Abstract

This paper suggests an alternative interpretation of Christ’ baptism, and more precisely, of the dove's role in it. One of the main rituals in the Ancient East was the 'sacred marriage' (Hieros Gamos), the purpose of which was to assure abundance, prosperity, and cosmic fertility, and to validate the status of the king. In many cases, the actual crowning, which followed the main ritual, was performed by a dove, one of the symbols of the feminine partner in the sacred marriage – the great goddess.Through the centuries, this ancient ritual underwent extensive transformations and reforms, but even though the goddess seemed to have vanished, her disappearance was only an illusion. There is abundant evidence to show that the ritual reform did not suppress the old traditions and beliefs but merely hid them beneath the surface. This evidence suggests that the goddess reappeared, sometimes centuries later, manifesting herself in numerous guises, as, for example, in the Kabbalah and in Middle Eastern folk tradition. Furthermore, both textual and archeological findings indicate the continuous presence of the motive of the dove as a symbol of the goddess, who elects and coronates the king. The projection of this motive onto the familiar Christian scenario of Jesus’ baptism can shed new light on the survival of the ancient, forgotten, symbolic meaning of the dove as a female divine entity who chooses and crowns Christ.

Highlights

  • Jerrold S., "Sacred Marriage and Popular Cult in Early Mesopotamia", in Matushima, E., Official Cult and Popular Religion in the Ancient Near East: Papers of the First Colloquium on the Ancient Near East - The City and its Life held at the Middle Eastern Culture Center in Japan, Tokyo, March 20-22, 1993

  • Irit, O my Dove, that art in the clefts of the rock: The Dove-allegory in Antiquity, Tel Aviv: Eretz Israel Museum, 1998

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Summary

Introduction

Pirhiya, "The Drawings from Horvat Teiman (Kuntillet Ajrud)", Tel Aviv 9.1, 1982, pp. T., "Ashera in Israel", Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament, 9, 1995. Jerrold S., "Sacred Marriage and Popular Cult in Early Mesopotamia", in Matushima, E., (ed.), Official Cult and Popular Religion in the Ancient Near East: Papers of the First Colloquium on the Ancient Near East - The City and its Life held at the Middle Eastern Culture Center in Japan, Tokyo, March 20-22, 1993. John, "Yahweh and the Gods and Goddesses of Canaan", Journal for the Study of the Old Testament, Supplement Series 265, Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2000.

Results
Conclusion

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