Documentary hypothesis: Difference between revisions

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==Alternate Theories==
==Alternate Theories==
P.J. Wiseman and Curt Sewell have voiced support for the "Tablet Theory".<ref name=tablet /> Wiseman first noticed that many of the ancient Mesopotamian clay tablets we're discovering use "colophon phrases" naming the tablet's writer or owner, as well as some method of dating the tablet; and often relate to family histories and origins. Wiseman also noted their similarity to the book of Genesis, which scholars have long recognized is sub-divided into sections via the phrase "these are the generations of..." Such a phrase is translated from the Hebrew word "''toledoth''", defined by Strong's dictionary as 'generations' as related to family history or descent.<ref>Strong's Hebrew Dictionary. [http://strongsnumbers.com/hebrew/8435.htm 8435.toledoth]. Biblos.com.</ref> Sewell hypothesizes that each of these subsections divides into differing individual accounts separated by the Hebrew word "toledoth", God's account of Creation (Genesis 1:1-2:4), Adam's genealogy/personal history (2:4-5:1), Noah's genealogy/personal history (5:1-6:9), Shem/Ham/Japheth's (6:9-10:1), Shem's specifically (10:1-11:10), Terah's (11:10-11:27), Isaac's (11:27-25:19), Ishmael's (25:12-18), Jacob's (25:19-37:2), Esau's (36:1-36:43), and Jacob's 12 sons (37:2-Exodus 1:6). Since each of these sub-sections is separated by the Hebrew word "''toledoth''", Sewell considers that Genesis is actually a grouping of the family genealogical tablets, per Mesopotamian style, and thus very much is a compilation of accounts, but not in the way Wellhausen envisioned, since it would make Genesis' origins far older than Moses, rather than younger; with Moses himself the likely compiler/redactor of the tablets' accounts.
P.J. Wiseman and Curt Sewell have voiced support for the "Tablet Theory".<ref name=tablet /> Wiseman first noticed that many of the ancient Mesopotamian clay tablets we're discovering use "colophon phrases" naming the tablet's writer or owner, as well as some method of dating the tablet; and often relate to family histories and origins. Wiseman also noted their similarity to the book of Genesis, which scholars have long recognized is sub-divided into sections via the phrase "these are the generations of..." Such a phrase is translated from the Hebrew word "''toledoth''", defined by Strong's dictionary as 'generations' as related to family history or descent.<ref>Strong's Hebrew Dictionary. [http://strongsnumbers.com/hebrew/8435.htm 8435.toledoth]. Biblos.com.</ref>  
 
Sewell hypothesizes that each of these subsections divides into differing individual accounts separated by the Hebrew word "toledoth", God's account of Creation (Genesis 1:1-2:4), Adam's genealogy/personal history (2:4-5:1), Noah's genealogy/personal history (5:1-6:9), Shem/Ham/Japheth's (6:9-10:1), Shem's specifically (10:1-11:10), Terah's (11:10-11:27), Isaac's (11:27-25:19), Ishmael's (25:12-18), Jacob's (25:19-37:2), Esau's (36:1-36:43), and Jacob's 12 sons (37:2-Exodus 1:6).  
 
Since each of these sub-sections is separated by the Hebrew word "''toledoth''", Sewell considers that Genesis is actually a grouping of the family genealogical tablets, per Mesopotamian style, and thus very much is a compilation of accounts, but not in the way Wellhausen envisioned, since it would make Genesis' origins far older than Moses, rather than younger; with Moses himself the likely compiler/redactor of the tablets' accounts.


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>

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See also: Authors of the Bible

The Documentary Hypothesis is best known for Julius Wellhausen's 1876 work, Die Komposition Des Hexateuch in Der Jungsten Diskussion,[1] although a number of authors in the 17th and 18th centuries also developed the idea.[2] The hypothesis is based upon the belief that that the Pentateuch (first 5 books of the Christian Bible and Jewish Tanakh) is inconsistent in its writing,[3] and shows signs of multiple authors, rather than one, Moses. This has in turn led to the theory that the Pentateuch is the result of four different authors, who supposedly wrote the book centuries later than Biblical Moses. As a general framework, the proposed authors are:

  • J: Jehovist/Yahwist source - Claimed to be written in the 9th or 10th century B.C.[2]
  • E: Elohist source - Claimed to be composed shortly after J in Israel's north, when both were combined into a 'JE' source.[4]
  • D: Deuteronomist source - Claimed to be written in 8th century B.C.[2]
  • P: Priestly source - Claimed to be written in 6th century B.C. by combining other 3 sources.[2]

The hypothesis is entirely interpretive, and has no historical evidence supporting claims for sourcing from multiple documents, apart from the analysis of the Bible undertaken by the hypothesis.[5] The topic is one of the most "hotly debated" in the field of Biblical scholarship,[6] and the details of the hypothesis strongly debated even among those who support it, with younger scholars abandoning it for other approaches.[7]

Proofs

The hypothesis first claims inconsistencies in the Bible as its basis for assuming multiple authorship (see Alleged Inconsistencies) below. This includes the use of doublets.

It then points to the following proofs for multiple authors:

Separate Narratives

A separate narrative for Genesis appears when extracting each of the separate sources.[8]

3rd Person

Moses rarely speaks in 1st person, but in 3rd person.[2]

Impossible/Unlikely Mentions

Richard Friedman in "Who Wrote the Bible?" questions how Moses could be the humblest/meekest person in the world if stating this of himself (Numbers 12:3), how he could have written about his own death and later events in Deuteronomy 34:4-12, and the use of phrases like "to this day" and "across the Jordan".[9]

Traditional Views

Traditionally, Moses was considered the author of the Pentateuch.[2] Jewish tradition held that Moses was the author of the Pentateuch.[10] In Deuteronomy 31:24-26 it says Moses wrote the words of the Law in a book, that was then put in the Ark of the Covenant. In 2 Chronicles 34:14 it says Hilkiah found a book of the Law of the Lord given by Moses and the book of Nehemiah[11] says the Law was given by Moses, a claim repeated in the New Testament's Gospels of Mark[12] and John.[13]

Alleged Inconsistencies

As the basis for the hypothesizing, and upon which the assumption is made that the Pentateuch could not be of Mosaic authorship, are a number of alleged inconsistencies,[14][2]

Genesis 1 & 2

The criticism is that two conflicting stories called doublets, separate accounts, are presented in the beginning chapters of Genesis,[3] that in 1:27 God created man in his image, but in 2:7 it repeats this as though man's creation hadn't been mentioned before.[14][4][15] However, what the critics fail to take into account is that the chapters are 2 separate accounts, one general, the later an overview, since in 1:1 it says "God created the heavens and the earth", and in 2:4, a more detailed account is given of "the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created", a pattern that will be seen used all through Genesis. In essence, the preceding section serves as the introduction, relating the genealogy or overview, the next relates details from the view of a major character in that genealogy.[16][17] This is also recognized by Claus Westerman in "A Continental Commentary."[18] Dr. Richard S. Hess has recognized the use of an overview account, rather than a contradictory doublet, at work here as well as elsewhere in Genesis (including chs. 4-5 and 10-11):

"As with the genealogies, we find in Genesis a focusing of content or theme. In chapter 1, the general account of creation is rehearsed, with little emphasis on any single aspect of the account. In the account of chapter 2, however, there is a clear emphasis on one particular aspect of creation, the man who is created to work the garden. The whole of the account describes his home, his work, and his companion. It is all centred on the man, planned and created for him. Thus there is a focusing technique between the first two chapters in terms of content, just as there is in the two genealogical doublets."[19]

Genesis 6-9

Asserted is that the Flood is represented as being 40 days long and 150 days long.[3][20] However, what the accounts actually say (7:4,12) is that it will rain 40 days and 40 nights, and that the Flood will be on the earth for this time. (7:12,17) It then says the flood waters themselves are on the earth for 150 days,(7:24) and return off the earth constantly until at the end of the 150 days they were stopped.(8:4) This is particularly clear when looking at the time frame, as the Flood began in the 2nd month, 17th day,(7:11) and in the 7th month, 17th day the Ark rested on the mountains of Ararat.(8:4) The plain context seen is that God stopped the Flood itself after 40 days with a wind, and it was the abating or drying up of the waters to stop them from 'prevailing' that took 150 days to where the Ark could finally come to a rest.(8:1-4) With a flood, there is one period where the rain occurs, and another period where the waters are still at work, perhaps with waves or fierce activity, even though the rain has stopped.

How many pairs?

Yet another contradiction is asserted in this section by Michael Coogan, who suggests the text is inconsistent in saying in Genesis 6:19-20 that two pairs of each animal are to be taken on the Ark, and shortly thereafter in 7:2-3 that 7 each of clean animals and bird species are to be taken, and of each unclean animal, two.[2] The mistake made of course by Coogan and sites like Infidels.org,[21] is in not knowing what clean and unclean animals refer to. In the Mosaic Law, clean and unclean animals are differentiated for purposes of food, with clean animals allowed for eating, and unclean animals not allowed for eating.[22] In short, both the Genesis 6 and 7 passages mentioned the 7 pairs of animals, since the 7 pairs were mentioned in Genesis 6:21, which said "and take for yourself of all food which is eaten..." The 7 pairs were likely brought as food for the other animals on the Ark, and possibly for the people on board as well, and thus were mentioned in the previous passage, just not as explicitly.

Genesis 11 & 12

John Barton claims that in Genesis 12:1 Abram is told to leave after the death of his father, Terah. Barton says in 11:26 Abram was born when Terah was 70, and according to 11:32, Terah died at age 205, so Abram must have been age 135, yet in 12:4 it says he was only 75.[14] However, as with Genesis 1 & 2, Barton fails to note the existence of an overview description given in chapter 11:10-32, stating the genealogies of Abram's lineage, and then a specific account of Abram's life, covering him specifically, starting in ch. 12, in which Abram's father has not yet died.

Genesis 20 & 26

[3]

Exodus 24

Barton accuses the chapter of saying Moses went up to the mountain 3 times.[14] In actuality, the chapter says he was asked to go up the mountain (vv. 1-8), then he actually did go up with Aaron and the elders of Israel (vv. 9-11), and then God asked Moses to go up to the mountaintop specifically. (vv. 12-18)

Samuel chs. 8-12

Criticism

Section to be completed.

BibleArchaeology.org[23], Dr. William F. Campbell[24] Glenn Giles [25], Rabbi Dovid Gottlieb[26], James P. Holding[27]

Separate Narratives

3rd Person

Impossible/Unlikely Mentions

German Influence

See also: Alfred Rosenberg and Positive Christianity

Like the Q Source hypothesis claimed by critical scholars to have been used as a basis by the authors of the Mark and Luke Gospels, (see Johannes Weiss, Christian Hermann Weisse and Friedrich Schleiermacher), the Documentary Hypothesis found its roots in 19th century Germany, where it would ultimately be popularized by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust, as noted by author Ken Collins:

"The Nazis, borrowing from the growing scholarly consensus that the Torah consisted of myth and legend, used this scholarly climate to invalidate both Judaism and the Old Testament. The Nazis promoted a revised form of Christianity called Deutsches Christentum, in which they replaced the Old Testament with Germanic myths and legends. Deutsches Christentum never caught on with the public, but since it epitomized the beliefs of the leadership of the Nazi party, it contributed to the martyrdom of a number of famous German Christians."[28]

Alternate Theories

P.J. Wiseman and Curt Sewell have voiced support for the "Tablet Theory".[17] Wiseman first noticed that many of the ancient Mesopotamian clay tablets we're discovering use "colophon phrases" naming the tablet's writer or owner, as well as some method of dating the tablet; and often relate to family histories and origins. Wiseman also noted their similarity to the book of Genesis, which scholars have long recognized is sub-divided into sections via the phrase "these are the generations of..." Such a phrase is translated from the Hebrew word "toledoth", defined by Strong's dictionary as 'generations' as related to family history or descent.[29]

Sewell hypothesizes that each of these subsections divides into differing individual accounts separated by the Hebrew word "toledoth", God's account of Creation (Genesis 1:1-2:4), Adam's genealogy/personal history (2:4-5:1), Noah's genealogy/personal history (5:1-6:9), Shem/Ham/Japheth's (6:9-10:1), Shem's specifically (10:1-11:10), Terah's (11:10-11:27), Isaac's (11:27-25:19), Ishmael's (25:12-18), Jacob's (25:19-37:2), Esau's (36:1-36:43), and Jacob's 12 sons (37:2-Exodus 1:6).

Since each of these sub-sections is separated by the Hebrew word "toledoth", Sewell considers that Genesis is actually a grouping of the family genealogical tablets, per Mesopotamian style, and thus very much is a compilation of accounts, but not in the way Wellhausen envisioned, since it would make Genesis' origins far older than Moses, rather than younger; with Moses himself the likely compiler/redactor of the tablets' accounts.

References

  1. McKim, D. (2007). Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters. pp. 130-131.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Glassman, G. (2007). NOVA: The Bible's Buried Secrets. PBS.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Cheyne, T., & Black, J. (Eds.). (1899). "Hexateuch." In Encyclopaedia Biblica (Vol. II, pp. 2045-2058).
  4. 4.0 4.1 Reed, A.Y. (2004, September 20). Source Criticism, The Documentary Hypothesis, and Genesis 1-3.
  5. Brace, R.A. (2003). Does Anyone Still Believe the 'Documentary Hypothesis'? UKApologetics.net.
  6. Cassuto, U. (1941). The Documentary Hypothesis and the Composition of the Pentateuch. Originally published by Magnes Press, the Hebrew University.
  7. Alter, R. (1996). The Five Books of Moses. pp. 10-11.
  8. Friedman, R.E. (2004). The Editorial Team Behind the Bible. BeliefNet.com.
  9. Friedman, R.E. (1987). Who Wrote the Bible? pp. 19-20. Summit Books.
  10. Hirsch, E.G., & Jacobs, J. Pentateuch. JewishEncyclopedia.com.
  11. The Bible. Nehemiah 8:14; 9:29.
  12. The Bible. Mark 12:26.
  13. The Bible. John 8:17.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Zelkowitz, M. (2006). Documentary Hypothesis. University of Maryland, Legacy College.
    Barton, J. (1992). Source Criticism. The Anchor Bible Dictionary (Vol. 6).
  15. Friedman, R.E. (1987). Who Wrote the Bible? pp. 25-26. Summit Books.
  16. Tsumura, D. (1996). Genesis and Ancient Near Eastern Stories of Creation and Flood: An Introduction Part I. BibleArchaeology.org.
    Jackson, W. (1991). Are There Two Creation Accounts in Genesis? Apologetics Press.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Sewell, C. (1994). The Tablet Theory of Genesis Authorship. Bible and Spade (Vol. 7, No. 1).
  18. Westerman, C. (1994). A Continental Commentary. p. 583. First Fortress.
  19. Hess, R.S. (1990). Genesis 1-2 In Its Literary Context. Tyndale Bulletin 41.1.
  20. Friedman, R.E. (1987). Who Wrote the Bible? pp. 26-60. Summit Books.
  21. Morgan, D. Bible Inconsistencies. Infidels.org.
  22. The Bible. Leviticus 11:46-47.
  23. Garrett, D. (2010, September 24). The Documentary Hypothesis. BibleArchaeology.org.
  24. Campbell, W.F. (2002). The Qur'an and the Bible in the Light of History & Science (2nd ed.). Section 3, chapter 1.
  25. Giles, G. (2009, June 12). The Documentary Hypothesis: Its History and Present Status. Christian Evidence Conference Houston, Texas.
  26. Gottlieb, D. Who Wrote the Bible? - Critique. DovidGottlieb.com
  27. Holding, J.P. (2005). Debunking the Documentary Hypothesis. Creation.com.
  28. Collins, Ken (1993). The Torah in Modern Scholarship. www.kencollins.com. Retrieved on 2011-03-12.
    Robinson, B.A. (2007, August 21). The Documentary Hypothesis on the identity of the Pentateuch's authors. ReligiousTolerance.org.
  29. Strong's Hebrew Dictionary. 8435.toledoth. Biblos.com.