Well, birdie, glad you cleared that up… you say you chose your words carefully, such as this: "...As I'm sure you're aware, earlier civilisations such as the Romans, the Greeks, the Egyptians, the Sumerians, etc. were all polytheistic religions. Not one religion prior to the Abrahamic religions were monotheistic…."
Of course (disregarding your pithy, personal comments) you are, once again, just wrong according to a list of scholars to include:
"...The term "monotheism" was coined in 1660 by Henry More (1614-1687), a member of the Cambridge Platonists, in order to better organize and categorize religions on a continuum (as progressing in an evolution from "primitive" levels such as animism through to polytheism, eventually ending up at monotheism). Monotheism was seen as the most "civilized" notion for conceiving of divinity and placed at the top of this hierarchy. Scholars such as Max Müller (1823-1900) believed that monotheistic religions such as Islam and Christianity were reflections of advanced civilizations and advanced levels of thought. Although the theory of "Ur-monotheism" or original monotheism was put forward by Wilhelm Schmidt (1868-1954) in a series of volumes beginning in 1912 to claim, in direct opposition to this evolutionary viewpoint, that monotheism was the original belief of humankind, and that subsequent beliefs such as polydaemonism and pantheism, among others, gradually arose out of the degeneration of this primordial monotheism, nevertheless this theory has been largely discredited in academic circles…" (Source: New World Encylopeadia).
Moreover, one of your examples, the Greeks, are referenced as well as "…The Greeks were also among the first cultures to propound monotheistic ideals, at least in a philosophical sense. Generally, the idea of a unified, divine principle was seen by the Greeks to express a sense of reasonableness or order in the cosmos. For Pre-Socratic philosophers, including Xenophanes, such an idea seemed to be the highest manifestation of religious thought. For example, Xenophanes depicted the spiritual union of the so-called "All-One" as uncreated, unchangeable, and ubiquitous throughout the universe. Plato construed the ultimate principle as a unity of the good, and identified God this way. In a world of evil, in constant flux, God represented the single good, which was ultimately unchanging in its embodiment of perfection. Likewise, Aristotle conceived of a First Mover who derives from physical unity; that is, a solitary supreme being who is one, eternal, and immutable… (Source: ibid )
Naomi, perhaps you could supply one or two (or more) of the contradictions you're fond of referencing? You 'common sense' can best be described as common but not sense… This is especially evident when you claim nothing offered in defense of Biblical truth is "fact" yet disregard equally factual studies of other ancient documents accepted on face value… It really is the subject matter that concerns you, not the equivalent supporting study and documentation...