by jimwalton » Wed Mar 04, 2020 12:00 pm
> So what evidence do we have that Moses a) existed, and b) wrote Genesis?
1. The author of the Pentateuch must have been a well-educated man, thoroughly familiar with the desert and must have written in that environment, an eye-witness, and familiar with Egypt. Moses fits that profile, though that profile doesn't point specifically to him.
2. The Jews and Samaritans of the 5th c. BC considered Moses to be the author, as confirmed by the Samaritan Pentateuch. They were inarguably much closer to the original material than we are, especially given the theory that the Pentateuch was written in the 5th century. It would be odd for these Jewish scholars to claim Moses as the author if the documents were being written at the same time.
3. The Jewish traditions of subsequent centuries also identified Moses as the writer. Again, they were closer to the material than we are.
4. The style, shape and structure of the Pentateuch is about a single story, with the central themes being the covenant, the land, and trust in a holy God. By all appearances it was intended to be read as a single book with a distinct purpose, focus, and message. This lead us to a single author. The five books don't seem o be haphazardly thrown together, leaving us with a hodgepodge of assembled documents.
5. Critical analysis shows the usage of terms known only to the 2nd millennium.
6. As a remote source, there is a highly-debated (i.e., little agreed-upon) paper by Doug Petrovich, where he claims to have found proto-consonantal script from the 12th c. BC mentioning not only Moses but also some of the stories recorded in Exodus and Numbers. If he is right (and many say he is not), then he has found evidence of Moses in those Sinaitic mines.
7. The consistent and unanimous biblical testimony is that Moses was the author of the "book of the law" (Josh. 8.31-32; 1 Ki. 2.3; etc.) These books have proved to be reliable in other matters. I have no justified reason to doubt their veracity in the matter of Moses's authorship.
To me a more pertinent question is, why you doubt Mosaic authorship?
> What evidence? Haven't you just asserted this?
If you examine the concept of YHWH in these two books, comparing and contrasting his attributes and behaviors, they align. It's not just an assertion, but a matter of study and comparison.
> I'm afraid I don't believe you. It seems to me as if nephesh isn't at all the same as essence (plants don't have nephesh, for example), so this is just a retcon.
Well then do some study.
> Again, supreme doesn't mean the same as all-powerful.
Correct, but God is portrayed as being all-powerful and supreme. Do the research.
> So do you have newer translations than the current NRSV which incorporate information the NRSV doesn't which shows that your preferred translation is correct?
I use the original Hebrew.
Translation is always a matter of compromise: exact one-for-one grammatical alignment or dynamic translation (getting at the meaning). Translations are always a mixture of scholarly technical work and interpretation.
> Are there translations where I can find these interpretations?
I have no idea. You'd have to search through them. I'm reading the Hebrew and the commentaries. I don't rely on translations as the basis of my research, though they can be interesting and informative.
> But you have to make non-textual assumptions for your explanations.
I have not. I've shown you the grammar. It's the source of the English text. There's no "assumptions" about it.
> You have to read the narrative having already assumed that your conclusion is correct.
Not true. I read the text in the original language, arrive at an understanding about both what it says and what it means, and then derive a conclusion about the narrative. It's the opposite of what you have repeatedly accused me of (you falsely accuse me of dogma over evidence, prejudice over reason, conclusion first then make the text fit it).
> So what evidence do we have that Moses a) existed, and b) wrote Genesis?
1. The author of the Pentateuch must have been a well-educated man, thoroughly familiar with the desert and must have written in that environment, an eye-witness, and familiar with Egypt. Moses fits that profile, though that profile doesn't point specifically to him.
2. The Jews and Samaritans of the 5th c. BC considered Moses to be the author, as confirmed by the Samaritan Pentateuch. They were inarguably much closer to the original material than we are, especially given the theory that the Pentateuch was written in the 5th century. It would be odd for these Jewish scholars to claim Moses as the author if the documents were being written at the same time.
3. The Jewish traditions of subsequent centuries also identified Moses as the writer. Again, they were closer to the material than we are.
4. The style, shape and structure of the Pentateuch is about a single story, with the central themes being the covenant, the land, and trust in a holy God. By all appearances it was intended to be read as a single book with a distinct purpose, focus, and message. This lead us to a single author. The five books don't seem o be haphazardly thrown together, leaving us with a hodgepodge of assembled documents.
5. Critical analysis shows the usage of terms known only to the 2nd millennium.
6. As a remote source, there is a highly-debated (i.e., little agreed-upon) paper by Doug Petrovich, where he claims to have found proto-consonantal script from the 12th c. BC mentioning not only Moses but also some of the stories recorded in Exodus and Numbers. If he is right (and many say he is not), then he has found evidence of Moses in those Sinaitic mines.
7. The consistent and unanimous biblical testimony is that Moses was the author of the "book of the law" (Josh. 8.31-32; 1 Ki. 2.3; etc.) These books have proved to be reliable in other matters. I have no justified reason to doubt their veracity in the matter of Moses's authorship.
To me a more pertinent question is, why you doubt Mosaic authorship?
> What evidence? Haven't you just asserted this?
If you examine the concept of YHWH in these two books, comparing and contrasting his attributes and behaviors, they align. It's not just an assertion, but a matter of study and comparison.
> I'm afraid I don't believe you. It seems to me as if nephesh isn't at all the same as essence (plants don't have nephesh, for example), so this is just a retcon.
Well then do some study.
> Again, supreme doesn't mean the same as all-powerful.
Correct, but God is portrayed as being all-powerful and supreme. Do the research.
> So do you have newer translations than the current NRSV which incorporate information the NRSV doesn't which shows that your preferred translation is correct?
I use the original Hebrew.
Translation is always a matter of compromise: exact one-for-one grammatical alignment or dynamic translation (getting at the meaning). Translations are always a mixture of scholarly technical work and interpretation.
> Are there translations where I can find these interpretations?
I have no idea. You'd have to search through them. I'm reading the Hebrew and the commentaries. I don't rely on translations as the basis of my research, though they can be interesting and informative.
> But you have to make non-textual assumptions for your explanations.
I have not. I've shown you the grammar. It's the source of the English text. There's no "assumptions" about it.
> You have to read the narrative having already assumed that your conclusion is correct.
Not true. I read the text in the original language, arrive at an understanding about both what it says and what it means, and then derive a conclusion about the narrative. It's the opposite of what you have repeatedly accused me of (you falsely accuse me of dogma over evidence, prejudice over reason, conclusion first then make the text fit it).