Monotheism is the belief that one God is the only, or at least the dominant deity. A distinction may be made between exclusive monotheism, in which the one God is a singular existence, and both inclusive and pluriform monotheism, in which multiple gods or godly forms are recognized, but each are postulated as extensions of the same God.
Monotheism is distinguished from henotheism, a religious system in which the believer worships one god without denying that others may worship different gods with equal validity, and monolatrism, the recognition of the existence of many gods but with the consistent worship of only one deity. The term monolatry was perhaps first used by Julius Wellhausen.
Monotheism characterizes the traditions of Atenism, Bábism, the Baháʼí Faith, Christianity,Deism, Druzism,Eckankar, Islam, Judaism, Mandaeism, Manichaeism, Rastafari, Samaritanism, Seicho-no-Ie, Sikhism, Tenrikyo, Yazidism, and Zoroastrianism. Elements of monotheistic thought are found in early religions such as ancient Chinese religion, Tengrism, and Yahwism.
Etymology and usage
The word monotheism was coined from the Greek μόνος (monos) meaning "single" and θεός (theos) meaning "god". The term was coined by Henry More (1614–1687).
Monotheism is a complex and nuanced concept. The biblical authors had various ways of understanding God and the divine, shaped by their historical and cultural contexts. The notion of monotheism that is used today was developed much later, influenced by the Enlightenment and Christian views. Many definitions of monotheism are too modern, western, and Christian-centered to account for the diversity and complexity of the ancient sources, which include not only the biblical texts, but also other writings, inscriptions, and material remains that help reconstruct the ancient beliefs and practices of the people of Judah and Israel.
The term "monotheism" is often contrasted with "polytheism", but many scholars prefer other terms such as monolatry, henotheism, or one-god discourse.
History
This section relies excessively on references to primary sources.(July 2017) |
Quasi-monotheistic claims of the existence of a universal deity date to the Late Bronze Age, with Akhenaten's Great Hymn to the Aten from the 14th century BCE.
In the Iron-Age South Asian Vedic period, a possible inclination towards monotheism emerged. The Rigveda exhibits notions of monism of the Brahman, particularly in the comparatively late tenth book, which is dated to the early Iron Age, e.g. in the Nasadiya Sukta. Later, ancient Hindu theology was monist, but was not strictly monotheistic in worship because it still maintained the existence of many gods, who were envisioned as aspects of one supreme God, Brahman.
In China, the orthodox faith system held by most dynasties since at least the Shang dynasty (1766 BCE) until the modern period centered on the worship of Shangdi (literally "Above Sovereign", generally translated as "God") or Heaven as an omnipotent force. However, this faith system was not truly monotheistic since other lesser gods and spirits, which varied with locality, were also worshipped along with Shangdi. Still, later variants such as Mohism (470 BCE–c.391 BCE) approached true monotheism, teaching that the function of lesser gods and ancestral spirits is merely to carry out the will of Shangdi, akin to the angels in Abrahamic religions which in turn counts as only one god.
Since the sixth century BCE, Zoroastrians have believed in the supremacy of one God above all: Ahura Mazda as the "Maker of All" and the first being before all others. The prophet Zoroaster is credited with the founding of the first monotheistic religion in history sometime as early as the middle of the second millennium BCE, leaving a lasting influence on other belief systems such as Second Temple Judaism and, through it, on later monotheistic religions. Scholars are conflicted whether Zoroastrianism is best characterized as monotheistic, polytheistic, or henotheistic religion due to the centrality of Ahriman as a component or opposite force of Ahura Mazda.
Post-exilic Judaism, after the late 6th century BCE, was the first religion to conceive the notion of a personal monotheistic God within a monist context. The concept of ethical monotheism, which holds that morality stems from God alone and that its laws are unchanging, first occurred in Judaism, but is now a core tenet of most modern monotheistic religions, including Christianity, Islam, Sikhism, and Baháʼí Faith.
Also from the 6th century BCE, Thales (followed by other Monists, such as Anaximander, Anaximenes, Heraclitus, Parmenides) proposed that nature can be explained by reference to a single unitary principle that pervades everything. Numerous ancient Greek philosophers, including Xenophanes of Colophon and Antisthenes, believed in a similar polytheistic monism that bore some similarities to monotheism. The first known reference to a unitary God is Plato's Demiurge (divine Craftsman), followed by Aristotle's unmoved mover, both of which would profoundly influence Jewish and Christian theology.
According to contemporary Jewish, Christian and Islamic tradition, monotheism was the original religion of humanity; this original religion is sometimes referred to as "the Adamic religion", or, in the terms of Andrew Lang, the "Urreligion". Scholars of religion largely abandoned that view in the 19th and 20th centuries in favour of an evolutionary progression from animism via polytheism to monotheism.
Austrian anthropologist Wilhelm Schmidt had postulated an Urmonotheismus, "original" or "primitive monotheism" in the 1910s. It was objected[by whom?] that Judaism, Christianity, and Islam had grown up in opposition to polytheism as had Greek philosophical monotheism. More recently, Karen Armstrong and other authors have returned to the idea of an evolutionary progression beginning with animism, which developed into polytheism, which developed into henotheism, which developed into monolatry, which developed into true monotheism.
Narrow And Wide Monotheism
"Narrow monotheism" is a religion that believes in only one deity, disallowing the possibility of there being other deities. "Wide monotheism" is a religion that believes in only one supreme deity, allowing the possibility of there being other lesser deities. A narrow monotheistic religion will often regard other monotheistic religions as worshipping its own specific deity under a different name or form (hence the Abrahamic religions believe they worship the same one God). A wide monotheistic religion will often regard other monotheistic religions as worshipping deities lesser than its own specific deitiy (hence Atenism believes Yahweh to be a lesser deity to Aten). Examples of narrow monotheist religions includes: Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Sikhism, and Baháʼí Faith. Examples of wide monotheism include: Atenism, Native American worship of the Great Spirit, Hinduism, Chiniese religions, Tengrism, Mandaeism, Rastafari, Yazidism, Zoroastrianism, Proto-Indo-European religion, Hellenistic religion, and Andaman Islands religion.
Regions
Africa
Indigenous African religion
The Tikar people of Cameroon have a traditional spirituality that emphasizes the worship of a single god, Nyuy.
The Himba people of Namibia practice a form of monotheistic panentheism, and worship the god Mukuru. The deceased ancestors of the Himba and Herero are subservient to him, acting as intermediaries.
The Igbo people practice a form of monotheism called Odinani. Odinani has monotheistic and panentheistic attributes, having a single God as the source of all things. Although a pantheon of spirits exists, these are lesser spirits prevalent in Odinani expressly serving as elements of Chineke (or Chukwu), the supreme being or high god.
Waaq is the name of a singular God in the traditional religion of many Cushitic people in the Horn of Africa, denoting an early monotheistic religion. However this religion was mostly replaced with the Abrahamic religions. Some (approximately 3%) of Oromo still follow this traditional monotheistic religion called Waaqeffanna in Oromo.
Ancient Egypt
Atenism
Amenhotep IV initially introduced Atenism in Year 5 of his reign (1348/1346 BCE) during the 18th dynasty of the New Kingdom. He raised Aten, once a relatively obscure Egyptian solar deity representing the disk of the sun, to the status of Supreme God in the Egyptian pantheon. To emphasise the change, Aten's name was written in the cartouche form normally reserved for Pharaohs, an innovation of Atenism. This religious reformation appears to coincide with the proclamation of a Sed festival, a sort of royal jubilee intended to reinforce the Pharaoh's divine powers of kingship. Traditionally held in the thirtieth year of the Pharaoh's reign, this possibly was a festival in honour of Amenhotep III, who some Egyptologists[who?] think had a coregency with his son Amenhotep IV of two to twelve years.
Year 5 is believed to mark the beginning of Amenhotep IV's construction of a new capital, Akhetaten (Horizon of the Aten), at the site known today as Amarna. Evidence of this appears on three of the boundary stelae used to mark the boundaries of this new capital.[citation needed] At this time, Amenhotep IV officially changed his name to Akhenaten (Agreeable to Aten) as evidence of his new worship. The date given for the event has been estimated to fall around January 2 of that year.[citation needed] In Year 7 of his reign (1346/1344 BCE), the capital was moved from Thebes to Akhetaten (near modern Amarna), though construction of the city seems to have continued for two more years. In shifting his court from the traditional ceremonial centres Akhenaten was signalling a dramatic transformation in the focus of religious and political power.[citation needed]
The move separated the Pharaoh and his court from the influence of the priesthood and from the traditional centres of worship, but his decree had deeper religious significance too—taken in conjunction with his name change, it is possible that the move to Amarna was also meant as a signal of Akhenaten's symbolic death and rebirth.[citation needed] It may also have coincided with the death of his father and the end of the coregency.[citation needed] In addition to constructing a new capital in honor of Aten, Akhenaten also oversaw the construction of some of the most massive temple complexes in ancient Egypt, including one at Karnak and one at Thebes, close to the old temple of Amun.[citation needed]
In Year 9 (1344/1342 BCE), Akhenaten declared a more radical version of his new religion, declaring Aten not merely the supreme god of the Egyptian pantheon, but the only God of Egypt, with himself as the sole intermediary between the Aten and the Egyptian people.[citation needed] Key features of Atenism included a ban on idols and other images of the Aten, with the exception of a rayed solar disc, in which the rays (commonly depicted ending in hands) appear to represent the unseen spirit of Aten.[citation needed] Akhenaten made it however clear that the image of the Aten only represented the god, but that the god transcended creation and so could not be fully understood or represented. Aten was addressed by Akhenaten in prayers, such as the Great Hymn to the Aten: "O Sole God beside whom there is none".
The details of Atenist theology are still unclear. The exclusion of all but one god and the prohibition of idols was a radical departure from Egyptian tradition, but scholars[who?] see Akhenaten as a practitioner of monolatry rather than monotheism, as he did not actively deny the existence of other gods; he simply refrained from worshiping any but Aten.[citation needed] Akhenaten associated Aten with Ra and put forward the eminence of Aten as the renewal of the kingship of Ra.
Under Akhenaten's successors, Egypt reverted to its traditional religion, and Akhenaten himself came to be reviled as a heretic.
Other monotheistic traditions
Some Egyptian ethical text authors believed in only a single god ruling over the universe.
Americas
Native American religion
Native American religions may be monotheistic, polytheistic, henotheistic, animistic, or some combination thereof. Cherokee religion, for example, is monotheist as well as pantheist.
The Great Spirit, called Wakan Tanka among the Sioux, and Gitche Manitou in Algonquian, is a conception of universal spiritual force, or supreme being prevalent among some Native American and First Nation cultures. According to Lakota activist Russell Means a better translation of Wakan Tanka is the Great Mystery. Indeed, "Wanka Tanka" among the Lakota was considered a "council of gods" in pre-columbian times, and their religion is not monotheistic.
Some researchers have interpreted Aztec philosophy as fundamentally monotheistic or panentheistic. While the populace at large believed in a polytheistic pantheon, Aztec priests and nobles might have come to an interpretation of Teotl as a single universal force with many facets. There has been criticism to this idea, however, most notably that many assertions of this supposed monotheism might actually come from post-Conquistador bias, imposing an Antiquity pagan model onto the Aztec.
Asia
South Asia
Hinduism
As an old religion, Hinduism inherits religious concepts spanning monotheism, polytheism, panentheism, pantheism, monism, and atheism among others; and its concept of God is complex and depends upon each individual and the tradition and philosophy followed.
Hindu views are broad and range from monism, through pantheism and panentheism (alternatively called monistic theism by some scholars) to monotheism and even atheism. Hinduism cannot be said to be purely polytheistic. Hindu religious leaders have repeatedly stressed that while God's forms are many and the ways to communicate with him are many, God is one. The puja of the murti is a way to communicate with the abstract one god (Brahman) which creates, sustains and dissolves creation.
Rig Veda 1.164.46,
- Indraṃ mitraṃ varuṇamaghnimāhuratho divyaḥ sa suparṇo gharutmān,
- ekaṃ sad viprā bahudhā vadantyaghniṃ yamaṃ mātariśvānamāhuḥ
- "They call him Indra, Mitra, Varuṇa, Agni, and he is heavenly nobly-winged Garuda.
- To what is One, sages give many a title they call it Agni, Yama, Mātariśvan." (trans. Griffith)
Traditions of Gaudiya Vaishnavas, the Nimbarka Sampradaya and followers of Swaminarayan and Vallabha consider Krishna to be the source of all avatars, and the source of Vishnu himself, or to be the same as Narayana. As such, he is therefore regarded as Svayam Bhagavan.
When Krishna is recognized to be Svayam Bhagavan, it can be understood that this is the belief of Gaudiya Vaishnavism, the Vallabha Sampradaya, and the Nimbarka Sampradaya, where Krishna is accepted to be the source of all other avatars, and the source of Vishnu himself. This belief is drawn primarily "from the famous statement of the Bhagavatam" (1.3.28). A viewpoint differing from this theological concept is the concept of Krishna as an avatar of Narayana or Vishnu. It should be however noted that although it is usual to speak of Vishnu as the source of the avataras, this is only one of the names of the God of Vaishnavism, who is also known as Narayana, Vasudeva and Krishna and behind each of those names there is a divine figure with attributed supremacy in Vaishnavism.
The Rig Veda discusses monotheistic thought, as do the Atharva Veda and Yajur Veda: "Devas are always looking to the supreme abode of Vishnu" (tad viṣṇoḥ paramaṁ padaṁ sadā paśyanti sṻrayaḥ Rig Veda 1.22.20)
"The One Truth, sages know by many names" (Rig Veda 1.164.46)
"When at first the unborn sprung into being, He won His own dominion beyond which nothing higher has been in existence" (Atharva Veda 10.7.31)
"There is none to compare with Him. There is no parallel to Him, whose glory, verily, is great." (Yajur Veda 32.3)
The number of auspicious qualities of God are countless, with the following six qualities (bhaga) being the most important:
- Jñāna (omniscience), defined as the power to know about all beings simultaneously
- Aishvarya (sovereignty, derived from the word Ishvara), which consists in unchallenged rule over all
- Shakti (energy), or power, which is the capacity to make the impossible possible
- Bala (strength), which is the capacity to support everything by will and without any fatigue
- Vīrya (vigor), which indicates the power to retain immateriality as the supreme being in spite of being the material cause of mutable creations
- Tejas (splendor), which expresses His self-sufficiency and the capacity to overpower everything by His spiritual effulgence
In the Shaivite tradition, the Shri Rudram (Sanskrit श्रि रुद्रम्), to which the Chamakam (चमकम्) is added by scriptural tradition, is a Hindu stotra dedicated to Rudra (an epithet of Shiva), taken from the Yajurveda (TS 4.5, 4.7). Shri Rudram is also known as Sri Rudraprasna, Śatarudrīya, and Rudradhyaya. The text is important in Vedanta where Shiva is equated to the Universal supreme God. The hymn is an early example of enumerating the names of a deity, a tradition developed extensively in the sahasranama literature of Hinduism.
The Nyaya school of Hinduism has made several arguments regarding a monotheistic view. The Naiyanikas have given an argument that such a god can only be one. In the Nyaya Kusumanjali, this is discussed against the proposition of the Mimamsa school that let us assume there were many demigods (devas) and sages (rishis) in the beginning, who wrote the Vedas and created the world. Nyaya says that:
[If they assume such] omniscient beings, those endowed with the various superhuman faculties of assuming infinitesimal size, and so on, and capable of creating everything, then we reply that the law of parsimony bids us assume only one such, namely Him, the adorable Lord. There can be no confidence in a non-eternal and non-omniscient being, and hence it follows that according to the system which rejects God, the tradition of the Veda is simultaneously overthrown; there is no other way open.[citation needed]
In other words, Nyaya says that the polytheist would have to give elaborate proofs for the existence and origin of his several celestial spirits, none of which would be logical, and that it is more logical to assume one eternal, omniscient god.
Many other Hindus, however, view polytheism as far preferable to monotheism. The famous Hindu revitalist leader Ram Swarup, for example, points to the Vedas as being specifically polytheistic, and states that, "only some form of polytheism alone can do justice to this variety and richness."
Sita Ram Goel, another 20th-century Hindu historian, wrote:
I had an occasion to read the typescript of a book [Ram Swarup] had finished writing in 1973. It was a profound study of Monotheism, the central dogma of both Islam and Christianity, as well as a powerful presentation of what the monotheists denounce as Hindu Polytheism. I had never read anything like it. It was a revelation to me that Monotheism was not a religious concept but an imperialist idea. I must confess that I myself had been inclined towards Monotheism till this time. I had never thought that a multiplicity of Gods was the natural and spontaneous expression of an evolved consciousness.
Sikhism
Sikhi is a monotheistic and a revealed religion.God in Sikhism is called Akal Purakh (which means "The Immortal Being") or Vāhigurū (Wondrous Enlightener). However, other names like Rama, Brahman, Khuda, Allah, etc. are also used to refer to the same God, who is shapeless, , and sightless: niraṅkār, akaal, and alakh. Sikhi presents a unique perspective where God is present (sarav viāpak) in all of its creation and does not exist outside of its creation. God must be seen from "the inward eye", or the "heart". Sikhs follow the Aad Guru Granth Sahib and are instructed to meditate on the Naam (Name of God - Vāhigurū) to progress towards enlightenment, as its rigorous application permits the existence of communication between God and human beings.
Sikhism is a monotheistic faith that arose in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent during the 16th and 17th centuries. Sikhs believe in one, timeless, omnipresent, supreme creator. The opening verse of the Guru Granth Sahib, known as the Mul Mantra, signifies this:
- Punjabi: ੴ ਸਤਿ ਨਾਮੁ ਕਰਤਾ ਪੁਰਖੁ ਨਿਰਭਉ ਨਿਰਵੈਰੁ ਅਕਾਲ ਮੂਰਤਿ ਅਜੂਨੀ ਸੈਭੰ ਗੁਰ ਪ੍ਰਸਾਦਿ ॥
- Transliteration: ikk ōankār sat(i)-nām(u) karatā purakh(u) nirabha'u niravair(u) akāla mūrat(i) ajūnī saibhan(g) gur(a) prasād(i).
- One Universal creator God, The supreme Unchangeable Truth, The Creator of the Universe, Beyond Fear, Beyond Hatred, Beyond Death, Beyond Birth, Self-Existent, by Guru's Grace.
The word "ੴ" ("Ik ōaṅkār") has two components. The first is ੧, the digit "1" in Gurmukhi signifying the singularity of the creator. Together the word means: "One Universal creator God".
It is often said that the 1430 pages of the Guru Granth Sahib are all expansions on the Mul Mantra. Although the Sikhs have many names for God, some derived from Islam and Hinduism, they all refer to the same Supreme Being.
The Sikh holy scriptures refer to the One God who pervades the whole of space and is the creator of all beings in the universe. The following quotation from the Guru Granth Sahib highlights this point:
Chant, and meditate on the One God, who permeates and pervades the many beings of the whole Universe. God created it, and God spreads through it everywhere. Everywhere I look, I see God. The Perfect Lord is perfectly pervading and permeating the water, the land and the sky; there is no place without Him.
— Guru Granth Sahib, Page 782
However, there is a strong case for arguing that the Guru Granth Sahib teaches monism due to its non-dualistic tendencies:
Punjabi: ਸਹਸ ਪਦ ਬਿਮਲ ਨਨ ਏਕ ਪਦ ਗੰਧ ਬਿਨੁ ਸਹਸ ਤਵ ਗੰਧ ਇਵ ਚਲਤ ਮੋਹੀ ॥੨॥
You have thousands of Lotus Feet, and yet You do not have even one foot. You have no nose, but you have thousands of noses. This Play of Yours entrances me.
— Guru Granth Sahib, Page 13
Sikhs believe that God has been given many names, but they all refer to the One God, VāhiGurū. Sikh holy scripture (Guru Granth Sahib) speaks to all faiths and Sikhs believe that members of other religions such as Islam, Hinduism and Christianity all worship the same God, and the names Allah, Rahim, Karim, Hari, Raam and Paarbrahm are, therefore, frequently mentioned in the Sikh holy scripture (Guru Granth Sahib) . God in Sikhism is most commonly referred to as Akal Purakh (which means "The Immortal Being") or Waheguru, the Wondrous Enlightener.
East Asia
Chinese religion
The orthodox faith system held by most dynasties of China since at least the Shang dynasty (1766 BCE) until the modern period centered on the worship of Shangdi (literally "Above Sovereign", generally translated as "High-god") or Heaven as a supreme being, standing above other gods. This faith system pre-dated the development of Confucianism and Taoism and the introduction of Buddhism and Christianity. It has some features of monotheism in that Heaven is seen as an omnipotent entity, a noncorporeal force with a personality transcending the world. However, this faith system was not truly monotheistic since other lesser gods and spirits, which varied with locality, were also worshiped along with Shangdi. Still, later variants such as Mohism (470 BCE–c.391 BCE) approached true monotheism, teaching that the function of lesser gods and ancestral spirits is merely to carry out the will of Shangdi. In Mozi's Will of Heaven (天志), he writes:
I know Heaven loves men dearly not without reason. Heaven ordered the sun, the moon, and the stars to enlighten and guide them. Heaven ordained the four seasons, Spring, Autumn, Winter, and Summer, to regulate them. Heaven sent down snow, frost, rain, and dew to grow the five grains and flax and silk that so the people could use and enjoy them. Heaven established the hills and rivers, ravines and valleys, and arranged many things to minister to man's good or bring him evil. He appointed the dukes and lords to reward the virtuous and punish the wicked, and to gather metal and wood, birds and beasts, and to engage in cultivating the five grains and flax and silk to provide for the people's food and clothing. This has been so from antiquity to the present.
且吾所以知天之愛民之厚者有矣,曰以磨為日月星辰,以昭道之;制為四時春秋冬夏,以紀綱之;雷降雪霜雨露,以長遂五穀麻絲,使民得而財利之;列為山川谿谷,播賦百事,以臨司民之善否;為王公侯伯,使之賞賢而罰暴;賊金木鳥獸,從事乎五穀麻絲,以為民衣食之財。自古及今,未嘗不有此也。
— Will of Heaven, Chapter 27, Paragraph 6, ca. 5th century BCE
Worship of Shangdi and Heaven in ancient China includes the erection of shrines, the last and greatest being the Temple of Heaven in Beijing, and the offering of prayers. The ruler of China in every Chinese dynasty would perform annual sacrificial rituals to Shangdi, usually by slaughtering a completely healthy bull as sacrifice. Although its popularity gradually diminished after the advent of Taoism and Buddhism, among other religions, its concepts remained in use throughout the pre-modern period and have been incorporated in later religions in China, including terminology used by early Christians in China. Despite the rising of non-theistic and pantheistic spirituality contributed by Taoism and Buddhism, Shangdi was still praised up until the end of the Qing dynasty as the last ruler of the Qing declared himself son of heaven.
In the 19th century in the Guangdong region, monotheist influences led to the Taiping Rebellion.
Tengrism
Tengrism or Tangrism (sometimes stylized as Tengriism), occasionally referred to as Tengrianism, is a modern term for a Central Asian religion characterized by features of shamanism, animism, totemism, both polytheism and monotheism, and ancestor worship. Historically, it was the prevailing religion of the Bulgars, Turks, Mongols, and Hungarians, as well as the Xiongnu and the Huns. It was the state religion of the six ancient Turkic states: Avar Khaganate, Old Great Bulgaria, First Bulgarian Empire, Göktürks Khaganate, Eastern Tourkia and Western Turkic Khaganate. In Irk Bitig, Tengri is mentioned as Türük Tängrisi (God of Turks). The term is perceived among Turkic peoples as a national religion.
In Chinese and Turco-Mongol traditions, the Supreme God is commonly referred to as the ruler of Heaven, or the Sky Lord granted with omnipotent powers, but it has largely diminished in those regions due to ancestor worship, Taoism's pantheistic views and Buddhism's rejection of a creator God. On some occasions in the mythology, the Sky Lord as identified as a male has been associated to mate with an Earth Mother, while some traditions kept the omnipotence of the Sky Lord unshared.[citation needed]
West Asia
Abrahamic religions
Baháʼí Faith
God in the Baháʼí Faith is taught to be the Imperishable, uncreated Being Who is the source of existence, too great for humans to fully comprehend. Human primitive understanding of God is achieved through his revelations via his divine intermediary Manifestations. In the Baháʼí faith, such Christian doctrines as the Trinity are seen as compromising the Baháʼí view that God is single and has no equal, and the very existence of the Baháʼí Faith is a challenge to the Islamic doctrine of the finality of Muhammad's revelation.
God in the Baháʼí Faith communicates to humanity through divine intermediaries, known as Manifestations of God. These Manifestations establish religion in the world. It is through these divine intermediaries that humans can approach God, and through them God brings divine revelation and law.
The Oneness of God is one of the core teachings of the Baháʼí Faith. The obligatory prayers in the Baháʼí Faith involve explicit monotheistic testimony. God is the imperishable, uncreated being who is the source of all existence. He is described as "a personal God, unknowable, inaccessible, the source of all Revelation, eternal, omniscient, omnipresent and almighty". Although transcendent and inaccessible directly, his image is reflected in his creation. The purpose of creation is for the created to have the capacity to know and love its creator. God communicates his will and purpose to humanity through intermediaries, known as Manifestations of God, who are the prophets and messengers that have founded religions from prehistoric times up to the present day.
Christianity
Among early Christians, there was considerable debate over the nature of the Godhead, with some denying the incarnation but not the deity of Jesus (Docetism) and others later calling for an Arian conception of God. Despite at least one earlier local synod rejecting the claim of Arius, this Christological issue was to be one of the items addressed at the First Council of Nicaea.
The First Council of Nicaea, held in Nicaea (in present-day Turkey), convoked by the Roman Emperor Constantine I in 325, was the first ecumenical council of bishops of the Roman Empire, and most significantly resulted in the first uniform Christian doctrine, called the Nicene Creed. With the creation of the creed, a precedent was established for subsequent general ecumenical councils of bishops (synods) to create statements of belief and canons of doctrinal orthodoxy—the intent being to define a common creed for the Church and address heretical ideas.
One purpose of the council was to resolve disagreements in Alexandria over the nature of Jesus in relationship to the Father; in particular, whether Jesus was of the same substance as God the Father or merely of similar substance. All but two bishops took the first position; while Arius' argument failed.
Christian orthodox traditions (Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and most Protestants) follow this decision, which was reaffirmed in 381 at the First Council of Constantinople and reached its full development through the work of the Cappadocian Fathers. They consider God to be a triune entity, called the Trinity, comprising three "persons", God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. These three are described as being "of the same substance" (ὁμοούσιος).
Christians overwhelmingly assert that monotheism is central to the Christian faith, as the Nicene Creed (and others), which gives the orthodox Christian definition of the Trinity, begins: "I believe in one God". From earlier than the times of the Nicene Creed, 325 CE, various Christian figures advocated the triune mystery-nature of God as a normative profession of faith. According to Roger E. Olson and Christopher Hall, through prayer, meditation, study and practice, the Christian community concluded "that God must exist as both a unity and trinity", codifying this in ecumenical council at the end of the 4th century.
Most modern Christians believe the Godhead is triune, meaning that the three persons of the Trinity are in one union in which each person is also wholly God. They also hold to the doctrine of a man-god Christ Jesus as God incarnate. These Christians also do not believe that one of the three divine figures is God alone and the other two are not but that all three are mysteriously God and one. Other Christian religions, including Unitarian Universalism, Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormonism and others, do not share those views on the Trinity.
Some Christian faiths, such as Mormonism, argue that the Godhead is in fact three separate individuals which include God the Father, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost, each individual having a distinct purpose in the grand existence of human kind. Furthermore, Mormons believe that before the Council of Nicaea, the predominant belief among many early Christians was that the Godhead was three separate individuals. In support of this view, they cite early Christian examples of belief in subordinationism.
Unitarianism is a theological movement, named for its understanding of God as one person, in direct contrast to Trinitarianism.
Some in Judaism and some in Islam do not consider Trinitarian Christianity to be a pure form of monotheism due to the pluriform monotheistic Christian doctrine of the Trinity, classifying it as shituf in Judaism and as shirk in Islam. Trinitarian Christians, on the other hand, argue that the doctrine of the Trinity is a valid expression of monotheism, citing that the Trinity does not consist of three separate deities, but rather the three persons, who exist consubstantially (as one substance) within a single Godhead.
Islam
In Islam, God (Allāh) is all-powerful and all-knowing, the Creator, Sustainer, Ordainer and Judge of the universe.God in Islam is strictly singular (tawhid) unique (wahid) and inherently One (ahad), all-merciful and omnipotent. Allāh exists on the Al-'Arsh [Quran 7:54], but the Quran states that "No vision can encompass Him, but He encompasses all vision. For He is the Most Subtle, All-Aware." (Quran 6:103) Allāh is the only God and the same God worshiped in Christianity and Judaism(Q29:46).
Islam emerged in the 7th century CE in the context of both Christianity and Judaism, with some thematic elements similar to Gnosticism. Islamic belief states that Muhammad did not bring a new religion from God, but rather the same religion as practiced by Abraham, Moses, David, Jesus and all the other prophets of God. The assertion of Islam is that the message of God had been corrupted, distorted or lost over time, and the Quran was sent to Muhammad in order to correct the lost message of the Tawrat (Torah), Injil (Gospel) and Zabur.
The Quran asserts the existence of a single and absolute truth that transcends the world; a unique and indivisible being who is independent of the creation. The Quran rejects binary modes of thinking such as the idea of a duality of God by arguing that both good and evil generate from God's creative act. God is a universal god rather than a local, tribal or parochial one; an absolute who integrates all affirmative values and brooks no evil.Ash'ari theology, which dominated Sunni Islam from the tenth to the nineteenth century, insists on ultimate divine transcendence and holds that divine unity is not accessible to human reason. Ash'arism teaches that human knowledge regarding it is limited to what has been revealed through the prophets, and on such paradoxes as God's creation of evil, revelation had to accept bila kayfa (without [asking] how).
Tawhid constitutes the foremost article of the Muslim profession of faith, "There is no god but God, Muhammad is the messenger of God. To attribute divinity to a created entity is the only unpardonable sin mentioned in the Quran. The entirety of the Islamic teaching rests on the principle of tawhid.
Medieval Islamic philosopher Al-Ghazali offered a proof of monotheism from omnipotence, asserting there can only be one omnipotent being. For if there were two omnipotent beings, the first would either have power over the second (meaning the second is not omnipotent) or not (meaning the first is not omnipotent); thus implying that there could only be one omnipotent being.
As they traditionally profess a concept of monotheism with a singular entity as God, Judaism and Islam reject the Christian idea of monotheism. Judaism uses the term Shituf to refer to non-monotheistic ways of worshiping God. Although Muslims venerate Jesus (Isa in Arabic) as a prophet and messiah, they do not accept the doctrine that he was a begotten son of God.
Judaism
Judaism is traditionally considered one of the oldest monotheistic religions in the world, although up to the 8th century BCE the Israelites were polytheistic, with their worship including the gods El, Baal, Asherah, and Astarte. Yahweh was originally the national god of the Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah. During the 8th century BCE, the worship of Yahweh in Israel was in competition with many other cults, described by the Yahwist faction collectively as Baals. The oldest books of the Hebrew Bible reflect this competition, as in the books of Hosea and Nahum, whose authors lament the "apostasy" of the people of Israel, threatening them with the wrath of God if they do not give up their polytheistic cults.
As time progressed, the henotheistic cult of Yahweh grew increasingly militant in its opposition to the worship of other gods. Some scholars date the start of widespread monotheism to the late 8th century BCE, and view it as a response to Neo-Assyrian aggression. Later, the reforms of King Josiah imposed a form of strict monolatrism. After the fall of Judah and the beginning of the Babylonian captivity, a small circle of priests and scribes gathered around the exiled royal court, where they first developed the concept of Yahweh as the sole God of the world.
Second Temple Judaism and later Rabbinic Judaism became strictly monotheistic. The Babylonian Talmud references other, "foreign gods" as non-existent entities to whom humans mistakenly ascribe reality and power. One of the best-known statements of Rabbinic Judaism on monotheism is the Second of Maimonides' 13 Principles of faith:
God, the Cause of all, is one. This does not mean one as in one of a pair, nor one like a species (which encompasses many individuals), nor one as in an object that is made up of many elements, nor as a single simple object that is infinitely divisible. Rather, God is a unity, unlike any other possible unity.
Some in Judaism and Islam reject the Christian idea of monotheism. Modern Judaism uses the term shituf to refer to the worship of God in a manner which Judaism deems to be neither purely monotheistic (though still permissible for non-Jews) nor polytheistic (which would be prohibited).
Mandaeism
Mandaeism or Mandaeanism (Arabic: مندائية Mandāʼīyah), sometimes also known as Sabianism, is a monotheistic, Gnostic, and ethnic religion.: 1 Mandaeans consider Adam, Seth, Noah, Shem and John the Baptist to be prophets, with Adam being the founder of the religion and John being the greatest and final prophet.: 45 The Mandaeans believe in one God commonly named Hayyi Rabbi meaning 'The Great Life' or 'The Great Living God'. The Mandaeans speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic. The name 'Mandaean' comes from the Aramaic manda meaning "knowledge", as does Greek gnosis. The term 'Sabianism' is derived from the Sabians (Arabic: الصابئة, al-Ṣābiʾa), a mysterious religious group mentioned three times in the Quran alongside the Jews, the Christians and the Zoroastrians as a 'people of the book', and whose name was historically claimed by the Mandaeans as well as by several other religious groups in order to gain the legal protection (dhimma) offered by Islamic law. Mandaeans recognize God to be the eternal, creator of all, the one and only in domination who has no partner.
Rastafari
Rastafari, sometimes termed Rastafarianism, is classified as both a new religious movement and social movement. It developed in Jamaica during the 1930s. It lacks any centralised authority and there is much heterogeneity among practitioners, who are known as Rastafari, Rastafarians, or Rastas.
Rastafari refer to their beliefs, which are based on a specific interpretation of the Bible, as "Rastalogy". Central is a monotheistic belief in a single God—referred to as Jah—who partially resides within each individual. The former emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie, is given central importance. Many Rastas regard him as an incarnation of Jah on Earth and as the Second Coming of Christ. Others regard him as a human prophet who fully recognised the inner divinity within every individual.
Yazidism
God in Yazidism created the world and entrusted it into the care of seven Holy Beings, known as Angels. The Yazidis believe in a divine Triad. The original, hidden God of the Yazidis is considered to be remote and inactive in relation to his creation, except to contain and bind it together within his essence. His first emanation is the Angel Melek Taûs (Tawûsê Melek), who functions as the ruler of the world and leader of the other Angels. The second hypostasis of the divine Triad is the Sheikh 'Adī ibn Musafir. The third is Sultan Ezid. These are the three hypostases of the one God. The identity of these three is sometimes blurred, with Sheikh 'Adī considered to be a manifestation of Tawûsê Melek and vice versa; the same also applies to Sultan Ezid. Yazidis are called Miletê Tawûsê Melek ("the nation of Tawûsê Melek").
God is referred to by Yazidis as Xwedê, Xwedawend, Êzdan, and Pedsha ('King'), and, less commonly, Ellah and Heq. According to some Yazidi hymns (known as Qewls), God has 1,001 names, or 3,003 names according to other Qewls.
Zoroastrianism
By some scholars, the Zoroastrians ("Parsis" or "Zartoshtis") are sometimes credited with being some of the first monotheists and having had influence on other world religions. Zoroastrianism combines cosmogonic dualism and eschatological monotheism which makes it unique among the religions of the world. There are two issues that have long made it problematic to identify Zoroastrianism as true monotheism: the presence of lesser deities and dualism. But before hastening to conclude that the Amesha Spentas and the other yazatas compromise the purity of monotheism, we should consider that the other historical monotheisms too made room for other figures endowed with supernatural powers to bridge the gulf between the exalted, remote Creator God and the human world: the angels in all of them (whose conception in post-exilic Judaism was apparently developed after the pattern of the Amesha Spentas; Boyce and Grenet, 1991, 404–405), the saints and the Virgin Mary in several Christian churches, and the other persons of the Trinity in all of Christianity. Despite the vast differences with Zoroastrian theology, the common thread is that all these beings are subordinate to the Godhead as helpers or (in the case of the persons of the Trinity) co-equals, hence they do not pursue different interests and are worshiped jointly with the Godhead, not separately; therefore the supplicant’s dilemma does not arise.[ε]
Europe
Ancient proto-Indo-European religion
The head deity of the Proto-Indo-European religion was the god *Dyḗus Pḥatḗr . A number of words derived from the name of this prominent deity are used in various Indo-European languages to denote a monotheistic God. Nonetheless, in spite of this, Proto-Indo-European religion itself was not monotheistic.
In Eastern Europe, the ancient traditions of the Slavic religion contained elements of monotheism. In the sixth century AD, the Byzantine chronicler Procopius recorded that the Slavs "acknowledge that one god, creator of lightning, is the only lord of all: to him do they sacrifice an ox and all sacrificial animals." The deity to whom Procopius is referring is the storm god Perún, whose name is derived from *Perkwunos, the Proto-Indo-European god of lightning. The ancient Slavs syncretized him with the Germanic god Thor and the Biblical prophet Elijah.
Ancient Greek religion
Classical Greece
The surviving fragments of the poems of the classical Greek philosopher Xenophanes of Colophon suggest that he held views very similar to those of modern monotheists. His poems harshly criticize the traditional notion of anthropomorphic gods, commenting that "...if cattle and horses and lions had hands or could paint with their hands and create works such as men do,... [they] also would depict the gods' shapes and make their bodies of such a sort as the form they themselves have." Instead, Xenophanes declares that there is "...one god, greatest among gods and humans, like mortals neither in form nor in thought." Xenophanes's theology appears to have been monist, but not truly monotheistic in the strictest sense. Although some later philosophers, such as Antisthenes, believed in doctrines similar to those expounded by Xenophanes, his ideas do not appear to have become widely popular.
Although Plato himself was a polytheist, in his writings, he often presents Socrates as speaking of "the god" in the singular form. He does, however, often speak of the gods in the plural form as well. The Euthyphro dilemma, for example, is formulated as "Is that which is holy loved by the gods because it is holy, or is it holy because it is loved by the gods?"
Hellenistic religion
The development of pure (philosophical) monotheism is a product of the Late Antiquity. During the 2nd to 3rd centuries, early Christianity was just one of several competing religious movements advocating monotheism.
"The One" (Τὸ Ἕν) is a concept that is prominent in the writings of the Neoplatonists, especially those of the philosopher Plotinus. In the writings of Plotinus, "The One" is described as an inconceivable, transcendent, all-embodying, permanent, eternal, causative entity that permeates throughout all of existence.
A number of oracles of Apollo from Didyma and Clarus, the so-called "theological oracles", dated to the 2nd and 3rd century CE, proclaim that there is only one highest god, of whom the gods of polytheistic religions are mere manifestations or servants. 4th century CE Cyprus had, besides Christianity, an apparently monotheistic cult of Dionysus.
The Hypsistarians were a religious group who believed in a most high god, according to Greek documents. Later revisions of this Hellenic religion were adjusted towards monotheism as it gained consideration among a wider populace. The worship of Zeus as the head-god signaled a trend in the direction of monotheism, with less honour paid to the fragmented powers of the lesser gods.
Oceania
Aboriginal Australian religion
Aboriginal Australians are typically described as polytheistic in nature. Although some researchers shy from referring to Dreamtime figures as "gods" or "deities", they are broadly described as such for the sake of simplicity.
In Southeastern Australian cultures, the sky father Baiame is perceived as the creator of the universe (though this role is sometimes taken by other gods like Yhi or Bunjil) and at least among the Gamilaraay traditionally revered above other mythical figures. Equation between him and the Christian god is common among both missionaries and modern Christian Aboriginals.
The Yolngu had extensive contact with the Makassans and adopted religious practises inspired by those of Islam. The god Walitha'walitha is based on Allah (specifically, with the wa-Ta'ala suffix), but while this deity had a role in funerary practises it is unclear if it was "Allah-like" in terms of functions.
Andaman Islands
The religion of the Andamanese peoples has at times been described as "animistic monotheism", believing foremost in a single deity, Pūluga, who created the universe. However, Pūluga is not worshipped, and anthropomorphic personifications of natural phenomena are also known.
Criticism
Critics have described monotheism as a cause of ignorance, oppression, and violence.
David Hume (1711–1776) said that monotheism is less pluralistic and thus less tolerant than polytheism, because monotheism stipulates that people pigeonhole their beliefs into one tenet. In the same vein, Auguste Comte said that "Monotheism is irreconcilable with the existence in our nature of the instincts of benevolence" because it compels followers to devote themselves to a single Creator.Mark S. Smith, an American biblical scholar and ancient historian, wrote that monotheism has been a "totalizing discourse", often co-opting all aspects of a social belief system, resulting in the exclusion of "others". Jacob Neusner suggests that "the logic of monotheism ... yields little basis for tolerating other religions".
Ancient monotheism is described as the instigator of violence in its early days because it inspired the Israelites to wage war upon the Canaanites who believed in multiple gods.Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan regarded monotheism as a cause of violence, saying: "The intolerance of narrow monotheism is written in letters of blood across the history of man from the time when first the tribes of Israel burst into the land of Canaan. The worshippers of the one jealous God are egged on to aggressive wars against people of alien [beliefs and cultures]. They invoke divine sanction for the cruelties inflicted on the conquered. The spirit of old Israel is inherited by Christianity and Islam, and it might not be unreasonable to suggest that it would have been better for Western civilization if Greece had moulded it on this question rather than Palestine."
See also
- Seicho no Ie
- Cheondoism
- Tenrikyo
- Criticism of monotheism
- Deism
- Idolatry
- Intelligent design
- Panentheism
- Pantheism
- Post-monotheism
- Unmoved mover
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Evolutionary interpretations of the history of religion are usually understood to be an explanation of the phenomenon of religion as a result of a continuous development. The model for such development is the growth of living beings which leads to increasingly subtle differentiation and integration. Within such a framework of thought, monotheism would be interpreted as the result of a continuous development from animism, polytheism, henotheism and monolatry to belief in the one and only God. Such a development cannot be proved. Monotheism appeared suddenly, though not without being prepared for.
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"In the Vedic approach, there is no single God. This is bad enough. But the Hindus do not have even a supreme God, a fuhrer-God who presides over a multiplicity of Gods." – Ram Swarup
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Hence all the power of magic became dissolved; and every bond of wickedness was destroyed, men's ignorance was taken away, and the old kingdom abolished God Himself appearing in the form of a man, for the renewal of eternal life.
— St. Ignatius of Antioch in Letter to the Ephesians, ch.4, shorter version, Roberts-Donaldson translationWe have also as a Physician the Lord our God Jesus the Christ the only-begotten Son and Word, before time began, but who afterwards became also man, of Mary the virgin. For 'the Word was made flesh.' Being incorporeal, He was in the body; being impassible, He was in a passable body; being immortal, He was in a mortal body; being life, He became subject to corruption, that He might free our souls from death and corruption, and heal them, and might restore them to health, when they were diseased with ungodliness and wicked lusts
— St. Ignatius of Antioch in Letter to the Ephesians, ch.7, shorter version, Roberts-Donaldson translationThe Church, though dispersed throughout the whole world, even to the ends of the earth, has received from the apostles and their disciples this faith: ...one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven, and earth, and the sea, and all things that are in them; and in one Christ Jesus, the Son of God, who became incarnate for our salvation; and in the Holy Spirit, who proclaimed through the prophets the dispensations of God, and the advents, and the birth from a virgin, and the passion, and the resurrection from the dead, and the ascension into heaven in the flesh of the beloved Christ Jesus, our Lord, and His manifestation from heaven in the glory of the Father 'to gather all things in one,' and to raise up anew all flesh of the whole human race, in order that to Christ Jesus, our Lord, and God, and Savior, and King, according to the will of the invisible Father, 'every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth, and that every tongue should confess; to him, and that He should execute just judgment towards all...'
— St. Irenaeus in Against Heresies, ch.X, v.I, Donaldson, Sir James (1950), Ante Nicene Fathers, Volume 1: Apostolic Fathers, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., ISBN 978-0802880871For, in the name of God, the Father and Lord of the universe, and of our Savior Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Spirit, they then receive the washing with water
— Justin Martyr in First Apology, ch. LXI, Donaldson, Sir James (1950), Ante Nicene Fathers, Volume 1: Apostolic Fathers, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, ISBN 978-0802880871 - Olson, Roger E. (2002). The Trinity. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 15. ISBN 9780802848277.
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Jacob Neusner [...] claims that 'the logic of monotheism ... yields little basis for tolerating other religions.'
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Further reading
- Bernard, David K. (2019) [2016]. "Monotheism in Paul's Rhetorical World". The Glory of God in the Face of Jesus Christ: Deification of Jesus in Early Christian Discourse. Journal of Pentecostal Theology: Supplement Series. Vol. 45. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. pp. 53–82. ISBN 978-90-04-39721-7. ISSN 0966-7393.
- Betz, Arnold Gottfried (2000). "Monotheism". In Freedman, David Noel; Myer, Allen C. (eds.). Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans. pp. 916–917. ISBN 9053565035.
- William G. Dever, Who Were the Early Israelites?, Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans 2003.
- William G. Dever, Did God Have a Wife?: Archaeology and Folk Religion in Ancient Israel, Eerdmans, 2005, ISBN 978-0802828521.
- Jonthan Kirsch, God Against The Gods: The History of the War Between Monotheism and Polytheism. Penguin Books. 2005.
- Hans Köchler. The Concept of Monotheism in Islam and Christianity. Vienna: Braumüller, 1982. ISBN 3-7003-0339-4 (Google Books Archived 2023-04-05 at the Wayback Machine).
- Niehr, Herbert (1995). "The Rise of YHWH in Judahite and Israelite Religion: Methodological and Religio-Historical Aspects". In Edelman, Diana Vikander (ed.). The Triumph of Elohim: From Yahwisms to Judaisms. Leuven: Peeters Publishers. pp. 45–72. ISBN 978-9053565032. OCLC 33819403.
- Patai, Raphael (1990) [1967]. "Lilith". The Hebrew Goddess. Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology (3rd Enlarged ed.). Detroit: Wayne State University Press. pp. 221–251. ISBN 9780814322710. OCLC 20692501.
- Ratzinger, Joseph (2004) [1968]. "Part One: God – Chapter II: The Biblical Belief in God". Introduction to Christianity (2nd Revised ed.). San Francisco: Ignatius Press. pp. 116–136. ISBN 9781586170295. LCCN 2004103523. S2CID 169456327.
- Reynolds, Gabriel Said (2020). "God of the Bible and the Qur'an". Allah: God in the Qurʾān. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 203–253. doi:10.2307/j.ctvxkn7q4. ISBN 978-0-300-24658-2. JSTOR j.ctvxkn7q4. LCCN 2019947014. S2CID 226129509.
- Römer, Thomas (2015). The Invention of God. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. doi:10.4159/9780674915732. ISBN 978-0-674-50497-4. JSTOR j.ctvjsf3qb. S2CID 170740919.
- Silberman, Neil A. et al.; The Bible Unearthed, New York: Simon & Schuster 2001.
- Smith, Mark S. (2003). "El, Yahweh, and the Original God of Israel and the Exodus". The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 133–148. doi:10.1093/019513480X.003.0008. ISBN 9780195134803.
- Smith, Mark S. (2017). "YHWH's Original Character: Questions about an Unknown God". In Van Oorschot, Jürgen; Witten, Markus (eds.). The Origins of Yahwism. Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft. Vol. 484. Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 23–44. doi:10.1515/9783110448221-002. ISBN 978-3-11-042538-3. S2CID 187378834.
- Smith, Mark S. (2002). The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel (2nd ed.). Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0802839725.
- Smith, Peter (2008). An Introduction to the Baha'i Faith. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-86251-6.
- Van der Toorn, Karel (1999). "God (I)". In Van der Toorn, Karel; Becking, Bob; Van der Horst, Pieter W. (eds.). Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (2nd ed.). Leiden: Brill Publishers. pp. 352–365. doi:10.1163/2589-7802_DDDO_DDDO_Godi. ISBN 90-04-11119-0.
- Van der Horst, Pieter W. (1999). "God (II)". In Van der Toorn, Karel; Becking, Bob; Van der Horst, Pieter W. (eds.). Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (2nd ed.). Leiden: Brill Publishers. pp. 365–370. doi:10.1163/2589-7802_DDDO_DDDO_Godii. ISBN 90-04-11119-0.
- Keith Whitelam, The Invention of Ancient Israel, Routledge, New York 1997.
External links
- The dictionary definition of monotheism at Wiktionary
- Media related to Monotheism at Wikimedia Commons
- About.com "What is Monolatry?" (Contains useful comparisons with henoteism etc.)
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Christian Monotheism (biblical unitarians)
- World Union of Deists
Monotheism is the belief that one God is the only or at least the dominant deity A distinction may be made between exclusive monotheism in which the one God is a singular existence and both inclusive and pluriform monotheism in which multiple gods or godly forms are recognized but each are postulated as extensions of the same God Monotheism is distinguished from henotheism a religious system in which the believer worships one god without denying that others may worship different gods with equal validity and monolatrism the recognition of the existence of many gods but with the consistent worship of only one deity The term monolatry was perhaps first used by Julius Wellhausen Monotheism characterizes the traditions of Atenism Babism the Bahaʼi Faith Christianity Deism Druzism Eckankar Islam Judaism Mandaeism Manichaeism Rastafari Samaritanism Seicho no Ie Sikhism Tenrikyo Yazidism and Zoroastrianism Elements of monotheistic thought are found in early religions such as ancient Chinese religion Tengrism and Yahwism Etymology and usageThe word monotheism was coined from the Greek monos monos meaning single and 8eos theos meaning god The term was coined by Henry More 1614 1687 Monotheism is a complex and nuanced concept The biblical authors had various ways of understanding God and the divine shaped by their historical and cultural contexts The notion of monotheism that is used today was developed much later influenced by the Enlightenment and Christian views Many definitions of monotheism are too modern western and Christian centered to account for the diversity and complexity of the ancient sources which include not only the biblical texts but also other writings inscriptions and material remains that help reconstruct the ancient beliefs and practices of the people of Judah and Israel The term monotheism is often contrasted with polytheism but many scholars prefer other terms such as monolatry henotheism or one god discourse HistoryThis section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Monotheism history news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Quasi monotheistic claims of the existence of a universal deity date to the Late Bronze Age with Akhenaten s Great Hymn to the Aten from the 14th century BCE In the Iron Age South Asian Vedic period a possible inclination towards monotheism emerged The Rigveda exhibits notions of monism of the Brahman particularly in the comparatively late tenth book which is dated to the early Iron Age e g in the Nasadiya Sukta Later ancient Hindu theology was monist but was not strictly monotheistic in worship because it still maintained the existence of many gods who were envisioned as aspects of one supreme God Brahman In China the orthodox faith system held by most dynasties since at least the Shang dynasty 1766 BCE until the modern period centered on the worship of Shangdi literally Above Sovereign generally translated as God or Heaven as an omnipotent force However this faith system was not truly monotheistic since other lesser gods and spirits which varied with locality were also worshipped along with Shangdi Still later variants such as Mohism 470 BCE c 391 BCE approached true monotheism teaching that the function of lesser gods and ancestral spirits is merely to carry out the will of Shangdi akin to the angels in Abrahamic religions which in turn counts as only one god Since the sixth century BCE Zoroastrians have believed in the supremacy of one God above all Ahura Mazda as the Maker of All and the first being before all others The prophet Zoroaster is credited with the founding of the first monotheistic religion in history sometime as early as the middle of the second millennium BCE leaving a lasting influence on other belief systems such as Second Temple Judaism and through it on later monotheistic religions Scholars are conflicted whether Zoroastrianism is best characterized as monotheistic polytheistic or henotheistic religion due to the centrality of Ahriman as a component or opposite force of Ahura Mazda Post exilic Judaism after the late 6th century BCE was the first religion to conceive the notion of a personal monotheistic God within a monist context The concept of ethical monotheism which holds that morality stems from God alone and that its laws are unchanging first occurred in Judaism but is now a core tenet of most modern monotheistic religions including Christianity Islam Sikhism and Bahaʼi Faith Also from the 6th century BCE Thales followed by other Monists such as Anaximander Anaximenes Heraclitus Parmenides proposed that nature can be explained by reference to a single unitary principle that pervades everything Numerous ancient Greek philosophers including Xenophanes of Colophon and Antisthenes believed in a similar polytheistic monism that bore some similarities to monotheism The first known reference to a unitary God is Plato s Demiurge divine Craftsman followed by Aristotle s unmoved mover both of which would profoundly influence Jewish and Christian theology According to contemporary Jewish Christian and Islamic tradition monotheism was the original religion of humanity this original religion is sometimes referred to as the Adamic religion or in the terms of Andrew Lang the Urreligion Scholars of religion largely abandoned that view in the 19th and 20th centuries in favour of an evolutionary progression from animism via polytheism to monotheism Austrian anthropologist Wilhelm Schmidt had postulated an Urmonotheismus original or primitive monotheism in the 1910s It was objected by whom that Judaism Christianity and Islam had grown up in opposition to polytheism as had Greek philosophical monotheism More recently Karen Armstrong and other authors have returned to the idea of an evolutionary progression beginning with animism which developed into polytheism which developed into henotheism which developed into monolatry which developed into true monotheism Narrow And Wide Monotheism Narrow monotheism is a religion that believes in only one deity disallowing the possibility of there being other deities Wide monotheism is a religion that believes in only one supreme deity allowing the possibility of there being other lesser deities A narrow monotheistic religion will often regard other monotheistic religions as worshipping its own specific deity under a different name or form hence the Abrahamic religions believe they worship the same one God A wide monotheistic religion will often regard other monotheistic religions as worshipping deities lesser than its own specific deitiy hence Atenism believes Yahweh to be a lesser deity to Aten Examples of narrow monotheist religions includes Judaism Christianity Islam Sikhism and Bahaʼi Faith Examples of wide monotheism include Atenism Native American worship of the Great Spirit Hinduism Chiniese religions Tengrism Mandaeism Rastafari Yazidism Zoroastrianism Proto Indo European religion Hellenistic religion and Andaman Islands religion RegionsAfrica Indigenous African religion The Tikar people of Cameroon have a traditional spirituality that emphasizes the worship of a single god Nyuy The Himba people of Namibia practice a form of monotheistic panentheism and worship the god Mukuru The deceased ancestors of the Himba and Herero are subservient to him acting as intermediaries The Igbo people practice a form of monotheism called Odinani Odinani has monotheistic and panentheistic attributes having a single God as the source of all things Although a pantheon of spirits exists these are lesser spirits prevalent in Odinani expressly serving as elements of Chineke or Chukwu the supreme being or high god Waaq is the name of a singular God in the traditional religion of many Cushitic people in the Horn of Africa denoting an early monotheistic religion However this religion was mostly replaced with the Abrahamic religions Some approximately 3 of Oromo still follow this traditional monotheistic religion called Waaqeffanna in Oromo Ancient Egypt Atenism Pharaoh Akhenaten and his family adoring the Aten Amenhotep IV initially introduced Atenism in Year 5 of his reign 1348 1346 BCE during the 18th dynasty of the New Kingdom He raised Aten once a relatively obscure Egyptian solar deity representing the disk of the sun to the status of Supreme God in the Egyptian pantheon To emphasise the change Aten s name was written in the cartouche form normally reserved for Pharaohs an innovation of Atenism This religious reformation appears to coincide with the proclamation of a Sed festival a sort of royal jubilee intended to reinforce the Pharaoh s divine powers of kingship Traditionally held in the thirtieth year of the Pharaoh s reign this possibly was a festival in honour of Amenhotep III who some Egyptologists who think had a coregency with his son Amenhotep IV of two to twelve years Year 5 is believed to mark the beginning of Amenhotep IV s construction of a new capital Akhetaten Horizon of the Aten at the site known today as Amarna Evidence of this appears on three of the boundary stelae used to mark the boundaries of this new capital citation needed At this time Amenhotep IV officially changed his name to Akhenaten Agreeable to Aten as evidence of his new worship The date given for the event has been estimated to fall around January 2 of that year citation needed In Year 7 of his reign 1346 1344 BCE the capital was moved from Thebes to Akhetaten near modern Amarna though construction of the city seems to have continued for two more years In shifting his court from the traditional ceremonial centres Akhenaten was signalling a dramatic transformation in the focus of religious and political power citation needed The move separated the Pharaoh and his court from the influence of the priesthood and from the traditional centres of worship but his decree had deeper religious significance too taken in conjunction with his name change it is possible that the move to Amarna was also meant as a signal of Akhenaten s symbolic death and rebirth citation needed It may also have coincided with the death of his father and the end of the coregency citation needed In addition to constructing a new capital in honor of Aten Akhenaten also oversaw the construction of some of the most massive temple complexes in ancient Egypt including one at Karnak and one at Thebes close to the old temple of Amun citation needed In Year 9 1344 1342 BCE Akhenaten declared a more radical version of his new religion declaring Aten not merely the supreme god of the Egyptian pantheon but the only God of Egypt with himself as the sole intermediary between the Aten and the Egyptian people citation needed Key features of Atenism included a ban on idols and other images of the Aten with the exception of a rayed solar disc in which the rays commonly depicted ending in hands appear to represent the unseen spirit of Aten citation needed Akhenaten made it however clear that the image of the Aten only represented the god but that the god transcended creation and so could not be fully understood or represented Aten was addressed by Akhenaten in prayers such as the Great Hymn to the Aten O Sole God beside whom there is none The details of Atenist theology are still unclear The exclusion of all but one god and the prohibition of idols was a radical departure from Egyptian tradition but scholars who see Akhenaten as a practitioner of monolatry rather than monotheism as he did not actively deny the existence of other gods he simply refrained from worshiping any but Aten citation needed Akhenaten associated Aten with Ra and put forward the eminence of Aten as the renewal of the kingship of Ra Under Akhenaten s successors Egypt reverted to its traditional religion and Akhenaten himself came to be reviled as a heretic Other monotheistic traditions Some Egyptian ethical text authors believed in only a single god ruling over the universe Americas Native American religion Native American religions may be monotheistic polytheistic henotheistic animistic or some combination thereof Cherokee religion for example is monotheist as well as pantheist The Great Spirit called Wakan Tanka among the Sioux and Gitche Manitou in Algonquian is a conception of universal spiritual force or supreme being prevalent among some Native American and First Nation cultures According to Lakota activist Russell Means a better translation of Wakan Tanka is the Great Mystery Indeed Wanka Tanka among the Lakota was considered a council of gods in pre columbian times and their religion is not monotheistic Some researchers have interpreted Aztec philosophy as fundamentally monotheistic or panentheistic While the populace at large believed in a polytheistic pantheon Aztec priests and nobles might have come to an interpretation of Teotl as a single universal force with many facets There has been criticism to this idea however most notably that many assertions of this supposed monotheism might actually come from post Conquistador bias imposing an Antiquity pagan model onto the Aztec Asia South Asia Hinduism Krishna displaying his Vishvarupa universal form to Arjuna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra As an old religion Hinduism inherits religious concepts spanning monotheism polytheism panentheism pantheism monism and atheism among others and its concept of God is complex and depends upon each individual and the tradition and philosophy followed Hindu views are broad and range from monism through pantheism and panentheism alternatively called monistic theism by some scholars to monotheism and even atheism Hinduism cannot be said to be purely polytheistic Hindu religious leaders have repeatedly stressed that while God s forms are many and the ways to communicate with him are many God is one The puja of the murti is a way to communicate with the abstract one god Brahman which creates sustains and dissolves creation Rig Veda 1 164 46 Indraṃ mitraṃ varuṇamaghnimahuratho divyaḥ sa suparṇo gharutman ekaṃ sad vipra bahudha vadantyaghniṃ yamaṃ matarisvanamahuḥ They call him Indra Mitra Varuṇa Agni and he is heavenly nobly winged Garuda To what is One sages give many a title they call it Agni Yama Matarisvan trans Griffith Traditions of Gaudiya Vaishnavas the Nimbarka Sampradaya and followers of Swaminarayan and Vallabha consider Krishna to be the source of all avatars and the source of Vishnu himself or to be the same as Narayana As such he is therefore regarded as Svayam Bhagavan When Krishna is recognized to be Svayam Bhagavan it can be understood that this is the belief of Gaudiya Vaishnavism the Vallabha Sampradaya and the Nimbarka Sampradaya where Krishna is accepted to be the source of all other avatars and the source of Vishnu himself This belief is drawn primarily from the famous statement of the Bhagavatam 1 3 28 A viewpoint differing from this theological concept is the concept of Krishna as an avatar of Narayana or Vishnu It should be however noted that although it is usual to speak of Vishnu as the source of the avataras this is only one of the names of the God of Vaishnavism who is also known as Narayana Vasudeva and Krishna and behind each of those names there is a divine figure with attributed supremacy in Vaishnavism The Rig Veda discusses monotheistic thought as do the Atharva Veda and Yajur Veda Devas are always looking to the supreme abode of Vishnu tad viṣṇoḥ paramaṁ padaṁ sada pasyanti sṻrayaḥ Rig Veda 1 22 20 The One Truth sages know by many names Rig Veda 1 164 46 When at first the unborn sprung into being He won His own dominion beyond which nothing higher has been in existence Atharva Veda 10 7 31 There is none to compare with Him There is no parallel to Him whose glory verily is great Yajur Veda 32 3 The number of auspicious qualities of God are countless with the following six qualities bhaga being the most important Jnana omniscience defined as the power to know about all beings simultaneously Aishvarya sovereignty derived from the word Ishvara which consists in unchallenged rule over all Shakti energy or power which is the capacity to make the impossible possible Bala strength which is the capacity to support everything by will and without any fatigue Virya vigor which indicates the power to retain immateriality as the supreme being in spite of being the material cause of mutable creations Tejas splendor which expresses His self sufficiency and the capacity to overpower everything by His spiritual effulgence In the Shaivite tradition the Shri Rudram Sanskrit श र र द रम to which the Chamakam चमकम is added by scriptural tradition is a Hindu stotra dedicated to Rudra an epithet of Shiva taken from the Yajurveda TS 4 5 4 7 Shri Rudram is also known as Sri Rudraprasna Satarudriya and Rudradhyaya The text is important in Vedanta where Shiva is equated to the Universal supreme God The hymn is an early example of enumerating the names of a deity a tradition developed extensively in the sahasranama literature of Hinduism The Nyaya school of Hinduism has made several arguments regarding a monotheistic view The Naiyanikas have given an argument that such a god can only be one In the Nyaya Kusumanjali this is discussed against the proposition of the Mimamsa school that let us assume there were many demigods devas and sages rishis in the beginning who wrote the Vedas and created the world Nyaya says that If they assume such omniscient beings those endowed with the various superhuman faculties of assuming infinitesimal size and so on and capable of creating everything then we reply that the law of parsimony bids us assume only one such namely Him the adorable Lord There can be no confidence in a non eternal and non omniscient being and hence it follows that according to the system which rejects God the tradition of the Veda is simultaneously overthrown there is no other way open citation needed In other words Nyaya says that the polytheist would have to give elaborate proofs for the existence and origin of his several celestial spirits none of which would be logical and that it is more logical to assume one eternal omniscient god Many other Hindus however view polytheism as far preferable to monotheism The famous Hindu revitalist leader Ram Swarup for example points to the Vedas as being specifically polytheistic and states that only some form of polytheism alone can do justice to this variety and richness Sita Ram Goel another 20th century Hindu historian wrote I had an occasion to read the typescript of a book Ram Swarup had finished writing in 1973 It was a profound study of Monotheism the central dogma of both Islam and Christianity as well as a powerful presentation of what the monotheists denounce as Hindu Polytheism I had never read anything like it It was a revelation to me that Monotheism was not a religious concept but an imperialist idea I must confess that I myself had been inclined towards Monotheism till this time I had never thought that a multiplicity of Gods was the natural and spontaneous expression of an evolved consciousness Sikhism A Sikh temple known as Nanaksar Gurudwara in Alberta Canada Sikhi is a monotheistic and a revealed religion God in Sikhism is called Akal Purakh which means The Immortal Being or Vahiguru Wondrous Enlightener However other names like Rama Brahman Khuda Allah etc are also used to refer to the same God who is shapeless and sightless niraṅkar akaal and alakh Sikhi presents a unique perspective where God is present sarav viapak in all of its creation and does not exist outside of its creation God must be seen from the inward eye or the heart Sikhs follow the Aad Guru Granth Sahib and are instructed to meditate on the Naam Name of God Vahiguru to progress towards enlightenment as its rigorous application permits the existence of communication between God and human beings Sikhism is a monotheistic faith that arose in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent during the 16th and 17th centuries Sikhs believe in one timeless omnipresent supreme creator The opening verse of the Guru Granth Sahib known as the Mul Mantra signifies this Punjabi ੴ ਸਤ ਨ ਮ ਕਰਤ ਪ ਰਖ ਨ ਰਭਉ ਨ ਰਵ ਰ ਅਕ ਲ ਮ ਰਤ ਅਜ ਨ ਸ ਭ ਗ ਰ ਪ ਰਸ ਦ Transliteration ikk ōankar sat i nam u karata purakh u nirabha u niravair u akala murat i ajuni saibhan g gur a prasad i One Universal creator God The supreme Unchangeable Truth The Creator of the Universe Beyond Fear Beyond Hatred Beyond Death Beyond Birth Self Existent by Guru s Grace Ik Onkar a Sikh symbol representing the One Supreme Reality The word ੴ Ik ōaṅkar has two components The first is ੧ the digit 1 in Gurmukhi signifying the singularity of the creator Together the word means One Universal creator God It is often said that the 1430 pages of the Guru Granth Sahib are all expansions on the Mul Mantra Although the Sikhs have many names for God some derived from Islam and Hinduism they all refer to the same Supreme Being The Sikh holy scriptures refer to the One God who pervades the whole of space and is the creator of all beings in the universe The following quotation from the Guru Granth Sahib highlights this point Chant and meditate on the One God who permeates and pervades the many beings of the whole Universe God created it and God spreads through it everywhere Everywhere I look I see God The Perfect Lord is perfectly pervading and permeating the water the land and the sky there is no place without Him Guru Granth Sahib Page 782 However there is a strong case for arguing that the Guru Granth Sahib teaches monism due to its non dualistic tendencies Punjabi ਸਹਸ ਪਦ ਬ ਮਲ ਨਨ ਏਕ ਪਦ ਗ ਧ ਬ ਨ ਸਹਸ ਤਵ ਗ ਧ ਇਵ ਚਲਤ ਮ ਹ ੨ You have thousands of Lotus Feet and yet You do not have even one foot You have no nose but you have thousands of noses This Play of Yours entrances me Guru Granth Sahib Page 13 Sikhs believe that God has been given many names but they all refer to the One God VahiGuru Sikh holy scripture Guru Granth Sahib speaks to all faiths and Sikhs believe that members of other religions such as Islam Hinduism and Christianity all worship the same God and the names Allah Rahim Karim Hari Raam and Paarbrahm are therefore frequently mentioned in the Sikh holy scripture Guru Granth Sahib God in Sikhism is most commonly referred to as Akal Purakh which means The Immortal Being or Waheguru the Wondrous Enlightener East Asia Chinese religion Shang dynasty bronze script character for tian 天 which translates to Heaven and sky The orthodox faith system held by most dynasties of China since at least the Shang dynasty 1766 BCE until the modern period centered on the worship of Shangdi literally Above Sovereign generally translated as High god or Heaven as a supreme being standing above other gods This faith system pre dated the development of Confucianism and Taoism and the introduction of Buddhism and Christianity It has some features of monotheism in that Heaven is seen as an omnipotent entity a noncorporeal force with a personality transcending the world However this faith system was not truly monotheistic since other lesser gods and spirits which varied with locality were also worshiped along with Shangdi Still later variants such as Mohism 470 BCE c 391 BCE approached true monotheism teaching that the function of lesser gods and ancestral spirits is merely to carry out the will of Shangdi In Mozi s Will of Heaven 天志 he writes I know Heaven loves men dearly not without reason Heaven ordered the sun the moon and the stars to enlighten and guide them Heaven ordained the four seasons Spring Autumn Winter and Summer to regulate them Heaven sent down snow frost rain and dew to grow the five grains and flax and silk that so the people could use and enjoy them Heaven established the hills and rivers ravines and valleys and arranged many things to minister to man s good or bring him evil He appointed the dukes and lords to reward the virtuous and punish the wicked and to gather metal and wood birds and beasts and to engage in cultivating the five grains and flax and silk to provide for the people s food and clothing This has been so from antiquity to the present 且吾所以知天之愛民之厚者有矣 曰以磨為日月星辰 以昭道之 制為四時春秋冬夏 以紀綱之 雷降雪霜雨露 以長遂五穀麻絲 使民得而財利之 列為山川谿谷 播賦百事 以臨司民之善否 為王公侯伯 使之賞賢而罰暴 賊金木鳥獸 從事乎五穀麻絲 以為民衣食之財 自古及今 未嘗不有此也 Will of Heaven Chapter 27 Paragraph 6 ca 5th century BCE Worship of Shangdi and Heaven in ancient China includes the erection of shrines the last and greatest being the Temple of Heaven in Beijing and the offering of prayers The ruler of China in every Chinese dynasty would perform annual sacrificial rituals to Shangdi usually by slaughtering a completely healthy bull as sacrifice Although its popularity gradually diminished after the advent of Taoism and Buddhism among other religions its concepts remained in use throughout the pre modern period and have been incorporated in later religions in China including terminology used by early Christians in China Despite the rising of non theistic and pantheistic spirituality contributed by Taoism and Buddhism Shangdi was still praised up until the end of the Qing dynasty as the last ruler of the Qing declared himself son of heaven In the 19th century in the Guangdong region monotheist influences led to the Taiping Rebellion Tengrism Tengrism or Tangrism sometimes stylized as Tengriism occasionally referred to as Tengrianism is a modern term for a Central Asian religion characterized by features of shamanism animism totemism both polytheism and monotheism and ancestor worship Historically it was the prevailing religion of the Bulgars Turks Mongols and Hungarians as well as the Xiongnu and the Huns It was the state religion of the six ancient Turkic states Avar Khaganate Old Great Bulgaria First Bulgarian Empire Gokturks Khaganate Eastern Tourkia and Western Turkic Khaganate In Irk Bitig Tengri is mentioned as Turuk Tangrisi God of Turks The term is perceived among Turkic peoples as a national religion In Chinese and Turco Mongol traditions the Supreme God is commonly referred to as the ruler of Heaven or the Sky Lord granted with omnipotent powers but it has largely diminished in those regions due to ancestor worship Taoism s pantheistic views and Buddhism s rejection of a creator God On some occasions in the mythology the Sky Lord as identified as a male has been associated to mate with an Earth Mother while some traditions kept the omnipotence of the Sky Lord unshared citation needed West Asia Abrahamic religions Bahaʼi Faith Bahaʼi House of Worship Langenhain Germany God in the Bahaʼi Faith is taught to be the Imperishable uncreated Being Who is the source of existence too great for humans to fully comprehend Human primitive understanding of God is achieved through his revelations via his divine intermediary Manifestations In the Bahaʼi faith such Christian doctrines as the Trinity are seen as compromising the Bahaʼi view that God is single and has no equal and the very existence of the Bahaʼi Faith is a challenge to the Islamic doctrine of the finality of Muhammad s revelation God in the Bahaʼi Faith communicates to humanity through divine intermediaries known as Manifestations of God These Manifestations establish religion in the world It is through these divine intermediaries that humans can approach God and through them God brings divine revelation and law The Oneness of God is one of the core teachings of the Bahaʼi Faith The obligatory prayers in the Bahaʼi Faith involve explicit monotheistic testimony God is the imperishable uncreated being who is the source of all existence He is described as a personal God unknowable inaccessible the source of all Revelation eternal omniscient omnipresent and almighty Although transcendent and inaccessible directly his image is reflected in his creation The purpose of creation is for the created to have the capacity to know and love its creator God communicates his will and purpose to humanity through intermediaries known as Manifestations of God who are the prophets and messengers that have founded religions from prehistoric times up to the present day Christianity The Trinity is the Christian belief that God is one God in essence but three persons God the Father God the Son Jesus and God the Holy Spirit Among early Christians there was considerable debate over the nature of the Godhead with some denying the incarnation but not the deity of Jesus Docetism and others later calling for an Arian conception of God Despite at least one earlier local synod rejecting the claim of Arius this Christological issue was to be one of the items addressed at the First Council of Nicaea The First Council of Nicaea held in Nicaea in present day Turkey convoked by the Roman Emperor Constantine I in 325 was the first ecumenical council of bishops of the Roman Empire and most significantly resulted in the first uniform Christian doctrine called the Nicene Creed With the creation of the creed a precedent was established for subsequent general ecumenical councils of bishops synods to create statements of belief and canons of doctrinal orthodoxy the intent being to define a common creed for the Church and address heretical ideas One purpose of the council was to resolve disagreements in Alexandria over the nature of Jesus in relationship to the Father in particular whether Jesus was of the same substance as God the Father or merely of similar substance All but two bishops took the first position while Arius argument failed God in The Creation of Adam fresco by Michelangelo c 1508 1512 Christian orthodox traditions Eastern Orthodox Oriental Orthodox Roman Catholic and most Protestants follow this decision which was reaffirmed in 381 at the First Council of Constantinople and reached its full development through the work of the Cappadocian Fathers They consider God to be a triune entity called the Trinity comprising three persons God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Spirit These three are described as being of the same substance ὁmooysios Christians overwhelmingly assert that monotheism is central to the Christian faith as the Nicene Creed and others which gives the orthodox Christian definition of the Trinity begins I believe in one God From earlier than the times of the Nicene Creed 325 CE various Christian figures advocated the triune mystery nature of God as a normative profession of faith According to Roger E Olson and Christopher Hall through prayer meditation study and practice the Christian community concluded that God must exist as both a unity and trinity codifying this in ecumenical council at the end of the 4th century Most modern Christians believe the Godhead is triune meaning that the three persons of the Trinity are in one union in which each person is also wholly God They also hold to the doctrine of a man god Christ Jesus as God incarnate These Christians also do not believe that one of the three divine figures is God alone and the other two are not but that all three are mysteriously God and one Other Christian religions including Unitarian Universalism Jehovah s Witnesses Mormonism and others do not share those views on the Trinity Some Christian faiths such as Mormonism argue that the Godhead is in fact three separate individuals which include God the Father His Son Jesus Christ and the Holy Ghost each individual having a distinct purpose in the grand existence of human kind Furthermore Mormons believe that before the Council of Nicaea the predominant belief among many early Christians was that the Godhead was three separate individuals In support of this view they cite early Christian examples of belief in subordinationism Unitarianism is a theological movement named for its understanding of God as one person in direct contrast to Trinitarianism Some in Judaism and some in Islam do not consider Trinitarian Christianity to be a pure form of monotheism due to the pluriform monotheistic Christian doctrine of the Trinity classifying it as shituf in Judaism and as shirk in Islam Trinitarian Christians on the other hand argue that the doctrine of the Trinity is a valid expression of monotheism citing that the Trinity does not consist of three separate deities but rather the three persons who exist consubstantially as one substance within a single Godhead Islam Arabic calligraphy reading Allah may his glory be glorified In Islam God Allah is all powerful and all knowing the Creator Sustainer Ordainer and Judge of the universe God in Islam is strictly singular tawhid unique wahid and inherently One ahad all merciful and omnipotent Allah exists on the Al Arsh Quran 7 54 but the Quran states that No vision can encompass Him but He encompasses all vision For He is the Most Subtle All Aware Quran 6 103 Allah is the only God and the same God worshiped in Christianity and Judaism Q29 46 Islam emerged in the 7th century CE in the context of both Christianity and Judaism with some thematic elements similar to Gnosticism Islamic belief states that Muhammad did not bring a new religion from God but rather the same religion as practiced by Abraham Moses David Jesus and all the other prophets of God The assertion of Islam is that the message of God had been corrupted distorted or lost over time and the Quran was sent to Muhammad in order to correct the lost message of the Tawrat Torah Injil Gospel and Zabur The Quran asserts the existence of a single and absolute truth that transcends the world a unique and indivisible being who is independent of the creation The Quran rejects binary modes of thinking such as the idea of a duality of God by arguing that both good and evil generate from God s creative act God is a universal god rather than a local tribal or parochial one an absolute who integrates all affirmative values and brooks no evil Ash ari theology which dominated Sunni Islam from the tenth to the nineteenth century insists on ultimate divine transcendence and holds that divine unity is not accessible to human reason Ash arism teaches that human knowledge regarding it is limited to what has been revealed through the prophets and on such paradoxes as God s creation of evil revelation had to accept bila kayfa without asking how Tawhid constitutes the foremost article of the Muslim profession of faith There is no god but God Muhammad is the messenger of God To attribute divinity to a created entity is the only unpardonable sin mentioned in the Quran The entirety of the Islamic teaching rests on the principle of tawhid Medieval Islamic philosopher Al Ghazali offered a proof of monotheism from omnipotence asserting there can only be one omnipotent being For if there were two omnipotent beings the first would either have power over the second meaning the second is not omnipotent or not meaning the first is not omnipotent thus implying that there could only be one omnipotent being As they traditionally profess a concept of monotheism with a singular entity as God Judaism and Islam reject the Christian idea of monotheism Judaism uses the term Shituf to refer to non monotheistic ways of worshiping God Although Muslims venerate Jesus Isa in Arabic as a prophet and messiah they do not accept the doctrine that he was a begotten son of God Judaism The tetragrammaton in Paleo Hebrew 10th century BCE to 135 CE old Aramaic 10th century BCE to 4th century CE and square Hebrew 3rd century BCE to present scripts Judaism is traditionally considered one of the oldest monotheistic religions in the world although up to the 8th century BCE the Israelites were polytheistic with their worship including the gods El Baal Asherah and Astarte Yahweh was originally the national god of the Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah During the 8th century BCE the worship of Yahweh in Israel was in competition with many other cults described by the Yahwist faction collectively as Baals The oldest books of the Hebrew Bible reflect this competition as in the books of Hosea and Nahum whose authors lament the apostasy of the people of Israel threatening them with the wrath of God if they do not give up their polytheistic cults As time progressed the henotheistic cult of Yahweh grew increasingly militant in its opposition to the worship of other gods Some scholars date the start of widespread monotheism to the late 8th century BCE and view it as a response to Neo Assyrian aggression Later the reforms of King Josiah imposed a form of strict monolatrism After the fall of Judah and the beginning of the Babylonian captivity a small circle of priests and scribes gathered around the exiled royal court where they first developed the concept of Yahweh as the sole God of the world Second Temple Judaism and later Rabbinic Judaism became strictly monotheistic The Babylonian Talmud references other foreign gods as non existent entities to whom humans mistakenly ascribe reality and power One of the best known statements of Rabbinic Judaism on monotheism is the Second of Maimonides 13 Principles of faith God the Cause of all is one This does not mean one as in one of a pair nor one like a species which encompasses many individuals nor one as in an object that is made up of many elements nor as a single simple object that is infinitely divisible Rather God is a unity unlike any other possible unity Some in Judaism and Islam reject the Christian idea of monotheism Modern Judaism uses the term shituf to refer to the worship of God in a manner which Judaism deems to be neither purely monotheistic though still permissible for non Jews nor polytheistic which would be prohibited Mandaeism Mandaean pendant Mandaeism or Mandaeanism Arabic مندائية Mandaʼiyah sometimes also known as Sabianism is a monotheistic Gnostic and ethnic religion 1 Mandaeans consider Adam Seth Noah Shem and John the Baptist to be prophets with Adam being the founder of the religion and John being the greatest and final prophet 45 The Mandaeans believe in one God commonly named Hayyi Rabbi meaning The Great Life or The Great Living God The Mandaeans speak a dialect of Eastern Aramaic known as Mandaic The name Mandaean comes from the Aramaic manda meaning knowledge as does Greek gnosis The term Sabianism is derived from the Sabians Arabic الصابئة al Ṣabiʾa a mysterious religious group mentioned three times in the Quran alongside the Jews the Christians and the Zoroastrians as a people of the book and whose name was historically claimed by the Mandaeans as well as by several other religious groups in order to gain the legal protection dhimma offered by Islamic law Mandaeans recognize God to be the eternal creator of all the one and only in domination who has no partner Rastafari Rastafari sometimes termed Rastafarianism is classified as both a new religious movement and social movement It developed in Jamaica during the 1930s It lacks any centralised authority and there is much heterogeneity among practitioners who are known as Rastafari Rastafarians or Rastas Rastafari refer to their beliefs which are based on a specific interpretation of the Bible as Rastalogy Central is a monotheistic belief in a single God referred to as Jah who partially resides within each individual The former emperor of Ethiopia Haile Selassie is given central importance Many Rastas regard him as an incarnation of Jah on Earth and as the Second Coming of Christ Others regard him as a human prophet who fully recognised the inner divinity within every individual Yazidism Melek Taus Tawuse Melek the Peacock Angel functions as the ruler of the world and leader of the other Angels God in Yazidism created the world and entrusted it into the care of seven Holy Beings known as Angels The Yazidis believe in a divine Triad The original hidden God of the Yazidis is considered to be remote and inactive in relation to his creation except to contain and bind it together within his essence His first emanation is the Angel Melek Taus Tawuse Melek who functions as the ruler of the world and leader of the other Angels The second hypostasis of the divine Triad is the Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir The third is Sultan Ezid These are the three hypostases of the one God The identity of these three is sometimes blurred with Sheikh Adi considered to be a manifestation of Tawuse Melek and vice versa the same also applies to Sultan Ezid Yazidis are called Milete Tawuse Melek the nation of Tawuse Melek God is referred to by Yazidis as Xwede Xwedawend Ezdan and Pedsha King and less commonly Ellah and Heq According to some Yazidi hymns known as Qewls God has 1 001 names or 3 003 names according to other Qewls Zoroastrianism Faravahar or Ferohar is one of the primary symbols of Zoroastrianism believed to be the depiction of a Fravashi guardian spirit By some scholars the Zoroastrians Parsis or Zartoshtis are sometimes credited with being some of the first monotheists and having had influence on other world religions Zoroastrianism combines cosmogonic dualism and eschatological monotheism which makes it unique among the religions of the world There are two issues that have long made it problematic to identify Zoroastrianism as true monotheism the presence of lesser deities and dualism But before hastening to conclude that the Amesha Spentas and the other yazatas compromise the purity of monotheism we should consider that the other historical monotheisms too made room for other figures endowed with supernatural powers to bridge the gulf between the exalted remote Creator God and the human world the angels in all of them whose conception in post exilic Judaism was apparently developed after the pattern of the Amesha Spentas Boyce and Grenet 1991 404 405 the saints and the Virgin Mary in several Christian churches and the other persons of the Trinity in all of Christianity Despite the vast differences with Zoroastrian theology the common thread is that all these beings are subordinate to the Godhead as helpers or in the case of the persons of the Trinity co equals hence they do not pursue different interests and are worshiped jointly with the Godhead not separately therefore the supplicant s dilemma does not arise e Europe Ancient proto Indo European religion The head deity of the Proto Indo European religion was the god Dyḗus Pḥatḗr A number of words derived from the name of this prominent deity are used in various Indo European languages to denote a monotheistic God Nonetheless in spite of this Proto Indo European religion itself was not monotheistic In Eastern Europe the ancient traditions of the Slavic religion contained elements of monotheism In the sixth century AD the Byzantine chronicler Procopius recorded that the Slavs acknowledge that one god creator of lightning is the only lord of all to him do they sacrifice an ox and all sacrificial animals The deity to whom Procopius is referring is the storm god Perun whose name is derived from Perkwunos the Proto Indo European god of lightning The ancient Slavs syncretized him with the Germanic god Thor and the Biblical prophet Elijah Ancient Greek religion Classical Greece Fictionalized portrait of Xenophanes from a 17th century engraving The surviving fragments of the poems of the classical Greek philosopher Xenophanes of Colophon suggest that he held views very similar to those of modern monotheists His poems harshly criticize the traditional notion of anthropomorphic gods commenting that if cattle and horses and lions had hands or could paint with their hands and create works such as men do they also would depict the gods shapes and make their bodies of such a sort as the form they themselves have Instead Xenophanes declares that there is one god greatest among gods and humans like mortals neither in form nor in thought Xenophanes s theology appears to have been monist but not truly monotheistic in the strictest sense Although some later philosophers such as Antisthenes believed in doctrines similar to those expounded by Xenophanes his ideas do not appear to have become widely popular Although Plato himself was a polytheist in his writings he often presents Socrates as speaking of the god in the singular form He does however often speak of the gods in the plural form as well The Euthyphro dilemma for example is formulated as Is that which is holy loved by the gods because it is holy or is it holy because it is loved by the gods Hellenistic religion The development of pure philosophical monotheism is a product of the Late Antiquity During the 2nd to 3rd centuries early Christianity was just one of several competing religious movements advocating monotheism The One Tὸ Ἕn is a concept that is prominent in the writings of the Neoplatonists especially those of the philosopher Plotinus In the writings of Plotinus The One is described as an inconceivable transcendent all embodying permanent eternal causative entity that permeates throughout all of existence Remains of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi Greece A number of oracles of Apollo from Didyma and Clarus the so called theological oracles dated to the 2nd and 3rd century CE proclaim that there is only one highest god of whom the gods of polytheistic religions are mere manifestations or servants 4th century CE Cyprus had besides Christianity an apparently monotheistic cult of Dionysus The Hypsistarians were a religious group who believed in a most high god according to Greek documents Later revisions of this Hellenic religion were adjusted towards monotheism as it gained consideration among a wider populace The worship of Zeus as the head god signaled a trend in the direction of monotheism with less honour paid to the fragmented powers of the lesser gods Oceania Aboriginal Australian religion Aboriginal Australians are typically described as polytheistic in nature Although some researchers shy from referring to Dreamtime figures as gods or deities they are broadly described as such for the sake of simplicity In Southeastern Australian cultures the sky father Baiame is perceived as the creator of the universe though this role is sometimes taken by other gods like Yhi or Bunjil and at least among the Gamilaraay traditionally revered above other mythical figures Equation between him and the Christian god is common among both missionaries and modern Christian Aboriginals The Yolngu had extensive contact with the Makassans and adopted religious practises inspired by those of Islam The god Walitha walitha is based on Allah specifically with the wa Ta ala suffix but while this deity had a role in funerary practises it is unclear if it was Allah like in terms of functions Andaman Islands The religion of the Andamanese peoples has at times been described as animistic monotheism believing foremost in a single deity Puluga who created the universe However Puluga is not worshipped and anthropomorphic personifications of natural phenomena are also known CriticismCritics have described monotheism as a cause of ignorance oppression and violence David Hume 1711 1776 said that monotheism is less pluralistic and thus less tolerant than polytheism because monotheism stipulates that people pigeonhole their beliefs into one tenet In the same vein Auguste Comte said that Monotheism is irreconcilable with the existence in our nature of the instincts of benevolence because it compels followers to devote themselves to a single Creator Mark S Smith an American biblical scholar and ancient historian wrote that monotheism has been a totalizing discourse often co opting all aspects of a social belief system resulting in the exclusion of others Jacob Neusner suggests that the logic of monotheism yields little basis for tolerating other religions Ancient monotheism is described as the instigator of violence in its early days because it inspired the Israelites to wage war upon the Canaanites who believed in multiple gods Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan regarded monotheism as a cause of violence saying The intolerance of narrow monotheism is written in letters of blood across the history of man from the time when first the tribes of Israel burst into the land of Canaan The worshippers of the one jealous God are egged on to aggressive wars against people of alien beliefs and cultures They invoke divine sanction for the cruelties inflicted on the conquered The spirit of old Israel is inherited by Christianity and Islam and it might not be unreasonable to suggest that it would have been better for Western civilization if Greece had moulded it on this question rather than Palestine See alsoSeicho no Ie Cheondoism Tenrikyo Criticism of monotheism Deism Idolatry Intelligent design Panentheism Pantheism Post monotheism Unmoved mover Portal ReligionReferences 14 2 Types of Religions 4 June 2020 Monotheism Encyclopaedia Britannica 24 May 2023 Monotheism Hutchinson Encyclopedia 12th edition p 644 Cross F L Livingstone E A eds 1974 Monotheism The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 2 ed Oxford Oxford University Press William Wainwright 2018 Monotheism Stanford 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Gerd 1985 III Biblical Monotheism in an Evolutionary Perspective Biblical Faith An Evolutionary Approach Translated by Bowden John Minneapolis Fortress Press published 2007 p 64 ISBN 9781451408614 Retrieved 13 January 2017 Evolutionary interpretations of the history of religion are usually understood to be an explanation of the phenomenon of religion as a result of a continuous development The model for such development is the growth of living beings which leads to increasingly subtle differentiation and integration Within such a framework of thought monotheism would be interpreted as the result of a continuous development from animism polytheism henotheism and monolatry to belief in the one and only God Such a development cannot be proved Monotheism appeared suddenly though not without being prepared for Noort Ed 2010 Abraham and the Nations In Goodman Martin van Kooten George H van Ruiten Jacques T A G M eds Abraham the Nations and the Hagarites Jewish Christian and Islamic 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Archived from the original on 20 February 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2022 It does not necessarily imply monotheism however since in addition to the Supreme High god or Heaven there were also the ordinary gods shen and the ancestral spirits guei all of whom were worshipped in the Jou royal cult Asatrian Garnik S Arakelova Victoria 2014 Part I The One God Malak Tawus The Leader of the Triad The Religion of the Peacock Angel The Yezidis and Their Spirit World Gnostica Abingdon Oxfordshire Routledge pp 1 28 doi 10 4324 9781315728896 ISBN 978 1 84465 761 2 OCLC 931029996 Allison Christine 25 January 2017 The Yazidis Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 013 254 ISBN 9780199340378 Archived from the original on 11 March 2019 Retrieved 15 May 2021 Mallory J P Adams D Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 408 411 and 423 434 ISBN 978 0 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19 280346 7 Buskirk Kathy Van 4 April 2007 The Cherokee religion New Statesman Retrieved 28 February 2024 Thomas Robert Murray Manitou and God North American Indian Religions and Christian Culture Greenwood Publishing Group 2007 ISBN 0313347794 pg 35 Means Robert Where White Men Fear to Tread The Autobiography of Russell Means Macmillan 1995 ISBN 0312147619 pg 241 Rice Julian 1998 Before the great spirit the many faces of Sioux spirituality University of New Mexico Press ISBN 0 8263 1868 1 James Maffie 2005 Aztec Philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy James Maffie Aztec Philosophy Understanding a World in Motion University Press of Colorado 15 03 2014 Rogers Peter 2009 Ultimate Truth Book 1 AuthorHouse p 109 ISBN 978 1 4389 7968 7 Chakravarti Sitansu 1991 Hinduism a way of life Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 71 ISBN 978 81 208 0899 7 Polytheism Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2007 Retrieved 5 July 2007 Pattanaik Devdutt 2002 The man who was a woman and other queer tales of Hindu lore Routledge p 38 ISBN 978 1 56023 181 3 Concept Of God In Hinduism By Dr Naik Islam101 com Archived from the original on 29 April 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Swaminarayan bicentenary commemoration volume 1781 1981 p 154 Shri Vallabhacharya and Shri Swaminarayan Both of them designate the highest reality as Krishna who is both the highest avatara and also the source of other avataras To quote R Kaladhar Bhatt in this context In this transcendental devotieon Nirguna Bhakti the sole Deity and only is Krishna New Dimensions in Vedanta Philosophy Page 154 Archived 2023 04 20 at the Wayback Machine Sahajananda Vedanta 1981 Delmonico N 2004 The History Of Indic Monotheism And Modern Chaitanya Vaishnavism The Hare Krishna Movement The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant ISBN 978 0 231 12256 6 Retrieved 12 April 2008 Elkman S M Gosvami J 1986 Jiva Gosvamin s Tattvasandarbha A Study on the Philosophical and Sectarian Development of the Gaudiya Vaishnava Movement Motilal Banarsidass Pub Dimock Jr E C Dimock E C 1989 The Place of the Hidden Moon Erotic Mysticism in the Vaisnava Sahajiya Cult of Bengal University Of Chicago Press page 132 Archived 2023 04 20 at the Wayback Machine Kennedy M T 1925 The Chaitanya Movement A Study of the Vaishnavism of Bengal H Milford Oxford university press Flood Gavin D 1996 An introduction to Hinduism Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 341 ISBN 0 521 43878 0 Retrieved 21 April 2008 gavin flood Early Vaishnava worship focuses on three deities who become fused together namely Vasudeva Krishna Krishna Gopala and Narayana who in turn all become identified with Vishnu Put simply Vasudeva Krishna and Krishna Gopala were worshiped by groups generally referred to as Bhagavatas while Narayana was worshipped by the Pancaratra sect Gupta Ravi M 2007 Caitanya Vaisnava Vedanta of Jiva Gosvami Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 40548 5 Essential Hinduism S Rosen 2006 Greenwood Publishing Group p 124 Archived 2023 04 03 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0 275 99006 0 Matchett Freda 2000 Krsna Lord or Avatara the relationship between Krsna and Visnu in the context of the Avatara myth as presented by the Harivamsa the Visnupurana and the Bhagavatapurana Surrey Routledge p 4 ISBN 0 7007 1281 X Rig Veda A Metrically Restored Text with an Introduction and Notes HOS 1994 Vedavid org Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Atharva Veda Spiritual amp Philosophical Hymns Archived from the original on 7 October 2008 Shukla Yajur Veda The transcendental That Archived from the original on 11 October 2008 Tapasyananda 1991 Bhakti Schools of Vedanta Madras Sri Ramakrishna Math ISBN 81 7120 226 8 For an overview of the Satarudriya see Kramrisch pp 71 74 For a full translation of the complete hymn see Sivaramamurti 1976 For the Satarudriya as an early example of enumeration of divine names see Flood 1996 p 152 Goel Sita Ram 1987 Defence of Hindu Society New Delhi India Voice of India Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 23 August 2011 In the Vedic approach there is no single God This is bad enough But the Hindus do not have even a supreme God a fuhrer God who presides over a multiplicity of Gods Ram Swarup Goel Sita Ram 1987 Defence of Hindu Society New Delhi India Voice of India Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 23 August 2011 Goel Sita Ram 1982 How I became a Hindu New Delhi India Voice of India p 92 Mark Juergensmeyer Gurinder Singh Mann 2006 The Oxford Handbook of Global Religions US Oxford University Press p 41 ISBN 978 0 19 513798 9 Ardinger Barbara 2006 Pagan Every Day Finding the Extraordinary in Our Ordinary Lives Weisfer p 13 ISBN 978 1 57863 332 6 Nesbitt Eleanor M 15 November 2005 Sikhi a very short introduction Oxford University Press p 136 ISBN 978 0 19 280601 7 Retrieved 19 July 2010 Parrinder Geoffrey 1971 World Religions From Ancient History to the Present USA Hamlyn Publishing Group p 252 ISBN 978 0 87196 129 7 Sikh Beliefs and Doctrine ReligionFacts Archived from the original on 12 June 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2012 A Short Introduction to Sikhism Multifaithcentre org Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Chang Iris 2003 The Chinese in America A Narrative History New York Viking Press pp 30 31 ISBN 978 0 670 03123 8 The spelling Tengrism is found in the 1960s e g Bergounioux ed Primitive and prehistoric religions Volume 140 Hawthorn Books 1966 p 80 Tengrianism is a reflection of the Russian term Tengrianstvo It is reported in 1996 so called Tengrianism in Shnirelʹman ed Who gets the past competition for ancestors among non Russian intellectuals in Russia Woodrow Wilson Center Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 8018 5221 3 p 31 in the context of the nationalist rivalry over Bulgar legacy The spellings Tengriism and Tengrianity are later reported deprecatingly in scare quotes in 2004 in Central Asiatic journal vol 48 49 2004 p 238 Archived 2023 03 26 at the Wayback Machine The Turkish term Tengricilik is also found from the 1990s Mongolian Tenger shүtleg is used in a 1999 biography of Genghis Khan Boldbaatar et al Chingis haan 1162 1227 Haadyn san 1999 p 18 Archived 2023 04 20 at the Wayback Machine R Meserve Religions in the central Asian environment In History of Civilizations of Central Asia Volume IV Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine The age of achievement A D 750 to the end of the fifteenth century Part Two The achievements p 68 The imperial religion was more monotheistic centred around the all powerful god Tengri the sky god Michael Fergus Janar Jandosova Kazakhstan Coming of Age Stacey International 2003 p 91 a profound combination of monotheism and polytheism that has come to be known as Tengrism H B Paksoy Tengri in Eurasia Archived 2017 09 11 at the Wayback Machine 2008 Napil Bazylkhan Kenje Torlanbaeva in Central Eurasian Studies Society Central Eurasian Studies Society 2004 p 40 There is no doubt that between the 6th and 9th centuries Tengrism was the religion among the nomads of the steppes Yazar Andras Rona Tas Hungarians and Europe in the early Middle Ages an introduction to early Hungarian history Yayinci Central European University Press 1999 ISBN 978 963 9116 48 1 p 151 Archived 2023 04 06 at the Wayback Machine Rona Tas Andras Andras Rona Tas March 1999 Hungarians amp Europe in the Early Middle Ages An Introduction to Early Andras Rona Tas Google Kitaplar Central European University Press ISBN 9789639116481 Retrieved 19 February 2013 Jean Paul Roux Die altturkische Mythologie p 255 Hatcher John S 2005 Unveiling the Huri of Love Journal of Bahaʼi Studies 15 1 1 38 doi 10 31581 jbs 15 1 4 1 2005 Cole Juan 1982 The Concept of Manifestation in the Baha i Writings Baha i Studies Vol 9 pp 1 38 Archived from the original on 17 May 2019 Retrieved 28 May 2012 Stockman Robert Jesus Christ in the Baha i Writings Bahaʼi Studies Review 2 1 Archived from the original on 3 October 2012 Retrieved 28 May 2012 Lewis Bernard 1984 The Jews of Islam Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00807 8 Smith 2008 pp 107 108 Hatcher William 1985 The Bahaʼi Faith San Francisco Harper amp Row pp 115 123 ISBN 0060654414 Smith P 1999 A Concise Encyclopedia of the Bahaʼi Faith Oxford UK Oneworld Publications ISBN 1 85168 184 1 Momen M 1997 A Short Introduction to the Bahaʼi Faith Oxford UK One World Publications ISBN 1 85168 209 0 Hatcher 1985 p 74 Smith 2008 p 106 Effendi 1944 p 139harvnb error no target CITEREFEffendi1944 help Smith 2008 p 111 Definition of the Fourth Lateran Council quoted in Catechism of the Catholic Church 253 Archived 2020 03 29 at the Wayback Machine Ecumenical from Koine Greek oikoumenikos literally meaning worldwide the earliest extant uses of the term for a council are in Eusebius s Life of Constantine 3 6 1 Archived 2007 07 07 at the Wayback Machine around 338 synodon oἰkoymenikὴn synekrotei he convoked an Ecumenical council Athanasius s Ad Afros Epistola Synodica in 369 2 Archived 2018 11 30 at the Wayback Machine and the Letter in 382 to Pope Damasus I and the Latin bishops from the First Council of Constantinople 3 Archived 2006 06 13 at the Wayback Machine Examples of ante Nicene statements Hence all the power of magic became dissolved and every bond of wickedness was destroyed men s ignorance was taken away and the old kingdom abolished God Himself appearing in the form of a man for the renewal of eternal life St Ignatius of Antioch in Letter to the Ephesians ch 4 shorter version Roberts Donaldson translation We have also as a Physician the Lord our God Jesus the Christ the only begotten Son and Word before time began but who afterwards became also man of Mary the virgin For the Word was made flesh Being incorporeal He was in the body being impassible He was in a passable body being immortal He was in a mortal body being life He became subject to corruption that He might free our souls from death and corruption and heal them and might restore them to health when they were diseased with ungodliness and wicked lusts St Ignatius of Antioch in Letter to the Ephesians ch 7 shorter version Roberts Donaldson translation The Church though dispersed throughout the whole world even to the ends of the earth has received from the apostles and their disciples this faith one God the Father Almighty Maker of heaven and earth and the sea and all things that are in them and in one Christ Jesus the Son of God who became incarnate for our salvation and in the Holy Spirit who proclaimed through the prophets the dispensations of God and the advents and the birth from a virgin and the passion and the resurrection from the dead and the ascension into heaven in the flesh of the beloved Christ Jesus our Lord and His manifestation from heaven in the glory of the Father to gather all things in one and to raise up anew all flesh of the whole human race in order that to Christ Jesus our Lord and God and Savior and King according to the will of the invisible Father every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth and that every tongue should confess to him and that He should execute just judgment towards all St Irenaeus in Against Heresies ch X v I Donaldson Sir James 1950 Ante Nicene Fathers Volume 1 Apostolic Fathers Justin Martyr Irenaeus William B Eerdmans Publishing Co ISBN 978 0802880871 For in the name of God the Father and Lord of the universe and of our Savior Jesus Christ and of the Holy Spirit they then receive the washing with water Justin Martyr in First Apology ch LXI Donaldson Sir James 1950 Ante Nicene Fathers Volume 1 Apostolic Fathers Justin Martyr Irenaeus Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0802880871 Olson Roger E 2002 The Trinity Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 15 ISBN 9780802848277 The Articles of Faith 13 Beliefs ComeUntoChrist www churchofjesuschrist org Archived from the original on 5 August 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2022 Jesus Christ Is Our Savior ComeUntoChrist www churchofjesuschrist org Archived from the original on 5 August 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2022 Offenders for a Word Archived from the original on 10 December 2015 Retrieved 28 February 2015 Unitarians Archived 2014 07 05 at the Wayback Machine at Catholic Encyclopedia ed Kevin Knight at New Advent website Mohammed Amin Triangulating the Abrahamic faiths measuring the closeness of Judaism Christianity and Islam Archived from the original on 22 February 2016 Retrieved 20 January 2016 Christians were seen as polytheists due to the doctrine of the Trinity In the last few hundred years rabbis have moderated this view slightly but they still do not regard Christians as being fully monotheistic in the same manner as Jews or Muslims Muslims were acknowledged as monotheists Jacobs Louis ed 1995 The Jewish Religion A Companion 1st Edition Oxford University Press pp 79 80 ISBN 978 0198264637 Archived from the original on 21 May 2020 Retrieved 13 April 2018 Islamic Practices Universal Life Church Ministries Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 20 January 2016 It is the Islamic belief that Christianity is not monotheistic as it claims but rather polytheistic with the trinity the father son and the Holy Ghost Lesson 10 Three Persons are Subsistent Relations Archived 2017 07 31 at the Wayback Machine The fatherhood constitutes the Person of the Father the sonship constitutes the Person of the Son and the passive aspiration constitutes the Person of the Holy Spirit But in God everything is one where there is no distinction by relative opposition Consequently even though in God there are three Persons there is only one consciousness one thinking and one loving The three Persons share equally in the internal divine activity because they are all identified with the divine essence For if each divine Person possessed his own distinct and different consciousness there would be three gods not the one God of Christian revelation So you will see that in this regard there is an immense difference between a divine Person and a human person Trinity Archived 2021 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica The Council of Nicaea in 325 stated the crucial formula for that doctrine in its confession that the Son is of the same substance homoousios as the Father even though it said very little about the Holy Spirit Over the next half century Athanasius defended and refined the Nicene formula and by the end of the 4th century under the leadership of Basil of Caesarea Gregory of Nyssa and Gregory of Nazianzus the Cappadocian Fathers the doctrine of the Trinity took substantially the form it has maintained ever since It is accepted in all of the historic confessions of Christianity even though the impact of the Enlightenment decreased its importance Gerhard Bowering God and his Attributes Encyclopedia of the Quran Esposito John L 1998 Islam The Straight Path Oxford University Press p 22 Esposito 1998 p 88 Allah Encyclopaedia Britannica 2007 Encyclopaedia Britannica Peters F E 2003 Islam Princeton University Press p 4 Lawson Todd 2011 Gnostic Apocalypse and Islam Qurʼan Exegesis Messianism and the Literary Origins of the Babi Religion London Routledge ISBN 978 0415495394 Tisdall William 1911 The Sources of Islam A Persian Treatise London Morrison and Gibb pp 46 74 Rudolph Kurt 2001 Gnosis The Nature And History of Gnosticism London T amp T Clark Int l pp 367 390 ISBN 978 0567086402 Hoeller Stephan A 2002 Gnosticism New Light on the Ancient Tradition of Inner Knowing Wheaton IL Quest Books pp 155 174 ISBN 978 0835608169 Smith Andrew 2008a The Gnostics History Tradition Scriptures Influence Watkins ISBN 978 1905857784 Smith Andrew 2006 The Lost Sayings of Jesus Teachings from Ancient Christian Jewish Gnostic and Islamic Sources Annotated amp Explained Skylight Paths Publishing ISBN 978 1594731723 Van Den Broek Roelof 1998 Gnosis and Hermeticism from Antiquity to Modern Times State University of New York Press pp 87 108 ISBN 978 0791436110 Tillman Nagel 2000 The History of Islamic Theology from Muhammad to the Present Princeton NJ Markus Wiener Publishers pp 215 234 ISBN 978 1558762039 People of the Book Islam Empire of Faith PBS Archived from the original on 28 June 2011 Retrieved 18 December 2010 Accad 2003 According to Ibn Taymiya although only some Muslims accept the textual veracity of the entire Bible most Muslims will grant the veracity of most of it Esposito 1998 pp 6 12 Esposito 2002 pp 4 5 sfn error no target CITEREFEsposito2002 help Peters 2003 p 9 F Buhl A T Welch Muhammad Encyclopaedia of Islam Online Hava Lazarus Yafeh Tahrif Encyclopaedia of Islam Online Vincent J Cornell Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 5 pp 3561 3562 Asma Barlas Believing Women in Islam p 96 Tamara Sonn 2009 Tawḥid In John L Esposito ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195305135 D Gimaret Tawhid Encyclopedia of Islam Ramadan 2005 p 230 sfn error no target CITEREFRamadan2005 help Wainwright William Monotheism Archived 2019 03 18 at the Wayback Machine The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2018 Edition Edward N Zalta ed Boteach Shmuley 2012 5772 Kosher Jesus Springfield NJ Gefen Books pp 47ff 111ff 152ff ISBN 9789652295781 Religion Judaism BBC Archived from the original on 5 August 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2022 Albertz Rainer 1994 A History of Israelite Religion Volume I From the Beginnings to the End of the Monarchy Westminster John Knox p 61 ISBN 9780664227197 Walls Neal 2015 The Gods of Israel in Comparative Ancient Near Eastern Context In Niditch Susan ed The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Ancient Israel John Wiley amp Sons pp 261 277 ISBN 978 1 118 77392 5 Monotheism Archived 2022 04 12 at the Wayback Machine My Jewish Learning Many critical scholars think that the interval between the Exodus and the proclamation of monotheism was much longer Outside of Deuteronomy the earliest passages to state that there are no gods but the Lord are in poems and prayers attributed to Hannah and David one and a half to two and a half centuries after the Exodus at the earliest Such statements do not become common until the seventh century B C E the period to which Deuteronomy is dated by the critical view Cf 1 Kings 18 Jeremiah 2 Othmar Keel Christoph Uehlinger Gods Goddesses and Images of God in Ancient Israel Fortress Press 1998 Mark S Smith The Origins of Biblical Monotheism Israel s Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts Oxford University Press 2001 Levine Baruch A 2005 Assyrian Ideology and Israelite Monotheism IRAQ 67 1 411 427 doi 10 1017 S0021088900001455 ISSN 0021 0889 Smith Mark S 2016 Monotheism and the Redefinition of Divinity in Ancient Israel In Niditch Susan ed The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Ancient Israel John Wiley amp Sons p 287 ISBN 978 0 470 65677 8 Maimonides 13 principles of faith Second Principle e g Babylonian Talmud Megilla 7b 17a Yesode Ha Torah 1 7 Buckley Jorunn Jacobsen 2002 The Mandaeans ancient texts and modern people PDF Oxford University Press p 4 ISBN 9780195153859 archived PDF from the original on 11 October 2017 retrieved 5 October 2019 Ginza Rabba Translated by Al Saadi Qais Al Saadi Hamed 2nd ed Germany Drabsha 2019 Brikhah S Nasoraia 2012 Sacred Text and Esoteric Praxis in Sabian Mandaean Religion PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 17 March 2022 Nashmi Yuhana 24 April 2013 Contemporary Issues for the Mandaean Faith Mandaean Associations Union archived from the original on 31 October 2021 retrieved 8 December 2021 Rudolph Kurt 1978 Mandaeism BRILL p 15 ISBN 9789004052529 The Light and the Dark Dualism in ancient Iran India and China Petrus Franciscus Maria Fontaine 1990 De Blois Francois 1960 2007 Ṣabiʾ In Bearman P Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 0952 Van Bladel Kevin 2017 From Sasanian Mandaeans to Ṣabians of the Marshes Leiden Brill doi 10 1163 9789004339460 ISBN 978 90 04 33943 9 Archived from the original on 1 June 2022 Retrieved 19 June 2022 p 5 Hanish Shak 2019 The Mandaeans In Iraq In Rowe Paul S 2019 Routledge Handbook of Minorities in the Middle East London and New York Routledge p 163 ISBN 9781317233794 Archived from the original on 30 July 2022 Retrieved 19 March 2023 Acikyildiz Birgul 23 December 2014 The Yezidis The History of a Community Culture and Religion I B Tauris ISBN 9780857720610 Asatrian Garnik S Arakelova Victoria January 2003 Asatrian Garnik S ed Malak Tawus The Peacock Angel of the Yezidis Iran and the Caucasus 7 1 2 Leiden Brill Publishers in collaboration with the Caucasian Centre for Iranian Studies Yerevan 1 36 doi 10 1163 157338403X00015 eISSN 1573 384X ISSN 1609 8498 JSTOR 4030968 LCCN 2001227055 OCLC 233145721 Asatrian Garnik S Arakelova Victoria 3 September 2014 The Religion of the Peacock Angel The Yezidis and Their Spirit World Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 54428 9 Kreyenbroek Philip G 1995 Yezidism its Background Observances and Textual Tradition Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 978 0 7734 9004 8 Omarkhali Khanna 2017 The Yezidi religious textual tradition from oral to written categories transmission scripturalisation and canonisation of the Yezidi oral religious texts with samples of oral and written religious texts and with audio and video samples on CD ROM Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 10856 0 OCLC 994778968 Omarkhali Khanna December 2009 Names of God and Forms of Address to God in Yezidism With the Religious Hymn of the Lord Manuscripta Orientalia International Journal for Oriental Manuscript Research 15 2 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Kreyenbroek Philip 2005 God and Sheikh Adi are perfect sacred poems and religious narratives from the Yezidi tradition Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 05300 6 OCLC 63127403 Kartal Celalettin 22 June 2016 Deutsche Yeziden Geschichte Gegenwart Prognosen in German Tectum Wissenschaftsverlag ISBN 9783828864887 Ferrero Mario 1 December 2021 From Polytheism to Monotheism Zoroaster and Some Economic Theory Homo Oeconomicus 38 1 77 108 doi 10 1007 s41412 021 00113 4 ISSN 2366 6161 Heckert Jason May 2023 Reflections Across Religions A Historical Examination of Common Themes in Zoroastrianism Judaism and Christianity digitalcommons winthrop edu Buddhism in China A Historical Sketch The Journal of Religion Boyce 1975a p 155harvnb error no target CITEREFBoyce1975a help Mallory J P Adams D Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 408 411 and 423 434 ISBN 978 0 19 929668 2 Katicic Radoslav 2008 Bozanski boj Tragovima svetih pjesama nase pretkrscanske starine PDF Zagreb IBIS GRAFIKA ISBN 978 953 6927 41 8 Archived from the original PDF on 18 October 2015 Puhvel Jaan 1987 Comparative Mythology Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press pp 234 235 ISBN 0 8018 3938 6 McKirahan Richard D Xenophanes of Colophon Philosophy Before Socrates Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Company 1994 61 Print Diels Kranz Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker Xenophanes frr 15 16 Osborne Catherine Chapter 4 Presocratic Philosophy A Very Short Introduction Oxford UP 62 Print Lamb W R M Euthyphro Perseus Tufts University Archived from the original on 23 August 2015 Retrieved 25 March 2017 Wyller Egil A 1997 Henologische Perspektiven II zu Ehren Egil A Wyller Internales Henologie Symposium Amsterdam Netherlands Rodopi pp 5 6 ISBN 90 420 0357 X Retrieved 25 March 2017 Schurmann Reiner Lily Reginald 2003 Broken Hegemonies Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 143 144 ISBN 0 253 34144 2 Retrieved 25 March 2017 Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible s v Apollo E Kessler Dionysian Monotheism in Nea Paphos Cyprus two monotheistic religions Dionysian and Christian existed contemporaneously in Nea Paphos during the 4th century C E the particular iconography of Hermes and Dionysos in the panel of the Epiphany of Dionysos represents the culmination of a pagan iconographic tradition in which an infant divinity is seated on the lap of another divine figure this pagan motif was appropriated by early Christian artists and developed into the standardized icon of the Virgin and Child Thus the mosaic helps to substantiate the existence of pagan monotheism Abstract Archived 2008 04 21 at the Wayback Machine Aboriginal Culture Archived from the original on 6 March 2021 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Jennifer Isaacs 2005 Australian Dreaming 40 000 Years of Aboriginal History New South Wales New Holland Greenway Charles C Honery Thomas McDonald Mr Rowley John Malone John Creed Dr 1878 Australian Languages and Traditions The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 7 JSTOR 232 274 doi 10 2307 2841001 ISSN 0959 5295 JSTOR 2841001 Archived from the original on 7 April 2023 Retrieved 12 March 2023 Aboriginal Christians amp Christianity 14 August 2020 Archived from the original on 14 August 2021 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Rogers Janak 24 June 2014 When Islam came to Australia BBC News Retrieved 25 June 2014 Radcliffe Brown A R 14 November 2013 The Andaman Islanders Cambridge University Press p 161 ISBN 978 1 107 62556 3 PEOPLE of Andaman and Nicobar Islands Archived from the original on 22 June 2021 Retrieved 28 March 2021 David Hume said that unlike monotheism polytheism is pluralistic in nature unbound by doctrine and therefore far more tolerant than monotheism which tends to force people to believe in one faith David Hume Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion and the Natural History of Religion ed J C A Gaskin New York Oxford University Press 1983 pp 26 32 The Catechism of Positive Religion page 251 Mark S Smith The Origins of Biblical Monotheism Israel s Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts August 2001 p 11 Oxford University Press Google Books Berchman Robert M May 2008 The Political Foundations of Tolerance in the Greco Roman Period In Neusner Jacob Chilton Bruce eds Religious Tolerance in World Religions Templeton Foundation Press published 2008 p 61 ISBN 9781599471365 Retrieved 3 July 2016 Jacob Neusner claims that the logic of monotheism yields little basis for tolerating other religions Regina Schwartz The Curse of Cain The Violent Legacy of Monotheism The University of Chicago Press 1997 ISBN 978 0 226 74199 4 Arvind Sharma A Primal Perspective on the Philosophy of Religion Dordrecht Springer 2006 p 29 Further readingBernard David K 2019 2016 Monotheism in Paul s Rhetorical World The Glory of God in the Face of Jesus Christ Deification of Jesus in Early Christian Discourse Journal of Pentecostal Theology Supplement Series Vol 45 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 53 82 ISBN 978 90 04 39721 7 ISSN 0966 7393 Betz Arnold Gottfried 2000 Monotheism In Freedman David Noel Myer Allen C eds Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans pp 916 917 ISBN 9053565035 William G Dever Who Were the Early Israelites Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans 2003 William G Dever Did God Have a Wife Archaeology and Folk Religion in Ancient Israel Eerdmans 2005 ISBN 978 0802828521 Jonthan Kirsch God Against The Gods The History of the War Between Monotheism and Polytheism Penguin Books 2005 Hans Kochler The Concept of Monotheism in Islam and Christianity Vienna Braumuller 1982 ISBN 3 7003 0339 4 Google Books Archived 2023 04 05 at the Wayback Machine Niehr Herbert 1995 The Rise of YHWH in Judahite and Israelite Religion Methodological and Religio Historical Aspects In Edelman Diana Vikander ed The Triumph of Elohim From Yahwisms to Judaisms Leuven Peeters Publishers pp 45 72 ISBN 978 9053565032 OCLC 33819403 Patai Raphael 1990 1967 Lilith The Hebrew Goddess Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology 3rd Enlarged ed Detroit Wayne State University Press pp 221 251 ISBN 9780814322710 OCLC 20692501 Ratzinger Joseph 2004 1968 Part One God Chapter II The Biblical Belief in God Introduction to Christianity 2nd Revised ed San Francisco Ignatius Press pp 116 136 ISBN 9781586170295 LCCN 2004103523 S2CID 169456327 Reynolds Gabriel Said 2020 God of the Bible and the Qur an Allah God in the Qurʾan New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 203 253 doi 10 2307 j ctvxkn7q4 ISBN 978 0 300 24658 2 JSTOR j ctvxkn7q4 LCCN 2019947014 S2CID 226129509 Romer Thomas 2015 The Invention of God Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press doi 10 4159 9780674915732 ISBN 978 0 674 50497 4 JSTOR j ctvjsf3qb S2CID 170740919 Silberman Neil A et al The Bible Unearthed New York Simon amp Schuster 2001 Smith Mark S 2003 El Yahweh and the Original God of Israel and the Exodus The Origins of Biblical Monotheism Israel s Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts Oxford Oxford University Press pp 133 148 doi 10 1093 019513480X 003 0008 ISBN 9780195134803 Smith Mark S 2017 YHWH s Original Character Questions about an Unknown God In Van Oorschot Jurgen Witten Markus eds The Origins of Yahwism Beihefte zur Zeitschrift fur die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft Vol 484 Berlin and Boston De Gruyter pp 23 44 doi 10 1515 9783110448221 002 ISBN 978 3 11 042538 3 S2CID 187378834 Smith Mark S 2002 The Early History of God Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel 2nd ed Eerdmans ISBN 978 0802839725 Smith Peter 2008 An Introduction to the Baha i Faith Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 86251 6 Van der Toorn Karel 1999 God I In Van der Toorn Karel Becking Bob Van der Horst Pieter W eds Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible 2nd ed Leiden Brill Publishers pp 352 365 doi 10 1163 2589 7802 DDDO DDDO Godi ISBN 90 04 11119 0 Van der Horst Pieter W 1999 God II In Van der Toorn Karel Becking Bob Van der Horst Pieter W eds Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible 2nd ed Leiden Brill Publishers pp 365 370 doi 10 1163 2589 7802 DDDO DDDO Godii ISBN 90 04 11119 0 Keith Whitelam The Invention of Ancient Israel Routledge New York 1997 External linksWikiquote has quotations related to Monotheism Library resources about Monotheism Resources in your library Resources in other libraries The dictionary definition of monotheism at Wiktionary Media related to Monotheism at Wikimedia Commons About com What is Monolatry Contains useful comparisons with henoteism etc Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Christian Monotheism biblical unitarians World Union of Deists