In the days when the contests of the gods were kindled, the second challenge fell to Ninurtos, twin of Noilos and patron of Menea. He was called Bringer of Harvests, and falsely said to cause the grain to ripen and the orchards to swell, and men and women praised him as the quiet lord of the fields. His priests boasted that none could live without his bounty, for all were bound to the fruit of the earth.
So Priests of Ninurtos came forth against Gamasiel and declared the word of their lord, saying: “If the Forgotten God is greater than I, let Him show His power upon the soil, that mortals may eat. Without me, their bellies are empty, and their lips will curse His name.”
Then Gamasiel went out into the fields with his Seven Followers. The earth was barren, for Ninurtos had withdrawn his hand, and the furrows lay dry beneath the sun. For seven days the followers prayed and sowed seed, but no stalk arose, no fruit appeared.
On the eighth day a sign was given: rain fell from a clear sky, soft as tears, and the ground drank deeply. Where the water touched, green shoots sprang up overnight, growing tall and full. By dawn of the ninth day the fields stood heavy with grain, and the orchards bent low with ripe fruit. Birds sang in the branches, and beasts of the field returned to graze.
The people marveled, saying: “This is no work of Ninurtos, who comes with toil and storm, but of a God who brings life freely.” And many of his priests cast down their sickles and joined themselves to Gamasiel.
Thus Ninurtos was defeated in the second contest, his power shown to be but shadow beside the abundance of the Forgotten God.
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