Dunno about that . . .

Let us suppose, for the moment at least, that the story of the Garden of Eden,
in the Bible, while not being literally true, is
a powerful and cogent psychological lesson . . .

A rather beastly, paternalistic, sexist, bullying demi-urgos called Ialdabaoth gets too big for his boots and sets up a sort of petting-zoo and populates it with lots of jazzy animals and plants, among them 2 rather peculiar bald apes who have rather well-developed, if naive, minds.

Now, old Ialdabaoth, being a right "case", pops 2 trees bung in the middle of the zoo, and they have just the tastiest and most interesting fruit you can imagine on them. In addition to this the fruit of these 2 trees have remarkable powers: the fruit of the first one gives you an instant doctorate in just about everything you can imagine, and the second one solves all your medical problems to
such an extent that you'll live forever.

The Ialdabaoth says to the 2 bald apes, "No, and not under any circumstances!"

---------------

Try this experiment: go out and buy a bag of jelly sweeties, put its contents in a bowl right in the middle of the kitchen table and tell your children/grandchildren/nephews/nieces/ other stray kids,
"Those are mine and I will turn you into pumpkins if you touch them."

Last time I tried that those sweets lasted about 20 minutes.
--------------

Now the Lord and Master of the Universe looks down at what yon Ialdabaoth is up to and feels an element of disquiet: not least because Ialdabaoth is misrepresenting things in a major way to the 2 bald apes.

So the Lord and Master of the Universe pops together a very odd creature indeed: no arms, no wings and no legs: a snake.

And sends that snake into the petting-zoo to point out what a "pill" Ialdabaoth is being.
---------------

The snake does its work, as instructed, at which point "Old Sweaty Socks", Ialdabaoth, who, among other character defects, suffers from a serious temper problem, chucks the bald apes out of the zoo.

At which point the bald apes work a few basic things out, and one of them is that, despite the petting-zoo being a sort of non-stop cafeteria and club-Med: they are actually better off outiside where they can use their creativity, brains and so forth to create the sort of world they want rather than the one that Ialdabaoth
had imposed on them.

------------
The above, by the way, is my retelling of the standard Christian Gnostic Myth of Origins. I am retelling it not in any attempt to insult or upset anyone, but as at least one way of understanding why snakes, culturally,
have been viewed with mixed feelings.

Historically and mythologically snakes have been viewed ambivalently; both as threats and as
the bearers of wisdom and healing (c.f. the wand of Aesclepius).
-----------

There is a large body of evidence to support the idea that the early Jewish Temple on mount Moriah, in Jerusalem contained snake idols, as did the early Jewish (Samaritan) Temple on mount Gerizim. At the Jewish Temple at the first cataract on the Nile in Egypt snakes were worshiped along with 'Ashera': poles representing the brides of Yahweh.

Snake worship has been found in South America and runs right through Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism (if you really
want to consider those 3 religious traditions as separate from each other).

Nag Pachami is a Hindu festival: possibly the only religious tradition that has retained that to the present day.

Richmond.

On 13/8/2018 6:23 pm, Bob Sneidar via use-livecode wrote:
Why do snakes get their own day?? They are the source of all our problems!

Bob S


On Aug 13, 2018, at 07:57 , Devin Asay via use-livecode 
<use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:

This question is very timely as Wednesday is Nag Panchami: the day of snakes!

Richmond.

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