Questions to Ponder: Creation
What in your mind is the most important theme in mythology? Why do we have a creation myth? What purpose do they serve in both the individual and society?Themes
I find it remarkable how similar myths from around the world can be in their most generalized context. For example, both the Grecian and Japanese creation myths involve an original male and female "mating" to create other beings who then created the aspects of our world. This basic plot line is the basis of a large number of creation stories from dozens of cultures. Even more interesting is how the cultures have evolved based on their mythos; how their origin stories have affected the development of cultural rituals and habits and how their vary society is structured even in modern day.From that stems my interest in a particular theme: the fall of man, but especially the second fall. While this pertains more to the flood than creation, it is a dominant theme in many myths. The common 'fall of man' plot seems to go something like this:
- God(s) create the light and the dark, plants and animals
- God(s) get ambitious and/or lazy so they design a keeper or servant: humans
- Humans run wild and muck up the beautiful world
- God(s) get angry and wipe out most of the humans
- "Pure" humans are allowed to repopulate
This narrative is most familiar to a number of us via the Christian Bible: God made Adam and Eve to tend the Garden of Eden, but then Eve disobeys God's one command by eating the apple, feeds it to Adam, and they both get kicked out of the Garden. That is the first fall of man. But the second fall, when humans prove that not all of us are the scum-of-the-earth and that we are all redeemable, comes when God sends Noah on the quest to build the ark so that He might wipe out all but two of each creature.
Again, steps 1-5 are formulaically followed in the Egyptian myth of Hathor, Blood and Beer. Humans are created and all is well until the humans start conspiring against the gods. Ra is displeased with humans and sets Hathor to kill them off, but her bloodthirsty attitude drives Ra to pity men and helps them trick her, thus saving a few of mankind to repopulate the earth.
Over and over, humans are given a second chance.
Perhaps it is because of my personal history that this theme is so forefront in my mind; this is my second chance to get things right. And I realize a third chance doesn't come often. Perhaps we are in the midst of our third chance and that has led to our current tense climate: the proverbial beginning of the end. But that is a post for later!
Creation Myths and Their Purpose
The eternal question: why am I here? Before more modern sciences, we made sense of our world and explain the observable phenomena in the only way we could: a higher power. The creation of life is still seen as a somewhat magical process, even though we understand the biology behind human conception and life. But where did it all begin? Why are we unique, only one species where there are dozens of species of dogs? Why are we the apex predator? How did we create tools and master fire? Even now, the best we can do is speculate at the progression we took from primordial soup to modern bipeds.
On a societal scale, it was a common thread to connect people, a central belief system that defined the basic rules to follow. Creation myths made sense of why we are so different from every other creature and why we seem to be above all other creatures.
But the effects on the individual would make for a fascinating psychological study. Creation myths gave us the answer to where we came from in such a way that it created the basic rules of life, it gave early cultures a purpose and a goal: to honor/please/serve the god(s). But it also allowed us to progress further by allowing individuals to focus more on other areas like: 'what is my purpose?' or 'how can we do this?' I believe it answered the questions we couldn't even begin to truly comprehend the answers to so that we might divert our attentions to what would affect us more day-to-day: from diseases came medicine, from trading came currency, from charcoal pictures came writing.
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