The
World's Oldest Books
In conclusion, I would like to say that Genesis,
as we now know it, is composed of a series of some of the world's
oldest books. Dr. Charles Taylor has identified the following
"nine volumes" of which he claims the Book of Genesis originally
consisted:(61)
I: "God's Book, an account of his activities at
the beginning of things. (Gen. 1:1 to 2:4a)"
II: "Adam's Diary, some of it parallel to Vol.I. (Gen. 2:4b to
5:2)"
III: "Noah's Family Tree and Diary. (Gen. 5:3 to 6:9a)"
IV: "Noah's Sons' File on the Deluge. (Gen. 6:9b to 10:1)"
V: "The Dispersion and Shem's Table of Nations. (Gen. 10:2 to
11:10a)"
VI: "Terah's Family Tree. (Gen. 11:10b to 27a)"
VII: "Isaac's Biography of Abraham, with Ishmael's Family Tree
as Appendix.(Gen. 11:27b to 25:19a)"
VIII: "Jacob's Biography of Isaac and his Descendants, including
Jacob's Autobiography; with Esau's Family Trees in two Appendices.
(Gen. 25:19b to 37:2a)"
IX: "Moses' Biography of Joseph and his Brothers. (Gen. 37:2b
to 50:26)."
It is to be hoped that future biblical students
will greatly advance humanity's knowledge of the Book of Genesis,
by humbly and patiently studying its Toledoth histories.
Notes and References
1. Wiseman, P.J., 'New Discoveries in Babylonia
about Genesis', Marshall, Morgan & Scott (1936); 'Clues to
Creation in Genesis', Marshall, Morgan & Scott (1936); 'Die
Entstehung der Genesis', Wuppertal (1958); 'Ancient Records and
the Structure of Genesis', Thos. Nelson (1985).
2. Ardley, G., 'Aquinas and Kant', Longmans, Green
& Co. (1950), p.5.
3. Ibid., 6.
4. Ibid.
5. Wiseman's findings have captured the imagination
of, for instance, the renowned Old Testament scholar, Professor
R.K. Harrison. See e.g. his 'Introduction to the Old Testament',
Eerdmanns (1969), in which he summarises Wiseman's 'Toledoth'
theory on pp. 545-553. Also, the linguist, Dr. Charles Taylor,
who - on the basis of the same theory - wrote 'The Oldest Science
Book in the World', Assembly Press (1984). It is also worth mentioning
here that P.J. Wiseman's son, Donald J. Wiseman, who wrote the
Foreword to 'Ancient Records' (see footnote 1), is one of the
pre-eminent Assyriologists of our time.
6. 'Jehovah' being German for 'Yahweh.'
7. With R. K. Harrison, I believe that the so-called
Deuteronomist source is the only valid one amidst the JEDP 'sources.'
8. Wiseman, P.J., 'Clues to Creation in Genesis,'
143.
9. Wellhausen, J., as quoted by Wiseman in Clues,
144.
10. Wiseman, Clues, 145. Wellhausen resigned from
Greifswald University in 1882. Orthodox Lutherans there were alarmed
at the doubts that he had been casting on the inspiration of Scripture
(see 'New International Dictionary of the Christian Church', ed.
J. Douglas, The Paternoster Press, Exeter, 1974, under "Wellhausen").
11. Ibid., 143.
12. Ibid., 144.
13. However, as those involved in a revision of
ancient chronologies would appreciate, a full scientific answer
to this question cannot be given until a complete and accurate
revision of the chronology of the ancient world has been achieved.
14. Wiseman, Clues, 143.
15. Ibid., 159.
16. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 60.
17. Ibid.
18. Driver, as quoted by Wiseman, ibid.
19. R.K. Harrison, 'Introduction to the Old Testament,'
543-553, discusses this mistake by some modern scholars.
20. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 61.
21. Ibid.
22. Ibid.
23. Wiseman, Clues, 35.
24. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 63.
25. Ibid.
26. Ibid.
27. Wiseman, Clues, 40.
28. Skinner, J., 'Genesis' (1929).
29. Maly, E., "Genesis", in JBC 2:21 (1968).
30. F. Delitzsch, as quoted by Wiseman, Ancient
Records, 67. To those who might be under the misconception that
there were no registers of births and deaths in such distant days,
we might suggest that that is just exactly what the fifth chapter
of Genesis is. The family records that were preserved in those
days were little else but records of births, marriages and deaths.
31. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 67.
32. This does not mean that Abraham could not have
had his own separate history, or that he had perhaps written part
of his sons' records. Again, whilst his sons may have owned the
tablets, Abraham may have written them.
33. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 69. He noted here
that all of these ancestral histories could have come into the
possession of Moses in the way that family records were normally
handed down.
34. Wiseman, Clues, 77.
35. Ibid., 42.
36. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 79.
37. Ibid.
38. Ibid., 80.
39. Ibid., 81.
40. Ibid.
41. Ibid., 82.
42. Ibid.
43. Ibid.
44. Ibid., 128.
45. Ibid., 129.
46. Note that "Ur of the Chaldees" is not to be
confused with the famous Babylonian city called Ur that Sir Leonard
Woolley excavated.
47. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 129.
48. Ibid., 132.
49. Ibid., 133.
50. Maly, ibid., 2:16.
51. Yahuda, A., 'The Language of the Pentateuch
in its Relation to Egyptian' (Oxford, 1933), 127. Yahuda further
notes, in footnote 3, that: "The argument that ['tehom'] must
be identical with tiamat because like the latter it is feminine,
is untenable, for the simple reason that in our particular passage
the gender of ['tehom'] is not apparent, and further because,
there are examples of its being used in the masculine as a poetical
expression for sea."
52. Ibid., 128.
53. It is an eye-witness acount.
54. Wiseman, Ancient Records, 93.
55. Wiseman, Clues, 170.
56. Ginzberg, L., 'The Legends of the Jews', Vol.
V (Philadelphia, 1955), 196-197. It has been drawn to my attention
that the C7th BC Assyrian king, Asshurbanipal, claimed to have
seen (read) a copy of the pre-Flood tablets.
57. In a follow-up article, I shall produce compelling
evidence in support of the traditional view that the compiler
of Genesis was, in fact, Moses.
58. Wiseman, Clues, 66.
59. Ibid.
60. Ibid.
61. Taylor, C. (see footnote 5), 20.
(Other articles in CompuServe libraries by the same
author are: 'The Sothic Star Theory of the Egyptian Calendar';
'Is the Bible Fact or Fiction? A Reply to TIME'; 'Pharaoh Who
Looted Solomon's Temple'; 'Queen of Sheba: Hatshepsut').
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