The breakup of the Mongol empire greatly handicapped the growth of monotheism in Asia. [1] Egyptian political factors favored the spread of monotheistic beliefs in ancient Egypt. [2]
The priests in Egypt struggled to fully overcome the monotheistic wave, leading them to combine and hyphenate their gods in a contracting family of deities, only for the concept of monotheism to persist until the arrival of the Creator Son. [3] Monotheism enabled man to see the Father as the creator and controller of all creation. [4]
The evolution of monotheism progresses from inclusion of all gods to the subordination of lesser deities, culminating in the exclusive worship of the one supreme God. [5]
Trinitarianism arises from the human struggle to grasp the concept of a personal deity within the framework of pure monotheism, which tends to strip away personal qualities and reduce God to a pantheistic Absolute. [6]