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By John McDermott
The Pentateuch, or Torah, the
foundational story for Judaism, is an important part of Scripture
for Christianity and shaped many or the stories in Islam’s Quran.
These first five books of the Bible tell of the creation of the
universe, the promises God made to the ancestors of the Israelites,
the enslavement of the Israelites in Egypt, their escape and journey
through the wilderness under the leadership of Moses, and the
covenant God made with them. Because of the religious importance the
Pentateuch has had, it has been much studied. Indeed, the Pentateuch
has been the subject of groundbreaking studies in source criticism,
the role of oral traditions, archaeology and the Bible, form
criticism, canonical studies, and literary studies.
In this article, I will focus on historical
issues, including how the Pentateuch was written, to what extent the
story it tells is based on real historical events, and how the
historical circumstances at the time of its composition shaped its
message. It should be remembered, though, that no one approach is
adequate in itself. Historical study is a necessary approach to the
Bible, but it is not a complete approach. A thorough interpretation
must be informed by literary and theological concerns as well.
Composition of the Pentateuch
Traditionally, Moses was considered the author
of the Pentateuch, but there have long been doubts about that claim.
Moses dies at the end of Deuteronomy, so obviously he did not write
that part. In addition, Moses never crosses the Jordan into the
promised land, yet there are statements that are from the
perspective of someone who is in the promised land: Deuteronomy 1:1
refers to the land east of the Jordan as “beyond the Jordan.” There
are also statements from a perspective long after the story takes
place; Genesis 12:6 says, “At that time the Canaanites were in the
land,” which is what someone might write during the monarchy or
later.
With the rise of the critical approach to the
Bible in the 18th and 19th centuries, interpreters began to develop
new theories about the composition of the Pentateuch. The most
important of these, the Documentary Hypothesis, was the claim that
the Pentateuch was not the work of one author but was a combination
of four sources written at different times. The Yahwist was written
in the southern kingdom, Judah, early in the monarchy as a national
epic. This source called God Yahweh and portrayed God interacting
directly with people, much like a human character (e.g., Genesis
2:4—3:24). The Elohist was written in the northern kingdom, Israel,
as an alternative epic.
It called God Elohim, had a particular concern
for ethical issues, and portrayed God communicating indirectly with
humans, through angels or dreams (e.g., Genesis 20). The
Deuteronomist was basically the book of Deuteronomy, a law
collection put together late in the monarchy as a basis for a
religious reform. The Priestly source was written during the exile
or later. Like the Elohist source, it called God Elohim, but
emphasized rituals and purity, and portrayed God acting in an
orderly, all-powerful way (e.g., Genesis 1:1—2:3). At some point
during the Persian period (after the exile) the Pentateuch reached
its finished form, combining the four sources, plus redactional
material needed to tie it together.
In recent years, there have been many
challenges to the Documentary Hypothesis, and few people accept
every part of its original form. Most scholars do agree with the
fundamental idea that the Pentateuch contains diverse material that
was put together over a long period of time in the monarchy, exile,
and Persian period. The nature of the written sources and the role
of oral and liturgical traditions are among the issues being
debated. Increasingly, scholars emphasize that the Pentateuch should
be seen primarily as an exilic and Persian period work, rather than
as a monarchic work. While it contains traditions that developed
during the monarchy and some poetry that may be even earlier, its
basic shape and message come from the time after the monarchy had
ended. For example, except for Deuteronomy 17, it has nothing on
establishing a king for Israel, which would hardly make sense for a
people’s foundational story during a monarchy.
Ancestors of the Israelites in Genesis
The first problem in investigating the
historicity of Abraham, Sarah, and the other ancestors is
determining when they are supposed to have lived. The simple answer
would be to say that Exodus 12:40 gives 430 years as the length of
time the Israelites were in Egypt, and 1 Kings 6:1 gives 480 years
from then until Solomon built the temple. Therefore, if Solomon
ruled sometime in the 10th century BCE, the last generation in
Genesis must have been in the 19th century BCE. But there are
contradictions in the biblical chronology. The events reported in
the Pentateuch, Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings—from the time in
Egypt up to the building of the temple—take more than 550 years, not
480 years.
Comparing the stories in Genesis with extra
biblical evidence also provides no definite answer for when they
might have lived. While some scholars have claimed that some of the
names, such as Isaac, Ishmael, and Joseph, and some of the customs,
such as inheritance, are similar to those found in texts from the
early second millennium, others have pointed out that they can also
be found in later periods as well. Also, there are anachronisms in
the story; it has Abraham encountering Philistines (Genesis
21:32-34), but the Philistines and other Sea Peoples did not arrive
in Canaan until well after Abraham would have lived.
The stories of the ancestors of the Israelites
do not come from any one period but developed over time. It is best
to see the ancestors as composite characters. Stories from the Shasu
(nomadic people mostly south and east of Canaan), Apiru (gangs
closer to the Canaanite cities), traders who traveled throughout the
region, and residents of the Canaanite cities were passed down among
the people who became the Israelites. The most important male
characters in the final story—Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph—were
likely revered ancestors or legendary figures of different groups of
Israelites. The story makes them all part of one family as a way of
strengthening Israelite unity.
The Exodus Story
Again, there are problems determining the date the exodus
is supposed to have occurred. The dates mentioned above would give a
date for the exodus in the 15th or 16th century BCE, depending on
whether 1 Kings 6:1 is followed or the other periods mentioned are
added up. But in fact, many scholars who believe there is a
historical basis for the exodus argue for a significantly later
date, around 1250, to account for other factors: the Israelites
encountering Edomites, Moabites, and others on the journey; the
Merneptah Stela, a monument put up by the Egyptian pharaoh in 1209
claiming to have fought and defeated Israelites in Canaan; and
archaeological evidence that shows 1200 to 1100 to have been a time
when new settlements were being established in Canaan.
If there is some historicity to the exodus, I
believe the range of possible dates should be extended from around
1250 to 1050, taking into account the following facts. Biblical
dates are often artificial or symbolic, so they should not be taken
literally. The Israel of the Merneptah Stela is not necessarily the
exodus group; more likely both were small groups who later became
part of biblical Israel. And the changes that took place in Canaan
ca. 1200 to 1100 are now considered by most archaeologists to be
primarily a change within Canaan and not something caused by a new
group arriving. An exodus group could have arrived at any time in
this period and found a place in the evolving society.
It is possible there was an exodus event
behind the biblical story, but if so, it involved a much smaller
group than the Bible claims (certainly nowhere near the 600,000 men
of Exodus 12:37). Egypt did use Semitic slaves, and occasionally
some escaped. During the period of 1250 to 1050, the decline in
Egyptian power and the changes taking place in Canaan would have
made it possible for a group too small to dramatically change Egypt
or Canaan by itself, but large enough to remember its story, to
escape Egypt, and to make its way into Canaan.
The biblical story has so many theological and
legendary elaborations that it cannot be read as strict history. But
we should ask why it eventually became the national epic, if
originally it was the story of only a small group. There are a
number of possibilities, not mutually exclusive. Descendents of an
exodus group may have become political and religious leaders and
were in a position to propagate their story. Other groups who became
part of the Israelites had also been under Egyptian domination, so
the story would have appealed to them. And the finished form in the
Pentateuch comes from the Persian period. The Persian Empire often
got involved in local religions and would have approved of an
anti-Egyptian story because it would have discouraged Jews from
cooperating with Egypt to resist Persian rule.
Journey through the Wilderness
Journeys are used frequently in literature to
represent a transformation. In the Pentateuch, the Israelites are
transformed into a nation through their experiences on this journey.
Wilderness is also a common literary motif. It is a place of purity
and innocence, away from the decadence of the city, but also a place
of danger from gangs, lack of food and water, and wild animals. The
combination of purity and danger makes it an ideal place to
encounter God. The wilderness journey in the Pentateuch thus serves
literary and theological purposes but should not be read as a
history. However, some historical information may be gleaned from
it. For example, the concentration of events around Kadesh and in
Transjordan suggests that traditions of groups from those places who
became part of the Israelites have been incorporated into the
national epic by giving them prominence in the journey.
Laws
The main event during the journey, of course,
is the covenant God makes with the Israelites. God will be bound to
them as national protector, and they will follow the laws of the
covenant. The laws are quite diverse and come from throughout
Israelite history. Scholars identify three major collections. The
Covenant Code (Exodus 20:2—23:33) is the earliest, from sometime in
the middle of the monarchy. The Deuteronomic Code (Deuteronomy
12—16) came late in the monarchy and was connected to King Josiah’s
religious reform. And the Holiness Code (Leviticus 17—26) was
completed during the exile and is related to writings from the
Priestly source.
As an example of the historical development of
biblical laws, consider Exodus 23:19, “You shall not boil a kid in
its mother’s milk.” There is evidence from Ugarit of a Canaanite
ritual of boiling a kid in milk, and thus the original purpose of
the law was to separate Israelite religion from other Canaanite
rituals. This is supported by the fact that Exodus 23:19, part of
the early Covenant Code, puts the law with other liturgical laws.
However, the same law occurs in the later Deuteronomic Code, but in
a different context, with dietary laws (Deuteronomy 14:21). By the
time the Deuteronomic Code was compiled, the dietary laws were
becoming more important as a mark of Israelite identity, so the law
seemed more meaningful in that context. In post-biblical times, the
same law became the basis for not eating any meat and dairy products
together. The long evolution was a process of the community
responding to different historical circumstances, with the common
thread of strengthening the community’s identity through distinct
practices.
John McDermott is the author of Reading the Pentateuch: A
Historical Introduction. Paulist Press, 2002.
Suggested Readings
Ahlstrom, Gosta. The History of Ancient Palestine. Fortress
Press, 1993.
Axelsson, Lars. The Lord Rose up from Seir: Studies in the
History and Traditions of the Negev and Southern Judah. Almquist
& Wiksell, 1987.
Blenkinsopp, Joseph. The Pentateuch: An Introduction to the First
Five Books of the Bible. Doubleday, 1992.
Mazar, Amihai. Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 10,000-586
BCE. Doubleday, 1990.
McDermott, John. Reading the Pentateuch: A Historical
Introduction. Paulist Press, 2002.
McDermott, John. What Are They Saying About the Formation of
Israel? Paulist Press, 1998.
Stern, Ephraim. Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, vol. II:
The Assyrian, Babylonian, and Persian Periods (732-332 BCE).
Doubleday, 2001.
Van Seters, John. The Life of Moses: The Yahwist as Historian in
Exodus—Numbers. Westminster/John Knox Press, 1994.
Van Seters, John. The Pentateuch: A Social-Science Commentary.
Sheffield Academic Press, 1999.
Whybray, R. Norman. Introduction to the Pentateuch. Eerdmans,
1995.
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