Writer, Magi, Artist, Taoist and Pirate;I am consistently pushing the boundaries of Magic,Taoism,Voodoo,Buddhism and The Left Hand Path and good taste for future generations to come !
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Lilith
A Bit of Black Flame about Lilith.....I've
worked with Lilith extensively and know a few things about her.The earliest
surviving mention of Lilith’s name appears in Gilgamesh and the
Huluppu-Tree, a Sumerian epic poem found on a tablet at Ur and dating
from approximately 2000 B.C.E. The mighty ruler Gilgamesh is the world’s
first literary hero; he boldly slays monsters and vainly searches for
the secret to eternal life.a In one episode, “after heaven and earth had
separated and man had been created,” Gilgamesh rushes to assist Inanna,
goddess of erotic love and war. In her garden near the Euphrates River,
Inanna lovingly tends a willow (huluppu) tree, the wood of which she
hopes to fashion into a throne and bed for herself. Inanna’s plans are
nearly thwarted, however, when a dastardly triumvirate possesses the
tree.Then in steps Lilith: “Inanna, to her chagrin, found herself unable
to realize her hopes. For in the meantime a dragon had set up its nest
at the base of the tree, the Zu-bird had placed his young in its crown,
and in its midst the demoness Lilith had built her house.” Wearing heavy
armor, Gilgamesh kills the dragon, causing the Zu-bird to fly to the
mountains and Lilith to flee “to the desert.”Originating about the same
time as the Gilgamesh epic is a terracotta plaque, known as the Burney
Relief, that some scholars have identified as the first known pictorial
representation of Lilith. (More recently, scholars have identified the
figure as Inanna.) The Babylonian relief shows her as a beautiful, naked
sylph with bird wings, taloned feet and hair contained under a cap
decorated with several pairs of horns. She stands atop two lions and
between two owls, apparently bending them to her will. Lilith’s
association with the owl—a predatory and nocturnal bird—bespeaks a
connection to flight and night terrors.The Tetragrammaton is considered
“the name that comprises all” (Zohar 19a). In the Bible’s burning bush
episode of Exodus 3, God explains the meaning of the divine name as “I
am what I am,” or “I will be what I will be,” a kind of formula for YHWH
(vuvh), associated with the Hebrew root “to be.” The whole of the Torah
is thought to be contained within the holy name. In The Alphabet,
Lilith sins by impudently uttering the sacred syllables, thereby
demonstrating to a medieval audience her unworthiness to reside in
Paradise. So Lilith flies away, having gained power to do so by
pronouncing God’s avowed name.In the Gilgamesh and Isaiah episodes,
Lilith flees to desert spaces. In The Alphabet of Ben Sira her
destination is the Red Sea, site of historic and symbolic importance to
the Jewish people. Just as the ancient Israelites achieve freedom from
Pharaoh at the Red Sea, so Lilith gains independence from Adam by going
there.YHVH tells Adam that if Lilith fails to return, 100 of her
children must die each day. Apparently, Lilith is not only a
child-murdering witch but also an amazingly fertile mother. In this way,
she helps maintain the world’s balance between good and evil.A very
Luciferian act indeed.Three angels are sent in search of Lilith. When
they find her at the Red Sea, she refuses to return to Eden, claiming
that she was created to devour children. Ben Sira’s story suggests that
Lilith is driven to kill babies in retaliation for Adam’s mistreatment
and God’s insistence on slaying 100 of her progeny daily.To prevent the
three angels from drowning her in the Red Sea, Lilith swears in the name
of God that she will not harm any infant who wears an amulet bearing
her name. Ironically, by forging an agreement with God and the angels
and using the name, Lilith demonstrates that she has power over YHVH and
can Bind him to her will.A theory about the creation of this Lilith
story, is that Ben Sira’s tale is in its entirety a deliberately satiric
piece that mocks the Bible, the Talmud and other rabbinic exegeses.
Indeed, The Alphabet’s language is often coarse and its tone irreverent,
exposing the hypocrisies of biblical heroes such as Jeremiah and
offering “serious” discussions of vulgar matters such as masturbation,
flatulence and copulation by animals.A parable by Judith Plaskow
Goldenberg shows a more Luciferian view of Lilith. At first Goldenberg’s
fanciful tale follows the basic Ben Sira plot line: Lilith dislikes
being subservient to Adam, so she flees Paradise and her absence
inspires God to create Eve. But in Goldenberg’s retelling, the exiled
Lilith is lonely and tries to re-enter the garden. Adam does everything
he can to keep her out, inventing wildly untrue stories about how Lilith
threatens pregnant women and newborns. One day Eve sees Lilith on the
other side of the garden wall and realizes that Lilith is a woman like
herself. Swinging on the branch of an apple tree, a curious Eve
catapults herself over Eden’s walls where she finds Lilith waiting. As
the two women talk, they realize they have much in common, “till the
bond of sisterhood grew between them.” The budding friendship between
Lilith and Eve puzzles and frightens both man and deity.And then there's
the Zohar...but that's for another post. Copyright 2015 Vincent Piazza
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Quite well done. Extensive research and good organization.
ReplyDeleteI've always associated Lilith with Sophia Zoe from the text On The Origin of the World which is part of the Nag Hammadi texts. "She entered the tree of knowledge and remained there. And they pursued her, and she revealed to them that she had gone into the tree and become a tree."
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