The Bible itself tells us the the Kingdom of Israel and its inhabitants were at all times polytheistic. The Kingdom of Judah did eventually embrace monotheism, but this is believed to have taken place during the reign of King Josiah long after the final destruction of Israel. A large number of refugees had flooded south into Judah and it is possible that they had not integrated well into the culture of their sister-kingdom. The reforms undertaken by Josiah, including monotheism and written scriptures may have been intended to foster national unity.
They believed in Monotheism.
They believed in Monotheism.
He was known for his embrace of monotheism. His successors attempted to erase all memory of him.
Israelites Jews tribe Israel monotheism Torah
Abraham is conventionally considered the father of monotheism, but there were no Israelites in Abraham's time. Abraham's grandson, Jacob was given the name Israel after he wrestled with someone (his brother? an angel? God?) at the ford of Jabbok. His children were literally the Children of Israel, and the 12 tribes descending from him are collectively referred to as Israelites. Reading this question narrowly, Jacob was the first to teach his children monotheism, something he learned from his father who learned it from Abraham.
They believed in one god (monotheism) , almost all the other peoples believed in many polytheism).
AnswerThe Bible tells us that the Israelites were at all times polytheistic, until the destruction of Israel in 722 BCE. The people of Judah adopted monotheistic Judaism during the seventh-century-BCE reign of King Josiah. At this stage it was limited to the city of Jerusalem and its immediate surrounds, still under the control of the king of Judah. The Jews have ever since practised monotheism wherever they were to be found.
The Hebrew's belief in one God was in marked contrast to the many gods of the nations round about them at that time. Archaeologists who have deciphered ancient writing in Egypt, for example, have discovered that as they looked at the earliest dated records the beliefs tended closer towards monotheism, as evidence that something akin to this was the original religious expression of mankind. By the time the Israelites existed as a nation, this primitive monotheism which the Israelites themselves maintained continuously as their official religious expression had deteriorated into polytheism, often of the grossest kind, in other nations.
Monotheism is the belief of one god.
Yes. That is the definition of monotheism.
In the book of Judges, after Joshua's death, there is a cycle of four stages: 1. The Israelites worship Idols (usually the Baal and Ashera). 2. God sends to them some enemy to punish them. 3. The Israelites cry and pray to god for his forgiveness. 4. God sends a judge to save the Israelites.
The land of Israel is the land that God promised to the Israelites (in Genesis ch.12, ch.15 and elsewhere). The covenant is the contract binding the Jewish people to God (see Exodus ch.19 and Deuteronomy 26:16-19). Monotheism is the most basic of all of the Jewish beliefs.