Serpents~

topic posted Thu, May 1, 2008 - 6:23 PM by  ஹૐ adya
Serpents :: Eve and the Identity of Women

Copyright © (text only) 2000. Christopher L. C. E. Witcombe

"The ancient cult of the Mother Goddess as manifest in Canaan in the popular Baal/Asherah cult was one that the Yahwists were most intent on suppressing. The transformation in Genesis 3 of the Goddess's wise serpent into a creature feared and despised has been described as one of the more successful campaigns perpetrated against the older cult.

These days the serpent is regarded as one of the chief symbols of the Mother Goddess and attempts have been made to reclaim it as a creature of significance to women.

In the English language a distinction can be made between "snakes" on the one hand and "serpents" on the other. "Snake" is a native English word commonly used to describe the zoological creature. The word "serpent", however, sounds more alien and is usually reserved for large or venomous specimens.

One lexicographer observed that snakes are insidious, cold and contemptible, while serpents are terrible, powerful, and beautiful. The term serpent also opens up enormous metaphorical possibilities. The relationship of snake to serpent is not unlike that of penis to phallus.

The serpent has symbolised many different ideas. One of the earliest and most fundamental, derived from solar mythology, is lightning and the storm-cloud. Lightning is snake-like both in its form and in the speed with which it strikes.

It was also associated with storms and rain. Baal, who was represented as a serpent, was a storm god who fertilized the earth with rain. At the same time, however, the serpent was seen as an earth-dwelling creature and so regarded as autochthonous and the natural guardian of earth's treasures.

Over time, the serpent has also been associated with life, longevity, ancestry, generation, health, healing, and immortality. Many cultures regard the serpent as wise and clever. In the story of Eve, however, this wisdom is twisted into a devious form of cleverness described as "cunning". The term is related to the female genitals (as the modern slang term makes clear), and refers to the site, or source, of women's learning, insight, wisdom and knowledge (literally "carnal knowledge").

The serpent has been connected in one way or another with both the female and the male sex. Its association with women would appear to be through its sinuous, curving, sensuous body, and through its ability to fascinate with its eyes.

Its association with men would seem to lie primarily in its phallic form; long before the Freudian 20th-century, the serpent was seen as a symbol of the male penis.

In the ancient world, for example, Plutarch reports the legend that Alexander the Great was fathered by a snake that his presumptive father, Philip of Macedonia, had seen in bed with his wife Olympias.

Similarly, Suetonius, records that Octavius, later Emperor Augustus, was believed to have been divinely conceived after his mother, Atia, had been penetrated by a snake that mysteriously appeared while she dozed at a midnight service at the Temple of Apollo."

read more :: witcombe.sbc.edu/eve-women/serpents.html
  • Re: Serpents~

    Thu, May 1, 2008 - 7:43 PM
    With all this talk of Serpents and Snakes on this tribe, I have mentioned almost every Goddess associated with serpents except for Manasa Devi. Manasa Devi has some very interesting legends associated with her. She is also supposed to be bitter enemies with Parvathi. Have you ever read about Manasa Devi? She is much more of a village and tribal Goddess, much like Sheetala, The small pox Goddess. They both have very interesting stories, and very interesting requirements of their devotees.
  • Re: Serpents~

    Fri, May 2, 2008 - 1:42 AM
    Om Shanti

    The very word Serpant seems closely associated with Sarpam as we call it the local tongue.
    Snakes in India are called Sarpams/Nagams etc.
    Association with the Gods /Goddess is well defined.
    Among the Trinity ,Lord Shiva - wears one round the neck
    and Lord Vishnu reclining of the Great Serpant -Anantha.
    Lord Ganesha has one wound on the belly.
    Lord Subramanya is associated with serpants.
    The Goddess in most forms has hooded snake behind the Crown.

    Then of course Nagaraja,Nagayakshi,Srapayakshi...

    One interesting aspect of Serpant worship is its deep rooted relationship with Agrarian communities and civilisations.
    Snakes are even today regarded as farmers friend,supporting the ensuring good harvest (fertility )of earth by ridding them of rodents.

    They are in general harmless to human beings irrespective of being poisonous or not.
    The fatal venom lies not in the fangs of the snake but in the herats of human kind who fail to understand these lovely beings.

    Om Shanti


  • Re: Serpents~

    Fri, May 2, 2008 - 6:18 AM
    I love serpents and snakes. And I also respect them, greatly. I think of them as representing our Wise Elders who choose to be close to the Earth.

    For me, they are helpful and very loving. Once when I was hiking through the woods with my friend, my friend realized she had lost her wallet. We re-traced our steps, and when we were climbing back down a bank, I noticed that there was a snake coiled up about 6 inches from my hand. Right next to the snake was my friend's wallet! (My friend was deathly afraid of snakes, but I think this snake was trying to tell her that snakes could be her friend....)

    When I met a woman who was to be my longest-running friend, I took her for a walk around our backyard and there was a ball of snakes all coiled together near the edge of the woods!

    When my dear prime-mate and I were recently married and having a very nice quiet time in the wilds of West Virginia, we were sitting watching a little creek meander near our shack. As we were watching, a fish jumped and a snake popped up and got it, in mid-air! Later, we saw that snake and its "mate" coiling around each other as they played in the water....

    There are many more stories, but I take the snake as one of my totems....my Southern totem, who connects me with my child-self. I often sing songs to the snakes as I hike through the fields and forests.....
  • Re: Serpents~

    Fri, May 2, 2008 - 1:14 PM
    Snakes are extremely beneficial to mankind. They help keep the rats and mice from our grain, and their populations in check. And that has been beneficial in many ways.

    Snakes remind me most of renewal. Coming out of hibernation in the spring, shedding their skin, and so on.
    I like watching them move, and you can see the snake clearly in its respective martial arts forms, I love the movements so much!

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