Without any hard evidence, Bible critics maintain that Moses
didn’t write any of the “Five Books of Moses” - Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus,
Numbers, and Deuteronomy. Instead, they claim that these books were written 800
years later, despite the fact that there exists an elaborate paper trial
starting from Moses and the “Book of Joshua” through the Prophets claiming that
the Law and the Mosaic Covenant were given through Moses, who also wrote them down:
·
Then Moses wrote this law and gave it to the
priests, the sons of Levi, who carried the ark of the covenant of the Lord, and
to all the elders of Israel. And Moses commanded them, "At the end of
every seven years, at the set time in the year of release, at the Feast of
Booths, when all Israel comes to appear before the Lord your God at the place
that he will choose, you shall read this law before all Israel in their
hearing. Assemble the people, men, women, and little ones, and the sojourner
within your towns, that they may hear and learn to fear the Lord your God, and
be careful to do all the words of this law.” (Deuteronomy 31:9-12 ESV)
The Law, The Books of
Moses, claim their author to be Moses, and this is the consistent testimony
of the entire Bible. In addition to this, the Law was committed into the
keeping of the priests would periodically read, copy, and instruct from the
Law. Therefore, along with the written Law, Israel passed on the consistent
oral tradition that they had witnessed the Law being given to Moses and would
regularly be instructed from the Law. To suddenly be presented five allegedly
foundational and nationally defining books, claiming to have been written by
Moses, with which they had had absolutely no experience, would not have been
credible to the Israelites.
Instead, this Law, the Word of God, had already become
central to Israel’s identity, history, and their welfare. They learned that
when they followed the Law, they were blessed; when they violated the Law, they
were punished. Every message of Israel’s Prophet had been predicated on the
fact that Israel had in its possession the written Law and the supporting oral
traditions of their historical engagement with these books. Besides, the books
of the Hebrew Bible give ample testimony to the fact that Israel continually
suffered because of their disobedience to the Law, the Mosaic Covenant:
·
The Lord, the God of their fathers, sent
persistently to them by his messengers, because he had compassion on his people
and on his dwelling place. But they kept mocking the messengers of God,
despising his words and scoffing at his prophets, until the wrath of the Lord
rose against his people, until there was no remedy. (2 Chronicles 36:15-16)
Therefore, to claim that Israel had been without the Five
Books of Moses is to suddenly remake Israel’s entire history and
traditions.
While Israel had made many charges against their God, they
never once charged that the Law hadn’t come from God through Moses, even though
such a charge would have provided them with a convenient justification for
their refusal to follow the Law of Moses, which they habitually violated.
Nevertheless, the critics continue to claim that the Books of Moses weren’t written until
Israel’s exile to Babylon or even afterwards. However, everything in the Hebrew
Scriptures is predicated on the fact the Israel had these books and were
regularly nourished by them, even as the Psalms reflect. Even when the
Israelites were charged with doing “whatever was right in their own eyes,” as
indicated throughout the Book of Judges,
this too implies that the Mosaic Covenant was being violated. Israel’s repeated
descent into debauchery, followed by periods of great suffering, demonstrate
the promised consequences of Israel’s unfaithfulness to God by breaking the
Mosaic Covenant. All this is evidence that the Books of Moses had been in their possession. If these books of the
Hebrew Scriptures had been introduced to Israel long after the fact, Israel would
never have received them as their Scriptures.
To illustrate this, let’s imagine that scholars presented a
nation with several books for which they had no record, claiming that what you
thought had been your history was not really your history but rather what the
scholars had just unearthed. Besides these problems, these books claimed to
have always been in your possession, whereas there had never been even an oral
tradition that acknowledged these recently found books. Would you receive such
books as your defining history, especially in light of the fact that they are
consistently critical of your people, even to the point of promising them doom?
Why then would the Israelites have received the Books of
Moses 800 years later, which claimed to have been written by Moses, if they had
had no prior knowledge of them?
The critics present the Israelites as gullible idiots. Instead,
the Bible presents us with a coherent and consistent history of a people
without any reasons to believe that it had been artificially hacked together
and foisted upon ignorant Israelites.
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE OF MOSAIC
AUTHORISHIP
Deuteronomy is written in a covenantal form reflecting the
form of Hittite suzerainty treaties of the 14th-13th centuries.
·
“Nearly all the known treaties of the 13th /14th
centuries B.C. follow this pattern closely.” (Josh McDowell)
·
This type of treaty form “cannot be proven to
have survived the downfall of the great empires of the last 2nd millennium B.C.
When empires rose again…the structure of the covenant…was entirely different.” (G.
Mendenhall)
·
Kenneth Kitchen writes that there is no
“legitimate way to escape from the crystal-clear evidence of the correspondence
of Deuteronomy with the remarkably stable treaty or covenant form of the
14th-13th centuries BC.”
EGYPTIAN SETTING
·
“A greater percentage of Egyptian words than
elsewhere in the OT” (Gleason Archer).
·
Egyptian Idioms and terminology: “This
conformity to eighteenth dynasty Egyptian usage turns out to be strong evidence
of a Mosaic date of composition.” (Gleason Archer)
·
“Thus we can not but admit that the writer…was
thoroughly well acquainted with the Egyptian language customs, belief, court
life, etiquette and officialdom; not only so, but the readers must have been
familiar with things Egyptian.” (Garrow Duncan concerning the Joseph and Exodus
narratives)
CUSTOMS AND GEOGRAPHY:
·
“The price of 20 shekels paid for Joseph in Gen.
37:28 is the correct average price for a slave in about the 18th Century BC:
earlier than this, slaves were cheaper (average, 10-15 shekels).” (K.A. Kitchen)
·
“When Pharaoh appointed Joseph prime minister,
Joseph was given a ring and a gold chain or collar which is normal procedure
for Egyptian office promotions.” (Josh McDowell, A Ready Defense)
·
“The author of the Torah shows a consistently
foreign or extra-Palestinian viewpoint.” (Gleason Archer)
·
“The Shittim or Accacia tree is indigenous to
Egypt and the Sinai Peninsula, but not to Palestine.” (G. Archer)
·
“The lists of clean and unclean birds of Lev 11
and Deut. 14 include some which are peculiar to Sinai.” (G. Archer)
The nature of the Torah suggests that at the time of writing
the people were nomadic (not settled in their nation as they were after Joshua.)
1.
Portable Tabernacle: instructions to create and
carry.
2.
Encampment Instructions (Num. 2:1-31)
3.
Marching Instructions (Num. 10:14-20)
4.
Sanitary Instructions For Desert Life (Deut.
23:12-13)
5.
Sending Of Scapegoat Into Desert (Lev. 16:10)
“For centuries there was a tomb in Shechem reverenced as the
tomb of Joseph (Josh 24:32). A few years ago the tomb was opened. It was found
to contain a body mummified according to the Egyptian custom, and in the tomb,
among other things, was a sword of the kind worn by Egyptian officials” [paralleling
the Scriptural account]. (John Elder, Prophets,
Idols, and Diggers)
CONCLUSIONS:
·
“No evidence has come to light contradicting any
item in the [Mosaic] tradition.” (J. Bright)
·
“It is …sheer hypercriticism to deny the
substantial Mosaic character of the Pentateuchal tradition.” (Albright)
·
“It is worth emphasizing that in all this work
no archeological discovery has ever controverted a single, properly understood
biblical (OT) statement.” (Nelson Glueck—a Reformed Jewish scholar.)
If the critics had presented hard evidence that the Books of Moses had been written 800
years after the fact, we might have to pay greater attention to their claims.
However, such evidence is lacking.
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