P1052:4, 96:1.1
The early Semites regarded everything as being indwelt by a spirit. There
were spirits of the animal and vegetable worlds; annual spirits, the lord
of progeny; spirits of fire, water, and air; a veritable pantheon of spirits
to be feared and worshiped. And the teaching of Melchizedek regarding a Universal
Creator never fully destroyed the belief in these subordinate spirits or nature
gods.
P1052:5, 96:1.2
The progress of the Hebrews from polytheism through henotheism to monotheism
was not an unbroken and continuous conceptual development. They experienced
many retrogressions in the evolution of their Deity concepts, while during
any one epoch there existed varying ideas of God among different groups of
Semite believers. From time to time numerous terms were applied to their concepts
of God, and in order to prevent confusion these various Deity titles will
be defined as they pertain to the evolution of Jewish theology:
P1053:1, 96:1.3
1. Yahweh was the god of the southern Palestinian tribes, who associated
this concept of deity with Mount Horeb, the Sinai volcano. Yahweh was merely
one of the hundreds and thousands of nature gods which held the attention
and claimed the worship of the Semitic tribes and peoples.
P1053:2, 96:1.4
2. El Elyon. For centuries after Melchizedek's sojourn at Salem his
doctrine of Deity persisted in various versions but was generally connoted
by the term El Elyon, the Most High God of heaven. Many Semites, including
the immediate descendants of Abraham, at various times worshiped both Yahweh
and El Elyon.
P1053:3, 96:1.5
3. El Shaddai. It is difficult to explain what El Shaddai stood for.
This idea of God was a composite derived from the teachings of Amenemope's
Book of Wisdom modified by Ikhnaton's doctrine of Aton and further influenced
by Melchizedek's teachings embodied in the concept of El Elyon. But as the
concept of El Shaddai permeated the Hebrew mind, it became thoroughly colored
with the Yahweh beliefs of the desert.
P1053:4, 96:1.6
One of the dominant ideas of the religion of this era was the Egyptian concept
of divine Providence, the teaching that material prosperity was a reward for
serving El Shaddai.
P1053:5, 96:1.7
4. El. Amid all this confusion of terminology and
haziness of concept,
many devout believers sincerely endeavored to worship all of these evolving
ideas of divinity, and there grew up the practice of referring to this composite
Deity as El. And this term included still other of the Bedouin nature gods.
P1053:6, 96:1.8
5. Elohim. In Kish and Ur there long persisted
Sumerian-Chaldean groups
who taught a
three-in-one God concept founded on the traditions of the days
of Adam and Melchizedek. This doctrine was carried to Egypt, where this Trinity
was worshiped under the name of Elohim, or in the singular as
Eloah. The philosophic
circles of Egypt and later Alexandrian teachers of Hebraic extraction taught
this unity of
pluralistic Gods, and many of Moses' advisers at the time of
the exodus believed in this Trinity. But the concept of the trinitarian Elohim
never became a real part of Hebrew theology until after they had come under
the political influence of the Babylonians.
P1053:7, 96:1.9
6. Sundry names. The Semites disliked to speak the name of their Deity,
and they therefore resorted to numerous appellations from time to time, such
as: The Spirit of God, The Lord, The Angel of the Lord, The Almighty, The
Holy One, The Most High,
Adonai, The Ancient of Days, The Lord God of Israel,
The Creator of Heaven and Earth, Kyrios, Jah, The Lord of Hosts, and The Father
in Heaven.
P1053:8, 96:1.10
Jehovah is a term which in recent times has been employed to designate
the completed concept of Yahweh which finally evolved in the long Hebrew experience.
But the name Jehovah did not come into use until fifteen hundred years after
the times of Jesus.
P1054:1, 96:1.11
Up to about 2000 B.C., Mount Sinai was
intermittently
active as a volcano, occasional eruptions occurring as late as the time of
the sojourn of the Israelites in this region. The fire and smoke, together
with the thunderous
detonations associated with the eruptions of this volcanic
mountain, all impressed and awed the Bedouins of the surrounding regions and
caused them greatly to fear Yahweh. This spirit of Mount Horeb later became
the god of the Hebrew Semites, and they eventually believed him to be supreme
over all other gods.
P1054:2, 96:1.12
The Canaanites had long revered Yahweh, and although many of the Kenites believed
more or less in El Elyon, the supergod of the Salem religion, a majority of
the Canaanites held loosely to the worship of the old tribal deities. They
were hardly willing to abandon their national deities in favor of an international,
not to say an interplanetary, God. They were not
universal-deity minded, and
therefore these tribes continued to worship their tribal deities, including
Yahweh and the silver and golden calves which symbolized the Bedouin herders'
concept of the spirit of the Sinai volcano.
P1054:3, 96:1.13
The Syrians, while worshiping their gods, also believed in Yahweh of the Hebrews,
for their prophets said to the Syrian king: "Their gods are gods of the hills;
therefore they were stronger than we; but let us fight against them on the
plain, and surely we shall be stronger than they."
P1054:4, 96:1.14
As man advances in culture, the lesser gods are subordinated to a supreme
deity; the great
Jove persists only as an exclamation. The monotheists keep
their subordinate gods as spirits, demons,
fates,
Nereids,
fairies,
brownies,
dwarfs,
banshees, and the evil eye. The Hebrews passed through henotheism
and long believed in the existence of gods other than Yahweh, but they increasingly
held that these foreign deities were subordinate to Yahweh. They conceded
the actuality of
Chemosh, god of the
Amorites, but maintained that he was
subordinate to Yahweh.
P1054:5, 96:1.15
The idea of Yahweh has undergone the most extensive development of all the
mortal theories of God. Its progressive evolution can only be compared with
the metamorphosis of the Buddha concept in Asia, which in the end led to the
concept of the Universal Absolute even as the Yahweh concept finally led to
the idea of the Universal Father. But as a matter of historic fact, it should
be understood that, while the Jews thus changed their views of Deity from
the tribal god of Mount Horeb to the loving and merciful Creator Father of
later times, they did not change his name; they continued all the way along
to call this evolving concept of Deity, Yahweh.