Atlas University Podcast
This book examines the biblical and historical significance of Tammuz, the ancient Mesopotamian deity whose cultic presence at the Jerusalem temple is condemned in Ezekiel 8. The author argues that Tammuz represents a "dead-god" pattern of religious corruption where idolatrous grief replaces covenantal obedience and resurrection hope. By focusing on the sacred corpse, the grieving mother, and the recurring wound, this religious system captures the affections and imagination of worshipers through the beauty of sorrow. The text warns that this "Tammuz grammar" persists throughout history, potentially infiltrating later traditions when they center devotion on images of death rather than the living presence of the divine. Ultimately, the sources describe a progressive anatomy of apostasy, moving from tolerated images to emotional captivity, which threatens to displace true worship with a counterfeit system of lament.
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