well, i'm not sure why people focus on the official approval aspect. it doesn't particularly negate the fact that even heretical sects help indicate the cultural background to the religion. and, in any case, we have a pretty clear biblical narrative of how the disapproval came about, during the reigns of hezekiah and josiah. those stories, hezekiah's in particular, specifically indicate that asherah was previously approved as part of the official state religion.
> The altar at Arad was taken down—dismantled, but not broken—in the time of Hezekiah.
that i wasn't aware of. i've only ever seen them standing.
> And that's my point: Let's not draw much conclusion from any of this. To conclude, as some quickly do, that Israelite monotheism evolved from its neighbors, or that Israel was really monolatrous or henotheistic is simply manufacturing an outcome that the data doesn't automatically support.
no, i think we can draw some conclusions, and i think the data generally supports a polytheistic origin to monotheism.
> > i don't think anyone is seriously debating the (somewhat) monotheistic revolution in judah around the time of hezekiah
> Agreed. Indubitably a revival. But that doesn't indicate its genesis.
we don't have any reason to think it was earlier. we have no monotheistic texts before this point, and the archaeology is pretty thoroughly filled with depictions and names of other gods. indeed, even hezekiah's revolution went right on using the symbols of the older polytheistic myths. his royal seal features a winged sun, and if you think the LMLK seals are part of his campaign against assyria, they feature winged scarabs -- both symbols of the contemporary youthful/solar baal in other regions. so he's going around stamping out baal worship, but still using baal iconography.
> Correct. The nation had fallen far, and apostasy was the order of the day. This tells us nothing about Israel's historic monotheism, monolatry, or henotheism.
we don't have a meaningful group to call "israel" before this period, though. and all of the people we might point to, well, they were polytheists. some of these sites have layers going back before our oldest reference to "israel", full of inscriptions to baal and asherah.
> The difference was that in the other cultures, the other members of the divine council were also divine, with one god on top. In Israel, the other members of the divine council were not divine. YHWH stood alone.
they are literally called gods, and sons of gods. this strikes me as a distinction made from later monotheistic thought being injected into the text.
> See, you can't say "synthesized" with any knowledge or evidence. In Israelite theology, they were always singular (Gn. 2 and onwards).
in nearly all israelite and judean mythology we're aware of, yes. there are hints, in the passages already referenced, that they were initially distinct. also, the fact that the E sources records the name "yahweh" being unknown and the god solely called "el" until a certain point seems to reflect the history of them being distinct, and merged. this is the predominant academic consensus on the matter, btw, considering that we know el from other sources that do not call him "yahweh".
> Yes it is, but Dt. 4.19 (same author) clearly shows YHWH as the subject of the allotment, not the recipient.
what people seem to miss is that deut 32:8-9 is an older inclusion, and not by the same author. the author is saying, "ask your fathers" and reporting a traditional statement, which he then expands on (see the later part of the chapter with the "not-god", explicitly denying the existence of other gods). this is sort of the same thing as the way jesus taught, "you have heard it said, you shall not kill, but i say to you, whoever is angry..." etc. jesus isn't saying "you shall not kill". he's quoting an older text, and expanding on it. the deuteronomist says:
Ask your father, he will inform you,
Your elders, they will tell you:
when the most high, etc. the deuteronomist is a monotheist. "your father" and "your elders" were not.
also, i'm a little confused about the "gn. 2 and onwards." gen 1 is perhaps the most monotheistic text in the torah, specifically rejecting the roles of other gods in the act of creation and revising earlier myths to make divine opponents (like liwyatan) into subordinate creations. it goes so far as to not name the sun lest you confuse it with the god shamash. it does use a peculiar plural once, but i'm not convinced that's evidence of anything besides a literary convention for when god talks to himself.
> We also know from numerous texts (dozens) that YHWH and Elyon are considered the same Person.
most of the bible, yes, regards el elyon and yahweh as identical. but this doesn't indicate that it was always so. as i mentioned, this and psalm 82 indicate that they were initially distinct.
> Why would we not perceive some metaphor in here?
the question is, why is one "inheritance" literal, and the other not?
> The whole concept of handing out nations as an inheritance (in 70 chunks), is it literal or figurative? Are there really 70 sements?
the chapter doesn't mention "70". we get "70" from the fact that a) there are approximately 70 nations listed in the table of nations, when they were split up, and b) el and asherah are described as having 70 sons in ugarit. we find a match between the two numbers, and this text states there was a match between the two numbers, but not what the number is.
> Because YHWH is always treated as unique,
except for this passage, which seems to treat him as one of 70 sons of god.
> and it cannot be conclusively established that ancient Israel was monolatrist.
given that we have plenty of evidence of other gods in israel and no evidence of a practice that excluded other gods, it doesn't look like israel was monolatrist, no. it looks like they were polytheistic. the evidence of monolatrism is from judah, which had a campaign that destroyed the cultic sites of other gods.
somehow i think you meant that statement the entire other way around though.
> "Israel" and Judah" were commonly treated as synonymous in the biblical text. Besides, Dt. 32.9 has "Jacob." I'm not sure what your point is.
they are, but this is an ideological position. mixing them up when discussing archaeology and history shows a bias towards the biblical narratives that attempt to unify the two separate kingdoms. even deut 32:9 is trying to show a shared cultural heritage, that yahweh should be the sole god of all israelites and not just judah. in reality, we have no reason to think israel (the northern kingdom) was ever monotheistic-yahwist in an significant capacity. the archaeology doesn't demonstrate, and even the bible condemns every last king of israel as being a polytheist, even the ones that adopted yahweh. so, israel were probably polytheists. the monotheistic revolution happened in judah, basically around the time israel stopped existing.