Greek Antiquity had a very different form of religious practice than the Levantine Monomyths. The religions were centered around personal revelation, like the Abrahamic faiths, but the revelations did not come from an omniscient personal God. They came instead from an inner world that was supposed to be a reflection of the perfect world of the Gods (and this was in strange irony to their mythology that showed these very same Gods to be tremendously imperfect). Their religions also tended to be very absent of dogma, since they had no codified rituals or rites that led to personal revelation. They did have codified rites for things that lay outside of the personal relationship of the people with the god, and had to do with the relationship of the Gods with nature instead.
Joseph Campbell’s The Masks of God, Vol 1: Primitive Mythology and The Masks of God, Vol 3: Occidental Mythology talk about these differences in great detail.
It was this absence of dogma & Rites pertaining to a personal relationship with the Gods that allowed the Greeks to be more open minded about the exploration of the world than the Christians who saw the balance of the world hung upon their personal relationship with God as portrayed through the rite and dogma of the Church. Upset that Dogma, and one upsets the balance of the Universe…
At least that is what I got out of reading Campbell when I was younger. I should get those books back from a friend I loaned them to and re-read them.
What kind of evidence do we have on what common folks in Ancient Greece believed, as opposed to a tiny number of philosophers? To me ancient god-for-every-occasion polytheism sounds a lot like Medieval saint-for-every-occasion Catholicism.
Again, according to Campbell, the two are very similar, and many of the Saints were chosen to fill specific pagan holidays.
The Ancient Greeks had a very different type of belief than the more modern Christian beliefs, and even tried to make accommodations for the Jewish and Christian Gods (only to be mocked by the Jews and Christians for their efforts to be inclusive). The Ancient Greek Belief was that your Family Spirits and Ancestors did more of the job that we would think of a personal theistic god doing. These spirits watched out for family members and strove against enemy family spirits for political/temporal dominance. The Greek Gods were remote powers of the natural world and were to be avoided at all costs in daily life. The last thing you really wanted was the natural force of lightning or rain to show up in town. So, ceremonies and rituals were made to propitiate these Gods so that they would do their jobs and “Please, Please, leave us alone!”
One would petition only specific Gods whose myths made it clear that they had a vested interest in specific peoples. Athena was one such God, Zeus was another, for the peoples of Crete and Pergemon. However, outside of those specific remits, it was dangerous to play with the gods by calling for their favor or damnation.
Thus, most people in Ancient Greece, believed that such beings existed, but that “Mostly, they leave me alone as long as I make sure to observe their rites.” They were very powerful, but I don’t think that any of the Greek Gods, nor all of them combined, could be said to be omnipotent, omniscient, and certainly not omnipresent (The Greek Gods were personifications, like people who had very a specific locale).
So, yes, they were very much like the Saint-for-every-occasion. Save that they did not have the larger presence of an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent being lording over them and mankind.
Greek Antiquity had a very different form of religious practice than the Levantine Monomyths. The religions were centered around personal revelation, like the Abrahamic faiths, but the revelations did not come from an omniscient personal God. They came instead from an inner world that was supposed to be a reflection of the perfect world of the Gods (and this was in strange irony to their mythology that showed these very same Gods to be tremendously imperfect). Their religions also tended to be very absent of dogma, since they had no codified rituals or rites that led to personal revelation. They did have codified rites for things that lay outside of the personal relationship of the people with the god, and had to do with the relationship of the Gods with nature instead.
Joseph Campbell’s The Masks of God, Vol 1: Primitive Mythology and The Masks of God, Vol 3: Occidental Mythology talk about these differences in great detail.
It was this absence of dogma & Rites pertaining to a personal relationship with the Gods that allowed the Greeks to be more open minded about the exploration of the world than the Christians who saw the balance of the world hung upon their personal relationship with God as portrayed through the rite and dogma of the Church. Upset that Dogma, and one upsets the balance of the Universe…
At least that is what I got out of reading Campbell when I was younger. I should get those books back from a friend I loaned them to and re-read them.
What kind of evidence do we have on what common folks in Ancient Greece believed, as opposed to a tiny number of philosophers? To me ancient god-for-every-occasion polytheism sounds a lot like Medieval saint-for-every-occasion Catholicism.
Again, according to Campbell, the two are very similar, and many of the Saints were chosen to fill specific pagan holidays.
The Ancient Greeks had a very different type of belief than the more modern Christian beliefs, and even tried to make accommodations for the Jewish and Christian Gods (only to be mocked by the Jews and Christians for their efforts to be inclusive). The Ancient Greek Belief was that your Family Spirits and Ancestors did more of the job that we would think of a personal theistic god doing. These spirits watched out for family members and strove against enemy family spirits for political/temporal dominance. The Greek Gods were remote powers of the natural world and were to be avoided at all costs in daily life. The last thing you really wanted was the natural force of lightning or rain to show up in town. So, ceremonies and rituals were made to propitiate these Gods so that they would do their jobs and “Please, Please, leave us alone!”
One would petition only specific Gods whose myths made it clear that they had a vested interest in specific peoples. Athena was one such God, Zeus was another, for the peoples of Crete and Pergemon. However, outside of those specific remits, it was dangerous to play with the gods by calling for their favor or damnation.
Thus, most people in Ancient Greece, believed that such beings existed, but that “Mostly, they leave me alone as long as I make sure to observe their rites.” They were very powerful, but I don’t think that any of the Greek Gods, nor all of them combined, could be said to be omnipotent, omniscient, and certainly not omnipresent (The Greek Gods were personifications, like people who had very a specific locale).
So, yes, they were very much like the Saint-for-every-occasion. Save that they did not have the larger presence of an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent being lording over them and mankind.