Let's not dismiss consensus scholarly opinion as appeals to authority. That's unthinking.
> The chapter is highly debated, with many presenting opinions, so the fact that you can find some scholars to support your position is moot, because anyone can find a cadre of scholars to support virtually any position taken about this text
This is disingenuous. This argument would only hold if one scholarly group didn't hold a consensus view. An unthinking YEC could make a similar (albeit much worse) claim with regard to evolution. Let's not pretend these groups have similar sway.
> It doesn't prove your position; it only says that you believe the say a certain camp of scholars do. This is true, I'd be happy to talk about why this view has grown to be the consensus view and how the other views fell short in detail. But let's not pretend it's anything but much more massively supported by scholars.
> A particular camp of scholars have abandoned the Mosaic source of Exodus/Dt., but a growing number of scholars are also finding that theories of days gone by are not holding up, and there is a trend back toward Moses as tradent of the material, if not the actual writer of a whole bunch of it. The more work that happens, the more tendency is back towards Moses. It's a work in progress, but Mosaic authorship is FAR from abandoned.
That's just not true. It's something the extreme conservative wing tries to tell themselves. Biblical scholars today agree almost unanimously that the Torah is the work of many authors over many centuries. This is not some heated debate, it's false to charaterize it that way. And while certain theories do show holes, the trend is to adjust and amend those, not going back to single authorship or near single authorship because the original problems which caused that to be abandoned still exist.
https://books.google.com/books?id=Dkr7rVd3hAQC&pg=PA21&dq=not+the+work+of+a+single+authorcomposed+over+several+centuries&hl=en#v=onepage&q&f=false
> source material more and more likely does date to "back then" (Mosaic era), and we are beginning to see the edits more clearly. Even then, though, we can't discredit the core material behind the edits as Mosaic. It's almost impossible to tell, but we certainly can't cavalierly jump to its inauthenticity.
What's your evidence? And what dates are you considering the "Mosaic era" as archaeology has demonstrated the exodus tale has major anachronisms. And we can discredit the edits as Mosaic absolutely. The whole reason we can see they are edits is because they are so clumsy, merge different writing styles and word choices and even beliefs. It would be virtually impossible to find the coherent edits of an original author on his own work.
> First of all, there is no set of ten (decalog) of anything in Exodus 34. From vv. 10-26 we have a list of 15 items of what "the Lord said, and we can observe that there are 11 parts of chapter 23 that correspond to these 15 elements, but there's nothing in Exodus 34 that is "ten words." Secondly, there's very little in Exodus 34 that qualifies as "ritual." I see the Feast of Unleavened Bread (18), the dedication of the firstborn (19-20, 26), the Sabbath (21), the Feast of Weeks (22-24), blood sacrifice not with yeast (25), and not cooking a young goat in its mother's milk (26). That's 6 things. So where's the support that it's a list of 10 things that are ritual?
It's just the name it was given based on the large number of ritual elements. You are basically arguing with the modern naming convention to distinguish two sets of ten commandments which is a pointless argument. And breaking it up into 10 isn't any harder than with the exodus 20 account which again can be listed multiple ways (see the catholic vs protestant version).
1. Be careful not to make a treaty with those who live in the land where you are going, or they will be a snare among you. 13 Break down their altars, smash their sacred stones and cut down their Asherah poles.[a] 14 Do not worship any other god, for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God.
15 “Be careful not to make a treaty with those who live in the land; for when they prostitute themselves to their gods and sacrifice to them, they will invite you and you will eat their sacrifices. 16 And when you choose some of their daughters as wives for your sons and those daughters prostitute themselves to their gods, they will lead your sons to do the same.
- 2.Do not make any idols.
3.“Celebrate the Festival of Unleavened Bread.
4.The first offspring of every womb belongs to me, including all the firstborn males of your livestock, whether from herd or floc
5.“Six days you shall labor, but on the seventh day you shall rest;
6.Celebrate the Festival of Weeks with the firstfruits of the wheat harvest, and the Festival of Ingathering at the turn of the year.[b]
7. Three times a year all your men are to appear before the Sovereign Lord, the God of Israel
8.Do not offer the blood of a sacrifice to me along with anything containing yeast, and do not let any of the sacrifice from the Passover Festival remain until morning.
9.“Bring the best of the firstfruits of your soil to the house of the Lord your God.
10.“Do not cook a young goat in its mother’s milk.”
Not hard at all.
> "It very much is understood as 'the ten commandments." I agreed in response to the OP that there is no disconnect between Exodus 20 and 34.
Yes there is. And it's right here: "Do not cook a young goat in its mother’s milk.”
27 Then the Lord said to Moses, “Write down these words, for in accordance with these words I have made a covenant with you and with Israel.” 28
"these words" in context are the exact words he just finished saying literally the exact sentence before. That being a reference to any other words is incoherent.
> The Jews and Samaritians of the 5th c. BC considered Moses to be the author. (This is especially poignant if you believe the book was written in the 5th c. BC.)
The wiki link addresses this and is well sourced:
"Authorship was not considered important by the society that produced the Hebrew Bible (the Protestant Old Testament), and the Torah never names an author.[2][3] It was only after c. 300 BCE, when Jews came into contact with author-centric Greek culture, that the rabbis began to feel compelled to find authors for their books,[2][Notes 3] and the process which led to Moses becoming identified as the author of the Torah may have been influenced by three factors: first, by a number of passages in which he is said to write something, frequently at the command of God, although these passages never appear to apply to the entire five books; second, by his key role in four of the five books (Genesis is the exception); and finally, by the way in which his authority as lawgiver and liberator of Israel united the story and laws of the Pentateuch.[19][Notes 4]"
> The Jewish traditions of subsequent centuries considered Moses to be the author.
meaningless. they were just repeating the original false claim and had no additional knowledge. That's not evidence.
> There is no competing theory or counterclaim for the author of Exodus until the 19th century.
Again not evidence as the scholarly analysis of authorship hadn't been developed yet. That's like saying newton is false because no one thought of gravity first.
> There are terms, styles, and themes, that date to the 2nd millennium, not the middle of the 1st.
And yet the core of the story cannot be 2nd millennium due to major anachronisms.
> The historical details in Exodus indicate that it accurately preserves information from the times it describes: The Late Bronze Age, or about a thousand years earlier than the oldest surviving manuscripts of Exodus. It’s reasonable to believe that some of this information had changed or would no longer have been known during the exile, so there is credible reason to believe an early source of this information.
The historical details are anachronistic and innacurate. Just as you would expect with a work that was not contemporaneous to the supposed story.