Genesis and the Moses story
Israel's dual origins in the Hebrew Bible
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Author
Contributions
- Nogalski, James. - Contributor
Publication
2010 - Eisenbrauns, Winona Lake, Ind, Indiana
Language
English
Word Count
114,000 words, Guess
Page Count
456 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-10157506152X
- ISBN-139781575061528
- Library of Congress Control Number2009054100
- OCLC Control Number495616863
- Better World Books9781575061528
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL23994800M
Classifications
- DDC222/.1092
- LCCBS573 .S35513 2010
- LCCBS573.S35513 2010
Description
Konrad Schmid is a Swiss biblical scholar who belongs to a larger group of Continental researchers proposing new directions in the study of the Pentateuch. In this volume, a translation of his Erzväter und Exodus, Schmid argues that the ancestor tradition in Genesis and the Moses story in Exodus were two competing traditions of Israel's origins and were not combined until the time of the Priestly Code--that is, the early Persian period. Schmid interacts with the long tradition of European scholarship on the Hebrew Bible but departs from some of the main tenets of the Documentary Hypothesis: he argues that the pre-Priestly material in both text blocks is literarily and theologically so divergent that their present linkage is more appropriately interpreted as the result of a secondary redaction than as thematic variation stemming from J's oral prehistory. He dates Genesis-2 Kings to the Persian period and considers it a redactional work that, in its present shape, is a historical introduction to the message of future hope presented in the prophetic corpus of Isaiah-Malachi.
Subjects
Topics
Times
Series Statement
- Siphrut: Literature and Theology of the Hebrew Bible -- 3
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