---
product_id: 9429056
title: "The Search for God in Ancient Egypt"
price: "284 zł"
currency: PLN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 11
url: https://www.desertcart.pl/products/9429056-the-search-for-god-in-ancient-egypt
store_origin: PL
region: Poland
---

# The Search for God in Ancient Egypt

**Price:** 284 zł
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- **What is this?** The Search for God in Ancient Egypt
- **How much does it cost?** 284 zł with free shipping
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## Description

The Search for God in Ancient Egypt [Assmann, Jan, Lorton, David] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Search for God in Ancient Egypt

Review: The system of Egyptian religions - Assmann's wonderfully easy, careful writing reveals all the features of Egyptian religion a way no other book achieves. He explores religion in two terms: 'divine presence.' These terms meaning sacred (transcendent), and mundane (immanent) realms. The distinction extends Durkheim's distinction of sacred and profane, because divinity was present in the world for the Egyptians. 'Divine presence' for the Egyptians meant realizing plenty (ma'at) over against lack (isfet) both in the divine order by pacifying the gods and in the mundane order by instituting ethical conduct. He studies the 'narrow view' of religion: pacifying the gods. He leaves the wide view - ethical conduct - aside a task of sociology. To arrive at the Egyptian 'narrow view,' Assmann distinguishes 'implicit theology' from 'explicit theology.' Implicit theology is his theory of how the Egyptians thought that he drives from interpreting texts. Explicit theology means whatever theory the Egyptian natives may have had, but the Egyptians 'never referred to [explicit theology] in practice.' His 'implicit theology' is not 'reading into' the liturgies, but summarizing their consistent literary devices. An example of 'implicit theology' is the consistent progress in the ancient liturgies from names, to embodiments, to statues. Such consistent liturgies reveal civil, natural, and mythical levels of religion. Studying implicit theology in the liturgies over the 3,000 or so years of the dynastic periods reveals that polytheism played the particles to waves of monotheism. A transition from localized polytheism to national monotheism occurred over the course of Egyptian history. During the transitions from Old to Middle to New Kingdoms, immanence in local cults of city gods transmuted to ruler god, primeval god, creator god, sun god, and to the ethical authority of personal devotion. The solar cult of the Amarna period, so often portrayed as Enlightenment, was a conservative repression that persecuted any personal experiences of the older religions of Ammon by interposing the royal couple between the Aten and people. The unexpected consequences of the persecution was the 'breakthrough' to the 'fourth dimension' of personal ethical consciousness, the same general development that describes the 'axial age,' the appearance everywhere of the historic religions at the end of the ancient world. Assmann's communicates the consistent beauty of the major hieroglyphic liturgies by demonstrating the logic of the litanies. Egyptian 'polytheism' was simply the symbolization of transcendence in immanence -- all the 'forms' (cheperu) of immanent experience are manifestations of searching for transcendent God. 'Search' in this context does not mean conscious theologizing.
Review: Five Stars - I found what I was looking for.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,115,082 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #180 in History of New Age & Mythology #746 in Ancient Egyptians History #1,538 in Archaeology (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (44) |
| Dimensions  | 6 x 0.81 x 9 inches |
| Edition  | 1st |
| ISBN-10  | 0801487293 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-0801487293 |
| Item Weight  | 13.6 ounces |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 288 pages |
| Publication date  | February 13, 2001 |
| Publisher  | Cornell University Press |
| Reading age  | 18 years and up |

## Images

![The Search for God in Ancient Egypt - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/716JEgiQ3KL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The system of Egyptian religions
*by P***T on February 18, 2013*

Assmann's wonderfully easy, careful writing reveals all the features of Egyptian religion a way no other book achieves. He explores religion in two terms: 'divine presence.' These terms meaning sacred (transcendent), and mundane (immanent) realms. The distinction extends Durkheim's distinction of sacred and profane, because divinity was present in the world for the Egyptians. 'Divine presence' for the Egyptians meant realizing plenty (ma'at) over against lack (isfet) both in the divine order by pacifying the gods and in the mundane order by instituting ethical conduct. He studies the 'narrow view' of religion: pacifying the gods. He leaves the wide view - ethical conduct - aside a task of sociology. To arrive at the Egyptian 'narrow view,' Assmann distinguishes 'implicit theology' from 'explicit theology.' Implicit theology is his theory of how the Egyptians thought that he drives from interpreting texts. Explicit theology means whatever theory the Egyptian natives may have had, but the Egyptians 'never referred to [explicit theology] in practice.' His 'implicit theology' is not 'reading into' the liturgies, but summarizing their consistent literary devices. An example of 'implicit theology' is the consistent progress in the ancient liturgies from names, to embodiments, to statues. Such consistent liturgies reveal civil, natural, and mythical levels of religion. Studying implicit theology in the liturgies over the 3,000 or so years of the dynastic periods reveals that polytheism played the particles to waves of monotheism. A transition from localized polytheism to national monotheism occurred over the course of Egyptian history. During the transitions from Old to Middle to New Kingdoms, immanence in local cults of city gods transmuted to ruler god, primeval god, creator god, sun god, and to the ethical authority of personal devotion. The solar cult of the Amarna period, so often portrayed as Enlightenment, was a conservative repression that persecuted any personal experiences of the older religions of Ammon by interposing the royal couple between the Aten and people. The unexpected consequences of the persecution was the 'breakthrough' to the 'fourth dimension' of personal ethical consciousness, the same general development that describes the 'axial age,' the appearance everywhere of the historic religions at the end of the ancient world. Assmann's communicates the consistent beauty of the major hieroglyphic liturgies by demonstrating the logic of the litanies. Egyptian 'polytheism' was simply the symbolization of transcendence in immanence -- all the 'forms' (cheperu) of immanent experience are manifestations of searching for transcendent God. 'Search' in this context does not mean conscious theologizing.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Five Stars
*by A***R on April 1, 2017*

I found what I was looking for.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Religion in Egypt, Beyond the Pharaohs and Pyramids.
*by C***T on November 16, 2016*

This is an excellent and informative book about Egyptian religion that goes beyond the usual discussion of the Book of the Dead and the various stuff that was done to make Pharaohs immortal, along with their various hangers-on. Religion needs to play a part in an attempt to bless and safeguard the state as well as help with the day to day concerns of individuals. These matters are described and discussed. The book, however, is translated from the German and is not intended for a popular audience. It is something of a slog to get through it. But if you are interested in the subject it is essential.

## Frequently Bought Together

- The Search for God in Ancient Egypt
- Conceptions of God in Ancient Egypt: The One and the Many
- Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt

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*Product available on Desertcart Poland*
*Store origin: PL*
*Last updated: 2026-05-08*