Friday, February 26, 2010

[OT] Canaan Cosmogony

Canaan, about 1450-1200 BCE [Primary source is the Baal cycle.  A full account is missing due to incomplete and damaged text.  Later details of their cosmogony have Greek influences]
  • Gods such as chaos, ether, air, wind and desire were produced from the egg Mot. The egg was populated with creatures who remained motionless until opened.

  • The sky and heavenly bodies were formed. Later the waters were separated from the sky, and the gods were formed.

  • There were twin mountains, Targhizizi and Tharumagi, which held the firmament above the earth-circling ocean, bounding the earth.

  • Baal Hadad (sky and storm god, associated with the west wind) and Yam (god of the chaotic sea, also called "Judge Nahar {River}" the same as, or in league with Lotan / Leviathan, a Dragon / Serpent) live with the Canaanite high god El on mount Lel, the source of the rivers and two oceans, as well as where those waters meet those of the firmament. 

  • El holds a council of the gods ("Elohim";  note "El" is usually a generic description for "god" in the Old Testament, and "Elohim" {words ending with "im" are plural in Hebrew} is the most common designation for "God" in the Old Testament ).

  • After a dispute between El and Baal, Yam is made king of the gods, becoming the "darling of El."

  • Yam must drive Baal from his throne, but Baal triumphs, killing Yam.

  • Baal is rewarded with a palace and feast to which Mot (god of death, drought & sterility -- seemingly different than the egg Mot) is invited.

  • Mot is insulted with an offering of bread and wine when he prefers flesh and blood, and suggests eating Baal.  Later he kills Baal.

  • Anat, Baal's sister and lover, kills Mot and Baal is resurrected.  Seven years later, Mot also resurrects, but El has pronounced Baal his favorite, and Mot recognizes Baal as king.

  • The victory of Anat was perpetuated year after year in ritual celebration.  Canaanites reenacted their struggle against sterility to ensure the creativity and fertility of the world, celebrating the death of a god, the quest of the goddess, and his the triumphant return to the divine sphere.

  • Baal is often depicted as Yahweh's antagonist in the Old Testament. However, like Baal, Yahweh  is depicted as a god of the storm, who's voice is as thunder and sends lightning (Ps.18:10–16).  Both are the "rider of the clouds" (Isa.19:1; Ps. 68:5), dominating the sea (ym) and vanquishing the primordial dragon (Ps. 74:13–14; Isa. 27:1; 51:9–10; Job 26:12–13). They are both also responsible for human and natural fertility.

  • more info here here here and here.  Photo: Ba'al with raised arm.


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/df/Baal_Ugarit_Louvre_AO17330.jpg/180px-Baal_Ugarit_Louvre_AO17330.jpg

[OT] Babylonian Cosmogony


Babylonian Cosmogony.  A Semitic group (Amorites)  conquered Sumer about 2300 BCE, centered in Akkad (language Akkadian also called Assyro-Babylonian).  During Hammurabi's reign (1790s-50s BCE), the capital moved to Babylon.  They borrowed heavily from their Sumerian predecessors. The first 5 tablets of the creation/flood epic were likely written in the 1st Babylonian dynasty (1830-1531 BCE), the last two during the 2nd (Kassite) dynasty.

  • The fresh water god is the male Apsu (Ab=water, zu=far) and the salt water god, the female Tiamat (may be related to Aakadian tâmtu "sea" or Sumerian ti=life, and ama=mother, may have originally been a Nammu cult.  Signifies chaos.  May be related to "Tehom" in Gen 1:2, rendered "Deep").
  • Their mating produced the gods.  '"When above" the heavens did not yet exist nor the earth below, Apsu the freshwater ocean was there, "the first, the begetter", and Tiamat, the saltwater sea, "she who bore them all"; they were "mixing their waters."'
  • These gods were noisy and Apsu could not rest by day or night (the sun, moon nor earth has not yet been created, yet day and night exist.  The Babylonians apparently had not yet conceived that the sun caused the day, but only marked the day).
  • Apsu suggests killing of their offspring gods, but they kill Apsu.
  • Marduk (counterpart to the Sumerian Enlil, god of light, called Merodach in the Bible, Asshur in Assyria), the chief of the offspring gods kills Tiamat, splits her body in half "like an oyster" and the two halves become the firmament (sky/heaven) and the earth.  Her spittle provide rain and clouds, and her head becomes the mountains.  From her eyes flow the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
  • Marduk was credited for bringing order from chaos, and good from evil.
  • Marduk slew Qingu while battling Tiamat, and mixed the blood of Qingu with clay to make Man, to work for the gods.
  • Man's  sins invite chaos, and elaborate rituals were needed to rectify their sins, providing a ritual rebirth of the world, free from sins of the past.
  • See  Brent Meeker, Cosmology and Cosmogony of Ancient Civilizations;  Wikipedia Mesopotamian Mythology.

http://wpcontent.answers.com/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Hammurabi%27s_Babylonia_1.svg/300px-Hammurabi%27s_Babylonia_1.svg.png


Thursday, February 25, 2010

[OT] Sumerian Cosmogony

Sumer - People from N.E. began settling Mesopotamia (meaning between rivers - the Tigris and Euphrates; swamp land at the head of the Persian gulf where Eden is thought to exist) about 5000 BC.  They later invented the wheel & writing.  Each city was ruled by a goddess or god with an elaborate priesthood with high priests ("En") discerning the god's will from a ziggurat, a temple shrine atop stairs with a purification pond in front (early ziggurats were elevated {one step}, later developing into stairs).

Sumerian pantheon was called Anunnaki (Anu = Heaven, Na = And, Ki = Earth)

The cosmology dates from approximately 3100 BCE
  • The primordial sea (abyss) is called Nammu (the mother of all)
  • The mother goddess Nammu (or Ninhursag "exalted lady" or Nintu, "the lady who gave birth," later Tiamat) creates "An" or Akkadian "Anu" (heaven) and "Ki" (earth). (Compare Gen 1:1 "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.")  An is a hard metalic shell lying on Ki.
  • The union of Ki and An produced Enlil god of air, wind and storm (En=Lord or high priest, Lil = Air/wind.  Yahweh has also been depicted as a storm god at times. Compare "a mighty wind [ruah] swept over the waters." [Gen 1:2, NAB])  He is usually portrayed in human form but also appears as a snake to the humans eyes. 
  • Enlil lifted An away from Ki providing a space for humans to live, and filled with it with Lil.
  • The bright aspects of Lil form the sun, moon and stars
  • Enlil creates living things in the Lil.
  • Enki is the son of Enlil and god of the freshwater sea beneath the earth ("the abyss," later called "apsu"), source of the Tigris and Euphrates (presumed by the Sumerians to come from underground).  Sometimes he is considered the god of the fertile earth.
  • Enki (later Akkadian Ea) creates man from clay in the image of the gods (compare to Adam) to relieve the lesser gods (igigi) of their labor.
  • A related myth has Enlil and other powerful gods enslaving the lesser gods to work for them.  They rebel while Enlil sleeps and when he awakes they negotiate a solution.  Male-female pairs from clay mingled with the blood of Geshtu-e (or Kingu), "a god who had intelligence", who was sacrificed for this reason.  Mankind then become slaves instead of the lesser gods (note that Sumerians used slaves to support their hierarchical priestly structure).
  • More info at Cosmology and Cosmogony of Ancient Civilizations; Wikipedia, Sumerian Religion; Wikipedia Mesopotamian Mythology

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

[OT] Early Middle Eastern Chronology

Selected Chronology of Middle Eastern up to the establishment of the kingdom of Israel

Maps through time


  • Sumer
    • 3450 BCE - The world's first cities appear along the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers just north of what is now the Persian Gulf (near presumed location of Eden).  Collectively, these cities make up the Uruka.  No unified government links these cities, and they remain independent for almost one thousand years.

    • 3200 BCE - Sumerians invent the wheel

    • 3100 BCE - Writing invented by Sumarians. recording the first epics in world history, including Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta and the first stories about Gilgamesh.

    • 2700 BCE - The Sumerian King, Gilgamesh, rules the city of Uruk, which has now grown to a population of more than 50,000. Gilgamesh is the subject of many epics, including the Sumerian "Gilgamesh and Enkidu in the Nether World" and the later Babylonian "Epic of Gilgamesh."

  • Akkadia (c.2350-2200 BCE)
    • 2320 BCE - Sargon conquers the independent city-states of Sumer and institutes a central government. But by 2130, Sumer regains its independence from Akkadian rule, though it does not revert back to independent city-states. At this time, Sumer is ruled from the important city of Ur.

    • 2320 BCE - Sargon conquers the independent city-states of SUMER and institutes a central government. But by 2130, Sumer regains its independence from Akkadian rule, though it does not revert back to independent city-states. At this time, Sumer is ruled from the important city of Ur.

    • 2100 BCE - The Sumerian King List is written, recording all the kings and dynasties ruling Sumer from the earliest times. According to this list, Eridu is named as the earliest settlement, a claim that seems to be confirmed by archeological evidence.

  • Babylonians / Amorites (c.2000-1600 BCE)
    • 2000-1600 BCE - The Old Babylonian period begins in Mesopotamia after the collapse of Sumer.  The Sumerians are conquered by the Amorites, who are situated in Babylon.  The Amorites introduce their Semitic language, an early ancestor to Hebrew, into the region.

    • 1900 BCE - The Epic of Gilgamesh is redacted from Sumerian sources and written in the Semitic language. Thus, though Gilgamesh was Sumerian, his Epic is Babylonian.

    • 1900-1500 BCE - Sometime between these dates a Semitic group of nomads migrate from Sumer to Canaan and then on to Egypt. They are led by a caravan trader, the Patriarch Abraham, who will become the father of the nation of Israel.

    • 1800 BCE - The Old Babylonians are employing advanced mathematical operations, such as, multiplication, division and square roots. In addition, they are using a duodecimal system (a system based on 12 and 6) to measure time. We still use their system for counting minutes and hours.

    • 1763BCE - The Amorite King, Hammurabi, conquers all of Sumer. Around the same time, he writes his Code of Laws containing 282 rules including the principles of "an eye for an eye" and "let the buyer beware." It is one of the first codes of law in world history, predated only by the Laws of Lipit-Ishtar.

  •  Kassites and Hittites (c.1600-717 BCE)
    • 1595 BCE - The Hittites, another non-Semitic people who speak an Indo-European language, capture Babylon and retreat, leaving the city open to Kassite domination. The Kassites remain in power for about three hundred years, maintaining the Sumerian/Babylonian culture without offering innovations of their own.

  • Assyrian  (c.1350- 612 BCE)
    • 1300-612 BCE - The Assyrians, a Semitic people, establish an empire spreading out from the town of Assur in northern Mesopotamia. By 1250, they commit themselves to conquering the Kassite Empire to the south.

    • 1286 BCE - The HITTITE  empire falls in 1185, to the "Sea People," an invading group coming from the West whose precise identity is unknown.

    • 1250-1200 BCE - The Hebrews, who migrated from Canaan to Egypt several hundred years earlier, return from Egypt after wandering for several years in the Sinai desert and begin the 100-year long conquest of Canaan. 

    • 1225 BCE - The Assyrian ruler, Tukulti-Ninurta, captures BABYLON and the region of southern MESOPOTAMIA, but Assyrian control does not last long.

    • 1200-1020 BCE - The Hebrews are ruled by the Judges during a period of relative stability that will be upset with the Philistine invasion of 1050.

    • 1050 BCE - The Philistines invade Israel from the North. Facing the threat of annihilation, the Hebrews ask Samuel, the last of the judges, to select a king.

    • 1020 BCE - Samuel selects Saul to be king of Israel thereby unifying the tribes of Israel into a nation. Facing many losses against the Philistines, Saul eventually commits suicide. Around the same time, David, undertaking his own campaign against the Philistines, proves victorious.

    • 1004 BCE - David becomes king of Israel. As such, he begins to build a centralized government based in Jerusalem, implementing forced labor, a census and a mechanism for collecting taxes. The First Temple period of Hebrew history begins with the rule of David





Saturday, February 20, 2010

[OT] Days of Creation


Days of Creation


Akkadian and Ugaritic literature indicate seven consecutive periods are considered a perfect period of time to do an important work, with action lasting six days and reaching it's conclusion/outcome on the 7th. [UC 13]  In their traditions,  6 days of labor were divided into three pairs, 1&2, 3&4, 5&6 with completion occurring in the 7th period.  Genesis does this a bit differently with 1&4, 2&5, 3&6 periods being related. 


Stationary Creation

Animated, Moving Creations

1; Light

4; Luminaries (sun , moon & stars)

2; Sea and Heaven

5; Fish and fowl

3; Earth (with it's plants)

6; Land creatures and Man

[UC 17]

Note the conceptual relationship in the symmetric pairs (rows).  The 1st column has the static phenomena or place, while it's parallel (2nd column) occupies and moves through the 1st [UC 42].

Some have felt the need to reconcile the order of the 6 "periods" of creation with a scientific understanding of creation.  This is difficult when the sun (4th day) is created after the plants (3rd day).  But this is not a scientific description of creation, but a literary parallel, and should be understood that way.



Friday, February 19, 2010

[OT] Rahab & Pre-biblical poetic epics


Rahab & Pre-biblical poetic epics
  • There appear to be intermediate links bridging the gap between the poems of the non-Israelites and their myths alluded to in the Bible. [UC 9]
  • The Old Testament contains evidence of pre-biblical poetic epics.  For example, the story of Rahab, prince of the sea who rose up in revolt against God, who subdued and slew him [UC 8].  Rahab, referred to in biblical and rabbinic literature, infers there were earlier ancient poetic stories about him.  The Old Testament refers to Rahab as if the reader were already aware of him.  Rahab, was the lord of the sea who opposed the will of God, and would not confine his waters within given limits until God subdued and slew him and fixed a boundary for the waters of the sea that they should never be able to pass. 

Genesis uses a simple prose style without embellishment of poetic metaphors or figures of speech, and avoids  making use of the legendary poetic material.  This is done as a voice of protest against the pagan myths.  So when the Torah simply says "God said 'Let the waters be gathered together,' the Mesopotamian stories of Tiamat & Rahab are trivialized, and the supremacy of the Hebrew God is emphasized simply by saying only "it was so." The following are biblical & rabbinic references to Rahab [UC 36-37]: 

  9 Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm of the LORD; awake, as in the ancient days, in the generations of old. Art thou not it that hath cut Rahab, and wounded the dragon?

  10 Art thou not it which hath dried the sea, the waters of the great deep; that hath made the depths of the sea a way for the ransomed to pass over?

  22 Fear ye not me? saith the LORD: will ye not tremble at my presence, which have placed the sand for the bound of the sea by a perpetual decree, that it cannot pass it: and though the waves thereof toss themselves, yet can they not prevail; though they roar, yet can they not pass over it?

  27 When he prepared the heavens, I was there: when he set a compass upon the face of the depth:

  28 When he established the clouds above: when he strengthened the fountains of the deep:

  29 When he gave to the sea his decree, that the waters should not pass his commandment: when he appointed the foundations of the earth:

  12 Am I a sea, or a whale, that thou settest a watch over me?

  13 If God will not withdraw his anger, the proud helpers do stoop under him (or "beneath Him bowed the helpers of Rahab")

  10 He hath compassed the waters with bounds, until the day and night come to an end.

  11 The pillars of heaven tremble and are astonished at his reproof.

  12 He divideth the sea with his power, and by his understanding he smiteth through the proud.

  8 Or who shut up the sea with doors, when it brake forth, as if it had issued out of the womb?

  9 When I made the cloud the garment thereof, and thick darkness a swaddlingband for it,

  10 And brake up for it my decreed place, and set bars and doors,

  9 Thou rulest the raging of the sea: when the waves thereof arise, thou stillest them.

  10 Thou hast broken Rahab in pieces, as one that is slain; thou hast scattered thine enemies with thy strong arm.

  • Hagiga 12a. Resh Lakish said: When the Holy One, blessed by He, created the sea it continued to expand until the Holy One, blessed by He, rebuked it and caused it to dry up.

  • Baba Bathra 74b: R. Judah said in the name of Rab: When the Holy One, blessed by He, desired to create the world, He said to the lord of the sea: "Open thy mouth and swallow up all the waters of the world."  The latter answered: "Sovereign of the universe, I have enough with my own!"  Thereupon God instantly trod him down and slew him as it is said: By this power He stamped down the sea; by His understanding He smote Rahab.  R. Isaac said:  From this you may infer that the lord of the sea is called Rahab.

  • Pirke Rabbi Eliezer, V: 'Thereupon the waters immediately became turbulent and rose up to cover the earth as in the beginning, until the Holy One, blessed be He, rebuked them and subdued them, placing them under the soles of his feet; and He measured them with His palm so as not to augment or diminish them, and He made the sand the boundary of the sea, like a man who makes a fence for his vineyard; and when they [the waters] rise up and see the sand before them, they turn back, as it is said: Do you not fear Me? says the Lord; do you not tremble before Me?  I placed the sand as the bounds for the sea, (Jer. v22)


[OT] References to Mesopotamian gods in Genesis 1:2

References to Mesopotamian gods in Genesis 1:2
  And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. (Hebrew transliteration here).
  • Form and Void in Hebrew: "Tohu" and "Bohu"
  • "Void" (Hebrew "bohu")  - possible reference to the  goddess Ba'u or Ba-u. [UC 22]

    • Bau was a Sumerian/Akkadian Goddess, daughter of An and Ninurta's wife who had seven daughters

    • The oldest king of Ur known to us is Ur-Ba'u (servant of the goddess Ba'u ).

    • According to Philo of Byblus, Ba'u, was a Goddess of the primal night, mother of the 1st mortals . But it is doubtful this reference is related to the Canaanite Goddess Ba-u.

  • Deep = "Tehom"  [UC 23-24]

    • Tehom belonges to the poetic creation epic tradition of the area.  It does not have a definite article ("the" or in Hebrew "ha").  It is not "The Deep" but simply "Deep" or "Tehom."  The definite article does not occur in Canaanite writings, and rarely in Hebrew poetry.

    • 'Tehom" is missing the feminine ending "t" but is still a feminine word in the context of this sentence.  It might have been rendered "Tehomat."

    • "Tiamat" was the Akkadian name of the goddess of the primeval World-Ocean, who had always existed and was the mighty foe of the creative god.

    • Her name seems ultimately to have been a Sumerian one, as in that language ti = Life, and ama = Mother, t = feminine ending, suggesting her original name may have been "the mother of all life" (compare Gen 3:20, Eve is the "mother of all living."  Tiamat is depicted as  a  dragon, and is shown rearing herself on two legs.  There could be parallels with Eve and the serpent).

    • Isaiah 51, 9-10 refers to tehom ("deep") saying regarding YHWH "was it not thou that didst cut rahab in pieces, that didst pierce the dragon?  was it not Thou that didst dry up the sea, the waters of the great DEEP...?"

    • The Babylonian epic Enuma Elish begins "When above" the heavens did not yet exist nor the earth below, Apsu the freshwater ocean was there, "the first, the begetter", and Tiamat, the saltwater sea, "she who bore them all"; they were "mixing their waters".


This "mixing of the waters" is a natural feature of the middle Persian Gulf, where fresh waters from the Arabian aquifer mix and mingle with the salt waters of the sea. This characteristic is especially true of the region of Bahrain (whose name means in Arabic, "twin waters"), which is thought to be the site of Dilmun, the original site of the Sumerian creation.


    • Tiamat was the "shining" personification of salt water who roared and smote in the chaos of original creation. She and Apsu filled the cosmic abyss with the primeval waters.

    • Slicing Tiamat in half, he made from her ribs the vault of heaven and earth (compare to firmament). Her weeping eyes became the source of the Tigris and the Euphrates. With the approval of the elder gods, he took from Kingu the Tablets of Destiny, installing himself as the head of the Babylonian pantheon.  Kingu was captured and was later slain with his red blood mixed with the red clay of the Earth to make the body of humankind (see discussion of Adam below) created to act as the servant of the younger Igigi

  • "Ruah" (Hebrew for "spirit," "breath" or "wind") of God could be a strong wind that divides the upper waters from the lower water.  Using "wind" for ruah, "and the Wind of God moved upon the face of the waters."  (compare Moses parting the red sea: "the Lord caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all that night, and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided.").

    • A possible connection between "Ruah" and "Lilith" exists.  In Mesopotamian literature, Lilith is a 'dark maid' who flies off on her wings to the desert.  In Akkadian tradition she is the goddess of the South wind. Rabbinic literature mentions her as the 1st wife of Adam.
    • "Lilith" is connected with two root words - LayiI, Hebrew for night, and Lil, Sumerian (c. 3000 BCE) for 'wind' or 'breath' or 'spirit'.
    • The possible connection to this verse is Ruah/Lilith, connotating darkness and/or wind, where she is a winged goddess hovering over Tiamat in darkness.
    • "Lilith" occurs once in the bible, in Isaiah 34:14, translated variously as 'night hag,'  'screech owl,` 'night-jar,' 'night monster,'  'vampires,'  a spirit or goblin, and "Lilith" (in the New American Bible, NRSV and The Message Bible).
  • Another possible translation of Genesis 1:1-2 is:
  • 'In the beginning, a number of gods ("Elohim") began to give birth to the heavens and the earth. The earth still belonged to Tohu and Bohu (goddesses of formlessness and ultimate space), and darkness was on the face of the mother creator goddess Tiamat, and a huge wind flapped its wings over the face of the water.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

[OT] Firmament

Firmament (Gen 1:6) (jumping ahead to the concept of firmament to provide context for v.2)

6 ¶ And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.  

  • The Hebrews conceived the universe as water, with a bowl shaped "firmament" over the flat earth holding back the waters.  the Stars, sun and moon were placed in the firmament.  Rain came through the "windows of heaven," and the fountains of the deep"  came from the universal waters below the earth.
  •  Hebrew Cosmology diagram.  See also here or here.


  • The root of "firmament" means "hammer out", implies a horizontal area [UC 31]

  • Mesopotamian mythology shows after Marduk (or other various deities from other times/places) vanquished Tiamat, goddess of the world-ocean, depicted as a great sea-monster and other monster-like creations she made to help her in her combat. After he had slain his chief enemy, he cut her carcass horizontally, dividing it into two halves, one on top of the other, and out of the upper half, he formed the heavens, and out of the lower half, the earth, including the sea/"deep."  [UC 32-33, 49-50]

  • From the Babylonian account of creation (Tablet IV, 137-140):

He split her like a fish into two parts;
The one half of her he set up and laid therewith the beams of the heavens*
He pulled down a bar and stationed a watch,
He enjoined them not to let her waters go forth
*(cf. Psalms 104:3 "Who hast laid the beams of thy chambers on the waters."  Note the  psalm is about the creation).
  • Genesis recognizes the Canaanite myth, but refutes it.  No weapons, no carved body or segments, just physical unfolding taking the place of the mythical train of events

Friday, February 12, 2010

[OT] Extra-Genesis biblical creation references

Extra-Genesis biblical creation references

  • Other references to the creation exist in other books of the bible. Note the similarities of these two, including laying foundations, measurements, line, bases, cornerstones and the allusions to a tent: [UC 9-10]

  4 Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding.

  5 Who hath laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest? or who hath stretched the line upon it?

  6 Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? or who laid the corner stone thereof;

  7 When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?

  12 Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand, and meted out heaven with the span, and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure, and weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills in a balance?

  21 Have ye not known? have ye not heard? hath it not been told you from the beginning? have ye not understood from the foundations of the earth?

  22 It is he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth, and the inhabitants thereof are as grasshoppers; that stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain, and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in:

[OT] Monotheism in the middle east

This is the first in a series of post based on my notes (mostly) from  Cassuto, Umberto., "A Commentary on the Book of Genesis: Part 1, from Adam to Noah (Genesis 1-6:8) translated form Hebrew by Israel Abrahams" , Jerusalem, The Magnes Press, The Hebrew University, 1944.  I'll refer to this as "[UC]" below.

Monotheism
  • Monotheism is the idea that there is one, single God.  Polytheism is the idea that many gods exist.  Most primitive are polytheist. 
  • Some early middle eastern religions began to approach monotheism, such as Amenhotep IV [UC 8], who attributed the creation to one of the gods, the sun-god Aten.  It appears that some of his predecessors held the same idea. 
  • Most Middle Eastern polytheistic religious texts begin with a theogeny, or the story of the origin of the gods, couched in epic poems [UC 7].  There is evidence of the bible responding to these earlier texts, and that knowledge of these texts were common at the time Genesis, Isaiah, Psalms & Job were written. 
  • Yahweh is not included in a theogeny -- because he always existed, a key concept of monotheism.  Nor do the Israelites have festivals commemorating events in Yahweh's life -- because he is non-changing, so there is nothing to commemorate.  Festivals are about historic events of Israel