Since the question arose, I have written about this in the upcoming updates for the Temple of Zeus. I share it here because I understand it might be an urgent matter to rectify what occurred with Akhenaten. He made a tragic mistake.
Part V: What Went Wrong The Abrahamic Reduction
The Precedent: Akhenaten’s Reckless Experiment (c. 1353–1336 BCE)
Before the Abrahamic religions attempted their theological monopoly on a global scale, the experiment was tried once before within Egypt itself and it failed so catastrophically that Egypt spent the next century erasing it from memory. The precedent is instructive, because it demonstrates that the most theologically sophisticated civilisation on earth tested exclusive monotheism, recognised it as a disaster, and deliberately reverted to the original synthesis of the One, the Three, and the Many.
The pharaoh Amenhotep IV, who renamed himself Akhenaten (“Effective for the Aten”), ascended the throne of Egypt around 1353 BCE and within a few years initiated the most radical theological revolution in Egyptian history. He did not merely elevate the Aten the visible solar disc to supreme status. That alone would have been unremarkable; the Egyptian tradition had always recognised Ra-Horakhty, Amun-Ra, and other solar forms as expressions of the supreme divine principle. What Akhenaten did was something entirely different and entirely reckless: he denied the existence of the other Gods.
He closed the temples of Amun, Osiris, Ptah, Isis, Thoth, and every other God in the Egyptian pantheon. He sent workmen throughout the land to chisel the names of the Gods from monuments, tombs, and temple walls including the name of his own father, Amenhotep III, because it contained the element “Amun.” He disbanded the priesthoods that had maintained the cult of the Gods for millennia. He relocated the capital from Thebes to a new, purpose-built city in the desert called Akhetaten (modern Amarna), abandoning the sacred centres that had served as the spiritual infrastructure of Egyptian civilisation for over a thousand years. He declared that the Aten and the Aten alone was God, and that he, Akhenaten, was the sole intermediary between the Aten and humanity. No one could approach the divine except through the pharaoh. The Many were abolished. The Three were abolished. Even the One was reduced: from the self-generating, self-naming, infinitely creative Atum of the Pyramid Texts to a single visible disc in the sky, accessible only through a single man on a single throne.
This was not a refinement of Egyptian theology. It was its mutilation. Akhenaten did not discover a truth the Egyptians had missed. The Egyptians had already articulated the unity of the divine with a sophistication that Akhenaten’s Aten theology never approached. The Leiden Papyrus declares “All the Gods are three” and “millions of forms from His oneness” without the slightest need to close a single temple or chisel a single name from a single wall. The Egyptian synthesis already held the truth of the One. Akhenaten did not elevate that truth. He impoverished it by tearing out the Three and the Many, he did not purify the One but amputated the limbs of God.
The consequences were immediate and devastating. The abolition of the temple network dismantled the administrative, economic, and spiritual infrastructure of the state. The closure of the Osirian cult severed the population’s relationship with its own dead the funerary rites that ensured the soul’s passage through the Duat were suppressed, meaning that for an entire generation, ordinary Egyptians were denied the most essential spiritual service their religion provided. Foreign affairs collapsed; the Amarna Letters record vassal states begging for military assistance that never came, as Akhenaten devoted his resources to his theological project while Egypt’s empire crumbled. The population was alienated; archaeological evidence from the workers’ village at Amarna shows that the common people continued to worship the old Gods in secret, hiding small statues of Bes, Taweret, and Amun in their homes. The exclusive monotheism was imposed from above and accepted by almost no one.
Akhenaten reigned for approximately seventeen years. Within a few years of his death, the restoration was underway. His successor Tutankhamun originally named Tutankhaten changed his name to incorporate Amun rather than Aten, signalling the reversal. The Restoration Stela, erected in the temple of Karnak, describes the state of Egypt at the end of the Amarna period in terms of theological catastrophe: the temples were in ruin, the Gods had turned their backs on the land, prayers went unanswered, and the army was ineffective because the Gods no longer supported it. The stela declares that the young king reopened the temples, restored the priesthoods, re-established the festivals, and recommissioned the cult images of every God that Akhenaten had suppressed. The Gods returned. Ma’at was restored. Egypt recovered.
The subsequent pharaohs Ay, Horemheb, and the early Ramesside kings went further. They dismantled Akhetaten stone by stone. They removed Akhenaten’s name from the king lists. They referred to him, when they referred to him at all, as “the criminal of Akhetaten” or simply “the enemy.” His temples were demolished and their stones reused as fill material in the pylons of other temples. His monuments were defaced. His memory was subjected to the most devastating punishment the Egyptian tradition could inflict: damnatio memoriae, the erasure of the name. In Egyptian theology, to destroy the Ren (the name) is to destroy the being. Egypt did not merely reject Akhenaten’s theology. It attempted to unmake him entirely to erase the man who had tried to erase the Gods.
The lesson is precise and devastating for every subsequent monotheistic project. The most theologically advanced civilisation on earth the civilisation that had articulated the unity of God with a clarity no other tradition has ever surpassed tried exclusive monotheism, lived with it for seventeen years, and judged it a catastrophe. Not because the Egyptians were too primitive to grasp the One (they had grasped it millennia before Akhenaten was born), but because they understood that the One without the Three and the Many is not a purer theology. It is a mutilated one. Akhenaten did not ascend to a higher truth. He descended to a lower one. He took the infinite, self-expressing, self-naming God of the Pyramid Texts the God who creates “millions of forms from His oneness” and reduced Him to a disc in the sky, accessible only through one man. The Egyptians recognised this for what it was: not illumination but Izfet. Not a revelation but a contraction of the divine. Not progress but regression.
Egypt healed itself. It restored the temples, the priesthoods, the festivals, and the full theology of the One, the Three, and the Many. The Nineteenth Dynasty that followed the Amarna period produced some of the greatest temples in Egyptian history Karnak, Luxor, Abu Simbel as if the civilisation was determined to prove, in stone, that the Gods it had been forbidden to worship were more real, more powerful, and more enduring than the single disc that had been forced upon it. Akhenaten’s experiment was the first monotheistic revolution. It was also the first monotheistic failure. Egypt tried it, rejected it, and returned to the truth it had always known. The Abrahamic traditions would later repeat the same error but on a global scale, and without Egypt’s wisdom to correct the mistake.
Egypt tried exclusive monotheism. Egypt rejected it. Egypt called the man who imposed it “the enemy” and erased his name from history. The temples were reopened. The Gods returned. The Trinity was restored. The experiment lasted seventeen years. The civilisation that corrected it lasted three thousand. The verdict of Ma’at is clear.
The Global Repetition: The Abrahamic Programme
If this synthesis was so clearly understood, how did it become lost? The answer is institutional, not theological. The Abrahamic traditions had an institutional interest in exclusivity. A religion that claims to be the only path to God must deny the validity of all other paths. To accomplish this, the Abrahamic programme executed three theological reductions:
Reduction One: "Polytheism" was declared primitive. The Many Gods were rebranded as "idols," "demons," or "superstitions." The fact that the very civilizations that worshipped these Gods also articulated the most sophisticated statements of divine unity in human history was simply ignored.
Reduction Two: The Trinity was claimed as an original innovation. The Christian doctrine of the Trinity was presented as a unique revelation. The fact that the Egyptian Trinity (Amun, Ra, Ptah) predates it by over a thousand years, that the Greek philosophical Trinity predates it by five centuries, and that the Indian Trimurti operates on the identical principle, was never acknowledged.
Reduction Three: Monotheism was made exclusive. The One God of the ancients was a God who generated the Many as His own self-expression. The One God of the Abrahamic traditions was a God who forbade the Many. This is not monotheism. This is theological monopoly. The ancient One contains the Many. The Abrahamic One excludes the Many. The ancient One is generous. The Abrahamic One is jealous. And jealousy, as the Greek theologians understood, is a deficiency, not a virtue.