RabbiO
הרב יונה בן זכריה
Now you’ve done it. It may not matter to you, but you have lost all credibility with me.Reported: Unsolicited advertising. SPAM.
You're advertising for Torah.com and selling books on Amazon.
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Now you’ve done it. It may not matter to you, but you have lost all credibility with me.Reported: Unsolicited advertising. SPAM.
You're advertising for Torah.com and selling books on Amazon.
It may not matter to you
I agree with you, which is why I have put @dybmh on "ignore"Now you’ve done it. It may not matter to you, but you have lost all credibility with me.
I would suggest there there is not.At this stage in archaeology I would say there is evidence for the Exodus and Conquest of Canaan and the existence of writing and written records back at that time etc but the documentary hypothesis was not thrown out altogether.
Your new avatar is doubly false advertising.
We are strengthened by cutting off dead weight. Bye bye uber-critical-mockery-machine.
Then shouldn't your avatar have the same Hebrew phrase but with a hand giving the finger?
You're still stuck; unable to see multiple ways.
John, there's more than one way to strengthen. There's more than one way to help. For the Jews on this forum who attack the Torah, don't forget, there's more than one way to have a portion in the world to come. Think about it.
I would say that there has to be a fundamental distinction between there being "multiple ways" versus all ways being equally valid.
Obviously dude. I stopped reading after this.
Also, realizing each book of the Bible is a *separate book*. They were written separately and then *brought together*.
It's always a good idea to ask why any collection of books was brought together and organized as it was.
Realizing each book of the Bible is a *separate book*....
Forgive my simpleness.
the Documentary Hypothesis is termed an hypothesis.
The task is actually a bit more complicated and daunting.
You left out "debunked". At least Wikipedia gets it correct.
View attachment 93994
...Documentary hypothesis - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Oh my ...
Belief in a literal interpretation combines two ideas: the belief that the Bible is the inerrant word of God, and that anyone can simply pick up the bible and read it and know not only spiritual truths and moral truths, but also historical truths and scientific truths. It includes things not in evidence, like that Moses wrote the Torah or Daniel wrote the book of Daniel. It utilizes intuition and tradition, but not evidence. In answer to your question, literalism starts with the conclusion and then goes looking for things that confirm the bias.When I was a staunch young earther Bible literalist, I viewed literary criticism of the Bible as nothing but a bunch of unfounded assumptions. Now I’m looking at it from a different light. I have some books written by biblical scholars, the Anchor Bible Series is a great collection of the Bible with scholarly commentary.
There is this theory called the Documentary Hypothesis which organizes the first five books of the Bible into various hypothetical authors. I used to think that it was rather flimsy, (as a layman, I’m no scholar).
Just, with the Documentary hypothesis, they suppose that an author cannot use more than one name for God. They say one author says Elohim, while another author says Yahweh. Would it have been impossible for Moses to use both those names? I know when I was a Christian, I used more than one name.
With Isaiah, scholars say there is three authors. They say this because of different writing styles. As a Christian, I countered this in my head by saying that Isaiah wrote the book over the course of his life. So, it made sense that there was variation of literary style.
I was looking at biblical scholarship with a closed mind, already set that the Bible was the literal word of God. Now I’m ready to reevaluate biblical criticism with an open mind. I’m reading A History of God by Karen Armstrong for starters.
Are there any scholars on this site? I ask scholars and layman alike though the following questions, as I am a layman myself.
Is biblical literary criticism reliant on flimsy assumptions?
Does biblical criticism in general start its investigation with a decided conclusion beforehand I.e. the belief that God of the Bible isn’t real?
Is viewing the literary style of a book a valid way of determining various authors?
Debunked is totally the wrong word. Further application of textual criticism calls into question whether there are only four authors of the Torah, and which parts are written by which author. However, the underlying claim (that it was written by multiple authors rather than by Moses) has not changed at all. There are no qualified Biblical scholars that still think Moses wrote the Torah.You left out "debunked". At least Wikipedia gets it correct.