Ancient Egyptian religion: "The world of the dead": Chapter 4 |
This decline of mortuary practice was part
of the more general shift in the focus of religious life toward the temples and
toward more communal forms. It has been suggested tentatively that belief in
the afterlife became less strong in the 1st millennium BCE. Whether or not
this is true, it is clear that in various periods some people voiced skepticism about
the existence of a blessed afterlife and the necessity for mortuary provision,
but the provision nevertheless continued to the end.
It was thought that the next world might be located in the area around the tomb (and consequently near the living); on the “perfect ways of the West,” as it is expressed in Old Kingdom invocations; among the stars or in the celestial regions with the sun god; or in the underworld, the domain of Osiris. One prominent notion was that of the “Elysian Fields,” where the deceased could enjoy an ideal agricultural existence in a marshy land of plenty. The journey to the next world was fraught with obstacles. It could be imagined as a passage by ferry past a succession of portals, or through an “Island of Fire.” One crucial test was the judgment after death, a subject often depicted from the New Kingdom onward. The date of origin of this belief is uncertain, but it was probably no later than the late Old Kingdom. The related text, Chapter 125 of the Book of the Dead, responded magically to the dangers of the judgment, which assessed the deceased’s conformity with maat. Those who failed the judgment would “die a second time” and would be cast outside the ordered cosmos. In the demotic story of Setna (3rd century BCE), this notion of moral retribution acquired overtones similar to those of the Christian judgment after death.
Influence On Other Religions
Egyptian culture, of
which religion was
an integral part,
was influential in Nubia as
early as predynastic times and in Syria in the 3rd millennium BCE. During
the New
Kingdom, Egypt was very receptive to cults from the Middle East, while
Egyptian medical and magical expertise was highly regarded among the Hittites, Assyrians, and
Babylonians. The chief periods of Egyptian influence were, however, the 1st
millennium BCE and the Roman period.
Egypt was an important center of the Jewish diaspora starting
in the 6th century BCE, and Egyptian literature influenced the Hebrew Bible. With
Greek rule there was a significant cultural interchange between Egyptians and
Greeks. Notable among Egyptian cults that spread abroad were those of Isis,
which reached much of the Roman world as a mystery religion,
and of Serapis, a
god whose name probably derives from Osiris-Apis,
who was worshipped widely in a non-Egyptian iconography and cultural milieu. With Isis
went Osiris and Horus the child, but Isis was the dominant figure. Many
Egyptian monuments were imported to Rome to provide a setting for the principal
Isis temple in the 1st century CE.
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