
Cosmogonic Sovereignty and the Deferral of Monotheism: How Creation Myths Structurally Resist Theological Unification Across Religious Traditions
Abstract This study challenges the comparative religion consensus that creation narratives across diverse traditions converge toward monotheistic unity. Examining cosmogonic texts from Babylonian, Hindu, Shinto, Maya, and Norse traditions, we argue that these narratives structurally encode resistance to singular divine authority through depictions of cosmogonic conflict and theological multiplicity. Rather than representing evolutionary stages toward monotheistic achievement, creation myths actively defend theological pluralism through their formal properties. We demonstrate that the “Ultimate Reality” interpretive framework, dominant in religious studies since the mid-twentieth century, systematically misreads polytheistic texts by imposing monotheistic categories onto narratives that explicitly resist such unification. Through close textual analysis, we show how the Enuma Elish, Hindu Puranas, Kojiki, Popol Vuh, and Norse cosmogonies construct divine authority as contingent, contested, and necessarily multiple rather than singular and transcendent. We conclude that monotheism represents a contingent theological innovation requiring active suppression of cosmogonic logic embedded in older traditions, not a teleological achievement of religious thought. This analysis reveals that comparative religion’s assumption of convergence fundamentally misreads how sacred texts construct and defend theological pluralism, necessitating a revised hermeneutical approach that privileges textual specificity over metaphysical abstraction. ...








