From a regional desert deity in the Canaanite pantheon, through monolatry, exile, and post-exilic transformation, into the universal God of the Abrahamic faiths — traced through inscriptions, scripture, and the consensus of modern scholarship.
The Yahweh of the early Hebrew Bible is not the Yahweh of later Judaism, much less of Christianity. He has a wife, a divine council, no clear afterlife, and no cosmic enemy. Almost everything we now associate with the biblical God was added across the next thousand years.
This archive presents the same evidence through different lenses. Begin wherever your curiosity leads.
Twenty-one eras from the Egyptian Shasu inscriptions to the Council of Nicaea. Each era expands to reveal scripture, sources, and historical context.
Enter the timeline → IIEight theological concepts traced across the exile. Hebrew text before, Avestan parallel, Hebrew text after — the texts make their own argument.
View the comparison → IIIThe world Yahweh was born into. El, Asherah, Baal, Anat — the four-tier divine council documented at Ugarit, ca. 1400 BCE.
Meet the gods → IVSix streams running in synchrony — Yahweh, the texts, the demons, the afterlife, and outside cultural influences from Egypt to Rome.
See the synchrony → VThe actual inscriptions, manuscripts, and texts the timeline rests on — Mesha Stele, Kuntillet Ajrud, Cyrus Cylinder, Dead Sea Scrolls, and more.
View the artifacts → VIThe bibliography. Smith, Boyce, Römer, Dever, Ehrman, Pagels, Collins, Day, Hultgård, Shaked — the published consensus this archive synthesizes.
Read the bibliography →This archive presents the mainstream scholarly consensus on the historical development of the Israelite deity Yahweh and the theological systems that grew up around him. It is not a religious argument. It does not claim to disprove or discredit any tradition's spiritual meaning. What it does is something narrower and more specific: it traces, with documentary evidence, how the texts and concepts changed over time.
Every era cited here is anchored to a primary source — an inscription, a manuscript, a passage in the canonical or extracanonical texts — and every claim is the position of credentialed scholars working in biblical studies, Near Eastern archaeology, and comparative religion. Where scholars disagree, the disagreement is noted. Where evidence is ambiguous, the ambiguity is preserved.
The story this evidence tells is striking. The Yahweh worshipped at the Jerusalem Temple in 700 BCE was a different deity, in nearly every theological dimension, from the Yahweh confessed at Nicaea in 325 CE. Tracking that transformation is the work of this archive.