Chapter 2 Victimization and Criminal Behavior
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Transcript Chapter 2 Victimization and Criminal Behavior
World Religions, Sixth Edition
Warren Matthews
Chapter Seven:
Ancient Religions of Iraq and Iran
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Mesopotamian History – Succession
of Empires
Minimal evidence for life in Mesopotamia prior to 4000 BCE
Since then, the empires have been, respectively:
Sumerian
Akkadian
Assyrian
Babylonian
Chaldean
Persian (under Cyrus the Great)
Greek (under Alexander the Great)
Romans
The Ancient Cradle of Civilization –
City-States of Mesopotamia
Mesopotamian Religion and Deities
Earliest known deities were agricultural and related to each other
through marriage
Dumuzi and Inanna
In third millennium, deities reconceived
No longer restricted exclusively to city-states
Mesopotamian Deities
Domain extended to wide-ranging cosmic phenomenon
An – god of the sky
Enlil – god of the weather necessary for good agriculture
Ninhursaga – goddess over births of animals and sovereigns
Enki – god of fresh water
Celestial deities
Sin – good of the moon
Shamash – good of the sun
Ishtar – goddess of the planet Venus
Ishtar Gate, the Eighth Fortified Gate
in Babylon, Built in 575 BCE
Babylonian Creation Accounts
Tiamat (salt water) and Apsu (fresh water) had offspring
Angered by and seeking to kill them, Apsu was killed by the god Enki
The god Marduk responded to Taimat’s rage by killing Tiamat and
creating the universe out of her corpse
Ishtar, fertility goddess and wife to Tammuz, descends to the
underworld annually, during which time vegetation suffers, and
resulting in the annual change of seasons
The Epic of Gilgamesh tells of the search for immortality
Mesopotamian Life
Life depended upon the success of the farm
Had uncertain and variable weather
Depended upon the river flow
Local “power” controlled those variables
Life depended upon keeping those local “powers” favorable
Worship created favor
Local powers were hierarchical
Mesopotamian religion was highly polytheistic
Worship involved the characteristics of those “powers”
Participation in “powers” invoked them
Sacrifice invoked “powers”
Mesopotamian Life
Life existed in city states
Family was the center of life
Religion meant placating the “powers” and seeking their favor
Personal worship of sacrifice and ritual
Communal worship of temple drama and honoring the royalty
Gods inhabited images housed in temples, fed and cared for by
priests
Festivals included dramas re-enacting accounts of deities
Rulers were accountable to deities
Mesopotamian Worldview
Diversity of universe symbolized by not one god but many gods
Earliest gods of agricultural people represented forces of nature
Gods of autonomous cities preceded those of the larger states
Priests provided food for gods, treated them as living people
Concepts of deities changed over many centuries
Came to believe that life on land occurred when salt waters were
divided from fresh waters
Iranian Religion
Reflected in the religions of India
Aryans who arrived in India had lived in Persia, the region of Iran
Aryan deities in Vedas reflect some beliefs and practices there
Worshiped Ahuras (lords) and Devas (shining ones of heavens)
The Assyrian and Persian Empires
Zoroastrianism
The Gathas (hymns) of the Avesta (book of the law)
Ahura Mazda served by six Amesha Spentas, moral messengers
Humans were exhorted to emulate the Amesha Spentas and
denounce the evil god Angra Mainyu
After death, all people were judged based their success in having
lived moral lives
Those who succeeded were sent to Ahura Mazda, but those who
failed were sent to Angra Mainyu
Life of Zarathustra
Dates of his life disputed, but had an orthodox religious upbringing
Grew up in a noble family in ancient Iran, but left his family and wife
at age twenty
In a visionary religious experience he responded to Vohu Manah, the
personification of Good Thought, who summoned him to come to the
court of the god Ahura Mazda
Observed that the struggle between Ahura Mazda and the evil god
Angra Mainyu could be aided by humans deciding to live moral lives
Life of Zarathustra
Subsequent visions over the course of a decade were given to
Zarathustra by Ahura Mazda’s angels
Seeking to enlist followers, Zarathustra’s first major success came
with his conversion of the Persian King Vishtaspa
Went on to preach for many decades until his death
Zoroastrian Sacred Flame in Baku,
Azerbaijan
Later Zoroastrian History
Zoroastrianism attained international reach by the empire-building of
Persian sovereigns
The Magi priestly group aided the worldwide spread of Zoroastrian
ideas
Differing emphases emerged and gave rise to one another
Mani developed a dualistic portrait of the cosmos
An ongoing struggle between a good spiritual principle and an evil
material principle
Later Zoroastrian History
Zurvanism returned to a more monotheistic vision that posited a
single principle of time that stood above both Ahura Mazda and
Angra Mainyu
Other gods came to be recognized by Zoroastrians, including:
Anahita – a fertility mother goddess
Haoma – a deity who received animal sacrifice
Mithra – a god of light
Ahura Mazda, at the Ruins of
Persepolis, Residence of Persian King
Zoroastrian Worldview
World is regarded as good, clean, created by Ahura Mazda for the
pleasure of people
People constituted by two separate elements – the soul and the body
People held morally accountable to live in accordance with the laws
of Ahura Mazda, though human freedom allowed them to violate
these laws
Burial rituals intended to keep the air, fire, and water free of
contamination
Zoroastrian Worldview
People die once, and each soul has to cross the Chinvat Bridge of
judgment to enter paradise
No reincarnation involved
At the frashokeriti, evil will be vanquished, creation renewed, and a
new earthly life for the good will be instituted
Adherents are born into the tradition and seek no converts
Zoroastrians numbers are dwindling in the modern world