Sigmund Freud: Moses and Monotheism
In a way 1937 was a very good year. One year before the Third Reich's occupation of Austria forced him to take refuge in England, Freud would publish Moses and Monotheism (Imago). A short book, but the kind you end up reading several times or more, that would offend many in England, the U.S. and Heaven knows where else. Freud claimed, through Psychoanalysis, that Moses was an Egyptian, that he was killed in a rebellion by the people he was leading at the time. The rebels unable to endure his harsh hand, temper, and the strictness of his religion, a religion more than likely ahead of its time. Now of course the Egyptian religion being comprised of many Gods, ceremonies, and idols does not fit with the command of the One God, no graven images, etc.
He was crowned Pharaoh Amenhotep IV then changed it to Akhenaton (living spirit of Aten), as a sign to his one God, Aten. When you look at his face you can see looks like his mother, Queen Tiye. The religion professed the Aten was above a god, an all purveying force that is the essence of life. It spurns sacrifice and the ceremonial; demanding only belief with a life of truth and Justice. Moses was probably an adherent of this religion, while Pharaoh was alive, maybe a member of court. The people of Egypt at the time and the priests of the other gods didn't mind Pharaohs beliefs. Its when Pharaoh stopped giving money to the temples, disbanded the priesthoods of the other gods, began professing beliefs in public the situation became dangerous. He had the names of gods taken off records, temples, changed statues, and placed a ban on images pertaining to anything but Aten.
Keep in mind when the priests didn't have the money to buy the goods for the temples (incense, animals, plants, drugs, alcohol, flowers, papyrus, new statues etc.) the people they buy from didn't get paid, those who make and gather these things, decorate, didn't get paid. Where did the money go? to build a new capital and glorify the Aten. To some, naturally, Pharaoh had lost his goddamn mind. When Pharaoh died (his enemies probably had quite the party) many of the followers of Aten had to flee for their lives, Moses being one of them.
With his close followers (the Levites of old, Egyptians according to Freud) and some, if not all, of a large amount the Jews leaving as well. After a rebellion in the desert (and the killers buried Moses) the people went through a latency period, joined the religion of Jahve (according to Eduard Meyer), due to Midianites they dwelled among. The Levites, we may suppose that a fair number of these people, escaped the fate that overtook Moses and his religion. Many would not forget the religion of their master, honored his memory, and observed his great teachings. Although a minority, they were more than likely culturally superior, in their way, to the rest. They exercised a more important influence on the later development of the modern Jewish religion because they brought with them a tradition the others lacked.
1 comment:
interesting. i wish you took your time a bit more its could of been much longer. And I would like to have heard more of Freuds theory. U throw something like that out u better follow up with some hooks and uppercuts. Still in all a good read.
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