Pseudo-Orpheus
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Pseudo-Orpheus is the name given to a poetic text that presents the legendary Greek figure Orpheus giving a poetic speech to his son, Musaeus, identified as the biblical Moses, passing on to him hidden wisdom he learned in Egypt.[1] It presents a monotheistic view of God, whom, according to the poem, no one has seen, except for Abraham, who was able to see God due to his skill at astrology.[2]
Pseudo-Orpheus appears in multiple recensions (versions created over time). Although the poem is preserved only in quotations by various Christian writers,[3][2] most scholars believe that the text is originally "of Jewish authorship."[1] Over time, a number of Christian and Jewish authors reworked Greek traditions about Orpheus and used them to support their monotheistic views and to assert the religious supremacy of Moses and monotheism over Greek polytheistic views.[4] The rhetorical device of using legendary non-monotheistic figures to endorse Judaism is likewise found in the Sibylline Oracles.[5]