The Shepherd as a Symbolic Figure: From Archetype to Soteriology
The image of the shepherd is one of the oldest and most universal archetypes in the history of human culture and religion. Its symbolism stems from the fundamental experience of the Neolithic Revolution, when animal domestication became the basis of survival. The shepherd embodies power, responsibility, knowledge, and mediation between the wild nature and the human community. This archetype was deeply incorporated into religious systems, where it transformed from a symbol of earthly power to an embodiment of divine care.
Archaic and Ancient Eastern Roots
In the Sumerian-Akkadian tradition, kings and gods were often titled "shepherds of the people." For example, the patron god of Uruk Dumuzi (Tammuz) was a shepherd whose annual descent into the underworld symbolized the change of seasons. In Ancient Egypt, the pharaoh was the "good shepherd" (as shown on the mace of King Scorpion, ca. 3200 BCE), and the god Anubis, the guide of souls, was depicted with the head of a jackal – an animal associated with the outskirts where flocks were tended. In Zoroastrianism, the religion of a nomadic people, the image of the shepherd (frawaši) was associated with spiritual guardians.
Biblical Judaism: The Formation of Theological Metaphor
In the Old Testament, the pastoral metaphor receives profound theological development. God Jehovah is directly named as the Shepherd of Israel (Ps. 22:1 "The Lord is my shepherd"; Gen. 49:24). Prophets (Ezekiel 34, Jeremiah 23) use this image to criticize negligent earthly rulers ("shepherds of Israel") and promise that God himself will pasture his people. At the same time, the figure of King David – the young shepherd anointed to the throne (1 Sam. 16) – becomes a prototype of the ideal ruler and the future Messiah of his lineage.
Interesting fact: the name of the city Bethlehem (Bейт-Лехем) translates as "House of Bread," indirectly indicating the pastoral-agricultural context of the ...
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