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Thought this might be edifying for those felling called to defend the book of Genesis. I'm linking an article I recommend toward the bottom of this post. It's something every Genesis defender should have in his arsenal.
JEDP of course has been pushed for years as a "scholarly" theory which advocates the rejection of the mosaic authorship of Genesis. Problem was, there was no textual evidence from archeological findings to back it up. The authors of JEDP merely picked up on literary differences within the book of Genesis and worked off the assumption that human writing didn't go back further than 1000 BC. And even though that starting premise has been proven wrong for many years, the theory is still pervasive among liberal theologians.
The "Tablet Theory" on the other hand works off actual archeological findings of ancient clay tablets that predate Abraham. Amazingly (or maybe not so amazingly) many literary similarities were discovered between these ancient clay tablets and the book of Genesis. This not only supports the authorship claims in the Bible that Moses wrote Genesis, but also gives insights as to how Moses put the book together, and from what materials he worked from.
Now I'm one who takes the Bible at face value that Moses wrote the pentateuch, but there's a whole host of interpretive insights that also come from this information (which is not new BTW).
Here are some implications that jump out at me:
1) It debunks the popular myth that Genesis has 2 creation accounts. We now know from historical textual evidence that Genesis 2:4a is actually not the title of what follows it, but the conclusion of what precedes it. There is only one creation account which begins with "In the Beginning God created the heavens and the earth (Gen. 1:1) and ends with "This is the history of the heavens and the earth when they were created," (Gen. 2:4a). This was the very first writing that Moses used in putting the book of Genesis together.
2) It shows Moses worked off the oldest documents in the world. We now have historical textual evidence that Adam was one of the original authors Moses worked off, and may not have even authors the oldest. The creation account doesn't specify him by name as the second section does. Perhaps an angel was the very first tablet author.
3) Genesis rather than allegory, is a collection of historical writings passed down from eye-witnesses. The book signatures we now recognize show the authors to be contemporary to their writings.
4) Given that we have historical textual evidence that Moses worked from writings older than any other known writings, accusations that the Genesis creation account was copied from older creation accounts falls apart. It's more likely that the Genesis creation account was the one being copied.
5) This debunks the notion that the Genesis creation account must be viewed through the lens of the culture of Moses' time. Clearly there is textual evidence that Moses worked off writings that preceded his time by thousands of years. It would be just as wrong to force ANE cosmology onto Genesis as it would to force modern cosmology on it.
The implications don't stop there, but those are some very important ones. All of the above are issues we see on this boards often.
Here's the article
The Tablet Theory of Genesis Authorship
Curt Sewell
© 1998-2001 by Curt Sewell. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Originally published by the archaeological magazine Bible and Spade, Winter 1994, Vol. 7, No. 1
Now mind you, I may have some minor disagreements with the theory, but as a whole, I'm pretty much on board. I have very little doubt that Moses worked from 11 separate writings.
If you're not familiar with the theory, please take in the linked article and share your thoughts.
JEDP of course has been pushed for years as a "scholarly" theory which advocates the rejection of the mosaic authorship of Genesis. Problem was, there was no textual evidence from archeological findings to back it up. The authors of JEDP merely picked up on literary differences within the book of Genesis and worked off the assumption that human writing didn't go back further than 1000 BC. And even though that starting premise has been proven wrong for many years, the theory is still pervasive among liberal theologians.
The "Tablet Theory" on the other hand works off actual archeological findings of ancient clay tablets that predate Abraham. Amazingly (or maybe not so amazingly) many literary similarities were discovered between these ancient clay tablets and the book of Genesis. This not only supports the authorship claims in the Bible that Moses wrote Genesis, but also gives insights as to how Moses put the book together, and from what materials he worked from.
Now I'm one who takes the Bible at face value that Moses wrote the pentateuch, but there's a whole host of interpretive insights that also come from this information (which is not new BTW).
Here are some implications that jump out at me:
1) It debunks the popular myth that Genesis has 2 creation accounts. We now know from historical textual evidence that Genesis 2:4a is actually not the title of what follows it, but the conclusion of what precedes it. There is only one creation account which begins with "In the Beginning God created the heavens and the earth (Gen. 1:1) and ends with "This is the history of the heavens and the earth when they were created," (Gen. 2:4a). This was the very first writing that Moses used in putting the book of Genesis together.
2) It shows Moses worked off the oldest documents in the world. We now have historical textual evidence that Adam was one of the original authors Moses worked off, and may not have even authors the oldest. The creation account doesn't specify him by name as the second section does. Perhaps an angel was the very first tablet author.
3) Genesis rather than allegory, is a collection of historical writings passed down from eye-witnesses. The book signatures we now recognize show the authors to be contemporary to their writings.
4) Given that we have historical textual evidence that Moses worked from writings older than any other known writings, accusations that the Genesis creation account was copied from older creation accounts falls apart. It's more likely that the Genesis creation account was the one being copied.
5) This debunks the notion that the Genesis creation account must be viewed through the lens of the culture of Moses' time. Clearly there is textual evidence that Moses worked off writings that preceded his time by thousands of years. It would be just as wrong to force ANE cosmology onto Genesis as it would to force modern cosmology on it.
The implications don't stop there, but those are some very important ones. All of the above are issues we see on this boards often.
Here's the article
The Tablet Theory of Genesis Authorship
Curt Sewell
© 1998-2001 by Curt Sewell. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Originally published by the archaeological magazine Bible and Spade, Winter 1994, Vol. 7, No. 1
Now mind you, I may have some minor disagreements with the theory, but as a whole, I'm pretty much on board. I have very little doubt that Moses worked from 11 separate writings.
If you're not familiar with the theory, please take in the linked article and share your thoughts.
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