The Bible makes it clear that the
forefathers of the nation of Israel ,Terah,
Abraham, etc., worshiped others gods [Joshua 24:2].
The Most High God called Abram away from his
land and his family and made a covenant with him. It
could be that the Most High God that called Abram to worship him
exclusively as the Creator - the only
existing God was the same God worshiped by the Semetic nations as El the High
God of their pantheon.
If the Most High God is the god
worshiped by the Semetic nations as El then the problem would be that the Semetic
nations had created other 'none existing' gods to worship alongside Him. This
would account for the Most High God, if he is in fact El, calling Abram away
from a pantheistic - polytheistic system to worship the Most High God exclusively.
It is also possible that the name /
title El functions the way that elohim does and is not exclusive to any one
god.
Polytheism is the multiplying of gods.
The fact that people have invented many gods to worship does not mean [is not
evidence ] that 1 Creator, 1 God does not actually exist.
God's acknowledging that people worship
many gods as is done in the 1st commandment is not acknowledging that many gods
actually exist.
"You must not have any other gods
besides me" is not an acknowledgment that the gods worshiped by polytheists
are real beings / gods that actually exist.
The Hebrew nation, descended from
Abraham through Isaac and Jacob / Israel were commanded - taught to worship
only one God and were taught the this God was the Creator and therefore the
only God in existence. For a time the nations from Abraham's by his wife
Keturah also worshiped the God of Abraham but eventually took up polytheism
from the surrounding nations.
The Bible texts states that the nation
of Israel intermarried with the Canaanite nations and worshiped their gods and
the gods of the surrounding nations from the generation after their coming into
the land of Canaan under Joshua until the Babylonian exile.
Scholars are aware of this but because
of their atheistic and career agendas they prefer to misinterpret the artefactual
data to support the pretense that this is evidence that the nation of Israel
was originally polytheistic.
The claim that Hebrew monotheism
developed from [1] polytheism to [2] henotheism to [3] monotheism is a 19th
century ideological construct with neither archeological nor historical foundation. The natural
progression would be for people to conceive of 1 god and add other gods with
different functions over time.
Claiming
that people worshiped many gods before they worshiped 1 god makes as much
sense as claiming the people conceive of the number 100 or the number 1000 before
they conceived of the number 1.