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CHAPTER XV
THREE PECULIARITIES OF THE PENTATEUCH WHICH
ARE INCOMPATIBLE WITH THE GRAF-WELLHAUSEN THEORIES OF ITS COMPOSITION
BY ANDREW CRAIG ROBINSON,
M. A.,
BALLINEEN,
COUNTY CORK, IRELAND
AUTHOR OF "WHAT ABOUT THE OLD
TESTAMENT?"
There are – amongst others – three very remarkable
peculiarities in the Pentateuch which seem to be incompatible with modern
theories of its composition, and to call for some explanation from the critics.
The first of these peculiarities is:
THE ABSENCE OF THE NAME “JERUSALEM” FROM THE PENTATEUCH
The first occurrence of the name “Jerusalem” in the Bible is
in the Book of Joshua (Joshua 10:1): “Now it came to pass when Adonizedek, King
of Jerusalem”, etc. In the Pentateuch the city is only once named (Genesis 14)
and then it is called “Salem” – an abbreviation of its cuneiform name “Uru-salem”.
Now on the traditional view of the Pentateuch the absence of the name Jerusalem
presents no difficulty; the fact that Bethel, Hebron, and other shrines are
named, whilst Jerusalem is not, would merely mean that at these other shrines
the patriarchs had built their altars, whilst at Jerusalem they had not.
But from the point of view of modern critics who hold that the Pentateuch was in
great part composed to glorify the priesthood at Jerusalem, and that the Book of
Deuteronomy in particular was produced to establish Jerusalem as the central and
only acceptable shrine for the worship of Israel – this omission to name the
great city, then of historic and sacred fame, which they wished to exalt and
glorify, seems very strange indeed. According to the theories of the critics the
composers of the Pentateuch had a very free hand to write Whatsoever they
wished, and they are held to have freely exercised it. It seems strange then to
find the “Yahvist,” supposed to have been written in the Southern Kingdom, and
to have been imbued with all its prejudices, consecrating Bethel by a notable
theophany (Genesis 28:16,19), whilst in all that he is supposed to have written
in the Pentateuch he never once even names his own Jerusalem. And so the
“priestly writer” also, to whom a shrine like Bethel ought to be anathema, is
found nevertheless consecrating Bethel with another theophany: “Jacob called the
name of the place where God spoke with him Bethel” (Genesis 35:14,15), and he
never even names Jerusalem.
What is the explanation of all this? What is the inner meaning of this absence
of the name Jerusalem from the Pentateuch? Is it not this: that at the time the
Pentateuch was Written, Jerusalem, with all her sacred glories, had not
entered yet into the life of Israel.
The second remarkable peculiarity to which attention is
called is:
THE ABSENCE OF ANY MENTION OF SACRED SONG FROM THE RITUAL OF
THE PENTATEUCH
This is in glaring contrast to the ritual of the second
temple, in which timbrels, harps, and Levite singers bore a conspicuous part.
Yet it was just in the very time of the second temple that the critics allege
that a great portion of the Pentateuch was composed. How is it then that none of
these things occur in the Mosaic ritual? It might have been expected that the
priests in post-exilic times would have sought to establish the highest possible
sanction for this musical ritual, by representing it as having been ordained by
Moses. But no such ordinance in point of fact occurs, and the Pentateuch stands
in its primitive simplicity, destitute of any ordinance of music in connection
with the ritual, except those passages in which the blowing of the trumpets is
enjoined at the Feast of Trumpets, the blowing of the trumpet throughout the
land in the year of Jubilee, and the command, contained in a single passage
(Numbers 10:10), that in the day of gladness, and in the beginnings of the
months, over the burnt offerings and over the sacrifices of the peace offerings
the silver trumpets were to sound. No mention in connection with the ritual of
cymbals, harps, timbrels, or psalteries; no mention of sacred song, or Levite
singers. NO music proper entered into the ritual, only the crude and warlike
blare of trumpets. No ordinance of sacred song, no band of Levite singers. The
duties of the Levites, in the Book of Numbers, are specially defined. The sons
of Gershom were to bear the tabernacle and its hangings on the march; the sons
of Kohath bore the altars and the sacred vessels; the sons of Merari were to
bear the boards and bands and pillars of the sanctuary. No mention whatsoever of
any ministry of sacred song. A strange omission this would be, if the “Priestly
Code” (so-called) which thus defines the duties of the Levites, had been
composed in post-exilic times, when Levite singers – sons of Asaph – cymbals,
harp, and song of praise formed leading features in the ritual. Does it not seem
that the Mosaic Code, enjoining no music but the simple sounding of the
trumpet-blast, stands far behind these niceties of music and of song,
seeming to know nothing of them all?
The third remarkable peculiarity to which attention is
called is:
THE ABSENCE OF THE DIVINE TITLE “LORD OF HOSTS” FROM THE
PENTATEUCH
The first occurrence of this Divine title in the Bible is in
1 Samuel 1:3: “And this man went out of his city yearly to worship and to
sacrifice unto the Lord of hosts in Shiloh.” After this it occurs in a number of
the remaining books of the Bible, and with increasing frequency. The pre-Samuelitic
period of the history of Israel is thus differentiated from the post-Samuelitic
period by this circumstance, that in connection with the former period this
title is never used, whilst in connection with the latter it is used, and with
growing frequency – at all stages of the history, even down to the end of the
Book of Malachi; occurring altogether 281 times.
Now the theory of the criticism of the present day is that the Pentateuch was
composed, edited, and manipulated, during a period of more than four hundred
years, by motley groups and series of writers, of differing views, and various
tendencies. One writer composed one part, and one composed another; these parts
were united by a different hand; and then another composed a further part; and
this by yet another was united to the two that went before; and after this
another portion was composed by yet another scribe, and afterwards was joined on
to the three. Matter was absorbed, interpolated, harmonized, smoothed over,
colored, edited from various points of view, and with different – not to say
opposing — motives. And yet when the completed product – the Pentateuch – coming
out of this
curious literary seething pot is examined, it is found to have this remarkable
characteristic, that not one of the manifold manipulators – neither “J”, nor
“E”, nor “JE”, nor “D”, nor “RD”, nor “P”, nor “P2”, nor “P3”, nor “P4”, nor any
one of the “Redactors of P”, who were innumerable – would appear to have allowed
himself to be betrayed even by accident into using this title, “Lord of hosts”,
so much in vogue in the days in which he is supposed to have written; and the
Pentateuch, devoid as it is of this expression, shows an unmistakable mark that
it could not possibly have been composed in the way asserted by the criticism,
because it would have been a literary impossibility for such a number of
writers, extending over hundreds of years, to have one and all, never even by
accident, slipped into the use of this Divine title for Jehovah, “Lord of
hosts”, so much in vogue during those centuries.
In point of fact the Pentateuch was written before the
title was invented.
These three peculiarities of the Pentateuch to which attention is here drawn,
are points absolutely undeniable. No one can say that the name “Jerusalem”
does occur in ‘the Pentateuch; no one can say that any mention of sacred
song does occur in the ritual of the Pentateuch; and no one can say that
the Divine title “Lord of hosts” does occur in the Pentateuch.
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