Thomas Römer
Verbum et Ecclesia
(online) 34/2, 2013, pp. 5 p. (pdf.)
Abstrat
The concept of ‘monotheism’
has become a matter of debate in Hebrew Bible scholarship. This article
investigates whether the concept should still be used, starting with Second
Isaiah, who in the early Persian period elaborated a discourse that presented
Yhwh as the only god. Therefore he had to integrate into this deity functions
traditionally attributed to goddesses and to demons or evil gods. However, this
attempt did not succeed. The goddess, whose elimination is probably reflected
in Zechariah 5, returned in a certain way through the personification of Wisdom
in Proverbs 8, and the ‘dark sides’ of the gods were materialised in the figure
of Satan, who experienced an impressive career in the following centuries. The
question of evil is not resolved in the Hebrew Bible. Some texts admit the
autonomy of evil, whereas Isaiah 45 claims that Yhwh himself is at the origin
of evil. This diversity makes it difficult to characterise the Hebrew Bible as
the result of a straightforward evolution from polytheism to monotheism.
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