A few comments on this idea of Genesis' composition. I'm going to make these general points rather than quoting the specifics of what statement I'm disagreeing with so hopefully this doesn't come across as adversarial or personal. That is not my intent. I think it's great to have threads like this where we can look deeply at certain ideas about how parts of our Bible came to us.
1. The toledot statements are not restricted to Genesis or to the time before Moses.
In English,
toledot statements are often translated as "these are the generations of" or "this is the account of". While only Genesis uses these statements repeatedly, there are two more statements just like the ones in Genesis elsewhere in the Old Testament:
- "These are the generations of Aaron and Moses at the time when the LORD spoke with Moses on Mount Sinai" (Numbers 3:1, ESV).
- "Now these are the generations of Perez: Perez fathered Hezron..." (Ruth 4:18).
If we take the first one as an author's signature at the end of their account, it would mean Aaron and Moses only wrote the first two chapters of Numbers, not what comes after it! After all, why would they sign their names after those chapters if they were not done writing? Also, if this is a signature, it would show that these "colophon" phrases were in use in Moses' time, since this would be Moses and Aaron's colophon.
2. The toledot statements are not necessarily author signatures.
What we actually see from the examples in Numbers and Ruth above is that this phrase is not necessarily a colophon phrase. It is a phrase used to divide an account, but it does not seem to indicate the author of the account. This is also clear from the very first
toledot statement in Scripture:
- "These are the generations of the heavens and the earth when they were created, in the day that the LORD God made the earth and the heavens" (Genesis 2:4).
Note that this does not say "these are the generations of a messenger of God" or "these are the generations of God", but rather the generations of "the heavens and the earth". This is not specifying the author of the account, but rather the subject of the account.
3. The toledot statements typically introduce rather than conclude a section.
While Genesis 2:4 is ambiguous, capable of being interpreted either way, in every other case the
toledot statement seems linked with what follows, not what came earlier. This is the case in both the Numbers and Ruth passages quoted above, as well as the following:
- "This is the book of the generations of Adam. When God created man [Adam], he made him in the likeness of God" (Genesis 5:1). The account goes on to summarize Adam's creation and give his genealogy.
- "These are the generations of Noah. Noah was a righteous man, blameless in his generation. Noah walked with God" (Genesis 6:9). Note that the account that follows is about Noah and his family.
- "These are the generations of the sons of Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japheth. Sons were born to them after the flood" (Genesis 10:1). The account proceeds to list the sons of Japheth, Ham and Shem.
- "These are the generations of Shem. When Shem was 100 years old, he fathered Arpachshad two years after the flood" (Genesis 11:10). The accounts continues with the rest of Shem's descendants.
- "Now these are the generations of Terah. Terah fathered Abram, Nahor, and Haran; and Haran fathered Lot" (Genesis 11:27). The account continues with more of Terah's descendants before zeroing in on Abram (more on this in section 4 below).
- "These are the generations of Ishmael, Abrahams son, whom Hagar the Egyptian, Sarahs servant, bore to Abraham" (Genesis 25:12). The account continues with Ishmael's sons.
- "These are the generations of Isaac, Abrahams son: Abraham fathered Isaac" (Genesis 25:19). The account continues to describe Isaac's marriage to Rebekah, her barrenness, and then her conception of twins.
- "These are the generations of Esau (that is, Edom)" (Genesis 36:1). The account continues to describe Esau's wives and sons.
- "These are the generations of Esau the father of the Edomites in the hill country of Seir" (Genesis 36:9). The account goes on with Esau's sons. Note that this and the previous section have very similar information.
- "These are the generations of Jacob. Joseph, being seventeen years old, was pasturing the flock with his brothers. He was a boy with the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah, his fathers wives. And Joseph brought a bad report of them to their father" (Genesis 37:2). The account continues to be about Jacob's sons: mainly Joseph and his interaction with the others, but also accounts of Judah and Tamar (Genesis 38) and a genealogy of Jacob (Genesis 46:8-27).
So, in all these cases, the account that follows the
toledot statement is about the person mentioned and their family. Often it is much more heavily about their family and descendents than the person themselves, but that is not surprising if the word
toledot has a general meaning of "generations".
4. The toledot statements alone do not neatly divide Genesis into sections.
It is odd, for instance, that there is no
toledot statement for Abram, even though he is a key character in Genesis. Abram's story is told between the
toledot statements of Terah (Genesis 11:27) and Ishmael (Genesis 25:12). Terah's
toledot statement seems like a good introduction for the genealogical information in Genesis 11:27-32, and perhaps that is all it should be linked with. The following chapters (12-24) may not have a
toledot statement connected to them. It may be a mistake to think that each part of Genesis is associated with a
toledot statement.
This is similar to the way we see
toledot statements used in Numbers and Ruth, quoted above. They do not indicate that everything following (or everything preceding) is connected to that statement. They are more tightly linked to the genealogical information directly following them. Further, since Genesis neither begins nor ends with a
toledot statement, they cannot be used to divide the entire text. (The article in the opening post attempts to make Exodus 1:6 into a
toledot statement that concludes the last chapters of Genesis, but it is not written in the same form as the others).
Another way the text itself provides a caution from taking these
toledot statements as the key and sole organizing principle of the book is the duplicated
toledot for Esau. Why does Esau get two sections? Did he write two tablets? Or, are there simply two accounts of his sons included, similar to other repetitions in Genesis? It seems the latter is more likely.
My point here is that we should not read too much into these statements. They are not chapter headings that identify all the text between them. They are important to understanding the composition of Genesis, but they are not the only factor in assessing how Genesis is structured.
5. The ancient tablet colophons are not toledot statements.
The article did not explicitly claim that ancient tablets used colophon statements that are the same as what we see in Genesis, but it did seem to give that impression. Actually, there are ancient tablets that have colophon phrases at the end, but they do not use
toledot statements. In fact, they are dissimilar in many ways. The following is from John Walvoord et al,
Bible Knowledge Commentary: Old Testament, p. 23:
Wiseman argues that the Genesis ṯôleḏôṯ are like the Babylonian colophons ... (Creation Revealed in Six Days. London: Marshall, Morgan & Scott, 1949, p. 46).
This view is unconvincing, however. The colophons on the tablets are not like the ṯôleḏôṯ of Genesis (see, e.g., Alexander Heidel, The Babylonian Genesis. 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1963, pp. 25, 30; A. L. Oppenheim, Ancient Mesopotamia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964, pp. 240-1). In the cuneiform tablets each title is a repetition of that tablets first line and not a description of its contents. Also the owners name seems to refer to the present owner, not the original owner. Moreover, the Akkadian equivalent of ṯôleḏôṯ is not used in the formula.
When these dissimilarities are considered, the evidential basis for the tablet theory seems rather weak. What, exactly, is the similarity between the colophon statements on the clay tablets and the Genesis
toledot statements? It appears to be only that both types of statements include a person's name (or, in some cases, multiple names, or in one case, the heavens and the earth). That is not enough from which to build such an ambitious theory of Genesis' genesis.