When History Becomes Myth: Cosmic Counterparts in the Bible
When History Becomes Myth: Cosmic Counterparts in the Bible One of the most fascinating literary techniques in the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament is what scholars call “cosmic counterparts.” Simply put, it’s when a historical or human-scale event—oppression, war, survival—is retold as a story about the cosmos, turning everyday history into mythic, universal drama. This technique appears repeatedly, from the early monarchy to apocalyptic visions of the first century CE, across a wide variety of texts. 1. Exodus: Pharaoh, the Red Sea, and the Cosmic Dragon Historical layer: Israel escapes Pharaoh through the Red Sea. Cosmic counterpart: Prophets and poets retell the Exodus using the language of mythic chaos warfare. Later writers reinterpret the Red Sea not just as an escape route but as the battleground where Yahweh defeated the cosmic embodiment of chaos. Key examples: Isaiah 51:9–11 portrays Yahweh’s deliverance from Egypt as the slaying of Rahab, a primordial sea monster. Psalm 7...