There
has been a very interesting occurrence in some churches in the country
where as a result of the operation of the prophetic gift women's lives
and livelihoods have been transformed.Prostitutes and other women of
nocturnal professions have been convicted and they have walked into the
church seeking deliverance and starting a new life.
The most
recent saw the pole dancer of fame, Bev Sibanda, getting to a church and
going through a deliverance session. One of the tabloids ran a headline
saying "Bev's manager loses job!"
This was testimony to the fact
that she had taken a new livelihood that did not need the services of
the old manager. She has now gotten herself a new manager!
The
church, the temple of today, has provided her a new life and the
possibility of a new livelihood! It brings us to the subject of today,
remarkably, where we would like to discuss the case of temple women in a
different light from last week's.
Last week we spoke of the
development of the nunnery but today we take a switch and interrogate a
different type of nun – the temple prostitute!
When the women that
forsake the life of the street and the night come into the church but
do not transform through deliverance I have no doubt they will remain in
the church but continue with the practice of the street they were used
to.
The new incomprehensible behaviours of some "temples" of late
do inform one that we are in a way returning to the ancient practice
where there were temple prostitutes!
In the past series we have walked the path of understanding the sanctity of sex in the realms of understanding its spirituality.
Nuns
as we saw were given to surrender their sexuality to God. Another
extreme is when these same women in the ancient pagan temples were used
as carnal representatives of the divinity.
They served the god. They provided a link between the deity and the people.
The
connection to that god for the people was through a sacred sex act!
Surely this was not the sacrament we spoke of two weeks ago!
It
was in these acts that a man considering himself unclean and vile would
then pass through the temple and cleanse himself by engaging in ritual
sex with the temple woman on the altar.
Aphrodite was one such deity in the ancient eastern communities' pantheon.
Herodotus,
the famous historian, reported a "wholly shameful" custom by which
every woman "once in her life" had intercourse near the temple of
Aphrodite (Ishtar) with the first stranger who threw "a silver coin"
into her lap (Herodotus 1983:121-122,I:199) Similarly, it is also
described by other documentation the punishment of women who declined to
shave their heads in mourning for Adonis: "For a single day they (had
to) stand offering their beauty for sale . . . (in a) market . . . open
to foreigners only, and the payment (became) an offering to Aphrodite
(Astarte)" (Lucian 1976:13-15). The Christian writers accused pagans of
indulging in orgies in honour of Aphrodite, ritual pre-marital sex, and
"cult prostitution" (Oden 2000:142-144).
It is true that much
ritual activity in the ancient Eastern Mediterranean focused on
promoting the fecundity of the land. This was linked to the productivity
in a largely agricultural community.
This was before the age of
industrialisation. So in this case the temple was the centre of the
gods, who in turn gave and sustained life.
Since procreation is through sex it follows that for the land to be productive sex has to be part of the process.
But
it cannot be sex anywhere with anyone save for sex in the temple with
one linked spiritually and in service to the god of fecundity! In early
Mesopotamia, for instance, the "Sacred Marriage," with its fertility
focus, could possibly have involved a "sacred prostitute."
Someone once asked me how the women would manage it…the truth is it was a spiritual act therefore they had the strength.
Notwithstanding,
women have the physiology that is accommodative of all sizes. Just
think of how your big head came out of your mother!!
Webster's
English Dictionary defines a prostitute as, first, ". . . a woman who
engages in sex for money; whore; harlot"; second, ". . . a man who
engages in sexual acts for money"(1996:1553). According to one scholar,
"Cultic prostitution is a practice involving the female and at times the
male devotees of fertility deities, who presumably dedicated their
earnings to their deity."
The "Sacred Marriage" rite was one of
"the motives of the practice, particularly in Mesopotamia," where the
king had intercourse with "a temple prostitute" on behalf of the whole
land.(Yamauchi 1973:213).
Ritual sex would not have been
prostitution even if the act produced an offering for a temple (Lambert
1992:136). Rather, it would have been an act of worship.
In the
Hebrew Bible, the word normally translated "sacred or cult prostitute"
is qedeshah/qedeshot (feminine singular/plural) and qadesh/qedeshim
(masculine singular/plural). These four titles do not occur very often
in the Hebrew Bible (Henshaw 1994:218-221).
The root qdsh means "set apart, consecrated" we have used the same as we address the Most Holy God Jehovah M'qadesh.
For
the most part, the terms occur in books from Deuteronomy through to II
Kings, the so-called Deuteronomistic History, which is especially
nationalistic, polemical, and denunciatory of Canaanite religion.
The
assumption that "sacred prostitution" had not only occurred, but had
happened in the context of fertility cults, resulted from the Hebrew
Bible's "deliberate" association of qedeshah, "sacred/consecrated
woman," with zonah, "prostitute" (Bird 1989:76). Thus, an important
category of cult functionary called qedeshah existed in Canaan (Henshaw
1994:235-236).
Otherwise, why would the Bible need to discredit
such women? Their function in Canaanite religion is not known, but they
were "consecrated women," probably priestesses.
When the Apostle
Paul in his writing to the Corinthian church admonishes them to flee all
uncleanness and sexual immorality this is what he was also referring to
among many other things. Further in his address alludes to the illicit
entry of the same cultic practice in the church!
So when
Christianity became a state religion through the works of Emperor
Constantine and his mother some of these pagan practices were
acculturated into the faith.
They were baptised into the doctrine,
liturgy and canon of the church! It was then that there became women
who did not want to serve the devil but rather serve God.
These
were the women that then became the qedeshah, "sacred/consecrated
woman," in the new Christian church. We then called them nuns and
cloistered them in convents.
But because the Pentecostal and Evangelical do not subscribe to the same they might have dealt with it differently.
Then
you have different type of qedeshah, "sacred/consecrated woman," as
uMama woManyano, or uMama woMthandazo. She may not be a nun, she
certainly is sacred and consecrated.
Let me close by saying the
truth of the matter is in that women and their sexuality have played a
very spiritual role in the church and should not be ignored.
What
we need to observe is that they are not abused and taken for granted.
Women make the largest number in any Christian congregation or religious
gathering for that matter!
They are important. So women in the temple are the qedeshah, "sacred/consecrated woman," of our time!
Sacred sex . . . prostitutes in the temple . . . nuns of a kind! Shalom
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