by jimwalton » Mon Jun 08, 2020 9:46 am
I'm always doing more research, thank you, but if you have been following the thread, you have noticed several things:
The book has very few, and possible zero, time markers for us to go by. There are parts of the book that lead us to an early writing (such as that the Jewish laws and temple rituals are absent), there are parts of the book that lead us to a middle writing (mention of the Sabeans, who weren't in existence until after 1000 BC), and finally some parts that lead us to a late writing (some Aramaic phrases and terms).
So instead of just telling me I'm off the mark and need to do more research, how about if you show me evidence of the Sabeans and Chaldeans in 1447 or earlier. That would go further in the discussion than merely telling me I haven't done my homework (which I have). I'm always willing to learn more, but I need facts, not just rebukes.
Here are the factors suggesting the patriarchal period:
- The setting of the book seems to be from the patriarchal period
- The unit of money in Job 42.11
- Job's lifespan
- The literary style of the book are similar to other works from about 2000 BC
- There is no mention of priesthood, Jewish laws, or temple rituals
- Ezekiel 14.14, 20 associates Job with Noah and Danel.
- The mention of the Chaldeans, a tribal group from the Abrahamic era (Gn. 11.27)
To me the weight of evidence puts Job's writing in the patriarchal period, making it the oldest book in the OT.
The elements that suggest a writing date of about 900-800 are:
- the brief mention of the Sabeans, a group that doesn't exist in history until about 1000 BC.
- has some distinctive Israelite features (no symbiosis, interest in the judgment and righteousness of God, worship of celestial deities considered an offense, and the idea of the retribution principle) that could put the writing later than 1000 BC.
The elements that suggest a writing date of about 800-600 are the Aramaic phrases and terms.
There's my research in a nutshell that I laid out in previous posts. Add your research to these, and I can add your points to my data base here, and we can continue the discussion. Let's keep talking.
I'm always doing more research, thank you, but if you have been following the thread, you have noticed several things:
The book has very few, and possible zero, time markers for us to go by. There are parts of the book that lead us to an early writing (such as that the Jewish laws and temple rituals are absent), there are parts of the book that lead us to a middle writing (mention of the Sabeans, who weren't in existence until after 1000 BC), and finally some parts that lead us to a late writing (some Aramaic phrases and terms).
So instead of just telling me I'm off the mark and need to do more research, how about if you show me evidence of the Sabeans and Chaldeans in 1447 or earlier. That would go further in the discussion than merely telling me I haven't done my homework (which I have). I'm always willing to learn more, but I need facts, not just rebukes.
Here are the factors suggesting the patriarchal period:
[list][*] The setting of the book seems to be from the patriarchal period
[*] The unit of money in Job 42.11
[*] Job's lifespan
[*] The literary style of the book are similar to other works from about 2000 BC
[*] There is no mention of priesthood, Jewish laws, or temple rituals
[*] Ezekiel 14.14, 20 associates Job with Noah and Danel.
[*] The mention of the Chaldeans, a tribal group from the Abrahamic era (Gn. 11.27)[/list]
To me the weight of evidence puts Job's writing in the patriarchal period, making it the oldest book in the OT.
The elements that suggest a writing date of about 900-800 are:
[list][*] the brief mention of the Sabeans, a group that doesn't exist in history until about 1000 BC.
[*] has some distinctive Israelite features (no symbiosis, interest in the judgment and righteousness of God, worship of celestial deities considered an offense, and the idea of the retribution principle) that could put the writing later than 1000 BC.[/list]
The elements that suggest a writing date of about 800-600 are the Aramaic phrases and terms.
There's my research in a nutshell that I laid out in previous posts. Add your research to these, and I can add your points to my data base here, and we can continue the discussion. Let's keep talking.