Nooo, Shelby. First of all, "towns/tribes/community folks" DIDN'T "start worshipping a god!"...... they started worshipping GODDESSES... Many "Goddesses", in fact.
Perhaps, dear Zid (again, peace to you!), but my point was that at SOME point they started worshipping.
It appears that most of the early Goddesses may have had some characteristics in common with the image of the GREAT Mother, a primal maternal image that was probably the initial deity of Homo Erectus - earliest primitive humanity's forebears... Which was a deification of their earliest experiences as human babies clinging to a human mother for their very life - and you'll notice that I'm not limiting that to Homo Sapiens, by the way...
While I have my thoughts as to the whole "homo erectus/neanderthalis/sapien"... thing... you're only restating what I said: it all started somewhere with someone. That "someone" was homo erectus (for the sake of argument) is neither here nor there, dear one.
There is solid paleo-archaeological evidence that "Goddess" worship PREDATES Homo Sapien... Which is fascinating and astounding, when one thinks about it... Just check out the "Berekhat Ram" figurine...
See, now, I had that discussion a few months ago and I'm just not willing to go there again, as it seems that scientists now believe homo neanderthalis and homo sapien are one and the same. My thought? They're gonna eventually figure out that homo erectus and homo sapien are one and the same, too.
"Worship" of a primal "Goddess" probably started with Homo Erectus, well over 200,000 years ago - quite possibly as long ago as 800,000 years... [That's if you consider Homo Erectus to be separate from Homo Sapien, who is generally believed to be only around 100,000 years old...]
See above for my position on homo erectus... and please know that I also have my concerns regarding the "well over such and so" amount of years. While I know that the earth is more than 6,000 or so years old... I must side with those scientists who believe in a relatively young earth. And they do exist, dear one.
The worship of "Goddesses" also totally predates that mythological group that you mentioned:
I absolutely do NOT doubt that, dear Zid! I am more than willing to concede that goddess worship predated Noah. Absolutely!
The mythology which generated the tale of "Noah" probably isn't much older than 7,000 - 8,000 years - if one considers the flooding of the Black Sea as the origin of the "Noah's Ark" story, and not some more localized Mesopotamian flood...
I consider neither; even so, I believe Noah and his sons were the start of a "new" humankind... so my comment stands. Because what is NOW... is what came after them... regardless of what occurred... or what/who was worshipped [by those who lived prior] BEFORE them.
your hypothetical "scads of people everywhere..." - with some initial "commonality" - who "said to their fellow towns/tribes/community folks, at the same or very close moments" - never happened.
Ummmm... I invite you go back and read that hypothetical, dear one, as I never stated that such a thing occurred. You misunderstood my point.
Human communities, especially at the time periods that you are referring to - around 4,000 to 3,000 years ago, were rather separated by distance, and many tribal groups lived out their existence with little to no contact with other civilizations - unless invaded by larger groups...
Yep, that's kind of what I was alluding to: that people absorbed the religions and beliefs of those they lived among, including those they captured or were captured by... as well as those sold to nomadic passersby...
Which allowed quite a variety of deities to develop.
I agree. However, deities are not necessarily religions, dear one. Indeed, while deities tended to belong to one (or perhaps a few religions), some (many) religions had a plethora of deities. You are counting religions by number of deities. But, again, that doesn't work as some religions had hundreds of deities. In ONE religion. See how that works?
I've said it before, I'll say it again - religion itself evolved - or perhaps devolved, as the range of options SHRANK... Polytheism was generally the RULE in older civilizations, not monotheism...
And I will say that while there was an attempt to force religion down to ONE... that didn't really work. There are "scads" now. Just in "christianity" alone there are, what a couple/few dozen "denominations"... and then in each denomination there are, what, a couple hundred sects... and then in each sect there are, what, a whole nuther hundred or so individual "churches"? Heck, there are at least 75 within a one mile radius of my house! And that's just the so-called "christian" stuff. The number bumps up when you add in the Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Shinto, Hara Krishna, metaphysical, Universal Unitarian, pagan, wiccan, voodoo, native american (including but not limited to Aztecan, Mayan, and more)... and the various denominations, sects, and/or individual "groups"/individuals under each of these!
And Monotheism, by its very nature, LIMITS the number of deities available for worship. Therefore, the period of time in which Polytheism was common would NATUARLLY have MORE deities - and more methods of worship - than our modern, monotheistic world.
I disagree. While I agree that there were more deities... and so more methods... I do not agree that there were more religions. Problem is, you see all "christians", etc., as one religion. I do not. I see less classifications of religions, yes. But not less religions.
So, it didn't start out with "someONE"... It started out in MANY locations with many different kinds of humans... It WASN'T homogenous; it was - again - POLYtheistic, with a WIDE VARIETY of deities and methods of worship...
Like I said, YOUR position is that people "everywhere" said to their fellow towns/tribes/community folks, at the same or very close moments, "Heyyyyyy, let's start worshipping a... okay, goddess!" Right?
But, I guess you'll take the word ot that "guy" who "talks" in your ear, over the hundreds of thousands of hours of work by of hundreds - thousands - of archaeologists, paleo-archaeologists, paleo-anthropologists, paleontologists, and geologists, and all of the artifacts and data that they present...
The guy who talks in my ear aside, I think you should go back and re-read my comments. Because what we have here is a failure to communicate, dear one. But I don't think it's on my end, truly.
But, as always, peace to you, dear Zid!
YOUR servant and a slave of Christ,
SA