PART I
PRIMAL FOUNDATIONS: The Birth of the Sacred
The Lower to the Upper Paleolithic Age2.6 million to 45,000 BCE
Essay 1 - The Birth of the Sacred: Animism and the Living Cosmos
- Humanity’s first experiences of spirit through natural phenomena.
- The world as an animate field of agency and intention.
- From cave art to shamanic ritual - consciousness awakening to cosmos.
- Panpsychism before philosophy: everything participates in the sacred.
Essay 2 - From Tribe to Totem: Symbol, Art, and Early Cults
- The totem as both social bond and spiritual emblem.
- The emergence of sacrifice as communion, not appeasement.
- Proto-religion as the art of relationship with life-forces.
- Worship as aesthetic participation in nature’s vitality.
| Neolithic Europe |
ADDENDUM 1: Transition from Essay II → Essay III
With the close of the Pleistocene (a period of many ice ages from 2.6 million to 11,700 BCE) and the climatic stabilization of the Holocene (a period of warming climate after the last major glacial period of 26,5000 to 19,000 BCE, with glaciers retreating and sea levels rising; the Holocene period runs from 9,700 BCE to the present day). Through these climatic upheavals, the ancient Paleolithic intuitions of extinct Homo species did not disappear but they crystallized into new forms within the Homo sapien species. The transition to the Neolithic Age (ca. 10,000–4,500 BCE) marks one of the most decisive inflection points in religious history: the shift from highly mobile hunter-gatherer lifeworlds to increasingly permanent, agrarian, architecturally complex communities.
*Of note: The Earth is currently still in an "Ice Age" (the Quaternary Ice Age) because permanent ice sheets exist at both poles; the warmer periods within an ice age are called interglacials, and the colder periods are called glacials. The last major glacial period is the one that ended around 10,000 BCE.
With a significantly warming period, modern humanity transitioned to its evolving terrestrial environment bringing several profound cultural consequences:
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Sedentism intensified ritual space, transforming caves and temporary gathering sites into enduring shrines, megaliths, and household altars.
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Agriculture altered humanity’s sense of dependency, deepening anxieties around fertility, seasonality, and divine favor - concerns that became central to Neolithic ritual life.
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Social complexity demanded new mediating roles, evolving the diffuse shamanic figure into more formal ritual specialists and eventually priesthoods.
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(Gift) Reciprocity with the perceived cosmos was reframed as management of divine-human relations, eventually giving rise to offerings, libations, temple economies, and the first political theologies involving kings, priests, etc.
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Myth was no longer episodic but institutionalized, as agricultural cycles required recurring, calendrical reenactments of creation, death, and renewal matching sowing, birth, growth, harvest, and death cycles of crops.
**Thus, from the Neolithic onward shows not a break with ancient Paleolithic religion but an intensification and systematization of its underlying structures. The relational cosmos is retained; what changes is the scale of organization.
By the time the Near Eastern Neolithic gives way to the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age, the seeds of the great pantheons are already present: divinized forces of sky, storm, fertility, craft, kingship, and death emerge from millennia-old archetypes rooted in Paleolithic symbolic life.
Essay III therefore begins precisely at the moment when religious intuition becomes institutionalized architecture - when the gods of the first cities crystallize the human encounter with power, order, desire, life, and cosmic coherence.
NEAR EASTERN CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE 1
NEAR EASTERN CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE 2
| Period / Culture | Date Range (BCE) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) | 10,000–8,800 | Earliest agriculture; permanent settlements, but no pottery. |
| Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) | 8,800–7,500 | Expansion of farming, animal husbandry; larger villages. |
| Late Pre-Pottery / Early Pottery Neolithic | 7,500–6,500 | First pottery emerges; ritual architecture intensifies. |
| Ubaid Culture (Mesopotamia) | 6,500–3,800 | Large villages → proto-urban centers; irrigation begins. |
| Chalcolithic (Copper Age) | 6,000–3,500 | First widespread metal use; increasing social hierarchy. |
Bronze Age (ca. 3,300–1,200 BCE)
Early Bronze Age (EBA) — 3300–2100 BCE
| Sub-Period | Date Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| EBA I | 3300–3000 | First writing systems; urbanization accelerates. |
| EBA II | 3000–2700 | Early Dynastic Sumer; Egyptian Old Kingdom. |
| EBA III | 2700–2200 | City-state networks; monumental temples. |
| EBA IV | 2200–2100 | Period of instability preceding the MBA. |
Middle Bronze Age (MBA) — 2100–1550 BCE
| Sub-Period | Date Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| MBA I | 2100–2000 | Sumerian revival; Amorite migrations. |
| MBA IIA | 2000–1750 | Rise of Old Babylon; Hammurabi's era. |
| MBA IIB | 1750–1650 | Regional kingdoms consolidate. |
| MBA IIC | 1650–1550 | Hyksos in Egypt; shifting power centers. |
Late Bronze Age (LBA) — 1550–1200 BCE
| Sub-Period | Date Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| LBA I | 1550–1400 | Egyptian New Kingdom expands. |
| LBA IIA | 1400–1300 | Height of international diplomacy (Amarna period). |
| LBA IIB | 1300–1200 | Hittites, Mycenaeans; ends with Bronze Age Collapse. |
Wikipedia - The Late Bronze Age collapse was a period of societal collapse in the Mediterranean basin during the 12th century BC. It is thought to have affected much of the Eastern Mediterranean and Near East, in particular Egypt, Anatolia, the Aegean, eastern Libya, and the Balkans. The collapse was sudden, violent, and culturally disruptive for many Bronze Age civilizations, creating a sharp material decline for the region's previously existing powers.
The palace economy of Mycenaean Greece, the Aegean region, and Anatolia that characterized the Late Bronze Age disintegrated, transforming into the small isolated village cultures of the Greek Dark Ages, which lasted from c. 1100 to c. 750 BC, and were followed by the better-known Archaic Age. The Hittite Empire spanning Anatolia and the Levant collapsed, while states such as the Middle Assyrian Empire in Mesopotamia and the New Kingdom of Egypt survived in weakened forms. Other cultures, such as the Phoenicians, enjoyed increased autonomy and power with the waning military presence of Egypt and Assyria in West Asia.
Competing theories of the cause of the Late Bronze Age collapse have been proposed since the 19th century, with most involving the violent destruction of cities and towns. These include climate change, volcanic eruptions, droughts, disease, invasions by the Sea Peoples, economic disruptions due to increased ironworking, and changes in military technology and strategy that brought the decline of chariot warfare. Following the collapse, gradual changes in metallurgic technology led to the subsequent Iron Age across Europe, Asia, and Africa during the 1st millennium BC. Scholarship in the late 20th and early 21st century introduced views that the collapse was more limited in scale and scope than previously thought.
- Part I - Foundations: The Birth of the Sacred
- Essay 1 - Animism and the Living Cosmos
- Essay 2 - From Tribe to Totem
- Part II - The Age of Gods
- Essay 3 - The Mesopotamian Fertile Crescent
- Essay 4 - Egypt, Indus, and Minoa Sacred Cultures
- Essay 5 - From Polytheism to Henotheism
- Part III - Axial Awakenings
- Essay 6 - Ancient Israel, Persia, and Monotheism
- Essay 7 - India
- Essay 8 - Greece and the Birth of Reason
- Part IV - The Sacred Made Universal
- Essay 9 - The Age of Universal Religions
- Essay 10 - Modernity and the Eclipse of the Sacred
- Essay 11 - The Rebirth of the Sacred
- Part V - Supplementary Materials
- I - The Ancient History of Mesopotamia
- II - The History of Language in Ancient Mesopotamia
- III - The Ancient History of the Hebrew Language
- IV(A-C) How the Ancient Near East Gave Shape to Israel's God
- Why the ANE is Essential for Israel's Received Theology (I-II)
- Affecting Cultic Syncretism Across the Ancient Near East (III-V)
- Cultural Identity Formation & the Rejection of Syncretism (VI-IX)
- V (A-C) The History & Compilation of the Hebrew Bible
- From Oral Memory to Proto-Canon (I-II)
- Exile, Redaction, and the Birth of Scripture (III)
- Second Temple Scribalization to Canonization (IV-V)
- VI - The Unhelpful Oxymorons of "Biblical Authority" & "Inerrancy"
- VII - The Evolution of Inerrancy: From Ancient Plurality to Modern Certainty
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Proto-Semites, Fertility Cults, and the Bronze Age Near East
Studies detailing how early Afro-Asiatic cultures, proto-Canaanites, and Mesopotamians shaped the symbolic and ritual structures later inherited by Israel and Judah.
I. Core Works on Israelite Religion, Yahwism, and Canaanite Context
- Day, John. Yahweh and the Gods and Goddesses of Canaan. Sheffield Academic Press, 2000.
- Smith, Mark S. The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel. Eerdmans, 2002.
- Smith, Mark S. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel’s Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. Oxford University Press, 2001.
- Stavrakopoulou, Francesca. Land of Our Fathers: The Roles of Ancestor Veneration in Biblical Land Claims. T&T Clark, 2010.
- Keel, Othmar. The Symbolism of the Biblical World: Ancient Near Eastern Iconography and the Book of Psalms. Eisenbrauns, 1997.
- Fleming, Daniel E. The Legacy of Israel in Judah’s Bible: History, Politics, and the Reinscribing of Tradition. Cambridge University Press, 2012.
- van der Toorn, Karel. Family Religion in Babylonia, Syria, and Israel: Continuity and Change in the Forms of Religious Life. Eerdmans, 1996.
- Sommer, Benjamin. The Bodies of God and the World of Ancient Israel. Cambridge University Press, 2009.
- Mettinger, Tryggve. The Dethronement of Sabaoth: Studies in the Shem and Kabod Theologies. Almqvist & Wiksell, 1982.
- Mettinger, Tryggve. No Graven Image? Israelite Aniconism in Its Ancient Near Eastern Context. Fortress Press, 1979.
- Römer, Thomas. The Invention of God. Harvard University Press, 2015.
II. Ugaritic and Canaanite Studies (Essential for Understanding Early Yahwism)
- Wyatt, N. Religious Texts from Ugarit. Sheffield Academic Press, 1998.
- Pardee, Dennis. Ritual and Cult at Ugarit. Society of Biblical Literature, 2002.
- Smith, Mark S., and Wayne Pitard. Ugaritic Narrative Poetry. Society of Biblical Literature, 2009.
- Gibson, John C. L. Canaanite Myths and Legends. T&T Clark, 1978.
III. Comparative Ancient Near Eastern Religion & Myth
- Jacobsen, Thorkild. The Treasures of Darkness: A History of Mesopotamian Religion. Yale University Press, 1976.
- Bottéro, Jean. Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia. University of Chicago Press, 2001.
- Dalley, Stephanie. Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Oxford University Press, 2000.
- Westenholz, Joan Goodnick (ed.). Gods, Goddesses, and Images of God in Ancient Israel. Eisenbrauns, 1998.
- Assmann, Jan. The Search for God in Ancient Egypt. Cornell University Press, 2001.
- Westenholz, Joan Goodnick. Legends of the Kings of Akkade. Eisenbrauns, 1997.
IV. Archaeology of Israel, Canaan, and the Levant
- Dever, William G. Did God Have a Wife? Archaeology and Folk Religion in Ancient Israel. Eerdmans, 2005.
- Finkelstein, Israel, and Neil Asher Silberman. The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology’s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. Free Press, 2001.
- Mazar, Amihai. Archaeology of the Land of the Bible: 10,000–586 B.C.E. Doubleday, 1992.
V. Proto-Semitic, Afro-Asiatic, and Cultural Foundations
- Ehret, Christopher. The Civilizations of Africa: A History to 1800. University of Virginia Press, 2002.
- Snell, Daniel. A Companion to the Ancient Near East. Blackwell, 2005.
- Ben Zvi, Ehud, and Lester L. Grabbe (eds.). Ahab Agonistes: The Rise and Fall of the Omri Dynasty. T&T Clark, 2007.
VI. Literature, Philology, and Comparative Text Studies
- Tremper Longman III. Fictional Akkadian Literature: Sumerian and Akkadian Myths, Tales, and Epics. Eisenbrauns, 1991.
- Dalley, Stephanie. Myths from Mesopotamia. (listed above; also belongs here)
VII. Theoretical, Ritual, and Sacrifice Studies (Useful for Your Process/Theological Bridge)
- Mauss, Marcel. The Gift: The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies. Routledge, 2002 (orig. 1925).
- Douglas, Mary. Purity and Danger. Routledge, 1966.
- Bell, Catherine. Ritual: Perspectives and Dimensions. Oxford University Press, 1997.
- Tambiah, Stanley Jeyaraja. Culture, Thought, and Social Action. Harvard University Press, 1985.
VIII. Works Particularly Compatible with Process Thought / Relational Cosmology
- Sommer, Benjamin. Revelation and Authority: Sinai in Jewish Scripture and Tradition. Yale University Press, 2015.
- Assmann, Jan. Cultural Memory and Early Civilization. Cambridge, 2011.
- Day, John. (listed above; excellent comparative methodology)
Although the present essay focuses on Paleolithic and early Neolithic religious developments, it is instructive to note that certain later traditions preserve conceptual residues of the ancient reciprocity cosmology that shaped early human ritual. One particularly striking example is the covenant ritual in Genesis 15, where God binds Himself to Abram by passing between the divided carcasses of sacrificed animals. Normally, in a Suzerainty-Vassal Treaty it is the vassal whom binds themselves, not the Overlord.
When analyzed anthropologically rather than devotionally, the ritual displays a structure remarkably consistent with what Marcel Mauss later described as the logic of the gift: the act in which the giver binds themselves through self-offering, thereby establishing a durable relational bond.
1. Divine Self-Offering as Relational Initiation
2. Sacrifice Not as Punishment, but Circulation
The divided carcasses in Genesis 15, far from representing fear-based violence, symbolize the liminal space where life, death, and relationship intersect. Within the older anthropological horizon, such a ritual would be understood as acknowledging that life is always part of a greater cosmic exchange between its functionaries and it's whole; what is given sustains the bond between human beings, the cosmos, and the unseen powers within it.
As an aside: Prehistoric reciprocity cosmologies recognized that life persists only through continual transformation and circulation. Modern science formalizes this principle through the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which describes the energetic exchanges required to sustain order in living systems. Hence, life continues only through continual flow, giving, taking, and returning.
Genesis reframes this: the divine Self becomes part of that circulation.
Where prehistoric societies offered portions of their own life-sources to maintain cosmic balance, Genesis presents a God who enters the economy of exchange by offering presence, fidelity, and future on behalf of the human partner.
3. Relational Theology in Seed Form
Seen through the lens of process thought, Genesis 15 anticipates a vision of God not as unmoved mover or distant sovereign but as relationally invested participant in the human story. The God of Genesis 15:
- initiates relation through self-offering
- binds divine future to human becoming
- embraces vulnerability within the covenant
- participates in history rather than standing outside it
This is the opposite of a static metaphysical deity; it is a processual deity, long before the category existed. The divine is disclosed not as absolute power but as absolute relationality.
4. A Continuity of Patterns Across Time
Though separated by tens of millennia, the ritual logic behind Genesis 15 echoes a prehistoric principle: relationships endure because gifts circulate. This is a very ancient principle that moderns still can relate to today.
What shifts is the scale and the theological interpretation, not the underlying structure of reciprocity. Paleolithic gift-sacrifice maintained ecological balance; the Genesis covenant ritual maintains relational fidelity between the human and the divine.
5. Why This Belongs Here
Even though Genesis stands outside the temporal scope of Paleolithic religion, it preserves an ancient memory of the reciprocity cosmology that preceded temple systems and priestly hierarchies. This addendum simply acknowledges that the dynamics explored in Essay 2 did not disappear; they were recontextualized, theologized, and narratively transformed in later religious traditions.



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