God Heka |
As the one who triggers Ka, Heka was besides said to be the son of Atum, the creator of things in widespread, or now and then the son of Khnum, who created special individual Ba (another view of the soul). As the son of Khnum, his mother was very to be Menhit.
The hieroglyph for his name featured a twist of flax inside a couple of mounted arms; however, it also mistily resembles a pair of intertwined snakes within someone's arms. Consequently, Heka was said to have combated and conquered two serpents, and was usually represented as a man dying two giant intertwined snakes. Medicine and doctors were considered to be a form of magic, and so Heka's priesthood performed these bodily functions.
Egyptians believed that with Heka, the activating of the Ka, an view of the soul of both gods and humans, (and divine personification of magic), they could mold the gods and gain shelter, healing and transmutation. Health and haleness of being were worthy to Heka. There is no word for religion in the ancient Egyptian language, material and religious world views were not distinct; thus Heka was not a secular practice but rather a divine observance. Every face of life, every word, plant, animal and ritual was connected to the power and agency of the gods.