Thomas II
Contributor
I go with what Mauro Biglino said:
"Again, as an official Hebrew translator, I can say at once that the biblical Elohim were not one single being, let alone God. Rather, they were a plurality of material, flesh-and-blood individuals. A multitude which is clearly and unequivocally mentioned in numerous passages of the Old Testament (Exodus 3,12 et seq.; Exodus 15,5 et seq.; Exodus 18,11 et seq.; Deuteronomy 6,14 et seq.; Deuteronomy 13,7 et seq.; Deuteronomy 32,17 et seq.; Jeremiah 7,18).
The Elohim represented a military hierarchy that divided the planet into spheres of influence, as instructed by their commander whom the Bible calls Elyon (Deuteronomy 32, “the one who is above, the one who commands”). They divided the Earth into governorates in which the peoples were assigned to individual Elohim. The Bible unequivocally calls them by their names: Yahweh, Milkom, Kamosh, Dagon, Qosh and so on."
https://www.maurobiglino.com/en/why-the-bible-does-not-talk-about-god/
"Again, as an official Hebrew translator, I can say at once that the biblical Elohim were not one single being, let alone God. Rather, they were a plurality of material, flesh-and-blood individuals. A multitude which is clearly and unequivocally mentioned in numerous passages of the Old Testament (Exodus 3,12 et seq.; Exodus 15,5 et seq.; Exodus 18,11 et seq.; Deuteronomy 6,14 et seq.; Deuteronomy 13,7 et seq.; Deuteronomy 32,17 et seq.; Jeremiah 7,18).
The Elohim represented a military hierarchy that divided the planet into spheres of influence, as instructed by their commander whom the Bible calls Elyon (Deuteronomy 32, “the one who is above, the one who commands”). They divided the Earth into governorates in which the peoples were assigned to individual Elohim. The Bible unequivocally calls them by their names: Yahweh, Milkom, Kamosh, Dagon, Qosh and so on."
https://www.maurobiglino.com/en/why-the-bible-does-not-talk-about-god/