In the Beginning
Every Egyptian creation text begins with the same basic belief that before the
beginning of things, there was a liquidy primeval abyss—everywhere, endless,
and without boundaries or directions. Egyptians called this cosmic ocean/watery
chaos, Nu/Ny/Nun—the unpolarized state of matter.
Scientists agree with the Ancient Egyptian description of the origin of the universe
as being an abyss. Scientists refer to this abyss as neutron soup, where there are
neither electrons nor protons, and only neutrons forming one huge extremely
dense nucleus. Such chaos, in the pre-creation state, was caused by the
compression of matter, i.e. atoms did not exist in their normal states, but were
squeezed so closely together, that many atomic nuclei were crowded into a space
previously occupied by a single normal atom. Under such conditions, the electrons
of these atoms were squeezed out of their orbits and move about freely (a
degenerate state).
For the deeply religious people of Egypt, the creation of the universe was not a
physical event (Big Bang) that just happened. It was an orderly event that was
pre-planned and executed according to an orderly Divine Law that governs the
physical and metaphysical worlds.
Egyptian creation texts repeatedly stress the belief of creation by the Word. When
nothing existed except the One, he created the universe with his commanding
voice. The Egyptian Book of the Coming Forth by Light (wrongly and commonly
translated as the Book of the Dead), the oldest written text in the world, states:
I am the Eternal ... I am that which created the Word ... I am the Word ...
In Ancient Egypt, the words of Ra, revealed through Tehuti (equivalent to Hermes
or Mercury), became the things and creatures of this world, i.e. the words
(meaning sound waves) created the forms in the universe.
We find that in the Book of the Divine Cow (found in the shrines of Tut-Ankh-
Amen), Ra creates the heavens and its hosts merely by pronouncing some words
whose sound alone evokes the names of things—and these things then appear
at his bidding. As its name is pronounced, so the thing comes into being. For the
name is a reality, the thing itself. In other words, each particular sound has/is its
corresponding form.
Our Purpose on Earth
According to the Egyptian philosophy, man is born mortal but contains within
himself the seed of the divine. His purpose in this life is to nourish that seed, and
his reward, if successful, is eternal life, where he will reunite with his divine
origin.
The essence of the Egyptian metaphysical beliefs is that man is created to
accomplish a specific role, within the grand cosmic scheme. According to Egyptian
traditions, one cannot succeed in earthly life merely by default. One must use his
metaphysical faculty (mind symbolized by the heart) and his physical faculty
(action symbolized by the tongue). These actions will be in agreement or at
variance with natural harmony. If during his/her earthly life, the actions are not
harmonious with nature, s/he will reincarnate again to the earthly realm, to try
another time.