biomystic wrote:For the EL of it all, I'd like to add that EL was viewed as aloof or distant because EL was the Canaanite name for the planet Saturn, the slowest moving planet of the seven "planetary" rulers, taking almost 30 years to complete an orbit hence the ancient Near Eastern according to Saturn as a symbol of "rest" from activity. EL was thought to reside in the seventh or "highest" heaven in the ancient's geocentric cosmos where seven concentric shell "heavens" were stacked one above the other above the earth. Thus "God Most High" was EL's title. That Judaism is totally involved in Saturn worship has been overlooked by Christian-biased Western scholars who, like Jews and Christians, do not really want to go there, the fact that Jews are actually commanded in the Decalogue to worship on Saturn's Day in spite of the Commandment against worshiping anything in the skies. "Sabbath" is derived from the Hebrew word for Saturn so it's not like this Saturn connection isn't a primary root of Jewish belief.
With Saturn worship you don't get resurrection theology emphasized as we see with sun god worship where the sun became a model for human life and afterlife. I think this is why exiled Jews in Egypt were looking to reestablish a resurrection theology to save Jewish souls. They found it in Egyptian spiritual ideas which were then given Jewish religious form historically and Greek form intellectually.
El just means 'deity'. (
Ref) This is why when the word appeared in the Hebrew scriptures it was replaced with God in English.
Sabbath derives from the Hebrew
shavat, which means 'rest' or 'cease work' (
Ref)
In the Canaanite religion, Saturn was associated with the king, who was himself subject to the high god El. (
Ref)
The idea of celestial spheres is a Greek one. (
Ref) I can find no indication that the Canaanites used this concept.
The earliest indication of a Jewish belief in an afterlife is probably in Isaiah 26:19.
But your dead will live, LORD;
their bodies will rise—
let those who dwell in the dust
wake up and shout for joy—
your dew is like the dew of the morning;
the earth will give birth to her dead.
The
Jewish Encyclopedia dates this passage around 334 BCE, long after any contact with Egypt.
However, the Temple owning Sadducees, the descendents of the El worshippers of the Priestly tradition, did not believe in a resurrection.
Matthew 22:23 That same day the Sadducees, who say there is no resurrection, came to him with a question.
Do you have any sources for your claims?