Exploring Cultural Parallels

26
Exploring Cultural Exploring Cultural Parallels Parallels Comparing Eve and Pandora Comparing Eve and Pandora

description

Exploring Cultural Parallels. Comparing Eve and Pandora. Creation stories reveal a great deal about a culture. What is the nature of mankind? What is the nature of God/the Gods? How do men and women relate to each other? How should mankind relate to God/the gods?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Exploring Cultural Parallels

Page 1: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Exploring Cultural Exploring Cultural ParallelsParallels

Comparing Eve and PandoraComparing Eve and Pandora

Page 2: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Creation stories reveal a great deal Creation stories reveal a great deal about a culture.about a culture.

• What is the nature of mankind?• What is the nature of God/the Gods?• How do men and women relate to each other? • How should mankind relate to God/the gods?

Page 3: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Consider the Greek and Hebrew stories Consider the Greek and Hebrew stories ofof

Pandora EveEveand

Page 4: Exploring Cultural Parallels

We can find these similaritiesWe can find these similarities

• Both stories describe a “first woman,”• Both women were created after the first man.• Both were created by a supreme male god.• Both women introduce death, woe, evil and toil

into the world. • Both stories reveal man’s inability to resist

temptation.

Page 5: Exploring Cultural Parallels

But consider these differencesBut consider these differences

Page 6: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Pandora

was created in an atmosphere of robbery and

deceit.

Think about it--

Page 7: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Prometheus was a god long before Zeus took the Throne on Olympus. In fact, he fought for Zeus against Cronos, but he never had true respect for Zeus

He felt that the new Olympian gods had no compassion for each other or the mortals on

earth below.

Page 8: Exploring Cultural Parallels

When Zeus took the throne, he had no interest in the mortal race of men. He intended for them to simply die off.

He said that knowledge and divine gifts would only bring misery to mortals, and he insisted that Prometheus not interfere with

his plans.

Page 9: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Prometheus loved man more than the Olympian gods. After all they had banished his family to Tartarus.

So when Zeus decreed that man must give the gods a portion of each animal they killed, Prometheus decided to trick Zeus. (He was afraid that men would starve.)

Page 10: Exploring Cultural Parallels

This was Prometheus first trick.

At a banquet, he prepared 2 sacrifices. He made one sacrifice of fat and bones (but he made it look good.) The other sacrifice was of the finest meat, hidden in the hide of the animal.

Page 11: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Zeus was to pick the sacrifice he preferred. (This would be the kind of sacrifice men would offer him from then on.)

Fooled, Zeus picked the bones, AND since he had given his word, he had to accept that as his share for future sacrifices from men.

But boy was he was angry!

Page 12: Exploring Cultural Parallels

In his anger, Zeus took fire away from man.

But Prometheus lit a torch from the sun and brought it back to earth.

Zeus was so enraged that he decided to inflict a terrible punishment on both man and Prometheus.

Page 13: Exploring Cultural Parallels

To punish man, Zeus had Hephaestus create a creature of stunning beauty. The gods gave her many charms, but Zeus had Hermes give her a cheating heart and lying tongue. A final gift was a jar which Pandora was forbidden to open.

Page 14: Exploring Cultural Parallels

So from the beginning, Pandora was So from the beginning, Pandora was intended to be a curse to man, one that he intended to be a curse to man, one that he could not resist.could not resist.

Man was to yearn for Man was to yearn for her and to “long for her and to “long for

and embrace and embrace the very source of his the very source of his

torment.”torment.”

Page 15: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Now consider the Hebrew Eve.Now consider the Hebrew Eve.

She was created in an atmosphere of love and compassion felt by God

for his creation.

God had observed Adam’s loneliness and felt that he needed a help meet.

Page 16: Exploring Cultural Parallels

After creating the birds and the beasts, God saw that they were not enough for Adam.

So God created Eve, not far away on Olympus or in heaven, but on earth. Since Eve was made fromAdam’s rib, she couldn’t be evil. She was a part of him. Eve was not created to torment Adam, but to complete him.

Page 17: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Now consider the WAY each woman Now consider the WAY each woman brought evil into the world.brought evil into the world.

First, Pandora brought evils with her in a box from the gods.

Second, Pandora was completely alone when she opened the box. She was not fooled by a sly deceiver.

Page 18: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Now look at EveNow look at Eve..Unlike Pandora, Eve was not alone. Adam

was with her. He could have spoken upat any time before she ate the fruit.

“She took of the fruit … and did eat; and she gave also unto her husband with her, and he did eat.” Genesis 3: 6

Page 19: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Second, Eve was tricked by Satan. She did not act entirely on her own. According to scripture, the

false deceiver tricked her . . .

as Adam stood by . . . saying nothing.

Page 20: Exploring Cultural Parallels

PunishmentPunishmentOnly the suffering of men is mentioned by Hesiod, who speaks very hatefully of women. According to Hesiod, since there is no good in women, their evil is a two-edged sword-- If men marry, they will live in torment; but if they do not, they will have no sons to care for them in their old age –and, when unmarried men die, their property will be divided up by distant relatives. No acknowledge- ment is made about the suffering of women.

Page 21: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Now consider the Biblical Eve:Now consider the Biblical Eve:

The Hebrews were not so one-sided in their description.

The Bible acknowledges the suffering of, not just men who must toil for their food, but women as well, who will bring forth children in pain.

Page 22: Exploring Cultural Parallels

So what do these stories tell us about So what do these stories tell us about the cultures who created them?the cultures who created them?

• To what extent does the Supreme God value man in each culture?

• What happens to those who disobey the Supreme God in Greek and Hebrew literature?

• How are women viewed in each culture?• Which genders are responsible for

hardship and woe in each culture?

Page 23: Exploring Cultural Parallels

The myths and stories told by a society reveal much about that culture’s values.

Compare and/or contrast the myth of Pandora and the story of Eve and explain what each story reveals about its culture.

Identify at least 3 major issues.

Page 24: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Information gathered from the following sources:Information gathered from the following sources:

• Hesiod. Theogony. (Tr. 1914 by Hugh G. Evelyn-White) (l. 492-617) January 25, 2003) Available online at http://www.hermetic.com/texts/hesiod.html

• Hesiod. Works and kDays. (Tr. 1914 by Hugh G. Evelyn-White) (l. 42-272) January 25, 2003) Available online at http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hesiod/works.htm

• Hunt, J. M. The Creation of Man by Prometheus. (n.d.) (January 22, 2003)• http://edweb.sdsu.edu/EdWeb_Folder/People/BDodge/scaffold/GG/

creationMan.html

• Phipps, William E. Eve and Pandora Contrasted. Theology Today. April 1988 vol. 4 available online at http://theologytoday.ptsem.edu/apr1988/v45-1-article3.htm

Page 25: Exploring Cultural Parallels

• Prometheus International, Inc. GREEK MYTHOLOGY OF PROMETHEUS. (2002) (January 25, 2002) http://www.prometheuskkp.com/mythman/prometheus1.htm

• XAVR. Prometheus the Rebel. Greek Mythology. (1998) (January 254, 2003.) http://www.messagenet.com/myths/bios/promethe.html

Page 26: Exploring Cultural Parallels

Created by Rosemary C. Perry January Created by Rosemary C. Perry January 26, 2003 for 26, 2003 for Myths And LegendsMyths And Legends