Different Perspectives on the Authorship of the Torah
Literary, historical, and theological perspectives on whether the Torah is
divine, human, or something in between
By Jeffrey A. Spitzer
The discussion of where the
Torah comes from is not simply a question of theology or history or literary
criticism. Within the Jewish community, it is a conversation that spans at
least all three of these disciplines. This article describes some of the
contours of that discussion within these three disciplines.
"This is the Torah which Moses placed before the people
of Israel. These are the testimonies, the laws and the judgments which Moses
spoke to the children of Israel when they went out from Egypt"
(Deuteronomy 4:43-44). When the Torah speaks of Torah, it is fairly clear that
the word means "instruction" and does not refer to the specific book
of the Torah as we have it. Nevertheless, under the influence of statements
like this one from Deuteronomy, Jews throughout the generations have treated
the book of the Torah, as a whole, as the revelation of God to Moses on Mount
Sinai, delivered to the people of Israel. Yet, even in ancient times, Jews
expressed opinions that parts of the Torah may have been revealed at different
times.
The question of the origin of the Torah is not merely one of academic
interest, like whether Shakespeare actually wrote Shakespeare's plays.
Connected to the question of the authorship of the Torah is the question of the
cultural and legal authority of the text. Since the Torah is the beginning of
all later Jewish discussions of ethics and normative practice, claims about its
origins can have profound implications for adherents to those ethics and
behaviors. Responses to questions concerning the divine authorship of the Torah
as we have it today are not uniform; many Jewish thinkers have claimed that the
Torah is authoritative whether human participation in its authorship is
demonstrable or not. Our concern, however, is not the response to the critique
of divine authorship but the the nature of the arguments for and against divine
authorship. Arguments for and against the divine authorship of the Torah can be
divided into three categories: understanding of the literary nature of the
text, conception of the relationship of the text to Israelite history, and
one's theological perspective on the Torah.
Assessments of the Literary Character of the Torah
Scholars have noted the repetitions, apparent contradictions, and
differences in vocabulary in different sections of the Torah. For the rabbis
who wrote the midrash (traditional, homiletical interpretations of
Scripture), those phenomena were seen as part of additional information,
encoded into the text of the Torah to serve as the basis for oral
interpretation. For example, if a law was repeated, the first case might be
seen as a warning and the second for punishment. Contradictory texts referred
to different situations. Differences in usage were not seen as alternate forms
for the same concept, but as different concepts.
Critical scholars look at the same phenomena and see evidence of
different sources. Recognizing that some of these differences are accompanied
by different uses of the name for God, scholars began to identify different
sources in the Torah: materials which shared a variety of characteristics
including the use of the four letter, unpronounced name of God (comprised of
the Hebrew letters yod-heh-vav-heh) were seen as deriving from a single
source. Scholars named that source J after the German transliteration of the
letter yod. Other sources were identified based on other shared characteristics
and vocabulary, including the "E" source, named after its use of the
name Elohim,. Materials from the book of Deuteronomy, and associated with the
language and ideas of that book are called D, and materials from Leviticus and
throughout the Torah that reflect the language and concerns of the Aaronid
priesthood are called P. The consistency within the various hypothetical
documents and an editing process that preserved the basic characteristics of
the original sources explained the repetitions and contradictions.
Other literary scholars have looked at the Bible and have
seen remarkable consistency and large literary structures and themes, like D.N.
Freedman's work on the centrality of the Ten Commandments in the overall
narrative structure of the Bible. This kind of literary analysis at least
points to a unified editorial process (if not a divine author). Many scholars,
including Freedman, who acknowledge underlying sources, nevertheless focus
their study on the narrative integrity of the received text of the Torah.
Although roundly rejected in academic circles, members of
certain Orthodox Jewish communities have made claims about the Torah's literary
character that, they assert, prove not just the unity of the Torah but the
divinity of its authorship. Specifically, some have claimed to identify
underlying codes revealed by equidistant letter skipping in the text of the
Torah. These codes, assert advocates of this approach, were built into the text
of the Torah by God precisely for our computer-enabled generation in order to
counter the Bible critics. Interestingly, Islamic researchers of the Koran are
"proving" the divinity of their holy text in the same way.
Assumptions About History & Prophecy
The first and most obvious concern that historians raised about the
unity of the text of the Torah deals with the fifth book, Deuteronomy. The
focus of the book on the unity of the people of Israel and its unified worship
in a single place, and the illegitimacy of any worship outside of Jerusalem are
concerns that do not seem to fit with most of Israelite history until the late
seventh century BCE. Strikingly, at that point, during the reign of King
Josiah, a book is "discovered" during repairs to the Temple, which
become the basis for "reforms" that align almost perfectly with the
language and concerns of the book of Deuteronomy.
For historians, this establishes the promulgation of the book of
Deuteronomy as having occurred during the reign of Josiah. More literal
believers accept the biblical account, and may acknowledge that it was, indeed,
the book of Deuteronomy which had been lost. Its loss explains the lack of
adherence to its norms in the intervening years as well as the zeal with which
Josiah instituted its reforms.
Another example is the story of the golden calf in Exodus 32. After
Solomon's reign, the northern Kingdom of Israel separated from the southern
kingdom of Judah. The northern king Jeroboam established cult centers at Bethel
and Dan, setting up golden calves as objects of worship and announcing,
"Here are your gods, Israel, who brought you up from Egypt" (1 Kings
12:28). If a story of Israelite rebellion in the worship of a golden calf had
been part of the Torah prior to Jeroboam, it is difficult to believe that
Jeroboam would choose the same symbol, and it is inconceivable that the book of
Kings would not condemn him explicitly for following that bad example.
Consequently, historians see the Torah's golden calf story as a polemic against
Jeroboam, cast back into Israel's mythic past. A traditional explanation would
assert that Jeroboam's adoption of the golden calf merely shows how rebellious
and twisted he was; the book of Kings would not have to refer back to the
Exodus incident because it would have been obvious and self-evident.
Theological Understandings of the Torah
Classically, Torah is understood as the content of God's revelation at
Mount Sinai. For some, that means that the exact words of the Torah, each word
and each letter comes from God. Unlike any other prophecy, the revelation to
Moses was perfect and clear; for many traditionalist Jews, these assumptions
are necessary in order to remove any question of human imperfection or
mediation from the foundation of all Jewish belief. If the Torah isn't true,
some assert, then all of Judaism is based on something false. Tradition,
according to this stance, provides an adequate lens through which to understand
Torah. Some who maintain this position question scientific beliefs that don't
accord with a simple reading of the Torah—they may say, for instance, that
dinosaur bones were planted by God in order to test our faith—and some
harmonize or explain away scientific findings that disagree with Torah,
arguing, for example, that the length of the days of creation could have been
millions of years long, thereby synthesizing evolution and the creation story
of Genesis.
For many modern theologians, beginning with Martin Buber, the content
of revelation is not the Torah itself. Revelation is the encounter with God;
Torah is the human testimony that Israel experienced this encounter. For some
moderns, the idea that God actually spoke is theologically problematic: If God
does not actually have an outstretched hand, why should God have vocal cords?
More to the point, however, is the belief that the human component in determining
God's will (which is later expressed through interpreting the Torah) is often
seen as an ongoing process that had its origins in the Sinai experience itself.
In this view, God is revealed in revelation, and Israel responded in each
generation with torah (teaching) which was finally canonized as Torah and then
supplemented with Oral Torah.
An intriguing approach expounded by the contemporary scholar David
Halivni is that God indeed revealed a complete Torah to the people, but Israel
sinned. Immediately upon receiving the Torah, the Israelites fell into the
idolatry of the golden calf, and not until the return from the Babylonian exile
under Ezra did Israel re-affirm its commitment to God. From Moses to Ezra, the
Torah was preserved in a fragmentary state, but under Ezra, revelation was
restored. The Torah that Ezra restored, however, has all of the signs of
imperfection and human composition that the critics have identified, but the
Torah is nonetheless the best restoration possible. Halivni's solution
acknowledges the arguments of the critics, while affirming a faith in God's
revelation of real objective content to the people of Israel.
Of course, there doubtless are relationships between these different
beliefs; theology influenced the early biblical critics who influenced the
historians who influenced later theologians; traditionalist explanations have
been sharpened to respond to the claims of the critics. Nevertheless, it is
clear that the discussion of how one understands the origins and authorship of
the Torah is a conversation that needs to be engaged at least through the
various dimensions discussed here.
Jeffrey A. Spitzer is a contributing editor and former
texts editor of MyJewishLearning.com and the senior educator at Jewish Family and Life!