Manna

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Manna (sometimes or archaically spelled mana) is the name of the food miraculously produced for the Israelites in the desert in the book of Exodus. Manna ceased to appear when the Israelites first harvested their crops in their new homeland. "Man hu", or "manna" in the Hebrew language is translated as "what is it". George Ebers (Durch Gosen zum Sinai, 1881, p. 236), derived "manna" from the Egyptian mennu, "food" (JE "Manna"). By extension "manna" has also been used to refer to any divine or spiritual nourishment.

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[edit] Biblical Manna

According to the Bible, the mysterious substance which was provided miraculously by God to the Hebrews during their forty years in the desert descended by night like hoarfrost in the form of coriander seed of the color of bdellium (Book of Numbers 11:7). It was collected before sunrise, before it melted in the sun. The people ground it, or pounded it, and then baked it (Num. 11:8). A double portion was to be found on the day before the sabbath, when none was to be found. When the Hebrews arrived at Gilgal, on the 14th of Nisan, and began to eat the grain grown there, the manna ceased.

Hebrews 9:4 records that a pot with manna in it was stored in the Ark of the Covenant, along with Aaron's staff that had budded, and the Ten Commandments. This Ark was in turn kept in the "Holiest of Holies" (the inner chamber) of the tabernacle that the Israelites carried with them in the wilderness for 40 years. This inner chamber was where the priests would encounter the presence of God.

[edit] Identifying manna

Some modern readers believe this may have been an edible cake called Shewbread or Showbread wafer or the sap of a variety of succulent plant found in the Sinai peninsula, which may have had appetite-suppressing effects (plants of the genus Alhagi are sometimes called "manna trees"). [1] Others have hypothesized that it was one of the species of kosher locusts found in the region. [2] The most widespread explanations, however, are either crystallized honeydew of scale insects feeding on tamarisk twigs, or thalli of the Manna Lichen (Lecanora esculenta).[3] At the turn of the 20th century local Arabs in Palestine collected the resin of the tamarisk as mann es-sama ("heavenly manna"), and sold it to pilgrims (JE "Manna").

Experts in the fields of ethnomycology such as R. Gordon Wasson, John Marco Allegro and Terence McKenna have speculated that just as with the sacred Hindu Rigvedas' repeatedly high praise of the miraculous food soma or the Mexicans' teonanácatl (literally "god mushroom"), psilocybe mushrooms are the prime candidate in Manna's accurate identification. [4]

Immanuel Velikovsky hypothesized that manna consisted of a "hydrocarbon rain" that resulted from a close encounter between Venus and Earth. This claim has been debunked by Carl Sagan, Stephen Jay Gould, and others.

[edit] Modern term

The term manna is also used in the modern context to refer to a secretion from various plants, including certain desert or semi-desert shrubs and especially the Ash Fraxinus ornus (manna or flowering ash) of Southern Europe. [5] The material is produced by sap-sucking insects that secrete a honeydew like liquid, that when dried forms manna; it has a sweet taste. Eaten in large quantities, it is mildly laxative and has been used medicinally for that purpose.[6]

[edit] Christian vegetarian view

According to the essay “The Semiotics of Food in the Bible,” by Jean Soler, the Creator (God) originally intended for man to only eat the food borne by plants such as fruits and vegetables. Plants were not considered “living” in part because they cannot move so “killing” them was not a sin. The manna that was given to the Hebrews during the exodus was vegetarian and as follows: “It was like coriander seed, white, and the taste of it was like wafer made with honey” (Exodus 16:31). The Babylonian Talmud, however, presents a view that its taste varied depending on who ate it: "For the youth the manna tasted like bread, for the elderly like oil, and for the small children like honey" (Yoma 75b).

According to Judeo-Christian tradition, God originally intended for man to not eat meat.(Genesis 1:29) Eating of animals was prohibited at the beginning because in order to eat animal one must first kill it, and this was against God’s will. This changed, however, after the Fall of Man and the Great Flood. In Genesis 9:3, God tells Noah: "Every moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you; even as the green herb have I given you all things.". People were, in time, permitted to eat only clean animals such as those that are strictly herbivorous, including sheep and cattle. (see Leviticus) Carnivorous animals and swine were considered unclean because they ate the blood of the animals they killed. The blood was considered the life that God gave and therefore only God has the rights to the blood.

[edit] Manna as a mushroom

It is the view of a minority that the biblical reference to manna refers to one of a number of entheogenic mushrooms. The use of entheogenic substances throughout history, from Native American Church Peyote, the União do Vegetal's ayahuasca, the Hindu and Sikh Soma and Amrita, and the Indo-Iranian Haoma seems to validate the biblical use of manna as a mystifying substance of transcendent experience. (Mushrooms and Mankind)

Exodus 16:4 and 16:14 both describe characteristics of manna which are similar to that of a number of mushrooms.[6] For example The Bible as quoted in Exodus 16:14 reads:

And when the dew that lay was gone up, behold, upon the face of the wilderness there lay a small round thing, as small as the hoar frost on the ground.
And when the children of Israel saw it, they said one to another, It is manna: for they wist not what it was. And Moses said unto them, This is the bread which the Lord hath given you to eat.

[edit] Manna of Saint Nicholas

The remains of Saint Nicholas (the historical saint who Santa Claus is based on) secrete a clear liquid, that is called "manna", from inside the tomb of the former Bishop of Myra. The liquid is attributed with miraculous abilities. (http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=42)

[edit] References

  • Mushrooms and Mankind : The Impact of Mushrooms on Human Consciousness and Religion by James Arthur [7]
  • Magic Mushrooms in Religion and Alchemy by Clark Heinrich [8]
  • The Mystery of Manna: The Psychedelic Sacrament of the Bible by Robert Forte [9]
  • Food of the Gods : The Search for the Original Tree of Knowledge A Radical History of Plants, Drugs, and Human Evolution by Terence Mckenna [10]
  • http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=42
  • from classic Encyclopedia Britannica.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Alhagi as "Manna Tree" [1]
  2. ^ Locusts as Manna [2]
  3. ^ Bodenheimer theory [3]
  4. ^ Terence McKenna, Food of the Gods, (New York, Harper Collins) p. 84.
  5. ^ Manna as Ash Tree [4]
  6. ^ Ash Tree as laxative [5]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links