The Egyptian Hymn starts by talking about the glories of the Aten and takes after this up with the notice of the Sun (the Aten was a sun plate). Amid Amen-hotep IV's rule, the one genuine …show more content…
The Egyptian song closes with a tribute to "the Lord of the Two Lands" who is unmistakably Akhenaten. It appears as though the Egyptians are worshiping their ruler practically as much as they love Aten. The Hymn says, "Who has approached from your body". They trust that Akhenaten is an incarnation of Aten. Worshiping the King glaring difference a conspicuous difference to Psalm 104 where they have the absence of a lord and are preying to God since they can't have faith in a ruler. In Psalm 104 it says, "might the masters radiance be always" where as in the Hymn to Aten it says " Lord of the two grounds… Living and youthful, everlastingly and ever." This is an altogether different message while Psalm 104 spotlights on the Lord, the Hymn to Aten closes by concentrating on their ruler.
All animals in both of the pieces love God, as expressed before in Psalm 104 the lions look for God to encourage them, The Hymn of Aten expresses that "every one of the herds are content with their grain." The substance is to a great degree comparative and the utilization the same analogies aside from they are worded and reinterpreted as their own God's. The primary contrast is by all accounts in the requesting and who is being