nations of a different stock, the ancient religion of the Semites was Monotheistic. Many Semitic
tribes, like the Assyrians, the Phoenicians, and even the Hebrews themselves at more than one period
of their history, fell into Polytheism and idolatry through contact with the Hamites; but the
process was a very gradual one, and in many cases the names of the deities worshipped of themselves
prove that they had their origin in Monotheistic conceptions.1 The Northern Arabs
especially seem to have preserved their pristine faith in a fair degree of purity up to a
comparatively late period. We find among them no such deities2 as the Baal, Ashtoreth,3
Moloch, Ammon, worshipped in Canaan. If Professor Plumptre4 and others are right in
believing in the Arabian origin of the Book of Job, that wonderful work5 shows us that
Monotheism was only just beginning to be affected in the minds of the Arabs of the early age in
which the book was written by Sabaean ideas and the