Sunday, October 30, 2016

The Epic of Gilgamesh and Genesis

Many people take that, coevals, is the original story of creationism. by chance that belief is so wide-spread, because twain p arents and teachers teach children that the Bible is the invention to existence. The similarities between, The Epic of Gilgamesh, and, Genesis, show that the aline relation of creationism was written foresighted before the Hebrews. The original tale had the characters of Enkidu, Shamhat and Aruru. The Bible may very be a alteration of this ancient Mesopotamian work.\nThe first comparison supporting the theory that these are the same story, is the way in which these hands were created. In Gilgamesh, the Goddess of birth, Aruru, emaciated a piece of dust to make Enkidu. The following reiterate depicts how she make him, Aruru wet her hands, she nasal off clay, she tossed it upon the steppe, she created valiant Enkidu in the steppe (Gilgamesh 92-95). In Genesis, it was God who likewise created crack, the first while. According to Genesis 2:7, He made it from the dust of the ground. Then he breathed into it the breath of life. And man became a living soulfulness (Genesis 2:7 21-22). slightly(prenominal) of these men were made in a paradise of sorts. The wilderness that Enkidu called home, may not attend as idyllic as The Garden of Eden to some readers, but to him it was perfect. Enkidu grazed the province with gazelles at the water hole, that as Adam overlap his beginning with animal companions. As told in the biblical world, nobleman sent the animals to accompany Adam (Lewis et al 14).\nEnkidu and Adam were peeled and wild prior to see the women in their tales, and both men become ashamed by it once they gain cognition of what is deemed right and wrong. Women play a very pivotal mathematical function in both of these stories, practically portrayed as wise. The two women are; Shamhat, the harlot, and Eve, the first woman. Although the women were believed to be wise and level-headed, the two men are eventuall y curse because of a woman. Perhaps this is wherefore Enkidu curses...

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