Religious Sacrifices, Living, Human
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Re-reading, and re-re reading Hubert and Mauss and Thames and Hudson. I vote
Pure Gold. Would welcome your opinion of
them.
If you have trouble following these authors, read all the previous entries on this blog. You'll be up to speed in no time.
Sacrifice: Its Nature and Function; Hubert and Mauss; Translated from the French by W. D. Halls
The Sacred Executioner: Human Sacrifice And The Legacy of Guilt; Thames and Hudson
If you have trouble following these authors, read all the previous entries on this blog. You'll be up to speed in no time.
Sacrifice: Its Nature and Function; Hubert and Mauss; Translated from the French by W. D. Halls
The Sacred Executioner: Human Sacrifice And The Legacy of Guilt; Thames and Hudson
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Dedicated to Dawn, and the players, the audience, the sacrifices, sacrifier, and the victims of the Mesoamerican ball game.
Dawn
proffered a question in an affiliated forum regarding the sacrifice in a
"Mesoamerican ball game":
1.
"If human sacrifice was considered so important, was the person
being sacrificed thought to have honor? Meaning,
would the people who were beaten in the ball game given some sort of redemption
by becoming a sacrifice?"
Let
me try to field question 1.
You
asked if the victim of the ("ball game") sacrifice is honored and/or
redeemed.
First,
does the person who is sacrificed have honor?
Today all we have is the ruins of the stadiums, which are huge, pictures
in hieroglyphic type drawing such as Borgia Codex, and the testimonies of
people who were never there when the "game was played".
Most scholars agree to disagree on this.
What was the game called? Nobody
seems to know that. Was a ball used. No one knows for sure. (But there's a boy on the street in Matamoros
who says his sister knows and for X dolares he will ask her.)
Most
of the testimony is of that caliber, apparently, and like today, what testimony
was given in the early Post Columbian times was given in a foreign language to
Europeans by people who were not present when the games were played (several
generations removed). One source says a
game something like basketball was played.
No balls survived. There is no
agreement among scholars on the size or the construction of the ball, including
what it was made of. (Some sort of
rubber is assumed by some). some rumors
say it was a Human skull, but a human skull would not take much
punishment.
The scholars seem to agree that the hands and feet of the
players could not be used to touch the "ball". The goal was a vertical donut type thing
presumably at one time decorated with gold
(no net). Scoring a goal was
apparently bordering on a superhuman fete.
Supposedly making one of the
"Teams" was quite a distinction.
The
sacrifice (the victim):
Some
scholars say that the winning team captain was sacrificed by the losing team
captain. and each captain considered it the greatest of honors. Others contend that it was the winning
captain who sacrificed the loser. One
thing all scholars seem to agree on is that game decided who got
sacrificed. And somebody always
did. Was he (apparently there was no
lady's league) redeemed by being the sacrifice?
I assumed you mean according to their mythology. Redeemed from what? There was nothing I know of in their
mythology about there being anything in the afterlife to be redeemed from. Being free from the rigidity of their obvious
class system might have been a reward.
Honored/redeemed
I have read chapters on the "sacredness of the sacrifice" in
general and there is no way I can adequately narrow it down to a short treatise
except to say although each sacrifice ritual has certain roles and properties
present, each one is different.
Before discussing it intelligently we would have to come to an
understood definition of several terms.
They would include ritual, place, religious instruments religious personages,
the sacrifier, the sacrificer, the victim, ad naseum. (Hubert and Maus, chapter
two) Here the place was the arena. The
sacrifier was the one for whom the whole thing was put on. Possibly the King. He doesn't really do anything but watch. He may stand up now and then. It is expected to be a special spiritual
experience for him/her. The sacrificer
would be the team captain who does the killing.
He does it with special instruments (whatever they may have been) and
according to an exact ritual (unknown today)..
There is a ritual which includes the game. This has to be at least overseen by a
religious official. The team captain who
is killed has distinguished himself by "making the squad". But is he redeemed? From what?
I would assume he was considered closer to the "deity" or
"the land of the dead."
After reading volumes about human and other sacrifice, It is my impression that the whole thing was for the person Hubert and Mauss describe as the sacrifier. Although he/she may or may not take part, the thing is done for his benefit and is designed to speak as some kind of inspiration to him/her. Like being the observer of a gladiatorial combat.
But, Therir blood was, according to Borgia Codex, being drunk by the Gods, so by providing energy for the gods they did achieve something, according to the mythology.
But, Therir blood was, according to Borgia Codex, being drunk by the Gods, so by providing energy for the gods they did achieve something, according to the mythology.
Hubert
& Mauss Sacrifice, it's
Nature and Function
Essai sur la Nature et la Funtion du Sacrifice
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Hubert & Mauss Sacrifice,
it's Nature and Function
Essai sur la Nature et la Funtion du Sacrifice
Translated
from the French, this essay is absolutely required reading.
Hubert
& Mauss say they have given themselves "only to the task of attempting
to put it (sacrifice) in its place."
(p103) Its ramifications in sociology, etc. are focused out
Discounting,
if not discarding, most Roman and European sources, although newer, in favor of
Biblical and Vedic material, Hubert and Mause say"(page 7) " The documents are direct, drawn up by the participants themselves, in their own language, in the very spirit in which they enacted the rights, " even if motives might have been unclear.
Roman and European For instance:
Hubert
& Mauss quote another author, Tyler, who they say was inspired by Bastian,
Spencer, and Darwin and I do not feel the thread can be improved upon:
"Sacrifice,
according to this writer, (Tyler, page 1) was originally a gift made by a primitive to supernatural being
with whom he needed to ingratiate himself. Then, when the gods grew greater and became more
removed from man, the necessity of continuing to pass on this gift to them gave rise to
sacrificial rites, intended to ensure that the objects thus spiritualized reached these
spiritual beings." (Introduction page 2)
The
authors then go on to show Tyler's theories of how, as "gods grew greater
and became more removed from man"(2 top) sacrificial rites were born. After painting this very orderly, concise
progression the authors go on to say there
may be some "historical basis of truth" (2 middle) in it and move
on.
Then, "their
simplicity, itself may stem from an insufficiency of documents" (6) and if
rife with usual implicit falsehoods
gained by combinations and labeling."(p2)
As I
say, texts relied upon are Biblical and Vedic.
The authors say Greek and Roman
sources, though newer are just "not of equal value". (p7)
First
they look at the sacrificial systems as a whole in their many ramifications and
establish what pervades all and render up a definition. Having done this they look for the "scheme"
(page 19).
The
scheme (all important moments included) breaks down into "the
entry"(p 19). "can only be
carried out in a religious atmosphere by essentially religious agents..."
(p 19 bottom)The cast includes:
·
the sacrifier(p20)
·
the sacrificer(22)
·
the place, the instruments(p25)
·
the victim(p28)
(can be human, animal, agricultural product, water, )
·
Action
"The
victim is first consecrated..." (p45)
The
procedure then goes on, and then the exit (p45)
Hubert & Mauss then state "The respective importance of these
phases... ...can vary infinitely
according to the circumstances."(p49)
Then they go on to show what these circumstances are.
They
discuss how the "General Functions can vary the scheme." (p50) This is also true of "special
functions".
The Sacrifice of the
God (p77)
Hubert
& Mauss give a myriad of examples in mythology of the victim being a god.
Conclusion, definitions
"...
establishes a means of communication between the sacred and the profane worlds
through mediation of a victim, that is something that in the course of the
ceremony is destroyed." (p97) "Moreover
we (Hubert & Mauss) have been able to see how many beliefs and social
practices not strictly religious are
liked to sacrifice... ...We have given
ourselves only to the task of attempting to put it (sacrifice) in its place."
Notes
pages
104 to 154 are notes
Again, "must read" for a student of sacrifice
Hubert & Mauss Sacrifice, it's Nature and Function
Essai sur la Nature et la Funtion du Sacrifice
Bob Hill
Sunday, October 13, 2013
One of
the questions that constantly recycles is when is a death a sacrifice, a murder,
a martyrdom, an argument settled, an execution, others.
Two
authors who really pursue this question from different angles are Hyman
Maccoby, "The Sacred Executioner" and Miranda Green "Dying for
the Gods".
Maccoby ( example on page 100, second
paragraph, but runs throughout the book) not only recognizes disagreement, but
attempts to point out who disagrees and why.
He definitely takes the approach that most scriptures and other written
records of the last few thousand years have been redacted later to speak to the
then current readers. He tries very hard
to lead us through the underbrush with the advantages he has as a dedicated
scholar so that we can see that there may be material that can be read between
the lines.
Green has the advantage of being
"Head of the Research Centre the Study of Culture, Archeology, Religions,
and Biogeography at the University of Wales College (Now in 2013 merged with
University of South Wales, my note), Newport, where she holds a personal chair
in Archeology. In 2001, when "Dying
for the Gods" was published, she had written 12 books, including Exploring the World of the Druids. (Back Fly Leaf)
Green
makes no bones (there I go again) about how difficult it is to differentiate
with ancient remains to determine the nature of an apparent possible sacrifice
and opposed to executions, etc. Her
accompanying Illustrations are impressive/informative.
Both
authors stress that civilization is a very new phenomena in the millions of
years of human life. Both indicate that
Human sacrifices seemed to carry a certain magic quality about them that even
animal blood sacrifices do not have, except in the earliest sacrificial days
when the animal may more resemble the deity involved. It was after the Jewish concept of "man
made in our own image" gave human sacrifice any special meaning. Both authors jump into substitute deaths,
scape goats... "Founding
sacrifices"...
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Three possibly surprising ideas are more or less morphing
from the boiling cauldron:
1.
Sacrifices*, human or otherwise, seem to be as universal
and natural to prehistoric man as breathing.
This supported by all ancient sources.
(Ugarit, Byblos, China, India, Egypt, The Bible, The Torah, The Epic of
Gilgamesh, The Iliad, The Odyssey, archeology... ) Sacrifices were offered to
a.
mark special occasions
b.
bribe the Power(s) that be
c.
bring about a "blessing"**
d.
seek forgiveness (by scape - goating)
e.
to accompany the dead to where ever...
f.
other
2.
The value of the sacrifice served at least a
dual purpose
a.
show the power(s) you were serious
b.
show onlookers you were serious
c.
show onlookers your affluence (as in conspicuous
consumption)
d.
to check with yourself to make sure you were serious
3.
A human sacrifice did not necessarily increase
the value of the sacrifice.
a.
A good milk cow could be more expensive than a
slave or member of the household (especially children - about half lived for 5
years or more)
b.
The value of an item was up to barter.
4.
Blood sacrifices were special
a.
a living animal
b.
blood itself (especially your own blood) For instance, the Huron (Wendat) Indians in
what is now Canada:**
"Even
bloodletting had parallels among the Wendats, who believed that bloodletting
had supernatural connections. '...When
we wish to have success in hunting...we cut and slash our bodies so that the
blood runs down abundantly.' The Wendats
also connected the release of blood with healing. Like Europeans, Wendats believed that blood
had powerful associations with health, and their healers performed procedures
to remove blood..." (page 82 bottom, 83)
5.
Sacrificing was such a natural part of the DNA
that even universal catastrophe (flood, for instance)
would not wipe it out.
In the myth of Noah, the first thing he is
said to have done after coming out on dry land was to offer a sacrifice. At the sacrifice the "Lord of Heaven" made the promise never to destroy the earth with water.*** (Genesis 8:19 -9:13) (Some may question the existence of Noah and
the actuality of the flood, but I have never heard anyone question that the
first thing the sole survivor with his family would instinctively do is offer a
sacrifice.
Many stories that
could be mythical have much truth in them regardless if "You have the ear
to hear..
*
Sacrifice: (as in sacred) a gift, or return of property,
to a higher (sacred) power. Some believe(d)
you were just returning what rightfully belonged to the power(s).
** Seeman,
Erick: The Huron-Wendat Feast of the
Dead (pages 82 and 83)
*** The Holy Bible (Genesis 8, 9)
Continuing Treasure Hunt
Have
added three books to my material:
Macoby, Hyam; The
Sacred Executioner; Human Sacrifice and
the Legacy of Guilt
Aldhouse-Green, Miranda:
Dying for the Gods
Selengut. Charles:
Sacred Fury; Understanding
Religious Violence
Got to
get to reading!!!
Friday, October 4, 2013
Introduced to middle world religions before I could read, I have always been puzzled by the idea of sacrifice, especially human sacrifice. This course and these books along with a myriad of videos and articles have certainly brought me a long way. This is a game changing experience. If this blog is about answers, each answer I find brings with it hundreds of more questions.
Currently reading: (some mentioned before)
Currently reading: (some mentioned before)
John Day, "Yaweh
and the Gods and Goddesses of Canaan"
Nigel Davies, "Human Sacrifices in History and
Today"
Jimmy Lee Shreeve, "Human Sacrifice; A shocking Expose of Ritual Killing Worldwide"
Dennis D Hughes,
"Human Sacrifice In Ancient Greece"
Geoffrey Samuel,
"The Origins of Yoga and Tantra;
Indic Religions to the 13th century
Seeman, "The Huron Wendat Feast of the Dead"
Lawrence Wright, "The Looming Tower; Al-Queda and the Road to 9/11" (mentioned before)
Elizabeth Keck, "Beside the Chebar River: The Glory of Yahweh, Name Theology, and
Ezekiel's Understanding of Divine Presence"
Miranda and Stephen
Aldhouse-Green, "The Quest for the Shaman"
Karin
Finsterbusch, "Human
Sacrifice in Jewish and Christian Tradition (Numen Book)"
The Bible
The Koran
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Next: What is the purpose of rituals? Sacrifice? Ritual Sacrifice? Human Ritual Sacrifice?
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