THE GODS THAT SURROUNDED ISRAEL
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Israel did not live in a spiritual vacuum. The name of YHWH was planted in the middle of a world already thick with names—names spoken over altars, carved into stones, invoked at city gates, and trusted for rain, fertility, victory, healing, and protection. The Bible’s warfare against idolatry wasn’t fought in theory; it was fought in public, in homes, in kings’ courts, and—at Israel’s worst moments—even beside the worship of YHWH Himself.
The Gods That Surrounded Israel is not a collection of exotic trivia. It is a clear, readable map of the rival deities, cults, and religious pressures that pressed against Israel and Judah across the Old Testament world—and later, through the Greco-Roman layers that shaped the wider biblical environment. It explains who these gods were, why they mattered, and how Scripture exposes them as counterfeit “lords” competing for covenant allegiance.
Inside you’ll find:
• The Bible’s most persistent rivals—Baal (in many forms), Asherah, Astarte/Ashtoreth, Molech/Topheth, Chemosh, Milcom, Dagon, astral worship (“host of heaven”), and imperial gods (Bel/Marduk, Nebo, Nisroch, and others).
• A tiered, commented guide to Egyptian gods—from the major state deities down through important regional and specialist figures.
• A wide-ranging guide to Greek and Roman gods, pairs, epithets, household spirits, and personified forces (from the Olympians to Janus, Fortuna, Pax, Lares, Penates, Manes, Genius, and more).
• A practical explanation of ancient syncretism—translation, double-naming in inscriptions, and genuinely hybrid cults—plus a focused discussion of Judea/Syria and the religious friction points around Jerusalem.
This book is designed for Bible readers, writers, teachers, and researchers who want the Old Testament to sound like what it is: a real-world contest over worship, truth, and covenant fidelity.
A Scripture-driven guide to the gods, cults, and syncretism that surrounded Israel. This book maps the Bible’s major rivals (Baal, Asherah, Astarte, Molech/Topheth, Chemosh, Milcom, Dagon, astral worship, imperial gods), offers a tiered survey of Egyptian deities, and provides an expansive Greek/Roman reference (Olympians, household spirits, personified forces, and key epithets). It also explains how ancient syncretism worked—translation, double-naming, and hybrid cults—especially in Judea/Syria and around Jerusalem.