And With Perfect Teeth

This week drug stores across the country will begin offering a testing product that will help assess genetic predispositions to various diseases and weaknesses. Potential parents might learn what debilitating illnesses could plague their children. Who wouldn’t want to eliminate needless suffering and create a world involving less pain and wasting away? Who wouldn’t want to know in advance? Ethicists are up in arms for such knowledge is surely a dangerous thing, just like an overcrowded lifeboat.

Ancient peoples had their own way of dealing with such dilemmas – blame the gods. Disease was not the result of genetic predisposition or even microbes. Illness, plague, pestilence and degeneration were the punishing weapons in the arsenal of ill-tempered deities who didn’t really understand what it was to be mortal. In Ugarit the archer-god Resheph was the divinity who brought pestilence. Shooting from afar with his fiery arrows he could topple cities and nations. Yet few prayers to him are recorded. Better to appeal to a higher power, an outranking deity who might overturn random suffering.

With the loss of many gods comes the loss of the right of appeal. Should the one God be the one who sends disease, to whom can prayers be offered? For many prayers to Jesus or even to Mary are made to circumvent the sad lot poured out upon a destitute humanity by an implacable father. People now recognize genetics and microbes, but still talk to the spirit world about woes and fears. Starting on Friday, however, there will be a product locally available that might provide relief in advance. Who’s willing to take on the gods and give Pathway Genomics a try?

6 thoughts on “And With Perfect Teeth

  1. Henk van der Gaast

    I think we are a bit luckier in Oz..

    Mind you, pharmacies everywhere will sell you something that is as effective as a sand pyramid.

    Caveat Dios Empty mayhap?

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  2. I’ve always chalked the lack of prayers to certain deities at Ugarit (Reshep, Shapash, etc) as having more to do with the nature of our finds. We’ve got a partial snapshot not a canonical set of texts.

    I agree though: monotheism makes issues much trickier (just ask Job!).

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    • Steve Wiggins

      I also agree, Jim. We haven’t found nearly enough to get a complete picture of religion at Ugarit. It does make a good starting point for a blog post, however!

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  3. I think the Christian tradition has unfortunately lost the importance of the role of other powers in the biblical writings. The Old Testament does not deny the existence of other gods, it just portrays them to be weaker than Yahweh.

    I think Christians need to recover the idea of hostile spiritual beings as an explanation for suffering in the world.

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Interesting suggestion, Matthew! I’ve had others suggest similar things to me in person. We all want someone to blame…

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