Title: GROUP PROJECT Akhnaton
1GROUP PROJECTAkhnatons Religion
- For AMS 1F 2007
- Submitted By
- Wayne Purdin
- Imeegene Alcantara
- Elise Hoist
- Bey Allex
2Akhenaton
- In 1369 B.C., Amenhotep IV, took over the reigns
of Egypt from his ailing father Amenhotep III.
During his upbringing he was educated at the
Temple of the Sun at On or Heliopolis where the
priests instilled in him a devotion to Aton. When
he became pharaoh, he was given the secret
mysteries of the sun handed down from his great
grandfather. He learned that Aton was the one
true, self-created, unmanifest God and that all
the other gods, including Amen-Re, were man-made.
Early in his reign, he changed his name to
Akhenaton, meaning he who is beneficial to
Aton. He considered himself a son of Aton. - Akhenaton initiated a change in the religious
climate from a fear-based polytheism with its
death cult, magic amulets, numerous idols, animal
sacrifice, and secretive rituals of a powerful
priesthood to a more devotional religion, which
was free of graven images, obsession with the
afterlife, and magic which emphasized reverence
for sunlight and cleanliness, and simple burial
and which allowed ordinary citizens to freely
worship in open-air temples with offerings of
fruits, flowers and incense, as were offered in
the original solar religion of Egypt. Aton's
temples had no idols or graven images other than
the one Akhenaton devised -- a sun disk from
which proceed rays, the ends of which terminate
in hands. Some of these hands held the ankh, the
symbol of life, to the nostrils of his sungazing
worshippers.
3AKHENATON'S VISION
It was said that one day Akhenaton had a vision
wherein he saw a sun disc between two mountains.
He felt that God was guiding him to make change.
He was shown the God, Aton, as the Sun Disk - the
Light. He felt guided by Aton to build a city
between the two mountains. In the sixth year of
his reign Akhenaton rejected the Gods of Thebes.
They were never part of his childhood anyway
since he had been shunned as a child. Akhenaton
had declared for the first time in recorded
history that there was only one God - the concept
of monotheism. Overnight he turned 2,000 years of
Egyptian religious upside down...
4Gazing into the Sun ... Direction from Aton"
Akhenaton, Nefertiti and daughters worshipping
Aton
5This was not
worship of the physical sun
but worship of one God, a supreme deity,
whose spirit was in Heaven
and whose physical manifestation was the Sun -
the Symbol of life.
61369-1332 BC Amenhotep IV - Akhenaton
- The Pharaoh Akhenaton was known as the Heretic
King. He was the tenth King of the 18th Dynasty.
Egyptologists are still tying to figure out what
actually happened during his lifetime as much of
the truth was buried, for all time, after he
died. - Akhenaton lived at the peak of Egypt's imperial
glory. Egypt had never been richer, more
powerful, or more secure. Up and down the Nile,
workers built hundreds of temples to pay homage
to the Gods. They believed that if the Gods were
pleased, Egypt would prosper. And so it did. - Akhenaton and his family lived in the great
religious center of Thebes, city of the God Amun.
There were thousands of priests who served the
Gods. Religion was the 'business' of the time,
many earning their living connected to the
worship of the gods. - All indications are that as a child Akhenaton was
a family outcast. Scientists are studying the
fact that Akhenaton suffered from a disease
called Marfan Syndrome, a genetic defect that
damages the body's connective tissue. Symptoms
include, short torso, long head, neck, arms, hand
and feet, pronounced collarbones, pot belly,
heavy thighs, and poor muscle tone. Those who
inherit it are often unusually tall and are
likely to have weakened aortas that can rupture.
They can die at an early age. If Akhnaton had the
disease each of his daughters had a 50-50 change
of inheriting it. That is why his daughters are
shown with similar symptoms.
7ATONISM THE ROOTS OF THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN
TRADITION
- The worship of Aton as the one, self-created,
unmanifest God as opposed to one sun god among
many began with Akhenatons grandfather, Thutmose
IV, who established a separate priesthood of Aton
at the temple of the sun in On (Heliopolis).
Akhenatons father Amenhotep III and his mother
Queen Tiya, continued supporting the priesthood
of Aton and engaged in their own devotion to
Aton. Amenhotep III was somewhat insistent that
he be identified with this sun god during his
lifetime. Around the time of his first jubilee in
the 30th year of his reign, he named palaces,
temples, lakes and pleasure boats after Aton.
(The name "aton" had simply been a word meaning
"sun" until Amenhotep III's father elevated Aton
to the status of a deity.) He also used stamp
seals for commodities that may be read,
"Nebmaatra (one of his names) is the gleaming
Aton". The shrine in the house of Akhenatons
advisor, Panehsy contained a plaque that showed
Amenhotep III beneath the sun disc, in the style
usually confined to Akhenaten and his officials. - While Amenhotep III accepted the traditional view
that all gods are aspects of the same divine
essence, there are hints that a theological split
was already in the offing. For example, some
inscriptions from the pharaoh's mortuary temple
mention only Aton. And there were hints of a feud
or power struggle between Amenhotep III and the
High Priest of Amen-Re, Aanen, the brother of
Queen Tiye. - The priesthood of Amen-Re tolerated the
priesthood of Aton and the religious aberrations
of the royal family. But it wasnt till Akhenaton
took over the throne that things came to a head.
8- Akhenaton was the son of Amenhotep III and Queen
Tiy, a descendent of a Hebrew tribe. The largest
statue in the Cairo Museum shows Amenhotep III
and his family. He and Queen Tiy (pronounced
'Tee') had four daughters and two sons.
Akhenaton's brother, Tutmoses was later named
high priest of Memphis. The other son, Amenhotep
IV (Later to take the name Akhenaton) seemed to
be ignored by the rest of the family. He never
appeared in any portraits and was never taken to
public events. He received no honors. It was as
if the God Amun had excluded him. He was rejected
by the world for some unknown reason. He was
never shown with his family nor mentioned on
monuments. Yet his mother favored him.
9- In 1369 B.C., Amenhotep IV, took over the reigns
of Egypt from his ailing father Amenhotep III.
During his upbringing he was educated at the
Temple of the Sun at On or Heliopolis where the
priests instilled in him a devotion to Aton. When
he became pharaoh, he was given the secret
mysteries of the sun handed down from his great
grandfather. He learned that Aton was the one
true, self-created, unmanifest God and that all
the other gods, including Amen-Re, were man-made.
Early in his reign, he changed his name to
Akhenaton, meaning he who is beneficial to
Aton. He considered himself a son of Aton. - Akhenaton initiated a change in the religious
climate from a fear-based polytheism with its
death cult, magic amulets, numerous idols, animal
sacrifice, and secretive rituals of a powerful
priesthood to a more devotional religion, which
was free of graven images, obsession with the
afterlife, and magic which emphasized reverence
for sunlight and cleanliness, and simple burial
and which allowed ordinary citizens to freely
worship in open-air temples with offerings of
fruits, flowers and incense, as were offered in
the original solar religion of Egypt. Aton's
temples had no idols or graven images other than
the one Akhenaton devised -- a sun disk from
which proceed rays, the ends of which terminate
in hands. Some of these hands held the ankh, the
symbol of life, to the nostrils of his sungazing
worshippers.
10Akhenaton established his new religion by
building an entire city dedicated to Aton
complete with a necropolis and royal tomb.
- The priests worried about the God Amun and the
fact that the 'Rebel Pharaoh' had declared their - god extinct and deserted the religious capitol
of Egypt. Gone were the royal offerings. The
resources - of Egypt were flowing out of the established
cities of Egypt and into the desert. People who
earned their - livings based on the old religions wood
carvers, scarab makers, and others were out of
business. - The people worried about their afterlife and what
would happen now that they were not worshipping - the traditional Gods. All of the old belief
systems into the next world were discarded. - The vision of the afterlife changed.
11THE END TIMES
- Akhenaton lived in his dream in Amarna for ten
years as conditions grew worse in Egypt. He
remained isolated from the true problems of the
people. Akhenaton apparently neglected foreign
policy, allowing Egypt's captured territories to
be taken back, though it seems likely that this
image can be partially explained by the
iconography of the time, which downplayed his
role as warrior. In 1332 BC Akhenaton died, the
circumstances never explained. His memory and all
that he had created soon to erased from history
not to be found for centuries later.
12AFTER AKHENATON'S DEATH
- Soon after his death the followers at Amana,
unable to understand what their Pharaoh had been
preaching, abandoned the city, and returned to
Thebes and the familiar Gods. The priests branded
the name Akhenaton, as a heretic. It was erased
from the monuments of Egypt. - It was his son, a young Pharaoh named Tutankhamen
who the world would get to know. King Tut moved
the capital back to Thebes and returned to the
old religion. - Akhenaton's successors, the generals Ay and
Horemheb reestablished the temples of Amun they
selected their priests from the military,
enabling the Pharaoh to keep tighter controls
over the religious orders. - Later Pharaohs attempted to erase all memories of
Akhenaton and his religion. Much of the
distinctive art of the period was destroyed and
the buildings dismantled to be reused. Many of
the Talitat blocks from the Aten temples in
Thebes were reused as rubble infill for later
pylons where they were rediscovered during
restoration work and reassembled. - Three thousand years ago, the rebel Pharaoh
Akhenaton preached monotheism and enraged the
Nile Valley. Less than 100 years after
Akhenaton's death, Moses would be preaching
monotheism on the bank of the Nile River, to the
Israelis. The idea of a single God once the
radical belief of an isolated heretic is now
embraced by Moslems, Christians, and Jews
throughout the world. The vision of Akhenaton
lives on! - Amarna was lost in antiquity until the end of the
19th Century. It was uncovered by the founder of
modern Egyptology, Sir Flinders Petrie. They
discovered a vast lost city in the dessert with
temples, palaces and wide streets. - The cult of the Aton is considered by some to be
a predecessor of modern monotheism.
13The Origins of Atonism
- This religious reformation appears to have begun
with his decision to celebrate a Sed festival in
his third regnal year a highly unusual step,
since a Sed-festival, a sort of royal jubilee
intended to reinforce the Pharaoh's divine powers
of kingship, was traditionally held in the
thirtieth year of a Pharaoh's reign. - His Year 5 marked the beginning of his
construction of a new capital, Akhetaton
('Horizon of Aton'), at the site known today as
Amarna. In the same year, Amenhotep IV officially
changed his name to Akhenaton ('Effective Spirit
of Aten') as evidence of his new worship. Very
soon afterward he centralized Egyptian religious
practices in Akhetaten, though construction of
the city seems to have continued for several more
years. In honor of Aton, Akhenaton also oversaw
the construction of some of the most massive
temple complexes in ancient Egypt, including one
at Karnak, close to the old temple of Amun. In
these new temples, Aton was worshipped in the
open sunlight, rather than in dark temple
enclosures, as had been the previous custom.
Akhenaton is also believed to have composed the
Great Hymn to the Aton. - Initially, Akhenaton presented Aton as a variant
of the familiar supreme deity Amun-Ra (itself the
result of an earlier rise to prominence of the
cult of Amun, resulting in Amun becoming merged
with the sun god Ra), in an attempt to put his
ideas in a familiar Egyptian religious context.
However, by Year 9 of his reign Akhenaton
declared that Aton was not merely the supreme
god, but the only god, and that he, Akhenaten,
was the only intermediary between Aton and his
people. He ordered the defacing of Amun's temples
throughout Egypt, and in a number of instances
inscriptions of the plural 'gods' were also
removed. - Aton's name is also written differently after
Year 9, to emphasise the radicalism of the new
regime, which included a ban on idols, with the
exception of a rayed solar disc, in which the
rays (commonly depicted ending in hands) appear
to represent the unseen spirit of Aten, who by
then was evidently considered not merely a sun
god, but rather a universal deity. It is
important to note, however, that representations
of the Aton were always accompanied with a sort
of "hieroglyphic footnote", stating that the
representation of the sun as All-encompassing
Creator was to be taken as just that a
representation of something that, by its very
nature as something transcending creation, cannot
be fully or adequately represented by any one
part of that creation.
14- There existed an inner circle of about 300
initiates who learned from Akhenaton the
mysteries of the sun. According to Egyptologist,
Robert Feather, one of these initiates was
Joseph, son of Jacob, also known as Nakhte,
Akhenatons vizier. It is likely that after
Akhenatons death, Joseph and his family fled to
Elephantine island with other initiates of
Ahkenatons mystery school. This would explain
the origins of the Jewish-like sect that exists
in Ethiopia, but not why the Shilonite priests
and the Essene sect of Judaism proper contained
elements of Atonism. For this, we need to look at
another patriarch, Moses. - In the History of Egypt Manetho wrote Moses, a
son of the tribe of Levi, educated in Egypt and
initiated at Heliopolis, became a High Priest of
the Brotherhood... He was elected by the Hebrews
as their chief and he adapted to the ideas of his
people the science and philosophy which he had
obtained in the Egyptian mysteries when he
established a branch of the Egyptian Brotherhood
in his country, from which descended the Essenes.
The dogma of an only God, which he taught, was
the Egyptian Brotherhood interpretation and
teaching of the Pharaoh who established the first
monotheistic religion known to man. Akhenaton.
The traditions he established in this manner were
known completely to only a few of them, and were
preserved in the arcanae of the secret societies,
the Therapeutea of Egypt and the Essenes. -
- After returning from Heliopolis, Moses became an
annoyance to the priests of Amen-Re and the court
of Ramses II because of his Atonistic ideas. The
historian Josephus records that Moses was sent on
a military expedition to Cush (Ethiopia) in an
effort by Pharaohs courtiers to get rid of the
dissident. There he not only found a wife but
another outpost of Atonism on Elephantine Island.
Robert Feather thinks that it was in the
wilderness of Cush that Moses saw the burning
bush and received his mission. Flavia Anderson,
in The Ancient Secret Fire From the Sun, claimed
that the burning bush was actually a small golden
tree with a crystal that reflected the sun so
brightly that it appeared to be on fire .
15Moses and the Burning Bush
Robert Feather thinks that it was in the
wilderness of Cush that Moses saw the burning
bush and received his mission. Flavia Anderson,
in The Ancient Secret Fire From the Sun, claimed
that the burning bush was actually a small golden
tree with a crystal that reflected the sun so
brightly that it appeared to be on fire
16- Jesus passed on the Essene secret teachings on
the mysteries of the sun to his disciples,
including Mary Magdalene. Jesus so identified
with the Word (i.e., the spirit of the Universal
Christ in the sun) that he became the Christ, the
Word made flesh. Anyone can do this. Jesus wasnt
the only Christ. There were others before him and
there were others after him. Cicero, when he
traveled in Greece, found inscriptions on
monuments to the Christ Hercules and other
Christs. Christ said, The things that I do shall
ye do also, and greater things, for I go unto my
Father. Because Jesus was the Christ, the spirit
of the sun, some of the things he said referred
to the sun and sunlight. The fundamental error of
Christianity is taking the words of the master
Jesus as referring to his self that dwelled in
his body (what he referred to in third person as
the son of man) and not the Christ that dwells
in the sun (the son of God). Because Jesus was
one with the Christ, when he said in first person
I am as in I am the light of the world, and
I am the living bread which came down from
heaven, it was not Jesus speaking of himself,
but it was the Christ in the sun speaking through
him. Peter realized this when he said in Matthew
1616 Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living
God. The Christ said to Peter Blessed art thou,
Simon Bar-jo-na for flesh and blood hath not
revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in
heaven. Peter understood that the spirit of
Jesus was not of a prophet but of Christ and he
knew it not from any human source but from the
inspiration he received from God while sungazing
or looking up to heaven. Six days later, Peter
along with James and John witnessed Jesus
transfiguration into the Christ. In Matthew 172
they saw that his face did shine like the sun,
and his raiment was as white as the light. The
Christ chose Peter to become the head of
Christianity because he had the correct
understanding that the Christ dwells in the sun
and in each heart and not just in Jesus. The
Taittiriya Upanishad states that He who dwells
in man and who dwells in the sun is one and the
same. Unfortunately, Peter did not maintain the
correct understanding. Peter and the early
Christians, at first worshipped the spirit of
Christ in the Sun, but after a while, they lapsed
into a personality cult of Jesus worship, which
has continued to this day.
17In the Lost Light, Theosophist Alvin Boyd Kuhn
wrote that sun worship was the hearts core of
all religion and philosophy everywhere before the
Dark Ages obscured the vision of truth. And
world religion will not fulfill its original
function of dispelling from the soul of mankind
the dark earth-born vapors that envelop it until
the mind once again is irradiated with the light
of that transcendent knowledge. Christianity
forsook its high station on the mount
illuminated by solar radiance when it submerged
the Christly sun-glory under the limitations of
a fleshly personage and dismissed solar religion
as pagan. In converting the typical man into a
man of history, it forswore its early privilege
of basking in the rays of the great solar
doctrine. Light, fire, the sun, spiritual glory -
all went out in eclipse under the clouds of
mental fog that arose when the direct radiance of
the solar myth had been blanketed. Christianity
passed forthwith out of the light into the
dreadful shadows of the Dark Ages. And that
dismal period will not end until the bright glow
of the solar wisdom is released once more to
enlighten benighted modernity.