Sunday, April 12, 2026

The Pharaoh Was God and Everyone Had to Believe It or Else. Here Is How That Actually Worked.

 Think about what it means to tell a population that their ruler is not just chosen by God but is actually God.


Not a representative. Not a prophet. Not a king appointed by divine will. An actual living god walking among them in human form.


Ancient Egypt did this for roughly three thousand years. And it worked. It worked so well that the Egyptian state outlasted almost every political entity in human history.


Here is how that system actually functioned.


How the Pharaoh Became God


Research notes that divine kingship likely originated in the role of a traditional shaman who possessed special abilities to commune with the supernatural on behalf of his people. Over time, this position became more formalized and powerful, eventually transforming into institutionalized divine kingship during periods of social consolidation and territorial unification.


In Egypt the pharaoh was identified with Horus the falcon god while alive and Osiris the god of the dead after death. Every pharaoh was a new incarnation of the same divine principle. The human individual who wore the crown was mortal but the divine essence of the pharaoh was eternal and unbroken.


This meant that when a pharaoh died and a new one took the throne it was not a change of ruler. It was a continuation of the same divine being in a new body.


The temples were not just places of worship. The state's religious structure was deeply intertwined with its administration, with temples functioning as both religious and economic centers. The temple held land. The temple held grain. The temple employed thousands of people. The temple was the economic and administrative backbone of the state dressed in religious clothing.


How It Controlled People


When the ruler is God three things happen simultaneously that are extremely useful for maintaining power.


First, resistance becomes unthinkable in a way that goes beyond ordinary political calculation. Opposing the pharaoh was not just dangerous. It was cosmically wrong. It threatened the order of the universe itself. The Egyptian concept of Ma'at, the cosmic order and harmony that the pharaoh was responsible for maintaining, meant that social disruption was not just a political problem. It was a religious catastrophe.


Second, the suffering of ordinary people becomes acceptable within the system. If the current order is divinely ordained, then your poverty and hard labor and difficult life are part of a sacred arrangement. Accepting it is a virtue. Resenting it is impiety.


Third, the priests who interpret and administer the divine order become essential partners in power rather than competitors. The pharaoh needed the priesthood to perform the rituals that maintained his divine status. The priesthood needed the pharaoh to provide the resources and political protection that made the temple system work.


As Egyptian dynasties sought to raise individual cults to supremacy by granting their priesthoods special favors, they ceded power to those priesthoods as well. This balance of power between king and priest was a constant negotiation throughout Egyptian history. When it broke down, as it sometimes did, the results were dramatic.


What Akhenaten Tried to Do


The pharaoh Akhenaten, who ruled around 1350 BCE, tried to break the power of the established priesthood by declaring a new religion with a single god, the sun disk Aten, and himself as the sole intermediary between humanity and this god.


The celebrated reforms of Akhenaten, who attempted to install the sun-disk Aton as the sole god of Egypt and erected a new palace and temple complex for this purpose, may have been intended in part to break the power of the priesthood of Amun-Ra. The attempt ultimately failed, and when the centralized power of the New Kingdom gave way at the end of the Twentieth dynasty, the priests of Amun-Ra found themselves the effective rulers of southern Egypt.


Akhenaten was essentially using a religious revolution as a political power grab. He was trying to cut out the existing priesthood and replace the entire religious system with one that gave him more direct control. It did not work. After his death his reforms were reversed, his monuments were defaced, and his name was erased from the record. His successor Tutankhamun, the famous boy king, restored the old religion.


The system he tried to destroy had more staying power than he did. Religious institutions that have been running for centuries have a kind of inertia that individual rulers find very hard to overcome.


The Lesson That Lasted


Egypt lasted three thousand years as a continuous civilization. That is a record almost nothing else in human history comes close to matching.


Some of that was geography. The Nile made Egypt rich and defensible. But a lot of it was the stability of the system of divine kingship. A system where the ruler was God had a built in answer to every challenge. You cannot argue with the order of the universe.


That lesson was not lost on the rulers who came after Egypt. Rome watched Egypt and learned. Christianity took elements of the divine king concept and adapted them. The concept of the divine right of kings that persisted in Europe well into the modern era is the same idea in different clothing.


The pharaoh of Egypt is gone. The idea that rulers derive their authority from God is still very much with us.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

The Ancient Religions of the World Were All Telling the Same Story With Different Names

 Look at the major religions and mythologies of the ancient world and you will notice something strange.


They keep telling the same stories.


Almost every ancient culture has a story about a great flood that nearly destroyed humanity and a handful of survivors who preserved the human race. The Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh has it. Ancient Hindu texts have it. The Hebrew Bible has it. Greek mythology has it. Indigenous traditions across the Americas and Australia and Africa have versions of it.


Almost every ancient culture has a story about a god who dies and comes back. The Egyptian god Osiris dies and is resurrected. The Babylonian god Tammuz dies and is mourned and reborn. The Greek god Dionysus has a death and rebirth story. The Norse god Baldur dies and is prophesied to return.


Almost every ancient culture has a story about a miraculous divine birth. A god or a hero born of a human mother and a divine father. Hercules in Greece. Gilgamesh in Mesopotamia. Horus in Egypt.


These are not coincidences. The question is what they mean.


What the Similarities Tell Us


There are a few explanations that scholars have put forward.


One is that some of these stories reflect real historical events. A massive flood did occur at the end of the last Ice Age when sea levels rose dramatically and coastlines were inundated across the world. Communities that survived that catastrophe may have passed down stories about it that evolved differently in different cultures but preserved the core memory of a great flood.


One is that these stories reflect universal human experiences and psychological patterns. The dying and rising god may reflect the cycle of seasons. The harvest dies in winter and is reborn in spring. Every agricultural civilization experienced that cycle and many of them developed religious stories around it.


One is that ancient cultures had more contact with each other than we often assume. Trade routes crossed the ancient world connecting Mesopotamia to Egypt to Greece to India. Stories traveled with goods and people. Ideas spread. Religious concepts mixed and evolved as they moved from culture to culture.


One is that human minds, when confronted with the same fundamental questions about life and death and meaning, tend to produce similar answers. The deep structure of religious storytelling may reflect something about how human consciousness works rather than about historical connections between specific cultures.


What This Means for How We Think About Religion


If you were raised in one religion and you learn that its central stories appear in older religions from different parts of the world, that can feel threatening. Or it can feel like evidence of something important.


The flood story is in the Bible. It is also in the Epic of Gilgamesh which predates the biblical version by centuries. The story of a divine birth is in the New Testament. Similar stories appear in Greek and Egyptian and Babylonian traditions that are much older.


None of that tells you what is true. It does tell you that human beings have been asking the same questions and finding similar answers for a very long time. And that the questions themselves, about where we came from, why we suffer, what happens after death, whether the world is meaningful, are universal.


The names of the gods change. The questions they are answering do not.


That is not an argument against any particular religion. It is an argument for taking the universal human search for meaning seriously regardless of which tradition it comes from.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Governments Have Been Using Religion to Control People Since the Beginning of Civilization

 The oldest trick in the book of power is not money. It is not armies. It is not law.


It is God.


Tell people that you rule because God chose you. Tell them that questioning you is questioning God. Tell them that the social order they live under is divinely ordained and therefore sacred. Tell them that suffering in this life is rewarded in the next.


That idea has been used by rulers to control populations since the first cities were built in ancient Mesopotamia five thousand years ago. It is still being used today. And understanding that history changes how you see every government that has ever claimed God was on its side.


How It Started in Mesopotamia


The first cities in human history were built between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in what is now Iraq. The Sumerians, the Babylonians, the Assyrians. Each of these civilizations built their political structures directly on top of their religious structures.


In Mesopotamia, kings were human representatives of the city-state's patron deity, and priests took care of the temple cult. It was nearly impossible for politics to stay away from religion and vice versa, so both spheres of influence worked in tandem.


The king did not just claim to be chosen by the gods. The king claimed to speak for the gods. The priests backed that claim in exchange for power and wealth. And the people had no framework for questioning it because the entire world they understood was organized around the same religious ideas.


The Code of Hammurabi in Babylon, one of the oldest known legal documents, begins with a declaration that Hammurabi was chosen by the gods to bring justice. Laws were often believed to be divinely ordained, making them sacred and unchallengeable.


Think about what that means. Not just that the king made the laws. That the laws came from God. Disobeying a law was not just a crime. It was a sin.


How Egypt Took It Further


Ancient Egypt took the concept of divine kingship further than almost any other civilization.


The outstanding feature of Egyptian society during its long history was that the king was considered to be of divine essence, a god incarnate. Egyptians identified the king as Horus, king of the gods, and each successive king took a Horus-name upon his succession.


The pharaoh was not chosen by God. The pharaoh was God. Living among the people in human form.


That is an extraordinarily powerful political tool. You cannot overthrow a god. You cannot petition a god to change his policies. You cannot vote against a god. The entire framework of legitimate political challenge collapses when the ruler is not a representative of divine authority but divine authority itself.


And it worked for thousands of years. The Egyptian state lasted longer as a continuous political entity than almost anything in human history precisely because this framework made resistance almost unthinkable.


How Rome Used It


Rome was more sophisticated about it. The Roman Republic had its own religious structures but the emperors took it further.


An imperial cult is a form of state religion in which emperors are worshipped as demigods or deities. The practice began formally under Augustus and spread across the Empire within decades, with the Roman Senate holding the power to officially declare a deceased emperor divine.


Rome also demonstrated what happened when a new religion challenged the existing power structure. Christianity began as a persecuted minority faith. When the Emperor Constantine converted and made it the state religion in the fourth century, he did not give up power. He absorbed the new religion into the imperial structure and used it for the same purposes the old religion had served.


The pattern is always the same. The religion changes. The use of religion as a tool of political control does not.


Why It Has Always Worked


The reason this strategy has worked for five thousand years is not because people are stupid. It is because it answers a real human need.


People want to know that the world is ordered. That suffering has meaning. That the powerful are accountable to something higher than themselves. Religion provides a framework for all of those things.


When governments attach themselves to that framework they borrow its legitimacy. Challenging the ruler becomes challenging the cosmic order. Accepting your place in society becomes a religious virtue. The machinery of control runs on something more durable than fear alone.


It runs on meaning.


And that is why understanding the history of religion and political power is not just interesting. It is essential to understanding how power actually works.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.