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Book: Religions of a Single God

Chapter: Chapter 2: History of Judaism

DOI: 10.1558/equinox.36411

Blurb:

That no religion has an essence is a feature of contemporary theory of religion. To say
that we cannot speak of Judaism in the past until monotheism has been developed is not
to say that monotheism is the essence of Judaism. But it is suggest that monotheism is the
most innovative theological development before the common era, and that until its development,
the religion of Israel is one among many competing national religions devoted
to a national god. It is monotheism that sets them apart from the religions around them,
and that allows us to suggest a shift from “Israelite Religion” to Judaism. The development
of monotheism occurs as a response to the Babylonian exile, and so we begin there.
The rest of the history of Judaism is one of interaction and interchange with non-Jews,
minorities always living among Babylonians, Greeks, Romans, Syrians, Egyptians, Byzantine Christians, Muslims, and then European Christians. This is a history of diaspora and eventually nationhood.

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