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That the Book of Genesis shows evidence of having been derived from
various sources, at least in part, none but the very obstinate, or
excessively pious, would deny. The clever pair of I. Kikawada and A.
Quinn, who are able to prove against the JEDP documentary theorists that
Genesis is in fact a unity, nevertheless regard it as "mere polemic"
to dismiss the claims of the documentists out of hand, without giving
them a hearing; or, more especially, without being prepared to confront
the JEDP assertions in the process of one's arguing for an alternative [010].
That is why I found quite unrealistic a recent paper sent to me for
evaluation; an article written in French in which the author attempts to
uphold a traditional view that Moses was the author of the Pentateuch
(or first five books of the Bible). This paper seemed to be proposing
(as far as my knowledge of French would allow me to grasp it) a blanket
view of this tradition: namely, that Moses wrote every single word of
the entire Pentateuch, even the account of his own death. And that no
extra-Mosaïc sources whatsoever were involved (whether pre- or
post-Moses). My own view, based on the tradition of substantial Mosaïc authorship of the Pentateuch [020]
is, that, whilst Moses substantially wrote the books of Exodus to
Deuteronomy, he was the editor or compiler, not author, of Genesis.
In this new article, "Tracing the Hand of Moses in Genesis", I hope to update this 1987 SIS article and to arrive at a more exact view of what was Moses' own personal contribution to the Book of Genesis.
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For full article, see:
http://www.specialtyinterests.net/Tracing_the_hand_of_moses_in_genesis.html
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