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Archive 1

Monism is NOT Monotheism

Monotheism is dualism. It represents linear logic and is based on duality and a strict separation between man and God, and everything in general.

hippies hippies It is the same thing as polytheism or any other theism in that "God/Gods are up there, we are down here". It is based on "I am" "it is", "you are".

Further, monotheism, according to popular practice, is about a God with a personality and emotions.

Monism, or nondualism, cannot fall under monotheism as they proclaim that God is all that exists, as God = reality. Anything else that is percievable is an illussion (Maya) and merely reflective of a limited comprehension of reality (God). Ultimately, God is an "it" with no personality and is incomprehensible.

Big differences.—Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.4.1.164 (talk)

While this is a valid opinion, it uses words like Dualism in a very different context than is the typical language used to discuss monotheism. Put the way you phrased it, this is just another POV. However, you could phrase it somewhat as:
Eastern thought would, however, see Monotheism as presented in the west as a form of dualism, since it presents a God/not-God duality. Some eastern approaches to divine unity see God as the only reality, all else being an insubstantial reflection of that single, divine reality. Some interpretations of muslim concepts of Allah can sound close to this, though many Muslims would be scandalized by the comparison.
I'm not sure the above is the exact phrasing, and it bears more probing, but porobably on the monism page. But something like that makes the point without being chauvinistic one way or another. --Christian Edward Gruber 07:44, 27 June 2006 (UTC)

There are no Monotheist Religions

Monotheism is currently defined as "belief in the [existence] of one deity". if so, there is hardly a single religion in the world that is monotheistic.

Each of the Abrahamic religions go to great linguistic length to define their deities so that they can say "There is only one'god'". But in the end, they all believe in the existence of at least one evil deity -- Satan...

In practice, many Muslims and Christians also worship plenty of minor gods . Although linguistically it's a taboo to actually call these acts "worships of minor gods". Instead we have to say that they're "praying to 'saints' and 'angels' for 'intercessions'". -- but that's like calling waterboarding and "interrogation technique" instead of "torture" -- it's only a difference in semantics.

If a being with all the attributes of St. Gabriel or St Michael (having great supernatural powers and being completely subservient to a higher being) appeared in Chinese or Greek or Roman mythology, English translator definitely label the being a "god".

Philosophy.dude (talk) 02:00, 24 September 2008 (UTC)

I realize I'm violating WP:DNFTT, but Judaism doesn't believe in a Satan person. You have us confused with Christianity. -LisaLiel (talk) 03:17, 24 September 2008 (UTC)

I agree with Lisa Liel; Judaism does not have a 'devil' nor do Jews acknowledge the existence of saints. This argument does not apply to Judaism. Also, if you read Maimonides's Guide to the Perplexed it states that angels are not literal beings but rather "forces of nature" or "acts of G-d". They are not ascribed abilities nor personalities or even free will or "existence" (might be the wrong word). And so using this argument Judaism would be monotheistic. 24.61.36.87 (talk) 22:04, 24 May 2009 (UTC)

Error on page?

A sentence on the page reads "The Hyksos, continued an inheritance of Akhenaten's religious policies."

If I recall correctly, the Hyksos was of the XV'th dynasty, whereas Akhenaten was of the XVIII'th dynasty and thus antedates them. How could they continue his policies?

(I'm not sure wether this actually is an error or if I misunderstand the passage in question, so I'll refrain from editing the page myself.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.225.83.70 (talk)

You are quite right. See Akhenaten: Suggested dates for Akhenaten's reign (subject to the debates surrounding Egyptian chronology) are from 1353 BC-1336 BC or 1351 BC-1334 BC. And Hyksos: They rose to power during the Second Intermediate Period, and ruled Lower and Middle Egypt for over one hundred years, forming the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Dynasties of Egypt, (ca. 1674-1548 B.C.E. See Egyptian chronology). So Hyksos rule came to an end some 200 years before Akenaten's reign. I shall remove this part of the article. It is a good idea to sign your comments with four tildes (~) so other contributors can identify you. If you plan to contribute regularly it is a good idea to create an account. Alun 10:10, 8 April 2006 (UTC)


Well done! Both the anonymous first, and then especially the explanation of Alun. Good work both of you.

Cialovesyou 11:15, 8 April 2006 (UTC)

Origins of Abrahamic or Middle East Religions

This section is very confusing to me. When I read the article on Abrahamic religion it seems much clearer. Does anyone else agree this section should be written more clearly?

Wjbentley 01:52, 14 November 2005 (UTC)


I must confess I have serious questions over whether Abraham was a Monotheist. Scripture doesnt seem to support this. It talks of the god of Abraham, but does not exclude the possibility of other gods who were not relevent to Abrahams descentdants. (Gen 15:17). Monotheism was more of a prgression with the Jewish faith, not a moment in time where Abraham dismissed other gods... Cialovesyou 00:36, 8 April 2006 (UTC)

Genesis 15:17? "And it came to pass, when the sun went down and it was dark, that behold, there appeared a smoking oven and a burning torch that passed between those pieces" (NKJV). I'm sorry, but I don't see how this verse comments on God or gods, one way or the other. Arch O. La Grigory Deepdelver 11:57, 21 May 2006 (UTC)

I have to admit I really don't know if Abraham was a Monotheist or not. However, clearly he is an important figure for people of the Jewish, Christian and Islamic faiths. Therefore, it makes sense to include him in a discussion of Monotheism Wjbentley 22:40, 23 April 2006 (UTC)

Judaism does not use what is written in the old testament (especially the King James English translation) as an exclusive source of history and philosophy. Explanations, footnotes and background information were all handed down in the oral scriptures. They were written down eventually and They include the Midrash and Babylonian Talmud. These give extensive history on Abhraham, including how he came to his monotheistic beliefs through observation of nature, long before G-d spoke to him. These are related mainly in Midrash Bereishit Rabbah, and Midrash Tanchuma. Christianity and Islam, however, may believe something different, but since the original character is in Jewish literature, it seems fair to take him in context of all the jewish literature that was written of him, which clearly states he was a monotheist and was in fact persecuted for being one. LemonLion 18:12, 2 January 2007 (UTC)

Monotheism

"Monotheism is the belief in a single deity. In contrast, see Polytheism, which holds that there are many or a potentially infinite number of gods.

Various forms of belief relating to the transcendence and immanence of the divine exist among both monotheists and polytheists including:

Deism is a term which refers to belief in the absolute transcendence of the divine, a Deist comes to their belief through reason, and rejects any religious revelations such as the Bible, the Tanakh, or the Qur'an.

Theism, a term that actually indicates a transcendent and immanent divine being but which commonly refers to the belief in a 'personal' god or gods, that is, a god with a distinctive personality, rather than just a divine force. Theism differs from panentheism and is similar to deism in that that God is seen as the ruler of the universe

Panentheism is a closely related to theism in that the divine is beleived to be both transcendent and immanent but differs from theism and is similar to pantheism in that God contains, but is not identical to, the Universe.

Pantheism holds that the divine is totally immanent and therefore is the Universe is God or visa versa. Depending on how this is understood, such a view may be tantamount to atheism or acosmism."

Suggest the above amendments to bring this page in line with "Theism" page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theism

The present version on the Monotheism page makes no reference to the divine attributes of Transcendence and immanence, which are the central features which distinguish the various positions. Also the order placing Theism at the top is unusual. Normally Deism is placed first as it emphasises transcendence, followed by the two beliefs which balance Transcendence & Immanence, then Pantheism which emphasises immanence. A more logical order.


Are these personal definitions, or do theology and philosophy texts use these terms? I have not seen these words used this way before. User:RK


"Ostensibly monotheistic religions may still include concepts of a plurality of the divine, for example the Trinity." This sentence from the Monotheism page is contradictory. Mono means one. Trinity means three. Ergo: 1 does not equal 3. User:Paulwarshauer


Well, they are used by Encyclopedia Britannica, for one thing. -- User:SJK


I was wondering the same as RK. For example, how is it that theism entails a belief in a "persona" God. I find that to be false. Theism presumes a belief in a God(s). Aspects of theism believe in a personal God, but to define theism as belief in a personal God is misleading. User:JpB


Question: Christianity (and Islam?) believe in the existence a force that is opposed to God ("the Devil"). Doesn't this mean that these religions believe in "inclusive monotheism"?


I think the belief in two roughly equal but opposing forces is called dualism; this is clearly not what Jews, Christians and Muslims believe, as they generally agree that the Devil is a finite being created by God, not an equal or even near-equal "arch-enemy". But I think that that dualism at least comes close to describing Zoroastrianism. --User:Wesley



Many Jews, Unitarians and Muslims look at Christians as dualists. Christians believe in a supernatural being called God and in a similarly powerful supernatural being called Satan. True, one is the father of the other, and one is weaker, but nonetheless they both exist. They have nearly the same relationsip to each other as the two gods of Zoroastrianism (which everyone agrees is dualism). Despite the belief in both of these deities, and despite the belief that one of these deities is also a trinity with three distinct persons in it, its adherenets nonetheless claim to be monotheists. Many Jews, Unitarians, and Muslims find this claim of monotheism to be incomprehensible. In fact, that is one of the main reason that people left Christianity to create Unitarian-Universalism.
I don't think the article should include the Jewish/Unitarian/Muslim view of the Trinity. The first and third are explicity non-Christians and their views are inevitably going to be biased. As for Unitarians, well, sometimes it's hard to tell exactly what they believe in.


I have never met a Jew, Christian or Muslim with such a belief, nor have I ever read a book written that proposes such beliefs. The number of Jews, Chrisitians or Muslims who have such beliefs is likley very small. The only group I know of that had a widespread adoption of what the writer terms "inclusive monotheism" are Hindus. User:RK


A lot of (mostly Christian, though some may be Jewish) liberal theologians and philosphers of religion, especially those who study issues of religious pluralism and interreligious dialogue, support some kind of view similar to inclusive monotheism. It also occurs in some branches of Sufism, I believe. -- User:SJK


I doubt even half of one percent of Christian laity have such beliefs. I have never met a Chrisitian, Jew or Muslim in my life with such views. What you reder to is the province of academic ivory tower theoology, which is fine, but is not representative of real-world Christianity in any statistically meaningful sense. User:RK



---


Are you sure you really mean "God" and not "god"? In this article it doesn't refer to the god known as "God" by many people. It refers to any god.




I have a question about this sentence:

The Christian belief in the Trinity is traditionally considered a form of monotheism, although many Muslims and non-Trinitarian Christians (and a few Jews also) would question this classification.

I understand that Muslims and Jews may look at the doctrine of the trinity and see three separate gods, and therefor claim that Christianity is polytheistic. But wouldn't non-Trinitarian Christians deny the Trinity but continue to claim to be monotheistic and deny the Trinity, just like Jews and Muslims? Any specific examples of a Christian group that doesn't claim to be monotheistic? Maybe the Latter-Day Saints???? --User:Wesley


Both Jehovah's witnesses and Mormons explicitly deny trinitarianism. Jehovah's witnesses believe in one God, and believe that Jesus was a human being that was the son of God. Jesus, for them, was not part of God Himself. Mormons believe in millions of Gods, literally. (Their religion teaches that when a Mormon dies, he or she literally becomes a god of another planet in our galaxy.) However, Mormons only pray to one god, and thus they consider themselves monotheists. They draw a distinction between belief in millions of Gods, and their loyalty and service to one god. Many Jews and Muslims see Mormons as polytheists. The rule of thumb is this: Chrisitians always claim to be monotheists, no matter how many godlike heavenly supernatural deities they believe in. Jews and Muslims believe that any recognition of more than one godlike heavenly supernatural being is, by their definition, polytheism. User:RK


Your last sentence is fair enough. :-) Your description of Mormonism sounds a lot like henotheism: lots of gods, but one is better than all the others and therefore is the only one worshipped. How would Jews classify Hinduism, and I wonder how Hindus would classify themselves? In practice, you can observe that they seem to pray to lots of different gods, but I think they would say they're all part of one god, and further that all that exists is ultimately part of Brahman. From one angle it looks polytheistic, from another it might look vaguely monotheistic, and from another more pantheistic. Terminology is tricky. :-) --User:Wesley


Actual Mormom theology differs from how it is popularly represented (and derided) in that Mormons do _not_ "believe" in multiple G|gods. Any given individual is the creation of (and is under the stewardship of) one God called the Father. Mormons do not hold that other Gods populate our galaxy as drawn from the faithful ranks of those who have gone before. Without bogging the discussion down with the semantics of sequence and the nature of Time (cyclical, linear, &c: seen as x by man and y by God ....), consider the following statements regarding the nature and plurality of God(s):
* One title for God is "Holy Man" or Exalted Man.
* God developed divine attribute progressively in a repeateable process.
* God's activities of creation (the physical universe; the organization of spirits, or premortal man) occur in a space (time?) distinct from the activities of any other God. Gods other than the Father are "out of scope."
* Mormons are not moon-eyed imbeciles laboring away to be "Emerald Ring" members of some great MLM spiritual sham. However, moon-eyed imbeciles are invited to participate in a religion that aknowledges the divine potential of everyone.
The assertion is often found that because Mormons beleive God is a perfected Man and Men may become like God, Mormons believe in a pantheon of which God the Father is merely paramount. Not so. Mormons have no dealings, literature, stories, fables, or sermons relating to any God other than God the Father. No human being is said to be a child of any other God. Let us not read too much into a doctrine of human progression and posibility. --BrantEaton


Ok, I think I sort of understand the human progression and possibility part. Do I understand you to be saying, though, that God was not always fully God, i.e. omnipotent, omnipresent, etc. etc.? How can the creation of the universe take place in any space or time, when space and time are properties of the universe, or are themselves something that would need to be created or somehow come into existence? To put what is basically the same question another way, if God was once a man, how did he come into existence? I'm not trying to be argumentative, just trying to clear up my understanding while I have the chance. Thanks, --User:Wesley


I think Hindus (or at least most Hindus) are simultaneously polytheists, inclusive monotheists, and pantheists (or more accurately monists). A big problem with Hinduism though is that, historically at least, there are lots of different groups with lots of different views, especially on the relationship between God and the universe... (lookup a list of the main schools of Hindu philosophy and you will see what I mean.) -- User:SJK



I believe that there is a difference between saying "there is one god" and "there is one God", because in theory a single lower-case "god" could just be a finite immortal being with great powers, whereas a monotheistic "God" is frequently lly seen as (depending on the variant of monotheism you subscribe to, of course) an infinite source or ground of the universe. To me there is a fundamental qualitative difference between a lot of conceptions of a monotheistic God and polytheistics gods, rather than just a quantitative difference in the number of gods you believe in. So, to avoid the controversy in the opening sentence, I rewrote it slightly, avoiding the use of either god or God (and instead using "deity"), and trying to emphasize the qualitative aspects of the way monotheism frequently differs from polytheism.


Suggest the following concluding passage to replace the final two paragraphs.


The three main Western religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, are monotheistic. The Christian doctrine of the Trinity is understood by Christians to represent a monotheistic view. Some others see the trinity as representing a polytheistic (three gods).User:Ed Poor


Most Jews and Muslims see the Trinity as a sincere attempt to be monotheistic. Thus, most Jewish and Muslim critics of the Trinity don't claim that it is the worship of three separate Gods; rather, they say that Chrisitians attempt to worship one god, but at the same time acknowledge three distinct persons within that god. Given Mulim and Jewish definitions of these terms, the resulting Christian worship has the appearance (to Muslims and Jews) of cognitive dissonance. The way that Jewish law deals with this is by saying that such worship is legally considered monotheism, as long as gentiles are doing it; however, this type of worship is forbidden by Jewish law to Jews. (The law itself is an example of cognative dissonance, but the rabbis were well aware of this. They are trying to legally find a way to hold onto their beliefs, without condemning Christianity. For this issue, they were not looking for philosophical clarity.) I am not sure how Muslims or other strict unitarian monotheists formally deal with this issue. User:RK


It's a very interesting question for me, because I was a Unitarian/Univeralist for a couple of years before becoming a Unificationist. Being obsessed with math puzzles, I set myself the task of counting (or taking a census of) the Christian Trinity. I found the answer of "one God in three persons" hard to quantify as an integer; this frustrated me, and I figured there had to be a mistake somewhere in the doctrine. However, as long as they are not worshiping three discrete beings (or even two), I can respect their desire to consider themselves monotheists. User:Ed Poor


Here's an analogy that may or may not help: picture three burning matches held with the burning match heads in close proximity, so that there is just one flame. You can't say that one match is burning and another is not, or that one is burning more than another. Yet the match sticks can still be identified as three distinct match sticks. This is very roughly comparable to the distinction drawn between one divine essence (homoousios) and one divine nature, existing in three Persons (hypostases) who are God. But be aware that any analogy breaks down if you push it too far. RK, I'm glad to learn how Jewish law deals with it, and appreciate the compassion and understanding shown. --User:Wesley

Here's another analogy that makes the "God in three persons" understandable to most Christians. God is manifested in creation, the teaching and saving Son, and the guiding Holy Spirit just as water is seen as ice and steam as well.

 --(Ernhart)


I agree with RK's earlier observation that few if any Jews today subscribe to "inclusive monotheism." But there is an argument that some Biblical Jews (really, Hebrews) did -- one passage in the Torah asks "Who among the gods is like you, Lord?" suggesting that there are other gods (i.e. that other nations have their own gods) but that those other gods are inferior to the God of Abraham. Some scholars have argued that within the book of Job is a creation myth that is strikingly different from the one that ended up in Genesis; in Genesis God is alone and creates the cosmos; in Job God battles with other gods. In other words, over time there was a shift from Hebrews who believed that each people had their own god, to the belief that there is one God who has different relationships with different nations. -- SR


Scholars agree that polytheism predated monotheism. Obviously, the Tanach (Hebrew Bible) is making oblique references to fact that some of the Israelite ancestors were indeed polytheistic (by today's definition of the word), and only later came to the modern concept of monotheism. Certain parts of the Midrash also imply this. Conservative and Reform rabbis have no problem with recognizing that the Bible has traces of the pre-historical belief of the earliest Jewish ancestors. But Judaism as faith from Biblical times onward was strictly monotheistic. As for Job, it is seems likely that just as Genesis is a midrash on one set of pagan creation stories, Job is also a midrash on a pagan creation story. Perhaps Genesis and Job both drew from the same original material, and emphasized different parts, or perhaps they were responses to different creation stories. In either case, that might be worth mentioning in an entry on detailed higher biblical criticism, and academic studies of how the Bible's text was created. But I just want to note that this wouldn't belong in an entry on Judaism and Jewish philosophy; it just isn't what Jews have ever believed from Biblical times to the present. User:RK
Forgive me for chipping in, and rather late in the day, but not all scholars agree that polytheism predated monotheism. Conservative evangelical Christian scholars, for instance, who take the story of Adam and Eve seriously, would point out that they were plainly monotheists, and that polytheism was a later perversion. They would also argue that phrases like "Who among the gods is like you, O LORD?" don't signify that (in this instance) Moses believed that the other "gods" were true gods like YHWH, but that of all the celestial powers, YHWH was the greatest. He *wasn't* advocating worshipping them, or even recognising them as Creators (which is a fundamental part of the understanding of God in the OT), but actually was saying that all other powers are subject to (and created by) YHWH.
Also, there is no reason to suppose that Genesis and Job are reflecting earlier pagan creation stories. Particularly Job: I never did understand where people got that idea from. The book is about a guy who suffers a load of problems and how he copes with that, not creation!
Just another view which may bear consideration. Wooster 11:41, 26 Jul 2004 (UTC)


The following was removed - The Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) traditionally subscribed to exclusive monotheism, though an increasing number of adherents of these religions today subscribe to the inclusive monotheist view.


The reason for removal was that this is just plain wrong. Jews, Christians and Muslims do not believe in the existence of multiple gods (i.e. "inclusive monotheism"). I would be shocked to see any studies which affirmed such a view. With the exception of a handful of university professors who have no following in any organized religion I have ever heard of, people in the Abrahamic faiths see this view as polytheism or paganism, and do not accept it. User:RK


Thanks for fixing that. --User:Wesley


...Conservative evangelical Christian scholars, for instance, who take the story of Adam and Eve seriously, would point out that they were plainly monotheists, and that polytheism was a later perversion...
In jewish literature, the midrashim relate extensively on how polytheism arose. Originally the sun, the moon and other heavenly objects were given honour, as people likened them to emmisaries of a king (the king being G-d). Eventually people forgot about the king and started worshiping the emisaries instead. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by LemonLion (talkcontribs) 18:33, 2 January 2007 (UTC).

Deistic definition

I disagree with the definition of Deism that is shown here because one, it is a false dichotomy(implying that religous revelation is in conflict with reason) and two, Deism is usually defined by lack of interventionism regarding God's actions(a divine watchmaker, creating the universe and allowing it to function in a self-sustained manner).

Monotheism

I am frustrated by those who remove contributions of others without explaining their reasons. Could one of you enthusiastic monotheists explain to me the age old question of evil? Please do not censor out what you disagree with- instead try and answer the question so you can convince and convert the critics. User: Sirimewan 20:11, 26 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Could someone explain to me how an all powerful god who is benevolent can allow a Devil / Satan to operate? If god is all powerful he should have eliminated Satan before Satan could create any mischief. it is not logical to call your selves monotheists and at the same time believe in a Satan. But most monotheists when confronted with the epicurian question resort to a devil. I am waiting to be converted. Please explain to me where eveil comes from in a universe presided over by an all-powerful God. User:Sirimewan

Well this isn't a debate club. The material you inserted is your personal editorial, which is inappropriate for Wikipedia. If you can cite critics who make your point, rather than your personal opinion, you can do so, but inserting personal views about the matter as you did is considered POV and original research. --MPerel( talk | contrib) 20:53, Jan 26, 2005 (UTC)


Your paragraph is a POV bit of original research. You claim
In practice most monotheists tend to be dualists. When confronted with the Epicurean([Epicurus] http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/e/epicur.htm) question "where cometh the evil" most Christians Muslims and Jews etc. are quick to point to a Devil / Satan who, according to this arguement should have equal or more power than the god-in effect creating a socond "GOD" who is responsible for the evil in the world. Whle there is no dispute about the benefits of a belief in god to the individual, the many wars fought in the name of GOD, make one question the value of this concept to modern humanity.
Where did you get the figures to back up your claim that "most monotheists tend to be dualists"? Or that "most Christians Muslims and Jews etc. are quick to point to a Devil / Satan"? Do all these groups really have the same view of the Devil/Satan? Is there really "no dispute about the benefits of a belief in god to the individual"? Whose opinion is it that "the many wars fought in the name of GOD, make one question the value of this concept to modern humanity." Please again review the Wikipedia:No original research and Wikipedia:NPOV policies. Also, please stop reverting my re-write of the poorly written Hinduism section. Jayjg | (Talk) 20:54, 26 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Now you are more to the point. I have very little knowledge of Hinduism and have never attempted to edit the article. Sirimewan

You haven't answered any of my questions, and I was talking about the re-write of the section on Hinduism in this article, not the Hinduism article. Jayjg | (Talk) 19:08, 27 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Stronger historical perspective needed

This article needs a stronger historical influence as oppossed to the enthusiatic work of theologians which, to me, seem to have clouded the issue. How is it that an article on monotheseism classifies various forms of monotheism in a way that seems to have completely failed to classify the three major monotheistic religions of the world today. i.e. Judaism, Islam and Christianity and failed to clearly identify the common Judaic root of these religions? --Wm 22:49, 17 Mar 2005 (UTC)

To distinguish Jewish monotheism from Christian trinitarianism is too easy while ignoring the Shekinah and other "aspects" of the Jewish monotheistic God..


On the question of evil.

Without giving a long dissertation on evil here, from a Christian perspective it is not a "force" which opposes good. Even Satan is not more than a doer of evil. A sinner(one who knowingly and freely chooses evil. Evil is imperfection of good. Like darkness is the absense of light, not an opposing force. If I could point you guys to St.Augustine, Confessions; and Thomas Aquinas, for the traditional view on these matters. I accept I have not written an essay for you on evil, but the subject is vast. The references will give you clues where to start. In my view, no accepted scholar of Christian theology would see satan as "another deity". Cialovesyou 04:57, 8 April 2006 (UTC)

excess detail on Hindu monotheism

In Hinduism

I have moved this info as the information is too detailed for an intro to Hindu monotheism:


In contrast, see polytheism, which holds that there are many gods. Dualism teaches that there are two independent divine beings or eternal principles, the one good, and the other evil, as set forth especially in early Zoroastrianism (modern Zoroastrianism is strictly monotheistic), but more fully in its later offshoots in Gnostic systems, such as Manichaeism.

Most monotheists would say that, by definition, monotheism is incompatible with polytheism. However, devotees within polytheistic religious traditions often behave like monotheists. This is because a belief in multiple gods does not imply the worship of multiple gods. Historically, many religions believe in the existence of many gods, but worship only one, considered by the devotee to be the supreme God. This practice is termed henotheism. There are also monotheistic theologies in Hinduism which teach that the many forms of God, i.e., Vishnu, Shiva, or Devi merely represent aspects of a single or underlying divine power or Brahman (see articles on Nirguna Brahman and Saguna Brahman). Some claim that Hinduism never taught polytheism [1], and such claim can be correct as one view of Hinduism, the Smarta view, is an inclusive monotheistic view of monotheism, as discussed later. This Smarta view dominates the view of Hinduism in the West and has confused all Hindus to be seemingly polytheistic. The Smarta division is the only branch of Hinduism that strictly follows this view. After all, Swami Vivekananda, a follower of Ramakrishna, along with many others, who brought Hindu beliefs to the West, were all Smarta in belief. Only a Smartist would have no problem worshiping Shiva or Vishnu together as he views the different aspects of God as leading to the same One God. God, thus, according to Smarta theology, can have a multitude of aspects and thus, according to this belief, they hold that Vishnu and Shiva are one and the same God. The Smarta theologians have cited many references to support this view. For example, they interpret verses in both the Shri Rudram, the most sacred mantra in Shaivism, and the Vishnu sahasranama, one of the most sacred prayers in Vaishnavism, to show this belief. By contrast, a Vaishnavite considers Vishnu as the only one true God, worthy of worship and other worship of other forms as subordinate or simply incorrect.

Monotheism can be divided into different types on the basis of its attitude towards polytheism: inclusive monotheism claims that all polytheistic deities are just different names for the single monotheistic God; Smartism, a denomination of Hinduism, follows this belief and holds that God is one but has different aspects and can be called by different names (this belief dominate the view of Hinduism in the West); exclusive monotheism, on the other hand, claims that these deities are false and distinct from the one God, either invented, demonic, or simply incorrect, as Vaishnavism, a denomination of Hinduism, regards the worship of anyone other than Vishnu. Exclusive monotheism is a well-known tenet in the beliefs of the Abrahamic religions. In Hinduism, views are broad and range from monism, dualism, pantheism, panentheism, alternatively called monistic theism by some scholars, and strict monotheism, but are not polytheistic as outsiders perceive the religion to be. Hinduism has often been confused to be polytheistic as many of Hinduism's adherents, i.e., Smartas, who follow Advaita philsophy, are monists, and view multiple manifestations of the one God or source of being. Hindu monists see one unity, with the personal Gods, different aspects of only One Supreme Being, like a single beam of light separated into colours by a prism, and are valid to worship. Some of the Hindu aspects of God include Devi, Vishnu, Ganesh, and Siva. It is the Smarta view that dominates the view of Hinduism in the West. After all, Swami Vivekananda, a follower of Ramakrishna, along with many others, who brought Hindu beliefs to the West, were all Smarta in belief. Other denominations of Hinduism, as described later, don't hold this belief strictly and more closely adhere to a Western perception of what a monotheistic faith is. Additionally, like Judeo-Christian traditions which believe in angels, Hindus also believe in less powerful entities, such as devas.

Contemporary Hinduism is now divided into four major divisions, Vaishnavism, Shaivism, Shaktism, and Smartism. Just as Jews, Christians, and Muslims all believe in one God but differ in their conceptions of him, Hindus all believe in one God but differ in their conceptions. The two primary form of differences are between the two monotheistic religions of Vaishnavism which conceives God as Vishnu and Shaivism, which conceives God as Shiva. Other aspects of God are in fact aspects of Vishnu or Shiva; see Smartism for more information. Only a Smartist would have no problem worshiping Shiva or Vishnu together as he views the different aspects of God as leading to the same One God. It is the Smarta view that dominates the view of Hinduism in the West. By contrast, a Vaishnavite considers Vishnu as the one true God, worthy of worship and other forms as subordinate. See for example, an illustration of the Vaishnavite view of Vishnu as the one true God, at this link. Accordingly, many Vaishnavites, for example, believe that only Vishnu can grant the ultimate aim for mankind, moksha. See for example, this link. Similarly, many Shaivites also hold similar beliefs, as illustrated at at this link and at this link.

However, even Vaisnavites, like other Hindus, have tolerance for other beliefs because Lord Krishna, avatar of Vishnu, said so in the Gita. Few views illustrate this view of tolerance: Krishna said: "Whatever deity or form a devotee worships, I make his faith steady. However, their wishes are only granted by Me." (Gita: 7:21-22) Another quote in the Gita states: "O Arjuna, even those devotees who worship other lesser deities (e.g., Devas, for example) with faith, they also worship Me, but in an improper way because I am the Supreme Being. I alone am the enjoyer of all sacrificial services (Seva, Yajna) and Lord of the universe." (Gita: 9:23) Even a Vedic verse illustrates this theme of tolerance. The Vedas are revered in Hinduism, regardless of denomination. For example, a well-known Rig Vedic hymn stemming from Hinduism states that "Truth is One, though the sages know it variously." This is in contrast with some beliefs of other religious traditions, where one must believe in God being one aspect and to totally reject or disdain other beliefs/

I have moved this info as the information is too detailed for an intro to Hindu monotheism

Raj2004 00:34, 1 January 2006 (UTC)

who was the first monotheist?

who is the first monothiest! i am doing a book report and i cant find the anwser to this question anywhere!

It is difficult to say exactly who was the very first monotheist, but the very first time that monotheism gained any kind of cultural stronghold anywhere was in Egypt. The Pharoah Akhnaten had been introduced to and schooled by his mother in the religion of the god "Aten," who was referred to as the "Sun of Righteousness," and was depicted as a sun-disc with many arms (rays) extending downward with hands of blessing. Some have maintained that this was merely sun worship but, in fact, Egypt already had a sun deity, Ra. The religion of Aten was actually monism, symbolized by the Sun. When Akhnaten became Pharoah, he actually removed the Egyptian capitol from Thebes and built a new city, replete with temples to his one God, and called the city Akhetaton. The priests of Ra, who hitherto had been the insiders with pharoahs and had power over all the other priests and, through the pharoah, over the people, were none too happy about this. The schemed during Akhnaten's entire short life (it is thought that he had a blood disease that cut his life short) to make sure that monotheist monism would not survive the pharoah, and that the polytheistic religion (led by the worship of Ra) would be restored on the pharoah's death. As soon as Akhnaten died, that's exactly what occurred. The capital was moved back to Thebes and the priests of Ra were back in power. Some historans believe that this religion of Aten actually is derived from the same precursor religion as the religion of El-Shaddai ("the God of the Mountain") practcied by the Canaanites and eventually by the Jews. Perhaps evidence of this is that Psalm 104 bears a striking resemblance to the Great Hymn to the Aten, which appeared centuries earlier:
How many are your deeds,
Though hidden from sight,
O Sole God beside whom there is none!
You made the earth as you wished, you alone,
All peoples, herds, and flocks;
All upon earth that walk on legs,
All on high that fly on wings,
The lands of Khor and Kush,
The land of Egypt itself!
Nrgdocadams 02:15, 25 January 2006 (UTC)Nrgdocadams

Sikhism

This article contains no mention of Sikhism, a major world religion, which is, I believe, monotheistic. Is this not correct? --Oldak Quill 23:36, 15 February 2006 (UTC)


User32

The above user has made a number of alterations which seem to be designed to suggest that Judaic and Islamic traditions are consistent with Vaishnavism. This user seems to have an agenda. I suggest his/her alterations be checked by regular editors. Paul B 13:10, 28 February 2006 (UTC)

Wikipedia is not confessional

Another user (Jeff3000) erased an external link I added arguing "linkspam". He also erased the whole new cathegory of external links:philosophical and critical views on monotheism. I shortened the later, erasing the obvious mention to monotheism in an article about the subject. But I kept the cathegory and the link. I suspect Jeff3000 has a religious agenda and doesn't like critical views on monotheism. It's too easy to argue "linkspam", but that won't do the trick. Wikipedia must remain free from disguised and undisguised religious censorship. (Miguel Montenegro) 23:07, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

Incorrect, you must assume good faith in Wikipedia. Firstly Wikipedia is not a list of links, I encourage to read Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not, and your link is not notable enough to be included. If you want find an academic external link about the criticism of monotheism and post it. Secondly anything that is added in Wikipedia must be verifiable; it might be true, but unless it's verifiable it can't be included in Wikipedia. So how is something verifiable, well it must have reliable sources. Blogs, personal websites, and forums are not considered reliable sources, and cannot be used to used to back up something in an article. -- Jeff3000 05:01, 17 March 2006 (UTC)

Ok, I won't put the link there again, Jeff: even my subborness has limits. But I think some of your arguments deserve a reply. First, I don't make assumptions about people I don't know, even if I try to treat them corteously. Second, your apreciation about the "notableness" of the link is entirely subjective: you still don't seem willing to say what you think about the content. Third, qualifying something as "academical" or "not-academical" says nothing about it's value. If you can only make formal objections (self-link, not academical...) or entirely subective ones (not "notable enough"), leaving the meaning untouched, that means you haven't got the competences needed to have a say in the matter, in which cas you should not intervene at all. In fact, it was the lack of content in your aguments that led me to think you do have a religious agenda and can't bear a critical view on monotheism. If that is true, you are in the wrong place. If my supposition is wrong, what is there keeping you from sharing whith us your thoughts about the contents of the link? Fourth, the link wasn't used to back anything in the article. On the contrary, by being added under the heading "Critical and philosophical views", it's critical bend was openly admitted. Finally, the statements in the text to which the link leads refer to publicly available documents (Sultan's interview, The Old and the New Testament, The Koran). Those statements are therefore verifiable. Of course, you may not agree with them and think they are good to be forgoten, but that's an entirely different thing, isn't it Jeff?

Miguel Montenegro 09:35, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
Academic means something published in a journal. A quick definition of a reliable source is something that has been published, that means someone else (a publisher/editor) has agreed it is noteworthy. A personal website does not pass that criteria, and is generally not notable. Wikipedia is not about if something is valuable or not, or if it is truth or not, it is about verifiability from reliable sources. I ask you once again to read those sections of Wikipedia policy that I linked to. It is not my job to prove that the contents of the link is valuable or true, but as part of the wikipedia community it is to follow wikipedia policy, and a general website is usually never notable enough to keep as an external link (except when the article is about that person). Finally in regards to the invertview, they might be true or not, but what you included was not referenced, and thus can be removed. -- Jeff3000 13:36, 17 March 2006 (UTC)

Question

what does the article mean by the sentence:

"In traditional Jewish, Christian, and Islamic thought, only those religions derived from biblical sources were considered monotheistic, with monotheism being regarded as their most basic belief. They have traditionally interpreted scriptures as exclusive monotheism."

I would say that it is not true, but I don't know what it is trying to say. Jon513 17:40, 1 April 2006 (UTC)

I agree. I will delete or move to 'Source of Abrahamic religions' shortly. Also will change intro - God is not Omnipresent or immanent in all monotheistic traditions - especially in Abahamic religions.--Pranathi 02:45, 8 April 2006 (UTC)

Christian Monotheism

I find the section on Christian monotheism to be quite problamatic. "Most Christians see the trinity as aspects of God"(paraphrase). This is simply false. It is identifiable as the heresy of Modism, or Modalism; and is clearly rejected by Catholicism, Orthodoxy, and the major protestant churches. In short, it is rejected by about 5/6 of Christianity. There are other problems with this section, but I will come back to them. Hopefully someone else will make a comment.

Cialovesyou 11:25, 8 April 2006 (UTC)


Furthur to my above post, I am thinking of making a total re-write of the "Christian Monotheism". If anyone has a vociferous complaint, post it here. Likewise, if anyone would rather do it, mention it, as I dont want to be doing something someone else is already working on.

Why? Because the section simply doesnt represent majority Christian thought/theology on the subject. A debate about different views on the Trinity is best left to that entry on Wiki.

Anyway, if you read the section I am talking about, leave a comment and we can discuss it.

Cialovesyou 12:51, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

Capitalization of God

Jeff3000. I see the point you are trying to make with the spelling. However, this is spelling vandalism. You are using improper case to make a point that in these instances the word "God" does not denote a proper noun (or person). However, you are incorrect that the word God is only capitalized when it is a proper noun. God can be used as a principle such as with Brahman (not a proper noun) and still is capitalized. Only "a god" or "gods" (as in polytheism) is in lower case.

If you want to make the point that in these instances the word "God" does not denote a proper noun then simply state this in the article and it will be clear to others. The way you are doing it (with lower case) makes readers think you are making reference to polytheism, which I'm pretty sure is not your point. chris 14:29, 23 April 2006 (UTC)


Defn and contrast with polytheism

The intro says - Monotheism, in contrast with polytheism, is the belief in one god, simply put it is the belief in a single deity. Is this the standard definition or is this made by in Wiki? There is a cited defn in the page as The belief in the existence of one God, or in the oneness of God. I think the second one is more appropriate and should be used for the intro. For one, god is not capitalized in current intro and should be he/she/it if he is 'One'. Also deity/divinity is ambiguous since there are other secondary entities considered divine such as angels etc. In addition, I think (atleast per Wiki definitions)monotheism and polytheism are not the opposite of each other (as mentioned in intro). Polytheism is defined as worship of multiple divinities. In for example some strains of Hinduism, there is belief in One God but also multiple divinities (secondary to God) are worshipped. So would that be considered both monotheistic as well as polytheistic (and so MT cannot be contrasted with PT). I will change the intro shortly to reflect the cited defn and also modify the 'comparison to polytheism' section unless anyone has objections or can clarify the correct defn/stance.--Pranathi 16:31, 26 April 2006 (UTC)

Evolution in Monotheism?

Under Zoroastrianism, the article states, "Zoroastrianism is considered by some to perhaps be one of the earliest monotheistic belief to have evolved among humanity." I simply do not believe this, and it is extremely biased and ignorant to say monotheism evolved. I do not believe in Zoroastrianism either, but this is just biased. I understand, it says, "...considered by some...," but the end of that sentence states declaratively that monotheism evolved: "...to have evolved among humanity." I understand that I am biased as well, but both sides of this issue must be stated, or else other words chosed to not sound biased towards monotheistic followers.--toaster 02:41, 19 May 2006 (UTC)

The word "evolved" refers to social evolution and development - not biological variety. The word is used in its basic meaning which predates the Theory of Evolution. -Ste|vertigo 01:54, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
That is what I meant. I was against that. Under my religion I believe that God has always been there. I think at least that sentence should be rewritten, I will not do it b/c i do not edit too often...--toaster 21:53, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
While God may always have been there, the question is whether an awareness of a single creator has always been there, or have humans come to that from a previous belief in nature spirits, or whatever. That's where the word 'evolved' might come in. However, I'm sure the sentence could be rephrased as "Zoroastrianism is considered by some to be one of the earliest historically documented monotheistic beliefs." No loaded "evolved" word, though I have no problem with the original wording myself. Although on that point, Ahkenaten might be earlier. --Christian Edward Gruber 01:43, 13 July 2006 (UTC)

Development of Monotheism in the Hebrew Bible

I'm cutting the following text from the paragraph on Zoroastrianism:

Several professors, of archaeology and of biblical criticism, connect Zoroastrianism and the religion of the early Israelites. For example, they have made the controversial claim that many stories in the Old Testament were actually initially developed by scribes employed by King Josiah (7th century BC) to rationalize monotheistic belief in YHVH. This theory observes that the neighbouring countries, such as Egypt, Persia etc, although keeping written records, have no writings about the stories of the Bible or its main characters before 650 BC. Such claims are detailed in Who Were the Early Israelites? by William G. Dever. Another such book is The Bible Unearthed by Israel Finkelstein and Neil A. Silberman, Simon and Schuster.

Finkelstein & Silberman make no mention of Zoroastrianism; and I'm very doubtful that Dever does either.

Theirs is quite a mainstream thesis that the attitude of the Hebrews may have been a lot more ambivolent towards Monotheism before a thoroughgoing attempt to impose it from the centre in the time of King Josiah (reigned 639-609 BCE), as part of which the books of the so-called Deuteronomic history (ie from Joshua through to II Kings) were largely cast into the form we now have them.

The idea that there might have been some kind of cross-over with Zoroastrianism is (as far as I know) based on a different, more extreme thesis, that the hardline Deuteronomical emphasis on monotheism was written in even later, during or immediately after the Exile, associated perhaps with the person of Ezra acting under Persian direction. But this is seen as a much more minority extreme view.

It seems to me the appropriate place to discuss this would be the subsection "History in Abrahamic religions", and the subsequent two subsections.

At the moment, I find these sections read a bit strangely. They could use some revision, I think, to set out an overview first, and some of the landscape in general terms, including perhaps mentioning some of the difficulties in dating when the various books of the Bible might have been formed, before diving straight into the data, and some of the evidence that some of the earlier less monotheistic traditions may still have managed to seep through to the texts we now have, in some of the wording and language.

Also, perhaps some of the subsequent material on Judaism could usefully be moved over to the Judiasm stub paragraph higher up. -- Jheald 01:53, 22 June 2006 (UTC).

                 why is this web so confusing? um u need 2 fix more better um ya da

salvation

Do not all three monotheistic religions offer salvation (ransom, redemption)? Should this not be included, because in my opinion it is a major feature that made it attractive to non-converted, especially ancient polytheism and modern age natives during colonisation. --FlammingoParliament 16:03, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

Akhenaten not mention?

My grammer is horrible. Could someone (hopefully somone more knowledgible than myself) so kindly include something on Akhenaten's monotheism in Egypt. I think its worth including.

(Bill) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 74.98.128.230 (talk) 22:15, 18 January 2007 (UTC). (January 18, 2007)

Druze Monotheism moved from article space

This was posted in the article space. It's entirely inappropriate, but might be useful if someone wanted to draw out anything relevant about Druze monotheism.

The Mo'wa'he'doon (Monotheists) DRUZE are Monotheists that beleive in Taw'heed (Monotheism) . Their concept of Taw'heed is as follows: The Taw’heed faith came to confirm the Absolute Oneness of God. • God is the only Creator • He is Omnipresent, not limited to the bounds of time or space, eternal without a beginning, abiding without an end. • He is the Creator who produced all things from His light, to whom all shall return. • He is the existence and there is no existences accept in Him. • He is beyond description, definition, and multiplicity. He rises above disobedience and opposition. • He created all things and to His might and Sovereign all shall return. • His presence is more truthful than the existence of all that exists. The truth lies in the comprehensive existence of everything. That is why admission of Taw’heed, Unitarianism is purity and existence. The Holy Koran defines Taw’heed: “God is one. God is eternal. God begot none, nor was He begotten. Non is equal to God.” Unitarianism “Taw’heed”, the belief in one God, in the Druze faith is a continuation of the old philosophy that started with creation and progressed during past eras, in Athens, Egypt, Syria, Persia, India and China.

Sincerely, Moustafa F. Moukarim Author of: 1. Faith of the Druze Simplified for the Youth 2. AL-KIAMA (The Life After) * 3. HAMZA (Strive for a Wiser Life) *

  • Both books can be ordered from: www.authorhouse.com
  • Or by Telephone at:

Visit my website: www.mmouka.com My e-mail address: mmouka@mmouka.com —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.201.230.9 (talk) 15:05, 18 February 2007

Gareth Hughes 15:17, 18 February 2007 (UTC)

Cyrus the Great of Persia

Something should be said about the spread of monotheism to Babylon by the Persian ruler Cyrus the Great when they defeated the Babylonians.

-Bob March 18, 2007 —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 74.98.128.230 (talk) 00:58, 19 March 2007 (UTC).

Approach to this subject and Hindu views on Monotheism

I think although people are making great efforts to write about this subject. Some grave mistakes are being made. In introducing a topic to the general public I think it would be wise to first write abut what is the most generally understood meaning or what is held as accurate by a great majority and not any controversial or contested opinions. I hope all will agree this is in line with and in spirit of the wiki community.

With this is mind i removed comments about the Hindu concept of monotheism which had references Richard Dawkins views in the first paragraph itself. Clearly his views don't represent what most the believers of any religion in this world believe. I would like to learn more about his views and perhaps read his books but I don't think one should quote Richard Dawkins to explain the Hindu view of monotheism because clearly most Hindus would disagree with what quote. The removed line is shown here.

    Richard Dawkins states that Hinduism is "monotheism in disguise" in his book, The God Delusion. 

Rajcurious

By the way Hinduism is not polytheism as most non-hindus seem to think! I just wanted to add that the Article Hindu Views on Monotheism is written in a better way and reflects the ideas and beliefs of Hindus more fairly than this article. Rajcurious

The development of Monotheism

It seems to me that, in an attempt to remain objective, this page has been written from a purely secular perspective. I added a short quip regarding the idea of original monotheism, and it was removed. I did not offer much in the way of argumentation, as my purpose was not to proselytize. I simply thought that, to round out a discussion of monotheism, one should at least entertain the notion that it predates man. Bentonbjones3 23:40, 19 June 2007 (UTC)

(I added an entry for the development of monotheism mainly focusing on Judaism. Perhaps someone wants to rename this "...within Judaism"? The last 2 lines may be in question(regarding Christianity and Islam), as there is more that could be said on this, including a reference to Arianism, and the Council of Nicea.

Cialovesyou 06:18, 8 April 2006 (UTC)

I fear this section is quite poorly written. For example, the sentence "In Genesis chapter one, God is put in the singular context" makes no sense as it stands; does it mean that the Hebrew word for God in Genesis 1 is singular in form (El as opposed to the plural form Elohim)? If so, why not say so?

PhilG 14:28, 22 April 2007 (UTC)

Was the wondering about the line "Western culture has a noted tendency for classification and terminology". Aren't all languages systems for so doing, is the West exceptional here?MacLeanA 19:36, 27 June 2006 (UTC)MacLeanA

I agree. For example, while Hinduism does not classify along monotheism/polytheism lines it does have other philosophical classifications such as advaita, vishistadvaita, dvaita etc.. The sentence seems to be personal opinion.--Pranathi 00:39, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
I've removed the paragraph on 'Original Monotheism' again. The previous section has a straightforward, matter-of-fact description of Urmonotheismus. A concept that never gained wide academic appeal. — Gareth Hughes 10:56, 20 June 2007 (UTC)

Are the Devil and Angels "Demigods"?

A lot of Christians seem to believe in these supernatural beings in addition to the main God. Also the Catholics have numerous saints corresponding to the minor Pagan gods. For example the winter solstice celebration.

I know it is a touchy subject, but most versions of "Christianity" are just Pagan beliefs kludged onto Judaism.

Unfortunately, WP tends to feature the official POV of organized religious groups. 24.64.165.176 08:05, 23 July 2007 (UTC)

Reliable sources for the term dharmic religions?

Where are the reliable sources that use the term dharmic religions in the context of this article? Dharmic religions is a now deleted obscure neologism and should not be used throughout Wikipedia. a good alternative is Indian religions. The number of google scholar results for "Indian religions"+"Indian religion" is (45.600 + 84.200) while it is only (492+475) for "dharmic religions" +"dharmic religion". See Wikipedia:Deletion_review/Log/2007_September_8. Andries 19:21, 9 September 2007 (UTC)

Search for "Eastern religions". ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:00, 9 September 2007 (UTC)
Why search on "eastern religions"? Only the phrase dharmic religions is a source of dispute. Andries 21:03, 9 September 2007 (UTC)


Machniations of Athanasius?

Does anyone have a source for this?

However, due to the machinations of Athanasius and others in his party, many of the Eastern bishops who were pro-Arian, were prevented from reaching the Council until after the vote had been taken.

I removed it pending discussion. --Mathaytace (talk) 22:56, 27 November 2007 (UTC)

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Zoroastrians do NOT worship fire

And the Catholic Encyclopedia is an unacceptable, because almost assuredly biased, source for information on any religion other than Catholocism. You can't trust a group who wants to exterminate all other groups to give an accurate and objective review. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.170.134.65 (talk) 22:29, 4 August 2008 (UTC)

Pretty sure that the Catholic church would not endorse the idea of "exterminating all other groups." —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.135.144.161 (talk) 17:26, 13 December 2008 (UTC)

Well maybe not the modern church...24.61.36.87 (talk) 22:25, 24 May 2009 (UTC)

Capitalisation of 'god'

One of a number of stylistic corrections I made to the article was decapitalisation of common noun instances of 'god', as in "or in the oneness of a God". This (and, inexplicably, all other changes) was reverted by editor Ben Asher, under the rationale that "Monotheists capitalize the single "God" to distinguish from other (false) "gods"". This convention may exist, but the MoS explicitly prescribes capitalisation for proper nouns only:

Honorifics for deities, including proper nouns and titles, start with a capital letter (God, Allah, the Lord, the Supreme Being, the Great Spirit); the is not capitalized. The same is true when referring to major religious figures and figures from mythology by titles or terms of respect (the Prophet, the Messiah, the Virgin, a Muse). Common nouns denoting deities or religious figures are not capitalized

It does not matter what deities the word is intended to reference. Ilkali (talk) 00:32, 1 September 2008 (UTC)

Where is this MoS?EGMichaels (talk) 13:34, 1 September 2008 (UTC)
Found it:
Honorifics for deities, including proper nouns and titles, start with a capital letter (God, Allah, the Lord, the Supreme Being, the Great Spirit); the is not capitalized. The same is true when referring to major religious figures and figures from mythology by titles or terms of respect (the Prophet, the Messiah, the Virgin, a Muse). Common nouns denoting deities or religious figures are not capitalized; thus the Romans worshipped many gods, many Anglo-Saxons worshipped the god Wotan, Jesus and Muhammad are both considered prophets in Islam, biblical scholars dispute whether Mary was a virgin for her entire life, and her husband was her muse.
Don't monotheists normally use "God" as a description (god), an honorific (God), and a substitute for a proper name (God) at the same time? It's strange to mix god and God in an article about monotheism. Just my two cents.EGMichaels (talk) 13:40, 1 September 2008 (UTC)
God is a proper noun referencing a specific deity, like 'Dad' references the speaker's father.
god is a common noun denoting all deities, like 'dad' denotes all fathers.
If we say "Dad is a dad", the first d-word is a proper noun and the second is a common noun. Likewise, we can say "God is a god". The second g-word here should not be capitalised, because it's a common noun. Ilkali (talk) 11:54, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
God is not a specific deity. God is specifically the Deity. When I get time I'll work on the capitalization in the article.EGMichaels (talk) 17:24, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
"God is not a specific deity". Let me clarify. The proper noun God references the thing described by the article God. The common noun god indexes the concept described by the article deity. Ilkali (talk) 20:55, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
I did a partial edit. There's a slight inconsistency so far with Aten that I'll have to fix. I stopped part way through Zoroastrianism. When there are multiple deities, "god" is a common noun. When there is only one Deity, God substitutes as a proper name. If you had a dog named Sam, you wouldn't call him "my sam" but "my Sam" even when not speaking vocatively. Since Western monotheists generally avoid using a proper name for God, "God" is used as if it were itself the proper name, rather than merely a title. I'll try to finish in the next few days, and thanks for bringing it to my attention.EGMichaels (talk) 17:51, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
"When there are multiple deities, "god" is a common noun. When there is only one Deity, God substitutes as a proper name". It's possible for proper nouns to behave like common nouns in exceptional circumstances, but I do not agree this is happening here. Take the text I gave as example above: "or in the oneness of a God". According to your anaysis, is the g-word in question a common or proper noun? If the latter, how is the text different to "or in the oneness of God"? Ilkali (talk) 20:55, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
I'm not talking about a proper noun behaving like a common noun. I'm talking about a proper name. "God" is a proper name to Christians and Jews who do not speak any other kind of name. "[T]he oneness of a God" is nonsensical, and because you pointed it out, I corrected it in the text. "A God" conotes two contradictory things at the same time: polytheism (a) and monotheism (God). The syntax is unworkable, and the editor in question would have to decide on whether the article is about "polytheism" (a god) or "monotheism" (God). I opted for the subject of the article.EGMichaels (talk) 03:20, 3 September 2008 (UTC)
EGMichaels, please stop edit-warring. We need to leave the article in its earlier state until this has been discussed - note that this is not my preferred state either.
Let's examine some of the changes you make:
  • "In theology, monotheism (from Greek μόνος "one" and θεός "god")". You capitalised 'god', thereby changing the translation. Are you fluent in Greek? If not, it seems massively presumptuous to make this change.
  • "belief in the existence of one deity". You capitalised 'deity'. Why? This is clearly not a proper noun.
  • "may still include concepts of a plurality of the Divine". Ditto above. Common mass noun.
  • "of a specific god" -> "of a single God". Is this not the same as the "Oneness of a god" example, in that it contains an indefinite article?
  • "Deism is a form of monotheism in which it is believed that one god exists. However, a deist rejects the idea that this god intervenes in the world" -> "Deism is a form of monotheism in which it is believed that one God exists. However, a deist rejects the idea that God intervenes in the world". What was wrong with the original? And semantically, the quantifier one does the same job as a. Why is "a God" bad but "one God" okay?
Ilkali (talk) 09:36, 3 September 2008 (UTC)
Archive 1

This is not a scholarly article

Any encyclopedia article is supposed to reflect the latest scholarly research. Here the author accepts traditionalist dating of biblical authorship, which is now comprehensively rejected by both Jewish and Christian scholars. The author betrays his literalist position with the passage 'if Deuteronomy is taken as part of the original text as it generally is by those who use it as scripture'. This is a statement of faith, not fact. Scholars date Deuteronomy centuries later. Similaraly he quotes from the prophet Isaiah to demonstrate that the Bible predates Zoroastrian monotheism. In fact Chapter 44, from which he quotes, has long been ascribed to a second author (Deutero Isaiah), who was writing after the Babylonian empire had been destroyed by Cyrus in 537 BCE. By this time Hebrew religion had been heavily influenced by Mesopotamian and Persian religion. Deutero Isaiah's hymn of joy 'Every valley shall be exalted and every mountain and hill made low' could just as well have been written by Zoroaster himself. Doubters are refered to Norman Cohn's authoratitive Cosmos, Chaos and the World to Come. Yale 2001.

This article contrasts sharply with other scholarly Wiki offerings on religious developments in this early period. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.6.96.248 (talk) 16:54, 13 May 2009 (UTC)

First Monotheistic Religion & History of Monotheism

I have two matters to bring up about this page.

The first is a question: what is the first monotheistic religion? When I was younger, I was under the impression that Judaism was the first religion to believe in only one god, or at least the first one to have any sort of broad significance (by which I mean that, although statistically Judaism has always had a relatively small percentage of followers, its derived religions Christianity and Islam have had huge influences on the world). Then I learned of Zoroastrianism, which I was told had influenced many of the beliefs of Judaism. Which religion came first, Judaism or Zoroastrianism? And were they possibly preceded by a less prominent monotheistic religion?

The second issue I'd like to bring up is a suggestion: I think it would be a good idea to have a section detailing the history of monotheism. Any feedback regarding this would be nice.

--The Self Devouring Snake. (talk) 23:13, 1 May 2010 (UTC)

Source about monotheism or pantheism of Zoroaster

Please give a source about Zoroastrianism being pantheic or monotheic. In the following source monotheism is evident.

from [2]:

Zoroaster’s teachings were a sharp break with previous local traditions, including:
  • Ahura Mazda was the only god to be worshipped. The previous tradition was polytheistic.
  • Wisdom being a defining trait of the new supreme god. Traditionally, local gods were nature-gods primarily defined by strength and power.
  • The new religion was to be a religion of righteousness. It specifically focused on correct living and genuine piety rather than stringent ritual aimed at placating the gods.

Please correct me if I am wrong. It seems to me that early Zoroastrianism could be different to what practised later (Sassanids) Sohale (talk) 22:36, 20 May 2010 (UTC)

Christian View?

At the end it say: "Some groups that are self-identified as Christians eschew orthodox theology; such as the Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormonism, Oneness Pentecostals, the Unitarians, Christadelphians, Church of God General Conference (Abrahamic Faith), Socinian and some of the Radical Reformers (Anabaptists), do not teach the doctrine of the Trinity at all." Are not all Christian groups "self-identified"? Why are we say that some are Christian and some are only "self-identified"?--Lord Don-Jam (talk) 02:16, 9 January 2010 (UTC)

That does sound a great deal as if someone is writing from a particular perspective. I am going to be bold and change it to read, "Some Christians eschew orthodox theology...--StormRider 02:48, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
I think that "eschew orthodox theology" may also seem to be coming from a particular perspective by some.--Lord Don-Jam (talk) 18:30, 11 January 2010 (UTC)

you should be even bolder and remove such obviously essayish bits. If it isn't clearly encyclopedic and clearly dealing with monotheism, it needs to go. This article is a pov-magnet as it is. --dab (𒁳) 13:09, 23 January 2010 (UTC)

Is Christianity Monotheistic?

Monotheism means believing that there is only one God. Leaving aside the question of the Trinity, if Christians believe in other spiritual powers whether good (eg angels) or evil (eg demons) how can they be said to be monotheistic? Isn't Satan a kind of evil god? Or does being a monotheist depend on whether you worship such an entity or not, rather than believing in its existence? I find this perplexing.188.141.24.109 (talk) 22:57, 20 April 2010 (UTC)

Monotheists such as Jews and Christians believes in an Almighty God who never had and will never have any peer. Psalms 82:6 is one of several scriptures which refer to angels as "gods" to emphasize that a mere angel (literally "messenger") of the biblical God is as powerful as any of the so-called gods of the pagans.
--AuthorityTam (talk) 01:24, 21 April 2010 (UTC)
...and yet recognises the existance of other gods. There does not exist any religion that believes that only one god exists. Insistance upon the superiority of a god should not be rewritten as belief in the existance of one god, regardless of what the lay person has been taught or believes. 67.183.157.148 (talk) 06:24, 25 May 2010 (UTC)
You are confusing "monotheism" and henotheism. Beeswaxcandle (talk) 08:51, 25 May 2010 (UTC)
Christianity is more henotheistic than monotheistic, but still is monolatric. That monotheistic religions even exist is a misconception by the masses--which does not make it correct. Though common education is made avaliable today, common belief does not supercede fact. 67.183.157.148 (talk) 07:33, 26 May 2010 (UTC)

I also have concluded, in my unstudied manner, that modern Christianity is not monotheistic but dualistic as much (perhaps more than half) of the world's events are attributed to Satan. One could objectively quantify this by questioning Christians not on their dogma but on their interpretation of the ultimate causes of their worlds -- I would guess that those in my childhood Nazarene church would attribute far more of the world to Satan than to God. It seems that to modern Christians God is only the God of Good and Love, and has been separated from the terrible events of the world that the Old Testament God, and perhaps the American God-to-be-feared of only several generations ago. As I see it, somebody has to pick up the causal slack, and once again old Lucifer is willing to do the dirty work, and so most Christians now are solidly dualistic. I guess this argument suggests that one can define a god by duck-typing rather than questioning one's explicit belief structure in abstract terms: if it quacks like a God, walks a God, and swims like a God, it is a God. 75.174.90.61 (talk) 01:38, 25 August 2011 (UTC)

Whether to include "oneness of a God" in the definition

In this edit, EGMichaels changed the opening definition "from the belief in the existence of one deity, or in the oneness of a God" to "the belief that only one Deity exists", with the edit summary "Corrected the meaning of the term". But the original wording was a direct quote from the given source, Encyclopedia Brittanica. I don't know whether Brittanica is correct, but we should either use their definition or use a different source. --Allen (talk) 20:41, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

Monotheism does not deny existance of other gods, but emphasises the importance of one over all others. This should be included in your definitions. 67.183.157.148 (talk) 06:21, 25 May 2010 (UTC) EDIT: Christianity, Islam, and Mosaicity (Judaism) are not monotheistic but are monolatric. 67.183.157.148 (talk) 07:41, 26 May 2010 (UTC)

Rewrite urgently required

Parts of the article lack any syntactical structure, parsing or punctuation, rendering the overall sense of the subject-matter and intent of the author(s) opaque in the extreme. 86.138.117.138 (talk) 19:18, 24 March 2011 (UTC)

This is especially true for the section "Siberian traditions". I am shocked by the fact that its first sentence, a totally uncomperehensible concatination of English words, has been virtually unchanched since the 4th of December 2010. The remainder of the section is hardly any better, consisting of completely ungrammatical sentences. Additionally, even the little bit of content that seems to be extractable from this gibberish lacks any citations and is not supported by the main article that the section links to, so that it might well completely contradict the facts too. The following section ("Indigenous American tradition") consists of one uncited fact followed by one grammatically flawed sentence without any relevant content. Hence I decided to provisionally make these two sections invisible by HTML-comment brackets. They should either be completely rewritten or be permanently removed. Marcos (talk) 12:31, 6 May 2011 (UTC)

Aspects of God: "Plurality" in Judaism, Christ., and Islam

There is no meaningful discussion on the expositions of the Logos by Philo, which is identified as the creative impulse of the one God in the writings of that Jewish sage. Also, the Memra of Rabbinic tradition, the Sephirot of Kabbala, and the Angel of the Lord, which many interpret as a theophany, are not discussed. These are all important Jewish concepts regarding the nature of God, and there are many historic views to be considered (such as those of Philo). In Islam, Allah is an absolute one, yet he has a Holy Spirit which is personal and visible (which is identified in Islamic tradition as the Angel Gabriel, but this is not explicit in the Quran). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.201.173.75 (talk) 07:48, 24 December 2011 (UTC)

  • In Islam, Angel Gabriel (Jibra'il) is just an angel, not a personal and visible part of Allah. An angel is a creation of Allah just like humans, planets and plants. Angel Gabriel (Jibra'il) is not part of Allah. He is not an extension of Allah. He is not a dimension of Allah. He is not a personality of Allah. He is one of Allah's creations. There is no Trinity in Islam.--98.196.233.8 (talk) 00:39, 23 May 2012 (UTC)

Relationship of God with Creation

There are many definitions of God in the article. But thre is no proper section for the relationship of god with creation. There must be a section for such a categorization.

Regarding this classification or categorization, only monism (pentheism, panentheism) is mentioned in the article. Other views are not named or mentioned in the article. Those views are mentioned without a name in various sections associaited for specific religions. But these views are not mentioned with their names in a proper section.

For example, Islam is a monotheistic religion but it is not monist. In Islam, it is believed that God and creation are not separate. Therefore there is god and there is creation (creatures, sum of created things). This view is called tawhid. So, this view is in contrast with monist views like panthiesm and panentheism.

Threfore, I suggest a section for Relationship of God with Creation--98.196.233.8 (talk) 00:50, 23 May 2012 (UTC)

Percentage of the world's population that are adherents to Abrahamic religions is 54%?!

That figure is probably 4 times too high. Complete nonsense.--Hontogaichiban (talk) 15:05, 2 May 2014 (UTC)

Not really. Christianity makes up about a third of the world's population, and Islam makes up about a fifth, so some figures between 50-55% seems about right. Judaism and Baha'i are comparatively small, but still large enough to make it worthwhile to round up. See Religion#Religious_groups and Major religious groups. Ian.thomson (talk) 19:49, 2 May 2014 (UTC)
Incorrect you should say "Christians" not "Christianity" one is born to that position and or practices it and the other practices. Be very careful how you use these words. It is misleading. Just because you are born in a country of a particular faith you should not be branded that way. If you were to include the people who believe in a true monotheistic religion of Father Christmas (which would mainly be children) who do practice their belief, you probably would have a reasonable percentage. Would I be right in saying the English make up about a third of the world's population? (Darmech (talk) 21:12, 25 July 2014 (UTC))
Wow, there's so much wrong with your post that I don't know if you're trolling or just incompetent.
Christianity is not an ethnic religion, so no one is born into it. The figures "one third" are based on the same standards that other percentages are gathered, censuses, polls, and so forth. While that would include the children in Christian households, that would also mean that children in other religions (and non-religious households) would be included in those figures, so it cancels out.
The comment about Father Christmas is ridiculous, whether made out of willful ignorance or out of a desire to troll.
Christianity also isn't the same as being English, and being English does not make one Christian. To equate the two is just ignorant.
Also, I'm not making stuff up. The articles Christianity, Islam, and Major religious groups, list Christianity at about 2.2 billion members (about around 33% of the world's population) and Islam at 1.3 billion (around 20%). These articles cite the CIA factbook, Foreign Policy, and Adherents.com, and many other sources. If you want to say that those sources are wrong, then you're welcome to leave.
Christianity and Islam make up just over half of the world's population by themselves, and are not the only Abrahamic religions that exist. Changing the article is not going to change that. Just deal with it. Ian.thomson (talk) 21:38, 25 July 2014 (UTC)
To believe people are not born into a religion is nonsense, any reasonable scholar would agree. Of course religion is mainly based on geographical regions. I pointed out that you used the word Christianity when you should have used Christian. Children (under 17) are about one quarter the world’s population most of which would be incapable of making an educated choice of their own. Going on your figures from the CIA there are nearly one hundred and eighty five million Christian children and a large portion of those practice in the belief of Santa. It wasn't a joke and I'm not trolling. What is the difference between Santa and another God. Which brings me to another point, the definition of a god? If it was any creature with extraordinary powers then Christianity would be a polytheistic religion. If it were based on a creator of everything then maybe Gaia in Greek mythology would make this a monotheistic religion, which we both would agree is not correct. Christianity is not a true monotheistic religion. To say one religion has the same percentage as the other of children cancels each other out would then challenge the figure of 54% and make it only 40% at the most. It seems I did not explain myself properly, when I stated if you speak English you are English, which is not true by the same way if you are born geographically in a Christian region you are not necessarily a practicing Christian. Also I was not rude to you, good manners is a better persuasive tool than your diatribe. Darmech (talk) 08:56, 26 July 2014 (UTC)
WP:NOTFORUM, WP:NOTSOAPBOX. Read them, and quit posting here. Your statements are just plain ignorant borderline bigoted, and do not try to improve the encyclopedia. Ian.thomson (talk) 14:43, 26 July 2014 (UTC)

Darmech: Please understand that Wikipedia is not a blog or discussion page but an encyclopedia with the precise function of summarizing what reliable sources have to say about any particular subject. The figures as given on this page reflect conclusions drawn by reputable bodies and students. The criterion used is one of self-definition (note the words "consider themselves" in the article). Also, many children are born into a religious community and, until they opt out of it, they accept its norms to a greater or lesser extent and consider themselves members of it. Links to full definition of one methodology can be found at http://www.pewforum.org/search/global+christianity/?site=pewforum and http://www.pewforum.org/search/global+islam/?site=pewforum You may feel that many people are mistaken in their appreciation of the situation because they show no convincing signs of behaving in accordance with their professed beliefs; but, unless you can come up with alternative and statistically reliable figures as to which religion people consider themselves to belong, you cannot reasonably suggest changes here and interventions like your last are going to cause a good deal of irritation. Jpacobb (talk) 19:52, 26 July 2014 (UTC)

Okay understood. My point was initially challenging his wording but also the inclusion of children as religious followers. It was not a blog. Thank you for your response Jpacobb. Darmech (talk) 21:03, 26 July 2014 (UTC)

Subjective vs Objective comments

I would stay away from comments like this:

the distinction between worshipping the divine nature of Jesus but not the human nature of Jesus can be difficult for non-Christians (and even Christian laity) to follow.

Personally, I find all the -isms confusing. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.167.198.121 (talk) 17:53, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

Zoroaster Not a Monotheist

I removed the demonstrably untrue statement that suggested Zoroaster could have been the first monotheist. Zoroastrianism was explicitly a dualist religion. Zurvanism is often confused with Zoroastrianism but was NOT the doctrine of the Gathas. CF Boyce *History of Zoroastrianism* Yonderboy (talk) 08:06, 14 October 2009 (UTC)

Oh PS looks like time to archive this discussion page... Yonderboy (talk) 08:06, 14 October 2009 (UTC)

Zoroaster was a Monotheist

Dear people who are ignorant about the subject, please stop trying to change the facts.

There is less dualism in Zoroastrianism than in Christianism. Indeed, there is no "devil" in Zoroastrianism. The "devil" is "Ahriman", which is actually an "evil spirit". It faces "Spenta Minyiu", which is the "good spirit" (but not God). So the "evil spirit" does not confront God. God is the only supreme Being and its aspects are represented by the seven angels and by the good spirit. Against this good spirit, there is an evil spirit, that man cultivates by doing bad things (cheating, lying, killing, etc.) Man can cultivate this spirit because God created the man free, so it's the man's role to choose between good and bad.

Then, there is no reference to "OTHER AHURAS" in the Gathas. This "other Ahuras" should actually be translated into "the ahuric rays" (the 7 angels). The ONE and ONLY divinity accepted by Zoroaster was Ahura Mazda, The Only Creator. The sentence "You are The Mightiest Ahura" is actually "You are the Mightiest, Ahura Mazda !" exactly like Muslims say "Allah Akbar" saying "Allah is The GreatEST". It only means that there is nothing better than God.

The word "Yazata" is not used one single time in the Gathas.

The "fake gods" is the translation of "daeva", word that still exists in our current Persian (deev) meaning "demon". "Fake gods" is a translation based on the Bible, where the idols, etc. are called "fake gods".

So the one who says Zoroastrianism isn't monotheistic by bringing these irrational and incoherent arguments should also go and claim the Abrahamic religions are not monotheistic.

"Additionally, the Zoroastrian faith includes characteristics different from those found in purely monotheistic worldviews, including the acknowledgment of subordinate nature-spirits and the aspect of the fire being very holy." Come on, most experts claim that your "purely monotheistic worldviews" directly come from Zoroastrianism http://www.religioustolerance.org/zoroastr.htm http://www.buzzle.com/articles/zoroastrianism-the-foundation-of-monotheism.html

Fire is VERY holy ? No, fire is just holy because it is a symbol of light and pureness. In the later Avestan writings (Yasht), the spirit symbolizing it (Arta) is not even quoted as an "angel" or "yazata". Acknowledgment of subordinate nature-spirits ? It is the opposite. Before Zoroastrianism, Iranians (Aryans) venerated nature-spirits like Anahita, etc. Zoroaster came and changed this and did not want anyone to venerate any nature-spirits anymore, it's actually them he called "daevas".

If you don't know the subject, please stop writing articles. Thank you very much and best regards.

--RaheZartosht (talk) 11:53, 31 October 2009 (UTC)

I have not edited that section and I have not yet reviewed it. However, it really does not matter what editors think, what matters is what experts think and statements made supported by reliable references. If you have them, use them. IF you don't, then it is just bantering opinions, which is not fruitful. -StormRider 13:07, 31 October 2009 (UTC)


Are there better sources than http://www.religioustolerance.org/zoroastr.htm and http://www.buzzle.com/articles/zoroastrianism-the-foundation-of-monotheism.html ? Neither seem to fulfill WP:RS. Gabbe (talk) 09:01, 4 December 2009 (UTC)

Hebrew Bible and monotheism

I shorted the first paragraph, but the entire section needs to be edited - it's far too long and diffuse. I think, if I were writing it fro scratch, I'd set out the gradual development of monotheism from polytheism, beginning with those passages in Psalms and elsewhere which are clearly polytheistic, then discussing the development of monolatry in passages such as the shema, and finally the emergence of genuine monotheism in the Persian period. I'd also discuss the forces which formed this history - the original Levantine pantheon, the emergence of Yahweh as the god of Israel in the late 7th century, and the impact of the Josianic reforms and then the Bablylonian and Persian period. But perhaps the first step really is to identify sources? - Anchor Bible Dictionary, Day, that sort of thing. PiCo (talk) 04:04, 5 December 2009 (UTC)

This is someone else "editing" but I just want to say that this is completely true and Zorastrianism is in fact the first monotheistic religion —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.66.251.49 (talk) 15:57, 6 December 2009 (UTC)
I believe you're probably right, but you'll need a good source to support that. By the way, there were strong elements of quasi-monotheism in ancient Egypt and elsewhere too (actually henotheism and monolatry). Plus perhaps worth mentioning that Islam doesn't regard Christianity as a monotheistic religion. All this needs to be covered. PiCo (talk) 21:54, 6 December 2009 (UTC)

Deaism

Does not Deaism (as can be defined at ( http://www.mother-god.com/catechism.html ) deserve a place here somewhere? As well perhaps in other articles, such as the one for God? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.199.90.38 (talk) 15:29, 24 December 2009 (UTC)

Only one faith of one God can exist?

Is there any truly monotheistic religion in the world, which is NOT derived from or connected to the YHWH faith? It appears that all proven unconnected faiths, like hindi, buddhism, shinto, maya, inca, australian aboriginal, etc. are all politheistic.

I would guess that jews' claim to be the one and only "chosen people" means, if true, that there cannot exist any monotheistic religion besides YHWH faith and its derivatives? 91.83.16.58 (talk) 23:10, 6 February 2010 (UTC)

Monotheism is not a "faith", it is a theological position. It is the very simple concept that the an absolute notion of a "supreme being" is meaningful and that it does have an application to a real being. What sort of "faith" you want to attach to that, i.e. worship, celebration, prayer, folklore, claims of incarnations, avatars, historical miracles or what have you goes beyond the theological claim. These are other aspects of religion unrelated to whether the religion under consideration is monotheistic.

So yes, there is only one kind of monotheism in the same sense that there is only one kind of proton. If you come up with another 'sort of proton', you should call it something different. While there is only a single concept of monotheism, there are of course any number of religions that are monotheistic, because any religion is much more than its mere theology. --dab (𒁳) 17:52, 8 February 2010 (UTC)

This is not an answer! The question was: did monotheism develop anywhere else in the world, in a way that had proven absolutely no connection to jews and their YHWH faith? For an absurd example, did the antarctican penguins develop monotheism millenia before any explorers arrived? It does appear there is no monotheistic religion on Earth, which is proven underived from the YWHW / Moses system!
The thing that comes nearest, the short-lived egyptian Sun God religion, artificially created by the pharaoh to unseat the politheistic priest class, appears to be a direct copycat of the YHWH faith as practiced by the jews in egyptian captivity.
The wikipedia article should make it very clear whether or not there exist any created-from-zero monotheistic religion, which is proven unconnected to the faith of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. This is a totally important issue! 91.82.34.6 (talk) 20:30, 20 February 2010 (UTC)
This is an academic question, but one example of a monotheistic religion that predates the Abrahamic religions is Zoroastrianism. In fact, some scholars state very clearly that Zoroastrianism influenced the Abrahamic religion. Which was the very first monotheistic religion? You might want to read The Great Transformation - The Beginning of our Religious Traditions by Karen Armstrong. Monotheism is one of its topics. I hope this helps. --StormRider 21:07, 20 February 2010 (UTC)
How does 5th century BCE predate monotheism???EGMichaels (talk) 03:29, 21 February 2010 (UTC)

There was the short-lived reform by Pharaoh Akhenaten in Egypt, who made Aten (the sun disc) the only god. It is unclear whether it predates Judaism or not, and connections between them are debated. Contrary to what the anon said, this was not fully artificially created, since the solar aspects of religion became already more and more emphasized under Akhenaten's predecessors, it's only that the solar religion reached its pinnacle under his reign. – Alensha talk 00:03, 27 February 2010 (UTC)

You will find that some scholars debate the monotheism of early Judaism. I am not reflecting my own opinion but the statements of scholars as I remember them or as I read them. --StormRider 00:14, 27 February 2010 (UTC)

Krishna

It should be stated that the majority of Vaishnavites believe in Vishnu as the supreme God. The post on Krishna is a purely ISKCON perspective.Domsta333 (talk) 10:32, 26 July 2010 (UTC)

Oneness Pentacostal under 'christianviews'

"The Oneness Pentecostals believe the doctrine of the Trinity is not orthodox theology, and they adhere to the teachings of the Apostles from the times of the New Testament writings before the Council of Nicaea, which taught that God is a Spirit and is one, and Jesus was the visible manifestation of that Spirit"

This obvious POV, as well as factually in error, I am editing to something along the lines that 'Oneness Pentecostals accept the deity of the Father, the Son, and The Holy Spirit they beleive that there is one God, a singular spirit who manifests himself in many different ways, including as the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. This contrasts with the creedal formulation of three distinct and eternal persons in one being'. This info is off of the 1nes pentecostal intro so assume it is correct, the 'teachings of the apostles from the NT' and God is a spirit and is one, Jesus is a manifestation of said God is an interpretation, it may or may not be true, but it is an opinion. And also as for 'ante-nicaea writings' there was far from unanimity ast to the nature of the relationship with God and JC, there were theologies of every kind including proto-trinity like Origen, modalist (sim. to oneness) like sabellius, and arian with its namesake and probably a plethora of other theologies. a side note 'orthodox' is also not the best word as today it connotes 'traditional' as opposed to back then orthodox meant within acceptable range of beliefs, today unorthodox means untraditional rather than condemned. before the pertinent creeds both arianism and sabellianism were 'orthodox'Enedra (talk) 20:53, 26 September 2010 (UTC)

Content from "Unity"

The following has been removed from the coat-rack article Unity. It talks about "oneness of God", a term which currently redirects here. (References have been inlined to avoid having side-effects on this talk page.) I hope someone will take the time to examine this material, extract anything that can add value, and include it in this (or another) article. -- Perey (talk) 14:46, 7 July 2011 (UTC)

Within the Ahmadiyya understanding of Islam, the Islamic concept of Unity of God, often referred to as Oneness of God, in application to humans, inculcates in man the realisation of the oneness of the human species, and does away with all such barriers as divide man into racial, ethnic and colour denominations. This gives birth to the universal concept of equality in Islam. Hence from the vantage point of God, all human beings, wherever and in whichever age they were born, stand equal in His sight. "THE BELIEF IN THE UNITY OF GOD". Retrieved 2 September 2010.
The Qur'an views that in the history of mankind prophets or messengers were sent to every nation or society to guide people towards God in every age. For this reason, with support from theological study, Ahmadis recognise many of the world faiths as having divine origin and their founders as divinely appointed individuals, such as Zoroaster, Buddha, Krishna and Confucius. The founder of the Ahmadiyya community, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad explained how the teachings of various faiths all converged to Islam as a universal religion. "An Overview". Retrieved 6 September 2010.
Three core assertions of the Bahá'í Faith, sometimes termed the "three onenesses", are central in the teachings of the religion. They are the Oneness of God, the Oneness of Religion and the Oneness of Humanity. Hutter, Manfred (2005). "Bahā'īs". In Ed. Lindsay Jones (ed.). Encyclopedia of Religion. Vol. 2 (2nd ed. ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA. pp. 737–740. ISBN 0-02-865733-0. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |edition= has extra text (help)
They are also referred to as the unity of God, unity of religion, and unity of mankind. The Bahá'í writings state that there is a single, all powerful God, revealing his message through a series of divine messengers or educators, regarding them as one progressively revealed religion, to one single humanity, who all possess a rational soul and only differ according to colour and culture. This idea is fundamental not only to explaining Bahá'í beliefs, but explaining the attitude Bahá'ís have towards other religions, which they regard as divinely inspired. The acceptance of every race and culture in the world has brought Bahá'í demographics an incredible diversity, becoming the second most widespread faith in the world, and translating its literature into over 800 languages. "The Bahá'í Faith". Britannica Book of the Year. Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1988. ISBN 0-85229-486-7. The National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States (2006). "Bahá'í scripture". bahai.us. Archived from the original on 2006-08-05. Retrieved 2006-08-03.
In Kabbalah, unity amongst people is a method for achieving spirituality. Kabbalist Yehuda Ashlag stated in his article, "Unity of Friends," that “the important thing that stands before you today is the unity of friends. Toil in that more and more, for it can compensate for all the faults.” His son, Kabbalist Baruch Ashlag, also emphasized a method among friends that involved unity to reach the spiritual. Ashlag, Yehuda. "Society as a Condition for Attaining Spirituality". www.kabbalah.info. Laitman Publishing. Retrieved 2009-06-11.
In previous generations Kabbalists such as Rav Abraham Kook argued that the affirmation of God aspires to reveal unity in the world as it is the basis of all spiritual knowledge and one the highest notions which mankind can perceive. (Abraham Isaac Kook: The lights of penitence, The moral principles, Lights of holiness, essays, letters, and poems By Abraham Isaac Kook, Translated by Ben Zion Bokser, Published by Paulist)

Was Islam a "reaction" to Judaism and Christianity ?

In the "Abrahamic religions" section, the author suggested that islam was a reaction to Judaism and Christianity. However, this needs to be historically proved. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.36.39.1 (talkcontribs)

First, there are multiple authors in almost all articles. Second, the Qur'an and traditional Islamic stories admit that Muhammed was born well after Judaism and Christianity were around, and that he was exposed to both religions before having his revelation. Whether the reaction was human or divine, Islam came about as a response to the then-current state of Judaism and Christianity. Ian.thomson (talk) 13:41, 29 September 2011 (UTC)

First of all Islam cannot be a reaction to the original Judaism and original Christianity since the source of revelation in Judaism, Christianity and Islam is one, Allah that is, according to Islamic theology. Now, speaking regardless Quran was a divine revelation or not, If the claim is that the source is one, then definitely Allah is not reacting to himself. However, according to Quran " To thee We sent the Scripture in truth, confirming the scripture that came before it, and guarding it in safety..."(Surah 5, verse 48, Yusuf ali translation) Quran is a confirmation of the previous revelation. Indeed the Quran was responding to many issues related to the Jews and the Christians as they have corrupted the Holy Scriptures and the righteous religion, according to Islamic theology. It is also true that Muhammad was exposed to both Judaism and Christianity before the revelation of Quran. But to say that the Religion of Islam was a mere reaction to Judaism and Christianity is not a fully correct statement. Besides, The most common belief at that time among the majority of Arabs was neither Judaism nor Christianity, but paganism or Idolatry and a tremendous portion of Quran was discussing and refuting these beliefs/claims and it makes much sense to say that Quran is a reaction to Idolatry or any form of worship of multiple deities(polytheism) or any God but Allah "(1). A. L. R. (This is) a Book, with verses basic or fundamental (of established meaning), further explained in detail,- from One Who is Wise and Well-acquainted (with all things)(2) (It teacheth) that ye should worship none but Allah..."(Surah 11, verse 1-2, Yusuf ali translation). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.36.38.50 (talk) 11:19, 1 October 2011 (UTC)

Worship of the One God in Monotheism

Regarding the top three religions of the world: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. It is clear that all three worship the Creator and not the creation. With these three religions monotheism is not only a belief in the one uncreated God, but also a belief in only offering worship to that one uncreated God. Judaism and Christianity are both resolute in that only the Creator is to receive worship."Deuteronomy 4:19; Romans 1:25"

 "Muslims are taught to worship only the Creator and not His creations...".http://books.google.com/books?id=FbnnJxar3aMC&pg=PA172&lpg=PA172&dq=Islam+teaches+that+only+God+is+worshiped+and+not+the+creation&source=bl&ots=qgX2pSlbV5&sig=d1byflUky8J9bWi6rKTqiUeg9Jc&hl=en&ei=uSvATvaJGY2GiQKw-oy8Aw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&sqi=2&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false

Zoroastrianism however cannot be compared to Judaism, Christianity, and Isalm in regard to worship due to the Younger Avestan Yashts clearly promoting the worship of the lesser dieties. While Mary Boyce asserted that Zoroaster proclaimed Mazda as the one uncreated God,"Zoroastrians Their Religious Beliefs and Practices" in the Gathas, the Gathas interpreted by the whole of the Zoroastrian scriptures allow worship of the created gods.TruthCkr (talk) 22:32, 13 November 2011 (UTC)

Sources? Wikipedia doesn't take original research or interpretation. There's also the issue of whether or not asking servants of the one God to do something for you really counts as worship, or having multiple titles for the one God really counts as polytheism. Ian.thomson (talk) 22:56, 13 November 2011 (UTC)

Regarding Zoroastrianism as monotheistic. This is an interpretation by Mary Boyce. And I am simply stating that the three main religions of the world: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam interpret monotheism as not only a belief in the one uncreated God but also the solitary worship which is afforded to the one God. Simply stated, monotheism from the point of view of the three largest religions of the world, is worship of the Creator and the not the created. Zoroastrianism falls outside of this definition "interpretation" because it allows for the worship of the lesser created gods.TruthCkr (talk) 18:07, 15 November 2011 (UTC)

That is your opinion, and you are not a WP:RS. Mary Boyce's work does meet WP:RS, which is why her "opinion" (which has somehow time travelled centuries before her birth) is allowed.
Again, there is also the issue of whether asking the servants of the one God to do something for you really counts as worship, or whether having multiple titles for the one God really counts as polytheism, which is where Zoroastrianism confounds your definition of monotheism. The Amesha Spentas are aspects of Ahura Mazda (like the members of the Trinity in Christianity, in fact Spenta Mainyu can be translated as "Holy Spirit,") and the Yazatas are treated in a manner similar to angels and saints have been treated in historical Judaism and Christianity: beings to be appealed for God's blessing.
There's also the mistaken assumption that an outsider's modern interpretation of the scriptures is representative of the "true" form of that religion. Max Muller's interpretation of the Vedas, while interesting, bears little similarity to modern Hinduism and is useless in describing modern Hinduism. Those outside the Abrahamic religions (and some within them in competition of other Abrahamic religions) have tried to pick apart the Bible and the Quran to portray those works as inherently polytheistic, but that is not at all representative of Judaism, Christianity, or Islam. Likewise, your personal interpretation of the Gathas is useless in describing modern Zoroastrianism, which is why we don't take original research. Ian.thomson (talk) 18:32, 15 November 2011 (UTC)

Abraham

The most that can be said with some degree of certainty is that the standard Hebrew text of Genesis places Abraham in the earlier part of the second millennium BCE. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03731a.htm This is Middle Bronze Age in the Ancient Near East. Abrahamic religions are the monotheistic faiths emphasizing and tracing their common origin to Abraham.http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/497132/philosophy-of-religion Those primarily being Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. TruthCkr (talk) 23:47, 26 November 2011 (UTC)

Akhenaten

Akhenaten and the worship of Aten not mention? Is he consider to be a monotheist??

Henry123ifa (talk) 23:50, 2 June 2012 (UTC)

Recent addition to lede

I have reverted a recent addition to the lede made by User:Pass a Method which added that Zoroastrianism was the first monotheistic religion. This might be true, depending on the definition of monotheism used, but there are more than one and I do not believe that the definition seemingly used in the source is the same one as used in this article. As per the "Zoroastrianism" article in the World Religions Reference Library of 2007, available on the HighBeam Research site, Zoroastrianism is called a monotheistic religion, based on the definition it gives after that word, "a religion that worships one god". That however is not the same definition as the one used in this article. This article is about monotheism as a religion that believes in the existence of one god, not a religion that only worships one god. There is a difference. For this material to be included, I believe that it is incumbent upon anyone seeking to make such changes to meet [{WP:BURDEN]] requirements to have the material added to the article. John Carter (talk) 20:15, 1 August 2012 (UTC)

Himba Religion

I reverted the first version of the section entitled "Indigenous African religion" for lacking proper sources. Hyperlinks to other articles in Wikipedia are not sufficient, inline citations are required: Attribute all quotations and any material challenged or likely to be challenged to a reliable, published source using an inline citation. Cite the source clearly and precisely (specifying page, section, or such divisions as may be appropriate). The citation must clearly support the material as presented in the article.(wp:proveit) When reinserted the citation was transferred from the article on Himba people but a check on the page given shows it covers only the second part of the statement: there is no mention of monotheism. Hence the insertion of "citation needed" Jpacobb (talk) 18:52, 26 December 2012 (UTC)

Trinitarian Christianity

Mainstream trinitarian Christianity does not qualify under the definition given for "an exclusive monotheism". There is postulated a unity among the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, but still there are three persons in the trinity. Trinitarian Christianity does not qualify in the way Judaism and Islam does. --84.210.127.117 (talk) 12:38, 5 July 2013 (UTC)

The introduction

please exclude "advaita, dvaita and visishtadvaita" out. Monotheism isn't just the belief in one God. Pantheism and Monism and several other forms of theisms also believe in "one God". The word "God" has numerous definitions. Monotheism is characterized by Abrahamic religions. Advaita, Dvaita, Visishtadvaita are all philosophical schools of thought and none of them fall within Monotheism. Advaita is Monism, Visishtadvaita is Qualified Monism and Dvaita perhaps is arguably Monotheism. But that is not the case because within it as well there are multiple Gods and Goddesses who have a heirarchy in which Vishnu stands the Highest. These Gods and Goddesses are represented by idols. They are anthropomorphic-zoomorphic. They copulate and reproduce. They interact with each other. Sometimes engaging in fights etc. They manifest to ordinary mortals also. These are all considered to be against Monotheism. Therefore it is improper and misleading to include them. Furthermore in the Dvaita tradition, its founder, Madhvacharya, is considered to be an incarnation of Vayu or Hanuman, who is a God but subordinate to Vishnu along with others.

Monotheism is the belief in a single God. There is a strict distinction between the Creator and creation. No images are allowed. God is single, with a unity is His being, and without any likeness. Jews and Muslims speak of God, Yahweh or Allah, as a single God. A Supreme Being. And would see the aforementioned Hindu beliefs as idolatry, polytheism and heresy.

In the Puranas, the Hindu Gods and Goddesses command each other, usually the respective Deities who are central to a specific Purana being superior and the others being inferior. Like for example in the Shiva Purana, Shiva commands Brahma and Vishnu and they obediently oblige to his authority and supremacy. Whereas in the Devi Bhagavata Purana, Durga says all other Gods are created by her and are all due to her lila(divine play) etc

Therefore it is beyond any doubr that atleast these schools of thought within Hinduism do not fall under Monotheism. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 175.156.15.127 (talk) 09:39, 6 December 2010 (UTC)

I would recommend only the 'major' religions are listed here in the introduction (major defined by number of practising believers from definitive statistical sources - e.g. UN, etc.). Otherwise there are raft of syncretic and 'modern' monotheistic religions that have not been listed here (e.g. the syncretic Christian religions of the New Zealand Maori, etc.). I have no sources for this proposition; it is axiomatic. cocosmooth (talk) 21:45, 3 September 2013 (UTC)

"....references to Al-Lat, Al-’Uzza, and Manat which were redacted from later Korans"

Okay, this idea is debated between non-Muslim scholars, while Muslims reject it wholly. The sentence appears as if it 100% actually happened, so I modified the sentence to include both ideas.--BelalSaid (talk) 21:17, 26 October 2012 (UTC)

Indented line

Actually, I would not say Muslim scholars reject it wholly. Did this story not originate from a Sunni hadith? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.105.229.186 (talk) 03:50, 8 October 2013 (UTC)

The map

In which way does the map show "Indo-European religion"? Even the caption is wrong, for it links to an article on Proto-Indo-European religion. I suggest just deleting the map, as it adds nothing to ideas of monotheism (or any other religious ideas). Herbgold (talk) 15:57, 13 January 2014 (UTC)

Definitions in lead

I'm never very happy with using dictionaries in this way rather than specialist sources. Why are we doing it here? It may not be the case here, but I've seen dictionary definitions which while perhaps reflecting common usage are in conflict with the way scholarly sources use the word. I've just been reverted because evidently "belief in the existence of one god or in the oneness of God" is a quote from the Britannica so should use the same case (and it is, I've checked) although not in quotation marks, which is when I realised what this article is doing. I'll add that I still think that if it wasn't a quote I'd be right, but that's a different issue. I don't know if this lead was a compromise or just an easy way out, so am not going to try to change it right now. Dougweller (talk) 15:27, 18 April 2014 (UTC)

I am the one who reverted you, after checking the source. Perhaps I can help explain the capital. In the first half of the definition it means "one god" as opposed to many gods. In the second half it refers to those believing in one god, who is for them the God, and their belief in god's oneness, which for them is God's oneness. I have no opinion as to the use of dictionary definitions on Wikipedia. Debresser (talk) 18:33, 19 April 2014 (UTC)


Merger proposal

I propose merging Criticism of monotheism with monotheism to create a single article with a NPOV instead of 2 different articles on the same topic. The article Criticism of monotheism is very small and can easily merge into the article monotheism, I propose the following strat:

  • Section 1 - Contradictions - this can go in the definition section. since the contradiction is talking about a contradicition in definition.
  • Section 2 - Forcing one belief - this can go either in monotheism or in Religious violence it could fit in either place there.
  • Section 3 - Success of monotheism - the title is somewhat confusing but the content in the section is just about the effect it has on peoples behavior so we can easily place it in monotheism under a section like "Effect on behavior"
  • Section 4 - See also - the only "see also" is Paganism, which is a bit odd, I think if we just directed them to "religion" they can pick any other religion to go to from there. we can send them upstream instead of a random lateral movement that is out of the current topic.
  • Section 5 - References - can just be merged with these references

This is a very small merger, by accomplishing this we can create a single strong NPOV article and avoid giving undue weight to any topics. any assistance with the move, suggestions, or feedback are both welcome and appreciated. Bryce Carmony (talk) 01:36, 14 March 2015 (UTC)

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Islam does not worship the same God as Christians (and Jews on a side note).

Here is a link that proves my point.

www.thereligionofpeace.com/pages/articles/jesus-muhammad.aspx Seth Red Star (talk) 13:30, 23 June 2017 (UTC) Seth Red Star

That isn't proof, religion is belief based on mythology, nothing is provable in it. The article is just an opinion, it might carry some weight with some people and no weight with other people, I can't see how it helps in any way Unibond (talk) 14:41, 23 June 2017 (UTC)
You seem to be talking about a complex theological issue that has no relevance in this article. This article is about monotheism. It is not about whether or not Christians and Muslims worship the same God. Besides, as Unibond has pointed out above, the whole dispute is really more a matter of opinion than objective fact. Wikipedia is supposed to deal with verifiable facts; we do not deal with people's opinions. --Katolophyromai (talk) 17:54, 23 June 2017 (UTC)

The lede lists traditions that are monotheist by the "broader" definition; it should list those that classify under the "narrower" one too

At the moment, we start by defining monotheism both narrowly and broadly, which is fine. Then we have a list of the traditions that classify under the broader definition, which is also fine:

"(t)he broader definition of monotheism characterizes the traditions of Bábism, the Bahá'í Faith, Cao Dai (Caodaiism), Cheondoism (Cheondogyo), Christianity, Deism, Eckankar, Islam, Judaism, Mandaeism, Rastafari, Ravidassia religion, Seicho no Ie, Shaivism, Shaktism, Sikhism, Tengrism (Tangrism), Tenrikyo (Tenriism), Vaishnavism, Yazidism, and Zoroastrianism"

What is missing is a lis of the traditions that count as "monotheist" under the narrower definition. Mhairis (talk) 22:35, 3 July 2017 (UTC)

Fixed Jewish/Muslim bias

On the introduction to the section titled "Abrahamic religions", I added in the Christian point of view so as to disperse some Jewish or Muslim bias that had clearly been present before my edit. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mooters 1563 (talkcontribs) 03:39, 20 July 2017 (UTC)

I restored the previous version, which was sourced. Please show consensus for your opinion that the present version constitutes a bias. I for one do not think there is any bias evident in the text, in addition to it being sourced. Debresser (talk) 11:51, 20 July 2017 (UTC)

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