firedragon
Veteran Member
I expected that you would have been aware that I'm referring to the standard scholarly dating for Genesis, which dates its final form as post-exilic to circa. 539-333 BCE, as opposed to to the traditional Mosaic ascription.
Vouthon. If you are looking at it from a completely naturalistic point of view, all you have is that this is a time period that is giving a period that it may have been written after. But that is a hypothesis of scholars.
Think about it. We dont have any extant Hebrew manuscripts prior to the 9th century. Though the script is available prior to that. The oldest Septuagint we have is from the 4th century, and that too begins with the 21st chapter. Unfortunately the Qumran fragments dont have the parts that you would concern yourself of. Thus how could one determine that the text in Hebrew was exactly as we read now in a plural? I am taking a completely naturalistic point of view. All one could determine is that the book of Genesis would have existed in the 1st century BC in some form. But how do you know the exact script this verse was written in?
Taking the same naturalistic approach in your case, according to Lumbard and even his arch rival Wellhausen would date the original Elohist and Yahwist-Elohist writings to the 9th century BC or later. What Hebrew documents do we have to compare with if it is the case? But then again, this is also a hypothesis that would only denote a hypothesised dating of the school of thought, not the actual penning of the exact text.