Two Vases Depict the Essence of Ancient Greek Religion

Figure 61: On this vase from ca. 475 BC, the artist tells us that Kaineus (the line of Kain) disappeared into the earth at the hands of the Kentaurs (the line of Seth). This is how Greek artists remembered and portrayed the effect of the Floodthe temporary wiping out of the line of Kain at the hands of the line of Seth.

This red-figure vase from ca. 420 BC, depicts the birth of the Earth-born One (Erichthonios). Earth (Gaia) presents the new-born child to Athena, who represents the reborn serpent-friendly Eve after the Flood. The figure to the left of Gaia and the child is Hephaistos, the eldest son of Zeus and Hera, the deified Kain. According to the myth surrounding this event, Athena obtained the sperm, or seed, of Hephaistos (Kain), and placed it into the Earth, and out of Earth sprang the rejuvenated line of Kain after the Flood. The essence of ancient Greek religion is very simple. After the Flood which caused the line of Kain to disappear into the earth, Athena, the reborn serpent-friendly Eve, nurtures the reborn line of Kain which re-emerges from the earth into which it had disappeared.
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