The Invention Of God -

The true "invention" of the universal God happened in 587 BCE, during a moment of total despair. The Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem, burned the Temple, and dragged the elite into exile. Normally, when a city fell, its god was considered "dead" or defeated by the enemy's god.

When kings arose in Samaria and Jerusalem, they needed a symbol of national unity. Yhwh was promoted to the "National God". He was no longer just a storm in the desert; he was the King’s champion, dwelling in a grand temple in Jerusalem. However, at this stage, the "invention" was still far from monotheism. Most people still kept statues of Asherah in their homes, and the King’s temple often housed symbols of other regional gods. The Invention of God

But the scribes in Babylon did something revolutionary. Instead of admitting Yhwh was weak, they reimagined him. They argued that Yhwh wasn't just their god; he was the God, the creator of the entire world, and he had allowed the Babylonians to win to punish Israel for its sins. The true "invention" of the universal God happened

As these nomads moved north into the highlands of Canaan, they brought their warrior-god with them. In the small hilltop villages that would become Israel and Judah, Yhwh met , the high father-god of the Canaanite pantheon. For generations, the two lived side-by-side. Yhwh was often seen as the son of El, a junior deity who eventually "merged" with his father, taking on El’s traits of mercy and creation. III. The King’s Champion When kings arose in Samaria and Jerusalem, they

In the early Iron Age, a group of Shasu nomads huddled under a sandstone overhang as lightning split the desert sky. To them, the thunder was not physics; it was the voice of , a fierce god of storms and war who dwelled in the mountains of Midian. He was a "tutelary" god—a protector of their specific tribe who helped them survive the harsh terrain and defeat their enemies. He was powerful, but he was local. He belonged to the desert, and he had a wife named Asherah who ensured the fertility of their few goats. II. The Migration North

The story begins not in a temple, but in the dust of the Edomite wilderness, centuries before the first stone of Jerusalem was laid.