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

-----

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

Monday, March 2, 2026

How the Ancient Sumerians Created the World’s First Writing System (SM 2a)


Sumerian script on a cunneiform tablet

Supplementary Materials
Part VI, SM 3

How the Ancient Sumerians Created
the World’s First Writing System

Bartle Bull on the Mesopotamian
Origins of Modern Civilization

November 22, 2024

“In Uruk he built walls, a great rampart, and the temple of blessed Eanna for the god of the firmament Anu, and for Ishtar the goddess of love. Look at it still today: the outer wall where the cornice runs, it shines with the brilliance of copper; and the inner wall, it has no equal. Touch the threshold, it is ancient.”
–The Epic of Gilgamesh, ca. 1750 BC


In the middle of the fourth millennium before Christ, men and women could feed themselves and their families, much of the time, but almost nobody else. They did not yet have the wheel. They could fight, but they did not have the capacity to make war. They could not read or write, for there was no writing. Without writing, there was no history. There were stories but no literature. Art was something that people might produce on their pottery, but never for a living. There were customs but no laws. There were chiefs but no kings, tribes but no nations. The city was unknown.

And then, around that time, civilization was born: urban life, based on nutritional surplus and social organization, characterized by complexity and material culture, much of it made possible by writing. This happened in a very particular part of the world: the flood-prone, drought-wracked, frequently pestilential plain of southern Iraq, where the rivers Tigris and Euphrates meet the Persian Gulf. The plain could be fertile, very fertile, but only when people worked together to irrigate it and control the floods with channels and earthworks; this necessity, most likely, accounts for much of the early surge in social complexity that distinguished the area. Later civilizations would arise independently in two great river valleys not so far away, the Indus and the Nile, but the original organized, literate, urban culture was produced by a far crueler and more challenging environment than either of those.

The need for a single script to serve a geography using two such dissimilar languages almost interchangeably was a great spur to the development of early Mesopotamian writing.

This first civilization came to be known as Sumer. By about the year 3000 BC, a city called Uruk near the mouth of the Euphrates River, just inland of the head of the Persian Gulf, had eighty thousand residents. A thousand years later Iraq, the land along the Euphrates and its sister stream, the Tigris, would be named for this early metropolis of Uruk. Sharing the land of Sumer, about the size of Belgium, with a dozen other city-states, Uruk was not always the foremost among its rivals in the land. But for most of its existence, spanning the two millennia of the Sumerian world, Uruk was the greatest city on earth.

The Sumerians invented kingship, priesthood, diplomacy, law, and war. They gave the West its founding stories: the opposition of darkness and light at the Beginning; the Flood, with its ark and dove and surviving patriarch; the tower of Babel; the distant ancestors of Odysseus and Hercules. The Sumerians established the outlines of our political, legal, and temporal structures too, with the first kings and assemblies, the first written laws, the first legal contracts, and the sexagesimal system of counting that regulates the hours and seconds of our days.

The Sumerians wrote the first epics and constructed the first monumental buildings. They invented the wheel, the sailing boat, the dome, and the arch. They were the first people to cast, rivet, and solder metals. They were the first to develop mathematics, calculating the hypotenuse of a right triangle two thousand years before Pythagoras and enabling extraordinary achievements in civil engineering. Compiling methodical lists of plants and animals, the Sumerians were the first people to apply rational order to our knowledge of the natural world.

The Sumerians wrote down almost everything they knew, much of it on disposable clay tablets that have survived the millennia. Some thirty-nine centuries after the last of the Sumerians died, another inventive and curious people, the Victorians of the nineteenth century AD, initiated a remarkable period of foreign exploration in Iraq. Thanks to this colorful and dramatic intellectual adventure, which began in the 1840s, today we can follow the course of Sumerian lawsuits, track Sumerian inventories, and study the terms of Sumerian marriages, wills, and loans. We read the overtures of Sumer’s diplomats. We follow in detail the provisioning of Sumer’s armies and the triumphs or disasters of their expeditions. We know intimately the pleadings of Sumerian students for more money from their fathers, and the pleadings of their fathers for more diligence from their sons. We track the transactions of Sumerian merchants in copper or onions. We admire the complex and perfect calculations of Sumerian engineers.

Human life on the alluvial plain of the two rivers at the birth of civilization five thousand years ago was precarious. Again and again, through the ancient stories and archaeological records that illuminate the dawn of history, plagues and pestilence swept the hot, low country. Terrifying floods killed and destroyed everything within reach of the raging waters that came every spring when the snow melted in the mountains five hundred miles and more to the north, in what is now Armenia and southeast Turkey. At Ur in Sumer’s far south, the great archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley, digging in 1929, discovered a layer of “perfectly clean clay” more than eight feet thick separating the remains—pottery and much more—of two distinct cultures from some time before 3000 BC. A single flood, in other words, had created a temporary lake that deposited this eight-foot-thick layer. The catastrophic scale of such a deluge is almost beyond the powers of imagination. Woolley naturally surmised that it was the great flood of Genesis. Other floods have left similar records in southern Iraq. Most were smaller than Woolley’s Ur deluge. One left eleven feet of new flood soil.

Meanwhile neighbors from the higher, rougher country to the east, north, and west were greedy for the wealth of the settled plain, then as now. The invasions of barbarians from the Persian hill country, the Kurdish and Turkish mountains, and the Arabian steppe sometimes paused, but never ended. Within Sumer, Uruk and its neighboring city-states fought against each other almost constantly during the twenty-odd centuries of Sumerian civilization.

The soil of southern Iraq is a dusty, flinty accumulation of silt from the two shifting rivers that originate far to the north. In the areas where Iraq’s alluvial soil is not dry, it is marshy, especially in the south; it was more so in ancient times, when the Tigris and Euphrates were bigger. The ground is home to no minerals or ores, although bitumen seeps from the earth in places. The land contains no stones for building. Almost no tree, aside from the date palm, grows on it successfully. Trade with the far-off source-lands of raw materials—for tin and copper to alloy into bronze for weapons, for gold and silver to please the rich and the divine, for hardwood timbers for the roof beams of palaces and temples—required the pooling of resources. Organization and leadership were required to conduct commerce at scale with places as far afield as Anatolia for tin, Lebanon for cedar timbers, “Oman for copper, south-west Iran for carved stone bowls, eastern Iran for lapis lazuli, the Indus for carnelian.”

*

The water of the two great rivers irrigated the rainless plain. It also raged as a violent killer, to be restrained with dykes and channels. This required cooperation on a much larger scale than the individual village or town could offer. Better irrigation led to increasing harvests. As the land of Sumer became crowded with more and more people, food was another reason for increasingly sophisticated social arrangements. Each of these catalysts—trade, water, sustenance—also led to humanity’s first organized conflicts. War was born. Every Sumerian city had its own principal deity, and the many gods also sent men into their earliest battles there on the hot plain.

*

Late in the fourth millennium BC, a couple of thousand years after the advent of agriculture with the Neolithic revolution, Sumer was one of several distinct cultures around the world. In none of these cultures had true urban life and, with it, civilization yet developed. Then the Sumerian genius produced its greatest innovation: writing.

The eighty thousand people living in Uruk by 3000 BC sheltered behind walls that were forty feet high and six miles long. Archaeologists estimate these to have cost over five million man-hours to build. The fourth-millennium city occupied about 1.7 square miles, a little bit less than imperial Rome at its peak (2.1 square miles) and larger than classical Athens.At the archaeological site of Uruk, the residential buildings, workshops, and barracks have not yet been excavated. Thus it is still the case that “very little about the actual conditions of life in the city is known.” Yet this is certain: Uruk was the world’s only major city of the fourth millennium BC, marked by public buildings that were “unprecedented and unrivaled at the time.” Most of the labor for such civic projects in Sumer came from free laborers requiring recompense for their work. Trade in livestock and agricultural produce fed them and the residents of nearby towns. The Sumerians needed a way to keep track of it all. This was the setting in which writing was born.

The earliest writing and the earliest direct precursors of writing, all from the second half of the fourth millennium, have been found at Uruk. Initially, clay tokens the size of a thimble would be formed to represent the sorts of things that a person might own and trade, such as sheep. For convenience, these tokens would then be put into a larger, hollow clay ball a little smaller than a grapefruit. These clay spheres, called “bullae,” served as something like sealed wallets or envelopes for the information within. On its exterior, the bulla would then be impressed with authenticating marks from cylindrical seals rolled upon the clay surface.

At Uruk some of these bullae have been found with additional marks impressed onto their surfaces. These marks indicated the number of tokens contained inside. It was an obvious step. The next step then suggested itself. With the contents marked on the exterior, there was no need for the little tokens rattling around inside. By 3300 BC, the information was instead simply scratched onto the surface of the spheres. The Sumerians had invented writing.

It is the only invention that has ever rivaled that of agriculture for its transformational effect upon human existence. Eventually flat clay tablets replaced the bullae.

At this stage writing was almost purely pictographic. Characters signified their objects through more or less recognizable images. Any given pictograph might mean several different things. “Mountain”—a right-side-up pyramid formed by three convex half circles—also meant “foreign lands,” for Sumer was completely flat. Consequently the same character also signified “conquest.” Shown together with the symbol for “woman,” a downward-pointing triangle with a notch at the bottom tip, the two symbols meant a woman captured from far away: “slave-woman.”

Pictographs were originally drawn on wet clay with a sharp-pointed object. Clay was an ideal medium for the Sumerians. It was cheap and abundant on the floodplain. Clay tablets were easy to make and prepare, although it is still not known how the larger ones were kept wet and impressionable. Sumerian scribes eventually wrote for the most part as we do, from left to right, top to bottom.

A typical tablet might be two to three inches high and half again as wide, with writing often going all the way to the margins. Incisions toward the bottom of archaic Iraq’s writing tablets tend to be visibly less deep and clear than those at the top of tablets, as the drying clay became harder to work. Once the inscribed clay had dried in southern Mesopotamia’s hot sun, it would endure for scores of centuries, and possibly forever, if left somewhere still and dry. Tablets made from such cheap and ubiquitous material were easily discarded once no longer needed. To the delight of archaeologists dozens of centuries later, they were thrown into heaps or used to fill the spaces beneath floors.

The original pictographs were for the most part recognizably indicative of something physical: a plow or a mountain, a head or a hand. But clay as a two-dimensional medium is ill-suited to both detail and curves. Around the year 2900, scribes discovered that impressing a sequence of lines with a straight-edged implement such as a cut reed was easier than tracing with a pointed implement. Reeds are flat, with a spine along one edge. Thus the mark made by each impression of the cut-off reed comprised a straight line with a wedge at its tip. By 2100, Sumerian scribes possessed a fast, well-developed script. Almost four thousand years later, in 1700 AD, cuneiform was named after the Latin word for wedge, cuneus, by the court interpreter of Eastern languages at the court of William III of England.

The rigid straight lines of the new technique pushed the characters away from the representational and toward the symbolic and the stylized. As centuries passed, the pictographs lost their illustrational quality. They were now “ideographs.” “Mountain,” for example, became three semicircles. By 2500 BC the recognizably representational had disappeared.

Here was the evolution from the ideographic to the phonetic. The impact was revolutionary. The boundaries of writing were now as infinite as those of speech.

A representational writing system has significant limitations. It is not practical to have a symbol for everything. The symbols must mean the same to all who use the writing. Users must memorize thousands of these symbols and must also be familiar with that which is being expressed. Tenses, cases, and voices are mostly impossible to depict. In the first centuries of writing, an image illustrating a foot meant “walk,” “stand up,” “ground,” “foundation,” and more besides simply “foot.” This made things difficult enough, but how would one say, “She will walk”? Or, worse, “Will she walk?” or “How will she have walked?” The ideographic method also had great limitations, as it connected writing not to words themselves, but rather to whatever it was that the words expressed. Ideographic writing bypassed spoken language, in other words. Restricted to known events and objects, unconnected to the spoken word, such a system can never cover all that language covers.

The next great innovation in the development of writing derived from puns. Early in the third millennium before Christ, Sumerian scribes perceived that homophones allowed them greatly to expand the verbal territory covered by the symbols they had mastered. For example, the Sumerians originally lacked a pictograph for their word sum, “to give.” To signify “give” in writing they used the pictograph for another word (“garlic”) that also was pronounced “sum.” In English such a visual pun is called a rebus. We might remember these from school. The picture of an eye next to that of a reed is one such, challenging us to remember dimly, the Sumerians with the sentence “I read.”

With this development, writing was now attached to sounds, to the “signifier” and not the “signified.” By the time of what is known as the Old Babylonian period, about 1500 BC, the Sumerian discovery of the power of paronomasia had helped the Uruk period’s written lexicon of two thousand characters halve in number, even as it covered more meaning. Writing was more accessible. During the Old Babylonian period even a king might be able to read, where hitherto that skill had been largely the province of scribes.

*

Shortly after the earliest development of writing, an ominous cloud appeared on Sumer’s northern horizon: a people called the Akkadians. In contrast to the native Sumerians, the Akkadians were Semitic pastoralists living in what came to be known as the Arabian Desert, the huge, dry steppe to the south and west of the Mesopotamian floodplain. By about 3000 BC, the Akkadians had moved eastward out of the desert. They settled north of Sumer in the part of Iraq that later came to be known as Babylonia.

The Sumerians and Akkadians lived next to each other for a thousand years. The two peoples mixed and fought constantly. There was a great degree of bilingualism, and all manner of sharing between the two languages over time. But the Sumerian and Akkadian tongues are entirely different. How, in such a setting, might a Sumerian scribe record the name of an Akkadian merchant? The need for a single script to serve a geography using two such dissimilar languages almost interchangeably was a great spur to the development of early Mesopotamian writing. Eventually the increasingly cosmopolitan quality of life on the Mesopotamian floodplain would force the script to make itself usable by people of different tongues.

The demands of the emerging southern Mesopotamian sprachbund required that the script deliver more and more of the nuances of speech. With writing no longer able to ignore spoken language, a crucial change happened. Most of writing’s symbols came to represent not meaning—an object, activity, or idea, for example—but rather sound. Here was the evolution from the ideographic to the phonetic. The impact was revolutionary. The boundaries of writing were now as infinite as those of speech. Once the Sumerian script became phonetic, the civilization that cuneiform defined would spread until it reached from Iran to the Mediterranean and from the Persian Gulf to Anatolia.

*Excerpted from Land Between the Rivers: A 5,000-Year History of Iraq by Bartle Bull. Copyright © 2024 by Bartle Bull. Reprinted with the permission of the publisher, Atlantic Monthly Press, an imprint of Grove Atlantic, Inc. All rights reserved.
__________________________________


amazon link
 
The epic, five millennia history of the region between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers that was the birthplace of civilization and remains today the essential crossroads between East and West

At the start of the fourth millennium BC, at the edge of historical time, civilization first arrived with the advent of cities and the invention of writing that began to replace legend with history. This occurred on the floodplains of southern Iraq where the great rivers Tigris and Euphrates meet the Persian Gulf. By 3000 BC, a city called Uruk (from which “Iraq” is derived) had 80,000 residents. Indeed, as Bartle Bull reveals in his magisterial history, “if one divides the 5,000 years of human civilization into ten periods of five centuries each, during the first nine of these the world’s leading city was in one of the three regions of current day Iraq”—or to use its Greek name, Mesopotamia.

Inspired by extensive reporting from the region to spend a decade delving deep into its history, Bull chronicles the story of Iraq from the exploits of Gilgamesh (almost certainly an historical figure) to the fall of the Iraqi monarchy in 1958 that ushered in its familiar modern era. The land between the rivers has been the melting pot and battleground of countless outsiders, from the Akkadians of Hammurabi and the Greeks of Alexander to the Ottomans of Suleiman the Magnificent. Here, by the waters of Babylon, Judaism was born and the Sunni-Shia schism took its bloody shape.

Central themes play out over the millennia: humanity’s need for freedom versus the co-eternal urge of tyranny; the ever-present conflict and cross-fertilization of East and West with Iraq so often the hinge. We tend to view today’s tensions in the Middle East through the prism of the last hundred years since the Treaty of Versailles imposed a controversial realignment of its borders. Bartle Bull’s remarkable, sweeping achievement reminds us that the region defined by the land between the rivers has for five millennia played a uniquely central role on the global stage.

Bartle Bull has written from the Middle East for the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Daily Telegraph, Foreign Policy, Die Welt, and other publications. He is the only western journalist to have been embedded with the Mahdi Army in Iraq. He sits on the Visiting Committee of the Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art at the Metropolitan Museum in New York City. His 2017 Showtime documentary film Cradle of Champions, following three young athletes competing in the world’s oldest amateur boxing tournament, received numerous awards and rave reviews. 




~ Continue to Part VI, SM 3 ~


Evolution of Worship & Religion

The Evolution of Worship & Religion - Prequel to Essay I


The Evolution of Worship & Religion

Prequel to Essay I

Before History:
Humanity in the Long Dawn of Becoming

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

The story of humanity was written long before ink -
in stone, in fire, in bone,
and in the slow remembering of the earth itself.



Preface

This essay inaugurates the series “Evolution of Worship & Religion” by situating religion not as a sudden invention, but as an emergent dimension of human becoming. Before doctrine, before priesthood, before sacred texts, there existed a long developmental arc in which early humans encountered the world as both material and meaningful.

Prehistory, therefore, is not merely a background to religion - it is its generative ground. The gestures that would later become ritual, the markings that would become symbol, and the communal bonds that would become liturgy all arise within this deep, pre-literate past.

To understand religion, one must first understand the conditions under which human consciousness itself unfolded. This essay traces those conditions across the prehistoric ages, interpreting them not as static periods but as dynamic phases within a continuous process of relational becoming.


Introduction - Prehistory as the Ground of Religious Emergence

https://images.openai.com/static-rsc-3/95yG2nus4rEJ_G9KhGwy7aaDx4mhoNXv6yJD6DvTLGvjtV7eF1QhrPho7F22JJ4T93EtPAesOt7zMCmUQXyoVRHL4yjjmAsFwkUgroXAaug?purpose=fullsize&v=1

https://scitechdaily.com/images/Artists-Reconstruction-of-Clovis-Life.jpg


18 mya - Pliopithecus
3.5 mya - Australopithecus
2.0 mya - Homo habilis
0.5 mya - Homo erectus
70,000 BP - Homo neaderthalensis
35,000 BP - Homo sapiens sapiens

Human existence precedes written history by hundreds of thousands of years. While written records emerge only within the last five millennia, anatomically modern humans have existed for approximately 300,000 years, and earlier hominin forms extend the lineage back over 2.5 million years.

This immense span - commonly termed prehistory - is accessible not through texts but through material traces: tools, bones, pigments, settlements, and environmental modifications. These traces reveal not only survival strategies but also the gradual emergence of symbolic and relational awareness.

From a processual perspective, prehistory is best understood not as a void but as a field of becoming - a continuous unfolding in which biological, cognitive, social, and proto-religious dimensions co-evolve. Religion, in this sense, is not introduced into human life from without; it arises from within the evolving structure of human experience itself.


I. The Paleolithic Age - Survival, Symbol, and the First Sacred Gestures


2.5 mya - Lower Paleolithic
300,000 BP - Middle Paleolithic
30,000 BP - Upper Paleolithic (before last major ice age)
14,000 BP - Mesolithic (after the last major ice age)
11,700 BP - Neolithic
3,300 BCE - Ancient India

The Paleolithic Age - spanning from approximately 2.5 million years ago to around 10,000 BCE - represents the longest and most formative phase of human existence. During this period, human communities lived primarily as nomadic hunter-gatherers, adapting to a wide range of ecological conditions.

Technologically, Paleolithic humans developed increasingly sophisticated stone tools, including hand axes, blades, and scrapers. The controlled use of fire marked a decisive threshold, enabling cooking, protection, and social gathering. These developments reflect not only practical ingenuity but also the emergence of cooperative social structures.

Yet the Paleolithic record reveals more than subsistence. The appearance of cave paintings, carvings, and burial practices suggests an early symbolic consciousness. Sites such as Lascaux and Chauvet indicate intentional representation of animals, movement, and possibly cosmological patterns. Burial sites, often accompanied by grave goods or red ochre, imply a recognition of death that transcends mere biological cessation.

These elements may be interpreted as proto-religious expressions - not formalized systems of belief, but embodied responses to mystery, mortality, and environment. Early humans appear to have engaged the world not only as a resource but as a presence - something to be encountered, interpreted, and perhaps revered.

From a process perspective, the Paleolithic age represents the emergence of symbolic mediation - the capacity to hold experience in forms that extend beyond immediate perception. This capacity becomes the seedbed for later myth, ritual, and theology.


II. The Mesolithic Age - Transition, Environment, and Relational Adaptation




The Mesolithic Age - roughly 14,000 to 8,000 BCE - emerges in the wake of the last (inter-glacial) Ice Age. As glaciers receded and climates stabilized, human populations adapted to increasingly diverse and localized environments.

Technological innovation during this period includes the development of microliths - small, refined stone tools often combined with wood or bone to form composite implements such as arrows and spears. Fishing technologies expanded, and many communities established seasonal or semi-permanent settlements near rivers, lakes, and coastlines.

Archaeological evidence such as shell middens reveals patterns of sustained habitation and resource management. These developments indicate a shift toward ecological attunement - a deepening relationship between human communities and specific landscapes.

Religiously or symbolically, this period likely witnessed a continuation and diversification of earlier practices. While direct evidence is limited, the increasing stability of settlement patterns suggests the possibility of localized ritual activity tied to place.

From a processual standpoint, the Mesolithic represents a phase of relational refinement. Human beings are no longer merely surviving within environments; they are learning to inhabit them with increasing sensitivity and continuity.


III. The Neolithic Age - Agriculture, Settlement, and the Structuring of Meaning



Stone Age - 3.3 mya to 3300 BCE
Bronze Age - 3300 - 1200 BCE
Iron Age - 1200 - 500 BCE

The Neolithic Age - approximately 8,000 to 3,000 BCE - marks one of the most transformative transitions in human history: the shift from foraging to agriculture.

The domestication of plants and animals enabled the development of permanent settlements, leading to the formation of villages and proto-urban communities. This shift brought profound changes in social organization, including division of labor, population growth, and the accumulation of material culture.

Technological advancements include polished stone tools, pottery, weaving, and architectural construction. These developments reflect not only increased efficiency but also the emergence of aesthetic and symbolic elaboration.

Importantly, the Neolithic period provides clearer evidence of structured religious activity. Sites such as Göbekli Tepe and Çatalhöyük suggest communal ritual spaces, symbolic architecture, and possibly organized ceremonial practices. These developments indicate that religion is becoming institutionalized within communal life.

From a process perspective, the Neolithic transition represents a movement from fluid existence to structured continuity. Human beings begin to orient themselves not only in space but in time - cultivating land, storing resources, and transmitting traditions. Religion, in this context, becomes a means of stabilizing and interpreting this new temporal depth.


IV. The Bronze Age - Civilization, Order, and the Codification of the Sacred

Wikipedia - Overview map of the world at the end of the 2nd millennium BC, color-coded by cultural stage:
  Palaeolithic or Mesolithic hunter-gatherers
  nomadic pastoralists
  simple farming societies
  complex farming societies (Old World Bronze AgeAndes)
  state societies (Fertile CrescentChina)

The Bronze Age - roughly 3,300 to 1,200 BCE - is characterized by the emergence of complex societies, facilitated by advances in metallurgy. The alloying of copper and tin to produce bronze enabled stronger tools and weapons, supporting agricultural expansion, trade networks, and urban development.

This period witnesses the rise of early civilizations, including those of Mesopotamia (Sumeria, Akkadia, Assyria, Babylonia, Hittites, Shoenicia & Sea Peoples) and Egypt (refer to timeline). With increasing social complexity come systems of governance, codified law, and stratified social hierarchies.

Crucially, the Bronze Age marks the advent of writing systems, such as cuneiform and hieroglyphics. These systems allow for the recording of economic transactions, political decrees, and religious narratives.

Religion in this period becomes increasingly formalized. Temples, priesthoods, and mythological systems emerge as central components of societal organization. The sacred is no longer only experienced in immediate relation to environment or life-cycle events; it is now mediated through institutions and texts.

From a processual lens, the Bronze Age represents the codification of meaning - the translation of lived experience into enduring symbolic systems.


V. The Iron Age - Expansion, Identity, and the Emergence of Historical Consciousness


The Iron Age - beginning around 1,200 BCE - introduces more accessible and durable metal technologies. Iron tools and weapons contribute to agricultural productivity, territorial expansion, and intensified social interaction.

Urbanization accelerates, and societies develop increasingly complex infrastructures, including roads, water systems, and fortified settlements. Writing systems evolve into alphabets, enabling broader literacy and the preservation of cultural memory.

Religiously, this period sees the further development of ethical, narrative, and theological traditions. Texts begin to reflect not only ritual practice but also moral reflection and historical interpretation.

This marks the transition from prehistory to history proper - a shift in which human communities begin to narrate their own existence within time.

From a process perspective, the Iron Age represents the emergence of self-conscious identity - the capacity of societies to understand themselves as participants within an unfolding historical narrative.


Conclusion - The Deep Roots of Religion in Human Becoming

Prehistory is not a primitive prelude to civilization; it is the matrix within which human consciousness, culture, and religion emerge.

Across the Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Bronze, and Iron Ages, we observe not isolated developments but a continuous process of transformation:

  • from survival to symbolism

  • from mobility to settlement

  • from immediacy to memory

  • from experience to interpretation

Religion, in this light, is not an external addition to human life. It is an emergent dimension of humanity’s ongoing effort to situate itself within a world that is at once material and meaningful.

Thus, the evolution of worship is inseparable from the evolution of humanity itself. Both arise within the same process - a process of relational becoming that continues into the present.



For Additional Referral:

The Prehistoric Ages: How Humans Lived Before Written Records, by Lesley Kennedy



Poetic Coda

Before the word, there was the mark,
before the temple - the open sky.

Hands of earth in firelight dark
asked not what - but why.

And still we walk that ancient thread,
through field and flame and frame -

A living past beneath our tread,
becoming without name.

- R.E. Slater




~ Continue to Part I, Essay 1 ~


Evolution of Worship & Religion


Bibliography

  • Childe, V. Gordon. Man Makes Himself. London - Watts & Co., 1936.

  • Cunliffe, Barry. Europe Between the Oceans. New Haven - Yale University Press, 2008.

  • Diamond, Jared. Guns, Germs, and Steel - The Fates of Human Societies. New York - W. W. Norton, 1997.

  • Harari, Yuval Noah. Sapiens - A Brief History of Humankind. New York - Harper, 2015.

  • Hodder, Ian. Çatalhöyük - The Leopard’s Tale. London - Thames & Hudson, 2006.

  • Mithen, Steven. The Prehistory of the Mind. London - Thames & Hudson, 1996.

  • Renfrew, Colin. Prehistory - The Making of the Human Mind. New York - Modern Library, 2007.

  • Stringer, Chris. The Origin of Our Species. London - Allen Lane, 2011.

  • Tattersall, Ian. Masters of the Planet. New York - Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.

  • Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality. New York - Free Press, 1978.


Friday, February 20, 2026

On vacation, Feb 2026

An eco-tour (transitional, tropical) hike on bad ground.

Hi.

My wife and I are away for a few weeks. When returning I intend to finish "What is reality" series and "How is cosmogical reality processual?" along with about about 30 other essays and commentaries.

These forthcoming essays will all be layered, organized, and outlined with one another... they just are not written yet. They are also related all the way back to all the published essays ftom last July forwards. If you wish to catch up, start with the Frege articles, July 2025, and read the next 150 essays chronologically.

Also, check out the many hundreds and hundreds of articles using the topic listing on the right. To assist topical readings, the listed Indexes in the topics-listing summarize previously written series as a group. When I set out to deconstruct - and - reconstruct Christianity I have done this completely without loss of faith. Just the opposite. I wish to strengthen the faith of millions. In affect, I have properly updated and contemporized today's faith.

There are also poetry articles here at Relevancy22 and a completely separate poetry site on google. To find it, just type "r.e. slater + poetry." Its my alter-ego site when I need a break.

Otherwise, be patient. I need the rest, and I need to be unplugged and decompress. My first three days I simply slept and slept. Apparently I had become exhausted.

Blessings!


R.E. Slater
Feb 20, 2026
Central and South America

   
Camels are not stinky, but riding is uncomfortable.

Racing in the Baja on UTX's.


Sunday, February 8, 2026

Truth as Horizon, Not Property: Responding to Truth Cultures



Truth as Horizon, Not Property

On Faith, Scripture, and the Refusal of Certainty

A Public Creed for a Searching People in a Fragile Democracy

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

Truth is not a possession to be guarded,
but a horizon best approached together.
- R.E. Slater

Public Creed

We believe truth is approached, not owned.
That faith must remain open to correction.
That any belief justifying cruelty and oppression has failed.
That love and human dignity come before doctrine.

Preamble
These statements do not claim authority, finality, or exclusive insight. It arises from the recognition that truth cannot be possessed without distortion, and that faith and democracy alike fail when certainty is used to excuse harm. In a time when religious and ideological language is increasingly invoked to justify brutal cruelty, exclusion, dehumanization, and unaccountable power, we offer these thoughts as a public posture or set of guidelines rather than as a doctrine - one that honors searching over certainty, responsibility over obedience, and shared becoming over fortified belief.

Truth is not what we hold.
It is how we walk together.
- R.E. Slater
 




A Public Statement

  • We affirm that truth is approached, not owned.
  • That no institution, ideology, or tradition is exempt from correction or accountability.
  • That certainty invoked to justify cruelty has forfeited moral authority.
  • That human dignity precedes any civic or religious doctrine, policy, and power.
  • That democracy depends on humility, plural voices, and the willingness to be wrong.
  • That faith, when it is worthy of trust, remains open, revisable, and accountable to love.
  • That shared responsibility matters more than enforced conformity.
  • That dialogue, restraint, and compassion are civic and spiritual strengths, not weaknesses.
  • That no claim to truth is legitimate if it requires dehumanizing the other.




Faith is Not a Possession

One says they hold truth,
as one might hold a deed,
a barrier fence line,
at times barbed and long.

One might say they are biblical,
as though ink could finish breath,
as though God consented,
to be archived and laminated.

But truth was never a property.
It came as weather.
As fire that burned.
As a voice refusing permanence.

Moses carried it in stone that broke.
The prophets spoke of it in grief.
The psalmists and poets wrote of mercy.
The Jesus gospels spoke in parables
that God might be heard in no one way.

Truth was never so simply "handed over."
It was to be entered into experientially -
as  the burning bush and consciences alike.
To be walked on roads that came-and-went.
Whose borders were permeable and crossed.

Those claiming to own "biblical truth"
built walls around the poor and unwanted,
calling imposed cruelty obedience,
mistaking a loving faith for absolutism.

But such an abominable faith was
never the answer in God's economy.
It was to be a posture of listening.
The courage to say, "I do not know,"
and to walk together in pursuit.

We do not come to belief to arrive.
We come to search, to be corrected,
to be interrupted, to learn and listen,
to be widened by other perspectives.

To conclude this is heresy is to repeat
the heresy of Abraham leaving Ur,
of Jacob limping away from divine encounter,
of Mary consenting without clarity,
of Jesus rightly refusing lurid kingdoms.

Truth does not live in locked fortresses.
It breathes where questions are allowed,
where power is held accountable,
where love risks uncertainty.

If divinity speaks at all,
it speaks in the verbs of life -
calling, undoing, welcoming,
becoming, learning, loving.

And if democracy is to live again,
it will not be through sacred certainty,
or declared human "truths"
by human dogmas and doctrines.

But through shared searching -
together, in many voices,
in unfinished sentences,
by peoples re-learning how to listen,
without owning flat, finished answers.

Those who claim truth's possession
have learned to keep their locked doors.
But those who hold truth loosely
have unlocked their doors
to walk outside their mindscapes.


R.E. Slater
 February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved






Seeking, Not Possessing

We do not claim to hold truth.
We commit ourselves to seeking it.

We reject the belief that Scripture is a finished subject,
or that "objectivized faiths" grant ownership of certainty.

We receive Scripture as witness, not weapon;
as provocation, not possession;
as a living field of struggle, failure, revision, and growth.

We deny any theology that confuses certainty with faith
or obedience with moral abdication of human rights and equality.

We refuse the use of “biblical truth” as a shield against responsibility,
or as a tool of discipline,
or as a justification for imposed, immoral, cruelty.

We reject fortress faiths -
faiths that make enemies of friends,
demands purity,
sacralizes power,
or renders love optional.

We affirm that faith is not assent but orientation;
not arrival but becoming;
not certainty but responsibility.

We stand with the deeper biblical postures -
of (rabbinic) argument, lament, parable, humility, and unfinished vision.

We believe any faith worthy of the name
must remain open to correction,
be accountable to the vulnerable,
and answerable to love's remiss.

We hold that faith and democracy rise or fall together -
each requiring humility, plural voices, revisability,
and the courage to be wrong and acknowledge it.

We confess that when belief harms another,
it has already betrayed its living source.

We do not guard truth -
We walk towards it, together.


R.E. Slater
 February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved





Preamble

This creed does not claim authority, finality, or exclusive insight. It arises from a long recognition that truth cannot be possessed without becoming distorted, and that faith collapses when certainty is used to excuse harm. In an age when religious language is increasingly invoked to justify cruelty, exclusion, and authoritarian power, we offer this as a statement of posture rather than doctrine - one that honors searching over certainty, responsibility over obedience, and shared becoming over fortified belief.

Such a creed does not an end.
It is a refusal to close.



A Civic Statement

  • We affirm that truth is approached, not owned.
  • That no institution, ideology, or tradition is exempt from revision or accountability.
  • That certainty used to justify harm has forfeited moral authority.
  • That democracy depends on humility, plural voices, and the willingness to be wrong.
  • That human dignity precedes policy, power, and ideology.
  • That shared responsibility matters more than enforced conformity.
  • That dialogue, compassion, and restraint are civic strengths, not weaknesses.
  • That no claim to truth is legitimate if it requires dehumanizing the other.
  • That the future depends not on final answers, but on our capacity to listen, revise, and act together.




An Anti-Creed Statement (What We Refuse)

  • We refuse the claim that truth can be owned, guarded, or weaponized.
  • We refuse the use of sacred language to excuse cruelty or indifference.
  • We refuse obedience that dissolves moral responsibility.
  • We refuse faith that builds fortresses instead of communities.
  • We refuse certainty that silences dissent or punishes doubt.
  • We refuse nationalism baptized as righteousness.
  • We refuse purity tests that require enemies to survive.
  • We refuse authority that answers only to itself.
  • We refuse beliefs that demand suffering as proof of loyalty.
  • We refuse any vision of order that renders love optional.
  • We refuse the lie that arrival matters more than becoming.



Truth as Horizon, Not Property

On Faith, Scripture, and the Refusal of Certainty

1. Holding Truth vs Seeking Truth

The difference between holding truth and seeking truth is not semantic. It is postural. It determines how Scripture is read, how faith is practiced, and how power is exercised.

To claim possession of “biblical truth” is to treat Scripture as a static deposit - as something finished, to be secured, and guarded. It becomes a boundary-marker distinguishing insiders from outsiders, and a credentialed authority that legitimizes teaching, discipline, and exclusion for others to follow. Truth, in this posture, is something one arrives at, then defends, and oppresses others for not assimilating towards their perceptions.

However, to seek truth through Scripture is to enter an altogether different relationship with the Divine, the sacred, the Loving Other - where holiness and justice conform to love and not love to holiness and justice.

Scripture must become a witness rather than a weapon, a provocation rather than a possession; to be encountered as a field of struggle, failure, revision, and growth... an unfolding conversation rather than a closed system of boundary truths. Here, faith is not about guarding (religious or faith) conclusions but about remaining open to interruption.

The church’s repeated insistence that it holds “biblical truth” must be framed in humility, but too often it is more accurately a descriptor for untenable, mythic certainties masquerading as real faith. And mythic certainties do not remain benign. They harden. Calcify. And eventually become inhumanly coercive as exampled by trans-abuse, immigrant-abuse, abuse of women, and children... all in the mighty name of faith.

One never should enter Christianity in order to "arrive". But to enter within to journey, wrestle, and be undone by the divine sacred of love and love's becoming. That holy posture - of seeking rather than possessing - places it's faithful closer to the Abrahamic-Davidic-Prophetic-Jesus tradition than those who claim to guard it.


2. The Myth of “Biblical Truth” as a Finished Object

In contemporary church discourse, “biblical truth” functions less as a theological claim and more as a mechanism of control within its power centers. It serves as a rhetorical shield against critique, a disciplinary tool for enforcing conformity, and a permission structure for cruelty. Too frequently the children and women of bible-churches experience abuse and oppression in the name of "biblical truth."

It allows religious institutions such as churches, synods, denominations, and schools, to say, "We are not choosing oppression - we are merely obeying God."

But the Bible itself never behaves as a single, settled truth-system. It is argumentative rather than uniform. It revises itself across generations. It contains internal resistance and unresolved tensions. Its ethical vision advances in fits and starts. It is morally uneven and theologically self-correcting. It is a very real picture of people and societies in motion, seeking thrival and discovering brutal roadblocks to love and energy.

To claim the Bible as a "finalized truth" is to deny the Bible’s own mode of existence. Scripture does not present itself as a "closed answer" but as a living record of human struggle with God, neighbor, power, and responsibility where truth is always approached and never quite apprehended. At its height, Israel failed and crucified the living God... how much more does the church do the same thing with Jesus' love and faithfulness through high-and-holy rules and obedience sentences??

In this sense, “biblical truth,” as it is often deployed today, rests more on a mythic foundation than it does a truth foundation - not because Scripture is meaningless, but because it is too dynamically alive to be reduced to mere "era-specific or culture-oriented" certainty. The problem is not that Scripture is unstable, but that certainty demands a stillness Scripture refuses to provide, and to which "certainty faiths" always demand of themselves.


3. MAGA Christianity and Fortress Faith

MAGA Christianity represents a particularly stark example of what happens when truth is treated as property. It fuses absolutist theology with nationalist identity and fear-driven boundary enforcement. The result is not faith, but oppresive fortress-building all in the name of "purity" and "White Christian culture".

Fortress faiths always require enemies. It depends on purity tests. It thrives on spectacle. It legitimizes punishment. It needs scapegoats to sustain itself.
This is why cruelty can coexist so easily with “biblical truth” language without producing cognitive dissonance. Once truth is owned, love becomes optional. Compassion becomes negotiable. Suffering becomes collateral.

Outsiders are not wrong to connect this magafaith-posture to ICE raids, dehumanizing policy rhetoric, indifference to suffering, and the sacralization of state power. These are not accidental failures of that theology. They are its logical outcomes.

When certainty is baptized, coercion soon follows.


4. The Older, Deeper Biblical Posture

What must be articulated aligns not with today's modernized, albeit secular, faith absolutism, but with the deeper, "truer,"  biblical posture itself:

The Hebrew prophets argued with God rather than quoting Him. The wisdom tradition refused certainty and prized discernment. Jesus taught in parables precisely to prevent closure and resist final answers. Paul confessed that we see “through a glass, darkly,” acknowledging the limits of knowledge even within faith.

Across these traditions runs a consistent thread: faith is not assent - but reorientation. Not possession - but re-attunement. Not certainty - but re-acquired responsibility.

This posture cannot coexist with absolutism. One dissolves the other. The moment faith becomes fixed, it ceases to be faithful. The moment faith learns faithfulness it ceases to be fixed.


5. Re-Birthing Faith and Democracy

To link this faith critique to democracy is exactly right. Democracy MUST depend on epistemic humility, a plurality of voices, critique and revisability, and the willingness to be wrong.

It requires shared participation rather than enforced conformity. These are not weaknesses. They are the conditions of collective life.

Similarly with any faith - whether Christian, Jewish, Muslim, etc. When churches and faith groups claim to own truth, they train people to accept authoritarian certainty, moral exemption, and (often enforced) hierarchical obedience. When churches model God's love, they then place themselves in the posture of seeking truth rather than owning truth; cultivating dialogue rather than demand obedience; and willingly seek to be accountable, compassionate, shared responsibility, and grow in civic maturity with cultural and religious difference.

In summary, challenging the rhetorics of “biblical truth” is not an act of anti-faith or lost-faith; it is a very pro-God, pro-democratic, pro-human, and profoundly biblical in its deepest sense.

When true truth seeks seek loving, critiquing approaches to flat statements of "biblical truth" they are not dismantling their faith. They are removing false floors that lead to abuse and oppression. They are allowing perceived truth to breathe again as Abraham had learned with his experiences in Ur and later, with God. Seekers of true-truth are but naming the difference between faith as arrival and faith as becoming. We wish always to become the latter.




A Manifesto Against Possessed Truth

On Faith, Scripture, and Democratic Life



  1. Truth is not a possession.
    Any claim to hold truth as settled, guarded, or owned has already begun to distort it.

  2. Scripture is not a finished object.
    It is a living record of struggle, argument, revision, and moral growth.
    To freeze it is to betray it.

  3. “Biblical truth” has become a mythic device.
    It now functions less as theological insight and more as a shield against responsibility,
    a tool of discipline,
    and a permission structure for cruelty.

  4. Certainty masquerading as faith is not humility.
    It is mythic certainty—and mythic certainty always hardens into coercion.

  5. We reject obedience that dissolves moral agency.
    “We are merely obeying” is not faith.
    It is abdication.

  6. Fortress faith is not faith.
    Any belief system that requires enemies, purity tests, spectacle, punishment, or scapegoats
    has already abandoned love.

  7. Cruelty justified by sacred language is not a failure of theology.
    It is its logical outcome when truth is treated as property.

  8. The deeper biblical posture is unfinished by design.
    Prophets argued.
    Wisdom refused certainty.
    Jesus spoke in parables to prevent closure.
    Paul confessed partial sight.

  9. Faith is not assent.
    It is orientation.
    Not arrival, but becoming.
    Not certainty, but responsibility.

  10. Absolutism and faith cannot coexist.
    One dissolves the other.

  11. Democracy and faith share the same ethical soil.
    Both require humility, plural voices, revisability, and the courage to be wrong.

  12. When churches claim to own truth, they train people for authoritarianism.
    When they seek truth, they form people capable of dialogue, accountability, and care.

  13. Challenging “biblical truth” rhetoric is not anti-faith.
    It is pro-human, pro-democratic, and faithful to Scripture’s living character.

  14. We did not enter belief to arrive.
    We entered to walk, to wrestle, and to be undone.

  15. The future belongs to becoming, not certainty.
    Faith that cannot be questioned will not survive.
    Faith that refuses possession may yet endure.