Now to the first part of our story. Who wrote/compiled/edited (and when) the
first five books of the Bible, called the Torah or the Pentateuch or the Five
Books of Moses?
The five scrolls or books of the Pentateuch tell the history of the
Israelites from the creation of the universe, through the exodus from Egypt and
the revelation at Mount Sinai to their entry into the Promised Land. The first
book, Genesis, contains most of the stories--the creation, Adam and Eve, Cain
and Abel, and Noah; and the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, etc., ending
with the story of Joseph and the arrival of the Israelites in Egypt. The book of
Exodus tells the story of the enslavement in Egypt, the exodus, the revelation
of the Ten Commandments and the Law at Mount Sinai, the golden calf, and the
construction of the Tabernacle (a portable house of worship, carried through the
desert). The book of Numbers tells of the Israelites' wanderings in the desert
and the legal and religious structure of their society. The book of Leviticus
deals largely with the rules of the priesthood, sacrifice, and worship. The book
of Deuteronomy is essentially Moses' farewell address to the Israelites as they
are about to enter the Promised Land, recapping much of what was covered in the
prior three books.
How did these books come to be written? There's a wide range of opinion.
We'll only present the two most commonly held views--what we'll call the
"traditional view" and the "scholarly view." This is perhaps misleading
terminology, since there are many profound scholars on both sides. We use the
term "scholarly" in the sense of "academic" or "scientific", although neither of
those terms are right, either. Perhaps the best term is "documentarist", but
that's cumbersome. So we shall stick to "traditional" and "scholarly", without
implying lack of scholarship on the other side.
The traditional explanation is that the Five Books of Moses were written by
Moses himself. There are several variants of this explanation:
- Traditional Judaism and fundamentalist Christianity believe that the text
was dictated by God to Moses on Mount Sinai, letter for letter (or pretty much
letter for letter).
- Other religious groups still ascribe authorship to Moses, but use words
like "divinely inspired" rather than "dictated letter for letter."
- Still others say Moses was the sole author, but there's nothing "divine"
about it except in the sense that all great works of literature and poetry are
"inspired."
Mosaic authorship would mean the five books were written around 1280 to 1250
BC, the most commonly accepted range of dates for the exodus from Egypt, give or
take 30 years.
It has long been recognized that there were a few problems with the
traditional view of Moses as author. The text reports the death of Moses--how
could Moses have written of his own death? It also describes Moses as "the most
humble man who ever lived"--how could Moses write that about himself? But these
are minor issues. Some say Moses' successor Joshua wrote the few lines that
describe the death of Moses; others say that Moses himself was commanded to
write that text before it happened. None of this represents a serious challenge
to Mosaic authorship.
As time went on, however, scholars became increasingly skeptical of the idea
of Moses as single author. Among their objections:
- Several stories are repeated, with different characters or different
emphasis (called "doublets"). For instance, there are two creation stories
(Gen 1 and Gen 2). There are three stories of a patriarch traveling among
pagans and pretending his wife is his sister. There are two stories of Moses
striking a rock to produce water. There are two versions of the Ten
Commandments (one in Exodus, one that Moses recaps in Deuteronomy) with
slightly different wording. There are, in fact, a lot of these doublets.
- There are internal inconsistencies. The number of days of the Flood story
don't add up right. At one point, Noah takes two of each animal; at another
point, he takes two of some, seven of others. Joseph is sold into
slavery to Ishmaelites in one verse, to Midianites a few verses later. The
Mountain of Revelation is sometimes called Sinai and sometimes Horeb. Moses'
father-in-law is sometimes called Yitro and sometimes Ruel, and so on.
Scholars in late 18th century Germany noted that in most of the duplicated
stories, one set described God using the Hebrew word Elohim (usually translated
"God") while the other set tended to use God's four-lettered Name Y-H-W-H
(usually translated "Lord," sometimes miscalled "Jehovah.") This gave rise to
the theory that there were two different authors, one called E and one called J
(German for Y), whose works were somehow combined to form a single text.
Later analysis of the grammar, vocabulary, and writing style provided
evidence for two other authors--called P for the Priestly author (mostly
Leviticus, and lots of the genealogy) and D for the Deuteronomist, since the
book of Deuteronomy seemed different (grammatically and politically) from the
earlier books. The multiple-author view has come to be called the "Documentary
theory."
We interject at this point to say that traditionalists have answers to all
the points raised by Documentary scholars. The E-word for God is used when God's
justice is predominant; the J-name is used when God's mercy is predominate. The
doublet stories are complementary, offering different interpretations and
insights. For example, each of the creation stories has a different emphasis,
one on the physical universe and one on the pre-eminence of mankind. Textual
differences (such as in the different versions of the Ten Commandments) make a
point by comparison. For example, "Remember the Sabbath" and "honor the Sabbath"
means to do both.
Documentary theorists see a much more complicated story, with four different
texts by four different authors (although some think "schools" of authors might
be responsible for each text rather than a single author). These were later
combined by an editor, called the Redactor. The Redactor sometimes put the
different authors' stories one after the other (as with the creation stories)
and sometimes interwove them (as with the two stories of Noah's Flood and of
Joseph's mistreatment by his brothers). The Redactor also added comments like
"Now it came to pass, after these things . . ." as a transition
between sections.
Scholars differ on when the various authors wrote and when the Redaction
occurred. No one today knows who the initial authors were--the predominant view
is that many of the stories were handed down orally for generations before being
written down. It's not clear which texts are older (although the Song at the Sea
in Exodus 15:1-8 is usually acknowledged as among the oldest verses), or which
author wrote which verses. Nor is there agreement on the gender of the authors.
Some scholars believe the J-writer was a woman, as described in The Book of
J by David Rosenberg and Harold Bloom (1990).
Our favorite interpretation of the Documentary theory is presented by Richard
E. Friedman in his book, "Who Wrote the Bible?" It's a marvelous book,
written for the lay person, and you feel like you're reading a detective story
as Friedman disentangles various threads and ties the authorship to historical
events. Friedman's version is summarized below (most dates are rough
approximations).
1250 to 1000 BC - Conquest of the land of Canaan begins before 1200, and the
tribes of Israel form a loose confederation. The histories of the tribes of
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and Moses are told orally, handed down from
generation to generation.
Around 1000 to 950 BC - The tribes are united under King David. Many of the
stories are written down by the author J. These stories describe the creation of
the universe, the birth and history of the tribes and their special relationship
with God. The stories have an intense focus on morality, on examples of
behavior, reward and punishment. Even the ancestral heroes are depicted as
having human faults and weaknesses.
920 BC to 722 BC - following the death of Solomon (around 920 BC), the
kingdom splits in two, Judah in the south with the royal capital at Jerusalem,
and Israel/Ephraim in the north with major shrines at Shechem and Bethel. The
J-stories primarily reflect the Davidic (southern) point of view. In the north,
some stories begin to accumulate twists reflecting the political situation
there. The stories from the south stress the importance of Jerusalem, Aaron and
the priesthood, and the centralization of sacrifice. Those from the north are
about sacrifices conducted anywhere and de-emphasize Aaron in favor of Moses.
The essence of the stories remains the same but the details vary. In the
north, the mountain of significance is Horeb, not Sinai, and greater emphasis is
placed on Joseph, his mother, and his son Ephraim (one of the largest of the
northern tribes). In the southern version, Judah (head of the chief tribe of the
south) saves Joseph from being killed by the other brothers; in the northern
version, it's Reuben (head of the chief tribe of the north.)
The northern stories--let's call them E-stories--are written down and become
the E-document. Northern prophets such as Amos (2:9) and Hosea (12:2-6) use the
E-stories in their messages to the people. By the eighth century BC, then, we
have two sets of stories, E-versions (northern) and J-versions (southern), both
evolved from a single tradition.
722 BC - Israel is conquered by Assyria and the ten tribes of the north are
scattered and exiled. Many refugees flee to Judah in the south. Although they
are all Israelites, those from the north have somewhat different versions of
stories from those in the south. Both texts are viewed as ancient and sacred, so
someone combines the two to form a single document, called JE. As they're
sitting around hearing the consolidated story read, the people from the north
hear familiar phrases and elements and say, yep, that's the story my grandpa
told me, all right. The people from the south, ditto. The combined text helps
the process of social integration and tribal distinctions disappear.
The JE version subordinates the E-stories to the J-stories, since Judah (the
southern kingdom) was politically dominant. Some of the E-stories may have been
lost at this time--there aren't separate versions of all the stories. Perhaps in
some cases there weren't any differences. Perhaps the southern authors who
combined the stories dropped northern variants they couldn't accept. We don't
know, and some say the absence of a complete E-document is a weakness in the
Documentary theory.
770 BC to 600 BC - A third work appears, mostly concerned with Temple rites,
sacrifices, priestly garb, genealogy (focused on the priestly tribe), etc. This
is identified as the P-document. The P-stories in all likelihood are very old
and handed down from oral tradition. Arguably many of them were compiled as a
pro-Aaron response to the anti-Aaron slant of E. Where JE mentions God speaking
to Moses, P mentions God speaking to Moses and Aaron. Where JE talks of the
staff of Moses, P talks of the staff of Aaron. P accounts for the largest amount
of text in the Torah, containing most of the legal sections, rules of sacrifice,
genealogies, and priestly matters.
The dating of the P document is hotly debated among Documentary scholars.
Some date P as late as Second Temple times (after 580 BC), but we find
Friedman's argument compelling, that it appeared in response to JE.
640 BC to 609 BC - Reign of King Josiah. The book of II Kings describes
(23:8-13) how a "lost" scroll of Moses was found by Halkiah around 622 BC and
read to King Josiah. Most scholars argue (based on internal evidence) that this
was the book of Deuteronomy--in fact, this was suggested by the early Church
fathers, including Jerome. (Traditionalists usually say the entire written Torah
had been lost, the people had strayed so far.) Deuteronomy largely recapitulates
the other books, but also contains new material. The Documentary theory labels
this last author D, the Deuteronomist.
The content of Deuteronomy is very old, although the literary style seems to
be from the later period of Josiah. The D-author, in attributing the writings to
Moses himself, certainly felt he was simply reviving Moses' teachings, as
understood 600 years later. In much the same way a modern biographer might put
together a collection of the sayings of Thomas Jefferson for a modern audience.
So at this point, there are three different texts: JE, P, and D. There were
doubtless other texts as well (Genesis makes reference to the "Book of the Wars
of the Lord," for example) which are long lost.
587 BC to 536? BC - The southern kingdom of Judah is conquered by Babylon in
587 BC. The people are exiled for 50 years, then return to Jerusalem to rebuild
the Temple and restore their religion. There is no longer a king of the line of
David, but a high priest. The process is not easy. Other exiled peoples were
assimilated by their conquerors and disappeared; the Israelites remained
faithful to their homeland and their God. But the religion had been weakened by
the exile, and needed to be strengthened and consolidated.
Approximately 450 BC - This is perhaps the most remarkable part of the story,
as the Redactor emerges on the scene. He sees the need for religious revival and
renewal, for strengthening and centralization. So he combines the three
documents (JE, P, and D) into one smooth flowing narrative--the five books of
Moses.
The Redactor did lots of cutting and pasting. Genealogies that probably
started all together in a P-text were interspersed throughout JE, acting as
bridging material or section dividers. Materials that told the same story from
pro-Aaron and anti-Aaron viewpoints (for example) were neatly woven together.
The Redactor was respectful of his sources and kept them largely intact.
These were all sacred and ancient texts/traditions, so the Redactor presumably
didn't drop material--duplication was preferable to omission. Sometimes he
combined the different texts; sometimes he left the two stories side by
side.
The single document became the center of the Israelite religion, under the
prophets Ezra and Nehemiah. Authorship was ascribed to Moses. This wasn't
deception. The Redactor in all likelihood knew nothing of the prior 500
year history of authorship and honestly believed the material he was editing had
all been handed down from Moses.
From 450 BC on the document was fixed--no more changes. The oldest existing
parchments, the Dead Sea scrolls, date from around 100 BC. They're almost
word-for-word identical to the versions we have today (although there are
occasional transcription errors, most so small they would be noticed only by an
experienced scholar).
That's the story as viewed by Friedman, and we venture to say it comes
closest to representing the consensus among Documentary scholars. We like
Friedman's approach because he neatly connects the political history (as
described in the text and as known to archaeology) with the religious and social
history. He also draws on the grammar and vocabulary of the different authors to
form a coherent explanation of the text's evolution.
Some Documentary scholars advocate different time lines. All agree on the
four basic authors (J, E, P, and D) but some separate D into D1 (around 600 BC)
and D2 (around 550 BC). Some say that P is older than D, some put E as oldest,
some date all the documents much later. Archaeological finds occasionally shed
some light (for instance, on the question of "household gods" in Genesis 31:19),
helping to date the origin of a story or a phrase. But for the most part there's
no firm evidence for one view over another. It's mostly a matter of trying to
analyze internal elements such as writing style, vocabulary, and grammar--a
highly subjective business. Arguments are waged over which author wrote which
sentence.
Questions of provenance notwithstanding, the text is one of the great works
of literature. It has endured for at least 2,500 years, parts of it for at least
3,200 years, and is still read today. There is hardly a work of art or
writing in the western world that does not build from the five books or use
images or phrases from them. Our notions of good and evil, of history as a
linear process, of the relationship between the individual and morality, of the
dignity of man ("created in the image of God"), all stem from this seminal work.
The pagan nations surrounding Israel did not see anything wrong with
mistreatment of animals, with leaving unwanted babies out in the woods, with
working slaves without relief. The famous legal code of Hammurabi, often cited
as a source for the laws of the Torah, declared that chopping off a man's hand
was suitable punishment for stealing a loaf of bread. The Torah says the
punishment must be proportionate to the crime.
It's hard for us to consider the profound impact of this text on human
history without thinking that there was a divine hand in its authorship, whether
the human author was one or many.
Resources:
Who Wrote the Bible? by Richard Elliot Friedman,
1987
Understanding the Old Testament, by Bernhard W. Anderson,
1986
The Art of Biblical Narrative, by Robert Alter, 1981
The
Religion of Israel, by Yehezkel Kaufmann (trans: Moshe Greenberg),
1948
Surpassing Wonder, by Donald H. Akenson, 1998
