Pages

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Historicity of the Old Testament – 1.

Historicity of the Old Testament – 1. Overview, History of the Issues, and General Principles


Recently, there have been many great books defending the historicity of the Old Testament. Kenneth Kitchen’s On the Reliability of the Old Testament, Hoffmeier and Magary’s Do Historical Matters Matter to Faith?, and Provan, Long, and Longman III’s A Biblical History of Israel all provide great evidence that the Old Testament is indeed true history.  
For a layman like myself to try to produce anything new in this area would really be utterly foolish, bordering on sinful pride. On the other hand, many people may find it difficult to access these books, since they are expensive and often go into the issues with very much detail. As such, here I’ll be trying to provide a basic summary of important points arguing for the overall historicity of the Old Testament.
I wrote an earlier draft for this which was lost because of a computer problem, but this has sort of been a blessing. Before rewriting, I got access to a huge set of books online that I can pull from, including Finkelstein and Silberman’s The Bible Unearthed. This book is similar to Bart Ehrman’s Misquoting Jesus and Jesus, Interrupted, in that they are books coming from a skeptical line of scholarship written at the popular level. If you were to encounter an a skeptic who has read biblical scholarship, these three books are the most likely ones they will have read. It is important to be able to provide a response to their key claims in the spirit of Peter’s famous words on the defense of the faith – “But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and always be ready to give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear;” (1 Peter 3:15 NKJV).
One kind word must be given to Finkelstein and Silberman, which is that their book was really well formatted, and so I will try to follow a similar basic pattern to what they did. So these posts will be standalone articles on Old Testament history, but also a type of long review and response to their book.

The order of discussion will be like so:

1.     Overview, History of the Issues, and General Principles

2.     The Patriarchs

3.     The Exodus

4.     The Conquest and Judges

5.     The United Monarchy

6.     The Divided Monarchy, Exile, and Return

7.     Ending Points



History the Issues

It is often thought that Higher Criticism is in some way a novel development from the Enlightenment Era. This view is helped by the fact that introductions to the study of the Old Testament will usually begin either with Medieval Biblical interpretation or Spinoza’s writing against Mosaic Authorship, but they rarely ever will go to times before then. One example of this can be found in John J. Collins’ Introduction to the Hebrew Bible. In all fairness, what he gives is a basic chronology of modern Biblical Scholarship. However, his depiction of pre-modern Biblical interpretation does not mention early controversies that give an interesting context to the more modern ideas.
While it is possible to look at the history of Old Testament study from the 18th century onward, one will be missing much important content, especially the 3rd Century controversies between Early Christians and pagan writers. Not to look at this period will lead to a great loss of context for later developments. This is because many of the conclusions of modern scholarship like those of Dr. Collins, Dr. Finkelstein, and Dr. Silberman are not very different from those of the Pagan critics of Christianity. This is not to disparage any of these scholars, but more show that these objections are not new. More than that, a look at the history of these developments in scholarship will usually reveal that certain philosophical presuppositions developed before the conclusions we see being drawn. This should allow us to not be misled to think that critical scholarship’s conclusions are certain or unbiased, and it should motivate us to look at the evidence for ourselves.
Throughout the first three centuries AD, the Christian faith was expanding very quickly and threatening to overturn much of the old pagan world. Many pagan writers such as Porphyry of Alexandria and Celsus began to write anti-Christian polemics while authors such as
St. Irenaeus, Origen, and Tertullian, took it upon themselves to offer defenses. Porphyry of Alexandria was a student of Plotinus, whose writings he compiled in the Enneads. He sought to defend a more intellectual and philosophical Pagan worldview over the Christian one. He was famous for his criticism of the Bible, especially for denying the traditional authorships of the Pentateuch (Genesis-Deuteronomy) and of Daniel:

“The books of Moses, Porphyry re- marked, could not be by Moses, because the data were recorded after the temple fire during the reign of Ezra, i.e., 1180 years after the death of Moses. Consequently the words of Jesus, "Had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed Me," were, in Porphyry's view, no better than an appeal to a false document. The most famous of his historical observations concerned the Book of Daniel. He was the first to demonstrate the Hellenistic provenance of several texts, and in this regard his historical criticism has become the common property of all contemporary exegetes, whatever their sympathies may be. But his conclusions might prove destructive of any faith in the prophetic character of the documents of salvation. For if it were established that a given prophecy had been invented post eventum and from historical experience, it would lose, for a mind that was inspired by an interest in history, all historical value and, above all, its value as unimpeachable revelation. In the conviction that he had established the charge of post eventum, the historian triumphantly pointed to the swindle of which the faithful were in his view the victims.” (Den Boer, 200)

This is more than a thousand years before Higher Criticism. That these arguments are quite old should allow us to recognize that the time before the Enlightenment was not a time where there was no critical inquiry into the Bible and its origins. Further, that Christians and Pagans debated these issues shows well that issues of Biblical origins and authenticity were considered to be important issues by the early Church, not just the concern of anachronistic Fundamentalists. Just as importantly, this shows that these arguments did not start as objective scholarship, but as polemics against Christians.

Of course, in the end, the Christianity grew so much that pagan Rome was no more, and by the early 4th Century, this new faith had become the major one in the Empire. Attacks like those of Porphyry and Celsus would not reemerge in force until the 17th century.

From the end of Antiquity to the beginning of the modern period, inerrancy and acceptance of traditional authorships was the norm among both Christians and Jews. Theologians and Church Fathers like St. Augustine, St. John Chrysostom, St. Anselm, and St. Thomas Aquinas all held to inerrancy and to the historicity of the Bible. In the 17th century, this changed radially. Thinkers such as Thomas Hobbes and Baruch Spinoza began to challenge the truth of revealed religion on philosophical grounds, and along with this, they criticized ideas traditional views of the Bible:

“Spinoza denied that Moses wrote all, or even most of the Torah. The references in the Pentateuch to Moses in the third person; the narration of his death and, particularly, of events following his death; and the fact that some places are called by names that they did not bear in the time of Moses all “make it clear beyond a shadow of doubt” that the writings commonly referred to as “the Five Books of Moses” were, in fact, written by someone who lived many generations after Moses. Moses did, to be sure, compose some books of history and of law; and remnants of those long lost books can be found in the Pentateuch. But the Torah as we have it, as well as as other books of the Hebrew Bible (such as Joshua, Judges, Samuel and Kings) were written neither by the individuals whose names they bear nor by any person appearing in them. Spinoza believes that these were, in fact, all composed by a single historian living many generations after the events narrated, and that this was most likely Ezra the Scribe. It was the post-exilic leader who took the many writings that had come down to him and began weaving them into a single (but not seamless) narrative. Ezra’s work was later completed and supplemented by the editorial labors of others. What we now possess, then, is nothing but a compilation, and a rather mismanaged, haphazard and “mutilated” one at that.”

What was radical was Spinoza’s conclusion that the majority of the Pentateuch was not Mosaic in origin. Even this however would have meant little if it were not for his religious and philosophical ideas, which could be by no means called orthodox:
                                                     
“The solution to this state of affairs, Spinoza believes, is to examine the Bible anew and find the doctrines of the “true religion”. Only then will we be able to delimit exactly what we need to do to show proper respect for God and obtain blessedness. This will reduce the sway that religious authorities have over our emotional, intellectual and physical lives, and reinstate a proper and healthy relationship between the state and religion. A close analysis of the Bible is particularly important for any argument that the freedom of philosophizing—essentially, freedom of thought and speech—is not prejudicial to piety. If it can be demonstrated that Scripture is not a source of “natural truth”, but the bearer of only a simple moral message (“Love your neighbor”), then people will see that “faith is something separate from philosophy”. Spinoza intends to show that in that moral message alone—and not in Scripture’s words or history—lies the sacredness of what is otherwise merely a human document. The Bible teaches only “obedience [to God]”, not knowledge. Thus, philosophy and religion, reason and faith, inhabit two distinct and exclusive spheres, and neither should tread in the domain of the other. The freedom to philosophize and speculate can therefore be granted without any harm to true religion. In fact, such freedom is essential to public peace and piety, since most civil disturbances arise from sectarian disputes.” 


What we see here is that Spinoza’s views on scripture were complementary to his philosophy, they were even maybe necessary for his other conclusions. This trend continued with Enlightenment figures such as David Hume, and grew stronger in the 19th century. Many theories began to develop and combine, leading to two important ideas in the origin of the Old Testament: the Deuteronomistic History, and the Documentary Hypothesis:

“About fifty years after Astruc a much more radical proposal was put forward by W. M. L. de Wette, who in his dissertation of 1805, and in another work (1806-7), argued that Deuteronomy was written in the time of Josiah (i.e. about seven centuries after Moses) and that the book of Chronicles gives a quite unreliable account of the history of Israel’s worship. Both these ideas became central in the view of Pentateuchal origins that emerged later in the century.” (Wenham, 48)

Julius Wellhausen suggested that the Pentateuch was made up of four sources – J, E, D, and P. Each was written at a different time and was brought together from 850 to 500 BC. His view was that the religion of Israel had developed quite a bit over time evolutionarily:

“Wellhausen painted a picture of Israel’s religious development that seemed natural and inevitable without the need for miracle or divine revelation. In the earliest stages, he argued, Israelite religion was relatively unregulated. People offered sacrifice when they liked and where they liked, without any priestly interference. This is the situation Wellhausen saw reflected in the books of Samuel and Kings At the end of the monarchy period King Josiah intervened, limited all worship to Jerusalem, thereby greatly enhancing the power of the priests, who were now able to control the details of worship. Once the priests had this power, they consolidated it, and during the exile (587-537 BC) they invented all sorts of rules and regulations about the details of worship, the status of the priests, their entitlement to tithes and sacrificial portions and so on.” (Wenham, 48)

Like with Spinoza, Wellhausen and his theory did not come in an intellectual vacuum: “If few of his ideas were new, the way they were presented by Wellhausen was brilliant and appealed very strongly in an era when the theory of evolution was new and believed by many to explain not just biological change, but many other historical developments.” (Wenham, 48) When his theory came out, it was relatively well accepted even among Christians. Indeed, the Documentary Hypothesis as proposed by Wellhausen became a consensus theory for the majority of the 20th century. This was helped by the fact that at the time many archaeologists thought that their findings largely confirmed the historicity of Abraham through Moses. (Wenham, 49) For example, William Foxwell Albright, considered to be one of the main biblical archaeologists of the 20th century, argued that while the texts were written late, Abraham and Moses could be placed in real history.

For much of the 20th century, this view that the Pentateuch furnishes much useful information was a consensus view. In the 1980s, scholars such as Thomas L. Thompson, John Van Seters and R. N. Whybray shifted this consensus dramatically in the opposite direction. They argued that the aim of the authors was not to portray history and that the milieu in which Abraham was said to have lieved was just as much like the Iron Age as the Middle Bronze Age. As such, it was suggested that Abraham through Moses were not historical figures. Israel Finkelstein and Neil Silberman say this on the matter:

“So long as the biblical textual critics and the biblical archaeologists maintained their basically conflicting attitudes about the historical reliability of the Bible, they continued to live in two separate intellectual worlds. The textual critics continued to view the Bible as an object of dissection that could be split up into even tinier sources and subsources according to the distinctive religious or political ideas each was supposed to express. At the same time, the archaeologists often took the historical narratives of the Bible at face value. Instead of using archaeological data as an independent source for the reconstruction of the history of the region, they continued to rely on the biblical narratives – particularly the traditions of the rise of Israel – to interpret their finds. Of course, there were new understandings of the rise and development of Israel as the excavations and surveys proceeded. Questions were raised about the historical existence of the patriarchs and on the date and scale of the Exodus. New theories were also developed to suggest that the Isrealite conquest of Canaan may not have occurred, as the book of oshua insists, as a unified military campaign. But for Biblical events beginning at the time of David – around 1000 BCE – the archeological consensus, at least until the 1990s, was that the Bible could be read as a basically reliable historical document.” (Finkelstein and Silberman, 38)

As they point out later, now even belief in the historicity of the United Monarchy is being contested quite a bit. The majority of biblical history today is seen as either mythical or greatly embellished by many if not most critical scholars. Of course, there are many reputable scholars who continue to give reasons to view the Bible as true history, and here I will try to look at some of them, but it is worth taking note of how much of a move against Scripture there has been in recent years. Hopefully this short look at the history of the study will make it clear that scholars do not operate in a vacuum, and that presuppositions often play a great role in their conclusions.

General Principles

While questions of evidence are important, questions of method are as well. Indeed, the approach with which one examines evidence will influence one’s conclusions greatly. While some attempts at reconstructing the history of ancient Palestine have worked heavily from textual evidence such as Provan, Long, and Longman’s A Biblical History of Israel, others have been more led by archaeology, especially Finkelstein and Silberman,’s book.

In modern times where science has been an extremely effective source for knowledge, many will be naturally inclined toward the approach that Finkelstein and Silberman advocate. Indeed, archaeology being held as the “Queen of the Battle” seems self evident at face value. It does run into certain pitfalls however. As James Hoffmeier points out, many events in ancient history are agreed to have happened despite a lack of firm archaeological evidence:

“The reality is that historians of the ancient Near East have often accepted the witness of written documents without corroborating archaeological data. During the fall of 2010, I participated in a conference in Germany on the exodus and conquest. In a panel discussion, a distinguished German colleague repeated the mantra that there is no Egyptian evidence for the exodus, which raises questions about the historicity of the biblical tradition. I asked if he believed that Thutmose III invaded Canaan in the mid-fifteenth century BC, besieging and taking the city of Megiddo. He responded, “Of course.” Then I pointed out that this military campaign is one of the best documented reports from the ancient Near East as it is recorded both in royal sources (e.g., Annals of Thutmose III, Gebel Barkal Stela, Armant Stela, Buhen Temple Text, Karnak Toponym lists) and in private documents and biographies of officers who accompanied the king. Despite all this textual evidence (from a variety of genres of literature) for the battle of Megiddo in 1457 BC and a seven-month siege of the city (according to the Barkal Stela), I reminded him, there is still no archaeological evidence from Megiddo for the Egyptian attack! Megiddo, as it turns out, is probably the most excavated site in ancient Israel, having been investigated with regularity since 1903 and work is ongoing.” (Hoffmeier, 2012)

Further, as Kenneth Kitchen points out, late documents may often be very historically reliable:

“Broadly, from Abram the patriarch down to such as Ezra and Nehemiah who guided the Jerusalem community in the fifth century, as given, the entire history (if such it be) does not precede circa 2000 B.C., running down to circa 400 B.C. Those who most decidedly dismiss this whole story point to the date of our earliest discovered MSS of its texts, namely, the Dead Sea Scrolls of the second century B.C. onward. They would take the most minimal view, that the biblical books were originally composed just before the time of the Dead Sea Scrolls, i.e., in the fourth/third centuries B.C. (end of Persian, into Hellenistic, times). With that late date they would couple an ultralow view of the rea lit y of that history, dismissing virtually the whole of it as pure fiction, as an attempt by the puny Jewish community in Pillistine to write themselves an imaginary past large, as a form of national propaganda. After all, others were doing this then. In the third century B.C. the Egyptian priest Manetho produced his Aegyptiaka, or history of Egypt, probably under Ptolemy 11,1 and by then so also did 13erossus, priest of Marduk at Babylon, his Clwldaika, for his master, the Seleucid king Antiochus J.2 Comparison with firsthand sources shows that these two writers could draw upon authentic local records and traditions in each case.” (Kitchen, 2)

It seems that if we accept both of these points, textual evidence should be used sometimes even where archeological evidence is lacking, and that even late documents may have a high level of historical veracity. As such, a current absence of archaeological evidence cannot be conclusive proof that an event has not taken place. In looking at the historicity of the Old Testament, we ought to take the texts seriously and to use them in a similar way to other historical documents of the time without a hermeneutic of suspicion.

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AJA8ikZGqO-qaXid04xjFhAY9KuKz26iIYeOOUvYNl4/edit?usp=sharing

Works Cited:

Den Boer, W. “A Pagan Historian and his Enemies: Porphyry Against the Christians.” Classical Philology, Vol. 69, No. 3 (Jul., 1974), pp. 198-208. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/268492, Accessed 7/26/18

Finkelstein, Israel, and Silberman, Neil. The Bible Unearthed, Prologue, Introduction, Scribd, Free Press, 2001. pp. 9-41.

Hoffmeier, James. “Why a Historical Exodus is Necessary for Theology,” Do Historical Matters Matter to Faith?, edited by James Hoffmeier and D. Magary, Crossway, Wheaton, Illinois, pp. 2012, 109-110.

Kitchen, K. On the Reliability of the Old Testament. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, 2003, p. 2.

Nadler, Steven, "Baruch Spinoza", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2018 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = <https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2018/entries/spinoza/>.

Wenham, J. “The Pentateuch.” New Bible Commentary, edited by D. A. Carson R. T. France, J. A. Motyer, G. J. Wenham, 4th Edition, InterVarsity Press, Downers Grove, 2010, pp. 48-50.