The Documentary Hypothesis Summaries of the JEPD Traditions Daniel J. Kuntz, PhD

Similar documents
Jesus! The Old Testament. Old and New What did Jesus Say?! Mt 5:17-48! 9/20/13. And the New Testament! Completes! Fulfills! Accomplishes the Promises!

LECTURE 10 FEBRUARY 1, 2017 WHO WROTE THE HEBREW SCRIPTURES?

Genesis. Exodus. Leviticus. Numbers. The way we are to respond to God (The Law)

Living Bible. Epiphany Church Fr. Ireneusz Ekiert

RLST 204H.01: Introduction to the Hebrew Bible

The Pentateuch. Lesson Guide INTRODUCTION TO THE PENTATEUCH LESSON ONE. Pentateuch by Third Millennium Ministries

INTRODUCTION TO GENESIS Wayne Spencer

CHAPTER EIGHT The Torah Up to the 18th century it was assumed that Moses wrote the Torah. People assumed that the text, therefore, gives direct

Documentary Hypothesis

From Empire to Diversity. Genesis 11:1-9

Joshua The LORD is Salvation

INTERPRETATION IN THE OLD TESTAMENT

Genesis CHAPTER ELEVEN

April 10, 2013 Intro Lecture Lakeside Institute of Theology Ross Arnold, Spring 2013

10. Genesis. The Patriarchal Narrative (Genesis 12-50)

a Grace Notes course Foundations 200 by Rev. Drue Freeman Foundations 202 Old Testament Survey: Genesis to Deuteronomy Grace Notes

Eichrodt, Walther. Theology of the Old Testament: Volume 1. The Old Testament Library.

Succession. Structure:

Course Syllabus: OT 101: Introduction to the Old Testament Prepared by Dr. Rolan Monje and Dr. G. Steve Kinnard

UNDERSTANDING THE OLD TESTAMENT

Thomas Römer University of Lausanne Lausanne, Switzerland CH-1004

OT 520 Foundations for Old Testament Study

1 & 2 Chronicles. The book of Chronicles is the final book in the Hebrew Bible.

Index of Graphics 9. PART 1: INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW 1. Introduction to the Old Testament Overview of the Old Testament 18

EMB 1003 HF Introduction to Old Testament I: The Pentateuch and Former Prophets

ST. THOMAS SEMINARY. Bloomfield, CT Office of Education, Evangelization and Catechesis

Judaism is. A 4000 year old tradition with ideas about what it means to be human and how to make the world a holy place

The Character of God and the Sexual Prohibitions of the Mosaic Law

2014 History Gal. All rights reserved.

Words to Know. 1) Famine a time of extreme hunger where crops are not growing usually due to weather conditions or warfare

Before the Flood The Flood Scattering of the People The Patriarchs The Exodus

SAMPLE SYLLABUS: CURRENT USERS A Short Introduction to the Hebrew Bible: Second Edition John J. Collins. Todd Hanneken

Psalms Session 4 The Royal Psalms. king figures prominently in the psalms. These psalms are important historical windows on the

Text 2: The Ancient Israelites. Topic 2: The Ancient Middle East and Egypt Lesson 3: The Hebrews and the Origins of Judaism

THE PENTATEUCH BACK TO THE BEGINNING. Lesson 1: God the Creator Treasure Story: Genesis 1:1-2:3 Treasure Point: God is the creator of all things.

GOD'S PROMISES TO ISRAEL THE CHURCH

Joshua 24:1-3, 13-15, King James Version December 9, 2018

DEUTERONOMY PART 1 CH 1-26

Historical Overview. Ancient Israel is the birthplace of the 3 great monotheistic religions of the world: Judaism, Christianity and Islam

Overview of the Old Testament

The Being (Greek rendition of YHWH) Exodus 3:14 ho ôn Jesus Christ. I will betroth you! to myself! in tenderness! (Hosea 2:20) Saint John

I am the LORD, Who Brought You Out of Ur of the Chaldeans to Give You This Land

MOSES MEETS GOD. Exodus chapter 3

January. The Beginning Genesis. Chester ARP Church -- Growing In Christ, Witnessing to the World

HRS 121: HEBREW BIBLE SPRING 2011 SECTION 1: TU/TH 9:00-10:15 MENDOCINO HALL 4000 DR. PHILIP C. DIMARE

Topic Reference Page

Ancient Egypt & Judaism

Who was the Pharaoh who ruled for 66 years? Who was the female Pharaoh whose reign was one of Egypt s most peaceful? What was early religion meant to

Joshua 24:1-3, 13-15, New International Version December 9, 2018

Living into the Promise Joshua 24:1-26, Matthew 4:8-10 Sunday Service: October 14, 2018

The quiz will consist of 15 short questions. Use the BBC Judaism Guide as a basic resource. To be prepared, know the answers to the following:

The Book of Worship And you shal be holy to Me, for I the Lord am Holy and have separated you from the people that you should be Mine Leviticus 20:26

SUNDAY MORNING BIBLE STUDY Week 3: Genesis 6-8

The People of God in the Priestly Source

The Principles of Judaism

Sequence. Homosexuality and the Bible. Leviticus. Reading the Past. Holiness Code. Holiness Code. 2. The Hebrew Bible II

Humankind must create and work with God Justice and righteousness in The Ten Commandments The Ten Commandments You shall have no other gods before me.

Reading Moses Seeing Jesus: How the Torah Fulfils its Goal in Yeshua

Syllabus Telling the Old Testament Story of God

Micah 4:1-2 The Mountain of the Lord

Since the publication of the first volume of his Old Testament Theology in 1957, Gerhard

The word Bible comes from the Greek Biblia that means Books. Is the collection of 73 old writing about God (Jehovah, Yahweh) TWO PARTS

In the Beginning God Created: Genesis 1:1 2 (#1 of Genesis 1 11) Grace Chapel, Orange, CA Dr. John Niemelä September 2, 2007 INTRODUCTION

Latter Prophets. Major & Minor. Nature of Prophecy. Page 1 of Paul Custodio Bube. P Major prophets vs. Minor prophets (Scroll of 12)

SESSION ONE In the Beginning: The Two Creation Stories (Genesis 1 and 2)

CREATING LIVING TRUSTING

SAMPLE. Babylonian Influences on Israelite Culture

Getting Started with Genesis by Lauren Stouffer and Ted Hildebrandt Copyright 2012

Search Results Other Tools

Blessings and Curses

The 27 th Sunday of Ordinary Time Year B Readings, Lectionary #141

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS FOR SINAI AND THE SAINTS

The Books of Samuel: Introduction. monarchy. In the earlier period, when there was no king in Israel, the tribes were ruled by

SERIES: 43 John MESSAGE: John 1:19-51 SPEAKER: Skip Heitzig SCRIPTURE: John 1:19-51

History of Redemption

LECTURE 1 PENTATEUCH OVERVIEW COVENANT PEOPLE INTRODUCTION

Theology (06) Foundations of Theology

Biblical Interpretation

The Old Testament: a brief introduction

Last wills and testaments are critical documents they tell the intentions of the person who has died people fight over them they contain surprises

Chiasmus in the Book of Genesis

The Book of the Covenant vs. The Book of the Law?

Note: Refer to the Introduction to the Prophets for the place that Malachi plays in the Biblical Story. Background 1

BIBLE 1004 ISRAEL IN CANAAN CONTENTS I. CONQUEST OF THE LAND...

2:23 3. The Burning Bush. John Barclay Pat Anderson

Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) RELG 301 / HIST 492 Dr. John Mandsager

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORICAL NARRATIVES

Year 7 Year 8 Year 9 Year 10

ORD Pentateuch TEXT: An Introduction to the Old Testament: Pentateuch ISBN

Final Exam will be offered at two locations on March 30, :30-9:30 at Boston Room 213 and 2:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. at South Hamilton Library

Bible Stories for Adults The Conquest of the Promised Land Joshua 7-24

The Unfolding of God s Revelations

What s the Bible all about? Amy Warfield Class 2 Old Testament

Notes on Leviticus - page 1

For more on what grace is, please see our teachings titled, The Hebrew Root of Grace and Grace, Faith & Obedience.

Exodus 3:1-12 & New Revised Standard Version July 2, 2017 International Bible Lesson Sunday July 2, 2017 Exodus 3:1-12 & 13-17

Azusa Pacific University Division of Religion and Philosophy Course Instruction Plan Prepared by: Matthew R.

The Book of NUMBERS MODULE: LORD, HOW I LOVE YOUR TORAH!

TDM: Doctrine of God Deuteronomy 1:1-8

BIBLE 1204 CONTENTS I. OLD TESTAMENT... 2 II. NEW TESTAMENT... 9 III. CHURCH HISTORY IV. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS GLOSSARY...

Transcription:

The Documentary Hypothesis Summaries of the JEPD s Daniel J. Kuntz, PhD Yahwist (J) Elohist (E) JE Deuteronomist (D) Priestly (P) s Relative Dates c. 950-850 BCE c. 850-721 c. 721-589 BCE c. 650-621 BCE c. 550-450 BCE Common Terms or Theological Themes The use of the name of Yahweh is the trademark name for God for the J source. YHWH is Immanent, that is, close to humanity and the earth, indeed, God walks and talks with Adam and Eve in the Garden. YHWH often appears to His people directly not often in visions or dreams or through other beings. The name Elohim is used for God in this source, a name perhaps derived from the more ancient Canaanite god, El, the leader of the divine council. For E, Elohim is transcendent or distant because Elohim is a terrifying God. Elohim communicates with people indirectly through dreams, visions, messengers, or in the case of When the northern kingdom of Israel fled south after the Assyrian invasion of 721/22, they brought with them the E tradition, bringing it into contact with the J tradition. The J tradition eventually incorporated much of the E tradition into it. The J author or authors subordinated the E material to the J tradition. Elohim is used to refer to God by the Deuteronomist tradition. It was the Deuteronomistic Theology that drove their belief that Jerusalem was destroyed because its traditional practices had been neglected. Israel s welfare depends on its obedience to the Torah and lists the consequences of breaking the covenant. Elohim is used to refer to God by the Priestly tradition. God has a predetermined plan and a special concern for Israel that is to unfold in history through which God reveals God s self. The priests who survived the destruction of Jerusalem in 587/586 BCE and then the Babylonian Exile were concerned with the

Moses, a burning bush. future of Judaism and the survival of its people. Common Terms or Theological Themes Yahwist (J) Yahweh is often presented anthropomorphically, that is, this God often portrayed as having human-like qualities. The theology behind its narrative flows from the divine and unconditional promise of The Land to Abraham and his offspring. Yahweh s concern is for all of humanity, not only for His chosen people. The Israelites are to be a universal blessing to Elohist (E) The JE Deuteronomist (D) Priestly (P) For E, Elohim has no anatomy, is fully spirit and without the human-like qualities. The fear of God for the E narrative refers to obedience. Elohim is more narrowly fixed on Israel alone, unlike the Yahwist tradition which understands God to be concerned with all of humanity. The assembly of the JE inevitably caused duplications, repetitions, conflicting names, dates or times, etc., but both narratives were included in their original forms. It is a call to faithfulness as well as to social responsibility. It is designed to appeal to the heart. The D tradition is written in a style that is personal and direct. P collected and assembled the originally separated legal codes, ritual, worship, regulations, dietary laws, genealogies, sacrifices, laws, statutes, and legal codes from ancient Israel. Order and structure (against chaos), the Priestly tradition was careful to show that the universe was created in in an orderly manner, rather than one of chaos. P contains mostly postexilic concerns. P establishes laws and codes of purity and impurity.

all the earth and its peoples.

Common Terms or Theological Themes Yahwist (J) The Vocabulary often used of in the Yahwist tradition include: Yahweh ( I AM ) to bless (to cause God s people to flourish) to know (a euphemism for sexual intercourse) to find favor (to have won YHWH s esteem) The J narrative refers to the people of Palestine as Canaanites who were in Palestine long before the Israelights arrived. The J narrative might have been used to justify the Davidic Monarchy. The J compilers may have been members Elohist (E) The JE Deuteronomist (D) Priestly (P) In the Hebrew Testament E tradition, no human person sees God and lives. E is concerned with prophecy and the fear of God. E refers to the people of Palestine as Amorites. As the rival tradition of the J source, E is The D appears to be somewhat of an independent source Final contribution to the Torah, according to the Documentary Hypothesis, as well as most biblical scholars today. The priestly writers lived during and after the Exile.

of the royal court of David who were interested in centralizing government, its military structure and worship in Jerusalem. centers first on Schechem, then on Samaria as the center of government, its military structure and worship.

Yahwist (J) Sources/Places J gives negative accounts of northern ancestral sites (such as Shechem). God dwells on Mt. Sinai. J contains the most significant continuous storyline around which the other traditions have been written. Elohist (E) The JE Deuteronomist (D) Priestly (P) E often contributes to the stories of sibling rivalry (the Jacob-Esau rivalry, for example). God dwells on Mt. Horeb. E is primarily a set of disconnected fragments. D Exalts Moses greatly. Deuteronomy seems to be traceable to Israel s Levites who lived mostly in the north. Deuteronomy centralizes both the temple of sacrifice and government at Jerusalem. The D tradition contains the Last Will and Testament, of Moses with cycles of sermons given to the Israelites before they crossed the river Jordan into the Promised Land. P places heavy emphasis on Temple ritual and practice.

Sources/Places Placement in the Scriptures J begins with second Creation Story (2:4b- 25) and the loss of the Garden of Eden (3:1-24). According to the Documentary Hypothesis, this tradition went south with those who fled the Assyrian destruction of Israel in 722/21 BCE. E begins in Genesis 20:1-18. D begins with The Book of Deuteronomy. P begins with the first Creation Story at Genesis 1:1-24. Bibliography Bandstra, Barry L. Reading the Old Testament: An Introduction to the Hebrew Bible. Belmont: Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1999. Boadt, Lawrence. Reading the Old Testament: An Introduction. New York: Paulist Press, 1984. Bowley, James E. Introduction to the Hebrew Bible: A Guided Tour of Israel s Sacred Library New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2008. Friedman, Richard Elliott Who Wrote the Bible? New York: HarperCollins, 1989. Habel, Norman. Literary criticism of the Old Testament. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971. Harris, Stephen and Robert Platzner. The Old Testament: An Introduction to the Hebrew Bible. Second Edition. Boston: McGraw- Hill Publishing Co., 2008. Harris, Stephen. Understanding The Bible. Seventh Edition. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2007. Hoffmeier, James K. Ancient Israel in Sinai: The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Wilderness. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. Klawans, Jonathan. Purity, Sacrifice, and the Temple. New York: Oxford University Press, Inc. Knight, Douglas and Walter Harrelson. and theology in the Old Testament. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1977. McKenzie, John L. A Theology of the Old Testament. Garden City: Doubleday, 1974. Rast, Walter. History and the Old Testament. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1972. Tucker, Gene M. Form Criticism of the Old Testament. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971.

von Rad, Gerhard. Old Testament Theology. New York: Harper & Row, 1962-1965.