by jimwalton » Sun Dec 06, 2015 4:58 pm
> Or do you subscribe to the faith position that Moses actually wrote the entire Torah?
The Bible itself claims that Moses is the writer (Josh. 8.31; 23.6; 1 Ki. 2.3; 2 Ki. 14.6; Mt. 8.4; 19.7; Mk .7.10, and many others). Jesus affirmed repeatedly that Moses was the author. The books of the Pentateuch are ascribed to Moses, not only in later books in the Bible, but also in the earliest extrabiblical literature, including Josephus. Mosaic authorship continued to be accepted among both Christians and Jews until the rise of critics in the seventeenth century.
Despite the elaborate theories of Wellhausen and those who came after him, Absolutely no textual evidence exists for the fragmentation of the Pentateuch. No archaeologist has ever uncovered a copy of J, E,
D, or P, or indeed any references to them in secondary literature. The Documentary Hypothesis and its kin are the result of pure speculation. Those who insist on empirical evidence should be ashamed to cite these theories, which claim no such evidence whatsoever. The Documentary Hypothesis is based on a reconstructed picture of the history of Israel presupposing an evolutionary model of gradual
movement from polytheism to monotheism for which no evidence exists. Such a theory assumes a social-science perspective on religion and how it develops.
Walton (The Lost World of Scripture) claims that though the authorship of the Pentateuch by Moses cannot be verified, it is clear that he was considered the authority behind the Torah that we have. His words, teachings, and actions can be considered to be represented with accuracy in the biblical text. As the leader of the people, "Moses was generating information…that would be considered important enough to preserve in written documents. Some undoubtedly would have been recorded in his time and under his supervision. Others may well have been produced by later generations after some time of oral transmission. It matters neither how much material is in each category nor which portions are which; the authority derives from Moses and he is inseparable from the material." Even if Moses didn’t actually write it, there is no verified reason to doubt that the material is his, even if it was not written down until much later.
> Dt. 22.28-29
Dt. 22.28-29 is an expansion of the casuistic law of Ex. 22.16-17. In each of the 3 scenarios, the *man* is guilty. Most critics try to accuse that the woman (the rape victim) is being treated like she is her father's property: she has been violated, and the rapist gets off by paying a bridal fee (as if there is no concern for the girl). And then, it is claimed, she is apparently forced to marry the dude.
This is not a valid claim. Even if the man has been too aggressive, the woman is complicit; she doesn't act against her will. The text says *they* are discovered, not *he* is discovered. Both are culpable. It's more like our current nation of statutory rape: he is guilty, but she gave in.
As it would have been far harder for her to find a husband if she has been sexually active, her bride-price (economic security for her future) would have been as risk. Both passages suggest two courses of action:
1. If the father and daughter both agree to it, the seducer (statutory rapist) must marry the woman and provide for her all her life, without the possibility of divorce. This is for her protection, but notice that she is not required to do this. She isn't just a piece of property.
2. The father also has the right to refuse any such life-long arrangement, but can still demand the payment that would have been for a bride, even if the rapist won't marry her. (Since she has been sexually compromised, marriage to another man would be difficult, if not outright impossible). The girl has to agree to this arrangement; she is not just a piece of property.
> Dt. 21.10-14
You must be reading a different text than I am. Deut. 21.11-14: "if you notice among the captives a beautiful woman and are attracted to her, you may take her as your wife. Bring her into your home and have her shave her head, trim her nails, and put aside the clothes she was wearing when captured. After she has lived in your house and mourned her father and mother for a full month, then you may go to her and be her husband and she shall be your wife. If you are not pleased with her, let her go wherever she wishes. You must not sell her or treat her as a slave, since you have dishonored her."
Where does this say anything about having sex with her without consulting her? Where does "the word is 'rape' " show up? There is no notion of rape in this passage. I'll grant that she is taken captive in an act of war, but that's as far as I'll go with you. She is not raped. She is brought into the home, allowed time to mourn, live with him for a month, and then the marriage takes place. Dr. Daniel Block says, "For women, few circumstances are more fearful than the conquest of their towns by a foreign army. This ordinance was designed to rein in the potential for male abuse of women in such contexts. This paragraph serves not as a legal provision for a soldier to marry a woman in circumstances where contractual arrangements with the bride's family are impossible, nor as an authorization of divorce from a foreign bride—both practices are assumed—but as an appeal to Israelites to be charitable in their treatment of foreign women, who, through no decision or fault of their own, are forced to become a part of the Israelite community. Verses 10-13 call for the charitable treatment of foreign brides when they are first taken; verse 14 for their charitable treatment in divorce."
> Ex. 20.17: I'm interpreting it that way because it's a listing of items of property.
You're interpreting it as a list of items of property, but it's not necessarily warranted. You have no Biblical evidence that the wife was considered to be an item of property. If you have it, put it on the table.
> But absent a clear signal in the text itself that the wife should be construed as something other than a member of the category to which every other listed item clearly belongs
I gave you a crystal clear one: Just a few commands earlier, in Exodus 20.12, children are commanded to give their mother honor equal to that of the father. A mother was to have equal authority over her children. The wife wasn't considered to be property at all. Women in Israel were not sellable items like houses, oxen, or donkeys (other items referred to in the verse). Another item of interest is that in other cultures in the ancient Near East, the mother was often under the control of the son in the household, but not so in Israel. The Mosaic Law presents a completely different picture than "wife as property." In Lev. 19.3 Moses commands a son to revere mother and father alike (look also at Prov. 12.4; 31.10)—and the mother is even listed first.