## Recommended Readings: Did God Have a Wife? - https://amzn.to/4oweMOe A Reassessment of Asherah - https://amzn.to/3Lpy3Cb The Cult of Asherah in Ancient Israel and Judah - https://amzn.to/47rcM3G --- Asherah is presented as a very ancient Northwest Semitic goddess and cultic object whose role evolves from Amorite and Canaanite “queen mother” and consort of El to a contested, partially erased figure in Israelite religion, possibly functioning at some stages as the consort of Yahweh and later reinterpreted in Kabbalah as the feminine aspect of the divine. Below is a structured outline of the video, followed by a historical timeline based on the events and developments it describes. --- ## Video Outline ## 1. Framing: Monotheism by Addition vs. Subtraction[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=0)] - Western monotheism can emerge either by philosophical argument from no gods to one God, or by starting from many gods and progressively demoting or erasing them until only one remains. - Among ancient Israelites, this “subtraction” process affected various deities (El, Baal, Mot, Yam, Lotan), whose roles were consolidated into Yahweh, with Asherah being the most conspicuous “loss” through demonization and erasure. ## 2. Yahweh’s Origins and Assimilation to El[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=197)] - Yahweh likely entered the Canaanite pantheon from the south in the late Bronze or early Iron Age as a youthful storm-warrior deity who later became the national god of Israel. - Over time, Yahweh was assimilated to El, the bearded high god of the Canaanite pantheon, and elements of Baal were also folded into him, forming a composite Israelite concept of Yahweh. - Following the destructions of Israel (722 BCE) and Judah (586 BCE) and the Babylonian Exile, henotheism/monolatry centered on Yahweh moves toward full monotheism. ## 3. The “Bug” of Assimilation: Yahweh Inherits El’s Consort[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=281)] - Early Yahweh appears as a bachelor storm god without a consort, similar to Baal and his sister Anat. - When Yahweh is assimilated to El, he effectively “inherits” El’s wife Athirat (Hebrew cognate Asherah), but this relationship becomes strained and ultimately ends in a sort of “divorce,” with Asherah demoted and erased. - Around 40 references to Asherah in the Hebrew Bible show shared cultic space between Yahweh and Asherah, which Deuteronomistic editors condemn as an abomination needing removal. ## 4. Etymology and Name: What Does “Asherah/Athirat” Mean?[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=428)] - Several older proposals about the name (e.g., “she who treads upon the sea” or “wife/consort” roots) are rejected because they are not attested and lack Semitic linguistic support. - A better-attested Semitic root (aleph-tav-resh) across Phoenician, Akkadian, Aramaic, and Ugaritic means “holy place” or “sanctuary,” suggesting a meaning like “she of the sanctuary,” though the name’s exact meaning remains elusive. ## 5. Earliest Historical Appearance: Asherah in Old Babylonian Context (c. 18th c. BCE)[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=499)] - Asherah (Ashratu) appears in a votive text for Hammurabi (~mid-18th century BCE), centuries before Israel and Yahweh are attested. - In this early evidence, she is “lady of the mountain,” has erotic associations (“lady of voluptuousness and happiness”), is daughter‑in‑law of the heaven god An, shares epithets with Ishtar, and is associated with the Amorite high god Amurru (“Lord of the mountain”). - God lists and cultic texts confirm she had a temple in Babylon (“house of the luxury of the land”), appears in New Year (Akitu) processions, and may be linked to divination (e.g., “Asherah wizard”). ## 6. Asherah in a Hittite Mythic Narrative[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=697)] - A Hittite text (likely translating a West Semitic myth) portrays Asherah (Asheratu) trying to seduce a storm god (probably Baal), who reports her to her husband El Cornisa (“El, creator of the earth”). - El instructs the storm god to sleep with her to humiliate her; the storm god boasts of killing 77 of her 88 children, causing her seven years of mourning before Asheratu and El plot against him. - This narrative reinforces Asherah as consort of the chief god, erotically charged, mother of many divine children, and involved in complex storm-god politics. ## 7. Ugarit: Asherah/Athirat as Queen Mother and Lady of the Sea[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=800)] - Ugaritic texts (c. late 13th–12th centuries BCE) preserve major material on Athirat: primarily the Kirta epic, the Baal cycle, and assorted ritual/myth fragments. ## 7.1 Kirta/Keret Epic[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=833)] - Kirta, son of El, seeks an heir and is instructed to attack Udum to marry Hurriya; he stops at Athirat’s shrine, promising gold and silver in return for success. - After Athirat ensures success (marriage and offspring), Kirta fails to honor his vow; Athirat curses him (and likely his eldest son, whom she had nursed), triggering illness and family conflict. - Athirat appears as powerful consort of El, connected to royal progeny and nursing divine children, and fiercely defending her honor when oaths to her are broken. ## 7.2 Baal Cycle[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=963)] - Athirat is “lady of the sea” and mother of the gods (including Yam/sea and Mot/death), consort of El, and a domestic yet erotic figure doing laundry with spindle whorl by the sea. - She has a tense relationship with Baal and Anat: she is horrified by them but agrees to petition El for Baal’s palace; she rides a donkey while Anat walks, preserving Athirat’s dignity. - After Baal’s apparent death by Mot, Athirat enjoys selecting Athtar the terrible (one of her sons) as ruler, but Baal’s return leads to the slaughter of many of Athirat’s children, echoing the Hittite motif. - Athirat’s primary roles: queen mother (Rabitu), consort of El, mother of gods and royal heirs; there is little direct textual evidence that she is a general fertility/agricultural goddess, despite maternal aspects. ## 7.3 Miscellaneous Ugaritic Material[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1201)] - Additional texts confirm Athirat as progenitor and nurse of divine beings, object of sacrifice (including animal offerings), and active cult figure in Ugarit. - Earlier attempts to associate her with lions and serpents are now viewed as misidentifications; newer scholarship rejects that iconography for her. ## 8. Asherah in the Hebrew Bible: Cultic Object vs. Goddess[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1251)] - About forty occurrences of “Asherah” (with feminine and masculine plurals Asherot, Asherim) appear, mostly referring to cultic objects (trees, poles, wooden structures, possibly statues), sometimes in association with altars or “high places.” - These Asherot/Asherim can be planted, cut down, and burned, reinforcing the idea of wooden/arboreal cult items; Greek and Latin translations render them as “groves,” and rabbinic tradition interprets them as worshipped trees or trees with idols. - References cluster in Deuteronomistic history, where Asherah objects and shrines are condemned, destroyed, or used to explain Yahweh’s wrath and justify reform. ## 9. Glimpses of a Goddess in Israelite Texts (and Their Ambiguity)[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1330)] - The word “Asherah” frequently appears in the plural (with definite article), often suggesting cult objects rather than a single goddess; sometimes Asherah and Baal are mentioned together in plural forms. - A masculine plural “Asherim” applied to a originally feminine term may be either mockery, grammatical drift, or evidence that the goddess identity had been forgotten by later editors. - Queen mother Maacah is removed from her position for making “a horrid thing for the Asherah”; her son Asa destroys and burns it—possibly echoing Athirat’s queen‑mother role but remaining tantalizingly unclear. - The Elijah–Baal confrontation briefly mentions prophets of Asherah, but they vanish later in the narrative and may be a scribal mistake. - Josiah’s reforms include removing an Asherah from the Jerusalem Temple and burning it in the Kidron Valley. - Overall, only a few passages plausibly treat Asherah as a personal goddess; many scholars see mainly cult objects, while others argue that the object and goddess have become conflated. ## 10. Prophets, Chronicler, and Further Erasure[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1545)] - Prophetic literature barely mentions Asherah (only four occurrences), typically in retrospective or future-oriented condemnations of Asherahs and associated cities. - Hosea 2 has been interpreted by some as a “divorce bill” between Yahweh and Asherah, but scholarly consensus reads it as between Yahweh and Israel. - The Chronicler seems either to erase any trace of Asherah or to be ignorant of her history, with all references occurring in plural forms, further distancing the word from a personal deity. - The net result: the Hebrew Bible gives extensive references to Asherah/Asherot/Asherim but almost no usable narrative about a goddess, especially not as mother or fertility deity. ## 11. Continuing Cult South of Israel: South Arabian Inscriptions[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1698)] - While Asherah is being suppressed or forgotten in Judah, inscriptions in pre‑Islamic South Arabia still invoke Athirat as part of an astral triad, likely in relation to lunar deities like Wadd and Amm; she may be solar, but this is uncertain. - These inscriptions mostly record dedication formulas, temple restorations, and possibly a month named after her, demonstrating that her cult persisted well into the first millennium BCE in Arabia. ## 12. Two Key Archaeological Inscriptions: Yahweh and “His Asherah”[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1752)] - Two 8th-century BCE inscriptions—Khirbet el-Qom (Judah) and Kuntillet Ajrud (Sinai)—introduce the formula “Yahweh and his Asherah.” ## 12.1 Khirbet el‑Qom[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1758)] - A tomb inscription blessed “Uriahu” by Yahweh and “his Asherah”; the text is damaged and full of scratches, complicating reading. - Scholarly consensus is that Yahweh and “his Asherah” are both invoked as agents of blessing for Uriahu, but the identity of Asherah (object vs. goddess) is debated. ## 12.2 Kuntillet Ajrud[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1859)] - Two large storage jars (pithoi) bear inscriptions: one blesses people “by Yahweh of Samaria and his Asherah”; another blesses “by Yahweh of Teman and his Asherah,” echoing priestly benediction language. - Yahweh appears in localized forms (Samaria, Teman), and the same “his Asherah” formula occurs. - Pithos A includes imagery: bovine nursing (often linked to divine nurturing), and seated figures with Egyptian Bes‑like features near a harp player; these may depict a deity and consort, but the connection to the inscriptions is contested. ## 13. The Grammatical Debate: Is “His Asherah” a Goddess or an Object?[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=1925)] - Classical Hebrew typically does not attach pronominal suffixes like “his” to proper names (e.g., “his Asherah”), leading some scholars to deny that a goddess is meant, instead seeing a cultic item associated with Yahweh. - However, cultic objects in the Hebrew Bible (ark, altar) don’t themselves give blessings; persons do, suggesting that “his Asherah” here functions like a personal divine agent. - Iconography of seated figures and consort‑like imagery on the pithoi supports reading Asherah as Yahweh’s partner, but this remains hotly debated. ## 14. Presenter’s Editorial Position on the Inscriptions[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=2006)] - The video’s presenter argues that if these inscriptions named other divine pairs (El and his Asherah, Ra and his Hathor, Zeus and his Hera), no one would hesitate to see a deity and consort. - He suggests theological bias and a prior commitment to monotheism influence reluctance to accept Asherah as Yahweh’s consort, and proposes that 8th-century Hebrew grammar might simply differ from later “classical” norms. - In his view, the simplest reading is that Yahweh and his apparent wife/consort Asherah are jointly sought for blessings by the living and dead in these inscriptions. ## 15. Chronological Irony: Asherah Older and Better Attested than Yahweh[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=2105)] - Asherah is epigraphically attested roughly 800 years before Yahweh’s appearance on the Mesha Stele; for much of early history, Yahweh is effectively a latecomer relative to Asherah. - Israelite history appears to have both idolized Yahweh and systematically erased or marginalized Asherah, the divine queen mother, from the textual record. ## 16. Kabbalah and the Return of the Divine Feminine[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=2135)] - The Zohar (Sefer ha‑Zohar), a core Kabbalistic text, includes a striking passage (149a) arguing that the Asherah prohibition was meant to prevent one‑sided worship, not to reject the feminine divine altogether. - It reinterprets Asherah as the female aspect of Asher/Yesod (a sefirah of potency), effectively equating Asherah with the Shekhinah, the indwelling divine presence. - Thus Baal (literally “husband”) and Asherah become the symbolic divine couple; Asherah, once erased and mocked, returns at the very heart of Jewish mysticism as the feminine half of God. ## 17. Closing Remarks and Reading Suggestions[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m60p7BEnN5Y&t=2209)] - The presenter notes extensive modern scholarship on Asherah, offers a curated reading list, and emphasizes that the Yahweh series will continue, especially with apocalyptic developments. - The episode ends by restating the relevance of exploring Asherah to understand the evolution of Israelite religion and the interplay of monotheism, gender, and divine imagery. --- ## Historical Timeline of Asherah’s Development Below is a chronological timeline of the main historical-religious developments described in the video. Dates are approximate and reflect the narrative presented. ## Bronze Age and Earlier Context (c. 18th–13th centuries BCE) - **Mid‑18th c. BCE: Asherah (Ashratu) in Old Babylonian Texts** Asherah appears in a votive offering to Hammurabi, described as lady of the mountain, erotic, daughter‑in‑law of An, consort of Amorite high god Amurru, with a temple in Babylon and presence in Akitu processions. - **c. 1700–1200 BCE: Asherah/Asheratu in Hittite Myth** A Hittite mythic narrative (probably translating a West Semitic story) shows Asheratu as wife of El Cornisa, attempting to seduce a storm god, followed by humiliation, loss of many children, and subsequent plotting—establishing her as a powerful yet vulnerable consort and mother. - **Late Bronze Age (c. 13th–12th c. BCE): Athirat at Ugarit** Ugaritic archives, destroyed and preserved around 1185 BCE, depict Athirat as: - Consort of El and queen mother (Rabitu). - Lady of the sea and mother of gods in the Baal cycle, resisting Baal’s rise yet mediating for his palace. - Patron of royal progeny and divine nursing in the Kirta epic. - Object of sacrifices and cult in Ugarit. ## Emergence of Israel and Yahweh (c. 12th–9th centuries BCE) - **Post–Bronze Age Collapse (after c. 1200 BCE)** The collapse of major powers (including Hittites) creates space for new polities like Israel; Canaanite religious ideas, including El/Athirat/Baal, form the background against which Yahweh emerges. - **Late Bronze/Early Iron Age: Yahweh Imported into Canaanite Pantheon** Yahweh appears as a southern storm-warrior deity (“rider on the clouds”) introduced into the Canaanite religious milieu. - **Assimilation of Yahweh to El (Iron Age)** As Yahweh gains prominence, he is assimilated to El, inheriting El’s throne imagery and potentially El’s consort Athirat/Asherah, setting up a conceptual Yahweh–Asherah pairing. ## Israelite Monarchic Period and Biblical Redaction (c. 9th–6th centuries BCE) - **9th–8th c. BCE: Widespread Cultic Use of Asherah in Israel and Judah** In practice, Israelites maintain cult objects called Asherah/Asherim (trees, poles, wooden structures) near altars and high places, sometimes even within the Jerusalem Temple. These objects appear in narratives about kings (e.g., Maacah and Asa, Josiah) and prophetic polemics, indicating real cultic presence. - **Mid‑8th c. BCE: Khirbet el‑Qom Inscription (“Yahweh and his Asherah”)** Tomb 2 at Khirbet el‑Qom records a blessing for Uriahu “by Yahweh and his Asherah,” implying a relationship where Asherah (whatever her precise identity) participates in dispensing blessings alongside Yahweh. - **Early–Mid‑8th c. BCE: Kuntillet Ajrud Inscriptions (“Yahweh of Samaria/Teman and his Asherah”)** Two pithoi from Sinai bear formulas blessing individuals “by Yahweh of Samaria” or “Yahweh of Teman” and “his Asherah,” echoing priestly benediction language and accompanying imagery possibly depicting a divine couple. These inscriptions provide the strongest epigraphic evidence that some Israelites or related communities recognized a Yahweh–Asherah pairing in cultic practice. - **8th–7th c. BCE: Deuteronomistic Reform and Polemic** Deuteronomistic texts emphasize Yahweh’s exclusive worship, condemning Asherah objects, Baal, and other deities. Asherah poles/trees are cut down, burned, or removed from sanctuaries (including the Jerusalem Temple), and prophets (Isaiah, Jeremiah, Micah) anticipate a future without Asherahs. - **722 BCE: Fall of Northern Kingdom (Israel)** The destruction of Israel contributes to theological reflection and a movement toward Yahweh-centered henotheism or monolatry. - **586 BCE: Fall of Judah and Babylonian Exile** The exile further intensifies theological consolidation, moving Israelite religion toward monotheism centered on Yahweh; within this process, Asherah’s cult and goddess identity are marginalized or suppressed. - **Post‑Exilic Period: Chronicler and Further Erasure** In Chronicles and later biblical redaction, references to Asherah are pluralized and de‑personalized; Asherah as a goddess virtually disappears from the textual record, replaced by generic cultic objects or forgotten altogether. ## Parallel and Later Developments (South Arabia and Mysticism) - **1st Millennium BCE (Pre‑Islamic Arabia): South Arabian Athirat** Inscriptions from South Arabia record Athirat as part of an astral triad with lunar deities, with dedications, temple restorations, and possibly a month named after her, attesting to a continuing southern cult independent of Israelite suppression. - **Medieval Period: Kabbalah and the Zohar (Sefer ha‑Zohar)** The Zohar (e.g., folio 149a) reinterprets Asherah not as a forbidden rival goddess but as the female aspect of Asher/Yesod and identifies her with the Shekhinah, the feminine presence of God. This mystical reinterpretation symbolically “returns” Asherah from exile, uniting masculine and feminine aspects of the divine and reframing earlier prohibitions as warnings against one‑sided worship rather than rejection of divine femininity. ## Conceptual and Historiographical Points - **Asherah’s Seniority Over Yahweh** From the perspective of epigraphic evidence, Asherah is attested centuries before Yahweh; for much of ancient Near Eastern history, Yahweh is a later figure in a religious landscape that already included Asherah. - **Monotheism, Erasure, and Feminine Divine** The evolution toward Yahweh‑centered monotheism involves both consolidation of storm and high‑god imagery and the erasure or redefinition of Asherah, reflecting broader dynamics of gender, power, and textual control in religious history. ---