Notes on Monotheism
The natural course of Monotheism, and the objective for which it emerged and developed, has always been the tendency towards the full realisation of its maximum splendour in Anglo-Saxon Protestantism.
To reduce all of Mythology to a single deity — eliminating thus the need to memorise a thousand gods’ names, their relations, attributes and sexual preferences, to know the various rituals to be undertaken at their respective temple, on this day of the year or the other, with men and women stupidly carting around their baskets of Mullein, or Foxglove, or live goats for sacrifice with their respective incenses, depending on the mallady to be cured or the fortune to be conjured or avoided, more akin to shoppers in a spiritual shopping centre than serious practicers of a religion — was the axis about which the entire thing was meant to spin. God is one, and He loves you: Get to work.