First Things
January 21, 2014
 
 
The Bible's Many Gods
 
 
 
The idea that there are other “gods” who exist as real supernatural 
beings,  albeit infinitely inferior to the only Creator and Redeemer, pervades 
the 
Bible.  The Psalms fairly explode with evidence. “There is none like you 
among the gods,  O Lord” (86:8); “For great is the Lord, and greatly to be 
praised; he is to be  revered above all gods” (96:4); “Our Lord is above all 
gods” (135:5); “Ascribe  to Yahweh, [you] gods, ascribe to Yahweh glory and 
strength” (29:1, my trans.);  “He is exalted above all gods” (97:7); “For 
Yahweh is a great god, and a great  king above all gods” (95:3, my trans.). 
And so on
 
But it’s not just the Psalms. In Exodus Yahweh predicts that he will 
execute  judgments “on all the gods of Egypt” (12:12). The author of Numbers 
then 
 declares that that is indeed what happened: “Yahweh executed judgments 
against  their gods” (33:4). There is no hint that Yahweh is the only God. 
Instead it is  clearly implied that Egypt has her own gods, and Yahweh will 
defeat them. 
When Yahweh gives his people the Ten Commandments, the first commandment  
implies the existence of other gods: “You shall have no other gods before me”
  (Exod. 20:3; see also Deut. 5:7). In Exodus 23:32–33 Israel is told not 
to  covenant with or worship other gods; there is no suggestion that the gods 
of  Israel’s neighbors do not exist. 
In Deuteronomy 4:19 the Israelites are forbidden from worshipping “the sun, 
 the moon and the stars, all the host of heaven . . . [which] Yahweh your 
god has  allotted to all the peoples everywhere under heaven.” In other 
words, they were  told not to worship other gods, not because those gods did 
not 
exist, but  because they were supposed to rule other peoples, not Israel. 
Yahweh himself, who created and rules the other gods, would rule Israel  
directly. He would rule the nations indirectly through the delegated authority 
 of other gods. This, apparently, was the original intent behind the 
strange  passage regarding the “prince of Persia” in Daniel 10: “The prince of 
Persia  withstood me [perhaps the angel Gabriel] twenty-one days, but Michael, 
one of  the chief princes, came to help me” (v. 13). 
Something had gone terribly wrong in Psalm 82. The supernatural beings He 
had  appointed to rule the nations justly had failed to perform. They were 
supposed  to rule with justice, executing judgments on behalf of the poor, the 
widows and  the rest of the nations. But because they did not judge 
properly, Yahweh would  judge them. And the punishment was ferocious. 
[Yahweh] has taken his place in the divine  council,
In the midst of the gods he passes judgment. . .  .
And all of you, sons of Elyon [God Most High]
Instead like Adam you  shall die,
And like one of the ‘Shining Ones’ you shall  fall.”
“Arise, O Yahweh; Judge the earth!
May you take possession of all  the nations!” 
If these “gods” were really human beings, verse 7 would not make sense, 
for  all humans die like Adam. Why would this be a special punishment? 
Instead, there  is a hint in this verse of cosmic rebellion against Yahweh. It 
calls to mind  Isaiah 14 and Ezekiel 28, where the king of Babylon and prince 
of 
Tyre are  condemned for their rebellious pride. In Isaiah 14:13–14, the 
rebellion is  explicit. The “Shining One, son of Dawn” (the same phrase used 
here in Ps. 82:7)  tried to place himself above “the stars of El [the highest 
God, or Yahweh]” to  “sit enthroned in the Mount of Assembly (of the gods),
” to “be like Elyon [the  fuller name for the Most High God].” 
The drift of these passages is that the gods—which are sometimes regarded 
in  the Hebrew Bible as fallen angels and arguably are the genesis of Paul’s  
“principalities and powers”—are condemned to death not simply because of 
their  failure to rule with justice, but more importantly, for their 
rebellion against  their Maker, Yahweh. Their unjust rule of the nations was 
simply 
one of many  expressions of their rebellion, which was the principal reason 
for Yahweh’s  discipline
 
Christians later came to see these two stories in the prophets as allusions 
 to Satan’s fall from grace. Once created as God’s most gifted and 
beautiful  supernatural being, Satan abused his authority and then led a 
rebellion 
against  Yahweh. God punished him by limiting his authority on earth; he is 
still the  “god of this world” (2 Cor. 4:4) but his authority is checked by 
God’s sovereign  purposes, and his final destruction is decreed. 
N. T. Wright calls this “creational monotheism,” which means that Yahweh  
rules over a cosmos thick with not only good angels but also fallen angels  
masquerading as the true God. Wright insists that “we have very few examples 
of  ‘pure’ monotheism anywhere, including in the Hebrew Bible.” 
For the biblical authors, these weak and beggarly “gods” helped explain 
why  this cosmos seems to be at war, both spiritually and politically. They 
believed  the ancient pagan religions were animated by powers hostile to 
Yahweh, actively  fighting Yahweh’s control of the cosmos. It was no surprise 
to 
them that history  is full of conflict, because its driving animus is 
conflict between supernatural  forces, which are visibly represented by both 
religious and political  communities. 
In other words, wars between nations were really only the shadowy surface 
of  the deeper and more fundamental combat between spiritual powers. So 
Samuel  Huntington, the Harvard political scientist whose Clash of  
Civilizations 
claimed the real inspiration for modern wars would be  cultural and 
religious, was making what might be seen as a biblical argument 
----------------------------------- 
Reader Comment: 
To recognize these Scriptures as addressing genuine gods of some sort is to 
 fly in the face of all the Scriptures that declare clearly and repeatedly 
that  there is only one God. Without commenting upon every instance cited, 
it is clear  from context and from the whole of Scriptural doctrine that the 
"gods" being  addressed or spoken about were all false gods, gods in name 
only. As one  specific example, God chose the ten plagues to demonstrate not 
that the Egyptian  gods were not as powerful as He, but clearly to 
demonstrate that they were not  truly gods at all, but rather figments of the 
Egyptian 
imagination, just as  Scripture so often points out that the "gods" the 
apostate Israelites worshipped  were mere objects of wood and stone, and were 
not gods at all 
However: 
Deuteronomy 32: 8 
When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance, when he separated 
 the sons of men, he fixed the bounds of the peoples according to the 
number of  the sons of God 
RSV  /   NEB 
------------------------ 
When the Most High gave the nations their inheritance, when he divided all  
mankind, he set up boundaries for the peoples according to the number of 
the  sons of Israel.  
Notice the misleading (dishonest ) NIV  translation

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