# Recommended Readings: The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel - https://amzn.to/4e6Bdo7 The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts - https://amzn.to/3KJuD9X Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic - https://amzn.to/4549Net Beyond the Texts: An Archaeological Portrait of Ancient Israel and Judah - https://amzn.to/3X68eek Yahweh and the Gods and Goddesses of Canaan - https://amzn.to/3x86I0p God: An Anatomy - https://amzn.to/3VoQRD5 The Origin and Character of God - https://amzn.to/3V2agcx The Religions of Ancient Israel: A Synthesis of Parallactic Approaches - https://amzn.to/4e0cLVB Documents of Judean Exiles and West Semites in Babylonia in the Collection of David Sofer - https://amzn.to/4e0v1Ox Judeans in Babylonia A Study of Deportees in the Sixth and Fifth Centuries BCE - https://amzn.to/3V6dSdv Yahweh before Israel - https://amzn.to/3X3mUuE No Other Gods: Emergent Monotheism in Israel - https://amzn.to/3wXfDSp # Outline He argues that Yahweh’s evolution into “God” was not a straight theological revelation but the cumulative result of Canaanite pantheon compression, Assyrian imperial theology, Judean political–cultic reforms, social collapse, exile, and finally a drastic monotheistic turn in Deutero‑Isaiah’s prophetic rhetoric.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=20s)] --- ## Detailed outline with timestamps - **Introduction and agenda** He recaps from the previous Yahweh origins video: Yahweh began as a minor regional warrior–storm god, became the state deity of Israel and Judah, and ultimately “mutated” into the sole God of monotheism.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=0)] He clarifies that this episode is about _how_ Yahwistic monotheism emerges and to what extent ancient Israel was ever truly monotheistic, distancing himself from confessional positions and focusing on non‑dogmatic scholarship.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=50)] - **Defining monotheism and scholarly positions** He defines monotheism as the claim that there is one and only one God, with all other supposed gods denied real ontological status or radically demoted.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=354)] He contrasts three broad views: (1) conservative claims that monotheism is present from Abraham/Moses onwards; (2) minimalist claims that the Hebrew Bible never contains real monotheism, only henotheism/monolatry plus rhetoric; and (3) his evidence-based view that true monotheism is a very late, narrowly attested innovation centered in the Babylonian exile.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=416)] - **Canaanite pantheon as a starting “ecosystem”** He outlines the relatively small Canaanite four‑tier pantheon: El and his consort Athirat/Asherah at the top, then divine children like Baal and Anat, then lesser specialized gods (e.g., craftsman Kothar‑wa‑Hasis), then semi‑divine servants and warriors.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=565)] He notes primordial forces like Sea and Death (Yam and Mot), tamed in the Baal cycle, and emphasizes that the Canaanite system’s small size made numerical “whittling down” toward one god more feasible than in Egypt or Mesopotamia.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=573)] - **Yahweh’s entry and ascent in the divine family** He discusses Deuteronomy 32:8–9 as preserving an older memory where Elyon (a form of El) allots nations to different gods, giving Israel/Jacob to Yahweh, implying Yahweh was originally a second‑tier deity, “son of El.”[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=694)] Textual variants in the Septuagint and Dead Sea Scrolls keep the more overtly polytheistic reading, while the Masoretic Text appears to have undergone later anti‑polytheistic smoothing.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=703)] - **Assimilation with El and rivalry with Baal** He describes Yahweh’s assimilation to El: Yahweh rises to the top of the pantheon, taking on El’s high‑god role, but this involves “mutations” in the divine household, especially around El’s consort Asherah.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=741)] In parallel, Yahweh competes with Baal (another storm‑warrior god and the regional incumbent) for popular devotion, with prophetic cycles like Elijah/Elisha dramatizing this rivalry.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=757)] - **Asherah, Anat, and compressed henotheism** He explains that Asherah (Asherah poles, sacred trees) appears both in archaeology and in the Hebrew Bible as a major focus of devotion, sometimes installed even in the Jerusalem temple, much to the horror of Yahweh‑only prophets.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=787)] He notes that Yahweh seems to acquire a consort role with Asherah and, in the Elephantine community, Anat appears alongside Yahweh, suggesting a complex divine “family” that gradually gets compressed as monolatrous Yahweh partisans slowly demote/eliminate other deities.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=819)] - **Divine council persists under Yahweh** He shows that the Canaanite divine council survives in Yahwistic form: Psalm 82 has Yahweh judging other gods; Job’s prologue has “the satan” as a prosecuting figure; heavenly armies and messengers remain; and the title “Yahweh Sabaoth” (Yahweh of armies) underscores this court imagery.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=846)] Even so, over time these figures are increasingly flattened into angels and spirits rather than full “gods,” marking another step toward a leaner pantheon.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=889)] - **Mythological compression and suppression** He characterizes the period as one of “compressed henotheism” moving toward monolatry: there are still other gods, but Yahweh is the only one worthy of worship, and elements of the old pantheon—especially Asherah—are slowly suppressed, eventually targeted for state‑backed elimination.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=940)] He frames this as alternating forces of compression (shrinking the divine family) and suppression (picking off elements one by one), which over centuries push the system toward fewer and fewer divine beings.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1013)] - **Assyrian imperial theology and universal godhood** He explains that in traditional Near Eastern thought, gods were regional, dwelling in specific shrines and territories, but the Assyrian imperial project forged a new royal theology: Ashur (and to some extent Ashur‑Marduk) becomes a universal imperial god ruling all conquered lands.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1048)] This Assyrian model—one king/one universal state god—deeply impresses surrounding cultures, including Israel and Judah, because they experience Assyria’s brutal power firsthand.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1116)] - **Israelite royal theology and Yahweh as warrior king** He outlines how Israelite royal theology, especially in Psalms, had already developed a cosmic–terrestrial parallel: the Davidic king’s ambitions mirror Yahweh’s cosmic battles against chaos forces like the sea; kings are envisioned as titan-like figures whose hands reach sea and rivers.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1206)] These mythic exaggerations later feed messianic hopes and provide conceptual scaffolding for envisioning Yahweh as a king with potentially universal scope once plugged into the Assyrian idea of a universal god.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1270)] - **Hezekiah’s reforms and siege of Jerusalem** He recounts Assyria’s destruction of the northern kingdom (722 BCE), the refugee influx into Judah, and Hezekiah’s reign as a moment of state-building, massive fortifications (Broad Wall, Siloam Tunnel), and religious centralization of Yahweh worship in Jerusalem.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1390)] He stresses that Hezekiah’s “reforms” can also be seen as an inquisition by non‑Yahweh worshipers, but the successful avoidance of Jerusalem’s destruction under Sennacherib is interpreted by Yahweh partisans as proof that exclusive Yahweh devotion “worked.”[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1510)] - **Manasseh, syncretism, and backlash** He argues that Manasseh’s long reign likely reflects a more popular syncretic policy: astral worship, non‑Yahwistic cults, and broader ecumenism support economic prosperity and appease Assyrian overlords, even as Yahweh extremists depict him as a villain.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1697)] From the viewpoint of the general population, Yahweh iconoclasts smashing beloved shrines would have seemed like extremists, analogous to modern iconoclastic movements destroying heritage sites.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1753)] - **Josiah, Deuteronomy, and vassal theology** He recounts Amon’s assassination and the rise of child‑king Josiah, under whose rule non‑Jerusalem shrines and non‑Yahweh sites are again targeted; a “scroll of the law” is “found” in the temple and vetted by the prophetess Huldah.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1815)] Many scholars, he notes, see this as the production of a Deuteronomic law code (core Deuteronomy 12–26) that constructs Judah as Yahweh’s vassal, with the king and priesthood mediating a covenant that grants land, fertility, and descendants in exchange for exclusive loyalty.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1863)] - **Priestly theology, separation, and demythologizing** He turns to priestly circles who develop a sophisticated system of ritual purity and “sacred contagion,” where cosmic order is maintained by carefully managing clean/unclean states and feeding Yahweh through sacrifice.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2020)] In their creation theology, they demythologize chaos: instead of personified monsters alone, creation is framed as a series of separations (waters, lights, time culminating in Sabbath), mirrored by the tabernacle/temple design, indicating a trend toward more abstract, less mythic language even while divine council echoes remain.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2085)] - **Collapse, exile, and socio‑economic shifts** He narrates Josiah’s death in the maelstrom between Egypt, Assyria, and rising Neo‑Babylonia, Judah’s brief Egyptian vassalage, and then Babylon’s devastating campaigns culminating in Jerusalem’s destruction and the exile.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2242)] He emphasizes that only a slice of the population is exiled—around several thousand elites, priests, artisans—and that this mix of monolatrous and syncretic Judeans is transported together, forcing them to wrestle with the theological meaning of partial destruction rather than total annihilation.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2338)] - **Exilic name evidence and identity hardening** He summarizes cuneiform evidence from Judean communities (“Yehud town”) in Babylonia: name patterns show high and sometimes increasing rates of Yahweh‑theophoric names across generations, suggesting intensified Yahweh identification in exile even as some Judeans adopt Akkadian or other theophoric elements.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2477)] Marriage contracts show Judean women marrying Babylonians invoking local gods in curses, but never Yahweh, indicating both syncretism and a complex negotiation of identity.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2572)] - **Breakdown of family-land structures and rise of individual** Drawing on Mark S. Smith, he notes that social collapse, land dispossession, and exile weaken the traditional family/land unit, undermining communal guilt structures and elevating individual responsibility (e.g., Ezekiel rejecting inherited guilt).[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2623)] This weakening of the extended divine family in heaven parallels an increasing focus on individual divine beings and individual human agents, adding another “compression” pressure toward fewer gods.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2715)] - **Dialectic with imperial gods and logical “dead end”** He argues that Assyrian and then Babylonian imperial theology pushes Yahwist thinkers into a dialectical posture: if Yahweh is to be king not just of Judah but of the empires, then the gods of those empires must be negated, not just subordinated.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2764)] Centuries of compression, suppression, royal theology, priestly demythologizing, and exile leave Judean theologians with “precious few options,” making monotheism almost an inevitable endpoint rather than a triumphant initial choice.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2793)] - **Deutero‑Isaiah and explicit primitive monotheism** He identifies the exilic prophet of Isaiah 40–55 (Deutero‑Isaiah) as the best candidate for articulating primitive Judean monotheism, noting that scholarship has long recognized this section as distinct from 8th‑century First Isaiah.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2914)] In Isaiah 40–48 and 49–55, Yahweh is proclaimed as sole creator, sole director of history (including Cyrus as Yahweh’s “anointed”), and Israel is told to choose Yahweh because there simply are no other real gods, not because of a mere vassal contract.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2963)] - **Polemic against idols and the ontological upgrade of Yahweh** He details Deutero‑Isaiah’s polemic: idols are human craftwork, mute and immobile, carried by beasts; their makers know only their own handiwork, while forests praise Yahweh and wood used for idols is fit only for burning.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3022)] Yahweh, by contrast, forms humanity, moves kings (Cyrus), carries Israel, and chooses Israel as witness; the harder the attack on Marduk/Nabu’s statues, the stronger the implied ontological upgrade of Yahweh into a universal, uniquely real deity.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3063)] - **Isaiah 45:7 and the “pinnacle” of pure monotheism** He highlights Isaiah 45:7 (“I form light and darkness, create good and evil”) as perhaps the high point of uncompromising monotheism, since Yahweh is explicitly responsible for both good and evil, a stance later traditions often evade or soften.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3208)] Later Jewish liturgy modifies this verse (creating “peace and _everything_” rather than “evil”), and many monotheisms introduce dualistic or philosophical workarounds (devils, falls, privation theories) to avoid this radical implication.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3258)] - **Return, temple, and invention of Judaism** He notes that under Persian rule, Cyrus acts as the only truly successful “messiah” in Judean history, allowing repatriation and temple restoration; some exiles return while many stay in the comfortable Persian context.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3303)] He suggests that many features we associate with Judaism (public reading of Torah, liturgical structures, a defined Judean religious identity) are largely invented or crystallized in this post‑exilic period rather than simply continuous from earlier Israelite religion.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3374)] - **Jewish apocalypticism and further transformation** He closes by sketching how, on the basis of monotheism and subsequent social turmoil, Jewish apocalypticism emerges: intense cosmology, symbolic visions, dualism, angels and demons, messianic and anti‑messianic figures, and heavenly journeys.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3412)] This apocalyptic mode further universalizes and abstracts Yahweh, stripping away remaining particularism and yielding the kind of universal God later inherited—“for better and for worse”—by major Abrahamic traditions.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3436)] --- # Historical timeline of key developments ## 1. Canaanite background and Yahweh’s early status - **Bronze Age (before 1200 BCE)** – Canaanite four‑tier pantheon centered on El, Asherah, Baal, Anat, and lesser gods and servants is well attested in Ugaritic texts; Yahweh is absent here.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=573)] - **Early Iron Age (c. 1200–1000 BCE)** – Yahweh appears in Israelite literature as a southern thunderstorm and warrior god associated with Seir and the southern highlands, eventually imported into highland cult centers like Shiloh.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=168)] ## 2. Pantheon compression and henotheism - **Early monarchy (roughly 10th–9th centuries BCE)** – Deuteronomy 32’s older layer remembers Yahweh as a son of El, allotted Israel among other nations, indicating a polytheistic divine ecology.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=694)] - **Monarchical period** – Yahweh assimilates El’s status and functions; rivalry with Baal intensifies; Asherah and Anat are associated with Yahweh in various cults; divine council remains but with Yahweh at the top.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=741)] ## 3. Political reforms and proto‑monolatry - **8th century BCE** – Assyrian imperial theology develops Ashur (and Ashur–Marduk) into a universal state god, creating a new model of theological universality tied to empire.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1093)] - **722 BCE** – Assyria destroys the northern kingdom; state Yahwism there ends; refugees flood into Judah.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1181)] - **Late 8th century BCE (Hezekiah’s reign)** – Hezekiah centralizes Yahweh worship in Jerusalem, fortifies the city, and likely suppresses rival shrines; the near‑miss siege by Sennacherib is interpreted as Yahweh’s miraculous deliverance, boosting Yahweh‑only factions.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1390)] - **7th century BCE (Manasseh’s reign)** – Long, stable reign with syncretic and astral cults flourishing, suggesting popular resistance to radical Yahweh‑only iconoclasm; Yahweh extremists remain a minority.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1697)] - **Late 7th century BCE (Josiah’s reign)** – Josiah’s reforms (as narrated) centralize cult further, destroy non‑Yahweh and non‑Jerusalem Yahweh shrines, and adopt a Deuteronomic law code that frames Judah as Yahweh’s exclusive vassal.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=1863)] ## 4. Collapse, exile, and identity hardening - **Late 7th–early 6th centuries BCE** – Assyria collapses, Egypt and Neo‑Babylonia struggle for dominance; Josiah dies in this period, Judah briefly falls under Egyptian hegemony.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2242)] - **586 BCE (traditional date)** – Nebuchadnezzar destroys Jerusalem and the temple; Judean elites are deported to Babylonia, initiating the Babylonian exile.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2271)] - **6th–5th centuries BCE** – In exile communities (e.g., “Yehud town”), cuneiform tablets show high and sometimes rising frequencies of Yahweh‑theophoric names, indicating intensified Yahweh identity amid some syncretism and intermarriage.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2477)] - **Exilic period** – Social and land structures collapse; texts like Ezekiel shift emphasis from collective/familial guilt to individual responsibility, aligning with a general “compression” of both human and divine families.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2623)] ## 5. Emergence of explicit monotheism - **Exilic Isaiah (mid‑6th century BCE)** – Deutero‑Isaiah (Isaiah 40–55) composes powerful polemics against idols and articulates a Yahweh who alone creates, directs history (including Cyrus as messiah), and stands as the only real God.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=2914)] - **Isaiah 45:7 (same period)** – Statement that Yahweh forms light and darkness and creates good and evil marks an extreme, philosophically rigorous form of monotheism that later traditions often soften.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3208)] ## 6. Return, Judaism, and apocalyptic transformation - **539–520 BCE (Persian rise and Cyrus)** – Cyrus conquers Babylon; Judeans gain the right to return and rebuild; temple restoration and Torah‑centered community begin to shape what we now call Judaism.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3303)] - **Post‑exilic period (5th–3rd centuries BCE)** – Deuteronomistic and priestly theologies reassert temple sacrifice and law; at the same time, Jewish apocalypticism develops (visions, dualism, angels/demons, eschatology), further universalizing and abstracting Yahweh.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3412)] - **Hellenistic and later** – Apocalyptic and monotheistic frameworks set up the transition from Yahweh as particular Judean deity to the universal God of later Judaism and the broader Abrahamic traditions.[[youtube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGCqv37O2Dg&t=3516)] ---