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In the myths of Creation by a Supreme Bring, we are to understand first that the Creator is eternal in that s/he exists outside of Time and his/her creation and so these narratives open with the phrase "In the beginning." In addition, the Creator exists alone and the act of creation is conscious planning and deliberation. Last, the Creator chooses freely to relate to his/her creation, or not. In this chapter, we will consider representative myths from: the Hebrews, the Quiche-Maya, Japan, and the (Jewish) Kaballah.
The Popul Vuh or The Book of Council is
the Mayan
The form of mystical expression known as Kabbalah includes as a characteristic symbol known as the ten sefirot mentioned first in the Sefer Yesirah (Book of Creation) a cosmogonical and cosmological work probably written during the fourth century C.E. The creation narrative presented here is associated with this Hebrew tradition, and involves the mystical interpretation of numbers and letters. |
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