Abstract
Unlike in the New Testament whereby faith in Christ can resurrect the dead, the ancient Egyptians believed that the bereaved created the resurrection of their deceased through burial rituals and by encouraging the living to serve their kings. They thought that faith alone in god or the gods was not enough to resurrect the dead, thus they seemingly superimposed resurrection alongside burials. Using the various forms of Egyptian burial rituals and evaluated from the perspective of the Christian concept of resurrection, this researcher attempts to search for the motives behind specific Egyptian burial rituals. The researcher proposes that the activities of the bereaved or of the living over the dead were paramount in resurrecting the dead in ancient Egypt. The purpose of this research is, firstly, to explain how the Egyptian burial rituals influenced their thoughts on resurrection and, secondly, to show that the Egyptian god(s) might have depended on the living to raise the dead.Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: The ancient Egyptians lived their lives mainly to satisfy the interests of the dead, hence their extensive burial rituals. Whilst they believed in the power of the gods to raise the dead, there seemed to be another motive behind their burial practices which suggested that the living may have had more power to raise the dead. The power was realised in the activities of the living in the form of burials, tomb designs, mummification, food offering, and in remembering the dead. This research explains that these burial activities were relevant in resurrecting the dead without which the gods alone were not able to do that.
Highlights
Death is inevitable and all those who live know that there will be a time that they too will have to die
The Egyptians conceptualisation of burials through the veneration of their rulers together with their thoughts concerning their rulers as god’s representatives, their elaborative burial rituals, mummification, tomb design, and continued offering to the dead, suggest that the living or the bereaved had a seemingly great role to play in the resurrection of the deceased, even more than the gods (Osiris/Re), who sometimes needed information from certain individual figures about a deceased before judgement could be passed
This means that the ancient Egyptians superimposed resurrection motives in their burial rituals
Summary
Death is inevitable and all those who live know that there will be a time that they too will have to die. Rensburg and Eck (2008:1499) think that there are few people who can honestly say that they have no interest in afterlife issues, with even those who often feel uncomfortable talking about the subject still desiring to know what would happen to them in the afterlife. The fact that many people desire to know what would happen to them in the afterlife suggests that the concept of resurrection is important amongst various peoples of different cultures. It seemed the ancient Egyptians regarded burial rituals as a sine qua non for the resurrection of the dead, whilst Christians on the other hand teach that faith in Christ can resurrect the dead irrespective of some kind of extensive burial ritual. The questions; how did the ancient Egyptians view resurrection with regard to the motives for their burial rituals, and how did the Christians’ view of resurrection by faith shed light on the Egyptian concept of resurrection by burial rituals?2
Published Version (
Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have