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Author Topic:   could moses have written the first five books of the bible
arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 185 of 242 (277908)
01-10-2006 9:13 PM
Reply to: Message 171 by idontlikeforms
01-10-2006 3:20 PM


Re: two wrongs, lying in the bible
Look, it does not logically follow that just because Jacob says God told him something instead of the Bible wording it as God Himself is saying something, that therefore Jacob must be lying. You need additional evidence to demonstrate lying.
but god did NOT tell him that, did he? show me the chapter and verse where god says any such thing. jacob does something FIRST, and then claims god did it. but god didn't do it, JACOB did.
Well it seems clear to me that Jacob is talking about Laban changing the terms of the original agreement. I don't see any lying here. Since this would logically be referring to after the original agreement was made, this doesn't cause any logical consistency problems. Why should I not believe Jacob here?
because laban does not change the agreement. laban changed an EARLIER agreement, regarding working for him as a dowry for his daughter. even still, you missed the point: laban did not set the terms for the agreement. jacob did. jacob said laban did it -- that was a lie.
what laban DID do was hide the speckled and spotted animals.
Well in order for Jacob to be ripping Laban off, he would have to be causing the sheep and goats to give birth to speckled, spotted, and brown offspring. But clearly we agree he did not have the capacity to do this.
so when reality and the bible disagree, you side with reality? good to know. but clearly there is a correlation between jacob's actions and the outcomes.
quote:
Gen 30:41 And it came to pass, whensoever the stronger cattle did conceive, that Jacob laid the rods before the eyes of the cattle in the gutters, that they might conceive among the rods.
Gen 30:42 But when the cattle were feeble, he put [them] not in: so the feebler were Laban's, and the stronger Jacob's.
doesn't that sound causal to you? rods before cattle = spotted offspring = jacob's. no rods before the cattle = clean offspring = laban's. jacob puts the rods before the better cattle, and takes the better cattle. he does not put the rods before the weeker ones, and leaves those for laban.
do you really think jacob had nothing to do with it?
This passage doesn't teach that two rights make a wrong. Look at Jacob's life later on. It is filled with grief and being humbled.
yes forms, that was the idea. you're contended that jacob did no wrong, when he did. you are saying that he was justified in doing so.
well, it certainly doesn't match any known process in genetics.
Right so therefore Jacob could not have been ripping Laban off. Or is it that you make exception to this in order to sustain your lying theory?
do you honestly think that all of the patriarchs are exemplarary? no one in the bible ever lies? the point of this is not that jacob lied -- it's that the bible presented a story that is frankly very unrealistic with modern science. the fact that jacob lied, and stole some sheep, is the point of the story, not my point.
quote:
And he said: Lift up now thine eyes, and see, all the he-goats which leap upon the flock are streaked, speckled, and grizzled; for I have seen all that Laban doeth unto thee.
but that's not true, is it?
I see no reason why it wouldn't be. Why wouldn't it be true?
because the chapter before shows the non-streaked, non-spotted, and non-grizzled ones breeding too. NOT all of the he-goats that lept upon the flock were streaked, spotted, or grizzled. rather, jacob controlled which sheep and which goats would be born spotted.
you seriously miss the point of the story, here.
IC. Ya I got the part where the weaker were Laban's and the stronger Jacob's.
yes, but did you catch the parts were non-spotted ones were breeding? here, let me remind you:
quote:
Gen 30:34 And Laban said, Behold, I would it might be according to thy word.
Gen 30:35 And he removed that day the he goats that were ringstraked and spotted, and all the she goats that were speckled and spotted, [and] every one that had [some] white in it, and all the brown among the sheep, and gave [them] into the hand of his sons.
Gen 30:36 And he set three days' journey betwixt himself and Jacob: and Jacob fed the rest of Laban's flocks.
there was not a single streaked, spotted or grizzled sheep or goat among the flock jacob was tending to. they were ALL "pure." laban had hidden every single goat and sheep that jacob would have claimed.
so there were NO streaked, spotted, or grizzled sheep or goats jumping on the flock. none.
What part says this?
comprehension. jacob says god told him something was happening. if jacob was part of that event, why would god tell him that he was doing it? jacob did something, and said "goddidit." god did not do it, jacob did.
God confirmed it? I think it's more like God caused it, letting Jacob know the real reason why the better sheep and goats gave birth to speckled and spotted.
uh huh. pull the other leg, forms. it has bells on it.
you're ingoring half the previous chapter, where jacob messes with which sheep are spotted.
Where? When he said Laban changed the wages 10 times? Check out Genesis 31:41.
i've told people on this board a million times to be careful of reading idioms over-literally. want to look a see if it's exactly 1,000,000 instances of such a statement?
but still, it's not the point. laban didn't changes his wages here -- he cheated him another way. he HID the wages.
See he later even tells Laban to his face that he changed his wages 10 times. Yet for some strange reason, Laban doesn't scream out "liar!" Read the following verses. In fact he doesn't disagree with Jacob's claim. This is quite bizarre if Jacob lied. Isn't it?
or, maybe laban understands the expression.
quote:
Job 19:3 These ten times have ye reproached me: ye are not ashamed [that] ye make yourselves strange to me
wanna count 'em? i see 5 reproaches. is that an innaccurate statement in job? or the same as me saying "a million times" and not literally meaning a million, just a lot?
Sure I do. But I don't go looking for lying that can't even logically fit and then go around trumpeting my ilogical interpretation to others as proof that the Bible is dishonest or that passages in it are not logical.
do you agree that characters in the bible lie? or no?

אָרַח

This message is a reply to:
 Message 171 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-10-2006 3:20 PM idontlikeforms has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 190 by purpledawn, posted 01-11-2006 6:20 AM arachnophilia has replied
 Message 200 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-11-2006 5:05 PM arachnophilia has replied

  
arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 186 of 242 (277910)
01-10-2006 9:29 PM
Reply to: Message 172 by idontlikeforms
01-10-2006 3:27 PM


Re: J & E Sources
I don't see any problem here. So the passage says Elohim and then later Yahweh, big deal. Isn't this rather a problem for the JEDP theory, which then has to presuppose an ilogical division, in the middle of a passage?
you mean in the middle of a verse? no.
the original documents of the hebrew bible, you see, lacked vowels, punctuation, and spaces between words. your above text would look like this, in english, reversed and with the substition of v for u and o, and a for certain other instances of vowels (like in hebrew)
quote:
AMYHLASYSGSPAHTVSRHMLBVRPYNAYSTNVDA
RFMLBRPARHTRSHTTNSALDGBHVHYRTLNHTDN
LANASVPSRPVTSHNHTHCYHWYROAHTPDEJAHT
GSPAFALDMAHTNANSYVDLCYGV
now, did you spot the typo i made?
considering that a fair number of verses in the bible start with a vav ("and") it's really quite full of run-on sentances. where do we choose to break them? well, there's no vav in the middle of this sentance, genesis 2:4. look for it, it's not there. it's a good breaking place -- one part is the end of the first story, the other the beginning of the second.
but i suppose you think verse numbers are inspired too?

אָרַח

This message is a reply to:
 Message 172 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-10-2006 3:27 PM idontlikeforms has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 203 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-11-2006 5:18 PM arachnophilia has replied

  
arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 187 of 242 (277912)
01-10-2006 9:39 PM
Reply to: Message 173 by idontlikeforms
01-10-2006 3:33 PM


Re: academia
And maybe I will read them. But so far I don't see a significant need to.
in other words, you're not interested in hearing they're argument which we are reporting secondhand? it's a wonder people ever convert to christianity based on our secondhand representation of christ.
wait wait, don't write it off just yet. let's follow this one to it's logical conclusion. you agree then that genesis was edited together from multiple sources?
This is the SOESV. Grigg also believes this. And yes I do too, as I've already indicated in earlier posts.
ok, so how many sources? can you tell which is which?
Very true, sadly. They exist only in theory to teach students.
uh, not in theory. in peoples' imaginations. creation of more professors out of students might be part of it -- but the general education of the masses, it is not.
I don't recall saying "vague" about grammer in regards to the Bible. I said ambiguous grammer.
quote:
Definitions of ambiguous on the Web:
* equivocal: open to two or more interpretations; or of uncertain nature or significance; or (often) intended to mislead; "an equivocal statement"; "the polling had a complex and equivocal (or ambiguous) message for potential female candidates"; "the officer's equivocal behavior increased the victim's uneasiness"; "popularity is an equivocal crown"; "an equivocal response to an embarrassing question"
* having more than one possible meaning; "ambiguous words"; "frustrated by ambiguous instructions, the parents were unable to assemble the toy"
* having no intrinsic or objective meaning; not organized in conventional patterns; "an ambiguous situation with no frame of reference"; "ambiguous inkblots"
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
quote:
Main Entry: am·big·u·ous
Pronunciation: am-'bi-gy&-w&s
Function: adjective
1 a : doubtful or uncertain especially from obscurity or indistinctness b : INEXPLICABLE
2 : capable of being understood in two or more possible senses or ways
synonym see OBSCURE
quote:
Main Entry: vague
Pronunciation: 'vAg
Function: adjective
1 a : not clearly expressed : stated in indefinite terms b : not having a precise meaning
2 a : not clearly defined, grasped, or understood : INDISTINCT ; also : SLIGHT b : not clearly felt or sensed : somewhat subconscious
3 : not thinking or expressing one's thoughts clearly or precisely
4 : lacking expression : VACANT
5 : not sharply outlined : HAZY
synonym see OBSCURE
you love semantics, don't you? when something is ambiguous, it has two or more meanings. havign two or meanings means that something is not precise. not precise is the definition of vague. "ambiguous" isa subset of "vague" oh, and:
Read the first definition listed. That is what I meant, not vague.
the first definition you posted says: "intended to mislead." did you mean that the bible's grammar is intended to mislead? somehow, i don't think that was your point.

אָרַח

This message is a reply to:
 Message 173 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-10-2006 3:33 PM idontlikeforms has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 205 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-11-2006 5:24 PM arachnophilia has replied

  
arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 189 of 242 (277949)
01-10-2006 11:54 PM
Reply to: Message 181 by idontlikeforms
01-10-2006 6:41 PM


Re: when logic breaks down
No not necessarily. Need I re-post the web definition for plagairism? The plagairizers needs to be taking credit for quotes or ideas that are not their own. But does the Epic of Gilgamesh or Genesis have an author's name attached to them? Technically they were written anonymously. Technically. Therefore, technically, they cannot be plagairized. Missed that subtle component of the definition to plagairism?
yes, i did. here's the bit you posted:
quote:
Definitions of Plagiarism on the Web:
* the act of appropriating the literary composition of another author, or excerpts, ideas, or passages therefrom, and passing the material off as one's own creation.
ucblibraries.colorado.edu/about/glossary.htm
did the epic of gilgamesh have at least one author? or did nobody write it? where does it say that the author has to be named? will i not get in trouble in school if i turn in the epic of gilgamesh as my own work for a literature class?
that bolded bit is "the documentary hypothesis;" the thing you're arguing against.
That's also the SOESV too. And saying I'm arguing against that, when I just argued for it, is not a logical statement.
i've never understood how someone can reach the right conclusion, but understand it wrongly. no, it is not a logical statement. you are arguing against the documentary hypothesis, but the basis of your argument accepts the documentary hypothesis. this is the equivalent of arguing against evolution, but using it to explain how noah only had to take certain kinds of animals in his boat.
either genesis is composed of source documents, or it's not. make up your mind.
I've already said my view on this. If you've forgotten it, then go back and read my previous posts again.
yes. your previous posts are arguing against the hypothesis that says that the torah was compiled from source documents. no you are claiming that your doctrine accepts that at least one book of the torah comes from multiple sources. which is it? are there multiple sources, or one source?
Ya I got that. I just felt like I could argue your view better than you did on this point is all.
uh, no, i called you on that usage because you argued YOUR point, not mine.
Well I view Isaiah as prophecy of course, so it would be God doing the mocking. And no, I don't take a strict stance against that being the case. I just don't then assume that Genesis and Isaiah were all written around the same time too. I have no problem with a city or a country being mentioned in different written documents 100's of year apart. I see that as plausible.
yes, that's fine and all. but they're mentioned hundreds of years apart for the same event, or at least one remarkably similar. on it's own, a coincidence. put too many coincidences start to look suspicious.
No, quite frankly I don't. Feel free to present a compelling argument that I must. But I see that coincidences are indeed possible. Why would Genesis not mention things about Babylon separately from the Captivity period and its writings? Why should I make a connection there?
here i was only asking if you acknowledge that the hebrew legend appears to be concerning a real place the babylonians have a remarkably similar legend about. surely you do -- at the very least it's good for the inerrency doctrine...
According to liberal scholars these documents were written at a close time to each other. But I don't have that view. I view the Bible as truthful and accept it's plain meaning at face value. I do not need to develope elaborate conspiracy theories to prop up my arguments. Now do you have some compelling evidence that the Bible cannot be true that I missed somewhere?
where was i arguing that the bible was not true? if anything, i made a pretty good case for one story being based on a REAL event.
i read the bible at face value too. i just come to a different conclusion than you do, because i'm not trying to get it to fit a preconcieved notion. i don't care if the bible is right, or wrong, or when it was written or by whom. i really don't.
but face value says that you read a book called "in the beginning" as being about the past, not the present.
The fact that the words may be a pun doesn't make the story not true.
are you really grasping at straws now? straw-men, anyways? the fact that it's a pun on a derogatory name suggests insult. suggests -- read it however you like.
the point is that it's a story about how a nation who exists at the time of authorship got their name, "in the beginning." do you notice the mention of how they are called that "to this day?" the day it happened and the day it was written are not the same day -- time as passed and the person has fathered a people.
I don't have any problem with this. I've read Genesis many times and I concur with your assessment here. But I don't see that as somehow making it untruthful.
the argument is not that it's untruthful. the argument is that it was written by people who lived after the events described.
Did it ever occur to you that perhaps that Mountain has two names, and Moses knew them both and simply used them interchangeably? What evidence do you have that writing or talking in this manner would have been ilogical or simply bad writing for Moses to do at the time periods in question?
ok, let's look at this analytically. the documentary hypothesis predicts that if we divide up the text into sources based on other criteria, that one source will use "horeb" and another "sinai."
this is confirmed, and by an evangelical source, i might point out:
quote:
"Sinai" can be found in the Yahwist (J) and Priestly (P) documents, while "Horeb" was used in the Elohist (E) and Deuteronomic (D) sources.{1}
Portland Seminary at George Fox University in Oregon
The Pentateuch is a huge book. My NKJV version has it at 190 pages, small print.
my shortest torah is 167 pages. my longest is 1200 (but that includes prayers and halftorot, as well as lots of footnotes). but i want to point something out. 190 pages is not a huge book. "the catcher in the rye" is 214 pages, but the name of the hotel holden stays at doesn't change once. 190 pages is not a lot to expect consistency from.
I'm inclined to believe that a document of that size, written by one person, is going to have plenty words that have the same meaning, places with more than one name, or even people or peoples with more than one name.
well, we DO have someone with two names. how about that. we have abram (abraham) and jacob (israel). know what we also have? stories about how they got their second names.
where is the story about how horeb became sinai, or vice versa? where's and indication that horeb and sinai are even the same place -- refered to as one being the other, not just the same events happening.
Ya I just don't see a problem here. Sorry. I think it's more like you've been taught to view the matter in this way and so you do. Odd how for 1000's of years, people have been studying the Bible and never came to the same conclusion. Perhaps it's simply not as obvious as you imply?
maybe you should look at the conclusions they did come to. some have suggested that horeb is the region, sinai is the mountain. others have suggest two mountains.
Was there a pillar of fire and a cloud once they captured the promised land? Perhaps Moses realized this would cease then? And being different from surrounding nations does not mean they can't have a king.
it does when kings are considered divine.
No I don't think the Bible has disagreements. You haven't presented any so far. Why should I? Inconsistency? I pray everyday. And I call God, Lord, Jesus, God, Father, and even more names than this. Am I being inconsistent? Are my prayers ilogical because of this? The "problem" you're describing, exists in the minds of liberal scholars and no where else. And it's that simple. Saying it's a problem, doesn't make it one.
but you agreed to an argument -- one founded on the basis that the bible is inconsistent. not contradictory, just not fully homogenized.
and yes, you are being inconsistent. did i qualify that as something bad? if you were consistently inconsistent -- using different names one after the other, that would say something different than using one name for three years, a different name for two years, and then switching back.
I understand that the JEDP theory is built on a theory that divides up the authorship of Genesis by the names of God that are used in given passages. So? That's not evidence that any of that is true. The foundational theory is still a theory. Or do you have evidence for this too and I don't know about it?
ah, see, that's the problem. you haven't gotten to step two -- once we divide the sources up, we read them.
they may not read like the stories we know, but the interesting thing is that each source contains complete stories. j has a complete and coherent creation story, as does e. this holds for most stories in the torah, although some separate less cleanly. but the redundancy is pretty good support for separate sources.
Sure. I like it because I'm inclined to believe there is a whole lot of oral tradition in the Bible, as I've pointed out already. Or do I?
you're inclined to believe. i am relating that there is evidence for the written transmission, instead of oral -- it's not a belief. it's got a bit more weight to it.
the evidence for the written transmission is the confirmed prediction of the documentary hypothesis. see that documentary bit? that means "relating to documents" (not the discovery channel kind, don't play semantics here). it is the documentary hypothesis because it hypothesizes that the bible came from written documents.
you agree that it did. can we stop arguing now that you agree?
I don't think the views of a 12th century Rabbi are terribly relevant to determining the views of ancient Rabbis. The way I see it, this is an irrelevant point.
then modern interpretation isn't valid either. and neither is long-standing views (which include 12th century rabbis)
Look you put up in a previous post the best information for the JEDP theory from rabbinic tradition you could find and quite frankly there was nothing there. A Rabbi speculating that Moses didn't write a handful of passages in the Pentateuch, is no foundation for the JEDP theory. Those are separate issues, that bear resemblence by pure coincidence.
tell me, forms, is it a coincidence that you're claiming coincidences a lot?
do you not understand the evolution of an idea? one rabbi says "well, moses couldn't have written this part. it had to come from somewhere else." and another points out some more. and another points more disagreements. the beaking point is when disagreements can be lumped together in consistent sets, and coherency can be derived from dividing incoherency (which, btw, is god's prefered method of creation).
but it's the QUESTIONING that matters. and the questioning began 1000 years ago, with small questions. but it's still a line of questions.
Rabbinic writings are huge and they don't always agree with each other, as you point out later here and I'm perfectly well aware of.
and clearly not all written by the same rabbi. wait, no. prove they weren't.
The point is that there is a Rabbinic tradition for Mosaic authorship of the Bible and it is known to not be questioned for some time.
did you miss the part where they were questioning it 1000 years ago? or are the 1000 years before that more important. (keep in mind we've only had the modern jewish text for 1800 years).
More Agreement? OK. Where in the Pentateuch is there DISAGREEMENT? Back up this claim please.
so you're arguing against written sources now? make up your mind.
here's a disagreement: are man and woman created at the same time, or one from the other?
Which proves nothing both because there is no reason why God could only be called one name by the author of Genesis or sources Moses likely based the book on and because dividing Genesis into separate accounts has zero to do with casting doubt on Mosaic authorship of the Bible.
suppose i'm reading a book about william shakespeare. for one whole chapter, he's just called "shakespeare," and nothing else. then for another three chapters, he's called "william shakespeare," and nothing else. but then another chapter it's "shakespere," "shackespeare," and "shakespear." and in another chapter, he's mysteriously called "marlow."
kinda weird, isn't it?
Which means nothing because Moses did not have to write the whole Pentateuch in one style only. What evidence do you have that he could not have written with shifts in styles?
moses as a schizophrenic? it's like having a book of short stories, all of which are told in completely different voices.
i mentioned salinger above -- i have a book of salinger short stories. they all sound the same: the same voice. btw, there are 9 sources there, and the book is roughly the length of your penteteuch.
Parallel accounts can be natural coincidences. I concede that doublets are strong evidence for either different source authors or the same author writing about the same matter at different times. But you would need to give an example where this type of style would be ilogical for Moses to do, in the last four books of the Pentateuch. Otherwise it's a mute issue.
will do. have you read the ten commandments? they're in exodus 20. and also exodus 34 -- and they're different.
The continuity of the various sources;
Not quite sure exactly what's being referred to here.
i explained it above. it's the phenomenon where the separated sources still read like continuous documents.
The political assumptions implicit in the text;
I think you'd need to cite examples to make a relevant point with this one.
see the points on babel and ben-ammi. also that the texts appear to originate in different political and theological contexts.
the stories of the covenant between God and Abraham; the naming of Isaac; the two stories in which Abraham claims to a king that his wife is really his sister; and the two stories of the revelation to Jacob at Bet-El. A famed triplet is the three different versions of how the town of Be'ersheba got its name.
And how are these true doublets. Aren't they actually talking about different things and just happen to have a few similarities?
actually, the article messed up. the abraham and abimelech story happens THREE times, not just two. except the third is with isaac and rebekah. all three are exactly the same story -- they come into town, claim the wife is a sister for fear of death, the wife gets taken by abimelech for a wife. it's almost consumated, but god swings in to the rescue and stops the king, who then returns the wife to her husband, and is really pissed. they leave with goodies so as not to incur the wrath of god.
either it's the SAME story repeated, or they found a good way to rip abimelech off. this time, i suspect there's no ripping off going on -- there is no greedy motivation present, just fear.
I'm inclined to agree that the Genesis compiler used more than one written document about the creation account.
ok, so let me make an assumption. you contend that moses wrote four books of the torah, minus an epilogue by joshua, but compiled genesis from existing documents. right? so moses did not write the entirety of the torah, correct?
can we move on from here?
I think that what happened was either the women in question had both Moabites and Midianites among them or that some Midianites were in Moab. Or it could be both of these.
The JEDP theory, OTOH, supposes that there must have been atleast two authors who wrote this passage. But I don't see a logical split anywhere in the passage for such a possibility. Also, even if one author added to the story, it is very surprising that he would not have noticed that the passage begins by calling the women "Moabites." Seems unlikely he would have been so sloppy in lying to me.
i am slightly unfamiliar with this story. it's been a while since i read numbers (the census half bores the tears out of me).
but the contention is not that one source is lying -- but that two separate sources with disagreements were editted together. neither was TRYING to be inconsistent with the other, or untruthful, they just did not HAVE the other source and were reporting the story they knew or had.
quote:
The Ten Commandments appear in Exodus 20, but in a slightly different wording in Deuteronomy 5. A second, almost completely different set of Ten Commandments appears in Exodus 34.
This makes alot of sense if Moses was just speaking matter of factly. But if there were multiple authors, it seems ilogical to me that they would not simply copy the wording of the earlier passages. So I don't see any problems with this
again, you are misunderstanding what the contention is. it's not EARLIER passages, but separate works. one work had one set, the other a different set. they were editted together at a later point. that's the documentary hypothesis -- the editting together or separate source documents.
as a single author, this presents problems. why would moses write down one set of commandments, break the stones, and then write down the exact words of the first ones -- only to have them come out completely different? surely moses himself would have noticed, when it happened.
So maybe Sinai had more than one name? Maybe Jethro had more than one name too, like Israel and Jeshurun? Maybe Moses married a 2nd wife, who happened to be Cushite? Or maybe Zipporah was half Midianite and half Cushite, but Miriam and Aaron didn't view Cushites as being equal to Midianites, who also would have been descendents of Abraham? Perhaps Moses was referring to Zipporah as Cushite, since that was what they objected to and called her a Midianite earlier, because Jethro, her father, was Midianite?
ad hoc, all of it. the fact that the documentary hypothesis explains and predicts the inconsistencies, but you have to come up with rationalizations to justify them looks really bad.
But I don't see anything that would make me believe that one person didn't write the whole Pentateuch. I mean come on, we could take a number of large writings and divide it up based on similar superficial divisions and then claim, see multiple authors wrote it.
ok, let's do it. pick your favourite book. (you also ignored that that table pointed out very many philosophical differences -- even god has all of those qualities and i'm sure he does, it's still one source emphasizing different qualities than another)
I disagree. It is a collection of books and we Evangelicals view it this way. Maybe some don't, but that sure as heck isn't what's taught at Bible colleges.
how many volumnes is your bible in? seems like a silly point, sure. but that's what i mean. we've compiled all of these books into one binding. that's part of the process.
Well I don't see it that way. I've come to my own conclusion about the book, based on studying it myself and I don't see the JEDP theory anywhere in the Pentateuch, sticking out at me and compelling me to seriously consider its possibility.
...except in genesis. which you agree is composed of more than one source.
I've read little of it. And none of this changes the fact that Rabbis historically believed that Moses wrote the Pentateuch. I mean what example of early Rabbinic tradition do you have of any Rabbis questioning Mosaic authorship of the vaste majority of the Pentateuch?
i had a bit of discussion with ramoss recently. apparently, the tradition of redaction goes back some time, and the position of the major editor and compiler of the torah is even known -- ezra. not ibn ezra, but ezra the prophet and "scribe of the torah."
tradition also states that he compiled joshua, judges, samuel, and kings -- the non prophet works of the "the prophets."
I don't believe there ever was a Lilith that Adam married before Eve. The Bible says nothing of this. Genesis 1 and 2 are nowhere logically inconsistent. Perhaps the same things are mentioned with different emphasises but they don't ever technically contradict each other.
uh huh. you missed it again.
this is a problem that is old enough to have a traditional explanation -- jewish tradition is that because genesis 1 says man and woman were created together, but genesis 2 says they were created sequentially, that there is another woman. eve is named the mother of all mankind to differentiate her from lilith. who IS mentioned in the bible, in the book of isaiah.
she's in the talmud, too.
I find the argument that they do laughable.
you mean, unles you agree with it? they argument they "do" is that genesis had one author. two authors? no lilith.
It presupposes that the compiler(s) of Genesis were so stupid that they didn't even recognize that they contradicted themselves a mere few paragraphs apart.
STUPID? retarded.
quote:
Pro 26:4 Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him.
Pro 26:5 Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit.
how did they put two completely opposite verses one right after the other the other in proverbs? did they not recognize that they contradicted themselves?
or, do you think, there was another purpose? or perhaps that it didn't bother them?
I think if they lied and/or used different sources, that were not true, which is still a lying of sorts, that they surely would have seen the contradictions and realized that leaving it as is, would likely not fool people so easily and make their forgery look like one.
who said anything about fooling anyone? or that someone was fooled? who do you think was fooled by the proverbs "contradiction" above? why do you think the motives were to decieve, as opposed to collect and present tradition?
I'm inclined to beleive that liars, in matters as important as this, would be much more likely to try and be more consistent.
but the redactor is not a liar. he's honestly presenting what he has. were the council of nicea all liars because they couldn't decide what jesus's last words were? no, they just presented the four gospels that were commonly in use.
This doesn't invalidate my claim in any way. It is entirely plausible that Pharoah was called a king over israel but Nebuchadnezzar happened to not have been called this, at least not in the Bible. No reason why that couldn't be the case.
no, i'm making the challenge easier for you. show me a single instance of pharaoh OR nebuchadnezzar OR any other conquering power being called "king to israel" and i'll accept your reading that the verse in question could apply to pharaoh.
but one needs to only search the bible and see that "children of israel" is a pretty common way to refer to the people who live in the country of israel. beny-yisrael = yisraely.
This doesn't detract from the vailidity of my claim in any way.
you claim that they used "children of israel" because it was not a country when the verse was written. i showed you an instance (among MANY btw) where the exact phrase is used while israel IS a country. that makes your point wrong, according to the bible. "children of israel" in no way indicates a lack of country.
Sure they might have, but as Pharoah was the only king to have ever ruled over them until that time, it's hardly problemtic that Moses' original audience would have known what he was referring to.
ok, i'll make the challenge even easier. the reference here was the verb malak. did pharaoh king israel? or did he do something else to israel?
I'm sorry, I just don't see how any of this challenges my claim. I mean so Edomite kings are being contrasted to a Pharoah that ruled over the children of Israel, so what?
one contrast at a time -- the kings of edom are being contrasted to a lack of kings in israel.
for instance, it's saying "johnny got an apple before i got my apple." not "johnny got an apple before i got a black eye." the first is about who got an apple first. the second doesn't really mean a whole lot. apples are better than a black eye, sure, but what does one have to do with the other?
you can't contrast something twice in the same sentance and expect it to make a coherent relation. the statement can be factual, sure, but pointless. (never taken english?)
It is indeed ambiguous, I don't see how you think it can't be. Pharaoh was king over the Israelites and the Egyptians. So? Honestly, I just don't see any real challenge to my claim. I think you need to provide new information on this point or it's a resolved issue. Forgive me if I don't respond to a rebuttal of yours on this point, that has no new information in it.
you're missing it. perhaps it's a lack of hebrew knowledge here. malak-melek l'beny-yisrael. ruled-king to-sons-of-israel. it's not king "over" israel, it's king "to" israel. lamed means "to" like in "i go to the store" ani holek l'ha-chanut, or "he likes to read" hu oheb l'qroa.
If Chaldeans lived there, sure you would.
was ur in saudi arabia?
Not neccessarily. If Moses simply compiled Genesis, based on earlier sources, it's quite plausible that that was simply the information available to him. Wouldn't surprise me if even Moses didn't know where "Ur of the Chaldeans" actually was.
i'm sure, especially since he never makes mention of the chaldeans anywhere else -- they're just not present.
both samuel and joshua refer to the same book. the both have to be after the authorship of jasher. a good guess would put them close to being contemporary.
I don't see why.
i said "guess." it's a starting point. logically, they both would have had to have been written after the book of jasher, correct?
have you read the book of jasher?
but joshua citing something else is pretty good evidence that it was written later, by someone else, and not joshua.
How does that logically follow?
according to joshua, the book of jasher contains descriptions of the events in joshua's times. why would joshua, writing shortly after the event itself happened, having witnessed it firsthand, refer us to another book, already written and finished, by someone else?

אָרַח

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 193 of 242 (278214)
01-11-2006 4:14 PM
Reply to: Message 190 by purpledawn
01-11-2006 6:20 AM


Re: Laban & Jacob J & E Versions
The stories weren't meant to go together. Putting them together causes a contradiction as you noted.
quite.
the story doesn't require the documentary hypothesis, however. it's just that the alternative is a decietful jacob -- and the bible is full of lying patriarchs.
forms, however, is trying to have it both ways. he wants both stories to be true when they clearly contradict.

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 194 of 242 (278217)
01-11-2006 4:18 PM
Reply to: Message 191 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 4:06 PM


Re: Pentateuch Claims
We've already gone over this purple and as I feel I gave a good answer to this already, I don't want to repeat myself.
yes, your answer was "tradition."
you failed to demonstrate any claim, for instance, that genesis was in the book of the law. i gave you an acceptable way to demonstrate such a conclusion, too. same with the references to deuteronomy that show when it joined the books of moses.
an intelligent response to THIS question would be to quote all the references you can find to anything from the book of law, and cross-reference them with the books they're from, and at least the claimed biblical time-frame of the authorship of the book that refers to it.
but that would take work. and you're content to sit in your assumptions that we are questioning and think you have made a point.

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 195 of 242 (278218)
01-11-2006 4:25 PM
Reply to: Message 192 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 4:11 PM


usage of ha-shem
Perhaps he used both to make clear to the Israelites that Elohim, the creator of the universe, was the same as Yahweh.
yes, that's why the j source uses "yahweh elohim." the e source does not use "yahweh" until it's revealed to moses in exodus.
look, this is a very, very basic problem. we're getting all confused here over the simple and obvious point that the names are NOT used interchangeably; they're used consistently in large blocks.
but let's get right to point here, because this is actually a major problem.
quote:
Gen 4:26 And to Seth, to him also there was born a son; and he called his name Enos: then began men to call upon the name of the LORD.
quote:
Gen 15:7 And he said unto him, I am the LORD that brought thee out of Ur of the Chaldees, to give thee this land to inherit it.
Gen 15:8 And he {abram} said, Lord GOD, whereby shall I know that I shall inherit it?
quote:
Gen 28:13 And, behold, the LORD stood above it, and said, I [am] the LORD God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac: the land whereon thou liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed;
how many references can you find to the name of the lord being used in genesis? specifically by god himself, or by abraham, isaac, or jacob?
quote:
Exd 6:3 And I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob, by the name of God Almighty, but by my name [...] was I not known to them.
you don't see this is a problem?

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 199 of 242 (278235)
01-11-2006 5:03 PM
Reply to: Message 198 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 4:43 PM


Re: J & E Sources
I'm not arguing against names' of God being used interchangeably. I'm arguing against names of God, consistently and only, being used because one of the alleged J, E, D, or P authors only knows one of those names.
no, you're still missing it.
yahweh is a name.
elohim is a title.
the elohist uses ONLY elohim until exodus 6. the jahwist uses yahweh and elohim together ONLY. the elohist does, indeed, know god's name. he uses it after it's revealed to moses.
Now if you make a list of the known names of God, in the OT, you will find that those names have a tendency to have relevent specific context to their usage.
well, you see, that sort of thing isn't possible if you're not willing to identify the cultural contexts and focii of various documents. why do you accept differing cultural contexts and focii -- but fail to see that they lines up with the way the documents divide?

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 204 of 242 (278246)
01-11-2006 5:21 PM
Reply to: Message 196 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 4:31 PM


Re: turnabout
I think you're losing track of what we were discussing on this particular point. Remember, the issue was about "Ur of the Chaldeans." You are the one that brought up early Hebrew presence in Palestine. Which is a separate part of the debate. I was just pointing out, that the question of early Hebrews in Palestine, doesn't negate the fact that you still have no evidence for Chaldeans not being in Mesopotamia in Abraham's time.
i'm making a logical point here. you cannot prove there was not a single hebrew in palestine just before the exodus.
it's hard to prove an abscence. what you're saying is the equivalent of "there is no evidence for god, therefore he exists." it doesn't follow. the burden of proof is on YOU to establish that there were chaldeans in mesopotamia during the time of moses.
i don't know how you fail to see what i'm saying here. maybe i'm not being straightforward enough? too subtle? i cannot prove that there were no chaldeans in mesopotamia during moses's time anymoe than you can prove there were no hebrews there either. i brought to point up to turn your own claim about on you, and demand the same thing of you that you demand of me. if you can't do it -- why should i be able to meet your demand?
rather, i have demonstrated that chaldean presence in babylonia is unlikely with the evidence we have -- the evidence that they invaded from the arabian peninsula.
Abscense of their being mentioned is not evidence that they were not in Mesopotamia earlier. How does your assumption here logically follow that they couldn't have been in Mesopotamia earlier?
normally, and on its own, it doesn't. but taken that the babylonia empire was one of continually invading and conquering empires -- one of which was the chaldeans -- the lack of evidence of them anywhere in the bible until they point we know we they invaded helps corroborate the idea that they came from somewhere else.
because they said "children of israel" we could infer that it was not a country. i pointed out two things: having a king would make them a nation, so this is not suprising (your point is not a point at all) and second that they are STILL called the childrean of israel WHILE they are country.
This does not logically follow
premise: the phrase "children of israel" indicates the abscence of a hebrew nation at the time of authorship
premise: the bible was written mostly contemporarily, and the end of kings is a later epilogue.
evidence: the phrase "children of israel" is used in the book of kings while israel and judah are nations.
reducto ad-absurdum.
pick a premise to be wrong.
I already explained this to you. It is the ancient Rabbinic tradition that matters, that is what is closer to the time of the authorship of the OT, and its canonization.
ok, let's have some of these ancient rabbinic traditions. cite me some specifics.
does closer mean correct? do you believe in the apocrypha and pseudepigraphica? those are some pretty ancient rabbinic traditions, some older than the nt. if you accept the new testament, why not the apocrypha?
Besides those medieval rabbis were not arguing against Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch, only Mosiac authorship of a handful of lines in the Pentateuch.
they doubted the authenticity of the tradition that moses wrote ALL of the torah. they were arguing that there parts in the torah in that moses did not write. to refute a claim of entirety or perfect, one needs only show one counterexample.
There is a mountain of difference between their views and the JEDP theory.
yes but one is logically derived from the other.
If they were alive today and participating in this debate, although they may not agree with me 100%, they would decidedly be on my side in this debate, not yours.
yeah? shall we ask some of today's rabbi's?

אָרַח

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 206 of 242 (278248)
01-11-2006 5:25 PM
Reply to: Message 201 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 5:08 PM


Re: J & E Sources
This doesn't change anything.
it's called background information.
And? I happen to think Moses used both. So what? I think he edited Genesis. So no problems here for me
you could happen to think that god himself presented moses with a cd-rom copy of the chumash and halftorot, laid in solid gold. i don't care. you're refuting the evidence with your personal opinion. that doesn't work.
the evidence is for inconsistent usage. it's like oil, and water -- not thoroughly mixed.
you also missed another point: j and e continue into exodus. so if they are sources moses editted together, then he editted exodus together, too. this is starting to look like the bit where joshua cites another book in reference to his own life.

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 209 of 242 (278253)
01-11-2006 5:36 PM
Reply to: Message 205 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 5:24 PM


Re: academia
Arach, just re-read the definition a few times till it clicks. Key in on words like "or" which split the meaning of a word up into separate meanings. See many words have multiple meanings any time you see "or" in its definitions. I never used the word "ambiguous" to mean "vague" in our debate here. Never! And I still used the word correctly too.
you know what's really funny? you like to smooth out the contradictions and inconsistencies of specifics in the bible -- but when present with very similar definitions you point how markedly different they are. let's resort to a math analogy again.
1. let X be the set of integers greater than 1.
2. Y = 2.
3. true or false: Y is an element of set X. 2 > 1, true.
1 was the mathematical definition of "vague." 2 was the mathematical definition of "ambiguous." ambiguous is a subset of vague. you really should, like, take a logic class or something. you're like my high school teacher who couldn't understand that "most" is a subset of "some." he'd ask questions like "t/f, some people sleep at night" and would mark us all down when we said was true.
as for "intended to decieve" perhaps you were ambiguous about which part of the first definition you meant. or is it just vague?

אָרַח

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 210 of 242 (278256)
01-11-2006 5:38 PM
Reply to: Message 203 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 5:18 PM


ten times!
I'm aware of all of this. You're missing my point. There should be a logical split in the storyline and that would be where two different stories were combined.
it's been pointed out to you ten times!
it's in genesis 2:4. one half is the last words of chapter 1's story, and the second is the introduction to chapter 2.
IOW, he lied, and clumsily. I find that hard to beleive and happen to think that Moses writing in that way, simply matter of factly, makes more sense.
perhaps you should look up the definitions of "edit" and "lie."

אָרַח

This message is a reply to:
 Message 203 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-11-2006 5:18 PM idontlikeforms has replied

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 215 of 242 (278355)
01-12-2006 12:35 AM
Reply to: Message 200 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 5:05 PM


Re: two wrongs, lying in the bible
According to Jacob, He did and I see absolutely no evidence whatsoever that Jacob was lying, so AFIAC, until you can present such evidence, you have no point to press here.
you see, when someone does something, and then tells someone that someone else did that thing instead, we call that "lying."
The changes in the terms that Jacob had to work for Rachel and Leah is a separate issue.
yes, it is. that's the issue.
It seems clear to me that your argument for Jacob setting the terms and not Laban is pointless. The fact is that they both agreed to them. It seems likely to me that Jacob felt obligated to fulfill the full amount of years of work for the share in the flock that he got off the bat. If the sheep and goats kept giving birth to speckled and spotted offspring than it makes sense to me that Laban would object and probably even suspect foul play on the part of Jacob. Jacob, was getting additional sheep and goats out of the deal, and he also was connected by marriage to Laban. That he didn't say, "hey wait a minute, this is not what we originally agreed on" and then promptly left because Laban renigged on his initial agreement, makes perfect sense to me. Perhaps this is unimaginable to you. But I view it as quite logical and in no way a problem for Biblical honesty.
that's great, but that's not the story in the bible. the story in bible goes like this:
laban says to jacob, "let me pay you."
jacob replies "keep your money."
laban says, "no, really. let me pay you."
jacob says, "well, if you insist. but i want sheep, not sheckels. actually, i don't even want good sheep, i want the rejects. i'll go through your flock, and pick out the nasty-looking ones, and those will be mine."
laban says "deal," and then promptly instructs his sons to collect all of the ones jacob would take and hide them three days walk away from jacob -- making jacob's share nothing.
jacob sees this and is unphased. he grabs some poplars and almonds and whatnot, and makes the sheep throw spotted and streaked young. he makes the product of two strong sheep spotted, and the product of two week sheep clean. and so he takes all of the strong offspring for himself, leaving laban a bad flock of good-looking sheep. then he leaves with his sheep, his wives, and his kids.
he tells his wives that god vindicate him by making all the sheep spotted and streaked.
those are the facts of what the biblical account is. it's a rather simple story, i don't know why you're having such a problem understanding what's going on. laban rips jacob off for twenty years straight, but jacob outsmarts him.
do you really think jacob had nothing to do with it?
This has already been addressed and no offense but I get tired of the repititon. If you want an answer to this, simply re-read my earlier posts and try to spot what evidently you have forgotten.
perhaps you can show the act of god in genesis 30? or where the angel speaks to him? because all i see is jacob doing something and affecting the outcome. now, you're saying that the bible is being deceitful, in that there was really a miracle in there somewhere they just failed to acknowledge.
the only thing getting repetitive here is "I've already addressed this." especially when you haven't. you've also failed to notice that one story has laban ripping jacob of one way, and the other story has laban ripping him off the other way. and you didn't answer how speckled and spotted he-goats and he-sheep were the only ones "jumping on the flock" when they were 3 whole days away, hidden from jacob.
He schemed to rip Laban off. Was he actually doing this? No. But in the Bible not all sin is an action, sometimes it's a thought or a motive.
so he thought up the scheme and went through the actions -- which didn't actually do anything. god did all the work, and joseph's actions were inconsequential. had he not placed the rods before the sheep, the outcome would have been the same. right?
why did jacob think this scheme would work? nevermind that it did -- what lead him to believe that some twigs would make goats throw spotted young? please note that even in jacob's LATER version where god tells him something, god neither indicates that jacob needs to take action (the male cattle do all of that), nor is anything mentioned about "rods." so for your view to make sense at all, something is completely left out of both accounts and god omits something.
Did it ever occur to you that perhaps not all 10 are mentioned to avoid being longwinded?
i've told you ten times already that it's just an expression. and no, it never occurred to me. have you, uh, read the bible? it's quite long-winded at times.
do you agree that characters in the bible lie? or no?
I've already responded to this.
no, actually, you did not. besides, you have to make 33 keystrokes to write "I've already responded to this." "yes" has only 3, and "no" has only 2. far, far less effort and much more clear.
because the actual answer is far shorter than your non-repsonse, i can only assume that you're dodging the question.

אָרַח

This message is a reply to:
 Message 200 by idontlikeforms, posted 01-11-2006 5:05 PM idontlikeforms has replied

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 216 of 242 (278359)
01-12-2006 12:54 AM
Reply to: Message 196 by idontlikeforms
01-11-2006 4:31 PM


ancient rabbinic tradition
I already explained this to you. It is the ancient Rabbinic tradition that matters, that is what is closer to the time of the authorship of the OT, and its canonization. Medeival divergences from the orthodox rabbinc views don't matter because they are much later.
i responded to this already, but i don't really feel like waiting for you to post that you don't actually have any real answers to my request for the specifics of ancient rabbinic tradition.
so i'll give you a specific.
quote:
4 Ezra, chapter 14:
20: Behold, Lord, I will go, as thou hast commanded me, and reprove the people which are present: but they that shall be born afterward, who shall admonish them? thus the world is set in darkness, and they that dwell therein are without light.
21: For thy law is burnt, therefore no man knoweth the things that are done of thee, or the work that shall begin.
22: But if I have found grace before thee, send the Holy Ghost into me, and I shall write all that hath been done in the world since the beginning, which were written in thy law, that men may find thy path, and that they which will live in the latter days may live.
this the fourth book of ezra, from the apocrypha. most date it to around the 2nd century ad -- it claims that the torah we have, as well as the nevi'im, kethuvim, and other sacred writings not found in the standard canon were lost in a fire, and over a period of 40 days ezra himself, inspired by the lord, dictates some 200 texts to five scribes.
2nd century ad rabbinic tradition claims that ezra wrote the torah. saint jerome in the 4th century even acknowledges that there was no objection to people saying that the prophet ezra renewed the torah.
how much further back do you want me to go?

אָרַח

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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 221 of 242 (278713)
01-13-2006 3:37 PM
Reply to: Message 218 by idontlikeforms
01-13-2006 3:21 PM


semantics
look, this is silly. you know that ambiguous (a few meanings) and vague (more than one meaning) have very similar definitions. you're just playing this game because i called you on a contradiction.
besides, your ORIGINAL quote did not use the word "vague," either:
quote:
The logical thing to do is to give the Biblical authors the benefit of the doubt, irregardless of whether or not one assumes they are truthful. You can always just assume their lying is at least trying to be logical. But liberal scholars don't do this, sadly. Instead they begin with the premise that the Biblical authors are clumsy with both grammer and logic in their presupposed falsehoods. Quite a tragedy, IMO.
you said "clumsy with .. grammar." ambigous and imprecise grammar could be considered "clumsy." you are putting your own presuppositions onto your perceived "ambiguous" grammar, and using it support your falsehoods.
that is very hypocritical, and you know. stop making excuses and playing semantics with your own clumsy grammar and just admit that you goofed up.

אָרַח

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