by jimwalton » Wed Jun 03, 2020 3:12 pm
>>Job's wealth in cattle and slaves
> This has nothing to do with time period and everything to do with location.
They pertain to the era before widespread use of precious metals as currency or coinage, certainly.
> Don't conflate the patriarchal period of the 10th century with the later Northern Arabian milieu.
I'm not. The patriarchal period to which I'm referring is of the 20th c. BC.
> I don't understand why you're using Genesis as a comparison for “oldness” when you should know the Yahwist source is typically dated from either just before or during the Babylonian exile of the 6th century BC
I have different views than you on when Genesis was written, but regardless of its date of writing, its period is of the 21st-17th centuries BC, and the culture it describes, along with some of its terminology, date to the early 2nd millennium BC.
> Eusebius was living in 300 CE,
Correct, but it's just another source that suggests the Abrahamic era rather than the Persian one. He must have had some source unavailable to us to write what he did.
> the frame-story clearly has its origins in ancient folktales preserved through oral tradition.
I don't take Job to be an historical account, nor do I take Job to be an historical personage. It's a philosophical/theological wisdom treatise. I think, though, based on the quality of Hebrew and poetry, that the writing far exceeds as mere folktale. It's a serious piece of quality literature and a deep theodicy.
> This says nothing about the composition of the Book of Job as it has come to us, via the hand of a final redactor, much less of the other later sources, such as the dialogues and the Hymn to Wisdom section.
I was not really making a claim to that effect, either. I mentioned that there are guesses that it was composed in about 2000 BC, must have been written down sometime after 1000 BC, and was obviously edited after that.
> So you're saying this story is actually co-opted from the general ANE wisdom milieu? How progressive of you.
Actually I didn't say that at all. What I suggested is that its literary genre of similarity to other ancient works possibly puts it in that era. I didn't make a claim about derivation or co-opting from other sources.
> Says who?
Dr. John Walton, The NIV Application Commentary, "Job" p. 24: "We should also note that the language of the book has been the subject of much discussion. The book is uncontested for the complexity of its Hebrew. Scholars have attempted to identify it as a dialect or even as a translation, but no such suggestions have been substantiated are widely excepted. All of this is to say that until we have more to go on, we cannot use the language of the book to determine its date."
Marvin Pope says (p. XXXII) that the historic and monetary terms could suggest an early date. The literary features and motifs could suggest an early date (p. XXXII). The Mesopotamian parallels could suggest an early date (p. XXXIII). Albright favors the 6th-4th c. (p. XXXIV). The Rabbins are widespread in their opinions. On p. XL, Pope, with regard to the date it was written, concludes, "The fact that dates proposed by authorities, ancient and modern, span more than a millennium is eloquent testimony that the evidence is equivocal and inconclusive."
> Is this your opinion or is there scholarly consensus on this point? Is your position that the entire field of philology is a fraud?
Of course that is not my position. Philology is a very valid field.