The usual translation of the Septuagint for
, dangerous monster
whose bite is poisonous ("dragons' poison") (Deut. xxxii. 33; Ps. xci. 13).
Nowhere distinctly described, they must be imagined as of composite form,
resembling, according to some passages, the snake. Thus in Ex. vii. 9 (Hebr.)
the staff of Moses is turned into a "dragon"; according to Ex. iv. 3 (Hebr.),
into a "snake." Their home is in the water; they are mentioned together with
the waves of the sea (Ps. cxlviii. 7), and were created by God with the
fishes (Gen. i. 21). Originally they are mythological personifications of
the floods (). In the
vicinity of Jerusalem a "dragon's spring" was located, in which, according
to ancient belief, a dragon lived as the spirit
of the well (Neh. ii. 13). Especially interesting are the passages that
speak of a single dragon: the "dragon that is
in the sea" (Isa. xxvii. 1); "the great dragon
that lieth in the midst of his rivers" (Ezek. xxix. 3); or simply "dragon"
(Job vii. 12 [Hebr.]; Jer. li. 34; Ps. xliv. 19, read
). Such a
dragon is also referred to as "Rahab" (Isa. li. 9 et seq.).
Leviathan ()
probably also means a dragon of this kind
(compare Isa. xxvii. 1).
Sometimes considerable information is given ofthese
monsters. "In the beginning of things
Yhwh overpowered them in creating the world." It is clear that this
story, which is found only in fragments in the O. T., was originally a myth,
representing God's victory over the seas (;
Isa. li. 9 et seq.), or the hemming in of the Nile (Ezek. xxix. 3).
The Babylonian story of Marduk's victory over the
dragon of the sea, Tiamat, is analogous; but other traditions,
especially those of Egypt, may also have influenced the story. The Hebrew
poets and Prophets were fond of using this old myth to symbolize the
destruction of Israel's enemies.
In post-canonical times also similar traditions are
often referred to. Psalms of Solomon (ii.) describe, under the image of a
dragon, Pompey's greatness and fall; Apocr. Esther (i. 4 et seq.)
describes the conflict between Haman and Mordecai as a battle between two
dragons; the legend of Bel and the Dragon,
a reproduction of the old Marduk monster, in the Septuagint version of
Daniel, narrates how the prophet made cakes of pitch and put them in the
dragon's mouth, with the result that the "dragon burst in sunder."
Especially important is the mystical story of the persecution of the divine
child and its heavenly mother by the great red dragon
(Test. Job xii.). In its present form the story is explained as referring to
the attacks of the devil on the Messiah, but it is based on an old Oriental
myth of the enmity of the dragon for the child
of the sun. (k) Bibliography:Gunkel,
Schöpfung und Chaos.E.G.H.H.Gun
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Prayer
- Rabbi David Azulai prides himself on
possessing special mystical powers to create
powerful and profound shifts in people’s
energy, life, and consciousness.