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Mother goddess

A mother goddess is a goddess who represents a personified deification of motherhood, fertility, creation, destruction, or the earth goddess who embodies the bounty of the earth or nature. When equated with the earth or the natural world, such goddesses are sometimes referred to as the Mother Earth or Earth Mother, deity in various animistic or pantheistic religions.[citation needed] The earth goddess is usually the wife or feminine counterpart of the Sky Father or Father Heaven. In some polytheistic cultures, such as the Ancient Egyptian religion which narrates the cosmic egg myth, the sky is instead seen as the Heavenly Mother or Sky Mother as in Nut and Hathor, and the earth god is regarded as the male, paternal, and terrestrial partner, as in Osiris or Geb who hatched out of the maternal cosmic egg.

Mother Goddess sculpture from Madhya Pradesh or Rajasthan, India, 6th-7th century, in the National Museum of Korea, Seoul

Excavations at Çatalhöyük

Between 1961 and 1965 James Mellaart led a series of excavations at Çatalhöyük, north of the Taurus Mountains in a fertile agricultural region of South-Anatolia. Striking were the many statues found here, which Mellaart suggested represented a Great goddess, who headed the pantheon of an essentially matriarchal culture. A seated female figure, flanked by what Mellaart describes as lionesses, was found in a grain-bin; she may have intended to protect the harvest and grain.[1] He considered the sites as shrines, with especially the Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük capturing the imagination. There was also a large number of sexless figurines, which Mellaart regarded as typical for a society dominated by women: Emphasis on sex in art is invariably connected with male impulse and desire.[2] The idea that there could have been a matriarchy and a cult of the mother goddess was supported by archaeologist Marija Gimbutas. This gave rise to a modern cult of the Mother Goddess with annual pilgrimages being organized at Çatalhöyük.[3]

Since 1993, excavations were resumed, now headed by Ian Hodder with Lynn Meskell as head of the Stanford Figurines Project that examined the figurines of Çatalhöyük. This team came to different conclusions than Gimbutas and Mellaart. Only a few of the figurines were identified as female and these figurines were found not so much in sacred spaces, but seemed to have been discarded randomly, sometimes in garbage heaps. This rendered a cult of the mother goddess in this location as unlikely.[4][a]

Ancient Egypt

In Egyptian mythology, sky goddess Nut is sometimes called "Mother" because she bore stars and Sun god.

Nut was thought to draw the dead into her star-filled sky, and refresh them with food and wine.[5]

Hinduism

 
Hindu goddess Durga

In Hinduism, Saraswati, Lakshmi, Radha, Parvati, Durga and other goddesses represents both the feminine aspect and the shakti (power) of the supreme being known as the Brahman.[6] The divine mother goddess, manifests herself in various forms, representing the universal creative force.[7] She becomes Mother Nature (Mula Prakriti), who gives birth to all life forms and nourishes them through her body. Ultimately she re-absorbs all life forms back into herself, or "devours" them to sustain herself as the power of death feeding on life to produce new life. She also gives rise to Maya (the illusory world) and to prakriti, the force that galvanizes the divine ground of existence into self-projection as the cosmos.[citation needed]

The Shakti sect is strongly associated with Samkhya, and Tantra Hindu philosophies and ultimately, is monist.[8] The primordial feminine creative-preservative-destructive energy, Shakti, is considered to be the motive force behind all action and existence in the phenomenal cosmos. The cosmos itself is purusha, the unchanging, infinite, immanent, and transcendent reality that is the divine ground of all being, the "world soul". This masculine potential is actualized by feminine dynamism, embodied in multitudinous goddesses who are ultimately all manifestations of the one great mother. Shakti, herself, can free the individual from demons of ego, ignorance, and desire that bind the soul in maya (illusion). Practitioners of the Tantric tradition focus on Shakti to free themselves from the cycle of karma.[citation needed]

The worship of the mother deity can be traced back to early Vedic culture. The Rigveda calls the divine female power Mahimata (R.V. 1.164.33) which means "great mother".[citation needed]

Christianity

Both the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church revere Virgin Mary as the Mother of God, a rendering of Theotokos and Deipara since the Ecumenical Council of Ephesus in 431 AD, and disregard Protestant objections to Marian devotion. She is regarded as "Our Mother", the Blessed Mother, or the Holy Mother as she gave birth to Jesus Christ, since Christians alike refer to themselves as "Brothers and Sisters in Christ". There is a Pater Noster but no equivalent Mater Nostra, however the Hail Mary and the Sub Tuum Praesidium have been popular forms of prayer and praise to Virgin Mary for many centuries. Some may perceive a parallel in calling Mary "Our Mother" and the Almighty Yahweh as "Our Father". In contrast to the Pagan notion of a fertility goddess, Mary is both the Perpetual Virgin and the Mother of God at the same time, she is not considered the "Heavenly Mother" in reference to God the Father or the "Heavenly Father" as her consort. St Mary has never been referred to as a goddess in the Gospel's accounts of the Annunciation, Wedding at Cana, or the Magnificat. The Orthodox Church since the Apostolic age have believed that Mary entered heaven alive after her death and subsequent resurrection, known as the Dormition; while Catholics led by the Pontifex teach that her body and soul were taken up, without death or resurrection into heaven (Assumption of Mary). As the foremost saint, some Christians believe she continues to supernaturally intervene in the world through Marian apparitions (Our Lady of Velankanni), Marian shrines (Our Lady of Zeitoun)& Marian devotions (Our Lady of the Rosary). According to Mariology and Scholasticism branches of study, though Mary is venerated as the foremost saint, she is still a creature and never viewed as an equal of the Triune God who is the Creator.

In pre-Islamic Arabia, Collyridians were an unorthodox Christian denomination who reportedly worshipped Virgin Mary by making burnt offerings of dough to her. Ancient Christians viewed the Collyridians as heretics, holding that Mary was only to be honoured, and not to be worshipped like the God-man of Christianity.[9]

Latter Day Saint movement

In the Latter Day Saint movement, particularly the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, many adherents believe in a Heavenly Mother as the wife of God the Father. The theology varies, however, according to denomination. The only clear declaration regarding a Heavenly Mother figure is that she exists. Some offshoot denominations disavow a belief in her, some do not make her a part of the official doctrine, and others openly acknowledge her.[10]

New religious movements

Zahng Gil-jah is a South Korean woman, by the World Mission Society Church of God believed to be “God the Mother” (Korean어머니 하나님; RREomeoni Hananim; pronounced [əːməːniː haːnaːniːm]).[11] Church members may also call her “New Jerusalem Mother”, “Mother Jerusalem”, or “Heavenly Mother”.[12][13]

In Theosophy, the Earth goddess is called the "Planetary Logos of Earth".

The Mother Goddess, or Great Goddess, is a composite of various feminine deities from past and present world cultures, worshiped by modern Wicca and others broadly known as Neopagans. She is considered sometimes identified as a Triple Goddess, who takes the form of Maiden, Mother, and Crone archetypes. She is described as Mother Earth, Mother Nature, or the Creatress of all life. She is associated with the full moon and stars, the Earth, and the sea. In Wicca, the Earth Goddess is sometimes called Gaia.[14] The name of the mother goddess varies depending on the Wiccan tradition. English historian Ronald Hutton, however, has forcefully stated that any use of the term "Mother-Goddess" can be accounted for, and disregarded, as the scholars and mythographers' own projection of the Virgin Mary onto the evidence and source data.[15] More recently Hutton was criticized in a review for ignoring the evidence of numerous goddesses identified as either mothers or both virgin and mother in pre-Christian antiquity, in addition to providing no evidence or secondary citations with which to substantiate his own position.[16]

Carl Gustav Jung suggested that the archetypal mother was a part of the collective unconscious of all humans; various adherents of Jung, most notably Erich Neumann and Ernst Whitmont, have argued that such an archetype underpins many of its own mythologies and may even precede the image of the paternal "father." Such speculations help explain the universality of such mother goddess imagery around the world.

The Upper Paleolithic Venus figurines have been sometimes explained as depictions of an Earth Goddess similar to Gaia.[17]

In the Baha'i Faith, Baha'u'llah uses the Mother as an attribute of God: "And when He Who is well-grounded in all knowledge, He Who is the Mother, the Soul, the Secret, and the Essence thereof, revealeth that which is the least contrary to their desire, they bitterly oppose Him and shamelessly deny Him.".[18] Baha'u'llah further writes that "Every single letter proceeding out of the mouth of God is indeed a Mother Letter, and every word uttered by Him Who is the Well Spring of Divine Revelation is a Mother Word, and His Tablet a Mother Tablet."[19]

Prehistoric matriarchy debate

There is difference of opinion between the academic and the popular conception of the term Mother goddess. The popular view is mainly driven by the Goddess movement and reads that primitive societies initially were matriarchal, worshipping a sovereign, nurturing, motherly earth goddess. This was based upon the nineteenth-century ideas of unilineal evolution of Johann Jakob Bachofen. According to the academic view, however, both Bachofen and the modern Goddess theories are a projection of contemporary world views on ancient myths, rather than attempting to understand the mentalité of that time.[20][b][21][c] Often this is accompanied by a desire for a lost civilization from a bygone era that would have been just, peaceful, and wise.[22][d] However, it is highly unlikely that such a civilization ever existed.[22][e]

For a long time, feminist authors claimed that these peaceful, matriarchal agrarian societies were exterminated or subjugated by nomadic, patriarchal warrior tribes. An important contribution to this was that of archaeologist Marija Gimbutas. Her work in this field has been questioned.[23][f] Among feminist archaeologists this vision is nowadays also considered highly controversial.[24][g][25][h]

Since the 1960s, especially in popular culture, the alleged worship of the mother goddess and the social position that women in prehistoric societies supposedly assumed, were linked. This made the debate a political one. According to the goddess movement, the current male-dominated society should return to the egalitarian matriarchy of earlier times. That this form of society ever existed was supposedly supported by many figurines that were found.

In academic circles, this prehistoric matriarchy is considered unlikely. Firstly, worshiping a mother goddess does not necessarily mean that women ruled society.[26][i] In addition, the figurines can also portray ordinary women or goddesses, and it is unclear whether there really ever was a mother goddess.[27][28][j][29][k]

List of mother goddesses

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As an example, the publication by Meskell et al. (2008) of detailed data on the figurines from the site has transformed our understanding of these objects. In much earlier work and writing on the site, including by Mellaart, these objects were seen as representational and as religious, relating to a cult of the mother goddess. The work of the figurine team has thoroughly undermined this interpretation. In fact, when properly quantified, few of the figurines are clearly female. In addition, examination of their context of deposition shows that the objects are not in 'special' locations, but were discarded, often in middens. A study of the fabric of the figurines by Chris Doherty (pers. comm.) has shown that they are made of local marls and that they are unfired or low fired. Many have survived only because they were accidentally burned in hearths and fires. Thus all the evidence suggests that these objects were not in a separate religious sphere. Rather, it was the process of their daily production – not their contemplation as religious symbols – that was important. They gave meaning, at the everyday, low-intensity level, to subjectivities and to the social world that they helped imagine. - Hodder (2010)
  2. ^ The idea of the Mother Goddess, also called the Great Mother or Great Goddess, has dominated the imaginations of modern scholars in several fields. The image of the Mother Goddess with which we are familiar today has its modern genesis in the writings of Johann Jakob Bachofen. In 1861 Bachofen published his famous study Das Mutterrecht in which he developed his theory that human society progressed from hetaerism, characterized by unrestricted sexual relations, to matriarchy, in which women ruled society, and finally to the most advanced stage, patriarchy. Bachofen conceived of religious practice as progressing in a parallel manner from a belief in a mother goddess to a more advanced belief in a father god, associating belief in a mother deity with a primitive stage in the development of human society: “Wherever we encounter matriarchy, it is bound up with the mystery of the chthonian religion, whether it invokes Demeter or is embodied by an equivalent goddess” (Bachofen, 88). Bachofen believed that the matriarchal form of social organization derived from the maternal mystery religions (88-9).
    As we see with Bachofen, modern theories of the Mother Goddess have inevitably been shaped by modern cultural presuppositions about gender. Lynn Roller believes that “[m]any discussions of the Mother Goddess rely on modern projections ought to be, rather than on ancient evidence defining what she was” (Roller, 9). William Ramsay, the late nineteenth-century archaeologist, who was the first researcher to demonstrate that the principal deity of Phrygia was a mother goddess, drew heavily on Bachofen's theory (Roller, 12). Like Bachofen's, Ramsay's understanding of the national character of matriarchal pre-Phrygian society is based on contestable evidence and relies on stereotypically feminine characteristics; he describes matriarchal pre-Phrygian society as “receptive and passive, not self-assertive and active” (12). For Ramsay, this “feminine” character explains why this culture was conquered by the masculine, warlike Phrygians with their male deities. Thus, constructions of ancient matriarchal societies, which are inseparable from “a glorification of the female element in human life” (12), are suspiciously similar to modern stereotypes of the feminine that are not necessarily native to pre-Phrygian culture. Given these observations, Bachofen's repeated emphasis on the necessity of freeing oneself from the cultural prejudices of one's own time if one is to truly understand these ancient cultures takes on an ironic tone. It is not only Bachofen and Ramsay, but many others after them, who assume the stereotypical femininity of the Mother Goddess. Many of these conceptions of what a mother goddess ought to be stem from “the Judaeo-Christian image of the loving, nurturing mother subservient to her husband and closely bonded with her children” (Roller, 9). - Smith (2007)
  3. ^ At one time, scholars tended to use the 'Mother Goddess' label for all female figurines found at sites. This was largely because of the belief that the worship of fertility goddesses was an important part of agricultural societies all over the world, and also due to a tendency to look at ancient remains through the lens of later-day Hinduism, in which goddess worship had an important place. However, scholars are now increasingly aware of the stylistic and technical differences among assemblages of female figurines. Further, all goddesses need not have been part of a single goddess cult, and not all ancient goddesses were necessarily associated with maternity.
    In the light of such problems, the term 'Mother Goddess' should be replaced by the longer but more neutral phrase— 'female figurines with likely cultic significance.' This does not mean that none of these figurines might have had a religious or cultic significance. It is indeed possible that some were either images that were worshipped or votive offerings that were part of some domestic cult or ritual. However, not all female figurines necessarily had such a function. Whether we are looking at human or animal figurines, in all cases, their possible significance or function has to be assessed, and cannot be assumed. Apart from their form, the context in which they were found is crucial. - Singh (2008) p. 130
  4. ^ A popular undercurrent in fringe archaeology concerns the ostensible presence of a lost civilization hidden somewhere in the proverbial dim mists of time. This lost civilization is usually portrayed as having been amazingly and precociously advanced, possessing technological skills as yet still not developed even by our modern civilization and paranormal capacities of which we are not even aware. This lost civilization (or civilizations) is usually presented as the mother culture of all subsequent, historically known civilizations, having passed down their knowledge to them. The lost civilization was, tragically, destroyed, through either a natural cataclysm or some catastrophic technological mishap, and has been somehow hidden from us. - Feder (2010)
  5. ^ There isn't a scintilla of physical evidence that anything of the kind occurred. There is no archaeological evidence of a supersophisticated civilization 10000 years ago—no gleaming cities, no factories powered by Earth energies... - Feder (2010)
  6. ^ There is another popular view of figurines, which may be summed up as the “Mother Goddess” issue. The idea of the ascendancy of the Mother Goddess as the primeval deity can be traced back to nineteenth century culture theory, endorsed by Freud and Jung (Parker Pearson 1999:99-100; Talalay 1991), if not before. The modern manifestation was given a huge impetus in the work of Marija Gimbutas (1974, 1989, 1991). To reduce Gimbutas's argument to simplicity, she viewed early Neolithic society as egalitarian, matrifocal, matrilineal, and focused on worshipping a Mother Goddess (Tringham 1993), as evidenced by females figurines found in Neolithic sites in the Near East and eastern Mediterranean region.
    Few archaeologists support her notion for a number of reasons (Meskell 1995; Tringham 1993, for example). They maintain that the Mother Goddess is an assumption, not a theory, and certainly not a demonstrated thesis. The critics argue that Gimbutas is blending modern myth, feminist ideology, and psychological theory unsupported by clinical research to impose the Mother Goddess archetype on past societies. [...]
    Gimbutas's own work included excavations at Achilleion (Thessaly). Reviewers of that work (McPherron 1991; Runnels 1990) find problems with the sample size (four 5 x 5 m test units on the slope of a tell), use of dating methods, lack of explanation of field methodology, recording systems or lack thereof, omission of clear criteria for discerning interior versus exterior contexts, typology, statistics---it is hard to find a part of this work not negatively critiqued. - Wesler (2012), pp. 65–66.
  7. ^ In her book The Faces of the Goddess from 1997, Motz negated the popular theory of the archetypal fertility cult of the Mother Goddess which supposedly would have existed prior to the rise of patriarchy and the oppression of women.
  8. ^ We begin with an issue that is foundational to the modern study of women in the ancient world, namely the Mother Goddess. As Lauren Talalay demonstrates in Case Study I (“The Mother Goddess in Prehistory: Debates and Perspectives”), there was a desire among scholars, particularly in the 1960s and 1970s, to locate a period in the distant past in which women were not secondary, when female power was celebrated, and when an overarching Mother Goddess was the primary divinity. This myth continues to have great appeal, as witnessed in “goddess-tourism” in the Mediterranean even today. While it is no longer an active scholarly theory, the issue of the Mother Goddess continues to be an exemplar for the problems of studying women in antiquity: mysterious images disembodied from their contexts, multiple scholarly biases and motivations, and conflicting interpretations of the scanty and fragmentary evidence. - James; Dillon (2012)
  9. ^ Worship of a nurturing Mother Goddess who oversees cosmological creation, fertility, and death does not necessarily entail or reflect a pacific matriarchy and female power in society. - Talalay (2012
  10. ^ It may be impossible to ever prove one way or the other that a Great Goddess existed in prehistory. As the essays that follow suggest, what is more likely is that interpretations of female deities, their intersection with the roles of women in antiquity, and the place of these debates in modern society will be rewritten many times in the future. - Talalay (2012
  11. ^ Goddesses of the prime of life are often described as mother goddesses, although that term is questionable, given that the goddesses may not be maternal in any conventional sense. For instance, the single child of Cybele was conceived upon her while she was in the form of a rock and was never reared by her (see Southeastern Europe). Similarly, the eastern Mediterranean goddess Ninlil gave birth by making images of people from clay, as did the Chinese goddess Nüwa. The distinction between mother goddess and creatrix is often difficult to locate. In the Pacific, the goddess Papa both created the earth and gave birth to the gods.
    The role of goddess as creatrix is common among goddesses, who can create by some other mechanism than birth, as Inuit Aakuluujjusi did when she threw her clothing on the ground, which walked away as animals. - Monaghan (2014)

References

  1. ^ Mellaart (1967), p. 180-181
  2. ^ Mellaart (1967)
  3. ^ Baler (2005), p. 40
  4. ^ Hodder (2010)
  5. ^ "Papyrus of Ani: Egyptian Book of the Dead", Sir E. A. Wallis Budge, NuVision Publications, page 57, 2007, ISBN 1-59547-914-7
  6. ^ Rankin, John (1 June 1984). "Teaching Hinduism: Some Key Ideas". British Journal of Religious Education. 6 (3): 133–160. doi:10.1080/0141620840060306. ISSN 0141-6200. The notion of the feminine in deity is much more pronounced and is evident in the pairings of Shiva with Parvati, Vishnu with Lakshmi, Krishna with Radha and Ram with Sita.
  7. ^ Monier-Williams, Monier. . University of Washington. Archived from the original on 25 August 2017. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  8. ^ Katherine Anne Harper; Brown, Robert L. (2012). The Roots of Tantra. State University of New York Press. pp. 48, 117, 40–53. ISBN 978-0-7914-8890-4.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 September 2012. Retrieved 25 December 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ . Restoration Church of Jesus Christ. Archived from the original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved 17 July 2006.
  11. ^ Amennews.com 통합측, 하나님의교회(안상홍증인회) ‘이단’ 재규정 2011 (Korean)
  12. ^ "WATV - Introduction". Retrieved 22 March 2013. (English)
  13. ^ dangdangnews.com Lee In-gyu column 하나님의 교회를 주의하라 2013 May 26 "안상홍이 부산에서 목회를 할 때에 서울교회의 전도사였던 장길자라는 여인을 1985년부터 어머니하나님, 하늘의 예루살렘, 어린양의 신부등으로 숭배하고 있으며, 당시 서울교회를 목회하던 김주철이 현재 하나님의 교회 총회장을 맡고 있다." (Korean)
  14. ^ "Sage Woman" magazine Issue 79 Autumn 2010--special issue "Connecting to Gaia"
  15. ^ Hutton, Ronald (1999). The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. Oxford University Press, pp. 36, 37, and 40.
  16. ^ Whitmore, Ben (2010). Trials of the Moon: Reopening the Case for Historical Witchcraft. A Critique of Ronald Hutton's Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. Auckland: Briar Books, p. 20.,
  17. ^ Witcombe, Christopher L. C. E. "Women in the Stone Age". Essay: The Venus of Willendorf. Retrieved 13 March 2008.
  18. ^ www.bahai.org https://www.bahai.org/not-found. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  19. ^ Drewek, Paula. "Feminine Forms of the Divine in Bahá’í Scriptures." Journal of Bahá’í Studies 5 (1992): 13-23.
  20. ^ Smith (2007)
  21. ^ Singh (2008) p. 130
  22. ^ a b Feder (2010)
  23. ^ Wesler (2012), pp. 65–66.
  24. ^ Motz (1997)
  25. ^ James; Dillon (2012)
  26. ^ Talalay in James; Dillon (2012)
  27. ^ Let me be perfectly clear about my own position: the maternal Great Goddess is a fantasy, a powerful fantasy with an astonishing capacity to resist criticism. Loraux in Duby, G.; Perrot, M. (1994)
  28. ^ Talalay in James, S.L.; Dillon, S. (2012)
  29. ^ Monaghan (2014)
  30. ^ "Nügua". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 7 August 2022.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Patai, Raphael (1990). The Hebrew Goddess. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0814322710.

External links

  •   Media related to Mother goddesses at Wikimedia Commons

mother, goddess, earth, mother, redirects, here, other, uses, mother, earth, mountain, with, native, name, chomolungma, goddess, mother, world, earth, mount, everest, heavenly, mother, redirects, here, being, mormonism, heavenly, mother, mormonism, mother, god. Earth Mother redirects here For other uses see Mother Earth For the mountain with native name Chomolungma Goddess Mother of the World Earth see Mount Everest Heavenly Mother redirects here For the being in Mormonism see Heavenly Mother Mormonism A mother goddess is a goddess who represents a personified deification of motherhood fertility creation destruction or the earth goddess who embodies the bounty of the earth or nature When equated with the earth or the natural world such goddesses are sometimes referred to as the Mother Earth or Earth Mother deity in various animistic or pantheistic religions citation needed The earth goddess is usually the wife or feminine counterpart of the Sky Father or Father Heaven In some polytheistic cultures such as the Ancient Egyptian religion which narrates the cosmic egg myth the sky is instead seen as the Heavenly Mother or Sky Mother as in Nut and Hathor and the earth god is regarded as the male paternal and terrestrial partner as in Osiris or Geb who hatched out of the maternal cosmic egg Mother Goddess sculpture from Madhya Pradesh or Rajasthan India 6th 7th century in the National Museum of Korea Seoul Contents 1 Excavations at Catalhoyuk 2 Ancient Egypt 3 Hinduism 4 Christianity 5 Latter Day Saint movement 6 New religious movements 7 Prehistoric matriarchy debate 8 List of mother goddesses 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksExcavations at Catalhoyuk Edit Seated Woman of Catalhoyuk Between 1961 and 1965 James Mellaart led a series of excavations at Catalhoyuk north of the Taurus Mountains in a fertile agricultural region of South Anatolia Striking were the many statues found here which Mellaart suggested represented a Great goddess who headed the pantheon of an essentially matriarchal culture A seated female figure flanked by what Mellaart describes as lionesses was found in a grain bin she may have intended to protect the harvest and grain 1 He considered the sites as shrines with especially the Seated Woman of Catalhoyuk capturing the imagination There was also a large number of sexless figurines which Mellaart regarded as typical for a society dominated by women Emphasis on sex in art is invariably connected with male impulse and desire 2 The idea that there could have been a matriarchy and a cult of the mother goddess was supported by archaeologist Marija Gimbutas This gave rise to a modern cult of the Mother Goddess with annual pilgrimages being organized at Catalhoyuk 3 Since 1993 excavations were resumed now headed by Ian Hodder with Lynn Meskell as head of the Stanford Figurines Project that examined the figurines of Catalhoyuk This team came to different conclusions than Gimbutas and Mellaart Only a few of the figurines were identified as female and these figurines were found not so much in sacred spaces but seemed to have been discarded randomly sometimes in garbage heaps This rendered a cult of the mother goddess in this location as unlikely 4 a Ancient Egypt EditIn Egyptian mythology sky goddess Nut is sometimes called Mother because she bore stars and Sun god Nut was thought to draw the dead into her star filled sky and refresh them with food and wine 5 Hinduism EditSee also Devi Hindu goddess Durga In Hinduism Saraswati Lakshmi Radha Parvati Durga and other goddesses represents both the feminine aspect and the shakti power of the supreme being known as the Brahman 6 The divine mother goddess manifests herself in various forms representing the universal creative force 7 She becomes Mother Nature Mula Prakriti who gives birth to all life forms and nourishes them through her body Ultimately she re absorbs all life forms back into herself or devours them to sustain herself as the power of death feeding on life to produce new life She also gives rise to Maya the illusory world and to prakriti the force that galvanizes the divine ground of existence into self projection as the cosmos citation needed The Shakti sect is strongly associated with Samkhya and Tantra Hindu philosophies and ultimately is monist 8 The primordial feminine creative preservative destructive energy Shakti is considered to be the motive force behind all action and existence in the phenomenal cosmos The cosmos itself is purusha the unchanging infinite immanent and transcendent reality that is the divine ground of all being the world soul This masculine potential is actualized by feminine dynamism embodied in multitudinous goddesses who are ultimately all manifestations of the one great mother Shakti herself can free the individual from demons of ego ignorance and desire that bind the soul in maya illusion Practitioners of the Tantric tradition focus on Shakti to free themselves from the cycle of karma citation needed The worship of the mother deity can be traced back to early Vedic culture The Rigveda calls the divine female power Mahimata R V 1 164 33 which means great mother citation needed Christianity EditFurther information Queen of Heaven Theotokos and New Eve Both the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church revere Virgin Mary as the Mother of God a rendering of Theotokos and Deipara since the Ecumenical Council of Ephesus in 431 AD and disregard Protestant objections to Marian devotion She is regarded as Our Mother the Blessed Mother or the Holy Mother as she gave birth to Jesus Christ since Christians alike refer to themselves as Brothers and Sisters in Christ There is a Pater Noster but no equivalent Mater Nostra however the Hail Mary and the Sub Tuum Praesidium have been popular forms of prayer and praise to Virgin Mary for many centuries Some may perceive a parallel in calling Mary Our Mother and the Almighty Yahweh as Our Father In contrast to the Pagan notion of a fertility goddess Mary is both the Perpetual Virgin and the Mother of God at the same time she is not considered the Heavenly Mother in reference to God the Father or the Heavenly Father as her consort St Mary has never been referred to as a goddess in the Gospel s accounts of the Annunciation Wedding at Cana or the Magnificat The Orthodox Church since the Apostolic age have believed that Mary entered heaven alive after her death and subsequent resurrection known as the Dormition while Catholics led by the Pontifex teach that her body and soul were taken up without death or resurrection into heaven Assumption of Mary As the foremost saint some Christians believe she continues to supernaturally intervene in the world through Marian apparitions Our Lady of Velankanni Marian shrines Our Lady of Zeitoun amp Marian devotions Our Lady of the Rosary According to Mariology and Scholasticism branches of study though Mary is venerated as the foremost saint she is still a creature and never viewed as an equal of the Triune God who is the Creator In pre Islamic Arabia Collyridians were an unorthodox Christian denomination who reportedly worshipped Virgin Mary by making burnt offerings of dough to her Ancient Christians viewed the Collyridians as heretics holding that Mary was only to be honoured and not to be worshipped like the God man of Christianity 9 Latter Day Saint movement EditFurther information Heavenly Mother Mormonism In the Latter Day Saint movement particularly the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints many adherents believe in a Heavenly Mother as the wife of God the Father The theology varies however according to denomination The only clear declaration regarding a Heavenly Mother figure is that she exists Some offshoot denominations disavow a belief in her some do not make her a part of the official doctrine and others openly acknowledge her 10 New religious movements EditZahng Gil jah is a South Korean woman by the World Mission Society Church of God believed to be God the Mother Korean 어머니 하나님 RR Eomeoni Hananim pronounced eːmeːniː haːnaːniːm 11 Church members may also call her New Jerusalem Mother Mother Jerusalem or Heavenly Mother 12 13 In Theosophy the Earth goddess is called the Planetary Logos of Earth The Mother Goddess or Great Goddess is a composite of various feminine deities from past and present world cultures worshiped by modern Wicca and others broadly known as Neopagans She is considered sometimes identified as a Triple Goddess who takes the form of Maiden Mother and Crone archetypes She is described as Mother Earth Mother Nature or the Creatress of all life She is associated with the full moon and stars the Earth and the sea In Wicca the Earth Goddess is sometimes called Gaia 14 The name of the mother goddess varies depending on the Wiccan tradition English historian Ronald Hutton however has forcefully stated that any use of the term Mother Goddess can be accounted for and disregarded as the scholars and mythographers own projection of the Virgin Mary onto the evidence and source data 15 More recently Hutton was criticized in a review for ignoring the evidence of numerous goddesses identified as either mothers or both virgin and mother in pre Christian antiquity in addition to providing no evidence or secondary citations with which to substantiate his own position 16 Carl Gustav Jung suggested that the archetypal mother was a part of the collective unconscious of all humans various adherents of Jung most notably Erich Neumann and Ernst Whitmont have argued that such an archetype underpins many of its own mythologies and may even precede the image of the paternal father Such speculations help explain the universality of such mother goddess imagery around the world The Upper Paleolithic Venus figurines have been sometimes explained as depictions of an Earth Goddess similar to Gaia 17 In the Baha i Faith Baha u llah uses the Mother as an attribute of God And when He Who is well grounded in all knowledge He Who is the Mother the Soul the Secret and the Essence thereof revealeth that which is the least contrary to their desire they bitterly oppose Him and shamelessly deny Him 18 Baha u llah further writes that Every single letter proceeding out of the mouth of God is indeed a Mother Letter and every word uttered by Him Who is the Well Spring of Divine Revelation is a Mother Word and His Tablet a Mother Tablet 19 Prehistoric matriarchy debate EditMain article Matriarchal religion History There is difference of opinion between the academic and the popular conception of the term Mother goddess The popular view is mainly driven by the Goddess movement and reads that primitive societies initially were matriarchal worshipping a sovereign nurturing motherly earth goddess This was based upon the nineteenth century ideas of unilineal evolution of Johann Jakob Bachofen According to the academic view however both Bachofen and the modern Goddess theories are a projection of contemporary world views on ancient myths rather than attempting to understand the mentalite of that time 20 b 21 c Often this is accompanied by a desire for a lost civilization from a bygone era that would have been just peaceful and wise 22 d However it is highly unlikely that such a civilization ever existed 22 e For a long time feminist authors claimed that these peaceful matriarchal agrarian societies were exterminated or subjugated by nomadic patriarchal warrior tribes An important contribution to this was that of archaeologist Marija Gimbutas Her work in this field has been questioned 23 f Among feminist archaeologists this vision is nowadays also considered highly controversial 24 g 25 h Since the 1960s especially in popular culture the alleged worship of the mother goddess and the social position that women in prehistoric societies supposedly assumed were linked This made the debate a political one According to the goddess movement the current male dominated society should return to the egalitarian matriarchy of earlier times That this form of society ever existed was supposedly supported by many figurines that were found In academic circles this prehistoric matriarchy is considered unlikely Firstly worshiping a mother goddess does not necessarily mean that women ruled society 26 i In addition the figurines can also portray ordinary women or goddesses and it is unclear whether there really ever was a mother goddess 27 28 j 29 k List of mother goddesses EditAl Lat Asase Yaa Asherah Atabey goddess Bhumi Coatlicue Cybele Dione Doumu Durga Gaia Guanyin Heavenly Mother Mormonism Hecate Hou Tu Imoinu Irai Leima Isis Izanami Jagdamba Konthoujam Tampha Lairembi Kounu Liễu Hạnh Laikhurembi Lakshmi Lainaotabi Leimarel Sidabi Maia Mahte Mariamman Mat Zemlya Mẫu Thượng Thien Mẫu Thượng Ngan Mẫu Thoải Mẫu Địa Mokosh Mut Nammu Nana Buluku Nena e Diellit Nongthang Leima Nuit Nut goddess Nuwa 30 Pachamama Panthoibi Parvati Phouoibi Prajnaparamita Queen Mother of the West Queen of Heaven antiquity Radha Revati Rhea Rukmini Shakti Sita Tanit Terra Thien Y A Na Umay Yumjao Leima ZivaSee also EditAstrotheology List of fertility deities ShekhinahNotes Edit As an example the publication by Meskell et al 2008 of detailed data on the figurines from the site has transformed our understanding of these objects In much earlier work and writing on the site including by Mellaart these objects were seen as representational and as religious relating to a cult of the mother goddess The work of the figurine team has thoroughly undermined this interpretation In fact when properly quantified few of the figurines are clearly female In addition examination of their context of deposition shows that the objects are not in special locations but were discarded often in middens A study of the fabric of the figurines by Chris Doherty pers comm has shown that they are made of local marls and that they are unfired or low fired Many have survived only because they were accidentally burned in hearths and fires Thus all the evidence suggests that these objects were not in a separate religious sphere Rather it was the process of their daily production not their contemplation as religious symbols that was important They gave meaning at the everyday low intensity level to subjectivities and to the social world that they helped imagine Hodder 2010 The idea of the Mother Goddess also called the Great Mother or Great Goddess has dominated the imaginations of modern scholars in several fields The image of the Mother Goddess with which we are familiar today has its modern genesis in the writings of Johann Jakob Bachofen In 1861 Bachofen published his famous study Das Mutterrecht in which he developed his theory that human society progressed from hetaerism characterized by unrestricted sexual relations to matriarchy in which women ruled society and finally to the most advanced stage patriarchy Bachofen conceived of religious practice as progressing in a parallel manner from a belief in a mother goddess to a more advanced belief in a father god associating belief in a mother deity with a primitive stage in the development of human society Wherever we encounter matriarchy it is bound up with the mystery of the chthonian religion whether it invokes Demeter or is embodied by an equivalent goddess Bachofen 88 Bachofen believed that the matriarchal form of social organization derived from the maternal mystery religions 88 9 As we see with Bachofen modern theories of the Mother Goddess have inevitably been shaped by modern cultural presuppositions about gender Lynn Roller believes that m any discussions of the Mother Goddess rely on modern projections ought to be rather than on ancient evidence defining what she was Roller 9 William Ramsay the late nineteenth century archaeologist who was the first researcher to demonstrate that the principal deity of Phrygia was a mother goddess drew heavily on Bachofen s theory Roller 12 Like Bachofen s Ramsay s understanding of the national character of matriarchal pre Phrygian society is based on contestable evidence and relies on stereotypically feminine characteristics he describes matriarchal pre Phrygian society as receptive and passive not self assertive and active 12 For Ramsay this feminine character explains why this culture was conquered by the masculine warlike Phrygians with their male deities Thus constructions of ancient matriarchal societies which are inseparable from a glorification of the female element in human life 12 are suspiciously similar to modern stereotypes of the feminine that are not necessarily native to pre Phrygian culture Given these observations Bachofen s repeated emphasis on the necessity of freeing oneself from the cultural prejudices of one s own time if one is to truly understand these ancient cultures takes on an ironic tone It is not only Bachofen and Ramsay but many others after them who assume the stereotypical femininity of the Mother Goddess Many of these conceptions of what a mother goddess ought to be stem from the Judaeo Christian image of the loving nurturing mother subservient to her husband and closely bonded with her children Roller 9 Smith 2007 At one time scholars tended to use the Mother Goddess label for all female figurines found at sites This was largely because of the belief that the worship of fertility goddesses was an important part of agricultural societies all over the world and also due to a tendency to look at ancient remains through the lens of later day Hinduism in which goddess worship had an important place However scholars are now increasingly aware of the stylistic and technical differences among assemblages of female figurines Further all goddesses need not have been part of a single goddess cult and not all ancient goddesses were necessarily associated with maternity In the light of such problems the term Mother Goddess should be replaced by the longer but more neutral phrase female figurines with likely cultic significance This does not mean that none of these figurines might have had a religious or cultic significance It is indeed possible that some were either images that were worshipped or votive offerings that were part of some domestic cult or ritual However not all female figurines necessarily had such a function Whether we are looking at human or animal figurines in all cases their possible significance or function has to be assessed and cannot be assumed Apart from their form the context in which they were found is crucial Singh 2008 p 130 A popular undercurrent in fringe archaeology concerns the ostensible presence of a lost civilization hidden somewhere in the proverbial dim mists of time This lost civilization is usually portrayed as having been amazingly and precociously advanced possessing technological skills as yet still not developed even by our modern civilization and paranormal capacities of which we are not even aware This lost civilization or civilizations is usually presented as the mother culture of all subsequent historically known civilizations having passed down their knowledge to them The lost civilization was tragically destroyed through either a natural cataclysm or some catastrophic technological mishap and has been somehow hidden from us Feder 2010 There isn t a scintilla of physical evidence that anything of the kind occurred There is no archaeological evidence of a supersophisticated civilization 10000 years ago no gleaming cities no factories powered by Earth energies Feder 2010 There is another popular view of figurines which may be summed up as the Mother Goddess issue The idea of the ascendancy of the Mother Goddess as the primeval deity can be traced back to nineteenth century culture theory endorsed by Freud and Jung Parker Pearson 1999 99 100 Talalay 1991 if not before The modern manifestation was given a huge impetus in the work of Marija Gimbutas 1974 1989 1991 To reduce Gimbutas s argument to simplicity she viewed early Neolithic society as egalitarian matrifocal matrilineal and focused on worshipping a Mother Goddess Tringham 1993 as evidenced by females figurines found in Neolithic sites in the Near East and eastern Mediterranean region Few archaeologists support her notion for a number of reasons Meskell 1995 Tringham 1993 for example They maintain that the Mother Goddess is an assumption not a theory and certainly not a demonstrated thesis The critics argue that Gimbutas is blending modern myth feminist ideology and psychological theory unsupported by clinical research to impose the Mother Goddess archetype on past societies Gimbutas s own work included excavations at Achilleion Thessaly Reviewers of that work McPherron 1991 Runnels 1990 find problems with the sample size four 5 x 5 m test units on the slope of a tell use of dating methods lack of explanation of field methodology recording systems or lack thereof omission of clear criteria for discerning interior versus exterior contexts typology statistics it is hard to find a part of this work not negatively critiqued Wesler 2012 pp 65 66 In her book The Faces of the Goddess from 1997 Motz negated the popular theory of the archetypal fertility cult of the Mother Goddess which supposedly would have existed prior to the rise of patriarchy and the oppression of women We begin with an issue that is foundational to the modern study of women in the ancient world namely the Mother Goddess As Lauren Talalay demonstrates in Case Study I The Mother Goddess in Prehistory Debates and Perspectives there was a desire among scholars particularly in the 1960s and 1970s to locate a period in the distant past in which women were not secondary when female power was celebrated and when an overarching Mother Goddess was the primary divinity This myth continues to have great appeal as witnessed in goddess tourism in the Mediterranean even today While it is no longer an active scholarly theory the issue of the Mother Goddess continues to be an exemplar for the problems of studying women in antiquity mysterious images disembodied from their contexts multiple scholarly biases and motivations and conflicting interpretations of the scanty and fragmentary evidence James Dillon 2012 Worship of a nurturing Mother Goddess who oversees cosmological creation fertility and death does not necessarily entail or reflect a pacific matriarchy and female power in society Talalay 2012 It may be impossible to ever prove one way or the other that a Great Goddess existed in prehistory As the essays that follow suggest what is more likely is that interpretations of female deities their intersection with the roles of women in antiquity and the place of these debates in modern society will be rewritten many times in the future Talalay 2012 Goddesses of the prime of life are often described as mother goddesses although that term is questionable given that the goddesses may not be maternal in any conventional sense For instance the single child of Cybele was conceived upon her while she was in the form of a rock and was never reared by her see Southeastern Europe Similarly the eastern Mediterranean goddess Ninlil gave birth by making images of people from clay as did the Chinese goddess Nuwa The distinction between mother goddess and creatrix is often difficult to locate In the Pacific the goddess Papa both created the earth and gave birth to the gods The role of goddess as creatrix is common among goddesses who can create by some other mechanism than birth as Inuit Aakuluujjusi did when she threw her clothing on the ground which walked away as animals Monaghan 2014 References Edit Mellaart 1967 p 180 181 Mellaart 1967 Baler 2005 p 40 Hodder 2010 Papyrus of Ani Egyptian Book of the Dead Sir E A Wallis Budge NuVision Publications page 57 2007 ISBN 1 59547 914 7 Rankin John 1 June 1984 Teaching Hinduism Some Key Ideas British Journal of Religious Education 6 3 133 160 doi 10 1080 0141620840060306 ISSN 0141 6200 The notion of the feminine in deity is much more pronounced and is evident in the pairings of Shiva with Parvati Vishnu with Lakshmi Krishna with Radha and Ram with Sita Monier Williams Monier Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary University of Washington Archived from the original on 25 August 2017 Retrieved 26 September 2022 Katherine Anne Harper Brown Robert L 2012 The Roots of Tantra State University of New York Press pp 48 117 40 53 ISBN 978 0 7914 8890 4 Archived copy Archived from the original on 24 September 2012 Retrieved 25 December 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The Role of Women in the Church Restoration Church of Jesus Christ Archived from the original on 17 June 2008 Retrieved 17 July 2006 Amennews com 통합측 하나님의교회 안상홍증인회 이단 재규정 2011 Korean WATV Introduction Retrieved 22 March 2013 English dangdangnews com Lee In gyu column 하나님의 교회를 주의하라 2013 May 26 안상홍이 부산에서 목회를 할 때에 서울교회의 전도사였던 장길자라는 여인을 1985년부터 어머니하나님 하늘의 예루살렘 어린양의 신부등으로 숭배하고 있으며 당시 서울교회를 목회하던 김주철이 현재 하나님의 교회 총회장을 맡고 있다 Korean Sage Woman magazine Issue 79 Autumn 2010 special issue Connecting to Gaia Hutton Ronald 1999 The Triumph of the Moon A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft Oxford University Press pp 36 37 and 40 Whitmore Ben 2010 Trials of the Moon Reopening the Case for Historical Witchcraft A Critique of Ronald Hutton s Triumph of the Moon A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft Auckland Briar Books p 20 Witcombe Christopher L C E Women in the Stone Age Essay The Venus of Willendorf Retrieved 13 March 2008 www bahai org https www bahai org not found a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Drewek Paula Feminine Forms of the Divine in Baha i Scriptures Journal of Baha i Studies 5 1992 13 23 Smith 2007 Singh 2008 p 130 a b Feder 2010 Wesler 2012 pp 65 66 Motz 1997 James Dillon 2012 Talalay in James Dillon 2012 Let me be perfectly clear about my own position the maternal Great Goddess is afantasy a powerful fantasy with an astonishing capacity to resist criticism Loraux in Duby G Perrot M 1994 Talalay in James S L Dillon S 2012 Monaghan 2014 Nugua Oxford Reference Retrieved 7 August 2022 Bibliography EditBalter Michael 2006 The Goddess and the Bull Catalhoyuk An Archaeological Journey to the Dawn of Civilization Free Press ISBN 9780743243605 OCLC 883184058 Bickmore Barry R Mormonism in the Early Jewish Christian Milieu Mormonism in the Early Jewish Christian Milieu 1999 Derr Jill Mulvay The Significance of O My Father in the Personal Journey of Eliza R Snow BYU Studies 36 no 1 1996 97 84 126 Feder K L 2010 Encyclopedia of Dubious Archaeology From Atlantis to the Walam Olum Greenwood Gimbutas M 1989 The Language of the Goddess Thames amp Hudson Gimbutas M 1991 The Civilization of the Goddess Hinckley Gordon B Daughters of God Ensign November 1991 97 100 Hodder I 2010 Religion in the Emergence of Civilization Catalhoyuk as a Case Study Cambridge University Press James S L Dillon S ed 2012 A Companion to Women in the Ancient World Wiley Blackwell Jorgensen Danny L The Mormon Gender Inclusive Image of God Journal of Mormon History 27 No 1 Spring 2000 95 126 Joseph s Speckled Bird Letter to the Editor Times and Seasons 6 892 1 May 1845 Mellaart J 1967 Catal Huyuk A Neolithic Town in Anatolia McGraw Hill Monaghan P 2014 Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines New World Library Motz L 1997 The Faces of the Goddess Oxford University Press Origen Origen s Commentary on the Gospel of John Book II 6 Included in The Ante Nicene Fathers 10 vols Buffalo The Christian Literature Publishing Company 1885 1896 10 329 330 Pearson Carol Lynn Mother Wove the Morning a one woman play October 1992 ISBN 1 56236 307 7 depicting according to the video s description Eliza R Snow as one of sixteen women who throughout history search for God the Mother and invite her back into the human family Pratt Orson Journal of Discourses 18 292 12 November 1876 Singh U 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education India Smith Joseph F et al The Origin of Man Improvement Era November 1909 80 Smith Joseph King Follett Discourse 7 April 1844 published in Times and Seasons 5 15 August 1844 612 17 and reprinted in the History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints edited by B H Roberts 2d ed rev Salt Lake City Deseret Book 1976 1980 6 302 17 see also The Christian Godhead Plurality of Gods History of the Church 6 473 79 Smith A C 2007 Powerful Mysteries Myth and Politics in Virginia Woolf ProQuest Wesler K W 2012 An Archaeology of Religion University Press of America Wilcox Linda P The Mormon Concept of a Mother in Heaven Sisters in Spirit Mormon Women in Historical and Cultural Perspective edited by Maureen Ursenbach Beecher and Lavina Fielding Anderson Urbana University of Illinois Press 1987 64 77 Also Wilcox Linda P The Mormon Concept of a Mother in Heaven Women and Authority Re emerging Mormon Feminism edited by Maxine Hanks Salt Lake Signature Books 1992 3 18 Women and Authority 01 Woodruff Wilford Journal of Discourses 18 31 32 27 June 1875 Further reading EditPatai Raphael 1990 The Hebrew Goddess Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0814322710 External links Edit Media related to Mother goddesses at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mother goddess amp oldid 1144911925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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