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Does God Exist? A Definitive Biblical Case
By John W. Loftus
To believe in a god who created the universe doesn’t automatically
lead believers to their own specific religious sect. The truth is there are
an overwhelming number of non-Christian religionists who agree that a
different creator god exists. So it’s quite apparent that philosophical and
scientific god-arguments are beside the point. None of those arguments,
even if shown to be true, point to a specific religion, or religious sect, or
gain anything at all in the debates between theistic religious faiths.
Philosophical god-arguments are unnecessary, used to reinforce a
faith that doesn’t actually need them, which are rejected by some key
figures in the history of the Christian faith. This includes philosopher
Immanuel Kant, who in the 18th century had to admit, “I have found it
necessary to deny knowledge in order to make room for faith” [Critique
of Pure Reason, p. bxxx], and Karl Barth, the greatest theologian of the
last century, who rejected these god-arguments, with a big fat Nein!
Some key evangelicals also reject the philosophical arguments:
--Alvin Plantinga: “I don’t know of an argument for Christian
belief that seems very likely to convince one who doesn’t already accept
its conclusion.” [Warranted Christian Belief, p. 201.]
--Richard Swinburne: “I cannot see any force in an argument to the
existence of God from the existence of morality.” [The Existence of
God, 2nd, ed., p. 215.]
--John Feinberg: “I am not convinced that any of the traditional
arguments succeed.” [Can You Believe it’s True?: Christian
Apologetics in a Modern, Postmodern Era, p. 321]. I studied
analytical philosophy under his brother Paul at Trinity Evangelical
Divinity School.
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The philosophical and pseudo-scientific cases used in defense of
one’s religion are very bad. Dr. Massimo Pigliucci is a Professor of
Philosophy at City College (NY) who holds two PhD’s, one in biology
and another in philosophy. He Tweeted: “I’m sorry but I can’t any
longer take seriously any essay or paper that itself takes talk of god
seriously. It’s simply a non starter.” [March 28, 2023]
In response, “The Real Atheology Podcast” Tweeted, “given the
serious work done by many Theistic philosophers, I have to disagree
with your comments here.” Pigliucci then responded, “I don’t consider
any theologian to be ‘serious.’ They may be, and often are, analytically
rigorous. But so is the concept of p-zombies. And yet I think it’s a waste
of time.” Pigliucci again Tweeted, “Consider, for instance, the Medieval
Scholastics. They were rigorous and did a lot of work. But it was, as
David Hume famously put it, only a bunch of sophistry and illusions.
Why? Because it was based on indefensible assumptions and lack of
empirical evidence.” [March 30, 2023].
I agree, and I have defended such a viewpoint in my 2016
book Unapologetic. You can see an online excerpt of it, titled, “Why I
Changed My Mind On the Value of the Philosophy of
Religion?” https://www.academia.edu/65144743/Why_I_Changed_My_
Mind_On_the_Value_of_the_Philosophy_of_Religion
What is almost always overlooked in debating the existence of the
theistic god is that such a divine being has had a complex evolution over
the centuries from Elohim, to Yahweh, to Jesus, then to the god of the
philosophers, without asking if the original gods had any merit. I will
critically scrutinize each of these gods in what follows. If believers
really understood the Bible they wouldn’t believe in any of these gods.
Atheist philosophers of religion try to disprove the existence of the
Christian god by arguing against the philosophical proofs put forth. This
is okay as it goes, but it overlooks the fact that Christians will just come
up with different conceptions of “God”, despite the fact that these new
conceptions are foreign to the gods we find in the Bible.
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There is a better approach. It’s the one that changed my mind, from
a former Christian apologist to an atheist. It involves taking the Bible
seriously. This is better than fruitlessly debating the five ways of
Aquinas.
What this means is that if we want to understand the Bible we
shouldn’t try to dismiss it, depending on what we think it should say.
Rather, we should honestly try to understand what it says.
Unfortunately, when it comes to the Bible Christians take it
literally until such time as the literal interpretation becomes indefensible.
Then they find some other meaning, no matter how strange. In
other words it says what it says until refuted by reason, morality, and/or
science, then it says something other than what it says. Keep this in mind
as you read. Come back to read it again if needed.
I’ll explain what I mean without recourse to skepticism, or antisupernaturalism.
Dr. Jaco Gericke wrote: “If you read the Scriptures and are not
shocked out of all your religious beliefs you have not understood
them.” Gericke has PhD’s in the Old Testament and the Philosophy of
Religion. His chapter “Can God Exist if Yahweh Doesn’t?” in my
book, The Christian Delusion (2010), has been influential in my
thinking.
1) THE GOD ELOHIM DOESN’T EXIST!
To see this I will focus on the first chapter in Genesis. It can be
difficult to understand. It requires understanding the immediate context,
the larger context, and the wider contexts of the Bible in the surrounding
cultures of their day.
How to Better Understand Biblical Texts Like Genesis 1:
--Interpret it using other passages.
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--Use the results of the consensus of scientists working in their
respective fields on anything relevant to the texts in the Bible. There
isn’t any higher authority. No non-scientist can dispute the consensus
until that consensus changes. Only further science can change the
consensus, not any pre-scientific biblical verses.
--Use archaeological evidence.
--Use the earliest manuscripts.
--Understand Akkadian literature like the “Enuma Elish”, which is
called “The Babylonian Genesis”
--Consider the “Enuma Elish” (c. 1600 BCE) which predates
Genesis 1. Both are products of the same Mesopotamian conceptual
world. There are important similarities: Darkness precedes creation.
Same division of the waters above and below. Light exists before the
creation of the sun, moon, and stars. The sequence of the days of
creation are the same. Both gods rest afterward. Plus most importantly, it
has a chaos god. More on this later.
When we take the Bible seriously we discover a significant but
unsuccessful cover-up about the gods we find in the Bible, who evolved
over the centuries from polytheism to henotheism to monotheism.
Let’s look at Genesis 1. I’ll point out 7 things about the first
two verses, usually translated like this:
“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now
the earth was without form and void, and darkness covered the
surface of the abyss, and the Spirit of God was moving over the
waters.”
1st) This is not describing the absolute beginning of time!
The word “the” in verse one, “In the beginning” is not there.
Better Translations:
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-- “When God began to create the heavens and earth.” (NRSV)
--“In the beginning, when God created the heavens and the earth.”
(New American Bible)
2nd) Genesis 1 is not describing a creation out of nothing!
Instead, it’s describing the making of something from pre-existing
matter. This is stated well by a translators note in the New English
Translation (NET):
“Genesis itself does not account for the original creation of
matter. The “heavenly/sky” did not exist prior to the second day of
creation, and the “earth/dry land” did not exist as we know it, prior
to the third day.”
Genesis 1 begins ominously. What exists is a formless empty earth,
hidden beneath a darkened watery chaos.
3rd) Genesis 1 is not describing the origin of heaven above,
where God lives, or where the saints go when they die!
Rather, it’s describing the origin of the “skies” above us, not much
higher than the highest of mountains. God lives in a palace with the
heavenly hosts above the skies.
4th) Nor is it describing the origin of the planet earth, since it
hadn’t been discovered yet!
It’s describing the origin of “dry land”.
5th) Nor does the “Spirit of God” move over the waters!
The word used here can be translated “spirit” or “breath” or
“wind” because the ancients believed wind came from the breath of their
gods. It’s best translated as “the wind of God” not the “Spirit of God.”
We no longer attribute the wind, or hurricanes, to God’s “Spirit” or his
breath.
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Biblical scholar Dr. Kipp Davis offered this comment:
“This is most likely akin to the wind-weapon fashioned by
Marduk in his defeat of the chaos monster, Tiamat. The way that the
“wind of god” is pictured brooding (“hovering”) over the watery
chaos is a combative posture of dominance over a vanquished
enemy.”
6th) Who was making the world in Genesis 1?
It was Elohim, a plural word for “gods”. Dr. Randall Heskett, an
Old Testament and Hebrew scholar tells me, “Elohim, even after
monotheism, still includes the heavenly hosts, who are part of the divine
council.” This includes “the sons of god” (Job 38:7). Elohim even says,
“Let us make man in our image” (Genesis 1:26), which includes these
celestial beings. More on Elohim directly below.
7th) The word “abyss” is misleading, since what is being
described in Genesis 1:2 is not just vastly deep and darkened waters.
It’s describing a primordial “chaos” which is being manipulated
and maintained by mischievous chaos gods! More on chaos gods below.
So here is a better translation of Genesis 1:1-2:
“Elohim made the skies and dry land, beginning with land that
was without form and void, with darkness covering the surface of
the chaos, and the wind of Elohim hovering over the waters.”
[The original grammar is a bit difficult to translate. If nothing else,
consider this a slightly interpretive translation using corrected wording.]
I could use the word “God” instead of Elohim since the verb
indicates a singular male God. Literally it reads, “God, he said, ‘Let
there be light.’” It’s just that it’s more complicated than that. Dr. Heskett
suggested “In the beginning, when the henotheistic god—who became a
monotheistic god but kept his henotheistic name—created the heavens
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and earth.” He adds, “elohim is the resonance of henotheism, before the
move to monotheism.”
Who is Elohim?
The Hebrew word Elohim is derived from the name of the
Caananite god El, a shortened version of which is El Elyon, or “God
Most High”. El was the head of the Canaanite pantheon of gods.
We see him enter the drama in Genesis 14:18-20:
“Then Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine.
He was priest of El Elyon, and he blessed Abram, saying: ‘Blessed
be Abram by El Elyon, Creator of heaven and earth. And praise be
to El Elyon, who delivered your enemies into your hand.’”
El had a wife named Asherah, the Queen of Heaven. El had many
“sons of god” with her, deities in their own right.
In Genesis 6 these embodied deities married women, had
genitalia, and produced giants the old fashioned way. Their offspring
were called Nephilim to be raised by their mothers!
That the Hebrews worshiped El is sure, we can see it in
geographic places and names, such as
Beth-el = “House of El”
Peni-el = “Face of El
Micha-el = “Who is like El?”
Dani-el = “Judged by El”
Isra-el = “Struggled with El”
Ishma-el “Heard by El”
…along with a whole host of others!
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We shouldn’t be surprised that a Canaanite god made the earth and
the skies above. Biblical scholar Mark S. Smith says:
“Archaeological data in the Iron I age suggests that the
Israelite culture largely overlapped with and derived from Canaanite
culture... In short, Israelite culture was largely Canaanite in
nature.” [Mark S. Smith, The Early History of God: Yahweh and
Other Deities of Ancient Israel (2002). pp. 6–7].
What About Chaos Gods?
Most ancient cultures believed there was someone or something
causing chaos before the creative gods came along to put a stop to their
mischief. Chaos was usually personified as a god, the first god. They
were typically associated with a wild, unpredictable, scary sea.
Chaos Gods Were Plentiful:
Apophis – The Egyptian Chaos God
Eris – The Greek Chaos Goddess
Chaos – The Roman God of Chaos
Tiamat – The Mesopotamian Chaos Goddess
--Tiamat was a chaos goddess of the saltwater ocean depicted as a
monster, a dragon. In the “Enuma Elish” the chief god Marduk killed
Tiamat and used her carcass to make the skies and dry land.
--The Hebrew word for “chaos” in Genesis 1:2 is the Akkadian
equivalent for Tiamat. Dr. Heskett: “They are one and the same.”
So Elohim was fighting chaos gods!
Chaos gods like Rahab:
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“By his power he churned up the sea; by his wisdom he cut Rahab
to pieces. (Job 26)
“You crushed Rahab, with your strong arm you founded the world
and all that is in it.” (Psalms 89)
Biblical scholar Dr. James Barr tells us, “This point of view, this
way of seeing the matter, was almost certainly present to the minds of
some biblical writers.” [in Beyond Fundamentalism, pp. 132-33)].
Which authors? The authors/editors of Genesis 1, Job, Psalms, and
Isaiah:
Isaiah 51:9–16:
“Awake, awake, arm of Yahweh, as in generations of old. Was it
not you who cut Rahab to pieces, who pierced that monster through?”
Yahweh Responds:
“I am Yahweh your Elohim, who set the heavens in place, who laid
the foundations of the earth, who stirs up the sea so that its waves roar,
and who say to Zion, ‘You are my people.’”
If you don’t have a concept of an eternal god this is the alternative.
In an ancient polytheistic world gods are born from and return to chaos,
just as people were born and died without them knowing their own
origins.
In a polytheistic world the gods fight each other, just like we do.
That’s because human beings invent gods that resemble themselves,
given what we know about the world. As our world changes so also our
gods change with the times.
I’m reminded of the Greek philosopher Xenophanes, who said:
“If cattle and horses, or lions, had hands, or were able to draw
with their feet and produce the works which men do, horses would
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draw the forms of gods like horses, and cattle like cattle, and they
would make the gods’ bodies the same shape as their own.”
Look At the 6 Days of “Making” rather than “Creating”:
Question: Who Was Elohim Commanding?
Day 1: Elohim said, “Let there be…
Day 2: Elohim said, “Let there be…
Day 3: Elohim said, “Let the waters…
Day 4: Elohim said, “Let there be…
Day 5: Elohim said, “Let the waters…
Day 6: Elohim said, “Let the earth…
Answer: Chaos gods!
With each day Elohim was freeing the skies and the land from the
power of their grip. He is described as doing this just as Yahweh sent ten
plagues against the gods of Egypt he was fighting, even though those
gods were not mentioned by name either.
What we find is Elohim lighting the darkness from above, making
dry land to surface, and filling it with life.
Day 1: “Let there be light”
Elohim took a dark, formless, empty earth that was engulfed in
water, and said, “Let there be light”. This wasn’t direct sunlight, which
was to be created on Day 4. Rather, in the pre-scientific mindset it’s a
dim indirect light that shines during the day separate from the sun,
something seen in a theatre before the show begins. It’s seen before the
sun breaches the horizon, and when clouds cover the sun.
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Day 2: “Let there be a dome in the middle of the water in order
to separate the water.”
Elohim took some of the waters, lifted them up into the sky, and
held them up in the sky with a “gigantic metal dome” (per translator note
in “New American Bible”). After all, the myth-makers had already
entered the Iron Age. Then this metal dome was supported by huge
pillars (Job 9). What supported the pillars themselves is relegated to
myth and mystery, the bedrock of faith. Or, is it really turtles all the way
down after all?
Later we find Elohim opened the floodgates of the dome in the sky
to flood the earth (Genesis 7:11), which never happened since there is no
dome in the sky!
Day 3: “Let the dry land appear and vegetation to grow.”
Dry land surfaced from beneath the waters. This was reaffirmed in
the New Testament: “By the word of God the earth was made from
water...” 2 Peter 3:5
But the planet earth was never covered with water from which the
land could appear, not at creation, nor in Noah’s story, per science.
Day 4: “Let there be lights in the sky to separate the day from
the night.”
Elohim fixed the sun, moon, stars, and galaxies by the billions in
the same dome that held back the waters from the land. Picture them like
recessed lighting in a ceiling, something absurd given modern
astronomy. Consider these three points:
1) We learn Elohim’s throne is not far above the dome in the sky,
because he worried men might actually build a Tower of Babel up to
him (Genesis 11)!
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2) Jesus “ascended” up to the sky, from which “every eye” will see
him return–-because they believed heaven was literally up there, and that
the earth was flat!
The earth is depicted as immovable (Joel 2:10; Isaiah 13:13;
Revelation 6:12–13), and flat (Ps. 75:3; 104:5; Is. 11:12; Job 28:24). It
uses the phrase: “The ends of the earth” (Deut. 13:7; Job 28:24; Ps.
48:10).
We’re told Jesus was taken by Satan to the pinnacle of the temple
in Jerusalem and tempted, where he could see all the kingdoms of the
world! How is that possible on this globe we live on? What about
kingdoms in China, India, Brazil and Europe?
Edward Babinski did a massive amount of research on this and
concludes: “Taking the Bible at its word means thinking in terms of a
flat earth.” [See his chapter on “Biblical Cosmology” in my book, The
Christian Delusion (2010)].
In Elohim’s world the stars move: “The sun rises and the sun sets,
and hurries back to where it rises.” Eccl. 1:5.
…and they stop: “The sun stopped in the middle of the sky for
about a full day. There has never been a day like it before or since.”
Joshua 10.
…and they point down: The Star of Bethlehem points down to the
specific place the baby Jesus was found so the Magi could find him.
Day 5: Elohim made all aquatic and flying animals according
to their “kind” without any understanding of how species originated
via evolution. Elohim showed no awareness of dinosaurs, nor the fact
that the history of evolution has shown that 99.9% of all species have
gone extinct, since evolution produces a lot of dead ends on its way to
producing species that survive.
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Imagine that! On every day in Genesis 1 the supposed creator god
Elohim knows nothing about the universe!
--Day 6: Elohim said, “Let us make man in our image, in our
likeness.”
As mentioned earlier this included the heavenly hosts as cocreators of human beings. Why did Elohim the creator of all things, so
we’re to believe, need them?
Furthermore, what does “our image” and “our likeness” mean?
Taking the Bible seriously means Elohim had a body like ours! We can
see this in the original language of Hebrew, but more easily in Genesis
5:1-3, with an analogy. “When Elohim created mankind, he made them
in the likeness of Elohim” we’re told. Then it switches to Adam, saying,
“When Adam had lived 130 years, he had a son in his own likeness, in
his own image; and he named him Seth.”
As Adam produced a son in his physical likeness and image, so
also Elohim created humans in his physical likeness and image. Maybe
the idea of God being likened to “the man in the sky” isn’t that far off
the mark after all!
--Day 7: Elohim was tired so he rested.
Only embodied beings get tired, surely not an omnipotent spiritual
being. This follows what we know of the Babylonian god Marduk, in
the “Enuma Elish”, in that he made humans to work so that he could
rest.
Genesis 32:22-32 tells us Jacob wrestled with Elohim and
prevailed. He struggled with a man one night. The man asked to be
released, but Jacob refused until he blessed him. So Jacob was named
“Israel” because, we read, he “struggled with Elohim and had
overcome.” Jacob called the place Peniel, “because I saw Elohim face to
face, and yet my life was spared.” [On this see the 2022 book, God: An
Anatomy, by Francesca Stavrakopoulou.]
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So Elohim doesn’t exist!
--It’s a Canaanite embodied deity.
--Invented by superstitious people.
--There is no excuse for a real creator to utterly fail a basic science
class, regardless of whether the days of creation were sequential or not!
--There is no excuse for a real creator to mislead his creatures
about something so important, which has led generations of
scientifically literate people away from the Christian religious faith, and
into damnation.
2) THE GOD YAHWEH DOESN’T EXIST!
Dr. Jaco Gericke: “The entity most readers refer to when they
speak of God is an upgraded version of a middle-Eastern tribal deity
called Yahweh.”
Just like Elohim and his sons in Genesis 6 bodies, so also did
Yahweh. How else can this passage be understood?
“Adam and Eve heard the sound of Yahweh as he was
walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and they hid from
Yahweh among the trees of the garden. But Yahweh called to the
man, ‘Where are you?’ He answered, ‘I heard you in the garden, and
I was afraid because I was naked, so I hid.’” (Genesis 3:8-19)
As with Adam and Eve, so also Yahweh let Moses see his body:
Moses wanted to see Yahweh, so Yahweh said, “I will cause all
my goodness to pass in front of you…But you cannot see my face, for
no one may see me and live.” Then Yahweh said, “There is a place near
me where you may stand on a rock. I will put you in a cleft in the rock
and cover you with my hand until I have passed by. Then I will remove
my hand and you will see my back; but my face must not be seen.’”
(Exodus 33).
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Again, how else can this passage be understood?
There’s something else. In the Old Testament, whenever you come
across “the Lord Our God”, or “the Lord God” or even “Lord”, Christian
translators have hidden the truth behind those words. It’s “Yahweh” or
“Yahweh your god.”
You can see this with these two examples:
“I am Yahweh your Elohim, who brought you out of slavery in
Egypt.” (Deuteronomy 5:6).
“Will you not possess what Chemosh your Elohim gives you? All
that Yahweh our Elohim has given us, we will possess.” (Judges 11:24).
The Dead Sea Scrolls contain the oldest text of the book of
Deuteronomy. It predates the manuscripts used for the Biblical texts by a
thousand years, and it says Yahweh was a son of El Elyon, who gave
him the Hebrew people to rule over.
Deuteronomy 32:8-9, 43:
“When Elyon divided the nations; When he separated the sons
of Adam, he established the borders of the nations according to the
sons of Elohim. Yahweh’s portion was his people, Jacob his allotted
inheritance…Praise, O heavens, his people, Kneel before him, all
you Elohim.” (Dead Sea Scrolls, 4QDeut)
Now we can see this attempted cover-up:
--The Masoretic Hebrew text inserted “sons of Israel”.
--The Greek Septuagint inserted “angels of god”.
--The Dead Sea Scrolls (c. 3rd century BCE) says “sons of God”.
New English Translation note on Deuteronomy 32: “Sons of God
is undoubtedly the original reading.”
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This, I submit, is the proverbial smoking gun, showing an
important deceptive redaction of the original text by the biblical mythmakers. [See Thom Stark’s discussion of this in chapter 4 of his 2011
book, The Human Faces of God, titled, “Yahweh’s Ascendancy”].
Now look at Psalm 82: “The downfall of unjust gods” (a title given
by the translators of New American Bible):
“Elohim presides in the divine council; he renders judgment in
the midst of the Elohim (i.e., the gods): ‘How long are you going to
judge unfairly? Defend weak people and orphans. Protect the rights
of the oppressed…I declare: Elohim though you be, you are all sons
of Elyon. Yet like any mortal you shall die; like any prince you shall
fall.’”
What we see here is no different than what we find in other
cultures connected through the trade route of the Fertile Crescent, whose
deities were henotheistic families of gods with a supreme one ruling
over them. Beyond them there were large pantheons of gods in other
lands and times. Why should it be different with El Elyon, Asherah, and
Yahweh? By the way, Yahweh had brothers. They were Chemosh
(Kemosh), Baal, and Milcom.
Canaanite Pantheon
Sumero-Akkadian Pantheon
Egyptian Pantheon
Greek Pantheon
Roman Pantheon
Mark Smith sees the union of El and Yahweh later in the early
Hebrew monarchy. El became identified as a name of Yahweh, while
Asherah ceased to be a distinct goddess. The attributes of El, Asherah,
and Baal (a storm-god) were assimilated into Yahweh. Yahweh
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eventually reigned over the Hebrews in Palestine, a territory given him
by El Elyon.
Readers might assume Yahweh was an omnipotent god. But as a
tribal god he is far from being all-powerful. We are told, “Yahweh was
with Judah; and he drove out the inhabitants of the mountain; but could
not drive out the inhabitants of the valley, because they had chariots of
iron.” (Judges 1:19).
Imagine that! An all powerful god cannot defeat men in iron
chariots! What could he do against tanks and fighter jets?
Furthermore, hear Dr. Jaco Gericke:
“In the Old Testament texts are to be believed, ultimate reality
is the god of Israel who forever uses Iron-Age artifacts. Time-period
artifacts like ram horn shofars, swords, scrolls and chariots, are
described as if they have been around forever and will be used
forever.”
Yahweh rides on chariots (Psalms 68:17; 104:3; Isaiah 66:15), and
brought Elijah up into heaven on one of them (II Kings 2). He also needs
an army to do his bidding, but why?
Dr. Jaco Gericke:
“There was a time before the Iron-Age when these artifacts
didn’t exist. People wrote on stone and clay, fought with clubs,
bows and spears and ran on foot. Some cultures never used these
artifacts and have never even heard of them. Modern people today
don’t write on scrolls, fight battles with swords, blow on ram’s
horns or ride in horse-drawn chariots.”
Yahweh is a Monster! Four Cases:
1) The Story of Job!
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Yahweh enlisted the barbaric thought police, a spy, a “satan” to
find out if anyone was being hypocritical, because Yahweh didn’t know.
The satan was a fully credentialed member of the divine court,
Yahweh’s little helper. Satan accused Job of hypocrisy, that Job merely
feigned allegiance to Yahweh in order to gain the benefits only Yahweh
could give him. So Yahweh allowed the satan to test Job with trials and
tribulations and the loss of family and slaves to find out the truth.
Yahweh did not know whether Job was guilty. If he already knew, then
Job’s sufferings were pointless.
In this story Yahweh lives in a separate palace in the sky and acts
like a petty narcissistic king who could treat his subjects terribly simply
because he could do so, just like any other despotic Mediterranean king
they knew. Job was a pawn who was tortured for the pleasure of
Yahweh and his sons. At the end Yahweh doesn’t reveal why Job
suffered, just that Job wasn’t capable of understanding why, so he was
faulted for demanding an answer from the Almighty.
Some apologists say evil cannot be an attribute of God, because
“evil is not a great-making quality.” But in Job’s tale, power alone is
indeed a great making quality. The one with the greatest power is in
charge and can do what he wants, even in doing evil by sending disasters
(Isaiah 45:7; Lamentations 3:28; Amos 3:6). The concept of
a Satanic being had not yet been invented by the myth-makers. [On this
see The Birth of Satan: Tracing the Devil’s Biblical Roots, by T.J.
Wray and Gregory Mobley, 2005].
Imagine that! An all knowing god who doesn’t know it all, and a
god who supposedly cares the most doesn’t care for the “collateral
damage.”
Yahweh is a Monster! 2) Genocide!
“In the cities of these peoples that Yahweh your god is giving
you for an inheritance, you shall save alive nothing that breathes,
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but you shall devote them to complete destruction as Yahweh your
god has commanded.” Deuteronomy 20:16-18.
“Thus says the Lord of hosts, now go and strike Amalek and
devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill
both man and woman, child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and
donkey.’” 1 Samuel 15:1-3. [On this see chapter 6 in Thom Stark’s
book, The Human Faces of God, 2011].
Yahweh is a Monster! 3) Slavery!
“Anyone who beats their male or female slave with a rod must
be punished if the slave dies as a direct result, but they are not to be
punished if the slave recovers after a day or two, since the slave is
their property.” (Exodus 21:20-21).
“Your male and female slaves are to come from the nations
around you; from them you may buy slaves. You may also buy
some of the temporary residents living among, and they will become
your property. You can bequeath them to your children as inherited
property and can make them slaves for life.” (Leviticus 25:44–46).
Is this a perfectly good God?
If you were enslaved,
a) Could Yahweh not have said anything different?
b) Does this express your god’s complete and utter love toward
you as an individual? [On this see Hector Avolas’s book, Slavery,
Abolitionism, and the Ethics of Biblical Scholarship, 2013.]
Yahweh is a Monster! 4) Child Sacrifice!
“You shall not delay to offer from the fullness of your harvest
and from the outflow of your presses. The first-born of your sons
you shall give to me. You shall do likewise with your oxen and with
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your sheep: seven days it shall be with its dam; on the eighth day
you shall give it to me.” (Exodus 22:29-30).
Let’s spend some time on this absolutely horrific command.
Hebrew people understood Yahweh’s command and acted accordingly.
[On this See Jon D. Levenson, The Death and Resurrection of the
Beloved Son, 1993].
Abraham was not morally repulsed by the command to sacrifice
his son Isaac, and there is no command against such a practice by
Yahweh afterward (Genesis 22). Jepthah sacrificed his daughter (Judges
11). King Solomon set up sites for his foreign wives to sacrifice children
to the goddess Asherah, and Chemosh (I Kings 11:1-7). King Ahab
sacrificed his two sons when rebuilding Jericho. “He laid its foundations
at the cost of his firstborn son Abiram, and he set up its gates at the cost
of his youngest son Segub, in accordance with the word of the Lord
spoken by Joshua son of Nun.” (I Kings 16:33-34); There were also
Kings Ahaz (II Kings 16:2-3); Hoshea (II Kings 17:7); and Manasseh (II
Kings 21; II Chronicles 33:6) who all set up places for child sacrifices.
In Micah 6:6-8 child sacrifices were the highest form of sacrifice:
“With what shall I come to Yahweh, And bow myself before
Elohim on high? Shall I come to Him with burnt offerings, with
yearling calves? Does Yahweh take delight in thousands of rams,
in ten thousand rivers of oil? Shall I present my firstborn for my
rebellious acts; the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul.”
“He has told you, O man, what is good; And what does
Yahweh require of you. But to do justice, to love kindness; And to
walk humbly with your Elohim?”
There is clearly an ascending order of magnitude for sacrifices that
the prophet thought pleased Yahweh, first by sacrificing 1) yearling
calves, to 2) thousands of rams, to 3) his firstborn child, then concluding
it would be better if he hadn’t sinned at all. The logic is that child
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sacrifice was the highest sacrifice to Yahweh, next to living a life
without sin, which wouldn’t require any sacrifice.
Archeologically speaking, there is evidence that supports the
biblical account that children were sacrificed at the founding of cities,
gates, and other structures.
In the sanctuary in Gezer were found two burnt skeletons of
six-year-old children and the skulls of two adolescents that had been
sawed in two. At Megiddo a girl of fifteen had been killed and
buried in the foundations of a large structure. [Nigel
Davies, Human Sacrifice, In History and Today, 1988, p. 61.]
About this Dr. Kipp Davis says, “the physical evidence for child
sacrifice in the Levant is scant, but this is also unsurprising. Children
would have been sacrificed within days or weeks after birth, and the
mostly cartilaginous nature of a newborn infant’s skeleton will
decompose to nothing.”
What we have are the written records of the eighth and seventh
centuries B.C.E that “demonstrate beyond all doubt that the Israelites of
the period made burnt offerings of their sons in the Tophet fires lighted
in the Valley of Gehinnon outside Jerusalem (II Kings 23:10). Usually
the infants were ‘passed over’ or ‘passed through’ the fire, in honour of
Molech.” [Davies, Human Sacrifice, pp. 63-64.]
Topheth, means “place of fire” which was located up high in a site
of worship and sacrifice. Whatever the ritual was like, when the fires
were hot enough, the infant was placed into the flames. The bonechilling screams of the babies must have been extremely hard to listen
to!
Francesca Stavrakopoulou concludes her book, King Manasseh
and Child Sacrifice (2004), by saying:
“Despite the biblical exhortation that child sacrifice is alien to
Yahweh worship, practiced by the foreign and idolatrous, and
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consistently outlawed by Yahweh, closer inspection of this biblical
portrayal instead locates child sacrifice within the mainstream of its
presentation of Yahweh. . . . Child sacrifice appears to be a native
and normative element of Judahite religious practice.” (p. 318).
Imagine that! A perfectly good god who commands the most
horrific deeds to be done!
Eventually the myth-makers got sick of child sacrifice, and
believed Yahweh was angry because of it. So the redactors did what they
could do to stop it.
King Josiah’s Strategy: Rewrite History Then Eradicate It!
The High Priest Hilkiah was an early facilitator of fake news. He
lied by saying he discovered a previously unknown book of law when
repairs were being made to the Temple, in about 622 BCE. Allegedly it
condemned child sacrifices. Strangely, no one thought to preserve this
book. Some say it may be an early edition of Deuteronomy. But one
thing sure, is that the further back in time we go, the less likely Hilkiah
would find a book that condemned child sacrifices.
King Josiah was surely in on the con, especially since he promoted
a most outrageous lie about himself and his reforms. The lie was that
both his name and his attempts to eradicate child sacrifice were
predicted 300 years in advance, something unheard of when it came to
any other prophecy of this type. We know it’s a lie because the original
prophet said to have predicted it, was coincidentally made to die
immediately afterward. This explains why no one had ever heard of him
up until that time. Then the remains of this dead prophet were atypically
buried alongside an old prophet, whose grave was pointed out in
Josiah’s day as “evidence” of the prophecy, yet never dug up. More
significantly, the false 300 year-old prediction was made before child
sacrifice was considered by the myth-makers to be sick. We know King
Josiah was in on it, because no one else could force the other priests and
scribes to keep silent about it. [Compare I Kings 13:1-32 with II Kings
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23:1-26, and the introduction to my book, The Case Against Miracles
(2019).]
So we read of King Josiah, that he “defiled Topheth, which is in
the valley of the sons of Hinnom, that no one might burn his son or his
daughter as an offering to Molech.” (II Kings 23:10). We also read that
King Josiah,
Defiled the high places which Solomon the king of Israel had
built for Ashtoreth the abomination of the Sidonians, and for
Chemosh the abomination of Moab, and for Milcom the
abomination of the Ammonites. And he broke in pieces the pillars,
and cut down the Asherim, and filled their places with the bones of
men…. And he slew all the priests of the high places who were
there, upon the altars, and burned the bones of men upon them. (II
Kings 22-23).
Jeremiah’s Strategy: Just Deny Yahweh Ever Commanded It!
Josiah’s reforms didn’t last past his reign. So Jeremiah’s strategy
was to simply deny Yahweh ever sanctioned child sacrifices: “The sons
of Judah have built the high places of Topheth, which is in the valley of
the son of Hinnom, to burn their sons and daughters in the fire; which I
did not command, and it did not come into my mind” (Jer.
7:31). Jeremiah even claimed the scribes had lied (Jer. 8:8). He predicted
Yahweh’s judgment:
“Listen! I am going to bring a disaster on this place that will
make the ears of everyone who hears of it tingle. For they have
forsaken me and made this a place of foreign gods; they have burned
incense in it to gods that neither they nor their ancestors nor the
kings of Judah ever knew, and they have filled this place with the
blood of the innocent. They have built the high places of Baal to
burn their children in the fire as offerings to Baal—something I did
not command or mention, nor did it enter my mind. So beware, the
days are coming, declares the Lord, when people will no longer call
this place Topheth or the Valley of Ben Hinnom, but the Valley of
Slaughter” (Jer. 19:3-6).
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Ezekiel’s Strategy: Have Yahweh Say He Was Teaching His
People How Bad They Were For Obeying His Commands!
Roughly 600 years after Yahweh commanded child sacrifice the
prophet Ezekiel invented an excuse for why Yahweh commanded it. He
made Yahweh say, “I gave them statutes that were not good in making
them offer by fire all their first-born, that I might horrify them; I did it
that they might know that I am Yahweh.” (Ezekiel 20:25–27). Whatever
this bizarre claim means, Yahweh was not concerned about the numbers
of babies who were killed for centuries!
A Note On Inerrancy. No matter how we look at it there are lies
in the Bible. Surely King Josiah and his High Priest Hilkiah lied about
finding a book, and its contents, along with a 300 year old faked
prophecy. In addition, either the text of Exodus 22:29-30 is a
forgery, where Yahweh commands child sacrifice, or Jeremiah was
lying, or Ezekiel was lying. This means the doctrine of inerrancy is
hopelessly indefensible.
Thomas Paine expresses my point:
To believe the Bible to be true, we must unbelieve all our
belief in the moral justice of God; And to read the Bible without
horror, we must undo everything that is tender, sympathizing, and
benevolent in the heart of man. Speaking for myself, if I had no
other evidence that the Bible is fabulous than the sacrifice I must
make to believe it to be true, that alone would be sufficient to
determine my choice. [The Age of Reason (Radford, VA: Wilder
Publications, 2007), p. 71].
In many cases child sacrifice was primarily condemned because it
was offered to other deities (II Kings 17:17 23:10; II Chronicles 28:3;
33:4-10; Psalm 106:38; Isaiah 57:5,6; Ezekiel 16:20,21; 20:26,31;
23:37,39; cf. Acts 7:43), not because child sacrifice was wrong in and of
itself.
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But Yahweh can be blamed for legitimizing child sacrifices in the
first place. Once child sacrifice was accepted as a divine command, the
only question left was which god people should sacrifice their firstborn
children to. If Yahweh existed as a perfectly good, all-knowing deity, he
should’ve condemned it from the very beginning, with no exceptions,
and enforced it by doling out stiff punishments to people who did it.
At the very least Yahweh should never have given any indications
that child sacrifice worked. But Yahweh’s Bible tells us King Mesha of
Moab sacrificed his first born son to the god Chemosh, which caused the
Israelites to retreat in defeat. Mesha’s sacrifice brought a great “wrath”
(ketzef) against the Israelite warriors in the story, indicating that
Chemosh acted on their behalf! (II Kings. 3:26–27).
Eventually child sacrifice to foreign gods was so prevalent it was
named as one of the major reasons Yahweh sent the Assyrians to destroy
the kingdom of Israel in the North in 722 BCE, and why he sent the
Babylonians to conquer and take captive the Judaeans in South in 587
BCE. (II Kings 17:14–18; II Kings 25).
When the Judaeans were defeated by Babylonia in 587 BCE, they
interpreted events in defiance of the facts. The prophets didn’t blame
Yahweh; they blamed their own sins. They had brought ruin on
themselves. And since their god Yahweh brought down upon them the
mightiest empire of the world from a distant foreign land, they
concluded Yahweh was the only God!
Consequently, this is how monotheism was born, and this is what
later editors wrote back into their own sacred texts, making it difficult to
see that the Hebrews began as a thoroughly polytheistic people who
accepted child sacrifice to their god.
Monotheism was finally accepted and taught by the mythmakers: “I am Yahweh, who made all things, who alone stretched out
the heavens, who by myself spread out the earth” (Isaiah 44:24).
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But Yahweh lied by saying no gods came before him, since he was
the son of El Elyon who fought chaos gods:
“You are my witnesses,” declares Yahweh. No god was formed
before me, and there will be none after me.” (Isaiah 43:10).
In this passage Yahweh is also saying he had a beginning and will
go out of existence, like other polytheistic gods.
Also it’s odd that Yahweh challenged the other gods, saying:
“Set forth your case, says Yahweh; bring your proofs, says the
King of Jacob. Do good, or do harm, that we may be afraid and
terrified. You, indeed, are nothing and your work is nothing at all;
whoever chooses you is an abomination.” (Isaiah 41:21-24).
Who talks to beings that don’t exist? Instead, we would speak to
the myth-makers themselves. We might say, “Set forth your case, bring
your proofs. Show that your gods do good, or do harm, that we may be
afraid and terrified. Your gods, indeed, are nothing and their work is
nothing at all; whoever chooses them is believing in an abomination.”
Although monotheism had arrived, Yahweh was still an embodied
god. He had a throne to sit on (Ezek. 1; Daniel 7; Matt. 25:31; Rev. 5:1),
and he rewards people by allowing them to see his face (Matt. 5:8;
18:11, Rev. 22:3-4). The first martyr Stephen saw Jesus “standing at the
right hand of God.” (Acts 7:56)
3) THE GOD JESUS DOESN’T EXIST!
If the embodied moral monster Yahweh and his sons don’t exist,
then Jesus, the embodied god depicted in the Gospels doesn’t exist, since
he’s believed to be the son of Yahweh, a part of the Trinity, and in
complete agreement with everything Yahweh said and did. That should
be the end of it.
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Nonetheless, Jesus affirmed the genocidal story of Noah (Matthew
24:37-41); and the genocidal story of Sodom and Gomorrah (Matthew
11:23-24: Luke 17:28-30).
What might seem to be a shocker is to learn Jesus affirmed honor
killings by stoning. The Pharisees had accused Jesus of being too lenient
in his observance of the law. So Jesus calls them hypocrites:
“You have a fine way of setting aside the commands of God in
order to observe your own traditions! For Moses said, ‘Honor your
father and mother,’ and, ‘Anyone who curses their father or mother
is to be put to death.’ But you say that if anyone declares that what
might have been used to help their father or mother is Corban (that
is, devoted to God) then you no longer let them do anything for their
father or mother.” (Mark 7:9-12)
Corban is an Aramaic word that refers to an oath to devote
something to God. The Pharisees allowed someone to pledge a gift to the
temple, like a trust fund, in order to avoid giving it for the care of one’s
aging parents.
Jesus’ first quote to “Honor your father and mother” is one of the
Ten Commandments. Jesus’ second scriptural quote “Anyone who
curses their father or mother is to be put to death” is found in Exodus
21:17, and again in Leviticus 20:9. Jesus says the Pharisaical Corban
loophole sets aside these two commands of God. Anyone who withholds
financial help to their parents because of a Corban is breaking the 4 th
Commandment. Furthermore, since the Pharisees didn’t put these adult
children to death for dishonoring their parents, they are breaking the law
of Moses.
In this Jesus is affirming the Old Testament law of honor killings
by stoning, for only if both of the laws Jesus cites are to be obeyed can
his analogy succeed. Deuteronomy 21:18-21 provides the context: “If
someone has a stubborn and rebellious son who does not obey his father
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and mother and will not listen to them…all the men of his town are to
stone him to death.”
That being said, there is more to consider. Justin Martyr was the
grandfather of the entire tradition of Christian apologetics, whom
contemporary apologists ignore. He wrote apologetic works, one of
which is The First Apology, written to Roman Emperor Antoninus Pius
(c. 155-157 CE). In it he argued against the persecution of Christians by
defending Christianity. He wrote:
When we say that the Word, who is the first-birth of God, was
produced without sexual union, and that He, Jesus Christ, our
Teacher, was crucified and died, and rose again, and ascended into
heaven, we propound nothing new from what you believe regarding
those whom you esteem sons of Zeus.
Then he goes on to tell some tales of the sons of Zeus, which
include Mercury, Æsculapius, Hercules, Leda, Dioscuri, Perseus,
Bellerophon, and Ariadne, along the emperors of Rome themselves
“whom you deem worthy of deification” and other tales, saying “it is
needless to tell to those who already know.” [From Chapter 21]
Dr. Richard Miller focuses on the points made by Justin, in his
important work, Resurrection and Reception in Early Christianity
(2017).] He comments as follows:
“Justin contends there is “nothing new” about the
Christian tales of Jesus. They are the same in kind as the GrecoRoman demi-gods: sired by human and divine parents, a tragic
death, immortalization / resurrection, ascension, etc., which are the
adorning themes of a superhero, not of real events in time and
space.”
“Justin essentially says: ‘Our new hero is just like your own,
except ours is awesome, whereas yours are the deceptions of demons.’”
“Justin offers no historical evidence.”
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“Justin’s ‘case’ is that Jesus had more ancient prophetic oracles, or
was a more perfect symbol of morality, and that’s it.”
Why doesn’t Justin offer any historical evidence? Because none
was needed, just as there was none needed for the sons of Zeus. Hero
deification was based solely on the perceived greatness of the deceased.
But Jesus was definitely not a perfect symbol of morality!
He acted just like other ancient deities as we’ve seen, since he was
one with Yahweh, his father (John 10: 30). So Jesus was Job’s
tormentor, commanded genocide, slavery, child sacrifice, PLUS
threatened an eternal punishment in hell.
In the book of Revelation Jesus is depicted as a horrible revengeful
deity. [On this see Bart Ehrman’s 2023 book, Armageddon: What The
Bible Really Says About the End Time.]
From Ehrman’s Preface:
“The book repeatedly indicates that God is angry and that
Christ seeks to avenge his own unjust death, not just on those who
were responsible for it; his vengeance falls on the “inhabitants of
earth.” His followers too want revenge and are told to go out and
get it. The largest section describes God and his “Lamb” inflicting
horrible suffering on the planet; war, starvation, horrid disease,
drought, earthquake, torture, and death. The catastrophes end with
the Battle of Armageddon, where Christ destroys all the armies of
earth and calls on the scavengers of the sky to gorge themselves on
their flesh. This, then, is the climax of the history of earth.”
“But it is not the end of all things. After that there will be a
final judgment. God’s faithful followers, his ‘slaves,’ will be saved;
everyone else who has ever lived will be brought back to life,
judged for their wickedness, and then thrown, while still alive, into a
lake of burning sulfur.”
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Lastly, if Justin is correct about prophecy then where is it to be
found?
There is none! I defy someone to come up with one.
No prophecy of a Trinitarian God
No prophecy of a Virgin Birth
No prophecy of an Incarnation
No prophecy of a suffering Messiah
No prophecy of a resurrection
No prophecy of a second coming
[On this see Robert Miller’s book, Helping Jesus Fulfill
Prophecy, (2015), which David Madison reviewed right here. See also
section two of my book The Case Against Miracles (2019).]
Just consider the Jews and Messianic prophesies:
They were supposedly beloved of Yahweh.
They believed in Yahweh.
They believed Yahweh does miracles.
They hoped for a messiah.
They knew their prophecies.
But overwhelmingly they did not believe!
4) FINALLY, THE GOD OF THE PHILOSOPHERS
DOESN’T EXIST!
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If theists think that an omni-everything god can legitimately be
based on the Bible, or its theology, they are fooling themselves. They are
inventing their own versions of god just like ancient people in the Bible
did. If anything, the problem of horrendous suffering renders that godconcept extremely improbable to the point of refutation. [On this see my
2021 anthology, God and Horrendous Suffering].