|  "netjeru"
("nTrw" - gods)
 three flagpoles : wind is powerful but invisible
 Although 
        Egypt could boast of hundreds of deities, the number of deities 
        receiving the service of established cults was surprisingly small. 
        Separate deities were often the same god or goddess, but called by 
        different names in different localities or represented in various 
        manifestations.
 A major distinction may be drawn between, on the one hand, the "greater
        deities" figuring in cosmogonic and cosmographic myths and, on the
        other hand, the "minor" household gods and demons. The latter
        were the subject of popular religion, whereas the former stood at the
        heart of the five major "systems" of theology : Heliopolitan, 
        Memphite, Hermopolitan, Osirian & Theban. To complicate
        matters, not all "greater deities" were functional. Of the
        company of nine of Heliopolis, none of the first five (Atum, Shu,
        Tefnut, Geb & Nut) received widespread dedication of cults. There is
        probably no clear connection between a deity's cosmic or popular role
        and the presence or absence of local centres of cult.
 
 Underlying these differences, Egyptian theology cherished the notion of 
        a universal and unified godhead. In the wisdom-teachings, the word 
        "god" is used in a general sense, without any specification or reference 
        to a particular deity. All deities participated in this universal divine 
        stratum. In the Late New Kingdom, Amun would be called the great 
        "hidden" deity, the "one and millions". Each deity being a 
        manifestation of Amun.
 
 The present studies underline the henotheist nature of Ancient Egyptian 
        religion. With 
        Amun-Re, the pinnacle of Ancient 
        Egyptian theology is reached. The One and the Many are always 
        simultaneously present. Behind the plurality of deities there is a basic 
        unity but behind the unity there is also basic plurality. The deities 
        are interchangeable and plastic. But Amun is hidden and one. Amun has 
        will and hears all prayers ... This henotheism is not a monotheism, for 
        the deity is not numerically one. It may be called a theomonism, for a 
        variety of expression of the One are possible, each being another 
        expression of this fundamental qualitative, not numerical unity. Solar 
        henotheism is not a polytheism, for the various deities are all the same 
        Great One.
 
 The Ancient Egyptian pantheon is a series of natural differentials of a 
        long tradition of practical, canonical, intersubjective and 
        ante-rational interactions with nature and its forces. Their paraphysics 
        is on a grand scale, derived from meditations on the revolutions of the 
        stars and the Milky Way, the celestial Nile (in fact, our galaxy), the 
        "first time" and an autogenetor "hatching" out of the "primordial 
        egg".
 
 Everything existing is part of nature. Ante-rational interaction with 
        nature envolves a contextual, practical, localized approach of its 
        crucial phenomena, such as water, air and light. Nature is divided 
        between "before" creation and "after" creation. Some deities (or 
        ante-rational representations of nature) are preexistent (like Nun), 
        others belong to creation and its inherent order (like Maat). The 
        distinction will prove to be fundamental, and returns in temple ritual, 
        funerary rituals and the regeneration of the Ba of Re in the
        
        Amduat.
 
        
          
            | ANCIENT
              EGYPTIAN THEOLOGY a summary relevant to (African) philosophy
 |  
            | PRE- DYNASTIC
 | Mythical figuration of the sacred in
              nature, cult of the Great Goddess and tribal polytheism with the
              associated "totem-talk" of each nome or conglomerate of
              nomes.
 Several attempts to unify Egypt and the rise (in the Terminal
              Predynastic period) of sacred kingship, which eventually
              assimilated the sacred power of the Great Goddess instead
              of being justified and installed by her. Besides Horus, Seth,
              Hathor and Osiris were already of non-local importance.
 
 The founding myths constitute a network of relationships
              between deified natural principles as they arise in (or are seen by)
              the mythical mind. Especially the dual structure evident in these
              relationships stands out (the Two Lands, Horus & Seth, Sky
              & Earth, etc.) and constitute the pre-logical, nonverbal
              "notion" of a totality embracing paired constrasts.
 |  
            | EARLYDYNASTIC
 | 
              Mythical figuration of the divine in (a) Pharoah, embodiment of 
              Horus and a united Egypt and (b) a henotheist pantheon of unique 
              gods & goddesses in various forms and shapes.
 Pharaoh, the divine king, who assimilated the power of the sacred
              Great Goddess, was an embodiment of Horus, the supreme
              celestial deity, represented by a falcon. Horus was incarnate in
              the reigning monarch, who was a "Follower of Horus". His
              Horus name expressed which aspect of Horus the king wished to
              underline. Pharaonic rule was an explicit dual monarchy, for
              Pharaoh was the "king of the Two Lands". Kingship had
              thus a "transcendent significance" (Frankfort, 1979)
              in the context of 
              
              a mythical mind with an 
              archaic script (cf. Narmer
              palette). The pantheon and its constellational myths constituted
              the "mythical deposit" of the Predynastic religion and
              its hylezoistic (everything is alive) organicism of the natural scene in and
              around the Nile, in particular the inundation of the latter (basis 
              of its economy).
 
 The myth of the transcendent significance of Pharaoh became
              fundamental and introduced the notion (and pre-concept) of the
              extraordinary power of a single (albeit royal) male individual,
              who embodied the god of the sky. This power suggests the harmony
              of opposites realized by and in this individual, and this in tune
              with the divine order. Hence, a single individual became the
              channel of communication between the divine and the human spheres.
              This is the unifying force that kept the opposites from relapsing
              into chaos, which is always lurking in the dark.
 |  
            | OLD KINGDOM
 | 
          Mythical fugal monotheism (Atum), pre-rational
              primitive henotheism (the pantheon) and early proto-rational deification (of
          Pharaoh).
 In the beginning, Atum self-engenders and rises out of the Nun (as
          Re). In oblivion and before anything else did Atum create himself. His
          creating himself is simultaneous with his spliting into the necessary
          elemental conditions of multiplicity (Shu, Air and Tefnut, Moist,
          who engender Nut, the light of the Sky and Geb, Earth). Atum-Re 
              is the "father of the gods", the supreme celestial deity. But : 
              complementary cosmogonies in Memphis (Ptah) and Hermopolis (Thoth) 
              prevail. Pre-rational confusions between these views stand erect. Pre-rational conflicts between Heliopolitan and Osirian
          components remain present and unresolved.
 
 The introduction of a creative principle "sui generis"
          (Re as "khepri", the scarab) and the filial interpretation
          of Pharaoh's extraordinary powers (Pharaoh as the "son of
          Re"), implying his deification and rise above all deities (by
          eating the deities), confirms his transcendent significance, 
          underlined by the fact only Pharaoh (being a god) communicates
          with the gods and only he is a "god on Earth" (the
          spirits of the other deities existed in the sky and only their Ka's
          & Ba's could dwell in the temple). Furthermore, in this
          transcendent role, as well as in the three 
              
              cosmogonies and the
              wisdom-literature of the period (in which a justified and truthful
          code of conduct was developed) we encounter 
              
              the creative power of the
          spoken & written word, especially 
              the great speech of Pharaoh who,
          through offerings and voice-offerings, returned order to the creator of
          order and in who's vincinity every truth-speaking individual wished to
          live (continuously in the Beautiful West). The (pre-rational) mind of powerful individuals
          such as the deities and Pharaoh created their objects (early
          logos-philosophy).
 |  
            | MIDDLE
              KINGDOM | Early 
              provincial henotheism and religious
              humanism.
 The (re)institution of Pharaoh as the guardian of order &
              unity, as well as the rising importance of Thebes (first
              politically, then religiously), reinforced the role of Amun-Re
              as the "king of the gods" and "divine judge".
              Early henotheism hand in hand with the popularity of Osiris
              in the funerary cult, with non-royals named
              "Osiris NN", i.e. assuming the form of the god Osiris.
 
 The collapse of the Pharaonic ideal of the Old Kingdom caused a
              crisis (lamented over in the literature of the period) which
              re-equilibrated the cultural form by introducing a more "democratic"
              understanding of the conditions of the non-royal deceased. In
              principle, everybody could become a god, namely Osiris, and
              continue to live in his domain in the netherworld. This depended
              on being true of voice, i.e. an individual who had lived according
              to the rules of order (Maat). The contents of one's mind (the 
              heart) were
              weighed against the feather of truth ... To assure save passage
              after death, and to guarantee health and safety during life on
              earth, the Egyptians reinforced the idea of the authorative power
              of words and rituals. Mental processes were able to erect barriers
              against the forces of chaos ("isefet") and create the
              conditions for a safe passage (magical logos-philosophy).
 |  
            | NEW
              KINGDOM | New
              Solar Theology (Solar henotheism) and the maturation of
              proto-rationality - early henotheist Amun-Re theology.
 A heliomorph naturalism prevailed, which disenchanted the
              pantheon. Royal afterlife literature described the course of the
              Sun in the underworld. Advent of a new (heliomorph) tendency
              towards one divine principle, the Sun-god Re. This Solar
              Theology was endorsed by none of the Pharaohs preceding 
              Akhenaten and
              existed as a "movement" side by side
              with the old pantheon and its beloved Amun-Re.
 
 The completion of the proto-rational discourse and its Solar
              syncretism, enabled the emergence of a non-constellational pattern
              of thought, a new theology, embedded in the internationalism which
              characterized the early New Kingdom. In the "Solar
              movement", the interactions between a variety of gods and
              goddesses were replaced by the course of the Sun, with its diurnal
              & nocturnal arc. The relationship between Re and the other
              deities was henotheist : Re is the supreme creator of them all,
              but each retained its own uniqueness and domain of divine
              indwelling. In the 
              theology of Ptah, the creative verb is
              introduced, for Ptah created everything (in the form of Atum) in
              his mind and on his tongue, for indeed his word becomes flesh and
              rules the transformation of subtle into solid states (cf. mature
              proto-rational logos-philosophy).
 |  
            | Short period of
              Solar monotheism in Amarna Culture and the rejection of
              Amun-Re.
 Unsuccessful but vigorous implementation by 
              
              Akhenaten
              (Amenhotep IV) of the Solar monotheism
              of the Aten against all deities, especially their
              "king" Amun. High priest of Amun expelled. The cult of
              the old pantheon is removed out of the temples and goes
              underground, as does magic. Even in the houses of Akhetaten ("Horizon or Place of
      the Light of Aten") figurines of Bes, Taweret, Sobek, Isis, Thoth,
              Ptah, Osiris, Mut and (even) Amun have been found, indicative of
              their continuing, albeit secret, worship (do these postdate the
              reign of Akhenaten ?).
 
 The Aten-project (exclusive worship of the physical disk of the
              Sun) was the child of Akhenaten, an artistic man
              unprepared for kingship, but chosen to experience mystical states
              of consciousness remaining immature and fixated in his
              solitary, mad role of exclusive and sole "son of his
              father", the only one who knew the Aten against all other
              gods, i.e. a monotheist creator identified by Akhenaten with the
              actual, physical disk of the Sun (the Aten) ! This artist-king was 
              also the first religious fundamentalist. His monotheist
              naturalism evidences a mature proto-rational discourse, with
              flights into the rational mode. However, these have no stability,
              for the mythical and pre-rational identification of his god with
              the physical disk of the Sun, unveil the contextuality of the
              discourse, and make us taste the everpresent limitations imposed
              by such concrete Solar monotheism.
 |  
            | The
              restoration : henotheism in a pan-en-theist format and the advent of the
              "god in the heart" in the Ramesside Empire.
 The henotheist Amun-Re theology is picked up were it was
              left just before Akhenaten and perfected by stressing the
              all-comprehensive, hidden presence of his unity in all possible
              beings, including the commoners and the poor (Amenism). The interiorization
              of spirituality, caused by having moved underground, shaped a throne for the
              "inner god" to sit on and listen. Amun-Re heared
              everybody and was with every god and goddess. Furthermore,
              everything depended on his will alone, which had to be followed if
              life, prosperity and health were to be expected here and in the
              netherworld.
 
 The finalization of theology as a pan-en-theist henotheism (all
              deities are forms of the one, supreme who is all in all),
              explained in a mature and rich proto-rational discourse, demanded
              the exploration of the limits of the concrete mode of thought.
              Evidently, the Hymns to 
              Amun reveal a level of abstraction
              suggesting the transcendence of the concrete mode of
              thought by a limited number of kings, priests & scholars to be a
              fact. Although Ancient Egypt never attained this level as a
              cultural form, it is unmistaken the best of the best of the
              Ramesside period surely did. Moreover, these peaks of reason of the
              intellectual elite stood firm (as were the pyramids) on
              the broad base of perfected proto-rational discourse. But more
              than once, this pyramid was truncated too ...
 
 Ramesside theology perfects henotheism by stressing the hidden,
              transcendent unity and oneness of Amun-Re in all deities and beings. The latter
              are transformations of the Great One and the deities are perfected
              thanks to Amun-Re. They exist as his many faces. Moreover, Amun-Re
              is interiorized and universalized, for each human being can place
              his name in his mind. The "will of the god" is the only
              valid moral directive. Amun-Re theology, as it appears in the
              mysteries, is hence the first historical description of the
              concept of God and the Divine which satisfied the conditions of 
              
              Divine
              bi-polarity.
 |  
            | Remark
              :
 The use of
              capitals in words for the transcendent principle, such as
              "Absolute", "God" or "Divine",
              points to a rational context (i.e. how these appear in a theology
              conducted in the rational mode of thought - cf. 
              
              theonomy). Hence, when these
              words are used in the context of Ancient Egyptian thought (which,
              as a cultural form, was mythical, pre-rational &
              proto-rational, i.e. ante-rational), this restriction is lifted. Hence, 
              the words 
              "god", "the god", "gods",
              "goddesses", "pantheon" or "divine"
              are not capitalized.
 |  
        five interrelated "systems" of theology & cult The earliest traces of
stable "schools" of cognitive activity regarding the pantheon, were the
mythical & pre-rational theologies of the Old Kingdom, developed in Heliopolis
(or "Ôn"), Memphis (or "Men-nefer")
& Hermopolis (or "Kemennu"). 
 In the Old Kingdom, the Heliopolitan scheme is best documented (Pyramid Texts).
        This dominant theology justified divine kingship, for it dealt with the
        appearances of the divine.
 
 The Hermopolitan scheme was first known through
        early
Ramesside sources (early XIXth Dynasty), although traces of it were found in
the Pyramid Texts. It focused on precreation.
 
 The only
clear-cut theological text of the Memphite school we have, is the inscription on
the right hand side of the Shabaka Stone, the so-called 
        Memphis Theology, referring to a late
New Kingdom original copy. Ptah is mentioned only three times in the  Pyramid
        Texts, and is referred to as 
        "the greatly noble" 
        (Utterance 573, § 1482). These Memphites concentrated on divine kingship 
        and the creation of the world through the divine word.
 
        ► 1. Heliopolitan theology
        : Re 
         
Heliopolitan theology stressed the self-creation of Atum, i.e. the appearance of
        light. He "evolved"
        himself with his company (his
        children) and so the Ennead (his court) was generated (in four stages
        happening simultaneously). The evolution of Atum represented the active
        polarity of this overall passive, undifferentiated, liquid matter.
 Atum is the Ba of Nun.
 Atum is Nun as Re.
 
 Atum manifests the active, lightening, generative potential hidden in
        the passive, darkening, inert principle. In his primordial egg, Atum is
        a pure divine act hidden in, floating on limitless dark waters. There, he represented the
        spark of creative activity locked in limitless inertia. The "Lord
        of All" caused himself to evolve beyond the limitations imposed by
        this inertia (break out of the egg and bring time & space into
        being : autogenesis). This "Lord to the Limit" actualized the active
        potential of creation. He brought about the virtual world of creation, which at first had
        been hidden in his "egg". The latter is to be viewed as an island of potential activity,
        which, before Atum's evolution, had been isolated and detained by Nun. Atum rose out of Nun like Re
        dawned and the first light struck the primordial mount. With this light,
        variety appeared.
 
 Atum, Shu,
Tefnut  Geb, Nut, Osiris, Isis, Seth, Nephthys :the company of nine of Heliopolis (the Ennead)
 
        The "first time" or "first event" ("zep tepy") came to be when Atum sprang out of
        this primordial ocean (Nun), instantaneously ({0} = 2) giving birth to
    Shu (air - life) and Tefnut (moist - order), Geb (Earth) and Nut (sky). With
        the fourth generation of gods (Osiris, Isis, Seth, Nephthys), a company of nine
        creative archetypes became operational (Atum included). The expression
        "Atum and the Ennead" being suggestive of a final tenth deity,
        namely Pharaoh Horus, the "Lord of the Two Lands" (a metaphor
        for Egypt, but also for the created order as a whole - cf. the
        fundamental duality of creation).
 Self-creative Atum had understanding, wisdom (sia), authoritative
        utterance (hu, the Great Word), magic (heka), justice &
        truth (maat). His eternal rejuvenation was based on his being all-light,
        forever alife & mutating perpetually in his Bark, although at night, Re
        navigated
        on the Nile of the underworld, the depth of which touched the primordial
        chaos of pre-creation.
 
 In Chapter 175 of the so-called Book of the Dead, called
        "Chapter of not dying a second time", Atum answers to Osiris,
        who asked him how long he will live :
 
 "You shall be
        for millions on millions of years, a lifetime of millions of years. I
        will dispatch the Elders and destroy all what I have made. The Earth
        shall return to Nun, to the surging flood, as in its original state.
        But I will remain with Osiris, I will transform myself into something
        else, namely a serpent, without men knowing or the gods seeing." - Book of the Dead,
        chapter 175.
 
        ► 2. Hermopolitan theology
        : Thoth 
  
In Hermopolis ("Khemennu" or "city of the eight"), Thoth was
worshipped as the "vizier" of Re. As a Sacred Ibis, he dropped the creative
& magical 
word.
In doing so, he fashioned the world out of the
primordial chaos of Nun, represented as a company of eight pre-creational, chaotic
deities (the Ogdoad). Thoth was the
        head of this pre-creational Ogdoad, as such turned into an Ennead. Thus
he organized the primordial matter by establishing the rules of its functioning,
conceived in his heart. The Ogdoad is the soul of Thoth.
 The mythical origin of creation is thus placed under the command of the divine mind,
the word of Re and god of magic, writing, healing, time, mathematics wisdom and
the like. In this scheme, the primordial realm of the original matter (water)
was characterized & personified. The primeval chaos, before the emergence of
Re on the "Island of Flames" (Hermopolis), contained all forces of
life, represented by four couples, four males (frog-headed) and four females
(snake-headed). These were deemed to exist in Nun and came into being there
spontaneously.
 
 The primordial waters were an integral part of creation, namely its background.
The chaos-gods are mentioned in the Pyramid Texts, suggesting the
Hermopolitan scheme was already in place in the Old Kingdom. In texts of the
First Intermediate Period and the Middle Kingdom, we already meet four of these
chaos-gods : Wateriness ("nwi"), Infinity ("HHw"), Darkness
("kkw") and Lostness ("tnm"). In the Late Period (cf.
Medinet Habu), four pairs were formed, together as a single entity :
 
  
    
      | OGDOAD | QUALITIES |  
      | NUN &
        NAUNET | wateriness
        & inertness |  
      | HUH &
        HAUHET | infinity |  
      | KUK &
        KAUKET | darkness |  
      | AMUN &
        AMAUNET | hiddenness |  In the temples
of Edfu & Esna, we read that the eight have made their seed germ. They
instilled this seed in the lotus, deposited it in Nun, condensed it into a
single form, so it took birth under the aspect of a child, the creator Re. 
 The Hermopolitan
scheme, with its emphasis on creation-through-the-word, is easy to combine with
the Memphite theology, which became dynastic in the IIIth Dynasty (Memphis had become the
capital of Egypt).
 
        ► 3.
        Osirian theology : Osiris With 
Osiris,
emphasis shifts from a cosmological to 
 a soteriological
perspective. The Solar
cycle (Atum, Re and Horus), with its royal and universal ideas (as well as
adjacent ante-rational conceptualizations of the mind as a creative agent), was
complemented by a popular, rather anthropological and Lunar cycle (the Moon
being associated with darkness and the sacred feminine, with fertility, birth
& rebirth) : the mystery-drama of Osiris, continuously depicted for about
three millenia.
 Indeed, as early as 3.000 BCE, Osirian funeral artifacts appeared at Abydos. Within a few hundred
years, the First Dynasty kings of a unified Egypt built tombs and cenotaphs at
Abydos in order to be near the tomb of Osiris and to assure for themselves (and
others ?) the gateway to the Land of the
Dead. From then on, Abydos became the center of the Osirian mysteries. A place
of pilgrimage.
 Osiris
- from the book of the dead of Pharaoh Pinudjem IThebes - XIth Dynasty - Papyrus
 No
other god was more intimately related with the afterlife than Osiris. The
original home of Osiris was the temple city Per-Asar-neb-Tetu (the Greek
Busiris), situated in the 9th nome of Lower Egypt. Here was preserved the
backbone of Osiris, the  "tet", and grew the sacred Acacia etc.
As his cult extended, Osiris assumed & assimilated the forms of the gods of
the dead of other nomes and cities like Memphis (Ptah-Seker) and Abydos
(Khenti-Amenti). Before Osiris had arrived at Abydos from the North,
Khenti-Amenti ("Foremost of those of the West") had been one of the
oldest gods of Abydos ... The Pyramid
Texts evidence the assimilation of the Khenti-Amenti by Osiris.
 The oldest form of the name of Osiris had two hieroglyphs : a seat, throne,
place and an eye, i.e. the seat maker, he who takes his throne. His important
role in the funerary rituals is testified by the ceremony of "Opening the
Mouth" found in the Pyramid Texts, intended to "balance the
mouth", enabling the deceased to speak
and act
in the afterlife.
 
 In the Old Kingdom, Osiris was intimately related with the individual spiritual
process of transformation happening after Pharaoh's physical body had died. For
Osiris was the proto-type of a godman who had lived on the Earth, had been
dismembered but who nevertheless remained everlasting in a fine condition, alife
after natural death ... immortal
(no second death).
Later, Osiris was called "Lord of the Living" (i.e. of those living
their afterlife). Osiris was the
beneficient
god of the dead,
because he gave eternal life to the dead as a result of his own permanent
state of divine existence in the afterlife.
 
 In the classical account on Osiris, namely that found in
Plutarch's De Iside et Osiride, we are not told whether Osiris
returned from the netherworld
in his natural body or in a subtle one.
The latter had power of speech
&
thought as well as a
posture recognizable by his son Horus. The core of the message being,
his natural body had
only been a sheet put on by
the divine part of Osiris, a spiritual vehicle able to take on all forms (at
first,
of all Pharaohs
and eventually of all justified human beings).
 
 "A ladder is knotted
together by Re before Osiris, a ladder is knotted together by Horus before his
father Osiris when he goes to his spirit, one of them being on this side and one
of them being on that side, while I am between them." - Pyramid Texts,
utterance 305 (§ 472).
 
 Osiris was the salvic archetype par excellence. He was the self-realized,
completed, perfected superbeing. His passion had been so destructive, that his
restoration (by Horus) and ascension were unmatched by no other deity. With
Osiris, the fundamental Heliopolitan trinity (Atum, Shu & Tefnut) was
anthropologized in the divine family and it drama (Osiris, Isis, Horus). The
myth of the Single Eye got transposed in "human" terms as myth of the
left Eye of Horus.
 
 As from the Middle Kingdom onward, every
human being was deemed to have a soul which could suffer a second death, namely exist in
the netherworld for a short period before total annihilation (desintegration and
return to the limitless waters), the judgment of Osiris was crucial to
guarantee personal salvation. Although Pharaoh was the "son of
Re", we already find a strong Osirian influence in the Pyramid Texts
(introducing unresolved pre-rational tensions in the overall Heliopolitan
inspiration of this corpus). The "popular" Osiris had to be
assimilated by the royal ritual, but the syncretism never was a self-evident one
(compared to, for example Atum and Re, or Amun and Re).
 
 Those
wretched souls deemed unfit to enter his realm (in the afterlife), existed in
darkness, without means to sustain themselves. As bleek as Eliot's Hollow Men,
they awaited the nightly return of the Solar superbeings in and around the
"Bark of Millions of Years", for it is their own fading contact with
light. Finally, they all perish, torturing and being tortured, walking on their
heads and eating excrements ...
 
 The heart of the commoner worshipped the Osirian trinity : Osiris, Master of
Silence, Isis, Great in Magic, and Horus, Vindicator.
 
        ► 4. Memphite
        theology : Ptah 
         In the Old Kingdom, Ptah was called the
"greatly noble", "speaking" on behalf of Pharaoh and
providing the latter with supplies (Pyramid Texts, Utterance 573, §
1482). In his mythical form, Ptah (like the Ogdoad) fashions the primordial egg. As creative
        principle, he was the patron
of artists & artisans.  
          
            
              | 
               Ptah
                -
        Thebes XVIIIth Dynasty
 |  The 
       Memphis
      Theology
      (completed in the late New Kingdom) superceded the Heliopolitan doctrine on
      three accounts : 
        
          Ptah 
          was all-encompassing : he was the "father of the gods" of pre-creation 
          (Nun), but also the self-created, hatching out of the primordial egg 
          and initiating the first event, occasion or time (Atum and the 
          Heliopolitan Ennead) and the whole of creation (especially in the cult 
          statue) ;
          The great
          word spoken
          by Ptah created the Ennead, whereas in the Heliopolitan view, Atum
          created the deities through physical means. The Memphite "great
          word" is coherent with the rather mental Hermopolitan view
          (about which only Late Period records have been found) ;
          the
          creative Great Word "in the heart" and the creative
          speech "on the tongue" are like the semen and the hands of Atum, i.e.
          the great word spoken is first cause here (and not Atum's act of taking semen in
          his hand and in his mouth.
         The 
          creation of the world by design and speech is remarkable and 
          prefigurates 
          Greek logos-philosophy.
 The creative 
          power of the mind and its
          
          spoken word always go hand in hand.
 
 Just as Pharaoh was the only one facing the deities (everybody else 
          had to face him), so was every member of the pantheon (the Enneads) a 
          manifestation of Ptah.
 |  In
      Memphis, a divine trinity saw the light : Ptah, Sekhmet and Nefertem. 
 Ptah in his
naos, Sekhmet and Nefertem Ptah is one &
        all-comprehensive (Ptah is Nun, Atum & Re). He utters what is on his mind,
        namely the Great Word, and thus created everything therewith. Pre-creation,
        first time & creation are all put into one category, an exemplaric
        summation. Ptah was before creation, during the first time, at the 
moment of creation and in every created god & goddess, in all doubles & souls, 
in all temples and on every altar ...  
        ► 5. Theban
theology : Amun In XVIIIth Dynasty of the New Kingdom,
the so-called "New Solar Theology" (Assmann, 1995) caused a crisis in
        Solar henotheism. It promoted an all-comprehensive, numerically 
        singular Re,
leading to the shortlived radical monotheism of Amarna.
        Eventually, this strong tendency towards a greater integration of the
        pantheon, gave rise, in the Ramesside Era, to the Theban theology
        centered around Amun-Re.
        It would continue to dominate Egyptian religion.    "O You, the
Great God, whose name is unknown."Pharaoh Unis (PT  276c -
ca. 2350 BCE)
 Amun would become the "king of the gods" and -as a state
        religion-, his cult would acquire more power than Pharaoh himself.
 The association of Amun with
        precreation (as part of the Hermopolitan Ogdoad), recalled the
        rejuvenating powers of the primordial waters (Nun), the abyssimal chaos
        surrounding
        life, but containing the dormant potential of the world-egg, inert
        in the Nun.
 In the theology of Amun, a final step is taken. The priests of Amun
        superceded ante-rationality, for they conceptualized him as One, Hidden
        and Millions. Politically too, a decisive change occurs : Amun becomes
        Pharaoh, ruling Egypt through oracular divination.
 
 These XIXth Dynasty Amun-Re "mysteries" explain the
        story of a mature henotheist concept of the divine. Ramesside Amun-Re theology predates the Judeo-Christian tradition,
        which, for the first time in history, would develop an abstract & monotheist
        cultural form, dogma or conceptualization of God based on written
        revelations (deemed final !). This concept of Amun-Re as the One Great
        God belonged to the "secret of secrets".
 
 Just as in Brahmanism
        today, the worshippers of Amun never relinquished the idea (as do the
        religions "of the book") that the One Creator has millions of
        forms, transformations & Divine manifestations ("xpr").
 
 One God with millions of Persons and Principles.
 
 Amun-Re of
  Thebes So contrary to these monotheist, numerical religions, the cult of Amun-Re
        was not
        against other deities, for each and every god & goddess was a
        light-manifestation (Re) of Amun, who remained hidden. They were so many
        theophanies of Amun's names or
        attributes. Moreover, Amun was not opposed to the use of images in
        the cult (no iconical ban). And finally,  everybody who invoked Amun,
        could be certain of being heard. There was no "final" prophetic
        dogma's (Moses, the kings &
        prophets of Israel & Muhammad) or an exclusive Divine Filiation (Christ,
         unique son of God - cf. 
        
        Akhenaten)
        to cross the gap between Earth and heaven. There was no revelation. Everywhere, constantly, only Amun
        reigned, but hidden & far, as well as present & near (cf. pan-en-theism, also found in
 
        
        Qabalah,
        
        Christian mysticism, and
 
        Sufism). 
 Also in Thebes, a divine trinity was worshipped : Amun, Mut and Khonsu.
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