Gods;gods
particularly those whose incarnations they were #elie*ed to #e #ut they were
considered greater and more Powerful than at least some of them. his also does shew #eyond any shadow of dou#t that e*en the hea*enly Gods;gods were #elie*ed to #e
perisha#le ,mortal and annihilata#le.
here were instances when a li*ing %ing did declared himself fully Di*ine;di*ine
within their lifetimes. . . . he li*ing Deification of menophis and 8ameses
during their reigns are certainly attested.
n the case of menophis we find that the %ing #egan the increasing solari7ation of
Egypt9s major cults and of his own %ingship. ccording to 8aymond Nohnson Othe
%ing declared himself deified and merged with the solar disc, the ten.L ccording to
"haw, monuments dating from his reign Oname 8ameses himself as the god.L
?e find the %ing ta%ing di*ine prerogati*es in his representations, such as those
showing him with the cur*ed #eard of the gods, with the horns of mun and wearing
the lunar crescent and sun disc or presenting an offering #efore a statue of himself. n
the inner shrine of the great roc% cut temples of #u "im#el, 8ameses was to doli%ewise. 8ameses did ha*e four statues cut to represent Ptah, 8e6+ora%hte, :riris
himself- and mun68e, seated side #y side. hat the %ing is not simply depicted in
the company of the gods is clear, since the figures are shown as incontro*erti#le
e5uals,rather greater then them.
"ince t has e*en #een suggested #y some that in this group the %ing might #e
represented as an em#odiment of all these national gods. human ncarnation of not
just one God;god #ut a num#er of Gods;gods. mplying more Powerful God;god then
all ofGods;gods present there.
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
17/36
1
1
During the time of 8amesses , the deification;Deification of Pharaoh reached its MMBM
as e*idenced in some cult statues as well as supporting hieroglyphs and papyri. (>) eeping this in
mind, let us now loo% at the two statements made in the Qur'an, i.e., Pharaoh 6 the god of Egypt 6
and his gods;Gods.."o "ome Pharaohs did e&alted their positions from an a*erage God;god to
more glorified rather the incarnation of the "upreme
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
18/36
1@
1@
5&i6 7ccording to *.de ouge ' the 8nity of a Supreme Being and Self *(isting Being in His *ternity'7 9imitless and *ternal eproduction thereby as +od:god' the 7ttributing of the ;reation of the
-orld and 7ll 9iving Beings to the Supreme [Being& +od:god the Impartiality and the Dogma ofeward and
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
19/36
1B
1B
=ishnu,"heu,Harayan and
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
20/36
2C
2C
+n any gi&en period many Gods.gods, e&en minor ones, were
described as superior to all other Gods/gods. %e also argues that the
unspecified
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
21/36
21
21
+t is more safe to gi&e eual probability to either side since
%enotheism with a upreme $eing is found on earth though a
continent away, yet e&ery thing shews the sane tendency in Ancient
Egypt if not with =ertainly then with some probabilityN a probability
which if not greater than its ri&alBs probability then not less then it or
not more less then it. +f its ri&al is assigned by the probability of .; it
cannot be assigned by any &alue less then .Q.
ornung! #ri4 (560) [57]. Conceptions of God in #g%pt- The 8ne
and the Man%. Translated &% 9ohn Baines.
•
;3MM#:T+S
)f here still #e a "upreme
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
22/36
22
22
hey do #elie*e in Manifestations and ncarnations of "upreme
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
23/36
25
25
num#er (not all) +indus regard their Gods;gods andGoddesses; goddesses as manifestations
of the "upreme
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
24/36
2J
2J
:;T I< S8M# TI+G IS I+
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
25/36
2Q
2Q
contact with Indians, enough to borrow elements from it or versa?, r they have
been influenced by Indians or vice versa?
!o answer the first, Indian Henotheism differs in several significant ways from
Egyptian religion" #$ !here were and there still are multitudes of Indian %ultsand &ects which did and still do differ in the e'planations of their version of
Henetheism" !here may be a number of sects in Egyptian (eligons but not only
less in number but their differences may be less significant" )$ Egyptian
Henotheism did not evoluted since it died latter with the end of *haroahs" +ut
Indian Henotheism is still evoluting"
$ -atures of %ulminations,Incarnations,.anifestations may be different in
between the ma/orities ofAncient Egypt and Ancient India"
0$If +rugsch is incorrect then there is a difference of Henotheistic or *olytheistic
&upreme +eing , when &ome Indian cults believe in It Egyptians did not, +yt it is
very difficult to claim that there was no Egyptian cult which believed in a
&upreme +eing" Actually there is a shortage of religious %anons of Egyptain, and
the te'ts found so far cannot be considered as comprehensive Egyptian %anon"
&o one might be careful while re/ecting +rugsh"
Both countries of two di'erent continents do share thecentral notions of enotheism! if not the details! of
enotheism.
It ma! be noted that the examples from Sankrit Scriptures are provided
as evidences that such believes did exist and are not imainar!
products proposed to response some ob2ections#
mparisi n:=
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
26/36
2
2
It is pointed out that the man% gods/Gods of ;ncient #g%ptians were
simpl% *arious forms! appearences! culminations and emanations) of a
single Supreme Being (God). This is where the idea of monotheism comes
in. ; &elief in a single Supreme Being is Monotheism. The &elief that
there man% gods/Gods is 1ol%thiesim [from the point of *iew of 1M]e*en if
the% are all included in the 8ne Single and 8nl% Supreme Being. [ Butfrom the point of *iew of di*isions of di'erent t%pes of concepts of Gods it
is enotheism ].Therefore! ! this 3ogma of Manifestation is 1ol%
Monotheistic. 8r more correctl% enothiesm or Kathenotheism. #g%ptian
gods/Gods li4e orus !8siris! e*en =a himself! were &elie*ed to &e
manifestations, , or personied attributes of Only One God ! the in*isi&le
God. These were not &elie*ed to &e separate gods/Gods! &ut incarnations
or manifestations of one and same God the one and onl% God! insepara&le
from him.
Ancient Egyptian !eligion is not ure olytheism45
Ancient Egyptian !eligion was not ure #onotheism45
;s it is shewn that #g%ptian =eligion was not onl% 3i'erent from 1ure
Monotheism &ut also from 1ure 1ol%theism! it is also a mista4e to consider it as
Monistic Monthiesm. It was in its form one of the forms of Kathenotheistic
1ol%theism or Kathenotheism .; 4ind of enotheism.
1haraoh himself e$alted from an Incarnation of God to the Greatest among
all incarnations and mani"stations of God. The most high Incarnation !
which is higher than all other Culminations ! Manifestations!Incarnations
et cetera.
Interesting parallels are found in some Indian Cults.Some e$amples from
Sans4rit ol% Scriptures [SS] ha*e &een cited a&o*e.
;lthough it ma% &e incorrect to consider that Indian =eligions and ;ncient
#g%ptian =eligions were one and the same with the onl% di'erence of
+ouns of Gods/gods ! the% do ha*e similarities in them .Missionaries ha*e
incorrectl% assumed that there is a contradiction in two *erses of DurEan
in regard to the &elie*es of 1haraoh and his Courtiers and +o&ilities.
There is
no such alleged contradiction. ;ctuall% the% ha*e incorrectl% assumed
somehow that ;ncient #g%ptian =eligion was 1ure 1ol%theism. But it is not
the case. ;ncient #g%ptian =eligion was a form of enotheism!
1ol%thiestic Monism and Kathenotheistic 1ol%thiesm.
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
27/36
2
2
This comple$ nature of their religion is similar to the comple$ nature of
;ncient Indian =eligion . So at least the% are certainl% not uniFue.
It is *irtuall% impossi&le to suggest that two di'erent countries of two
di'erent continents &orrowed from one another !it is the almost certainl%
the conclusion that parallel thoughts and ideas de*eloped with some *er%strong similarities &etween the religion s%stems of the two.
Duranic Statements and ;ncient #g%ptian =eligion.
;s Duranic statements must &e *iewed as according to the general
#g%ptian Belie*es!it is clear that there is no Contradiction in the Te$t 8f
ol% DurEa-n. =ather DurEa-n is ust narrating their &elie*es ! and two
narrate some thing is one thing and to contradict it self is another thing. I
there is a contradiction from the 1olemical point of *iew in enotheism!it
is &e%ond the scope of narration of their &elie*es.To criticiHe a 3ogma is
one thing and to Fuote a 3ogma is another thing.
;t these points DurEan is not criticiHing the &elie*es of 1haraoh and his
Courtiers and +o&alities. DurEa-n is ust narrating their dialogues which
did occur in the past ! and their respecti*e spea4ers spo4e according to
their =eligion !Theological Bac4grounds and 3ogmas.
#1?;+;TI8+ 8< D>=E;+IC ,#=S#S ;S ;CC8=3I+G T8 T# #+8T#ISM.
;s Missionaries ha*e repeatedl% attempted to e$plain these *erses of ol%
Duran as according to 1ure 1ol%theism ! thus claiming that there is acontradiction is DurEan! the proper e$planation of these *ersesJsentences
of Duran must &e studied ;S according to enothiesm and Kathentheism.
The sentence of 1haroah to the:hiefs, K Do god=8only means
F K( am your only God
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
28/36
2@
2@
(s an :nly God;god the God;god doeth not %now any other God;god . Pharaoh claimed not to
%now any other God;god for his su#jects +enotheistically and certainly not Monotheistically.)
The very same meaning K Thou !rt Thou !rt the 9nly God
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
29/36
2B
2B
*9M@ P9L@M(:!L (*:**(9D*F
(f there has been no evidence in the least meaning of the word evidence, that there are some similarities
between !sian (ndia and !frican @gy$t in their res$ective religious believes even then the obection of
Missionaries would have been incorrect, since it is based u$on the baseless, and $roof'less su$$osition that
!ncient @gy$tian eligion was a Pure Polytheism+ *ince in $ure $olytheism the claims li/e %i& 9nly 9ne
God
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
30/36
5C
5C
If it is as4ed that is there a contradiction in enotheism the answer is that
if there is e*en then to Fuote or to report a contradiction is one thing and
to contradict is an other thing. If enotheism is a Self Contradictor%
3ogma then it is not that Duran is contradicting Itself as incorrectl%
supposed &ut DurEan is ust Fuoting two contradictor% statements of two
one of 1haraoh and other of his courtiers. In this case it is not the casethat 8ne ol% ,erse is Contradicting the other ol% ,erse! &ut 1haraoh
and his courtiers contradicted each other and Duran onl% reports their
statements.
W.
S8M# 3#
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
31/36
51
51
other gods. ;ll twel*e were worshiped! each indi*iduall%
&% a di'erent sect or temple.
L- The word Monolatr%/Monolatrism is &ased upon the
Gree4 roots monos! which means one and latreia! whichmeans ser*ice or religious worship. It seems to ha*e &een
"rst used &% 9ulius :ellhausen to descri&ed a t%pe of
pol%theism in which onl% one god is worshipped e*en
though the e$istence of other gods is accepted. The
reason for the di'erence in treatment is the premise that
onl% one of the man% gods actuall% deser*es to &e
worshipped often this ma% &e due to a special
relationship the god has with the people in Fuestion.
Q+S Summodeism! ma% &e de"ned as the worship of a
Supreme Being who sits at the head of a pantheon of
other Gods/gods who are ust s manifestations !
incarnations!culminations etcof this igh god/God or
Supreme Being . Thus! in a summodeistic s%stem! the
e$istence of multiple gods onl% occurs &ecause a single!
high god/God is a&le to incarnate! to manifest and to
culminate into man% di'erent Gods/gods.
&anifestation:= here are two different meanings of Manifestation
4) f a thing #ecomes some thing that it is initially not with or with out con*ersion,
mutation etc it is called Manifestation.
0) o #ecome %nown through some thing other that itself
here is a #ig difference #etween #eing a manifestation of something something thatwas made known- in the first meaning and the second meaning. n this article we ha*e
used the word in the first meaning.
Incarnation:= Special case of &anifestation 'in the first meanin(#
$o &anifest in a corporeal thin#
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
32/36
52
52
&anifestation is a eneral word in reard to its firt meanin than
incarnation and incarnation is its special case#
7or example if a thin manifest in spirit or in a spiritual bein or a
human bein the word manifest is correct for all these cases# "ut thelast one is called incarnation#
Supreme "ein:=
$he words 8 Supreme "ein9 is used in this article in the followin
meanin :=
)( An ternal and ;ncreated "ein 0 which neither 3ath a "einnin
nor an nd# Such a "ein is also believed to be infinite and a Creator'%mnific( in /eneral#
"ut a Non
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
33/36
55
55
!igAeda( =oo- 1C
Rig Veda, tr. #y 8alph .+. Griffith, (41>), at sacred6te&ts.com
NM+ CI. Creation.
4. +EH was not non6e&istent(sat) nor e&istent("at)/ there was no realm of air, no s%y #eyond
it.
?hat co*ered in, and whereT and what ga*e shelterT ?as water there, unfathomed depth of
waterT
0 Death was not then, nor was there aught immortal/ no sign was there, the day's and night's
di*ider.
hat :ne hing ("ans%rit "upreme ?ho *erily %nows and who can here declare it, whence it was #orn and whence comes this
creationT
he Gods are later than this world's production. ?ho %nows then whence it first came into
#eingT
3 +e, the first origin of this creation, whether he formed it all or did not form it,
?hose eye controls this world in highest hea*en, he *erily %nows it, or perhaps he %nows not.
$EM: ;XXX. ;reation.
acred ans-rit criptures in the $oly ans-rit ;anon.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/rigveda/rv10130.htmhttp://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/rigveda/rv10130.htm
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
34/36
5J
5J
Rig Veda, tr. #y 8alph .+. Griffith, (41>), at sacred6te&ts.com
NM+ C. Creation.
4. +E sacrifice drawn out with threads on e*ery side, stretched #y a hundred sacred ministers
and one,J
his do these Fathers wea*e who hitherward are come/ they sit #eside the warp and cry, ?ea*e
forth, wea*e #ac%.
0 he Man e&tends it and the Man un#inds it/ e*en to this *ault of hea*en hath he outspun, it.
hese pegs are fastened to the seat of worship/ they made the "Uma6hymns their wea*ing
shuttles.
2 ?hat were the rule, the order and the modelT ?hat were the wooden fender and the #utterT
?hat were the hymn, the chant, the recitation, when to the God all Deities paid worshipT
K Closely was GUyatrV conjoined with gni, and closely "a*itar com#ined with Bsnih.
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
35/36
-
8/16/2019 In What Meaning Pharoah Claimed to Be Only God
36/36
53ubilee +ible )444nd Pharaoh said, ?ho is the !:8D, that should hear%en to his *oice to let srael goT do not%now the !:8D, neither will let srael go.
Pharaoh said "9 :hiefs; no god =8
: