Enuma Elish IV
The Seven Tablets of CreationThey set a constellation in the middle And addressed Marduk, their son, 'Your destiny, Be-l, is superior to that of all the gods, Command and bring about annihilation and re-creation. Let the constellation disappear at your utterance, With a second command let the constellation reappear.' He gave the command and the constellation disappeared, With a second command the constellation came into being again. When the gods, his fathers, saw (the effect of) his utterance, They rejoiced and offered congratulation: 'Marduk is the king!'
Isaiah 45:12
11 This is what the Lord says, the Holy One of Israel, the one who formed him, concerning things to come: “How dare you question me about my children! How dare you tell me what to do with the work of my own hands! 12 I made the earth; I created the people who live on it. It was me—my hands stretched out the sky. I give orders to all the heavenly lights. 13 It is me—I stir him up and commission him; I will make all his ways level. He will rebuild my city; he will send my exiled people home, but not for a price or a bribe, ”says the Lord of Heaven’s Armies.
Notes and References
"... Direct influence of Mesopotamian cosmogonies on the Bible is demonstrable only for Genesis 2–11. The Mesopotamian genre of the creation-flood epic, best represented by Atrahasis, has left its mark on the plot and themes of Genesis 2–11. Some scholars have argued that Enuma Elish directly influenced Genesis 1, but the claim is difficult to prove. Influence on Second Isaiah is also possible and, if the prophet actually lived in sixth-century Babylon, highly probable. Isaiah 44:24–45:13, for example, might well have been shaped by the traditions found in several minor cosmogonies and in Enuma Elish: control of the waters, building of a temple, appointment of a king. On the other hand, these ideas could simply have come from the common stock of the ancient orient. ..."
Clifford, Richard J. Creation Accounts in the Ancient Near East and in the Bible (p. 201) The Catholic Biblical Association of America, 1994