Quotes & Sayings


We, and creation itself, actualize the possibilities of the God who sustains the world, towards becoming in the world in a fuller, more deeper way. - R.E. Slater

There is urgency in coming to see the world as a web of interrelated processes of which we are integral parts, so that all of our choices and actions have [consequential effects upon] the world around us. - Process Metaphysician Alfred North Whitehead

Kurt Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem says (i) all closed systems are unprovable within themselves and, that (ii) all open systems are rightly understood as incomplete. - R.E. Slater

The most true thing about you is what God has said to you in Christ, "You are My Beloved." - Tripp Fuller

The God among us is the God who refuses to be God without us, so great is God's Love. - Tripp Fuller

According to some Christian outlooks we were made for another world. Perhaps, rather, we were made for this world to recreate, reclaim, redeem, and renew unto God's future aspiration by the power of His Spirit. - R.E. Slater

Our eschatological ethos is to love. To stand with those who are oppressed. To stand against those who are oppressing. It is that simple. Love is our only calling and Christian Hope. - R.E. Slater

Secularization theory has been massively falsified. We don't live in an age of secularity. We live in an age of explosive, pervasive religiosity... an age of religious pluralism. - Peter L. Berger

Exploring the edge of life and faith in a post-everything world. - Todd Littleton

I don't need another reason to believe, your love is all around for me to see. – Anon

Thou art our need; and in giving us more of thyself thou givest us all. - Khalil Gibran, Prayer XXIII

Be careful what you pretend to be. You become what you pretend to be. - Kurt Vonnegut

Religious beliefs, far from being primary, are often shaped and adjusted by our social goals. - Jim Forest

We become who we are by what we believe and can justify. - R.E. Slater

People, even more than things, need to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; never throw out anyone. – Anon

Certainly, God's love has made fools of us all. - R.E. Slater

An apocalyptic Christian faith doesn't wait for Jesus to come, but for Jesus to become in our midst. - R.E. Slater

Christian belief in God begins with the cross and resurrection of Jesus, not with rational apologetics. - Eberhard Jüngel, Jürgen Moltmann

Our knowledge of God is through the 'I-Thou' encounter, not in finding God at the end of a syllogism or argument. There is a grave danger in any Christian treatment of God as an object. The God of Jesus Christ and Scripture is irreducibly subject and never made as an object, a force, a power, or a principle that can be manipulated. - Emil Brunner

“Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh” means "I will be that who I have yet to become." - God (Ex 3.14) or, conversely, “I AM who I AM Becoming.”

Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are worthy. - Thomas Merton

The church is God's world-changing social experiment of bringing unlikes and differents to the Eucharist/Communion table to share life with one another as a new kind of family. When this happens, we show to the world what love, justice, peace, reconciliation, and life together is designed by God to be. The church is God's show-and-tell for the world to see how God wants us to live as a blended, global, polypluralistic family united with one will, by one Lord, and baptized by one Spirit. – Anon

The cross that is planted at the heart of the history of the world cannot be uprooted. - Jacques Ellul

The Unity in whose loving presence the universe unfolds is inside each person as a call to welcome the stranger, protect animals and the earth, respect the dignity of each person, think new thoughts, and help bring about ecological civilizations. - John Cobb & Farhan A. Shah

If you board the wrong train it is of no use running along the corridors of the train in the other direction. - Dietrich Bonhoeffer

God's justice is restorative rather than punitive; His discipline is merciful rather than punishing; His power is made perfect in weakness; and His grace is sufficient for all. – Anon

Our little [biblical] systems have their day; they have their day and cease to be. They are but broken lights of Thee, and Thou, O God art more than they. - Alfred Lord Tennyson

We can’t control God; God is uncontrollable. God can’t control us; God’s love is uncontrolling! - Thomas Jay Oord

Life in perspective but always in process... as we are relational beings in process to one another, so life events are in process in relation to each event... as God is to Self, is to world, is to us... like Father, like sons and daughters, like events... life in process yet always in perspective. - R.E. Slater

To promote societal transition to sustainable ways of living and a global society founded on a shared ethical framework which includes respect and care for the community of life, ecological integrity, universal human rights, respect for diversity, economic justice, democracy, and a culture of peace. - The Earth Charter Mission Statement

Christian humanism is the belief that human freedom, individual conscience, and unencumbered rational inquiry are compatible with the practice of Christianity or even intrinsic in its doctrine. It represents a philosophical union of Christian faith and classical humanist principles. - Scott Postma

It is never wise to have a self-appointed religious institution determine a nation's moral code. The opportunities for moral compromise and failure are high; the moral codes and creeds assuredly racist, discriminatory, or subjectively and religiously defined; and the pronouncement of inhumanitarian political objectives quite predictable. - R.E. Slater

God's love must both center and define the Christian faith and all religious or human faiths seeking human and ecological balance in worlds of subtraction, harm, tragedy, and evil. - R.E. Slater

In Whitehead’s process ontology, we can think of the experiential ground of reality as an eternal pulse whereby what is objectively public in one moment becomes subjectively prehended in the next, and whereby the subject that emerges from its feelings then perishes into public expression as an object (or “superject”) aiming for novelty. There is a rhythm of Being between object and subject, not an ontological division. This rhythm powers the creative growth of the universe from one occasion of experience to the next. This is the Whiteheadian mantra: “The many become one and are increased by one.” - Matthew Segall

Without Love there is no Truth. And True Truth is always Loving. There is no dichotomy between these terms but only seamless integration. This is the premier centering focus of a Processual Theology of Love. - R.E. Slater

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Note: Generally I do not respond to commentary. I may read the comments but wish to reserve my time to write (or write from the comments I read). Instead, I'd like to see our community help one another and in the helping encourage and exhort each of us towards Christian love in Christ Jesus our Lord and Savior. - re slater

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Evolution of Worship & Religion: Part I - The Birth of the Sacred (1)


Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

The Evolution of Worship and Religion:
From Cosmic Awe to Processual Faith

A Metamodern Journey through the History of the Sacred

THE BIRTH OF THE SACRED
PART I - ESSAY 1

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT-5

In the beginning, there was wonder.
And wonder is where worship began.



PART I

PRIMAL FOUNDATIONS: The Birth of the Sacred

The Lower to the Upper Paleolithic Age
2.6 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.


Stone Age Periods

PeriodTypical Date Range (BCE)Notes
Lower Paleolithic2,600,000 – 300,000Earliest stone tool use.
Middle Paleolithic300,000 – 40,000Associated with Neanderthals and early Homo sapiens.
Upper Paleolithic50,000 – 10,000Modern human flourishing; art, symbolic culture.
• Aurignacian40,000 – 30,000Early figurative art, blades, ornaments.
• Gravettian30,000 – 20,000Venus figurines; advanced hunting strategies.
• Solutrean22,000 – 17,000Sophisticated flint knapping.
• Magdalenian17,000 – 10,000Bone/antler tools; Lascaux cave art.
Mesolithic10,000 – 8,000Transition to agriculture; microlithic tools.
Neolithicc. 10,000 – 3,000 (Near East)Farming, pottery, permanent settlements.

Metal Ages

PeriodTypical Date Range (BCE)Notes
Copper Age (Chalcolithic)4500 – 3300First metal tools appear; transitional era.
Early Bronze Age3300 – 2000Development of bronze metallurgy; early states.
Middle Bronze Age2000 – 1600Urban expansion; Amorite kingdoms.
Late Bronze Age1600 – 1200International empires; ends with Bronze Age Collapse.
Iron Age1200 – 800 (start)Widespread adoption of iron technology; rise of Israel/Judah, Neo-Assyrian power, Greek Dark Age recovery.


Essay 1

The Birth of the Sacred:
Animism and the Living Cosmos

Before humanity built temples, it built fires.
Before it named gods, it named the stars.
Before it wrote, it listened. 
 

I. Humanity’s First Experiences of Spirit through Natural Phenomena

Long before Homo sapiens crossed into the Fertile Crescent, their ancestors - Homo habilis, Homo erectus, Homo heidelbergensis, and Homo neanderthalensis - were already perceiving the world not as an inert landscape but as a living presence.

The very long, and very ancient, homo line of human species, spanned over two million years,  and during that time they did not simply observe their environments; they participated in those environments.

Each tool struck from stone and flint, each fire preserved from lightning, each bone buried with pigment or flowers - all were gestures of spiritual participation in an earthy reality that was felt more than what it was stone, clay, plant, or fleshly material.

This proto-spiritual awareness was born not from abstraction, but from humanity's sensory encounter with it. The wind and storm were not about blowing, rumbling, bursting forces...  they were something so much more. The thunder had agency. Fire possessed will. Rivers gave life but also devoured.

The natural world and it's many animated forces were felt, experienced, and eventually spoken of, as living forces with which humanity might have communion with; that were feared or welcomed; that were either benevolent or perilous, intimately near to the soul yet immensely far away to the human psyche.

By the time our own Homo sapiens emerged roughly 300,000 years ago from Africa's southwestern regions, and began migrating into Eurasia between 120,000–60,000 BCE, this participatory sense and feeling of the sacred was already deeply embedded in the species’ neural and emotional architecture.

Archaeological evidence from Blombos Cave in South Africa, with its carved ochre patterns (c. 70,000 BCE), and from the deliberate burials of Neanderthals in Shanidar, Iraq (c. 60,000 BCE), suggests not only symbolic cognition but reverent awareness - an early intuition that life and death belonged to a greater mystery.

The Blombos Cave (used some 100,000-72,000 years ago) provides some of the earliest evidence that humans were creating symbolic, ritual, and relational meaning - the very building blocks of sacred consciousness we know as religion today.
Blombos showed that early (modern) humans saw the world as more than utilitarian, to be used for food and shelter. That early man was engaging with the world as they knew it then symbolically, aesthetically, and relationally. As example, through maturing forms of sacred animism, which was the belief that spirits or souls inhabited all things. In this way, early humans believed the cosmos was spiritually alive.
This was evidenced when clans and tribes began to move towards "totems,," or "sacred symbols," to represent their feelings of their "interiorly felt, external experience." Hence, beads, pigments, and geometric markings, become the earliest "totemic" identifiers (precursors to) clan symbols and sacred emblems of an revered ancestor, a passed clan member or child, a sacred protector, or even spirit guide.
From these personal and communal experiences emerged the clan shaman - the one who could interpret the visible and invisible for wondrous, trembling, grieving, or broken hearts; guide hunters seeking sustenance; and assist those in need of healing, balance, foresight, or cohesion. Acting as the human intermediary with the spirit world, the shaman diagnosed illness, restored harmony, recovered the lost, and strengthened social bonds through rituals that united the clan or tribe more deeply with one another and with the world around them.
Shamanism thus served as a psycho-sociological religious function for processing "meaningful" connections to individuals seeking inner wisdom and purpose in many of life's daunting challenges. They were the sacred intermediaries to the spirit world. And it was in the Blombos Cave where paleoanthropologists came to the moment of realization that the artifacts they were digging up represented early humanity's religious awakenings.
[Side Note: What modern philosophy describes as panpsychismthe view that consciousness or experiential capacity pervades the cosmos down to its most fundamental elements - is not far removed from what early humanity intuited. In this framework, humans are not uniquely singular bearers of awareness but participants within a larger, living field of consciousness that is dynamically present throughout the world.] 

As Homo sapiens spread north and east - crossing the Sinai into the Levant, migrating through Mesopotamia, and moving into Eurasia - they interbred with resident hominins such as Neanderthals and Denisovans and carried with them an inner grammar of awe. Through contact, exchange, and shared experience with these other hominin groups, this sensibility deepened into an evolving conscious awareness of the sacred permeating the world around them.

By the time Homo sapiens reached the proto-Semitic zones of the Fertile Crescent, a new synthesis of perception was taking form: "The universe was a theater of spirit, and humanity was both bearing witness to this kind of universe as well as participant within it. Religion, in its embryonic form, was being conceived and conducted - not as formal system or creedal dogma, but as the felt wonder that something is and is there.


II. The World as an Animate Field of Agency and Intention

In the early evolution of human cognition, long before conceptual distinctions such as “natural” and “supernatural” existed, the environment was experienced as inherently alive. For Paleolithic and early Mesolithic peoples (2.6 million to 45,000 BCE), the world was not a neutral, unresponsive backdrop, but a dynamic and responsive field in which forces acted with discernible patterns, intentions, and effects. Contemporary anthropology often labels this perception (sacred) “animism,” but such terminology risks oversimplifying a complex and continually adaptive (animated) ontology. What emerged among early hominins was a mode of interpreting reality in which agency, interiority, and responsiveness were attributed to the phenomena that sustained or threatened life.

Mountains, trees, rivers, animals, and stars were not conceived as inert objects. They were experienced as actors within a web of reciprocal becoming. Such attributions were not the result of superstition but arose from a deeply embodied or "felt" cognition that felt important and had somehow been related to lived experience: that survival depended on reading subtle environmental cues, anticipating shifts in weather or animal behavior, and integrating sensory information into meaningful patterns. As scholars like Stewart Guthrie and Pascal Boyer have argued, the human mind evolved with a cognitive bias toward detecting agency - a bias that, in the Paleolithic context, was adaptive rather than erroneous. When the cost of ignoring a potential agent exceeded the cost of mistakenly assuming one, the world became intelligible as a network of competing interacting presences.

Spirit, therefore, was not a separate category of being. It was an interpretive posture embedded in the earliest strata of human awareness - an intuitive recognition that the forces shaping existence possessed qualities analogous to intention, mood, or responsiveness. Early humans did not worship the wind as if it were divine; they encountered divinity through the experience of the wind. Each gust that bent the treetops, each whisper of grass, each violent storm, was not merely physical movement but a relational event. Environmental forces were experienced as conveying information, expressing mood, or communicating danger. For Paleolithic peoples, events did not simply occur; they occurred to someone.

Modern cognitive science might describe this as the operation of early “agency-detection systems,” but such language captures only the mechanistic substrate, not the experiential world it generated. For hominins between 2.5 million and 45,000 BCE - from Homo habilis and Homo erectus to Denisovans and Neanderthals to early Homo sapiens - the wind possessed qualities that contemporary humans would reserve for social agents. It revealed, concealed, pushed, resisted, startled, or comforted. These were not metaphors but perceptual realities grounded in survival-based cognition.

And so, in the absence of symbolic theology or metaphysical abstraction, such experiences formed a preconceptual religious grammar. The world was not divided into material and spiritual realms; it was a single, continuously interacting matrix of forces whose meanings were apprehended directly through sensation, emotion, and embodied interpretation. To feel the wind was to participate in a broader field of animated life. Listening to it constituted a form of spiritual attunement - a sensing of patterns, signals, and presences. Divinity, if such a term can be retroactively applied, was not imagined behind the phenomenon but encountered within it.

In this sense, the wind became one of humanity’s earliest teachers of sacred perception. It revealed that the world was not silent matter but an active interlocutor. The earliest religious intuitions were not speculative doctrines but relational experiences - the recognition, at a prelinguistic level, that human consciousness existed within a larger matrix of agency and meaning. Such encounters laid the groundwork for the later development of myth, ritual, and symbolic cosmology, even though none of these were yet articulated. The Paleolithic world was already thick with sacred-significance - a world that co-shaped human cognition as much as humans interpreted it.

This, then, was the world of an emerging - but not yet codified - proto-religious language, as human consciousness slowly awakened to a relational cosmos and began expressing that awareness through symbol, gesture, and early communal practice.


III. From Cave Art to Shamanic Ritual - Consciousness Awakening to Cosmos

The emergence of Paleolithic art marks a decisive shift in human cognitive evolution: the movement from immediate encounter with the world to expressive representation of it. What appears in the Upper Paleolithic caves of Lascaux, Altamira, and Chauvet (c. 35,000–20,000 BCE) is not mere decoration but the earliest known externalization of symbolic thought. These images - bison, horses, lions, and hybrid figures - constitute a visual grammar through which early Homo sapiens translated sensory experience into shared meaning.

Archaeologists increasingly interpret these sites not as living spaces but as ritual environments. The placement of images deep within cave systems, their layered repainting over generations, and their association with ochre, torches, and resonant acoustics indicate that they functioned as settings for structured communal experience. Rather than representing animals in a strictly naturalistic sense, the paintings appear to mediate relationships between seen and unseen forces - between hunter and hunted, life and death, the present and the ancestral. They are best understood as presences rather than simple depictions, signaling a worldview in which symbolic form and sacred perception were inseparable to the ancient mind.

From this symbolic sphere emerges the figure often described in anthropological literature as the shaman. Although the term is borrowed from much later Siberian cultures, the role it denotes - a ritual specialist who mediates between ordinary and altered states of consciousness - has analogues throughout prehistoric contexts. Through rhythmic sound, controlled breathing, sensory deprivation, and trance-inducing movement, these individuals facilitated communal access to forms of experience that exceeded the boundaries of ordinary perception. They served as interpreters of dream, illness, animal movement, weather patterns, and death - functions that, taken together, positioned them as early custodians of cosmological understanding.

This ritual mediation is not limited to European cave complexes. Across the Near Eastern and proto-Semitic zones - from the early layers of Jericho (c. 9000 BCE) to the monumental enclosures of Göbekli Tepe in southeastern Anatolia (c. 9500–8000 BCE) - we see the development of architectural spaces that formalize sacred experience. Göbekli Tepe’s T-shaped pillars, carved with animals, abstract symbols, and celestial motifs, suggest a society that had already conceptualized a structured relationship between humans, animals, and the wider cosmos. These sacred enclosures functioned less as “temples” in the later sense and more as cosmic axes - ritual sites that oriented human communities within a meaningful universe. [Refer to the Addendum section below for detailed explanation]

Taken together, the cave and the shrine, the drum and the carved stone, indicate that early humans were developing multi-sensory languages of transcendence - methods for modulating perception, intensifying emotion, and organizing communal insight. These practices reveal a growing awareness that human life was embedded within a larger, relational field of forces. In contemporary philosophical terms, such engagements reflect what process thought later calls prehension: the reciprocal influence of each entity upon every other, the felt relation that binds experience into coherent worlds.

Thus, by the late Paleolithic (formerly known as the Old Stone Age which extended from 50,000/40,000 to 10,000 BCE) down through the Mesolithic/Epipaleolithic (10,000-8,000 BCE) to the Early Neolithic (9,000 BCE in the Near East; and as late as 4,000 BCE in Northern Europe) periods, Homo sapiens were not merely adapting to their climatically challenging environment but interpreting, symbolizing, and ritualizing it. The cosmos was not simply external scenery; it was a shared and responsive mind-world in which humans participated (as if ghosts on the landscape) in physical/other-worldly encounters where everything had a voice, a will, a form, and meaning in life. And it was through ritual expression, symbolic art, and shamanic trance-mediation, etc., that the human consciousness was newly awakening to its own psychic-relational (or spiritual-religious) depth - to the possibility that meaning did not simply arise from within the human mind, but was being co-constructed with the world that held it.


IV. Panpsychism before Philosophy - Everything Participates in the Sacred

By the time human communities reached the threshold of the Early Neolithic in the Levant and Mesopotamian regions, roughly 9,000 BCE, the evolving world was already interpreted as a living field of relational activitya cosmos in which every entity, force, and phenomenon was understood to possess interiority. Long before “panpsychism” became a philosophical term, its intuition was the operative ontology of early Homo sapiens.

Across Paleolithic and Mesolithic cultures, being itself was inseparable from experiencing. To exist was to feel; to act was to respond; to appear was to signify. The world was not inert substrate but sensate process. Stones remembered, rivers murmured, flames danced with intention, and stars gazed back as watchful presences. The boundary that later Enlightened metaphysics would draw between “mind” and “matter” had no conceptual purchase here.

This is often mislabeled anthropomorphism, but the logic runs in the opposite direction. Early humans were not projecting human consciousness onto the world; rather, they perceived their own interiority as continuous with the world’s interiority. This worldview might better be named cosmomorphism - the recognition that human sentience is one local expression of a much broader tapestry of awareness woven through the cosmos [I am here illustrating how a processual metaphysic would re-weave earlier expressed non-processual ideas].

In such a world, death was not annihilation but transition. The dead did not vanish; they entered new relational modes - manifest in the whisper of wind through a crevice, the echo within a limestone chamber, the visitation of a dream, or a butterfly dancing across a field into a naturalized bridal ceremony of loved ones. Ancestral presence remained a structural feature of a relational world. In a word, our ancient paleo-forefathers in the clans and tribes, before entering into  displaced, perhaps superstitious/folkloric, neolithic cities, were close to nature and to nature's many sensory displays.

As African and Eurasian populations (re-)settled into proto-Semitic zones of the Near East (c. 8000–5000 BCE), these long-standing animistic + shamanistic intuitions were accumulating into more coherent symbolic-religious grammars. Fertility cults, seasonal rites, and mythic narratives of order and reciprocity emerged not as replacements for animism but as its formalization - that is, a systematizing of the already-perceived mutual sacred+participation between humans, animals, landforms, and celestial cycles.

This is visible in the cosmologies of:

  • Pre-Sumerian and Sumerian religion, with its vibrant pantheon of natural forces personified;

  • Akkadian and Babylonian myth, where divine agency maintains cosmic equilibrium;

  • Canaanite and early Levantine traditions, in which Baal, Asherah, El, Shapash, and others articulate a world of relational vitality.

What changed was not the underlying ontology - still relational, vital, participatory - but the scale and structure of its expression. Animism expanded into polytheism; local spirits became gods; distributed agencies became theophanies. Yet beneath every later evolving theology lied the original worldview: the cosmos was a web of living agencies, co-creating reality in every moment, with humanity; and humanity, with it.

Thus the prehistoric world, far from being simplistic or naïve, intuitively and experientially articulated the foundational insight that process philosophy would later formalize:

  • that existence is felt experience,

  • that to be, to exist, is to relate, and

  • that metaphysic reality is the ongoing conversation between the many and the one (re cosmic panpsychism or processual cosmic consciousness)

In this sense, Paleolithic and Mesolithic religious perception anticipates the metaphysical vision of Whitehead: a cosmos in which all actualities feel, respond, and contribute to the unfolding of the whole.

And it is here, in Section IV, we have come to the heart of the bridge between:
  • prehistoric consciousness,
  • proto-religious experience, and
  • process cosmology’s metaphysical depth.
It is the point where our project really becomes united with an enlivening metaphysic - where archaeology, paleontology, paleoanthropology, antiquarianism, prehistory, and Whiteheadian thought converge into a single narrative arc....


Coda - Remembering the Living World

To revisit the animistic horizon of the paleo-world is not to regress into primitive belief but to recover a mode of perception that modernity has rendered dormant. Early Homo species were not “wrong” in sensing the sacred everywhere; they were perceptive enough to recognize the depth of their relational embeddedness in the cosmos.

Their awe before flame and storm; their gratitude for soil and sun; their reverence for birth and mourning - these were not superstitions but expressions of a wisdom grounded in existential intimacy with the world. Theirs was a consciousness alert to the aliveness of everything, a consciousness attuned to subtle presences modern life has taught us to overlook.

The universe has always been alive.
Only our awareness forgets.
Where many people -
have inherited their theologies from institutions,
the ancients had inherited theirs from
the wind, soil, creatures, silence, and sky.

To awaken again to a living world is not to abandon science or rationality - but to rejoin the continuity of consciousness that stretches from Paleolithic caves to Neolithic shrines, from ancient temples to modern sanctuaries. It is to recognize that worship - at its root - is not submission but participation in the ongoing creativity of existence.

Thus, when we listen across the millennia, we recover what our ancestors already knew:

That the sacred is not an object to be found,
but a presence to be felt -
the quiet pulse of the world
still beating through us,
inviting us back again into relationship
from our urbanity, sophistication, worldliness.

The world is alive,
everything is in relation,
experience is shared,
nothing exists alone,
and meaning, as ever,
emerges through participation;
these are the words of process,
a language known to the ancients.



~ Continue to Part I, Essay 2 ~


Evolution of Worship & Religion
  • 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



BIBLIOGRAPHY


Part I: Primal Foundations

Archaeology, Anthropology, and the Prehistory of Religion

Foundational texts for understanding symbolic emergence, ritual behavior, cognitive evolution, and early sacred consciousness.

Core Works
  • David Lewis-Williams — The Mind in the Cave
    Cognitive archaeology of cave art, altered states, and the origins of ritual behavior.

  • Ian Tattersall — Becoming Human
    A clear account of the evolution of symbolic thought in Homo sapiens.

  • Pascal Boyer — Religion Explained
    A foundational study in cognitive-evolutionary approaches to the formation of belief.

  • Harvey Whitehouse — Modes of Religiosity
    Explores how ritual modes, memory, and social cohesion shaped early religious forms.

  • Mircea Eliade — The Sacred and the Profane
    A classic phenomenology of early sacred experience and spatial symbolism.


Symbolic Behavior and Cognitive Evolution
  • André Leroi-Gourhan — Gesture and Speech
    Foundational research on Paleolithic symbolic behavior, tool use, and the emergence of expressive capacity.

  • Colin Renfrew — Prehistory: The Making of the Human Mind
    Renfrew’s “cognitive archaeology” complements Lewis-Williams, expanding the study of symbolic emergence and ritual development.

  • Steven Mithen — The Prehistory of the Mind
    Seminal analysis of modular cognition and how religion evolves from cognitive fluidity.

  • Terrence Deacon — The Symbolic Species
    Highly relevant to Sections III & IV: explains why language, meaning, and symbolic behavior emerge as uniquely human traits.


Evolution of Religion and Social Imagination

  • Robert Bellah — Religion in Human Evolution
    A sweeping evolutionary account from archaic societies to axial transformations; deeply aligned with this project’s long-view developmental arc.

  • Agustín Fuentes — The Creative Spark
    Explores symbolic co-creation and imagination in Paleolithic communities — ideal for bridging toward a process-relational world.

  • David Graeber & David Wengrow — The Dawn of Everything
    Reframes long-held assumptions about early human social and political structures; valuable for understanding ritual variability and the plurality of developmental pathways.


Part II - Foundations & The Age of Gods

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.


Core Works
  • John Day — Yahweh and the Gods and Goddesses of Canaan
    A definitive comparison of Canaanite deities and early Israelite religion, clarifying the polytheistic matrix from which Yahwism emerged.

  • Mark S. Smith — The Early History of God; The Origins of Biblical Monotheism
    Foundational studies on Israel’s religious evolution, the divine council, and the transition from polytheism/henotheism to emergent monotheism.

  • Francesca Stavrakopoulou — Land of Our Fathers
    Examines Israelite ancestor veneration, territorial cults, and the bodily logic of ancient belief.

  • Othmar Keel — The Symbolism of the Biblical World
    A visual and iconographic guide to Near Eastern religious imagery that shaped biblical language.


Recommended Scholarly Additions
  • Daniel E. Fleming — The Legacy of Israel in Judah’s Bible
    A crucial reconstruction of Israelite and Canaanite religious interpenetration and the early diversity of Yahwism.

  • Karel van der Toorn — Family Religion in Babylonia, Syria, and Israel
    The authoritative study of household cults, figurines, and ancestral ritual—indispensable for understanding non-elite religion.

  • Joan Goodnick Westenholz — Legends of the Kings of Akkade
    Illuminates Mesopotamian royal mythology and its influence on later Near Eastern traditions.

  • Benjamin Sommer — The Bodies of God and the World of Ancient Israel
    Explores divine embodiment and fluid identity, central to reconstructing pre-exilic Israelite theology.

  • Tremper Longman III — Fictional Akkadian Literature
    Essential for comparing Akkadian literary forms with biblical narrative structures.

  • Stephanie Dalley — Myths from Mesopotamia
    Authoritative translations of creation, flood, and divine conflict myths foundational to the ancient Near Eastern worldview.

  • Thorkild Jacobsen — The Treasures of Darkness
    A classic synthetic history of Mesopotamian religion, myth, and ritual mentality.

  • Jean Bottéro — Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia
    A concise and elegant introduction to Mesopotamian religious imagination and ritual expression.

  • Tryggve Mettinger — The Dethronement of Sabaoth; No Graven Image?
    Key studies on the move toward aniconism and Israel’s conceptual shift in divine representation.


Optional but Highly Valuable
  • Guy Stroumsa — The Invention of Religion in the Ancient Near East
    Examines the evolution from domestic cults to temple-centered religion; excellent for understanding religious “complexification.”

  • Thomas Römer — The Invention of God
    A modern historical reconstruction of Yahweh’s origins within the larger Levantine pantheon.


ADDENDUM


1. TABLE OF ANATOLIAN RITUAL SITES

Table 1: Chronology of Anatolian Ritual Sites (200,000 - 7,000 BCE)

SiteLocationDate RangeRitual / Symbolic FeaturesSignificance for Religious Evolution
Karain CaveAntalya200,000 BCE → 10,000 BCEBurials, pigment use, symbolic itemsLongest ritual continuity in Anatolia; establishes deep Paleolithic sacred behaviors
Üçağızlı CaveHatay45,000–30,000 BCEOrnaments, pierced shells, ochreEarly symbolic adornment; emergence of mediated identity markers
Öküzini CaveAntalya20,000–10,000 BCEPainted pebbles, ritual hearthsEarly evidence of symbolic abstraction and fire-based ritual spaces
Pınarbaşı (Konya Plain)Central Anatolia13,000–9,000 BCERitualized burials, feastingPre-agricultural communal ritual gatherings
Karahan Tepe (Taş Tepeler)Şanlıurfac. 11,500–10,500 BCET-pillars, human heads, animal reliefsOlder sibling site to Göbekli Tepe; advanced ritual architecture
Göbekli Tepe (Layer III)Şanlıurfac. 9,600–8,800 BCEMegalithic enclosures, carved fauna, celestial motifsEarliest monumental ritual complex; world’s first evidence of “temple culture”
Nevalı ÇoriEuphrates Basin9,000–8,200 BCECult building, anthropomorphic statuesTransitional ritual community linking PPNA → PPNB
ÇatalhöyükCentral Anatolia7,400–6,000 BCEShrines, murals, bull hornsDomestic ritualism; transition to household cults distinct from megalithic centers


2. HOW GÖBEKLI TEPE EMERGES FROM A MUCH OLDER RITUAL TRADITION

Göbekli Tepe and the Deep Ritual Substrate of Anatolia

Although Göbekli Tepe (c. 9,600–8,800 BCE) stands as the earliest known monumental ritual architecture, it did not emerge ex nihilo. Rather, the site represents the apex of a much older ritual continuum extending deep into the Paleolithic record of Anatolia.

Karain, Üçağızlı, and Öküzini Caves demonstrate that symbolic behavior and ritual practice in this region stretch back at least 150,000–200,000 years. Across these early contexts appear:

  • intentional burial of the dead
  • manipulation of ochre
  • creation of ornaments and personal symbols
  • ritual hearths and structured living areas
  • animal-associated deposits and food offerings

These practices signal a long-standing cognitive ecology of the sacred, in which early humans perceived and enacted relational ties between themselves, non-human animals, and the landscape.

As populations moved through Late Pleistocene climatic shifts (127,000 to 9,700 BCE), the symbolic repertoire expanded. Sites like Pınarbaşı show increased communal feasting and structured ritual events between 13,000–10,000 BCE... behaviors that foreshadow the large-scale ceremonial gatherings found at later PPNA sites.

By the 12th–10th millennia BCE, the Taş Tepeler cultural horizon (Karahan Tepe, Hamzan Tepe, Sefer Tepe, Göbekli Tepe, etc.) reveals a fully crystallized ritual architecture. The monumental T-shaped pillars, anthropomorphic forms, and carved fauna encode a mythic cosmology that clearly draws on much older animistic, shamanic, and totemic grammars of meaning.

Thus Göbekli Tepe is best understood as a culmination, not the beginning but a culmination of the architectural flowering of a religious awakening whose paleolithic roots extend deeply into the evolutionary emergence of Homo sapiens’ symbolic and spiritual cognition journey.



3. MIGRATION & CULTURAL LINEAGE FROM LATE PALEOLITHIC ANATOLIA TO PPNA RITUAL COMPLEXES

From Mobile Bands to Megalithic Centers: A Lineage of Religious Cognition

1. Late Paleolithic (c. 50,000–20,000 BCE)
Anatolia is inhabited by mobile foragers whose ritual life centers on caves, seasonal camps, and natural features. Symbolic objects, pigment use, and structured burials indicate the presence of shamanic mediation and animistic cosmologies.

2. Epipaleolithic (c. 20,000–11,000 BCE)
    • Hunter-gatherer communities grow denser in resource-rich areas. Ritual feasting begins to expand in scale.
    • The first evidence of sedentism-before-agriculture appears, especially in the Levant and Upper Mesopotamia.
3. Proto-PPNA (c. 11,500–10,500 BCE)
Climatic stabilization after the Younger Dryas allows larger seasonal congregations. Sites like Karahan Tepe demonstrate complex symbolic carving traditions that anticipate the T-pillar iconography at Göbekli Tepe. Here, communal ritual gatherings become socially central.

4. PPNA (c. 10,000–9,000 BCE)
Monumental ritual architecture appears at Göbekli Tepe, Sefer Tepe, Hamzan Tepe, Harbetsuvan Tepe, and others. These sites served as:
    • seasonal gathering places
    • loci of mythic storytelling
    • cosmological observatories
    • regional social integrators
    • platforms for emerging religious specialists
5. Transition to PPNB (c. 9,000–8,000 BCE)
Ritual centers become less monumental as domestic architecture (e.g., Nevalı Çori) takes over religious life. This shift marks the domestication of the sacred, paralleling the domestication of plants and animals. In this framework, Göbekli Tepe is not the birth of religion, but the architectural expression of an already ancient religious consciousness that took shape over tens of thousands of years.



Wednesday, November 19, 2025

The Evolution of Worship and Religion: Resources


Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

The Evolution of Worship and Religion:
From Cosmic Awe to Processual Faith

A Metamodern Journey through the History of the Sacred

RESOURCES

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT-5

In the beginning, there was wonder.
And wonder is where worship began.


Introduction

The study of humanity’s evolving religious consciousness is necessarily interdisciplinary. It draws upon archaeology, anthropology, ancient Near Eastern studies, comparative religion, cognitive science, textual criticism, and philosophical theology.

Before beginning the narrative sequence of this project, it is useful to identify major works that may help illuminate the path of evolving millennial-old beliefs from prehistoric ritual to early Yahwism, which will eventually lead to the later emergence of monotheism and other universal/global religions.

The resources listed here have shaped the academic landscape in understanding how worship practices develop, diversify, and transform across humanity's evolution. They also provide essential grounding for the essays that follow, each of which will include an essay-specific bibliography. The works below form the conceptual and historical scaffolding on which this broader project rests.

All of these works contribute to one or more of the following domains:

  • Proto-Israelite religion
  • The emergence of Yahwism
  • Comparative Near Eastern religion
  • The embodiment and evolution of deity concepts
  • Archaeology + anthropology of early Judaism
  • Diversity of Israelite beliefs prior to canonization

Most of these titles will fit extremely well with Essay 2 (Part II) and Essay 3 (Part III) of the proposed outline: Age of Gods → Axial Awakenings → Early Monotheism.

These titles will also reinforce the broader thesis that religion evolves alongside human consciousness and cultural development.



  • Title-by-Title Review
  • (Review by ChatGPT)




1. Religious Diversity in Ancient Israel and Judah (Barton & Stavrakopoulou)

Value to the project: ★★★★★
This book is pure gold for the proposed series. It demonstrates:
  • That ancient Israel practiced plural religious forms, not early monotheism.
  • The persistence of folk religion, ancestor cult, local shrines, magic, goddess imagery.
  • The diversity within early Yahwism itself.
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 3 (Pantheons)
✔ Essay 5 (From Polytheism to Henotheism)
✔ Essay 6 (Prophetic revolutions)
✔ Appendix B (Comparative Mythology)

Amazon Blurb:

Published 2010
Understanding of the religious beliefs and practices of the ancient Israelites has changed considerably in recent years. It is now increasingly accepted that the biblical presentation of Israelite religion is often at odds with the historical realities of ancient Israel's religious climate. As such, the diversity inherent to ancient Israelite religion is often overlooked-particularly within university lecture halls and classrooms.  This textbook draws together specialists in the field to explain, illustrate and analyze this religious diversity. Following an introductory essay guiding the reader through the book, the collection falls into three sections.
  • The first focuses on conceptual diversities. It deconstructs common assumptions about Israelite religion and reconstructs Israelite perceptions of the nature of the religious world.
  • The second section examines socio-religious diversities. It studies the varied social contexts of ancient Israelites, exploring the relationship between worshippers' social locations and their perceptions and experiences of the divine.
  • The third section deals with geographical diversities. It seeks to understand how geographical distinctions engender certain characteristics within Israelite religion and impact upon religious perceptions.
Underpinning each essay in this volume is a shared concern to:
(1) explore the ways in which worshippers' socio-cultural contexts shape and colour their religious beliefs and practices;
(2) assess the role, benefits and limitations of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament in reconstructing ancient Israelite religion. 




2. The Origins of Yahwism (van Oorschot & Witte)


Value to the project: ★★★★★
This is one of the best academic treatments of Yahwism’s early formation. It examines:
  • Yahweh’s possible southern origins (Midian/Edom/Teman)
  • Syncretism with El, Baal, Asherah
  • Pre-exilic Yahweh worship’s diversity
  • The move from regional deity to national god
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 5 (From Polytheism to Henotheism)
✔ Essay 6 (Israel’s prophetic shift)

Amazon Blurb
Published 2019
This compendium examines the origins of the God Yahweh, his place in the Syrian-Palestinian and Northern Arabian pantheon during the bronze and iron ages, and the beginnings of the cultic veneration of Yahweh.

Contributors analyze the epigraphic and archeological evidence, apply fundamental considerations from the cultural and religious sciences, and analyze the relevant Old Testament texts.



3. The Origin and Character of God (Theodore J. Lewis)


Value to the project: ★★★★★
Lewis is one of the leading scholars on Canaanite and Israelite religion. This book explains:
  • How early Israel conceptualized deity
  • Divine embodiment and anthropomorphism
  • The deep Canaanite roots of Yahweh’s traits
  • Ritual practice, sacrifice, iconography
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 3 (Pantheons)
✔ Essay 5 (Henotheism)
✔ Appendix B (Deity correspondences)

Amazon Blurb
Published 2023

Few topics are as broad or as daunting as the God of Israel, that deity of the world's three monotheistic religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, who has been worshiped over millennia. In the Hebrew Bible, God is characterized variously as militant, beneficent, inscrutable, loving, and judicious. Who is this divinity that has been represented as masculine and feminine, mythic and real, transcendent and intimate?

The Origin and Character of God is Theodore J. Lewis's monumental study of the vast subject that is the God of Israel. In it, he explores:
  • questions of historical origin,
  • how God was characterized in literature, and
  • how God is represented in archaeology and iconography.
He also brings us into the lived reality of religious experience. Using the window of divinity to peer into the varieties of religious experience in ancient Israel, Lewis explores the royal use of religion for power, prestige, and control; the intimacy of family and household religion; priestly prerogatives and cultic status; prophetic challenges to injustice; and the pondering of theodicy by poetic sages.

A volume that is encyclopedic in scope but accessible in tone and was honored with all three of the major awards in the field in three seperate disciplines (American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR) 2020 Frank Moore Cross Award, 2021 American Academy of Religion Award for Excellence in the Study of Religion, 2021 Biblical Archaeology Society Biennial Publication Award for the Best Book Relating to the Hebrew Bible), The Origin and Character of God is an essential addition to the growing scholarship of one of humanity's most enduring concepts.




4. Israelite Religions: An Archaeological and Biblical Survey (Richard Hess)

Value to the project: ★★★★☆ (more conservative, still useful)
Hess is more cautious and evangelical-leaning, but the archaeological synthesis is very strong. It adds:
  • Material culture analysis
  • Settlement patterns
  • Ritual practices
  • Iconography and cult objects
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 4 (Agrarian/Solar civilizations)
✔ Essays 5–6 (proto-Israelite religion)
✔ Data for maps/timelines

Good to have as a counterbalance to more critical scholars.

Published 2017

Archaeological excavation in the Holy Land has exploded with the resurgence of interest in the historical roots of the biblical Israelites. Israelite Religions offers Bible students and interested lay leaders a survey of the major issues and approaches that constitute the study of ancient Israelite religion. Unique among other books on the subject, Israelite Religions takes the Bible seriously as a historical source, balancing the biblical material with relevant evidence from archaeological finds.




5. Judaism Is About Love (Shai Held)


Value to the project: ★★★☆☆ (later relevance)
This title fits less with early religion but fits beautifully with:
  • Ethical monotheism
  • Prophetic tradition
  • Axial Age re-interpretation
  • How early ideas transformed into love-centered modern Judaism
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 9 (Universal religions)
✔ Essay 11 (Processual renewal)

Useful but not essential for the earliest sections. Very good for a final theological synthesis.

Published 2024

A profound, startling new understanding of Jewish life, illuminating the forgotten heart of Jewish theology and practice: love.

A dramatic misinterpretation of the Jewish tradition has shaped the history of the West: Christianity is the religion of love, and Judaism the religion of law. In the face of centuries of this widespread misrepresentation, Rabbi Shai Held - one of the most important Jewish thinkers in America today - recovers the heart of the Jewish tradition, offering the radical and moving argument that love belongs as much to Judaism as it does to Christianity.

Blending intellectual rigor, a respect for tradition and the practices of a living Judaism, and a commitment to the full equality of all people, Held seeks to reclaim Judaism as it authentically is. He shows that love is foundational and constitutive of true Jewish faith, animating the singular Jewish perspective on injustice and protest, grace, family life, responsibilities to our neighbors and even our enemies, and chosenness.

Ambitious and revelatory, Judaism Is About Love illuminates the true essence of Judaism - an act of restoration from within.




6. Yahweh Before Israel (Daniel E. Fleming)


Value to the project: ★★★★★ (one of the best)
Fleming is groundbreaking. He argues convincingly for:
  • Yahweh’s origins within broader West Semitic religion
  • Yahweh as a title or regional deity before becoming Israel’s national god
  • The merging of Yahweh and El traditions
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 3–6 (core)
✔ Appendix B (Comparative deity chart)

This book is essential for the treatment of early Semitic religion.

Amazon Blurb
Published 2023

Yahweh is the proper name of the biblical God. His early character is central to understanding the foundations of Jewish, Christian, and Islamic monotheism. As a deity, the name appears only in connection with the peoples of the Hebrew Bible, but long before Israel, the name is found in an Egyptian list as one group in the land of tent-dwellers, the Shasu. This is the starting-point for Daniel E. Fleming's sharply new approach to the god Yahweh. In his analysis, the Bible's 'people of Yahweh' serve as a clue to how one of the Bronze Age herding peoples of the inland Levant gave its name to a deity, initially outside of any relationship to Israel. For 150 years, the dominant paradigm for Yahweh's origin has envisioned borrowing from peoples of the desert south of Israel. Fleming argues in contrast that Yahweh was not taken from outsiders. Rather, this divine name is evidence for the diverse background of Israel itself.




7. God: An Anatomy (Francesca Stavrakopoulou)


Value to the project: ★★★★★
This is a stunning, richly written scholarly work. It explores:
  • The physicality of Israel’s God
  • Embodied divine attributes
  • Ancient Near Eastern conceptions of deity anatomy
  • Rituals that relate to bodily metaphors
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 3 (Pantheons)
✔ Essay 5 (Henotheism)
✔ Essay 6 (Prophetic transformations)

Highly aligned with an embodied and evolving divine.

Amazon Blurb
Published 2022

An astonishing and revelatory history that re-presents God as he was originally envisioned by ancient worshippers—with a distinctly male body, and with superhuman powers, earthly passions, and a penchant for the fantastic and monstrous.
"[A] rollicking journey through every aspect of Yahweh’s body, from top to bottom (yes, that too) and from inside out ... Ms. Stavrakopoulou has almost too much fun.”—The Economist
The scholarship of theology and religion teaches us that the God of the Bible was without a body, only revealing himself in the Old Testament in words mysteriously uttered through his prophets, and in the New Testament in the body of Christ. The portrayal of God as corporeal and masculine is seen as merely metaphorical, figurative, or poetic. But, in this revelatory study, Francesca Stavrakopoulou presents a vividly corporeal image of God: a human-shaped deity who walks and talks and weeps and laughs, who eats, sleeps, feels, and breathes, and who is undeniably male.
Here is a portrait—arrived at through the author's close examination of and research into the Bible—of a god in ancient myths and rituals who was a product of a particular society, at a particular time, made in the image of the people who lived then, shaped by their own circumstances and experience of the world. From head to toe—and every part of the body in between—this is a god of stunning surprise and complexity, one we have never encountered before.




8. The Invention of God (Thomas Römer)


Value to the project: ★★★★★
Römer is one of the leading historians of Israelite religion. This book covers:
  • The historical development of monotheism
  • The political inventions behind theological shifts
  • The redactional processes that shaped the Bible
  • The evolution of Yahweh from local deity to universal god
Where it helps:
✔ Essay 5 (Henotheism → Monotheism)
✔ Essay 6 (Prophetic revolutions)
✔ Essay 10 (Modernity and the eclipse/reinterpretation of the sacred)

Absolutely core.

Amazon Blurb
Published 2015

Who invented God? When, why, and where? Thomas Römer seeks to answer these questions about the deity of the great monotheisms - Yhwh (Israel), God (Christianity), or Allah (Islam) - by tracing Israelite beliefs and their context from the Bronze Age to the end of the Old Testament period in the third century BCE (during the InterTestamental Period).

That we can address such enigmatic questions at all may come as a surprise. But as Römer makes clear, a wealth of evidence allows us to piece together a reliable account of the origins and evolution of the god of Israel. Römer draws on a long tradition of historical, philological, and exegetical work and on recent discoveries in archaeology and epigraphy to locate the origins of Yhwh in the early Iron Age, when he emerged somewhere in Edom or in the northwest of the Arabian peninsula as a god of the wilderness and of storms and war. He became the sole god of Israel and Jerusalem in fits and starts as other gods, including the mother goddess Asherah, were gradually sidelined. But it was not until a major catastrophe - the destruction of Jerusalem and Judah -that Israelites came to worship Yhwh as the one god of all, creator of heaven and earth, who nevertheless proclaimed a special relationship with Judaism.

A masterpiece of detective work and exposition by one of the world’s leading experts on the Hebrew Bible, The Invention of God casts a clear light on profoundly important questions that are too rarely asked, let alone answered.


~ Continue to Part I, Essay 1 ~


Evolution of Worship & Religion
  • 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

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Evolution of Worship & Religion: A Proposed Outline


Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

The Evolution of Worship and Religion:
From Cosmic Awe to Processual Faith

A Metamodern Journey through the History of the Sacred

A PROPOSED OUTLINE

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT-5

In the beginning, there was wonder.
And wonder is where worship began.



Living Christianly in a Process-Based Cosmos

To live Christianly in a process world is not to cling to fixed dogma, but to participate in the ongoing incarnation of divine creativity - a creation still revealing, still suffering, still renewing, still redeeming, and still becoming.

In each of these concepts, religious developmental stages can be discovered through the formation and annunciation of long-developing "biblical" or "historic" themes in sacred motifs such as divine revelation, incarnating birth or incarnate living; in a lived cruciformity, redemption, fallenness, hope, or resolving telic consummation; or even, communal forms of discipleship, shepherding, pastoring, or daily provisioning for one another.

Like other ancient religious concepts, the Christian bible has woven these deeply ingrained themes together through the mythic, or historical, narratives of individuals, their clans, tribes, and early national origins.

Thus, a religious historian, or theolog, might say that Christ, or the Christ-event, is not confined to a single event in time, but is the interior creational rhythm of relational human experience itself - that such events reveal a divine pattern by which love takes form, dies, and rises again in every moment of creational becoming and unfolding.

Thus the processual invitation of God and the universe extends beyond mere religious creed. That it taps into the very heart of divinity itself. so that for the agnostic, or atheist, this same "divine" or "sacred" rhythm resurrects itself as the interior pulse of a processual cosmos - as it ceaselessly births value, beauty, love and compassion within the panpsychic fabric of cosmic change.

And for the person of faith, it is this very same processual current of interiority - though differently named and differently addressed - described in religious terminology as processual faith and theology. So that the divide between the spiritual but not religious is thus united upon a singular process-based foundation as the philosopher Whitehead had intended when marrying Christianity to process thought.

Consequently, whether we call this process God, cosmic consciousness, or the evolutionary heart of being and becoming, the naming matters less than our attunement to it - in our willingness to listen and to live in harmony with the universe’s own cosmic becoming....

We thus may glimpse this natural processual attunement through nature’s patient rhythms; in humanity's aspirations which draws its eyes to the heavens; and, in the inner turbulence of our human conflicts and personal strivings. Somehow, and in some way, beauty, value, and love remain our ceaseless companions - urging us toward cruciform ways of living; ones which are transformative, renewing, restorative, redeeming, and even resurrectional.

These are the interior movements of the soul, buried deep within the human psyche’s longing for coherence with God, with creation, and with one another.

And it is in this processual vision where theology and cosmology converge. Faith becomes not possession but participation - in a willingness to be shaped by "the Sacred," by God-and-the-world’s creative/valuative advance. Whether one might pray or ponder, worship or wonder - it is the same currents which carries us all: a universal current that is awakening a living cosmos towards love through processually valuative living.


The universe stirs within our breath,
learning a language of love -
within every living thing; even by
our hands and heart and words.

Love is the universe awakening
to it's divine pulse - that it is alive,
connected, aware, and becoming,
from one moment to the next,
from one occasion the another.

That God is in all, through all, by all.
That as God is, so must we be -
speaking in an evolving grammar,
of love, beauty, value, and connection.

Amen.

- R.E. Slater

 


PROPOSED OUTLINE


PART I - PRIMAL FOUNDATIONS: The Birth of the Sacred

The Upper Paleolithic to the Early/Late Mesolithic Age
45,000 to 10,000/8,000 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.



PART II - THE AGE OF GODS: Civilization and the Divine Hierarchies

The Early/Late Mesolithic to the Neolithic Age
10,000-3,000 BCE

Essay 3 - The Fertile Crescent and the Birth of Pantheons

  • Sumer, Akkad, Babylon: the gods of city-states and cosmic order.
  • Anu, Enlil, Enki, and Inanna as archetypes of rule, craft, and love.
  • Divine kingship as projection of social coherence.
  • Religion as the architecture of early civilization.
Bronze Age Civilizations & Pantheons
3,300–1,200 BCE

Essay 4 - Solar and Agrarian Civilizations: Egypt, Indus, and Minoan Mirrors

  • The metaphysics of fertility and the sun’s eternal solar cycle.
  • Egyptian ma’at as a model of cosmic equilibrium.
  • Indus Valley cosmic balance proto-Shiva and fertility seals.
  • Minoan ritual life as aesthetic communion with the cosmos
  • How temples functioned as cosmic machines, sustaining divine-human reciprocity.
  • How solar-agrarian rhythms shaped the earliest structured calendars as sacred choreography.
From Polytheism to Henotheism
ca. 2,000–1,000 BCE

Essay 5 - From Polytheism to Henotheism: The Age of High Gods

  • The rise of chief gods (Marduk, Amun-Ra, Zeus).
  • Political consolidation mirrored in theological hierarchy.
  • Private devotion and personal piety appear within civic religion.
  • The beginnings of transcendence: one god above others.



PART III - AXIAL AWAKENINGS: Ethics, Reflection, and Inner Faith

Essay 6 - The Prophetic Revolutions: Israel, Persia, and Ethical Monotheism

  • From covenant to conscience: Yahweh, Ahura Mazda, and the moral cosmos.
  • The prophetic imagination as ethical evolution.
  • Ritual gives way to righteousness; the divine becomes relational.
  • The first stirrings of universality within monotheism.

Essay 7 - India and the Path of Liberation

  • From ritual sacrifice to spiritual introspection.
  • The Upanishads’ discovery of Atman-Brahman unity.
  • Karma and dharma as moral order embedded in cosmic process.
  • Contemplation replaces appeasement — liberation as alignment.

Essay 8 - Greece and the Birth of Reasoned Faith

  • Philosophy as the rationalization of myth.
  • From Homer’s gods to Plato’s One and Aristotle’s Unmoved Mover.
  • The sacred reframed as order, harmony, and purpose.
  • Stoicism’s divine logos as precursor to process thought.


PART IV - SYNTHESIS & TRANSCENDENCE: The Sacred Made Universal

Essay 9 - The Age of Universal Religions

  • Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam as global movements of inner transformation.
  • The humanization of divinity: compassion as the new sacred law.
  • Mysticism, incarnation, and surrender as the universal triad of worship.
  • Empires of faith and the paradox of universality and control.

Essay 10 - Modernity and the Eclipse of the Sacred

  • The Enlightenment’s rational rebellion against myth.
  • Science, humanism, and secularization: new gods of reason.
  • The disenchanted cosmos and the crisis of meaning.
  • Nietzsche’s “death of God” as call to recreate the sacred from within.

Essay 11 - The Rebirth of the Sacred: Process, Panentheism, and the Pluriverse

  • Whitehead, Teilhard, and the rediscovery of cosmic consciousness.
  • Worship as participation in divine creativity, not obedience to decree.
  • From anthropocentric religion to planetary spirituality.
  • A metamodern synthesis: faith beyond dogma, reverence beyond creed.


PART V - SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS

Appendix A: Timeline of Religious Evolution

  • Visual chronology of sacred forms from Neolithic to Postmodern.
  • Annotated with major texts, artifacts, and shifts in cosmology.

Appendix B: Comparative Mythology Chart

  • Cross-cultural table of corresponding deities (Mesopotamian ↔ Egyptian ↔ Indo-Iranian ↔ Greek ↔ Biblical).
  • Includes archetypal categories (Sky-Father, Earth-Mother, Trickster, Redeemer).

Appendix C: The Architecture of the Sacred

  • Diagrams showing how temple, church, and mosque architecture encode cosmology.
  • From ziggurat to cathedral: the vertical axis of worship.

Appendix D: Processual Theology and the Future of Worship

  • Theological reflection on how process thought recovers the evolutionary sacred.
  • Worship as co-creation, prayer as participation, God as evolving presence.


EPILOGUE: The Return of Wonder

  • A meditation on the reawakening of awe in an age of reason.
  • The human story of worship - from survival ritual to cosmic empathy - is the story of consciousness learning to love the world as divine.
  • The future of religion is not belief but creative participation in the unfolding beauty of existence.



~ Continue to Resources ~


Evolution of Worship & Religion
  • 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