Phoenix, Guardian of the World
1st–3rd Century
1And taking me, he led me where the sun goes forth. 2And he showed me a chariot drawn by four horses and fire underneath it. And upon the chariot sat a man wearing a fiery crown. The chariot was drawn by forty angels. And behold, a bird runs along before the sun, as large as nine mountains. 3And I said to the angel, “What is this bird?” And he said…
This passage from 3 Baruch contains a remarkable description of the phoenix, a mythical bird that shields the earth from the burning rays of the sun. Apocalypses often describe cosmological marvels, and this text also offers a number of etiologies, including of cinnamon and of the crowing of roosters at dawn. The excerpt below is translated from the Greek version of the text.
Related Guide
Otherworldly Journeys in Early Jewish Literature
Related Guide
Early Apocalyptic Literature
Related Guide
Ancient Jewish Literature
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