One View of the Garden of Eden After the Eating of the Fruit

It came to pass late one afternoon, in the transitional moments before twilight, just as the sun was caressing the horizon, that Shekinah was strolling through the garden. She was carrying a resplendent, glowing alabaster pot, filled with the fire of the breath of creation, on her way to feed the tree of wisdom and the tree of life. Just ahead of her she saw Adam and Eve, and at first she couldn’t fathom what they were doing. Then it dawned on her, they were dressing themselves in fig leaves.

Shekinah was so shocked, she dropped the pot, and it shattered into billions of shards. How did they know they were naked and needed to cover themselves? There was only one possible answer. They had eaten of the tree of wisdom, the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, before the fruit it bore was ripe. They just couldn’t wait. In one, maybe two, more months, the fruit would have been ripe, creation would have evolved a bit more, they would have grown in knowledge and wisdom themselves. Things would have been so different.

Shekinah tried to tell Yahweh that giving them a prohibitive commandment wouldn’t work. She argued that it would have been better to explain the ripening process to them, to help them understand it was not “no, never” but rather, “no, not just yet.” But now the fruit of the pomegranate tree will never ripen.  Now, Adam and Eve will have to face the consequences of their actions. Now, all of humanity to come will have to devote their lives to the repair of the world, regathering the fire of the breath of creation through acts of mercy and justice, working to find the balance between those two kinds of good works.

My version of the Dogon Cosmic Egg Cosmogony

In the beginning, before there were things, before there was time, Amma came to be. Amma began to pulse and shake, and she took upon herself the shape of an egg. Amma became the great cosmic egg, with four collarbones that were fused, dividing her into earth and air, fire and water, the materials and structure of all the universe. The egg continued to pulse and shake. Seven times it shook until it began to spin. As it spun, it broke open into a spiral, and the shell expanded to fill the universe, and so creation was born. This very birthing brought forth the Dogon people of Mali in the west of Africa.

Amma made the sun and the moon from discs of clay, and the stars from pebbles of clay thrown out into the vastness of the heavens. Amma planted a seed inside herself and created two sets of male and female twins. But something went wrong with the first set of twins. The male would not wait, and rushed his birth before time, and without his female twin. As he broke from the egg, a bit of his placenta few off into space and became the Earth Mother. This first male was called Yurugu, Pale Fox. He became a rogue and a trickster, jealous of Amma’s creativity and creation. Yurugu claimed the earth for himself and determined to make it even better that Amma’s heaven. He strode across the earth, but everywhere he went, everything was dark and dusty and dry. Yurugu planted seeds, and called forth animals, but nothing could flourish there. Hard as Yurugu tried, the dark dryness prevailed. Yurugu walked and thought. He sat and looked at the detritus of his efforts, and saw that he needed his soulmate, his female twin, to bring balance and completion to his efforts. So, he went back to the cosmic egg in search of his other half.

But Yurugu angered Amma with his interference with her creation. Amma banished Yurugu back to earth, where he has forever roamed in the darkness, in the dry desert places, in search of his female twin.

Amma called the second set of twins that she made Nommo. They became the creative spirits of all twinned things of the universe: male/female; left/right; order/disorder; good/evil.

The twins Nommo looked down from the sky and beheld the Earth Mother, naked, and beset with chaos and turmoil. The twins gathered together cosmic fibers that were filled with life forces. Together, the Nommo twins wove those fibers into a garment of green, swaddling the Earth Mother in the finest raiment befitting a most elegant woman. In gratitude for the gifts of the Nommo, Earth Mother spoke the first words heard in the world, words of graciousness and gratitude.

But Yurugu learned of Earth Mother’s powers, he opened his mouth imitating her way of speaking, but no meaningful sound issued from him. He tried, and he tried. He looked up to the moon, and breathed through his mouth, and . . . nothing. Yurugu wanted the power to be heard and understood for himself. Tired of his failed efforts, the next morning, Yurugu hid himself in the shadows, sneaked up on Earth Mother, and stole her skirt of cosmic fibers, which held the power of the word. From that day forward, Yurugu captured the power of language, and has been able to disclose the plans of Amma, the Creator of all.

When Amma saw her son recklessly cavorting, spoiling the bounties of the Earth, Amma decided to create more sets of twins, male and female, male and male, female and female, who would become the ancestor spirits of humanity and would live on Earth according to Amma’s plans. Amma worked to restore balance, countervailing the evil that Yurugu’s deeds evoked.

When the ancestor spirits were born, they traveled up to Heaven to receive instructions for their lives on Earth. Amma welcomed and blessed each of the twins with their own particular wisdom and skill: agriculture, healing, divining, iron-working, woodcarving, weaving and the like.. Amma gave each of the twins one of the eight grain seeds that the Dogon peoples grow to this day. To the eldest ancestor, Amma gave a storehouse for the harvests, a granary made from a clay-lined basket in the shape of the universe.

Amma looked on the workings of creation and was well pleased with its progress. She was about to claim her day of rest when she observed the eldest ancestor making his way to the celestial smithy. There, the eldest stole a piece of the sun and hid the glowing coal inside a bellow. Amma sent the Nommo to retrieve the stolen fire. The Female Nommo threw a lightning bolt at the Eldest Ancestor, but the Eldest held up the bellows, and deflected the bolt. The Male Nommo hurled a thunderbolt, but the Eldest escaped by sliding down a rainbow. At the end of the rainbow, the treasure of fire came to the Earth. As the Eldest tumbled to the Earth, the granary followed, smashing as it hit the ground, spewing out every kind of plant, animal, and human being — all of those beings spreading across the earth.

And that is how the world began.  

A Myth-Smithed version of the Huron Earth Diver Story

(Smith: to work with something by heating, hammering, and forging. Myth-Smith: to work with myths by combining, revising, and reshaping.)

Once, before the world as we know it, there was water, wide, deep and vast. The water was populated with fish that swam in its depths, and foul birds that danced on its surface. While the fish swam and the birds flew about and danced on the water, a woman fell through a rift in the sky, tumbling down from the upper world.

As two loons were flying over the waters, they happened to look up and noticed her falling. The loons decided that they could not let her drown, and so they flew beneath her and linked their wings together to form a cushion for her to rest on. While they held her, the loons yodeled and hooted, calling the other animals to aid in their rescue of the woman. All the sea creatures gathered together in response, but it was the great tortoise who consented to relieve the loons of their burden. The loons gently deposited the woman on the back of the tortoise, and the tortoise pledged to care for the woman.

A council of all the sea creatures was called to decide how best to care for the woman, and they decided that she should have earth to live on. The beaver was the first to dive to the bottom of the sea to bring up some earth, but he failed. Musk-rats were the next to dive, but stayed under water so long that when they rose to the surface of the water, they were dead. Each time the tortoise searched their mouths for bits of earth, but she could find none. Many other animals tried to gather a bit of earth for the woman to live on, but all to no avail. Finally, a toad went down to the bottom of the sea. The toad dove so deeply that when she rose, she was nearly dead. But on searching her mouth, the tortoise found a few grains of earth. She gave those to the woman, who took them and placed them carefully around the edge of the tortoise’s shell, and that became the beginning of dry land. The woman then walked from the center of the tortoise’s shell to the east and as she walked, the earth stretched in front of her. She walked to the west, and the earth stretched in front of her. She walked to the north and to the south, and as she walked the earth grew and extended, forming a vast land rich in vegetation and all forms of life. All of this was sustained by the tortoise, who still supports the earth.

This version of the earth diver creation story highlights primordial waters as the source of creation and life—life, which is protected and nurtured through the collaborative and cooperative community. It is also worth noting that not all attempts at finding grains of earth, the substance necessary for sustenance, are successful. Indeed, unsuccessful efforts result in death. This reminds me of the Jewish saying, “You are not required to finish the work, but neither are you permitted to desist from it.” Effort and responsibility are the cost of membership in an interdependent community. And, like planting the seeds of trees, the fruits of our efforts take time to grow and ripen.

Earth Diver Stories Part 1

These days I seem to be harking back to my Roman Catholic roots, reflecting on the “truths” I was taught in those 8 years of parochial school, and thinking about other ways of thinking about those truths. In particular, I’ve been obsession about creation: how did all of this, all of us, all of every thing come to be? From where? By whom?

For far too long, I just took it for granted that, “in the beginning God created the world.” That’s the way it was, that’s the way it is, that’s the way it always will be. And then I started reading. Reading is such a powerful and dangerous thing. No wonder there are so many banned books! No wonder dictators so often host book burning events. But I digress.

I have lately discovered that, depending on who does the categorizing and counting, there are at least five categories of creation myths and stories: 1) creation from chaos; 2) creation ex nihilo; 3) earth diver stories; 4) world parent stories; 5) emergence creation stories.

At the moment, I am particularly drawn to the earth diver stories, but I’m hard pressed to say why. There are earth diver creation stories from the Iroquois and other Native American cultures, from the Yoruba peoples of Africa, from the Slavic peoples of Europe; from Mongolia, Siberia, Japan, and even hints of earth diver themes interwoven with Chinese emergence and cosmic egg stories.

There are four themes that resonate across most cultural renditions of the earth diver: water, creator, diver, and making of the earth. I particularly resonate with the stories from the native peoples of the North American continent. Their divers are animals, often a muskrat, duck, or turtle. With all of my grandparents having emigrated to Pennsylvania from Poland, I wanted to have an attachment to the Slavic stories, but they all incorporate two creators, one good and one devilish. I still shudder when I think of the devil, even mythical ones, even though I am clear that some kinds of evil do exist in the world. So, here’s a bare bones sketch of how earth divers create the earth. More on particular cultural versions in late blogs.

Before the beginning of everything, primordial waters engulf everything. There is only water–and an Observer, the creator to be. When the first being, the observer looked out on the water and saw her image, she first became aware of herself. She conceived of the reflection as her spirit and sent the spirit out in the form of a loon. Waiting for the loon’s return, the Observer became weary of her solitude, which perhaps was morphing into loneliness. Listening to the stillness, hearing the possibility of more, the Observer sends a loon to dive into the waters to retrieve some sand or mud. After quite some time, the loon returns, out of breath, gasping for air, but with nothing. A second time, the loon dives, deeper this time, but still returns with nothing. Finally, on the third dive, the loon returns with tiny bits of mud clutched in its webbed feet. The Observer, now become Creator, kneads the grains of mud together, and works them into a small ball. When the mud in the ball becomes dry, the Creator sprinkles them across the back of a tortoise [No explanation is given for where the tortoise comes from, it is just there as needed. Sometimes the Creator sprinkles dirt across the water. No explanation is given for why it doesn’t sink into the water, it just doesn’t. This is a myth. It operates on its own logic.] Froom this foundation, all of creation, expands and grows.

Sometimes this creation story begins as I have it here. Sometimes this creation story follows a great flood which has destroyed the prior earth as a punishment for transgressive behaviors of the peoples.

My favorite versions sprinkle the dirt on the back of a tortoise. Inevitably, someone asks, what does the tortoise stand on? This is basically the same question that all creation stories invite. What was there before creation? In epistemology, this is called a regress argument or question. In philosophy, this is known as an infinite regress argument or question. It needs a potentially infinite series of additional explanations to support it.

From the likes of Terry Pratchett, the novelist; Stephone Hawking, the scientist; Ken Wilber, the philosopher, we have the considered answer: it is turtles all the way down. From Buddhism, we have emptiness. There is no fixed independent existence. Everything is interconnected and interdependent. And I am reminded of a Buddhist proverb: “The lotus flower blooms most beautifully from the deepest and thickest mud.” In Buddhism, the mud signifies the ubiquitous suffering, which if we learn to work with it properly can lead to wisdom, compassion, and enlightenment–the beautiful lotus bloom.

Maybe we are all earth divers, each in our own way, diving again and again to find our own bit of mud with which to construct our own world/reality, all of us together on the back of one immensely grand tortoise.

Lilith by Nikki Marmery

I’m reading Lilith by Nikki Marmery. It is the story of Lilith, the first, first woman, told in Lilith’s voice. I will confess, found the book a little slow, and maybe a tad incredulous in the first few pages, but am I ever glad that I persisted. Lilith takes us across time, across cultures, in search of the prophet who will reclaim reverence for Asherah, the Goddess of creation; the prophet who will lead the way to each of us reclaiming the goddess in ourselves. On page 238 (of about 320), Lilith find the prophet. She is not what Lilith expected, and Lilith doubts whether others will be open to hearing her. In response, the prophet stands on the edge of a precipice, and shouts into the void:

I am the first and the last!

I am the honorured and the mocked!

I am the whore and the holy one;

            the wife and the virgin; the mother and the daughter!

I am a barren woman with many children!

I am the silence that is incomprehensible

            and the voice whose sounds are many!

I am Wisdom and ignorance; I am shy and proud!

I am disgraced and I am great!

I am compassionate and cruel; I am witless and wise!

You who deny me, know me!

I am the one they call Life and you call me Death!

I am the one they call Law and you call me Lawless!

I am the one you seized and I am She you scattered!

I am She you despise, and yet you profess me!

I am peace, yet war had come because of me!

I am Perfect Mind!

A powerful proclamation if ever I read one. And yet, I think you need to read it in context to get the full power of it. So, go get yourself a copy of the book. Get thee to the library, or your local independent book store. If they don’t have it in stock, they will order it up for you. If you don’t have a local independent bookstore, reach out to the Frenchtown Bookshop, tell them Mary sent you and they will take great care of you (of course they will take great care of you even if you don’t tell them I sent you J).

https://frenchtownbookshop.com/

908-628-9297
frenchtownbookshop@gmail.com

Read on my friends, read on.