Polytheism/Henotheism of the Bible
Polytheism/Henotheism of the Bible In some critical readings of the Hebrew Bible, the text is understood as preserving traces of an older polytheistic or “divine council” worldview, in which multiple divine or semi-divine beings are present under a high god. On this view, later translators and interpretive traditions often smooth over that background by rendering key terms in different ways depending on context—such as “judges” or “rulers” in legal settings (Exodus 22:8), “angels” or “heavenly beings” in celestial court imagery (Psalm 8:5), and “mighty ones” when emphasizing status or power rather than divinity (Psalm 29:1). Critics of traditional translation approaches argue that these choices can reduce or obscure the more explicitly plural or divine-council dimensions of the original language, effectively reshaping how modern ...