Mesopotamia and Divine
Mesopotamia and Divine
Mesopotamia and Divine
Scriptures
ISSN 1203-1542
http://www.jhsonline.org and
http://purl.org/jhs
DAVID P. MELVIN,
DIVINE MEDIATION AND THE RISE OF
CIVILIZATION IN MESOPOTAMIAN LITERATURE
AND IN GENESIS 1–11
1
2 JOURNAL OF HEBREW SCRIPTURES
DAVID P. MELVIN
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY
INTRODUCTION
In the study of Genesis 1–11, it is common for scholars to make
comparisons between the biblical material and ancient Near East-
ern myths. The discovery of large numbers of texts from Mesopo-
tamia and Ugarit during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
created a veritable deluge of comparative studies of the primeval
history. While the observation of the many continuities between
Genesis 1–11 and Mesopotamian myths has contributed greatly to
our understanding of this portion of the biblical text, it is also im-
portant to note the discontinuities between the biblical and extra-
biblical material. One such discontinuity relates to the origin of
human civilization. In Mesopotamian myths, civilization arises via
the intervention of gods or other divine beings. It is portrayed
variously as a gift bestowed directly upon humanity, an institution
preceding the creation of humanity (via the creation of patron dei-
ties of various technologies), or the bestowal of knowledge upon
humans by gods, sometimes through intermediary beings.
In Genesis 1–11, on the other hand, there are no divine me-
diators, 1 and there does not appear to be any divine assistance in
the rise of civilization. Rather, civilization is the product of human
endeavor. In Gen 4:17–22, humans discover or invent various
aspects of civilized life: city-building, animal husbandry, music, and
metallurgy. The human source of city-building is further unders-
cored in Genesis 10–11 with the construction of cities by Nimrod
(10:8–12) and the building of the city and tower of Babylon (11:1–
9).
I propose that the absence of divine mediation from Genesis
1–11 shifts the responsibility for civilization and the evils which
accompany it onto humanity, particularly through the Eden narra-
tive’s portrayal of civilizing knowledge as illicitly acquired divine
knowledge. In order to make this case, I will first examine the
Mesopotamian literature to establish the mythological background
which Genesis 1–11 rejects. Then, I will analyze the relevant bibli-
cal texts in order to demonstrate the absence of the instruction
motif. Finally, I will argue that the Eden story in Genesis 3 is the
key to understanding how and why the mythological motif of di-
vine instruction was excluded from Genesis 1–11.
(1960), 4. See also Alan Lenzi, Secrecy and the Gods: Secret Knowledge in An-
FLHQW0HVRSRWDPLDDQG%LEOLFDO,VUDHO (SAAS, 19;; Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian
Text Corpus Project, 2008), 106–20. A similar description of the apkallus
4 JOURNAL OF HEBREW SCRIPTURES
the Uruk Sage List (c. 165 BCE), 4 as well as the Adapa myth and the
epic myth (UUDDQG,VKXP, semi-divine beings sent by Enki/Ea in-
structed antediluvian humans in the arts of civilization. 5 The apkal-
lus were teachers of early humanity whom Ea had endowed with
“broad understanding” (uzna rapašta). 6 According to Berossus, they
taught the people of Sumer “writing, science, and technology of all
types, the foundation of cities, the building of temples, jurispru-
dence and geometry,” as well as such necessities as agriculture. 7 In
lists, they usually appear paired with the king whom they purpor-
tedly advised as a sort of vizier. 8
Elements of civilization are also attributed to the semi-divine
hero, Gilgamesh. The opening lines of the Epic of Gilgamesh cele-
brate his great wisdom:
He who saw the Deep, the country’s foundation, [who]
knew…, was wise in all matters! [Gilgamesh, who] saw the
Deep, the country’s foundation, [who] knew…, was wise in all
matters! [He …] everywhere […] and [learnt] of everything the
sum of wisdom. He saw what was secret, discovered what was
hidden, he brought back a tale of before the Deluge. 9
The text goes on to describe Gilgamesh’s achievements in building
the edifices of the city of Uruk, especially its wall. Here the text
highlights the great wisdom required for such construction by as-
cribing the foundations of the city wall to the wisdom of the “Sev-
en Sages” (apkallus). 10 Moreover, within the epic, the greatest
achievements of Gilgamesh are the building of the wall of Uruk
and the wisdom he obtained and passed on to subsequent genera-
tions. 11 The source of this wisdom is his encounter with the divi-
mia: Writing, Reasoning, and the Gods (trans. Zainab Bahrani and Marc Van
De Mieroop;; Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992), 246–49. For a
discussion of the Uruk Sage List, see Lenzi, Secrecy and the Gods, 106–09.
5 See Helge S. Kvanvig, 5RRWVRI$SRFDO\SWLF7KH0HVRSRWDPLDQ%DFNJURXQG
09).
9 The Epic of Gilgamesh, SBV I.1–8 (Andrew George, The Epic of Gilga-
nized Flood hero, as the Sumerian text The Death of Bilgames indi-
cates:
…you reached Ziusudra in his abode! The rites of Sumer, for-
gotten there since distant days of old, the rituals and cus-
toms—it was you brought them down to the land. The rites of
hand-washing and mouth-washing you put in good order, [af-
ter the] Deluge it was you made known all the tasks of the land
[…]. 12
Thus, Gilgamesh acts as a mediating figure between the divine
source of the knowledge necessary for aspects of civilization and
the people of Sumer. The source of his divine knowledge is the
divinized Flood hero, who had in turn received his knowledge from
Enki/Ea, 13 as well as perhaps his divine mother, Ninsun. 14
In similar fashion, Enmerkar acts as a mediator of divine
knowledge which benefits humanity by aiding in the rise of civiliza-
tion. In the Sumerian myth Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta, En-
merkar competes with the Lord of Aratta for supremacy in the
region. They engage in a battle of wits in which the Lord of Aratta
issues various seemingly impossible challenges for Enmerkar, and
in each case, Enmerkar succeeds by receiving divine inspiration
from a deity. Thus, for example, when the Lord of Aratta chal-
lenges Enmerkar to carry grain from Uruk to Aratta in a net, he
receives the solution from the grain goddess, Nidaba, who “open[s]
for him her ‘Nidaba’s holy house of understanding.’” 15
By his reception of divine knowledge, Enmerkar is able not
only to meet the Lord of Aratta’s challenges, he also invents several
new technologies (e.g., writing) along the way. Because of the cru-
cial role divine counsel plays in Enmerkar’s cultural achievements,
his accomplishments become, indirectly, the work of the gods in
brining about human civilization.
Harps That Once…: Sumerian Poetry in Translation [New Haven: Yale Univer-
sity Press, 1987], 301).
6 JOURNAL OF HEBREW SCRIPTURES
WKRORJ\ $ 6WXG\ RI 6SLULWXDO DQG /LWHUDU\ $FKLHYHPHQW LQ WKH 7KLUG 0LOOHQQLXP
B.C. (rev. ed.;; New York: Harper & Brothers, 1961), 64–68;; Bottéro,
238–39.
18 In Mesopotamian Creation myths, the origin of humans is usually
described in one of two ways. The first is that they are fashioned from
clay, usually mixed with the blood of a slain god (cf. Enuma Elish;; Atraha-
sis). The second is that they sprout up from the ground like plants, as is
the case here.
19 COS 1.157.
20 See Kramer, 6XPHULDQ0\WKRORJ\72–73;; Tigay, Evolution, 204–05.
21 See Kramer, 6XPHULDQ0\WKRORJ\, 59–62. See also Bottéro, 0Hsopota-
mia, 236-37.
22 Batto, “Creation Theology,” 18–22.
DIVINE MEDIATION AND THE RISE OF CIVILIZATION 7
general, and Genesis 1–11 in particular, has a more positive view of human
achievements than the bulk of the ancient Near Eastern myths (Genesis 1–
11: A Commentary, [trans. John J. Scullion;; Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1984],
60–61). But by this Westermann primarily means that the “progress” in
Genesis 1–11 (and Gen 4:20–22 in particular) is human progress, whereas
the source of civilization in the myths of the ancient Near East is usually
divine. Therefore, while the biblical writers have portrayed the origin of
civilization as tainted by sin, and indeed, they do not place much emphasis
on “progress” at all, the achievements which they do describe are truly
human achievements.
While I would contend that Westermann’s reading still does not fully
recognize the significance of the negative portrayal of civilization in Gen
4:20–22 (and the rest of Genesis 1–11), his observation of the difference
in the human-divine element in progress is significant. As the text now
stands, there is no divine aid in the development of the arts of civilization
in Gen 4:20–22.
8 JOURNAL OF HEBREW SCRIPTURES
and Tubal-cain was the first to work with metals. If one considers
the entirety of Genesis 4, one may also add to the list of new de-
velopments animal husbandry (v. 2), agriculture (v 2), city-building
and urbanism (v 17), and polygamy (v 19). 26 Gunkel, following
Wellhausen, reads the account as brief fragments of what were
originally much fuller mythological narratives and suggests that
they may originally have referred to deities, 27 but even if this read-
ing is correct for the original myths, the text in its present form has
been largely de-mythologized, and the individuals and their accom-
plishments are completely human.
Further indication of the human origin of civilization in Ge-
nesis 1–11 appears in the motif of city-building and urbanism.
Interestingly, Mesopotamian myths attribute the origin of the earli-
est cities to the work of gods (e.g., Marduk’s construction of Baby-
lon) or semi-divine heroes (e.g., Gilgamesh’s building of the walls
of Uruk), while Gen 4:17 attributes the first city to Cain, who
names it after his first son, Enoch, with no indication of divine
assistance. 28 Similarly, the building of several key cities in Meso-
dicate that it was actually Enoch who built the city, rather than Cain, until
one reaches the phrase #1 -<) “according to the name of his son,”
which he suggests may originally have read simply #/<) “according to his
name” (Genesis 1–11, 327). He further argues that it would be unusual for
Cain to have been both the founder of agriculture and the first city-
builder. Such accounts of the development of civilization typically do so
by a succession of births in which each generation makes but one new
contribution. But this is not always the case, as the Phoenician History
shows by attributing to Chousor (Kothar) the arts of magic, divination,
prophecy, sailing, and fishing (see Albert I. Baumgarten, The Phoenician
History of Philo of Byblos: A Commentary. [Leiden: Brill, 1981], 143).
DIVINE MEDIATION AND THE RISE OF CIVILIZATION 9
1982), 98.
10 JOURNAL OF HEBREW SCRIPTURES
the gods led to the flood in Atrahasis is puzzling. Although it is true that
the Igigi gods protest against their subjection to labor prior to the creation
of humans, there is no hint of such refusal on the part of humanity in the
text, and the reason for the flood is not the attempt of humans to obtain
divinity, but rather their noisiness (see Atrahasis, I.352–59). There is also
no indication that humans sought to obtain divinity, not even Atrahasis,
to whom the gods decide to grant immortality after the flood.
33 Batto notes the transformation of Enkidu from his earlier wild, an-
the place where one would most expect to find evidence of divine
mediation of civilization, the absence of such mediation is all the
more striking. If the author of Gen 6:1–4 drew upon an early (Me-
sopotamian?) myth which included something akin to the instruc-
tion motif which appears in 1 En. 6–11, yet did not include this
element, there must have been a reason for this omission. 35 While
one must remain open to the possibility that Gen 6:1–4 alludes to a
larger tradition which included divine instruction, the absence of
this motif from the final form of Gen 6:1–4, especially in light of
its (re)appearance in 1 En. 6–11, actually underscores the total shift
away from divine mediation of culture in Genesis 1–11.
(e.g., Wellhausen, Prolegomena, 317;; Gunkel, Genesis, 59). Yet even here,
caution is due, as David L. Petersen points out that there is nothing in-
comprehensible about the text as it stands and that “these verses do con-
tain a complete plot,” (“Genesis 6:1–4, Yahweh and the Organization of
the Cosmos,” JSOT 13 [1979], 47–64;; citation from p. 48).
35 Ronald Hendel notes that “The Yahwist retained the story in his
the tree in the center of the garden by saying that if she eats of the
fruit of this tree, she will become like a god, which the woman
presumably desires since she decides to eat the fruit. Thus, there is
an implicit connection between knowledge and divinity in Genesis
3.
A number of possible understandings of the “knowledge”
(+')<!) which results from eating the fruit present themselves. 36
Gunkel understands the “knowledge” to be primarily, though not
exclusively, sexual awareness. Thus, before eating the fruit, the
primeval couple is not aware of their nakedness, suggesting that
they likewise did not engage in sexual intercourse prior to this mo-
ment, and may possibly have been unaware of the difference be-
tween their sexes. 37 The significance of such a motif in the Para-
dise episode would suggest that humanity’s attainment of this
“knowledge” forms a necessary step in their becoming fully human
(cf. the “humanizing” of Enkidu in the Epic of Gilgamesh). 38
While the awareness of nudity, making of clothing, and sexual
activity which follow the eating of the fruit do support this inter-
pretation, a number of other elements weigh against it. The objects
#& and 3: in Gen 3:5 make little sense in relation to sexual aware-
ness, even if one understands them (correctly) not as moral terms
but as referring to that which is helpful or harmful for humanity.
There is nothing else which suggests that human reproduction is
inherently negative in Genesis 1–11, and indeed, it is explicitly
commanded in Gen 1:28 and 9:1, 7. 39
Wellhausen understands “good and evil” as a comprehensive
term indicating that it is knowledge without bounds. Thus, “know-
ledge of good and evil” refers to knowledge in general, and the
secret knowledge of the workings of nature, the possession of
which leads to the development of civilization, in particular. 40
“Knowledge” in Gen 3:1–7 would correspond roughly to the “in-
struction” in the arts of civilization in the Mesopotamian apkal-
8).
39 While Gen 1 and 9:1–17 are both P texts, Genesis 2–3 belongs to
maintain that Gen 3:1–7 refers only to sexual awareness, but rather that
sexual awareness is the explicit example given in the text of the kind of
knowledge which results from eating the fruit.
45 See Brian E. Colless, “Divine Education,” Numen 17 (1970), 124.
46 See the version of the Atrahasis epic from Ugarit, which reads “I am
Atrahasis, I was living in the temple of Ea, my lord, and I knew every-
thing. I knew the counsel of the great gods, I knew of their oath, though
they would not reveal it to me. He repeated their words to the wall, ‘Wall,
DIVINE MEDIATION AND THE RISE OF CIVILIZATION 15
CONCLUSION
The elimination of divine beings by transferring their roles to other
beings (i.e., convergence) has been noted as a key component in
the development of monotheism. The transfer of the attributes and
roles of other deities to Yahweh during the First Temple period set
the stage for the elimination of those deities at the end of that pe-
riod and into the exilic and post-exilic periods. 49 It would seem
that in its final form Genesis 1–11 has performed a similar move
with regard to divine mediators. They have been eliminated by the
transfer of their roles, not to Yahweh, but to humans. The result is
that the cultural achievements in Genesis 4–11 are human achieve-
ments, without divine intervention, although they are ultimately the
result of humanity’s reception of divine knowledge. At the same
time, by associating divine knowledge with the sin in Eden, Genesis
1–11 negatively portrays the civilization which arises as a result of
that knowledge.
hear […] Life like the gods [you will] indeed [possess]” (obv. 6–12, rev. 4
[Foster, %HIRUHWKH0XVHV, 1:185]).
47 The Death of Bilgames, M 49–62 (George, The Epic of Gilgamesh, 198–