The Separation of Heaven and EarthThe Sumerians believed that in the beginning there was only the primeval sea, which they called Nammu ("Mankind's Mother"). Nammu gave birth to An ("Heaven") and Ki ("Earth"). It was the union of An and Ki, "heaven" and "earth", which produced the Anunnaki, or Anunna, meaning "Heaven came to Earth" or "Those who descended from Heaven to Earth." The physical union of Heaven and Earth is described in the Sumerian text The Birth of Wood and Reed: "The Great Earth made herself glorious, her body flourished with greenery. Wide Earth put on silver metal and lapis lazuli ornaments, adorned herself with diorite, chalcedony, carnelian, and diamonds. Heaven covered the pastures with irresistible sexual attraction, presented himself in majesty. The pure young woman showed herself to the pure Heaven. The vast Heaven copulated with the wide Earth, the seed of the heroes Wood and Reed he ejaculated into her womb. Sweet Earth, the good cow, received the rich seed of Heaven in her womb. The Earth, for the happy birth of the Plants of Life, presented herself." (Lapis luzuli is a dense blue semiprecious gemstone and diorite is a very hard green or gray volcanic rock. Chalcedony and carnelian are types of quartz.) In those days, in those distant days, in those nights, in those remote nights, in those years, in those distant years; in days of yore, when the necessary things had been brought into manifest existence, in days of yore, when the necessary things had been for the first time properly cared for, when bread had been tasted for the first time in the shrines of the Land, when the ovens of the Land had been made to work, when the heavens had been separated from the earth, when the earth had been encircled by the heavens, when the name of mankind was fixed, when An had taken the heavens for himself, when Enlil had taken the earth for himself, when the netherworld had been given Ereshkigal as a gift; when he set sail, when he set sail, when the father set sail for the netherworld, when Enki set sail for the netherworld -- against the king a storm of small hailstones arose, against Enki a storm of large hailstones arose. The small ones were light hammers, the large ones were like stones from catapults [?]. The keel of Enki's little boat was trembling as if it were being butted by turtles, the waves at the bow of the boat rose to devour the king like wolves and the waves at the stern of the boat were attacking Enki like a lion. What Enki did when he got there or why he went to the netherworld has not been recorded. "In the beginning Elohim created the heavens and earth. Now the earth was tohu [formless] and empty, darkness was over the surface of the tehom [deep], and the Spirit of Elohim was hovering over the waters. And Elohim said, "Let there be light," and there was light. Elohim saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from the darkness. Elohim called the light "day" and the darkness "night". And there was evening, and there was morning- the first day. And Elohim said, "Let there be an expanse between the waters to separate water from water." So Elohim made the expanse and separated the water under the expanse from the water above it. And it was so. Elohim called the expanse Shamayim. There was evening and there was morning, a second day." -Genesis 1:1-8
Translated in most Bibles as "God", Elohim is actually the plural form for Eloh, or El, even though the sentence structure uses it as if it were a singular noun. While some contend that the word is a holdover from an earlier polytheistic society, others believe that this is representative of the Trinity, or the plurality of majesty, similar to how European kings referred to themselves in the plural. The New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia cites the same use of plurality to denote a single god in inscriptions from Phoenicia and Tel Amarna (Akhetaten) in Egypt. Derivatives of Elohim found in the Old Testament include: El Elyon ("Lord Most High"), El Sabaoth ("Lord of Hosts"/ "Lord of Armies"), El Shaddai ("Lord Almighty"), and El Olam ("Lord Everlasting"). The Babylonian El was short for El-lil ("Lord-Air"), who they also called Enlil. To the Canaanites, El was a proper name for the head of their pantheon; they also added an epithet to the name, referring to him as "El the Bull". Map of the World, showing the ocean surrounding all land with the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers running through the middle. Enki in his underwater temple The texts say that in these ancient times the gods acted like men and did all the work and labor. A text called The Debate between Winter and Summer describes how after stealing away with the earth, Enlil copulated with the hills and produced the two seasons, Emesh ("Summer") and Enten ("Winter"). Like all gods, their births were quick and painless: An lifted his head in pride and brought forth a good day. He laid plans for ...... and spread the population wide. Enlil set his foot upon the earth like a great bull. Enlil, the king of all lands, set his mind to increasing the good day of abundance, to making the ...... night resplendent in celebration, to making flax grow, to making barley proliferate, to guaranteeing the spring floods at the quay, to making ...... Lengthen [?] their days in abundance, to making Summer close the floodgates of heaven, and to making Winter guarantee plentiful water at the quay. The fact that Winter created fish and birds in the same instance matches with the fifth day of creation as reported in the beginning of Genesis:
"And Elohim said: 'Let the water teem with living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth across the expanse of the sky.'"
-Genesis 1:20 Like in the Hebrew story of Kayin and Havel (Cain and Abel), the two seasonal metaphors Summer and Winter go to bring offerings for a sacrifice, except it is at E-Namtila, one of Enlil's mountain temples. Like Cain, Summer builds the world's first town. When the two of them go to sacrifice, Emesh brings cattle, sheep, rams, deer, stags, fattened pigs, porcupine, turtle, birds, eggs, crops, flour and malt while Enten brings figs, dried fruit, cool water, honey, beer, birds, fattened duck, carp, pomegranates, grapes, cucumbers and turnips. The two get into a quarrel about which sacrifice is better. At first Winter is too tired from working to argue but then, overcome with anger, he 'reared himself' and told Summer that he should not praise himself since all of Summer's harvest had come through Winter's toil. Summer countered that all of the straw that Winter hauled got thrown into the hearth because of the cold that Winter brought. This argument takes up the majority of the text. When Enlil makes his presence, the argument is settled: Like a great bull Winter raised his head to speak: "Father Enlil, you gave me control of irrigation; you brought plentiful water. I made one meadow adjacent to another and I heaped high the granaries. The grain became thick in the furrows. Ezina came forth in splendor like a beautiful maiden. Summer, a bragging field-administrator who does not know the extent of the field, ...... my thighs grown tired from toil. ...... tribute has been produced for the king's palace. Winter admires the heart of your ...... in words." Even though Summer's sacrifices are better, Winter's sacrifice is found more pleasing because he worked harder for it. Perhaps Enten ("Winter") was predestined to be the winner since the word 'En' ("Lord") is in his name. The moral of the Sumerian version doesn't translate over though: Abel's sacrifice is looked on with favor because he brings in the fat portions from the firstborn of the stock. Instead, the resolution of The Debate between Winter and Summer becomes the source of conflict between Kayin and Havel. After he had turned his gaze from there, after father Enki had lifted his eyes across the Euphrates, he stood up full of lust like a rampant bull, lifted his penis, ejaculated and filled the Tigris with flowing water. He was like a wild cow mooing for its young in the wild grass, its scorpion-infested cow-pen. The Tigris ...... at his side like a rampant bull. By lifting his penis, he brought a bridal gift. The Tigris rejoiced in its heart like a great wild bull, when it was born ....... It brought water, flowing water indeed: its wine will be sweet. It brought barley, mottled barley indeed: the people will eat it. It filled the E-Kur, the house of Enlil, with all sorts of things. Enlil was delighted with Enki, and Nibru was glad. The lord put on the diadem as a sign of lordship, he put on the good crown as a sign of kingship, touching the ground on his left side. Plenty came forth out of the earth for him. After that, Enki then built a shrine for the sea and ordained the rains to the storm god Ishkur, who rode great storm clouds and threw lightning bolts as a weapon. Enki further organizes the ploughs of the farmlands and the wildlife of the earth: He built the sheepfolds, carried out their cleaning, made the cow-pens, bestowed on them the best fat and cream, and brought luxury to the gods' dining places. He made the plain, created for grasses and herbs, achieve prosperity. Enki placed in charge of all this the king, the good provider of E-Anna, the friend of An, the beloved son-in-law of the youth Suen, the holy spouse of Inanna the mistress, the lady of the great powers who allows sexual intercourse in the open squares of Kulaba -- Dumuzi-Mother-Dragon-of-Heaven, the friend of An. After Enki had assigned duties to Enlil's sister Aruru (another name for Ninmah) and some of the minor gods, the love goddess Inanna came weeping and complaining that she hadn't been given a job. Enki told her that he has already given her her voice, clothed her in the garments of women's power, and the shepherd's crook-staff. But he adds to that, giving her the ability to sense ill omens regarding battle. For that, Enki gave Inanna a spindle and colored thread, perhaps to weave the fates. Enki tells Inanna that she sows human heads like seed and never grew weary of her admirers. At this point, the text starts becoming unclear until it ends with a praise for Enki. Inanna with wings, horns, and a crown, standing on a lion "My parts are little, they know not how to stretch; my lips are little, they know not how to kiss! If my mother learned about it she would be slapping my hand. If my father learned about it, he would be grabbing hold of me harshly, and it would not be for me, now, to tell my girlfriend, I should be drying up on her!" But Enlil gets his servant Nusku to build him a boat and he sails across and has his way with her. She conceives Suen (the Akkadian name for the moon god Nanna, also known as Sin), and when they find out, the gods throw Enlil out of his own city. But Ninlil decides to follow him as he travels into the netherworld. Enlil meets the keeper of the gate and warns him not to tell Ninlil where he is when she gets there. When Ninlil arrives, she tells the gatekeeper about the moon god that she and Enlil conceived. She then asks the gatekeeper to impregnate her, enabling her to leave behind a substitute in the netherworld so that the moon god could escape to arise into the heavens. The gatekeeper leads Ninlil to his bedchambers, but Enlil sneaks in and takes his place, conceiving the netherworld god, Nergal, who later marries Ereshkigal and becomes the king of the netherworld. The episode is repeated when Enlil and Ninlil meet up with the river man, and Enlil conceives Ninazu, owner of the temple manor Egida in the same fashion. The routine is done a third time with Silulim the ferry man, the Sumerian version of Charon of Hades. This time Enlil conceives Enbilulu, the river warden. The text then ends with many praises for Father Enlil and one for Mother Ninlil. |