For those biblical scholars who have had the unfortunate experience
of having the JEPD theory of the Documentary Hypothesis jammed
down their throats the past forty years in Catholic biblical scholarship,
and as long since the time of Julius Wellhausen in the late 1800s,
this will be a real treat. This article will show what an absolute
sham Catholic biblical scholarship has been since the 1960s; how
innocent Catholics have been deceived by these pseudo-scholars;
and why Catholic students all over the world have lost the faith.
After you read this article, if you own Raymond Brown's "New Jerome
Biblical Commentary," it may come in handy this winter when you
need kindling for the fireplace. I hear that liberal biblical
scholarship burns especially well. I can just hear those pages
crackling now!
For those who are not biblical scholars, "JEPD" refers to the
theory of modern liberal scholars positing that the the Pentateuch
(the first five books of the Old Testament) were not written or
complied by Moses (as the Bible claims) but by a series of unknown
authors separated by many hundreds of years. For example, the
Documentary Hypothesis claims that Genesis 2 was written long
before Genesis 1, the latter being written between 587-517 BC
just before the Jews returned from captivity in Babylon. In the
scheme of the J-E-P-D hypothesis, Genesis 1 was a "P" (Priestly)
document. Why? Because, we are told, the Jews needed a refresher
course on their divine heritage and there was no better place
to start than with a wonderful creation story in order to get
everyone excited about their return trip to Jerusalem. In other
words, the "priest" or his trusty scribe who wrote Genesis 1 was
basically making up a fairy tale for the delight of those returning
captives.
All this hypothesizing comes under the name of "Catholic
biblical scholarship," but it is nothing more than an attempt
to discredit the Bible. If the Bible is a product of men, then
it is prone to mistakes, and that is why these same "biblical
scholars" teach that the Bible cannot be trusted when it gives
historical information, or if a certain book claims to be written
by a certain author. If you've had enough of this intellectual
garbage, you will find the following paper to be very refreshing.
If it were possible, his paper should be at the head of every
Bible issued today, to make up for the fabrications perpetrated
on the public by the fantasies of Julius Wellhausen and company
for the past hundred and fifty years. For your convenience, I
will underline what I believe are the more important points of
the essay.
Robert A. Sungenis, M.A.
The "Toledoths" of Genesis
By Damien F. Mackey
This article is all about the true structure of
the Book of Genesis; a structure that is so simple and straightforward
- as the reader is going to discover - that even a child would
have no trouble understanding it in its basic form. The chief
credit for having laid bare this structure in all its profound
simplicity belongs to the British scholar, P. J. Wiseman(1),
upon whose thesis the following article will be based.
Introduction
As the brilliant Australian philosopher Gavin Ardley(2)
pointed out, there are two ways of going about the process of
analysing or dissecting something, depending on one's purpose.
Ardley well illustrated his point by comparing the practices of
the anatomist and the butcher. When an anatomist dissects an animal,
he traces out the real structure of the animal; he lays bare the
veins, the nerves, the muscles, the organs, and so on. "He reveals
the actual structure which is there before him waiting to be made
manifest"(3). The butcher, on the other hand, is not
concerned about the natural structure of the animal as he chops
it up; he wants to cut up the carcase into joints suitable for
domestic purposes.
In his activities the butcher ruthlessly cleaves
across the real structure laid bare so patiently by the anatomist.
"The anatomist finds his structure, the butcher makes his"(4).
The same sort of analogy may be applied, I believe,
to the different methods that have been employed to analyse the
structure of the Book of Genesis. Here I am only going to contrast
the archaeologically-based approach, as used by P. J. Wiseman
and others(5) (which method, I believe, resembles that
of the anatomist in Ardley's example), with the Graf-Wellhausen
approach (that to my mind approximates to the activities of the
butcher).
Astruc's Theory
It was really Jean Astruc (d. 1766) who invented
the theory of separate documents, based on the Divine names used.
The French physician found that in the first 35 verses of Genesis
(chapters 1-24a), the word 'Elohim', "God", was used, and no other
Divine name; while in chapters 2:4b to 3:24, the only designation
given is 'Jehovah Elohim', "Lord God" - except where Satan uses
the word God.
Astruc claimed that the passages must have been
written by different writers; for if Moses himself had written
the whole of it, first-hand, then we should have to attribute
to him this singular variation, in patches, of the Divine name.
This was really the beginning of the documentist
dissection, into fragments, of the Book of Genesis. By the middle
of the 19th century, owing largely to the efforts of the German
critics K. H. Graf (d. 1869) and Julius Wellhausen (d. 1918),
liberal scholarship had, to its own satisfaction, isolated four
main Pentateuchal sources: J-E-D-P.
Thus it was alleged that a writer who used 'Elohim'
was the author of a so-called E document, and the writer who used
'Jehovah' was the author of "J"(6). But since some
verses that were obviously written by the same person contained
both names for God, an editor had to be introduced, then a "redactor".
A Deuteronomist source, "D," was identified(7). After
a century of conjectures and further redactors, it was decided
that a further document, "P" (Priestly) had been written nearly
1,000 years after Moses, and so on ....
In this way Genesis has been reduced to a series
of confused fragments and authors, in order to account for the
way in which the name of God is used in the book. The fourfold
sigla, JEDP, of Graf-Wellhausen is now dogmatically retained (though
in modified form) in academic institutions the world over. Nonetheless,
the critical scholars have to admit that their literary expedients
break, not only the logical, but also the grammatical sequence
of the passages. As Wiseman commented(8): "It is confusion
confounded!"
Really, since what was formerly known as the "Documentary
Hypothesis" had its inception based upon an unrealistic premise:
the presumption that a single author would not be likely to use
more than one name to designate God, it does not come as a surprise
to discover that the modern end-product of such a line of reasoning
is a totally artificial form of analysis; a butcher-like activity,
ruthlessly cleaving across the natural structure of the scriptural
texts - so chopping and hewing them into fragments that their
original form and shape are no longer recognisable. Wellhausen
himself had in fact acknowledged that the result of all of this
dissecting was "an agglomeration of fragments"(9).
Despite this, his History of Israel (1878) "gave him a
place in Biblical studies comparable, it was said, to that of
Darwin in biology."(10)
The Archaeological Approach
Because of the newness of the science of archaeology
- a science that is only about 150 years old - we can say that
from an archaeological/historical point of view the study of
Scripture is still in its infancy. Pre-archaeological theories,
such as those advanced by the 19th century documentists, suffer
from an almost total ignorance of the methods and styles of the
ancient scribes, since these really became known only in our present
century, after the vast libraries of the ancient world had been
excavated and their data slowly and painstakingly sifted by modern
sholars.
The modern awareness of ancient scribal methods
would serve to show up with embarrassing starkness the numerous
defects in the old "Documentary Hypothesis".
P.J. Wiseman, on the other hand, was fortunate to
have had the opportunity of participating in some of the most
important archaeological digs that took place in Mesopotamia midway
through this present century; for example, that of Sir Leonard
Woolley at the site of Ur, and of Professor S. Langdon at Kish.
Wiseman had many discussions about ancient writing methods and
related subjects with these and other scholars (most notably,
Professor Cyril Gadd).
In the light of all of this first-hand evidence
and expertise that had become available to him, Wiseman found
himself perfectly equipped to re-examine the structure and authorship
of the Book of Genesis. He discovered that the book's structure
was really quite straightforward, and was completely explained
by the facts of archaeology. In true anatomist fashion - according
to Ardley's analogy - Wiseman was able to lay bare the real structure
of the Book of Genesis, and thereby scientifically to expose,
by stark contrast, just what an unholy mess the JEDP dissecters
were leaving behind them. In fact, nowhere do the clumsy techniques
of the documentists show up so embarrassingly as when contrasted
against the light of Wiseman's patient uncovering of the real
structure of the Genesis texts.
Wiseman had at least been prepared to concede on
behalf of the early documentists, as an excuse for their radical
fragmenting of the texts, that they had not been in a position
to compare the literary form and structure of Genesis with other
ancient methods of writing, that would have enabled them to have
read Genesis in the light of the times and circumstances in which
it was written. But, in the case of contemporary exegetes, he
considered that:
"... it cannot be regarded as other than serious that
notwithstanding archaeological discoveries, many still read Genesis
not as ancient, but as though it had been written in relatively
modern times."(11)
The mistake had been made, he said, despite the
very obvious fact that the Genesis narrative itself "is constructed
in a most antique manner by use of a framework of repeated phrases."(12)
These phrases, that form the skeleton of the structure of Genesis,
are of two kinds, namely (a) COLOPHON phrases and (b) CATCH-LINE
phrases, the former being the more important.
In the following pages I shall try to bring home
to the reader the full significance of these literary indicators,
colophon and catch-line, that reveal the Book of Genesis to be
a most ancient document - much older than the documentists would
have it. My explanation will lead naturally into a special
consideration of the controversial and famous first chapter of
Genesis. A grasp of the proper and true structure of the Book
of Genesis will enable the reader to understand why, for example,
biblical commentators have proposed the so-called "two accounts
of Creation" theory (Genesis 1 and 2), and how this theory ought
to be modified.
Also, following Wiseman, I shall be able to account
quite simply for the perplexing problem of the variations of the
Divine Names throughout Genesis; a variation that has led the
documentists to fragment so much of the Scriptures into their
J and E compartments.
Who borrowed from whom? Did the authors of the scriptural
books really borrow much of their written material, their stories,
their poetry, their wisdom, from the pagan mythology and the literature
of the Mesopotamians and Egyptians, for instance, or do the latter
owe a debt to the Hebrews? Since here I am interested only in
the Book of Genesis; my question can be more specific: Which
are the more ancient, the accounts of Creation, the Fall, the
Flood, Babel, etc. in the Mesopotamian and/or Egyptian writings,
or those recorded in Genesis?(13).
This is a further question that I shall be addressing
in the following pages.
THE KEY TO THE STRUCTURE OF GENESIS
(A) The Colophon Phrase
Documents written in Mesopotamia were generally
inscribed upon stone or clay tablets. It was customary for the
ancient scribes to add a colophon note at the end of the account,
giving particulars of title, date, and the name of the writer
or owner, together with other details relating to the contents
of a tablet, manuscript or book.(14) The colophon method
is no longer used today - the information originally given in
a colophon having been transferred in our day to the first or
title page. But in ancient documents the colophon with its
important literary information was added in a very distinctive
manner.
Thus the colophon ending to one of the mythological
Babylonian accounts of creation reads(15):
"First tablet of...after the tablet...Mushetiq-umi...A
copy from Babylon; written like its original and collated. The
tablet of Nabu-mushetiq-umi [5th] month Iyyar, 9th day, 27th year
of Darius."
My primary purpose in this article will be to demonstrate
that the MASTER KEY to the method of compilation that underlies
the structure of the Book of Genesis is to be found in the use
of the colophon.
Now scholars seem to agree at least that structurally
the most significant and distinguishing phrase in the Book of
Genesis is the phrase:
"THESE ARE THE GENERATIONS OF..."
The formula is used eleven times throughout the
Book of Genesis. Wiseman, commenting on the importance of this
phrase, wrote:
"... for so significant did the Septuagint translators
regard it, that they gave the whole book the title 'Genesis'",
which is the Greek version of the Hebrew word for "generations."(16)
Following Wiseman, though, I shall be preferring
the Hebrew word for "generations," Toledoth.
The Toledoth formula, "These are the generations
of ...," is to be found in the following places throughout the
Book of Genesis:
Verse Wording
2:4: "These are the generations of the heavens and the earth".
5:1: "This is the book of the generations of Adam".
6:9: "These are the generations of Noah".
10:1: "These are the generations of the sons of Noah".
11:10: "These are the generations of Shem".
11:27: "These are the generations of Terah".
25:12: "These are the generations of Ishmael".
25:19: "These are the generations of Isaac".
36:1: "These are the generations of Esau".
36:9: "These are the generations of Esau".
37:2: "These are the generations of Jacob".
In the past, scholars of all schools had recognised
what was obvious, and had admitted the importance of the repetitious
Toledoth phrase. However, as we are going to find, there is
a disturbing tendency amongst more recent exegetes practically
to ignore the phrase, as though it did not even exist in the text.
Moreover, it seems that virtually all have misunderstood both
its use and its meaning.
There is a simple reason for this, as Wiseman has
explained. Many of these sections of Genesis that conclude with
a Toledoth, commence, "as is frequent in ancient documents, with
a genealogy or a register asserting close family relationships."(17)
This has led commentators to associate the Toledoth phrase, "These
are the generations of ..." with the genealogical list where this
follows. Hence they have assumed that this phrase is used as a
preface or introduction.
For instance, S.R. Driver wrote in his Genesis
[commentary]:
"This phrase...properly belongs to a genealogical system;
it implies that the person to whose name it is prefixed is of
sufficient importance to mark a break in the genealogical series,
and that he and his descendants will form the subject of the section
which follows, until another name is reached prominent enough
to form the commencement of a new section."(18)
But Dr. Driver's assertion is plainly contrary
to the facts, as anyone will realise simply by reading through
the narrative of the Book of Genesis.(19) It does not
take the attentive reader long to discover that the Toledoth phrase
does not always belong to a genealogical list, for in some instances
no genealogical list follows. Hence Wiseman was entirely correct
when he stated that "the main history of the person named has
been written before the 'Toledoth' phrase and most certainly it
is not written after it."(20)
To illustrate this fact, Wiseman pointed firstly
to what he called the "classic example" of the second Toledoth:
"This is the book of the generations of Adam" (Genesis 5:1). After
this Toledoth we learn nothing more about Adam, "except his age
at death." Again, the record following the phrase, "These are
the generations of Isaac" (Genesis 25:19), clearly is not a history
of Isaac, but of Jacob and Esau. Similarly, after, "These are
the generations of Jacob" (Genesis 37:2), we read mainly about
his son Joseph(21)
Commentators have been puzzled by these presumed
peculiarities. But the whole thing ceases to be puzzling as soon
as one realises that the Toledoth phrase is not an introduction,
or the preface to the history of a person, as is so often imagined.
"Rather", as Wiseman had discerned, "it is to be read as a colophon
ending, for only as such does it make proper sense."(22)
So much for the first part of Dr. Driver's statement
that the Toledoth is tied to a genealogical system. When we test
the second part of his statement we find that it, too, does not
square with the facts and is therefore quite erroneous. Driver
had imagined that the Toledoth phrase had served to introduce
the next "prominent" person in the narrative. Who would doubt,
however, that the most "prominent" individual in the Book of Genesis
is ABRAHAM? He, more than all the other great Patriarchs, would
be entitled to be named in a Toledoth were Driver's interpretation
correct. "Yet," as Wiseman had observed, "it is remarkable that
while lesser persons such as Ishmael and Esau are mentioned, there
is no such Toledoth phrase as "These are the generations of Abraham."(23)
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