John Van Seters, «Dating the Yahwist’s History: Principles and Perspectives.», Vol. 96 (2015) 1-25
In order to date the Yahwist, understood as the history of Israelite origins in Genesis to Numbers, comparison is made between J and the treatment of the patriarchs and the exodus-wilderness traditions in the pre-exilic prophets and Ezekiel, all of which prove to be earlier than J. By contrast, Second Isaiah reveals a close verbal association with J’s treatments of creation, the Abraham story and the exodus from Egypt. This suggests that they were contemporaries in Babylon in the late exilic period, which is confirmed by clear allusions in both authors to Babylonian sources dealing with the time of Nabonidus.
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22 JOHN VAN SETERS
concern to link the history of the forefathers and their piety and the
patriarchal promises with the later destiny of Israel. Finally, the
rather unique role of the king as intercessor before the deity on be-
half of his people, as reflected in Nabonidus’s inscriptions, forms
a remarkable parallel with the role of Moses as intercessor, a quite
distinctive feature of J’s narrative 37.
This Yahwist as historian of Israelite origins may be contrasted
with the new fragmentary hypothesis that is advocated by many
European scholars today, in which this historical narrative is split
up into numerous fragments, compiled by innumerable “redactors”
over an extended period of time and of no fixed location and asso-
ciated with no specific historical or social context. Such an ap-
proach, it seems to me, is completely contradicted by the evidence
presented here for a unified non-P history of origins that belongs
to a quite specific time and place and social/religious location 38.
III. Conclusion: Dating the Yahwist Using
Biblical Texts and Non-biblical Evidence
The objective of this study has been to bring together all of the
relevant arguments for dating the Yahwist, by using comparison
with both the biblical texts whose dates may be controlled and with
the relevant non-biblical evidence that provides significant datable
parallels to the text of J. For those scholars who still believe that
there is a comprehensive and continuous non-priestly J narrative
that extends throughout the Pentateuch, the historical and social
context is vitally important for understanding what this long and
detailed narrative has to say about the Jews’ ethnic, religious and
institutional origins which define who they are. We must presup-
pose that there existed in Babylonia a significant community of
Jews who were concerned to preserve their religious and ethnic
37
Concerning the recent attempt by H.-C. SCHMITT, “‘Versuchung durch
Gott’ und ‘Gottesfurcht’ in Gen 22,1.12 und Ex 20,20”, ZAW 126 (2014) 15-
30, to date the theme of the “fear of God” as pre-Deuteronomic, the evidence
presented here speaks against this early dating.
38
For a collection of essays that represent both sides of the debate see T.B.
DOZEMAN – K. SCHMID (eds.), A Farewell to the Yahwist? The Composition
of the Pentateuch in Recent European Interpretation (Atlanta, GA 2006).