by jimwalton » Sat Nov 19, 2022 5:32 pm
The plagues were, for the most part, a rebuke of the gods of Egypt and to show YHWH's superiority over the entire Egyptian pantheon. Heqet, the god of fertility and resurrection, was in the form of a frog (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heqet). John Walton writes,
"One idea that scholars put forward is that this plague is one more attack on Egyptian ideology, with the frog goddess Heqet as its particular target. Heqet was a giver of life. As the consort of Khnum, a creator god, she assisted in the creation of infants.
"Egyptians did not, however, associate every common frog with the goddess. If there is symbolic meaning in the account of this plague, it may simply be to point out the inability of Pharaoh and the Egyptian gods to maintain proper order. First the water is ruined, and now the frogs are out of control. The disorder is taking different forms."
Propp, in the Anchor Bible, writes,
"The multiplication of frogs may be a whimsical reflection of Egyptian attitudes towards the multiplying Israelites. In Egyptian literature, too, frogs symbolize spontaneous procreation. Heqet, the frog goddess of Antinoe, is associated with childbirth."
Notice that the Egyptian magicians could not remove the plague, but instead could only make it worse.
The plagues were, for the most part, a rebuke of the gods of Egypt and to show YHWH's superiority over the entire Egyptian pantheon. Heqet, the god of fertility and resurrection, was in the form of a frog ([url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heqet[/url]). John Walton writes, [quote]"One idea that scholars put forward is that this plague is one more attack on Egyptian ideology, with the frog goddess Heqet as its particular target. Heqet was a giver of life. As the consort of Khnum, a creator god, she assisted in the creation of infants.
"Egyptians did not, however, associate every common frog with the goddess. If there is symbolic meaning in the account of this plague, it may simply be to point out the inability of Pharaoh and the Egyptian gods to maintain proper order. First the water is ruined, and now the frogs are out of control. The disorder is taking different forms."[/quote]
Propp, in the Anchor Bible, writes, [quote]"The multiplication of frogs may be a whimsical reflection of Egyptian attitudes towards the multiplying Israelites. In Egyptian literature, too, frogs symbolize spontaneous procreation. Heqet, the frog goddess of Antinoe, is associated with childbirth."[/quote]
Notice that the Egyptian magicians could not remove the plague, but instead could only make it worse.