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[[File:Tissot Solomon Dedicates the Temple at Jerusalem.jpg|thumbnail|Depiction of an Israelite worshiping Yahweh, who becomes the foundation and name of God in the ancient Jewish faith.]]
==Background to the List==
The concept of God and his historical development is an extraordinarily complex topic not easily addressed in ten books. Some works attempt to provide a complex but also more easily explained set of ideas on how the concept of God, or single devine being, developed in different cultures, places, and across time. The history of the idea of God is long and has its roots from prehistoric to early historic periods in the ancient Near East. Later cultures developed concepts that derive from ancient Iran, Greece, Egypt, and perhaps other regions. In a period over several hundred years, in the late first millennium BC and during the first centuries AD, several faiths, including Judaism, Christianity, and Zoroastrianism emerged that took the idea of God to levels that influence us today. While no easy task, here are the ten best books that try to make sense of this complex history.
==Top Ten Book List==
Armstrong, Karen. 1999. <i>[https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345384563/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0345384563&linkCode=as2&tag=dailyh0c-20&linkId=c5f79436e48ccd70fe128e130224ab49 A History of God]</i>. London: Vintage.: The book is somewhat more narrow that later books, looking mainly at Judaism, Christianity and Islam, along with Buddhism and Hinduism, as examples of different religions that emerged. The evolution of the idea of God is investigated in the ancient Near East, where the book looks at how the idea of God developed up to the modern day.
Bowker, John Westerdale. 2002. <i>[https://www.amazon.com/God-Brief-History-John-Bowker/dp/0789480506 God: A Brief History]</i>. 1st American ed. London ; New York: DK Pub.: The book looks at the origins of the Israelites, their development of the ideas of God, and then later influences that come on the Near East, in particular Greek influences that integrate new philosophies in the Near East. However, the book looks more at later views of god from other cultures and does not so much focus on the original ideas and how they evolved.