The Case for Lilith
Of
all the ancient Jewish myths, the story of Lilith is undoubtedly the most
fascinating. According to her legend
Lilith was the first wife of Adam. But she was a failed mate who rebelled
against her husband and fled from the garden to become the mother of demons. Her legend has influenced more modern monster
mythologies than any other Jewish myth. Her tale was not only the
original source material for medieval beliefs in succubae and night-hags, but
as the mother of estries she also lies
at the root of modern vampire lore. Her
creation story also fueled ancient Jewish notions about Golems, and has thus helped inspired the
modern version of this myth, Frankenstein. Although Lilith is not widely known amongst those normally considered well versed
in scripture, given the validity of her legend, her prominence in the Bible more than matches her prominence in
modern monster mythologies.. As we shall
see, Lilith is the first Sotah, the archetype
of the adulterous wife who turned aside from her husband and who was subjected
to the supernatural bitter water
trial. She is the Serpent who caused
Adam and Eve to fall. She and her seed
are the chess pieces of Lucifer’s struggle
against God and man. Her firstborn,
Azazel, is the infamous seed of the Serpent. He is locked in epic battle with the
promised seed of Eve. Due to his exalted
position Azazel plays a prominent role in Israel’s Yom Kippur ceremony. He is
the recipient of the sacrificial scapegoat, or literally, the goat “to
Azazel”. There are intriguing evidences
that in her quest to conceive Azazel
Lilith was responsible for bringing upon the earth the race of Nephilim, the
giant offspring of angels and women, and
as such she was the ultimate cause for Noah’s flood.
According
to commonly known versions of her legend, Lilith was created by God from the
soil of the earth at the same time as
Adam. She was intended as Adam’s mate,
but Lilith was rebellious against her husband. She quarreled continuously with
Adam and refused to sexually submit to him from an inferior position
below. At her rebellion’s culmination she unleashed her long hair and
shouted the ineffable name of God. She
thereby supernaturally sprouted wings
and took flight from the garden. After her
departure Adam became lonely and sought to recover his errant wife. At his
behest Jehovah sent three angels to return her. They found Lilith in the midst of the Red Sea. But she refused to return with them. She chose instead to become the mother of
demons. She did this not only by mating
with demons, but by also stealing semen
from men at night while they slept. Because of Lilith’s refusal, the angels cursed her that every day 100 of her demon seed would die, and for
Adam God created Eve as a replacement for his rebellious mate. In revenge
Lilith resolved that she would visit Eve’s children in childbirth and kill
those whom she found were not protected
by the names of the three angels.
As we shall see, there are deeper
mysteries to Lilith’s legend that may be derived from a careful study of the
Biblical text. These details confirm tenets held by the
Zohar of Kabalah concerning Lilith. The
Zohar is perhaps the most important book
on Lilith outside of the Bible. The
Zohar explains Lilith’s rebellious nature. It states that after God had formed
Adam’s and Lilith’s bodies from the earth, Lilith became animated by the
defective light of Lucifer, whereas Adam became animated by the holy spark of God’s
perfect light. From Genesis it is apparent
that Lucifer’s defective light entered
Lilith through a defiling mist which erupted from the ground and watered her
body. This preempted God’s spirit in animating her. Therefore Lilith is said to be created from
filth and sediment, whereas Adam is said to be created from dry dust, as he was untouched by the defiling
mist. He was animated by God’s perfect
light that entered him with the breath
of God’s holy spirit filled his nostrils.
According
to the Zohar and numerous Biblical evidences, Lilith later returned to the
garden under the title of the Serpent. Genesis reveals that the Serpent Lilith
deceived Eve into eating of the forbidden tree and thereby caused her and Adam to fall. Because of this God cursed the Serpent Lilith
and her seed. He declared that a doomed
rivalry would exist between Lilith and
Eve and between their seed. Lilith would
bruise the heal of Eve’s seed, but Eve’s seed would crush the head of Lilith. Lilith being identified as the Serpent also
links her to Leviathan, which Job 26 and Isa 27 describe as a winged serpent fleeing before
God. Leviathan is commonly held to refer
to the Serpent of Eden, and thus Lilith. From a study of Leviathan we learn again that
Lucifer is intimately fused with Lilith, and that Lilith was created in the same fashion as Adam. She was a golem fashioned from the dust of
the earth and animated by Lucifer’s defective light.
Lilith’s
legend is ancient and preceeds Judaism. Her first mention is found in a Sumerian king list which dates from about 2400 BCE. That list states that the father of the
great hero Gilgamesh was a Lillu demon. The first substantial written
record of Lilith comes in the epic Gilgamesh and the Huluppu Tree (circa 2000
BCE). In that epic the demoness Lilith and a snake haunt a great tree situated
in a holy garden of the gods. As we
shall see later, this tale has strong parallels
with Genesis’ story of the garden of Eden and tree of knowledge of good and
evil.
Lilith appears by name only once in the
Bible. This comes in Isaiah 34, which
describes her as a bird like demon who dwells
in an utterly desolate land once at the ocean’s floor. She is intimately fused with a snake, and she
is a killer of younglings. There is also a reference to Lilith in
Proverbs 30 under the title of Alukah. Proverbs’ heavily mystic passages
speak of two types of barren women given over to the power of Alukah . Alukah serves as a source of cursing and death to one barren woman and the catalyst
in granting a promised seed to the other. As we shall see, Alukah has strong
parallels to the cursing agent in the bitter water trial of the Sotah. According to the Zohar this agent is the
spirit of Lilith. In the Middle Ages legends became prevalent
that Alukah was the mother of estries – female bird-like winged monsters whom were said to devour children and
drink their blood. Esteries are the
earliest known incarnations of the modern
vampire legend, and their similarity to Lilith are obvious.
Lilith makes a handful of appearances in
the Talmud (circa 400 CE). Her mentions
are painfully brief, as the writers assume
she is known entity to the reader. One
Talmudic writer warns that she comes in secret at night to men in their sleep, much like a succubus or night hag, to
steal semen from them. Another writer
holds that she stole semen from Adam in
such a manner, and with this she inseminated her first seed.
Lilith’s legend struck a cord in
medieval Christian circles. Michelangelo
depicted Lilith as the Serpent in his famous paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel, and she is likewise depicted as the tempting Serpent in a carving on
the Notre Dame cathedral in France. Lilith appears in many other artworks of the
era as the Serpent.
Lilith
Tempting Adam and Eve "The Fall of Man and the Expulsion From
Paradise" Michelangelo - Sistine Chapel Vatican
Lilith Tempting Adam and Eve Notre Dame
Cathedral
Most
people acquainted with the Bible consider Lilith’s legend as merely a colorful
and interesting fictional myth with no Biblical
basis. This is certainly an
understandable position, as the legend’s version of early events in the garden
appear completely incongruous with the
plain written record of Genesis as it is commonly known. Yet, if there is such scant evidence for Lilith, how could the rabbis of the Talmud
and Zohar teach her existence? These
writers are the most learned and sophisticated
Jewish scholars over the last two thousand years. On what basis did these most sage experts
adopt ideas that appear in conflict with
the plain Biblical record? As we shall
see, the plain Biblical record is perhaps not so plain afterall. There
is actually numerous textual evidences in Genesis supporting most of Lilith’s
legend. This evidence lies in the
literal Hebrew of the account and the
logical deductions that may be therefore derived by applying the literal
wording. This Genesis evidence supports all the essential facets of
Lilith’s legend, such as why she is said to be created from mud and muck, and
not dust like Adam. It also identifies her as the Serpent. The analysis by which this evidence will be
developed in this section is probably
much the same means by which the ancient rabbis originally concluded details of
her legend. Based solely on Biblical evidence, this analysis makes a strong case
for Lilith. And the details of her
history and nature surmised from the analysis is remarkably in sync which her most ancient
legends, both Jewish and non-Jewish.
I
have found that a coherent collection of Biblical arguments supporting the case
for Lilith has been heretofore non existent in the public domain. In fact, the only argument usually put
forward - that Genesis speaks of two creation accounts of a man and woman - is almost always presented in an
outrageously flawed manner. The faulty
argument generally follows the notion that none of the creation events described in Ge 2
are a recap or retelling of creation events that happened in Ge 1. Thus the reasoning goes, when Ge 1:26-29 speaks of the
creation of a man and woman and Ge 2:18-22 then speaks of the creation of Eve, the two passages must refer to different
events. This simplistic argument is
based on outrageously faulty logic. If
all of Ge 2 was read as documenting new
events not specified in Ge 1, then Ge 2:7 would imply there are also two Adams! Furthermore, there would be two whole planets,
each with its own ocean, atmosphere, and biosphere! We must recognize that parts of Genesis 2 do recap Genesis 1, and the
Lilith argument must be put forth with more care and much more rigor.
Critics of the Lilith legend could argue
that if the Lilith legend was true, then why is her existence in Genesis so
tenuously written that simply
misinterpreting a few verses makes her seemingly disappear from the
account. While it is true that for mystical reasons much of Genesis’ early
accounts of Lilith seem to have been written so as to purposely obscure her
role, in Genesis’ later text she does
play a very prominent and overt role as the Serpent of Eden. The Serpent is second in prominence only to Adam himself in the early
chapters of Genesis. (The prominence of the Serpent in early Genesis is
demonstrated in several ways. The Serpent is the first speaking character
other than Adam (Ge 3:1). The Serpent
also has a more dominate role than Eve based on the number of words each speaks and the number of
words spoken to each. The Serpent speaks
26 Hebrew words compared to Eve’s 22. The Serpent also receives more
attention from God. The curses God heaps
upon the Serpent consist of 33 Hebrew words. The curses God inflicts upon Eve takes a mere 13 words.) We shall see that there is strong textual evidence in Genesis that the
Serpent can be safely identified as Lilith. Perhaps the most indisputable
evidence is the parallels between God’s curses upon the Serpent and upon
Eve. Part of the Serpent’s curse is that it and its seed would
be locked in enemity with Eve and her seed, and that although the Serpent would wound Eve’s seed, Eve’s seed would crush
the head of the Serpent. This curse
clearly establishes that the Serpent plays the role of a rival to Eve. Thus the Serpent is implied to be a woman. This notion is strongly reinforced by the
parallelism between the curses of the
Serpent and Eve to the bitter water trial. The Serpent, in the role of the defiled Sotah, eats dust and is cursed in her belly, and she shall be slain by
the innocent seed. Eve, as the innocent
woman in trial, shall endure pain in childbirth,
but shall be saved by her seed. There is
also evidence that the Hebrew for “serpent”, nachash, cannot indicate a snake, but rather implies the serpent was a
human inhabited by demonic spirits. Job
26:13 and Isa 27:1 identify the Serpent (under
the title of Leviathan) as fleeing upon wings. This is certainly suggestive of the Lilith legend. Furthermore, Job 26:13 implies that the Serpent was created in a
manner similar to Adam, that it was fashioned and formed from the dust of the
earth into a golem like Adam. This also supports the Serpent’s identity as
Lilith.