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- 36 page printout, Page 24 - 59
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- A SKETCH OF HEBREW SCRIPTURES
-
- THE Bible, as all must admit, is the only source of
- knowledge which we have, of the great questions of miracle and
- of "revealed religion" which come to us through its pages. The
- authenticity of its remarkable contents, as the word and will
- of God, can only be tested and ascertained by itself; by the
- internal evidences of its own words must its divine origin and
- inspired truth be vindicated, or its mere human origin and
- want of inspired truth be demonstrated. On a matter of such
- high importance to man and to the soul and its destiny, no
- candid and honest mind can offer reasonable objection to a
- candid and honest inquiry, made by a frank and faithful
- examination of its own words. To this capital end, therefore,
- we will follow the injunction of the Man of Galilee and
- "search the Scriptures," haply to find the answer to the
- eternal question posed by Pilate, "What is truth?"
-
- THE BIBLE A COLLECTION OF "LITTLE BOOKS"
-
- What, first, is this Bible? It is not one single and
- homogeneous book, in the form in which we see it printed; indeed,
- it was first printed, in Latin, in the year A.D. 1452, by
- Gutenberg, in Mainz. And what we know -- and fondly cherish -- as
- the Bible is not the Bible at all, but a translation, or version,
- more or less faulty and incorrect -- and often intentionally very
- misleading -- of ancient manuscripts of Hebrew and Greek writings,
- themselves very faulty and conflicting, forming together the so-
- called Bible. The very name Bible indicates its nature as a
- collection of writings. The name Bible is the Latin Biblia, from
- the Greek diminutive plural, ta bibliay "the little books," a term
- first used as referring to the Hebrew Scriptures in 1 Maccabees
- xii, 9. The Greek word biblos, from which comes the diminutive
- biblia, is from the Greek bublus, papyrus, the name of the
- material, from Egypt, on which ancient books were written. The
- title Ta Biblia for the whole Scriptures, Hebrew and Christian, was
- first used in the Second Epistle of Clement (xiv, 2) written in
- A.D. 170.
-
- The Bible, thus called, is a compilation, or gathering into
- one volume, of sixty-six separate "little books," or fragmentary
- "sacred" writings, from Genesis to Revelation. These sixty-six
- little books were written, or edited and compiled, in very
- different ages of the world, by wholly different, and mostly
- unknown, persons, in different countries and languages, Hebrew and
- Greek principally; but, as is commonly supposed, by Jews
- invariably. Together they form the "sacred writings" of the later
- Hebrews and of the early Jewish and Pagan Christians -- the name
- given, first at Antioch (Acts xi, 26), to the followers of the
- Jewish Jesus Christ.
-
- THE LANGUAGE OF THE BOOKS
-
- The Hebrew "little books," thirty-nine in number according to
- the accepted Hebrew and Protestant "canon," forty-six according to
- the Catholic, were written, of course, mainly in the Hebrew
- language, though Aramaic elements enter into some of the later
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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-
- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- compositions. This Hebrew language, like several others of the
- allied Semitic languages, was written entirely with consonants,
- having no written means of expressing vowel sounds; their words
- consist mostly of only three consonantal letters. The whole Hebrew
- Scriptures is a solid mass of words in consonants only, with not a
- single vowel among them. This consonantal mass of words was written
- from right to left, without spacing between words, and without a
- single mark of punctuation from end to end. To give a visual
- illustration of the practical difficulties, and frequent
- impossibilities, of decipherment and translation of the Old
- Testament texts, I present one of the best known passages in the
- Hebrew Bible, printed in Hebrew characters as Yahveh himself is
- said to have written it:
-
- @@@@ two lines of Hebrew characters @@@@
- (Computer Cannot generate the ancient Hebrew characters)
-
- In type the letters are plain, though even in type many are
- much alike and difficult to distinguish, as; @@; and @@ and @@; @@
- and @@; and @@ and @@; and @@; in handwritten Hebrew characters it
- is in many cases impossible to distinguish one from another.
- Jerome, who made the Vulgate Version of the Old Testament, says:
- "When we translate the Hebrew into Latin, we are sometimes guided
- by conjecture." Le Clere says: "The learned merely guess at the
- sense of the Old Testament in an infinity of places." But what they
- have guessed it to mean we must believe or be damned.
-
- Here is the same passage composed in the same manner in
- English consonants:
-
- Hnrthfthrndthmthrthtthdysmyblngpntlilndwhchthlrdthgd
- gvthththshltntkllthshltntemmtdltrythshltntstlthshltntbr
- flswtnssgnstthnghbr
-
- Who can guess what familiar passage this printer's pie is?
-
- There were no divisions, as at present, into chapters and
- verses, these divisions having been invented only some three or
- four centuries ago to facilitate quotations and references; even
- now the chapter and verse divisions differ considerably between the
- Hebrew text and the English translations. The Hebrew rabbis and
- scholars, somewhere between the fifth and eighth centuries A.D.,
- devised and put into use in their manuscripts of the Bible a system
- of so-called "vowel points" -- dots and dashes as in modern
- shorthand -- to express and preserve what they considered to be the
- probable ancient pronunciation of the Hebrew words. No wonder there
- are infinite doubts and difficulties as to the original words and
- their vowelization, and therefore even of their meaning. Many of
- the Hebrew words are almost untranslatable, and the same Hebrew
- word is often given scores of wholly different meanings in
- translation. A glance at the index-lexicon to the Old Testament in
- Young's Analytical Concordance to the Bible, demonstrates the
- difficulties, or the ingenuity, of the King James translators. For
- example, the word abar is given 88 different meanings; amar, 51;
- asah, 96; nathan, 94; nephesh (soul), 27; and so throughout the
- list -- many of these renditions being totally unrelated to each
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
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-
- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- other, as nephesh; soul, appetite, pleasure, fish, heairty, ghost.
- This results from the rude nature of the Hebrew language, which has
- only about 2050 root words, of which only 500 make up the bulk of
- the Old Testament. (Cath. Encyc., Vol. VII, p. 177).
-
- THE BIBLE LANGUAGE -- HEBREW
-
- Such a thing as the "Hebrew language," as a separate and
- distinctive speech of the ancient Israelites, in which they held
- familiar converse with Yahveh, and in which Yahveh spoke with Adam
- and Eve and with the patriarchs and Moses, never existed; no more
- than an "American language" now exists as distinct from the mother
- speech of England, or than the "Latin" languages of South America
- are distinct from the Spanish and Portuguese of the Iberian
- peninsula. As to the language of Yahveh and Adam and Eve, says the
- Catholic Encyclopedia: "The contention that Hebrew was the original
- language bestowed upon mankind may be left out of discussion, being
- based merely on pietistic a priori considerations."
-
- Abraham was a native of "Ur of the Chaldees," and hence
- naturally, with all his family and people, spoke the Chaldean or
- Babylonian language, which was very much akin to that of Canaan,
- where Abraham migrated, and was spoken by him and his descendants
- until the Seventy migrated to Egypt, 215 years later. Indeed, even
- as late as Isaiah; the language of the Chosen People is expressly
- said to be the "language of Canaan" (Isa. xix, 18). The Catholic
- Encyclopedia further says: "The name Hebrew (as applied to the
- language spoken by the ancient Israelites, and in which are
- composed nearly all the books of the Old Testament) is quite recent
- in biblical usage, occurring for the first time in the Greek
- prologue of Ecclesiastics, about 130 B.C." (Cath. Encyc. Vol. VII,
- 176). And further, as to the language of Abraham and the
- patriarchs: "That it was simply a dialect belonging to the
- Chanaanitish group of Semitic languages is plain from its many
- recognized affinities with the Phoenician and Moabitic dialects.
- Its beginnings are consequently bound up with the origin of this
- group of dialects. ... The language spoken by the clan of Abraham
- was a dialect closely akin to those of Moab, Tyre, and Sidon, and
- it bore a greater resemblance to Assyrian and Arabic than to
- Aramaic" (Id.). Indeed, the dictionary of the Hebrew language which
- lies before me is called The Analytical Hebrew and Chaldee Lexicon
- -- so nearly one and the same are the two dialects.
-
- So, if Yahveh, God of Abraham and of Israel, spoke all these
- wonderful things to his Chosen People, he spoke them in the common
- language of the peoples and gods of Canaan and Assyria, and not in
- some choice and peculiar "Hebrew language" as a special idiom of
- his Chosen People and of his divine revelations to his people and
- through them to mankind. Highly important sidelights on inspiration
- and the verity of sundry characteristic Scripture histories flow
- from this fact, so that its importance and interest justify this
- brief paragraph.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- THE NAME OF THE HEBREW TRIBAL GOD
-
- So obsolete did the "Hebrew language" become, following the
- world-conquests of Alexander the Great and the almost universal
- spread of the Greek language and culture throughout the Orient,
- that several centuries before the time of Christ even the form and
- proper pronunciation of the name YHVH of the Hebrew tribal deity
- were lost and unknown; though a few Jews, as Philo of Alexandria
- and Josephus, a generation after the time of Christ, professed to
- know it, but held it unlawful to pronounce or divulge it (Josephus,
- Antiq., II, xii, 4; see Cath. Encyc., Vol. VIII, art. Jehovah).
-
- Again the authoritative Catholic Encyclopedia speaks on this
- very significant point: "The modern Jews are as uncertain of the
- proper pronunciation of the Sacred Name as their Christian
- contemporaries. ... The name was not pronounced after the
- destruction of the temple" (Vol. VIII, p. 329). On page 330 it
- gives a list of the forms of the name as found in ancient writers,
- and lists: Jao, Jaoth, Jaou, Jeuo, Ja, Jabe, Jahb, Jehjeh. It then
- comments: "The judicious reader will perceive that the Samaritan
- pronunciation Jabe probably approaches the real sound of the Divine
- Name closest. Inserting the vowels of Jabe into the original Hebrew
- consonantal text, we obtain the form Jahweh (Yahweh), which has
- been generally accepted by modern scholars as the true
- pronunciation of the Divine Name" (p. 330).
-
- Very remarkably, for an orthodox Christian authority, this
- scholarly thesaurus of theology -- which so often seems to forget
- orthodox theology when engaged in questions of pure scholarship --
- reviews at some length inquiries of scholars to discover the origin
- of the old Hebrew tribal Yahveh -- that is, whence the Chosen
- People got or "borrowed" their tribal god. The colloquy between the
- God and Moses at the burning bush demonstrates that neither Moses
- nor the Chosen People knew or ever had heard of Yahveh, or of any
- other "God of their fathers"; for Moses says to the God: "Behold,
- when I come unto the children of Israel, and shall say unto them,
- The God of your fathers hath sent me unto you; and they shall say
- to me, What is his name? what shall I say unto them?" (Ex. iii,
- 13). The matter of the traditional "revelation" of the name of the
- God to Moses we will duly consider a few pages later.
-
- The article referred to reviews amply the suggested origins of
- Yahveh and his adoption by the Chosen People, of which but one or
- two very significant ones may be here noticed. Under the sub-
- caption, "Origin of the name Jahveh (Yahweh)," this high authority
- says: "The opinion that the name Jahveh was adopted by the Jews
- from the Canaanites, has been defended by [a number of eminent
- scholars], but has been rejected by [others]. It is antecedently
- improbable that Jahveh, the irreconcilable enemy of the Canaanites,
- should be originally a Chanaanite god" (Vol. VIII, p. 331). Passing
- other suggested origins, it says: "The theory that Jahveh is of
- Egyptian origin may have a certain amount of a priori probability,
- as Moses was educated in Egypt. Still, the proofs are not
- convincing. ... Plutarch (De Iside, 9) tells us that a statue of
- Athene (Neith) in Sais bore the inscription, 'I am all that has
- been, is, and will be,' ... the common Egyptian formula, Nuk pu
- Nuk, but though its literal signification is 'I am I,' its real
-
-
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- meaning is 'It is I who'" (Id.). Again: "As to the theory that
- Jahveh has a Chaldean or Aceadian origin, its foundation is not
- very solid," and the familiar Assyrian forms Yahu or Yah and Yau
- are cited, with the statement added, "Jahveh is said to be merely
- an artificial form introduced to put a meaning into the name of the
- national god" (Id.).
-
- The immense significance of this scholarly confession that the
- theory of Egyptian origin of Yahveh may have "a certain amount of
- a priori probability," and that this name is said to have been
- adopted "to put meaning into the name of the national god" Yahveh,
- or that the Hebrews may have adopted or adapted their tribal or
- "national god" from Egypt, Chaldea, or some other of their heathen
- neighbors, is that such concessions, or their bare possibility as
- fact, destroy at once utterly the Bible "revelations" and the
- pietistic Hebrao-Christian assertions that YHVH is eternal and
- "self-revealed" God since before the foundations of the world. It
- totally explodes the pretended "revelation" to Moses at the Burning
- Bush, soon to be noticed. In a word, such fact or the admission of
- it wholly destroys Yahveh except as a pagan Hebrew myth and a
- Christian "strong delusion" to believe ancient primitive myths for
- revealed truth of God.
-
- The name of the God, too, is often and variously abbreviated
- in the Hebrew texts. Dozens of times in Genesis it is written
- simply yy, the first time in Gen. ii, 4, the first mention of
- Yahveh. Elsewhere it occurs as Yah, or Yehu, Yeho, and as Yah,-
- Yahveh; often as Yahveh-Elohim. It is always, as we shall see,
- falsely rendered in the translations as "Lord" and "Lord God," for
- reasons of pious fraud which will duly appear.
-
- THE BIBLE ALL COPIES OF COPIES
-
- There is not existent in the world a single original book or
- manuscript of Hebrew or Christian Scriptures, containing the
- inspired Word of Yahveh. The most ancient manuscripts of the Hebrew
- texts date only from the eighth century of the era of Christ; while
- of the Christian books, said to have been written by the direct
- inspiration of the Holy Ghost within the first century of the era,
- all, all are lost, and the oldest "copies" bear the marks of the
- fourth century. And even in this fourth century, so gross was the
- corruption of text, so numberless the errors and conflicting
- readings, that the great St. Jerome, author of the celebrated Latin
- Vulgate version of the Scriptures, has left it recorded, as his
- reason for his great work, that the sacred texts "varied so much
- that there were almost as many readings as codices," or manuscript
- copies of the text. And for years past, the papal authorities have
- been collating all known extant versions and bits of Scriptures for
- the purpose of trying to edit them into one approved version of the
- inspired Word of Yahveh.
-
- Curious indeed it seems that in this inspired revelation of
- Yahveh, the Hebrew God, to Man, wherein the awful destinies of the
- human soul are said to be revealed to eternal salvation or
- damnation, some ten thousand different, conflicting, and disputed
- readings and textual corruptions and verbal slips of inspiration
- admittedly exist in the inspired texts, with the knowledge and
-
-
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-
- sufferance of the God whose awful will it all is; while the
- Providence of that same God, Yahveh, by special miraculous
- intervention has preserved wholly "incorrupt" through all the ages
- of faith, the cadavers and ghastly scraps and relies of holy saints
- and martyrs galore, from the very Year One on, which are yet to-day
- (or at last reports were -- Cath. Encyc., passim) as fresh,
- fragrant, and wholly "encorrupt" of flesh as when alive -- which,
- in very truth, in the case of many saints -- as their lives are
- recorded by the monks -- is not saying very much for either
- freshness or fragrance. An instance -- e pluribus unum -- is that
- of the pioneer Saint Pachomius, who, ambitious to outdo in bodily
- mortification his companions in filth, left the pig-sty in which he
- dwelt, and sat himself on the ground at the entrance of a cave full
- of hyenas in the pious desire of entering glory via their bestial
- maws; but the hyenas, rushing out upon the holy saint, stopped
- short of a sudden, sniffed him all over, turned tail, and left him
- in disgust uneaten.
-
- AND TRANSLATIONS OF TRANSLATIONS
-
- On the title-page of Bibles in current use is the statement
- "translated out of the original tongues"; but this does not tell
- the whole or the true story. The first translation of some of the
- Hebrew Scriptures (for all were not yet written) was the Septuagint
- into Greek, undertaken at the behest of Ptolemy II Philadelphus, of
- Egypt, begun at Alexandria about the year 285 B.C., and completed
- after some three hundred years. In many places this Greek
- translation differed widely from the Hebrew. About 392 A.D. Jerome
- made his translation from the Hebrew into Latin, this being the
- "Vulgate" version, which only gradually made its way into
- acceptance and suffered so many perversions that it was pronounced
- by Roger Bacon to be "horribly corrupt"; but it was adopted by the
- Council of Trent in 1546 as the "sole authoritative source of
- quotation; and it [the Council] threatened with punishment those
- who presumed to interpret the Scriptures contrary to the sense
- given them by the Fathers" (New Int. Encyc., Vol. ]III, p. 251).
-
- This Latin Vulgate, Old and New Testaments alike, with the
- Apocrypha added, was in its turn translated into English in the
- Douai Catholic version of 1609, thus removed three steps of
- translation from the Hebrew and two from the Greek. The Protestant
- versions in English, including the King James version of 1611, are
- more directly from the Hebrew and Greek texts of the respective
- Testaments. It is reported that the Tennessee legislator who
- sponsored the notorious "Anti-evolution" law in that state was
- greatly surprised to learn, from the eye-opening revelations of the
- Scopes trial, that his cherished King James version of Holy Writ,
- whose precious petrified "Sacred science" he sought to protect from
- the destroying effects of modern knowledge, was not in the original
- language of "revelation," in which Yahveh and the talking snake
- spoke to Adam and Eve. Some further anomalies and a number of
- tricks of translation will appear in their due order as we proceed.
-
- WHEN THE BOOKS WERE WRITTEN
-
- It will be of signal value to inquire, for a moment,
- concerning the periods of time indicated by the Bible, and the
- times when the principal books of it were written and by whom they
-
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- were written -- or rather, as that is the only course possible, to
- show, negatively, by whom, and when, they were not written. This
- inquiry will be confined to the "internal evidences" of the Bible
- texts themselves, with a bit of reference to their marginal
- editorial annotations. The force of such "internal proofs" is self-
- evident.
-
- To assist to an easier understanding, take this illustration:
- If one picks up a book, a newspaper, a letter, or any piece of
- written or printed matter which bears no date-mark or name of some
- known writer, one may not be able to ascertain exactly when or by
- whom it was written or printed. But one can often very readily
- determine, by the nature of its contents, that it was not written
- or published until after such or such a known time; and hence that
- it could not have been written by some person already dead or of
- one not yet born.
-
- If such a document, for instance, contains the name of Julius
- Caesar or of Jesus Christ, this proves at once that it was written
- some time within the past 1900-odd years, and not possibly before
- the advent of these two personages. If it mentions President
- Washington or some incident of his administration, it is evident
- that it could not have been written before Washington became
- President, in 1789; if it mentions Presidents Washington, Lincoln,
- and Coolidge, it is proof that it was written as late as the date
- the latter became President. So of every factual or fanciful
- allusion -- it can go no higher than its source. In a word, we know
- that no writing can speak as of a matter of fact of any event,
- person, or thing, until after such event has become an accomplished
- fact, or such person or thing has existed. No one can to-day write
- even the name of the President of the United States in the year
- A.D. 1939.
-
- With this simple thumb-rule of ascertaining or approximating
- the time of production of written documents by what is known as
- their "internal evidences" we may gather some astonishing proofs as
- to when, and by whom, sundry inspired records of Holy Writ were not
- written -- contrary to some currently accepted theories.
-
- SOME LIGHTS ON BIBLE CHRONOLOGY
-
- According to the chronology, or time-computations worked out
- of the Bible narratives (principally by Bishop Usaher) and printed
- in the margins of all well-edited Bibles, Catholic and Protestant
- alike, until recent ridicule shamed the Bible editors into quietly
- dropping them, the world and Man were created by the fiat or by the
- fingers of the Hebrew God Yahveh about 4004 years before the
- present so-called Christian Era, not yet two thousand years old; so
- that the reputed first man, Adam, inhabited the new-made earth
- slightly less than six thousand years before the present time. The
- revelation of this interesting event -- which by every token of
- human knowledge outside the Bible is known not to have occurred
- just when and how there related -- and of many equally accredited
- events, is recorded (for wonder of mankind) in the first five books
- of the Bible Genesis to Deuteronomy, called the Pentateuch or Five
- Books, or, as entitled in the Bible, "The Five Books of Moses."
- Moses is reputed to have written them at the inspiration or by the
- revelation of Yahveh, the God of Israel.
-
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- According to the Bible chronology, Moses lived some 1500 years
- before Christ; the date of his exodus out of Egypt with the
- Israelites is laid down as the year 1491 Before Christ, or some
- 2500 years after the Biblical creation of the world. So, if Moses
- wrote the account of the creation, the fall of man, the flood, and
- other notable historical events recorded in Genesis, he wrote of
- things happening, if ever they happened, 2500 years more or less
- before his earthly time, and some of them before even man was
- created on earth; things which Moses of course could not personally
- have known.
-
- But it is explained that while this is true, yet Yahveh
- inspired Moses with a true knowledge or "revelation" of all those
- things unknown to him, and so what he wrote was revealed historical
- fact. This is a matter which will be noticed a little later.
-
- But the Book of Genesis, and all the Five Books of Moses,
- contain many matters of "revealed" fact which occurred, if ever at
- all many hundreds of years after the death of Moses. Moses is not
- technically "numbered among the Prophets," and he does not claim
- for himself to have been inspired both backwards and forwards, so
- as to write both past and future history. It is evident therefore,
- by every internal and human criterion, that these "five Books of
- Moses," containing not only the past events referred to, but many
- future events -- not in form of prophecy, but as past occurrences
- -- could not have been written by Moses, the principal character of
- the alleged Exodus and of the forty years' wandering in the
- Wilderness of Sin, at the end of which he died. The cardinal
- significance of this fact, and of others connected with it, as
- bearing upon the historicity of Mosaic narrative and revelation,
- will appear in due course.
-
- Indeed, in the light of modern knowledge, it is quite evident
- that Moses and the "Hebrews" of his supposed time (1500 B.C.) could
- not write at all; or, if at all, on the theory of their 430 years
- in Egypt, only in Egyptian hieroglyphs. Not till many centuries
- later did the Hebrews acquire the art of writing. Professor
- Breasted, the distinguished Egyptologist of the University of
- Chicago, points out that to the nomad Hebrews writing was unknown;
- and that it was not until about the time of Amos (about eight
- hundred years after Moses) that the Hebrews were just "learning to
- write"; that "they were now abandoning the clay tablet, and they
- wrote on papyrus with Egyptian pen and ink. They borrowed their
- alphabet from the Phoenician and Aramean merchants." [James H.
- Breasted, Ancient Times (Boston: Ginn & Co.), see. 305] These
- Arameans themselves borrowed the alphabet from the Phoenicians
- "about 1000 B.C."; [Op. cit., see. 205.] the Phoenicians had
- themselves "devised an alphabet drawn from Egyptian hieroglyphs."
- [Op. cit., see. 400; see also Andrew Norton, The Pentateuch, p.
- 44.]
-
- SOME SIDELIGHTS ON MOSES
-
- Moses, as the traditional great leader and lawgiver of Israel,
- is worthy of very interested attention. In no accurate sense was
- Moses, if he ever lived, a Hebrew at all; indeed, he is expressly
- called "an Egyptian" (Ex. ii, 19). Certainly be did not speak the
-
-
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- Hebrew language, since it was non-existent as such, as noticed in
- another place; and after four hundred years in Egyptian slavery the
- slave descendants of Jacob the Syrian, of Chaldea, had evidently
- ceased to have any knowledge of their old Chaldean tongue, and
- could speak only an Egyptian dialect. As well should the
- descendants of the African slaves brought to America three hundred
- years ago speak to-day the strange dialects of their native
- jungles. In another place we shall see that neither the people nor
- Moses had ever heard of Yahveh, God of Israel; and that during the
- sojourn in Egypt and for a millennium afterwards they continued to
- worship the gods of Chaldea and of Egypt.
-
- All know the story of "Moses and the Bulrushes"; how the
- unnamed Pharaoh sought to destroy all the new-born male children of
- the Israelites, commanding the Hebrew midwives to slay them at
- birth; how the yet unnamed infant son of Amram was put into an "ark
- of bulrushes" and hidden on the bosom of the sacred Nile, watched
- over by his sister Miriam, found by the Pharaoh's daughter, drawn
- from the water by her, raised by his own mother, and adopted by the
- daughter of the Pharaoh. All this is very romantic, but not novel.
- Other high-born ladies have concealed their indiscretions by more
- or less similar shifts.
-
- Sargon, King of Accad about 3800 B.C., as shown by his
- monuments yet existing, was also secretly born, was placed by his
- mother in an ark of bulrushes, just like Baby Moses, and turned
- adrift on the Euphrates, where he was found by a kindly gardener
- (as were also Romulus and Remus, born of the god Mars and the
- vestal virgin, Rhea Silvia), The gardener nurtured him until his
- royal birth was discovered; he became beloved of the goddess
- Ishtar, and was raised by his valorous deeds to the throne of his
- country. Sargon then conquered all western Asia, including the land
- of Canaan, and set up his monuments of victory even on the shores
- of the Mediterranean Sea, where they remained, undisturbed by the
- floods of Noah, Xisuthros, and Deucalion, until discovered in
- recent years, and their records confronted with those of Holy Writ,
- in the British Museum in London, and elsewhere, where they may be
- seen to-day. The stele of Hammurabi's Code, we may also recall,
- stands to-day an eloquent and unimpeachable witness of the mighty
- past, in the Louvre at Paris; while Moses's Tables of Stone, writ
- by the finger of the Hebrew God Yahveh, are even as the sepulchre
- of Moses, whereof no man knoweth unto this day.
-
- To return from the digression. As the story is recorded in
- Exodus ii, the princess of Pharaoh spied the ark in the Nile, "had
- compassion on" the babe and rescued him; afterwards, when he grew,
- "he became her son." Now the remarkable incident: "And she called
- his name Moses: and she said, Because I drew him out of the water"
- (Ex. ii 10). What has "Moses" to do with "drew" out of the water?
- In English speech nothing discernible; but in the original Hebrew
- it is a plain play on words: "and she called his name Mosheh, ...
- Because meshethi (I drew) him out of the waters" (Heb., mashad, to
- draw). The curious thing about it all is that the Egyptian princess
- is represented as speaking in Hebrew, or Chaldee, and making a pun-
- name for her protege in that evidently unknown tongue. That it
- hardly happened that way is obvious. The birth, rescue, and
- "christening" of Moses have every indicium of myth. This evidently
-
-
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-
- fabled beginning must raise grave doubts as to the historicity of
- Moses himself and of all his reputed career. Other indications of
- the legendary will not be wanting as we proceed to review the life
- and times of Moses, and his Five Books.
-
- THE "FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES"
-
- The first and most obvious proof that the so-called 'Five
- Books of' Moses were not written by Moses, but date from a time
- many centuries after his reputed life and death, is very simple and
- indisputable. This proof consists of very numerous instances of
- what are called post-Mosaics, or "after-Moses" events, related in
- those books under the name of Moses as their inspired author;
- events of which Moses of course could not have known or written, as
- they occurred long after his death.
-
- It may be remarked, parenthetically, that Moses nowhere claims
- to have written the Five Books, nor does the Bible elsewhere impute
- their authorship to Moses. It is only "the law" which is elsewhere
- attributed to Moses. Indeed, the books are written throughout in
- the third person -- Moses did or said this or that; never, in all
- the relations of the doings and sayings of Moses does "I did" or "I
- said" once occur, except when Moses is recorded as making a speech.
-
- A singular passage in Exodus vi illustrates this point and is
- striking evidence that Moses could not have written the books. In
- verse 13 it is related: "And Yahveh spake unto Moses and unto
- Aaron, and gave them a charge unto the children of Israel, and unto
- Pharaoh king of Egypt, to bring the children of Israel out of the
- land of Egypt." Immediately, in verses 14 to 27, follows a strange
- interruption of the narrative by the insertion of a series of
- family genealogies, beginning "These be the heads of their fathers'
- houses," with many names, including the pedigrees of Moses and
- Aaron, the marriage of Aaron, and mention of the names of his
- offspring; then this careful explanation: "These are that Aaron and
- Moses, to whom Yahveh said, Bring out the children of Israel from
- the land of Egypt. ... These are they which spake to Pharaoh king
- of Egypt, to bring out the children of Israel from Egypt: these are
- that Moses and Aaron" (vv. 26-27). Moses could never have written
- in this form and manner among his contemporaries who knew him and,
- all about the "bringing out of Egypt." A thousand years afterwards
- the thing was written, and the sacred scribe took these pains,
- thrice reiterated, to identify the Aaron and Moses mentioned in the
- genealogies with the traditional Moses and Aaron of the traditional
- Exodus.
-
- It is recognized by scholars that all these elaborate
- genealogies inserted in the Five Books are post-exilic
- compositions. Their exact duplicates are found in the post-exilic
- Books of the Chronicles, and some in Ezra. This too is the origin
- of the use of "Adam" as a proper name instead of the common noun
- that it is. Again, if Moses had written the books, surely be would
- have at least once written the name of the Pharaoh of the Exodus.
- But several times in the verses cited is it said, as often
- elsewhere in the Five Books, "Pharaoh king of Egypt," as if Pharaoh
- were the name of the king instead of simply the official title of
- the ruler. The Egyptian title "Pharaoh" means "Great House," the
-
-
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-
- dynasty of the divine wearers of the double crown; the more modern
- appellative "Sublime Porte," for the Grand Turk, is an instance of
- a similar usage. The writer did not know the name of the Pharaoh,
- and thought that Pharaoh was his personal name. In later and more
- historical books, several Pharaohs are mentioned by their proper
- names, as Pharaoh Necho (2 Chron. xxxv, 20) Pharaoh Hophra (Jer.
- xliv, 30), and Shishak, king of Egypt (1 Kings,. xiv, 25).
-
- THE BIBLE "PREFACE"
-
- A flood of light on Mosaic authorship of the Book of Genesis,
- as well as on "divine revelation" of the most wonderful of its
- recorded events, breaks in at this vital point. In this light we
- will read a record which will totally destroy the theory of divine
- revelation.
-
- The Hebrews claim to "have Abraham as our father," or tribal
- founder. The "history" or account of tribal traditions of the
- Chosen People as a new or separate -- and "peculiar" -- ethnic
- division, first as nomadic desert Bedouins, later grown into a
- Hebrew nationality, begins with the "calling" of Abram and his
- departure out of Ur of the Chaldees into Canaan, the "Land of
- Promise." This event is related in Genesis xii; from there to the
- end the whole of Hebrew Scripture is a miraculous "history" of
- Abraham and his descendants as the Hebrew people.
-
- The first eleven chapters of Genesis are not Hebrew history at
- all; they deal with cosmic and human-race history, of the creation
- of the world and the progress of the gentile races of mankind,
- centered around an alleged direct line of personages, non-Hebraic
- and pre-Hebrew, from Adam, through Noah and his son Shern, to the
- immediate forbears of the Hebrew Father Abraham, who was born a
- Chaldean (Gen. i-xi). All the rest of the record deals with the
- theocratic history of the Hebrews as "Chosen People" of their god
- Yahveh, through their whole national life down to the Babylonian
- captivity, their restoration to their native land under Ezra and
- Nehemiah, by grace of the Persian conquerors of Babylon, and their
- subsequent re-establishment of their theocracy.
-
- Note now this capital fact: in the whole Scripture record,
- from Genesis xii to the post-exilic Books of the Chronicles, Ezra,
- etc., there is not a word of mention of one of the transcendent
- wonders of Genesis i-xi: creation, Father Adam and Mother Eve,
- Eden, and the serpent, Noah and his flood, the Tower of Babel --
- not a hint of any of these great events and personages preceding
- Abraham's trek into Canaan in the year 1921 B.C. Does not such
- singular silence of all subsequent history, prophecy, and poetry of
- the Hebrews excite curiosity or wonder? The explanation is easy and
- very revealing.
-
- In 586 B.C. Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, conquered Judea,
- destroyed Jerusalem, and carried away into captivity the Chosen
- People. There in the new, strange country, "by the rivers of
- Babylon ... We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst
- thereof; For there they that carried us away captive required of us
- a song. ... How shall we sing Yahveh's song in a strange land?"
- (Psalm exxxvii, 1-4) This proves, too, that David did not write
- this Psalm, for it was written after the captivity; and there they
-
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-
- dreamed of the Messiah who should arise to "deliver us from the
- Assyrian." There in Babylonia, for fifty years (not seventy, as
- their prophecies say) until Ezra, and for 150 years until Nehemiah,
- the Chosen People remained, among the wonders of the highest
- civilization of the East. There they learned the lore and the
- literature of the Assyrian and Babylonian cultures; and they no
- doubt conned with amazement the tablets and books of the great
- libraries of the land in which they dwelt.
-
- From these wonderful records of the past they learned the
- Babylonian Epic of Creation, wherein are recorded the fables of
- creation, the first parents, the garden, the forbidden trees of
- knowledge and of life, the serpent, the temptation, the fall of
- man, the flood and the ark, and of the Tower of Babel, the reputed
- original of which stood there before their wondering eyes. There
- they gathered these legends of the ancient past; and there, or
- after their return from captivity, they wrote, or rewrote, or
- edited their own ancient chronicles and their books of religious
- lore for use in the restored homeland.
-
- The thing speaks for itself: they simply recast the wonders of
- the Epic of Creation to suit their own notions and so as to make
- their own Yahveh the great Creator instead of Marduk. And to show
- that Yahveh's Chosen People were of the most ancient and
- illustrious lineage, they worked in the marvelous direct descent
- from the first man Adam, through Noah, to Terah, father of Abraham,
- only twenty generations since "in the beginning." When this product
- was completed, they tacked it on to their own tribal chronicles as
- a sort of introduction, and there it stands today -- the revised
- Babylonian Epic of Creation as Genesis i-xi -- the preface to the
- theocratic history of the Hebrews. Later priestly theologians
- attached the potent name of Moses to the first five books, and the
- whole gained credit as divinely revealed by Yahveh God to the
- traditional first historian and lawgiver, Moses.
-
- SOME "POST-MOSAICA"
-
- The instance is well known of the graphic account, in the last
- chapter of Deuteronomy, of the death and burial of Moses; this he
- could hardly have written himself. Even if he were inspired, as
- some people explain, to write of his own coming death and funeral,
- it would be odd for him to add (xxxiv, 6), when he was not yet dead
- or buried, "but no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto this day" --
- which was evidently very long afterwards, and proves an authorship
- much later than Moses. And in verse 8 is the statement: "And the
- children of Israel wept for Moses in the plains of Moab thirty
- days: So the days of weeping and mourning for Moses were ended" --
- a post-mortem which it is needless to say Moses did not write.
-
- In the same chapter is another similar proof of much later
- authorship by some other than Moses; for it is written: "And there
- hath not yet arisen a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses"
- (verse 10) -- a statement which could only have been made after
- many later great prophets had arisen with whom Moses could be
- compared. Moses could not himself have written that no prophet had
- arisen "since" himself when he was yet alive and when no prophet
- could as yet be his successor.
-
-
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-
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-
- In Exodus xi, 3 it is stated "the man Moses was very great";
- and in Numbers xii, 3 is the information, "Now the man Moses was
- very meek, above all the men which were upon the face of the
- earth." So meek a man would not probably have made such immodest
- boasts of himself. It must have been some later chronicler sounding
- his praises. This conclusion is strengthened by the use of "was"
- and "were," in the past tense. And Moses no doubt well knew the
- name of his own pagan father-in-law; but the latter is variously
- named in the Five Books by four different names: Jethro (Ex. iii,
- 1); Reuel (Ex. ii, 18); Raguel (Num. x, 29); Jether (Ex. iv, 18);
- and in Judges he is given a fifth name, Hobab (Judges iv, 11), all
- which indicates several different authors, or one very careless
- one, but not Moses.
-
- Moses is reputed to have written the Five Books in the
- chronological order of the inspired events, and of course he must
- have written it all before be died, which was months before the
- Israelites entered the promised land. The events of the forty years
- in the wilderness are supposed to have been written in the
- wilderness where they occurred. Yet in Numbers xv, 32 it is
- recorded: "And while the children of Israel were in the wilderness,
- they found a man that gathered sticks upon the sabbath day"; and he
- was brought to Moses, and "they put him in ward, because it was not
- declared what should be done to him. And Yahveh said to Moses, The
- man shall surely be put to death" (xv, 33-36). The writer was not
- "in the wilderness" when this was written, or be would never have
- added that phrase to it, as everything that occurred at all was "in
- the wilderness." Moreover, the "law" had already (it is alleged)
- been declared at Sinai, "whosoever doeth any work in the sabbath
- day, be shall surely be put to death" (Ex. xxxi, 15) -- so this
- narrative is just another "mistake of Moses."
-
- Joseph tells the Pharaoh: "I was stolen away out of the land
- of the Hebrews" (Gen. xl, 15). There was no "land of the Hebrews"
- in the days of Joseph, nor of Moses, nor until some years later
- when the Hebrews more or less possessed the land of Canaan or the
- "promised land" under Joshua after the death of Moses. The Song of
- Moses in Exodus xv, in exultation over the destruction of the
- Pharaoh and his army in the Red Sea, declaims upon the effects of
- that catastrophe, which had occurred that very day, upon the
- nations for hundreds of miles around: [This is a notable non-Mosaic
- form; the name Palestina is not Hebrew but Greek; it is in
- Herodotus that we first find the expression "Syria or Palestina"
- (New Standard Bible Dictionary, p. 650).] of Palestine, of Edom, of
- Moab, of Canaan (xl, 14, 15). Moses sings: "The peoples have heard,
- they tremble" (xl, 14, R.V.); which was impossible, as they could
- not so soon have heard the wonderful news, and their reactions to
- it been known so soon to Moses. But the significant proof of long
- post-Mosaic authorship is in these anachronic strophes of the Song:
- "Thou shalt bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of thine
- inheritance, in the place, O Yahveh, which thou hast made for thee
- to dwell in, in the Sanctuary, O Yahveh, which thy hands have
- established" (x], 17). This mountain was Zion, at Jerusalem, and
- the sanctuary was Solomon's temple; and Jerusalem did not come into
- the hands of the Chosen until partly captured by David. The temple
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
- was built by his son Solomon, some five hundred years after the so-
- called Song of Moses at the Red Sea, wherein these things are
- spoken of as already existing. So this reputed Song of Moses was
- written centuries after the death of Moses.
-
- In Genesis xiv is the account of the capture of Lot, nephew of
- Abram, in a battle; Abram took a posse of 318 of his armed
- retainers and went to his rescue, and "pursued as far as Dan" (xiv,
- 14). Now Dan clearly did not exist in those times, nor in the time
- of Moses. This name of one of the tribes of Israel, descended from
- Abraham through his grandson Jacob, was given to the town (then
- named Laish) of the Promised Land which was captured by the tribe
- of Dan during the conquest (Judges xviii, 27-29), some seven
- hundred years after Abraham and long after the death of Moses.
-
- In Deuteronomy iii, Moses is supposed to tell of a war which
- he had with the giant Og, King of Bashan, whom he conquered and
- killed. It is related (iii, 11), that Og had an iron bedstead 16
- 1/2 feet long and 7 1/3 feet wide; and for proof of the whole
- story, it says: "Is it not in Rabbath of the children of Ammon?" --
- preserved as a relic unto those days. But Moses never saw or heard
- of Rabbath, and could not have known what was in its local museum,
- for the town was first captured and entered by the Hebrews under
- David (2 Sam. xii, 26), some five hundred years after Moses died.
-
- During the forty years in the wilderness the Hebrews were
- provided each day, it is recorded, with manna to eat. In Exodus it
- is said, "the taste of it was like wafers made with honey" (xvi,
- 31); while in Numbers it is averred, "the taste of it was as the
- taste of fresh oil" (xi, 8). If Moses had eaten it as a steady diet
- for forty years, he would have known just what it did taste like,
- and he would have said, "the taste is like" oil or honey, if it
- tasted so diversely.
-
- But the strangest feature of this inspired story is this: in
- Exodus it is averred that the people ate manna for forty years
- "until they came unto the borders of the land of Canaan" (Ex. xvi,
- 35). It was Joshua who led them across Jordan into Canaan, some
- time after the death of Moses, and Joshua relates for a fact that
- when they got across the Jordan, they "did eat of the old corn of
- the land in the selfsame day, and the manna ceased on the morrow,
- after they had eaten of the corn" (Josh. v, 11, 12). Moses could
- not possibly have known when the manna ceased or have written of
- this incident happening some time after his death.
-
- In Genesis xxxvi a list of Edomite kings is given and it is
- said: "And these are the kings that reigned in the land of Edom,
- before there reigned any king over the children of Israel" (xxxvi,
- 31). It was some five hundred years after the death of Moses before
- Saul became the first king (1095 B.C.); hence Genesis could not
- have been written by Moses, or by any one until after the time when
- there were kings over Israel so that such a comparison could be
- possible. Again, in Judges xvii, 6 it is stated: "In those days
- there was no king in Israel, every man did that which was right in
- his own eyes"; which shows two things: that the Book of Judges was
- not written until during or after the time when there were kings in
- Israel; and that the Five Books of Moses, containing the laws of
-
-
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-
- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- Yahveh, were not written by Moses, and that the "law" claimed to
- have been "given" at Sinai was not existent; for that "law"
- specially forbade and fearfully denounced idolatry and minutely
- governed the whole lives of the Chosen People, leaving nothing to
- choice.
-
- Several of the Five Books abound with the provisions of the
- priestly code of sacrifices attributed to Moses in the wilderness,
- and are full of accounts of the manifold kinds of sacrifices made
- during the forty years in the wilderness. But all this is denied by
- the later prophets: "Thus said Yahveh Saboath, Elohe of Israel: I
- spake not unto your fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I
- brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning burnt offerings
- and sacrifices" (Jer. vii, 21, 22); and a chorus of them join in
- this refrain: "I hate, I despise your feast days; though ye offer
- me burnt sacrifices and meat offerings, I will not accept them"
- (Amos v, 21-26; Hosea viii, 13; Micah vi, 6, 7; Isa. i, 11, et
- seq.).
-
- All this shows that Moses never received or wrote the laws
- attributed to him and did not write the Five Books which relate all
- these things; and it confirms the view that this elaborate and
- intricate code of sacrificial and ceremonial law was a late
- priestly invention, unheard of by Moses, impossible in the
- wilderness, and unknown in all the intervening history of Israel,
- as we shall see in other places.
-
- OTHER LATE-WRITTEN BOOKS
-
- This same sort of simple but conclusive proof produces the
- same result with the succeeding books -- Joshua, Judges, Samuel,
- Kings, Chronicles, etc., showing that they likewise are of a date
- many centuries later than their supposed times and authors, as they
- relate matters occurring all the way from David to the Exile (about
- 500 B.C.). I will mention but an instance or two.
-
- The Book of Joshua relates the death and burial of Joshua
- (Josh. xxiv, 29-31), and records that "Israel served Yahveh all the
- days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders that overlived
- Joshua," thus showing that the book was written many years after
- Joshua's death by someone else. The late authorship of the book is
- proved by the reference (x, 13): "Is it [the fable of the sun and
- the moon's standing still] not written in the Book of Jasher?" This
- book of Jasher was itself not written until at least the time of
- David, for in the account of this bandit hero it is recorded: "Also
- he [David] bade them teach the children of Judah the use of the
- bow: behold, it is written in the Book of Jasher" (2 Sam. i, 18);
- so that Joshua, quoting Jasher, could not have been written before
- the latter, which records David.
-
- In the Book of Judges it is recorded: "Now the children of
- Judah had fought against Jerusalem and had taken it" (i, 8);
- whereas it was not until King David had reigned seven years and six
- months in Hebron that "the king and his men went to Jerusalem unto
- the Jebusites, the inhabitants of the land," and tried to take the
- city and failed. "Nevertheless, David took the stronghold of Zion,
- and called it the City of David" (2 Sam. v, 5-9). So Judges and
-
-
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-
- Samuel must have been written long after David was King and after
- Samuel was long since dead. Samuel died some years before the event
- he is quoted as recording (1 Sam, xxv, 1); and of course he could
- not have written of the calling up of his own ghost by the witch of
- En-dor, recorded in I Sam. xxviii, 7-19.
-
- A most conclusive proof of post-exilic composition or editing
- of these books now appears. In Judges xvii is the account of Micah
- and the elaborate idol-worship which he established, and of the
- silver phallic ephod which he set up in his house. He hired a
- Levite to be his idol-master and priest; then these sacred trophies
- were captured by the Danites; and this remarkable historical
- recital is made: "And the children of Dan set up for themselves the
- graven image [Micah's ephod]; and Jonathan, the son of Gershom, the
- son of Moses, he and his sons were priests to the Tribe of Dan
- until the captivity of the land" (Judges xviii, 30). Here we have
- Moses's own grandson, and his descendants for generations acting as
- heathen priests of idol-worship in Israel, so fearfully forbidden
- by Moses in his law. This "until the captivity of the land" proves
- that Judges was not written for nearly a thousand years after the
- events related, and after the captivity.
-
- In 1 Chronicles ix, 1 reference is made to "the kings of
- Israel and Judah, who were carried away to Babylon for their
- transgressions"; which shows that these books, too, were not
- contemporary chronicles of passing current events, but were
- compiled after the carrying away into Babylon.
-
- As the Hebrew God and religion are principally to be found in
- the Five Books of Moses, these instances of the late authorship of
- the other books are sufficient for present purposes; other
- instances will be noted here and there as they may be pertinent.
- The purpose of thus pointing out the internal proofs that the Five
- Books of Moses and the others are of a date ages after Moses is to
- show by the Bible itself that the records of the origins and
- development of the Hebrew legends, history, and religion were not
- written by Moses, who is accounted to have been the medium through
- whom the Hebrew God Yahveh revealed these events and this religion;
- and hence that these revelations are not authentic emanations from
- Yahveh, God of Israel, but are mere tribal traditions reduced to
- their present form of writing many centuries after their misty and
- mythical origin; and that much of it all and particularly the law,
- as we shall more fully see, was the creation of the priests in the
- late and declining days of the nation, and after the captivity.
- These facts also illuminate the question of the inspiration of the
- "Holy Scriptures," on which depends their claim to full faith.
-
- "YAHVEH" AND "ELOHIM"
-
- In connection with the question of authorship of the Hebrew
- "Scriptures" there is another feature which is conclusive proof of
- human workmanship, not divine "revelation." This is apparent in the
- books written in the Hebrew language, and is of course known to all
- scholars. It is also evident in our English translations, where it
- can be readily traced through large portions of the books by the
- English words "God," "Lord" and "Lord God," as the original Hebrew
- words are therein translated falsely.
-
-
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-
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-
- In a word, by these proofs it is manifest: that there were at
- least two older, independent, and contradictory sources of the
- present "Scriptures," that have been very carelessly patched
- together by later compilers who have worked them into more or less
- their present form. One of the older writers or schools of writers,
- of the Scripture records always makes use of the generic words El,
- Elohe, or Elohim (God, Gods), to designate the Hebrew tribal
- divinity; the other school invariably uses the personal name
- "Yahveh," or Jehovah.
-
- The first writer or school is thus designated as Elohist, or
- by the initial "E"; the latter is called Jahvist, designated by the
- letter "J"; these two original sources are together designated as
- "JE." As even a cursory perusal of the books will prove, these two
- original "Elohim" and "Yahveh" records were at some later time
- combined into one record, in more or less its present form,
- evidently by reckless and "priestly" editors, who added much
- material of their own, designated by the initial "P," for priestly.
- This composite product is known as "JEP." Other minor sources and
- combinations are also to be discovered; but "E" and "J" tell the
- remarkable tale the "twice-told tale" -- of revelation and
- inspiration beyond all contradiction -- but contradictorily,
- always.
-
- A RARENTHESIS OF EXPLANATION
-
- A critical study of the Hebrew Scriptures by competent
- scholars reveals that their present form results from much and very
- uncritical editing and patching together of ancient traditions,
- folk lore tales, and written records, long after the times usually
- attributed to the several books; and indicates that the Hexateuch,
- or Five Books of Moses plus the Book of Joshua, took its present
- form about 620 B.C. The older parts of the composite, by the
- "Yahveh" writer, or "J," roughly date from about 800 B.C.; the
- "Elohist" or "E" document from about 750 B.C. One is considered to
- have been composed in Israel, the other in Judah, after the
- division of the kingdom upon the death of Solomon. The hostile
- factions of the Hebrews had common traditions, but each gave
- partisan interpretation and color to them; this resulted in the
- signal discrepancies and contradictions which are apparent from the
- combination of the two records without careful pruning.
-
- Later, during and after the captivity, to about 450 B.C., when
- national longings and aspirations were very strong, and the tribal
- Yahveh was being evolved into "one God of all the world," the
- priestly editors, or "P," worked the Yahveh and Elohim documents
- into one whole, with fine dramatic skill and much originality, but
- with total want of critical sense. Still other editors, designated
- from their traces as "J2," "E2," "JE," and "R," worked the
- composite "JEP" over from time to time, to suit their own views,
- policies, and tastes, very freely making editorial additions and
- changes. All this can be followed by the critic's eye through the
- Hebrew texts almost as distinctly as the blue water of the Gulf-
- stream can be distinguished winding its way through the green
- waters of the ocean. And so the interested English reader can
-
-
-
-
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-
- readily distinguish the main sources of composition by the
- different terms for the Deity, "God" for "El," "Elolic," or
- "Elohim"; "Lord" for "Yahveh"; and "Lord God" for the Hebrew
- "Yahveh Elohim."
-
- It may not be without interest to mention that the personal
- God-name "Yahveh" occurs some 6000 times in the Hebrew Scriptures;
- the noun "El," meaning God or Spirit, occurs but two hundred and
- sixteen times; "Elohim," which is plural and means spirits or gods,
- is found some 2570 times; and the "dual plural" form "Elobe" is
- used many times, in composition, as "Yahveh, Elohe Yishrael."
- Further on we shall note another highly significant fact connected
- with this plural usage.
-
- OTHER "SOURCES" OF SCRIPTURE
-
- The fact is very obvious throughout that the later compilers
- or editors of the "Scriptures" in their present form often made use
- of older written materials, rather than always speaking "as they
- were moved by the Holy Ghost" -- who is not in those Scriptures
- revealed as having existed in their days. This fact is proved by
- the fact that these "inspired" writers frequently refer to and
- quote copiously from older, uninspired, and now lost books as the
- sources of information for matters which they relate. The instances
- of this editorial use of wholly profane sources are numerous.
-
- Thus in Numbers xxi, 14 it is stated, "Wherefore it is said in
- the book of the wars of Yahveh," followed by the quotation. The
- famous account of the sun and moon's standing still for Joshua is
- related not as original "inspired" matter; the story is told, and
- the writer asks, "Is not this written in the Book of Jasher?"
- (Josh. x, 13). David's Lament over Jonathan and Saul, in 2 Samuel
- i, 17-27, is quoted in full, with the reference, "Behold, it is
- written in the Book of Jasher." This Book of Jasher is several
- other times quoted, as is the Book of the Wars of Yahveh.
-
- After all that is told of Solomon down to the time of his
- death, it is stated, "Now the rest of the acts of Solomon, and all
- that he did, and his wisdom, are they not written in the book of
- the acts of Solomon?" (1 Kings xi, 41) There are repeated
- references to, and quotations from the Book of the Chronicles of
- the Kings of Judah (e.g., 1 Kings xv, 7, 23); and the Book of the
- Chronicles of the Kings of Israel (e.g., 2 Kings, xiv, 15, 28).
- Other lost books of sources, of uninspired secular records, are
- referred to, three in a single verse: The History of Samuel the
- Seer, the History of Nathan the Prophet, the History of Gad the
- Seer (1 Chron. xxix, 29). In another verse we have references to
- the Book of Nathan the Prophet, and the Prophecy of Ahijah, and the
- Visions of Iddo the Seer (2 Chron. ix, 29). Again we are referred
- to the Histories of Shemaiah the Prophet and of Iddo the Seer,
- concerning genealogies (2 Chron. xii, 15). And we are told that
- "the rest of the acts of Ahijah, and his ways, and his sayings, are
- written in the story [commentary] of the prophet Iddo" (2 Chron.
- xiii, 22).
-
-
-
-
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-
- Again, "Now the rest of the acts of Jehoshaphat, first and
- last, behold, they are written in the book of Jehu, ... who is
- mentioned [which is inserted] in the book of the kings of Israel"
- (2 Chron. xx, 34). And so, as to the other acts of Hezekiah, "they
- are written in the vision of Isaiah, the prophet, and in the book
- of the kings of Judah and Israel" (2 Chron. xxxii, 32). At the
- close of the Scripture sketch of each of the several kings of Judah
- and of Israel occurs the editorial reference to the source of the
- chronicled events in the formula, "Now the rest of his acts are
- written in the book," the name of which is given in each instance.
-
- That the whole of both books of Chronicles was written after
- the return from captivity, is apparent from the plain statement of
- the text, following the first eight chapters of genealogies, "So
- all Israel were reckoned by genealogies; and behold, they were
- written in the book of the kings of Israel and Judah, who were
- carried away to Babylon for their transgression" (1 Chron. ix, 1).
- This is true, too, of the Books of Kings, which, like the Books of
- the Chronicles, form only a single book in the Hebrew sacred
- writings.
-
- The Acts of the Kings of Israel (2 Chron. xxxiii, 18) is
- another cited work lost to posterity, as is also the quaint and
- curious volume of forgotten lore entitled "The Sayings of the
- Seers" (2 Chron. xxxiii, 19). Some of the apocryphal material of
- the Book of Esther is said to be found in "The Book of the
- Chronicles of the Kings of Media and Persia" (Esther x, 2), a
- purely pagan source. There is no claim at all that any of these
- many books of "sources" of Hebrew Scripture was inspired or was in
- any sense the "Word of God"; they were commonplace lay chronicles
- and books of history or literature; so that very large and material
- portions of "inspired" Hebrew Scriptures are from entirely
- uninspired and human sources. We shall see and judge of the other
- portions in due order.
-
- DUPLICATIONS OF INSPIRATION
-
- There are, moreover, numerous passages and even whole chapters
- of the Hebrew Bible which are in identical words, showing that the
- one was copied bodily from the other, or from a common older
- source, as is mostly the case, without giving the customary
- editorial credit to the original authors. A god would hardly repeat
- himself thus. Instances of these duplications of text may be
- multiplied; they very materially discount the theory of original
- inspiration of the copyists.
-
- A notable instance, because the duplications immediately
- follow one another in the English versions (but not in the Hebrew
- Scriptures), is the last two verses of the last chapter of 2
- Chronicles (xxxvi, 22-23), which are identical with the first two
- and a half verses of Ezra (i, 1-3). The Hebrew writer puts into the
- mouth of the pagan King Cyrus the avowal, "The Lord God [Heb.,
- Yahreh Elohim] of heaven hath given me all the kingdoms of the
- earth; and he [Yahveh] hath charged me to build him an house at
- Jerusalem" (Ezra i, 2). Cyrus could hardly, as a good Persian
- pagan, have thus discredited his own gods in favor of the tribal
- god of the captive Jews. The latter half of verse 3 affords a
-
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-
- signal instance of conscious mis-translation on the part of the
- clergymen of King James. It is recited that Yahveh "stirred up the
- spirit of Cyrus king of Persia" to build a house for Yahveh in
- Jerusalem; and Cyrus issued a proclamation in writing to the
- captive Hebrews, which is quoted in the English versions thus
- deceptively: "Who is there among you of all his people? his God be
- with him, and let him go up to Jerusalem, which is in Judah, and
- build the house of Yahveh, the God of Israel (he is the God), which
- is in Jerusalem" (Ezra i, 3). Thus the pagan King Cyrus is made to
- appear to make the wonderful public admission (though in
- parentheses) that "Yahveh he is the God." But the original Hebrew
- text reads: "Yahveh, Elohe Israel, he is the God which is in
- Jerusalem," without the parentheses, as may be read in the original
- Hebrew and as is shown in small type in the margin of the Revised
- Version; but the Authorized or King James Version wholly distorts
- the truth.
-
- Several other instances of duplication of long passages or
- chapters may be cited out of many others: the "Song of David" in 2
- Samuel xxii and Psalm xvi"; the battle between the Philistines and
- Israelites, in which Saul was killed, in 1 Samuel xxxi and I
- Chronicles x. The latter account adds two verses (x, 13, 14),
- giving as the reason why Saul was killed in the battle that he went
- and inquired of the witch of En-Dor, "enquired not of Yahveh";
- though it is expressly stated as the reason why Saul had recourse
- to the witch: "When Saul enquired of Yahveh, Yahveh answered him
- not. ... Then said Saul unto his servants, Seek me a woman that
- hath a familiar spirit" (1 Sam. xxviii, 6, 7) -- after Yahveh had
- been enquired of and refused response. The priest applied to was
- evidently not friendly to Saul.
-
- Other whole chapters practically identical are the accounts of
- the building of Solomon's temple, in I Kings v-vii and 2 Chronicles
- ii-iv (though in 1 Kings vii, 15 and 2 Kings xxv, 17, it is stated
- that the two pillars Jachln and Boaz were each 18 cubits high, and
- in 2 Chronicles iii, 15 that they were each 35 cubits high); the
- making of David king and his taking of Sion, part of Jerusalem, in
- 2 Samuel v, 1-10 and 1 Chron. xi, 1-9; the removal of the Ark to
- Jerusalem, in 2 Samuel vi, 1-11 and 1 Chron. xiii; the "finding of
- the law" by Josiah, in 2 Kings xxii-xxiii, and 2 Chronicles xxxiv-
- xxxv. Other striking instances of such duplications of inspiration
- may be found, in 2 Kings xix and Isaiah xxxvii; 1 Samuel xxxi, and
- 1 Chronicles x (see verse 10 of each for a contradiction); 1
- Chronicles xvi, 8-36 and Psalm cv. All these and many other like
- duplications, with their many variations and contradictions,
- clearly show that the writers used older sources, which they copied
- and changed to suit their own notions or purposes, and were not
- worried with "inspiration" at all.
-
- INSPIRATION AND CONTRADICTION
-
- The fact of distinct and contradictory sources worked up into
- a sort of composite hodge-podge with utter lack of literary or
- historical criticism and total disregard of self-contradiction is
- further very evident from the many double and contradictory
- accounts of the same alleged event. Some minor instances of this we
- have just noticed.
-
-
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-
- These contradictions are indeed too many to be even cited here
- -- they infest every book and almost every chapter of Holy Writ
- from Genesis to Revelation, wherever the same event becomes a
- twice-told tale. At this place we shall notice particularly only
- the major early instances: the double and contradictory accounts of
- the creation and of Adam and Eve; of Noah's Flood; or of the Tower
- of Babel, and other lesser legends of Genesis. In other chapters we
- give special attention to the notable contradictions of the Exodus,
- of the ten commandments and the law, of the conquest and possession
- of the promised land; of the prophecies, of the life and career of
- Jesus Christ; together here and there with such others as may be
- incident to the matter at the time in hand. But first we shall note
- a highly important consideration to be borne in mind throughout.
-
- THE LAWS AND TEST OF TRUTH
-
- In connection with the numerous examples of flagrant conflicts
- and contradictions in the inspired revelations of the "Word of God"
- as recorded in the Hebrao-Christian Scriptures, I wish at the
- outset to call particularly to attention and constant remembrance
- two very simple principles of correct judgment, which must govern
- at all times in determining what is truth. One is an eternal
- principle of human thought, the other an ancient and valid maxim of
- the law of evidence.
-
- At the base of all human knowledge and judgment there are
- three simple rules known as the "three primary laws of thought." Of
- these the third in order is this simple proposition, on which all
- valid judgment depends: "Of two contradictories, one must be
- false." Both of the contradictories may be false; but one must be
- false inevitably. If one person says of an object: "It is white,"
- and another says: "It is black," one or the other statement must of
- necessity be false. Of course both may be false, as the object may
- be red or blue or vari-colored; but in any event, one or the other
- statement must be false, for it cannot be both. This is a
- fundamental law of thought or correct judgment, or of truth.
-
- The other principle, somewhat complementary, is a rule of law.
- Every judge declares it to his juries as the law of every jury case
- on trial, for this ancient maxim is the law in every court to-day.
- As a Latin maxim it is: "Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus" -- that
- is, "false in one thing, false in all things." Not necessarily so
- as to the whole; for one part of the testimony of a witness, or of
- anything said or written, may be false or mistaken while the
- remainder may be quite true and correct. The maxim means, as the
- court always explains to the jury, merely that if the jury believes
- that a witness "knowingly or wilfully has testified falsely as to
- any material fact" in his testimony, they are at liberty to
- disbelieve him entirely and to reject all of his testimony as
- false. The reason is evident; for if a person orally or in his
- document or book says one thing which is detected as false;
- everything else which he says or writes is at once thrown into
- doubt, and unless otherwise corroborated, may well be considered to
- be all erroneous or false. Often it is impossible to know with
- certainty what things, if any, may possibly be true; all are
-
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- tainted and discredited by the parts shown to be false. This is
- peculiarly true with respect to the Scriptures, said to be in
- totality inspired and true: if some parts are proved false, the
- whole is discredited.
-
- Upon these two simple and fundamental principles of reason and
- of law I shall proceed to "search the Scriptures, whether these
- things were so," to the end that all may judge of their inspiration
- and their truth.
-
- If we find that the "Word of God" tells the same story in two
- or more totally different and contradictory ways, or that one
- inspired writer is "moved by the Holy Ghost" of Yahveh to tell his
- tale one way, and another inspired writer is moved to tell it in
- another way, totally different and contradictory in the essence of
- the alleged facts of the same event, we are forced to know and
- confess that one or the other record at least is wanting in God's
- inspiration of truth and is inevitably false. This being so, and
- there being no possible way of determining which version is the
- false and which may not be, both must be rejected as equally false,
- or equally uninspired and incredible; and in either event, the
- theory of inerrant inspiration and of the revealed truth of the
- "Word of God" is irreparably destroyed.
-
- FATAL CONTRADICTIONS OF REVELATION
-
- The Creation
-
- The first chapter of Genesis declares by inspiration that
- creation took place in six days, in this exact order: 1. on the
- first day light and day and night were created, (though the sun and
- moon were not created until the fourth day); 2. on the second day,
- the "firmament of heaven," a solid something "dividing the waters
- which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the
- firmament"; 3. on the third day, the dry land, the seas, and all
- manner of plants and trees; 4. on the fourth day, the sun, moon,
- and stars; 5. on the fifth day, every living creature that moveth
- in the waters, and every winged fowl; 6. on the sixth day, all
- manner of beasts, and cattle, and creeping thing: then, afterwards,
- on the same sixth day, "God [Elohim] created man in his own image;
- male and female created he them." And then (i, 28), "God [Elohim]
- blessed therit, and God [Elohim] said unto them, Be fruitful, and
- multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it."' And, running
- over into the second chapter, this "Elohim" account concludes:
- "Thus the heavens and the earth were finished; and all the host of
- them. And on the seventh day God [Elohim] ended his work which he
- had made; and he rested on the seventh day" (ii, 1, 2). Thus all
- creation, including man and woman, was fully made and finished in
- six days: no mention is made of any Adam and Eve, or Eden. This is
- the Elohist version of the creation.
-
- Then, beginning with the fourth verse of the second chapter,
- a totally different "Yahveh" account of creation of the world and
- of man, without woman, all in one day, is related: "These are the
- generations of the heavens and of the earth. when they were
- created, in the day that the Lord God [Yahveh Elohim; i.e., Yahveh
- of the Gods] made the earth and the heavens." Then follows this
-
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- description of the processes after the earth was thus already
- created: "And no plant or herb of the field was yet in the earth;
- ... and there was not a man to till the ground. ... And Yahveh
- Elohim formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his
- nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul. And
- Yahveh Elohim planted a garden eastward in Eden; and there be put
- the man whom he had formed." And he planted all kinds of trees in
- the garden, and put the man into the garden to till it (ii, 15).
- Then Yahveh Elohim said: "It is not good that the man should be
- alone; I will make an help meet [i.e., fit, appropriate] for him"
- (ii, 18). Then "out of the ground Yahveh Elohim formed every beast
- of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto the
- man" (ii, 19).
-
- Before proceeding further, to the creation of the woman, we
- will note the glaring contradictions already apparent in these two
- accounts. First we see a creation of everything by Elohim (Gods) in
- six days; then a creation of the heaven and naked earth by Yahveh
- in one day. In the first or Elohim account, on the third day, after
- creating the dry land, Elohim (Gods) commanded, (Gen. i, 12) "and
- the earth brought forth grass, herb yielding seed, and tree bearing
- fruit," etc. But in the second or "Yahveh" account, after the earth
- was all rough-finished and read , on the one day, it is declared
- (Gen. ii, 5): "no plant of the field was yet in the earth, and no
- herb of the field had yet sprung up." Then immediately follows the
- declaration (ii, 7) "And Yahveh Elohim [Eng., Lord God] formed man
- out of the dust of the ground"; then planted the Garden of Eden,
- and all its trees, and put the man into the garden. Nothing could
- be more contradictory than this.
-
- There is another very notable contradiction: in Gen. i, 20,
- 21, on the fifth day, the "living creatures" (Heb., nephesh
- hayyah), and the "winged fowl" were brought forth out of the waters
- -- "Let the waters bring forth abundantly the living creatures
- Inephesh hayyah] and the winged fowl"; and this, of course, before
- the creation of man and woman on the sixth day; whereas, in ii, 19,
- after the creation of the man, and when Yahveh was trying to find
- a "help-mate" for him among the animals not yet created, "out of
- the ground Yahveh formed every beast of the field and every fowl of
- the air, and brought them to the man."
-
- Another notorious contradiction: in the Elohim version (i, 24,
- 25), Elohim made every beast, and animal, and cattle on the sixth
- day, before man was created. In the Yahveh account, as we have just
- seen, after the man was created and put into the Garden of Eden,
- Yahveh "out of the ground formed every beast of the field, and
- brought them to the man" (ii, 19).
-
- Most notorious of these creation contradictions is that of the
- creation of the woman. In the Elohim account, as we have seen, on
- the sixth day -- after all else was created and done "Elohim
- created man in his own image, male and female created he them
- [i.e., man and woman]; and Elohim said, Be fruitful, and multiply,
- and replenish the earth" (i, 27, 28): thus both man and woman were
- created on the sixth day, and were sexually equipped and commanded
- to multiply and reproduce. But in the second or Yahveh account we
- have man created all alone, and put into the Garden of Eden alone.
-
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-
- Afterwards Yahveh considers: "It is not well for the man to be
- alone; I will make an help meet for him" (ii, 18). Then we have the
- very remarkable, not to say ridiculous, episode of Yahveh making
- all kinds of animals and parading them before the man for him to
- choose a female animal help-mate or wife, but none was "meet," or
- fit, or satisfactory for him -- "but for the man there was not
- found an help meet [fit] for him" (ii, 20). Then follows the rib
- story, of woman being made from the rib of the man and brought to
- him to be his wife (ii, 22).
-
- A peculiar contradiction resulting from these divergent forms
- of myth relates to the modus operandi of the creation. According to
- the Elohist, it was all the work of divine flat; the Gods sat "upon
- the circle of the earth" (Isa. xl, 22), "and Elohim said: Let there
- be ... and the earth brought forth ... and it was so" (Gen. i, 2,
- 6, 9, 11, 14, 20, 24, 26); "he spake, and they were made" -- were
- brought into existence by his word. But the Yahvist represents the
- superman God as coming down bodily to earth and as busily engaged
- molding the dust of the ground into man and animals and fowls (but
- not fishes), planting a garden and trees, talking to the man, and
- then artistically carving the rib into Eve; all creation thus being
- "the work of his fingers" (Psalm viii, 3).
-
- These are two totally contradictory stories of the creation of
- the earth, and of living creatures. Hence one is false; the notion
- of the inspired truth of God in one or the other of them must be
- abandoned as impossible. Of course we know that both are mere
- fables, equally false, and wholly disproved by every fact of the
- sciences of geology and anthropology and astronomy, which prove
- that the earth and sun and stars were countless ages in formation,
- and that human and animal life has existed for perhaps hundreds of
- thousands of years, far beyond the lately discovered Neanderthal
- and Cro-Magnon men, who outdated the biblical Adam by tens of
- thousands of years. But we will stick to our Bible "facts," and not
- appeal to the discoveries of science, nor to the common elements of
- modern human knowledge, to gainsay divine inspiration of the Bible.
- The book and its truth must be tried by itself. It is also evident
- on the face of these two conflicting accounts that two different
- writers, "E" and "J," wrote them, and not Moses; and also that the
- third man, "P," who patched them together, did it in a very
- apprentice-like manner, and without any inspiration or critical
- knack at all.
-
- The Garden of Eden had some topographic and hydrographic
- features truly notable. Of so limited an area that a single man was
- sufficient "to dress and to keep it" (Gen. ii, 15), it yet
- contained every created species of fauna and of flora; and all this
- exuberant growth without water, "for Yahveh Elohim had not caused
- it to rain upon the earth; but there went up a mist from the earth,
- and watered the whole face of the ground" (Gen. ii, 5, 6). So
- wondrously copious was this mist that its superfluity created a
- vast prehistoric river, which "went out of Eden to water the
- garden" -- and so it would seem that the garden was somewhere
- outside of Eden. So vast was this Father of Waters that, after
- watering the garden, "from thence it was parted, and came into four
- heads" (ii, 10). One branch, the Pison, "compasseth the whole land
- of Havilah" (ii, 11), wherever that was; the second, Gihon,
-
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- compasseth the whole land of Ethiopia" (ii, 13), which we know to
- be a vast country in equatorial Africa; the third river was the
- Hiddekel, "which goeth towards the east of Assyria" (ii, 14), and
- is supposed to be the Tigris, which however is west of Assyria;
- "and the fourth river is Euphrates" (ii, 14). These last two rivers
- are thousands of miles from Ethiopia, but all are a notable tribute
- to the copiousness of that watery mist of Eden.
-
- THE "DAYS" AND MATTER OF CREATION
-
- A word of comment may be made in passing on a couple of points
- which have given occasion to much concern and controversy, by the
- attempt to "accommodate" revelation to the everyday facts of
- science. It is argued that the "days" of creation may be used
- allegorically or figuratively; that, as "a day with Yahveh is as a
- thousand years," these Genesis "days" may well denote the
- indefinite veons assigned by science to the vast work of universal
- creation. (Cath.. Encyc., Vol. IV, p. 473, art. Creation.) But that
- the old Hebrew writers of these primitive myths had no such
- figurative notions, and my yom (day) meant exactly the solar day of
- twenty-four hours, is very clear: six times, at the close of each
- day's recorded work, it is declared, "and the evening and the
- morning were the first day," or the second, or third, day, etc.
-
- The Hebrew word yom (day) is used in the Old Testament 1153
- times; its plural (yammim, days) 811 times. Always the word means
- simply the twenty-four-hour solar day; always -- can we believe it?
- -- except in these "six days" of Genesis i, where, instead of
- meaning "day," as plainly written, it is piously expounded as
- meaning "countless aeons of time" so as to make Genesis look like
- a work of modern science! Quaint double usage is jumbled into a
- single verse: "And Elohim called the light yom [day], and the
- darkness he called layil [night]. And the evening and the morning
- were the first yom [day]" (Gen. i. 5)! Here the light part of the
- day is the hours between dawn and dark; the darkness is only the
- hours between sundown and the next dawn; but together they form the
- "first yom" -- countless aeons of the first process of creation!
- Verily, the theologians are funny-mentalists!
-
- And if each of the first six "days" are not days but aeons of
- time, how about the seventh day? The gods (Elohim) "rested [Heb.,
- shabath, the sabbath] on the seventh day" (Gen. ii, 2). If each of
- the other six days was an unreckonable won, the seventh day (aeon)
- of rest must, for proper recuperation from such vast and prolonged
- labors, be of more or less like ample duration; so that, as only
- six thousand brief years (not even a second of an aeon) have
- elapsed since all the work of creation was finished, the gods must
- be resting even yet -- as might be suspected from some evidence in
- their creation.
-
- Why "evening and morning" marking the "day" instead of morning
- and evening, as is more natural and of all but universal usage in
- speech? Simply because the Jewish day began, and yet begins, in the
- evening, at sunset, and their "day" is from one sunset to another;
- so in writing these myths it was conformable with Jewish customs to
- put the evening as the beginning of the day. Moreover, all the
- eight works of creation were stuffed into six days, so that Yahveh
-
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- could rest on the seventh day, the Jewish sabbath, or day of rest.
- In order to accomplish this, and Yahveh thus be made to appear to
- institute and sanction the sabbath, two distinct works, the
- creation of the seas and the dry land and the creation of trees and
- plants, are assigned to one, the third day; and two other works,
- the creation of the animals, and the creation of man and woman, are
- crowded into another day, the sixth -- eight distinct works in all.
-
- This obvious conclusion it is pleasing to find confirmed by
- the Catholic Encyclopedia -- which makes many admissions without
- seeming to see their logically fatal effects: "The third day and
- the sixth day are distinguished by a double work, while each of the
- other four days has only one production assigned to it"; and it
- adds, curiously for it, but acutely and correctly: "Hence the
- suspicion arises that the division of God's creative acts into six
- days is really a schemation employed to inculcate the importance
- and the sanctity of the seventh day" (Vol. VII, p. 311)! From this
- it is palpably evident that the seven days of the ordinary calendar
- week were in the inspired mind of the old Jewish Chronicler who
- worked up the Hebrew creation myth from the Babylonian Epic of
- Creation.
-
- All these material works of creation, the earth and the seas,
- the sun, moon, and stars, were not created by the fiat or by the
- architectural skill of Yahveh out of nothing, for "ex nihil nihil
- fit." From before the "beginning" of creation, or its constructive
- works, the material earth itself existed, but simply was "without
- form and void," or, in the Hebrew words, thohu (desolation) and
- bohu (waste) (Gen. i, 2). And the material waters existed, for "the
- spirit [wind] of Elohim moved upon the face of the waters" (i, 2);
- the waters not being collected together into seas until the third
- day (i, 9, 10). It is curious how the otherwise intelligent human
- mind can so struggle through centuries to "accommodate" sense and
- science to "what are patently early myths and naive, childish,
- primitive folklore," as Charles P. Fagnani, D.D., frankly calls
- these tales of Genesis.
-
- SOME SIGNIFICANT MISTRANSLATIONS
-
- Before considering various contradictions in the Book of
- Genesis and other sections of the sacred history, it is pertinent
- to call particular attention to some very peculiar mistranslations,
- rather than errors of translation, which with painful frequency
- occur in exactly those passages where they are most significant. As
- the translators were theologians, as well as indifferent Hebrew
- scholars, their scholarship may subconsciously have been tinged
- with theological preconceptions in choosing precisely the word in
- English to meet the needs of theological translation from the
- uncritical Hebrew. Mistranslation began early and is persistent.
-
- It is some very simple instances which I shall give, such as
- are apparent to one of very limited knowledge of the Hebrew text of
- the sacred books. Any one knowing merely the Hebrew alphabet and
- comparing a few Hebrew words with the words used by the theologians
- to translate them possesses the whole secret.
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
- "ADAM" MEANS ONLY "MAN"
-
- The word "Adam" as the proper name of a man is a deception of
- the theologian translators of Genesis. The original Hebrew text,
- which a schoolboy can follow in the excellent beginner's text-book,
- Magil's Linear School Bible, [Joseph Magil, Linear School Bible
- (Philadelphia: Joseph Magil Publishing Co. 1915).] says, not "Adam"
- as a proper name, but "ba-adam," the-man, a common noun. (There are
- no capital letters in Hebrew.) We will notice some instances of
- this.
-
- In Genesis i, 26 occurs the first mention of man, the first
- use of adam: "And Elohim [gods] said, Let us make man [adam] in our
- image"; "and Elohim created ha-adam [the-man] in his image" (i, 27)
- -- male and female both together.
-
- In chapter ii, it is said in the translations that Yahveh
- formed the beasts of the field out of the ground (adamah), "and
- brought them unto Adam" (ii, 19); "and Adam gave names. ... but for
- Adam there was not found an help meet for him" (ii, 20). But the
- Hebrew text mentions no "Adam"; it simply reads that Yahveh
- brought. the animals "unto ha-adam (the-man), and "ha-adam [the-
- man] gave names," etc.
-
- In Genesis ii, 7, "Yahveh formed ha-adam [the-man] out of the
- dust of ha-adamah [the ground]." And so throughout the Hebrew Bible
- "man" is "adam" (not "Adam"), and "ground" is "adamah." Man is
- called in Hebrew adam, because he was formed out of adamah, the
- ground: just as in Latin man is called homo because formed from
- humus, the ground, -- "homo ex humo," in the epigram of Lactantius.
- It may be instanced that the prophet Ezekiel many times represents
- Yahveh as addressing him as "ben adam" (son of man) -- the
- identical term Jesus so often uses of himself long after.
-
- As the whole of the "sacred science of Christianity" is built
- and dependent upon the factual existence of a "first man" named
- Adam, the now attenuated ghost of this mythical Adam must be laid
- beyond the peradventure of resurrection. The texts of the Hebrew
- books will themselves effectively lay the ghost.
-
- In Hebrew adam is a common noun, used to signify man or
- mankind in a generic sense; the noun for an individual man is ish,
- and so the sacred texts make manifest. The distinction is exactly
- that of Mann and Mensch in the Teutonic languages. A few out of
- thousands of instances must suffice.
-
- Chapters i and ii of Genesis afford a number of these
- instances, as above seen, but these may be repeated along with the
- others, to get a fair view. "Elohim said: 'Let us make adam'" (i,
- 26), and "Elohim created ha-adam," male and female (i, 27). In
- chapter ii: "and there was not adam to till the adamah" (ii, 5);
- "and Yahveh-Elohim formed ha-adam [the-man]. ... and ha-adam became
- a living soul" (ii, 3); and Yahveh-Blohlm placed in the garden "ha-
- adam whom he had formed" (ii, 8); and "Yahveh-Elohim took ha-adam"
- (ii, 15), and commanded ha-adam" (ii, 16); and said "it is not good
- for ha-adam to be alone" (ii, 18); and made the animals and
- "brought them to ha-adam, ... and whatsoever ha-adam should call
-
-
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-
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-
- them" (ii, 19); and "ha-adam called names; but for ha-adam he did
- not find an help meet" (ii, 20); and "Yahveh-Elohim caused a deep
- sleep upon ha-adam" (ii, 21), and from his rib made the woman, and
- he "brought her unto ha-adam" (ii, 22); and "ha-adam said, ... and
- called her woman [Heb., isshah], because out of man [Heb., ish] was
- she taken" (ii, 23); 'therefore shall a man [ish] leave his father.
- ... and cleave unto his isshah (ii, 24); "and they were both naked,
- ha-adam and his isshah" (ii, 25).
-
- Chapter iii: "And Yahveh-Elohim called unto ha-adam (iii, 9);
- "and ha-adam said, ha-isshah whom thou gavest me" (iii, 12); and
- Yahveh-Elohim said to ha-isshah, thy longing shall be unto thy ish"
- (iii, 16); "and to adam he said" (iii, 17); and "ha-adam called the
- name of his isshah Havvah [life], because she was the mother of all
- living" (iii, 20); and "Yahveh-Elohim made for adam and for his
- isshah coats of skins" (iii, 21). And Yahveh-Elohim said, "Because
- ha-adam has become like one of us" (iii, 22); therefore "he drove
- out ha-adam (iii, 24).
-
- Thereupon "ha-adam knew his wife Havvah, and she conceived,
- and bore Kain; and she said: I-have-acquired [Heb., kanithi] a man
- [ish] with Yahveh" (Gen. iv, 1). Lamech said to his wives, "I have
- killed a man [ish]" (iv, 23). Chapter v is "the book of the
- generations of adam: in the clay that Elohim created adam; male and
- female created he them, and blessed them, and called their name
- adam" (v, 1, 2); "and adam lived ... and the days of adam were and
- all the days of adam were" (v, 3-5). In these latter verses adam is
- used indifferently without the article, and the translators write
- it Adam, as a proper name; but all the previous and subsequent
- usage shows it is the same common noun for mankind. In the next
- chapter vi, "ha-adam began to multiply upon the face of ha-adamah"
- (vi, 1); and "the sons of the gods saw the daughters of ha-adam
- (vi, 2); "And Yahveh said, My spirit shall not strive with adam
- ["Adam" was dead] forever" (vi, 3). And Yahveh "saw the wickedness
- of ha-adam" (vi, 5), and he repented that he "had made ha-adam"
- (vi, 6); "And Yahveh said, I will destroy ha-adam, both adam and
- beast" (vi, 7); "and all adam perished" (vii, 21). And Noah was "a
- just man [ish]" (vi, 9). Yahveh said to Noah: "And surely your
- blood will I require of your lives; at the hand of ha-adam; at the
- hand of ish will I require the soul of ha-adam" (Gen. ix, 5). The
- "Egyptians are men [adam] and not God [El]" (Isa. xxxi 3); "God
- [El] is not a man [ish] ... neither the son of man [ben adam]"
- (Num. xxiii, 19); prophets are ish ha-elohim (men of the gods)
- (Judges xiii, 6); "put not your trust in the son of man [ben adam]"
- (Psalm cxlvi, 3).
-
- All through the Hebrew Bible adam, ha-adam, is for generic
- man; ish for individual man; Adam never is a proper name, except in
- the post-exilic genealogies of Chronicles.
-
- "LIVING CREATURES" AND "LIVING SOUL"
-
- Another signal instance of the practice of false translation
- at critical points for dogma occurs in these first two chapters of
- Genesis. The Hebrew word for soul is nephesh always, and it
- properly means nothing else but soul wherever used. Ha-adam called
- his wife's name Havvah [life], "for she was the mother of all
- living."
-
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-
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-
- In chapter one we are given the account of how the gods
- (Elohim), on the fifth day, created "the moving creature that hath
- life" and "every living creature," out of the waters (i, 20, 21);
- and on the sixth day "the living creature" out of the ground (i,
- 24); and he gave to ha-adam dominion over "everything ... wherein
- there is life" (i, 30). All these renditions are untrue: in each of
- the four instances the Hebrew is plainly nephesh hayyah -- "living
- soul" -- as is stuck into the margin of the King James Version. The
- significance of this appears below.
-
- In chapter two Yahveh-Elobim (ii, 7) formed ha-adam out of the
- dust of ha-adamah, and -- in wonderful contrast to these lowly
- "living creatures" (nephesh hayyah) -- "breathed into his nostrils
- mishmath hayyim [living breaths], and ha-adam became a living soul
- [nephesh hayyah]." So here we have the humble "living creatures"
- (nephesh hayyah) of the dumb animal world contrasted with
- "Creation's micro-cosmical masterpiece, Man," endowed out of hand
- by Yahveh-Elohim with a "living soul" (but the self-same nephesh
- hayyah), and thus the crowning work of creation, but "little lower
- than the angels" (Psalm viii, 5)! And then immediately afterwards
- Yahveh-Elohim, wanting to provide an "help meet" for his wonderful
- "living soul," out of ha-adamah formed and brought to ha-adam
- "every living creature" (again nephesh hayyah), for the-man to
- choose a she-animal for his wedded wife! But the "living soul" man
- refused to be satisfied with a female "living soul" animal wife; so
- Yahveh resorted to the rib expedient to provide a human "help meet"
- for his masterpiece! So reads in Hebrew the truth-inspired
- revelation of Yahveh, spoken by "holy men of old as they were moved
- by the Holy Ghost"! And thus we see that all "living creatures,"
- animals, fishes, fowls, had or were nephesh hayyah (living soul,
- exactly like the-man; or the-man, with Yahveh's breath of life in
- his nostrils, became a simple "living creature" (nephesh hayyah)
- like all the other animals.
-
- It is perfectly evident that the nephesh hayyah man was
- regarded by the inspired writer as no higher in the order of
- creation than any other nephesh hayyah or animal "living creature."
- For he represents Yahveh as creating all the beasts of the field
- for the express purpose of providing the-man with an "help meet"
- from among them, a female animal consort by which to fulfill the
- divine command, "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the
- earth"!
-
- THE "FLOOD" CONTRADICTIONS
-
- To return to the contradictions of inspiration. The history of
- Noah's Flood shows the same conflicting compound of Elohist and
- Jahvist stories. Only one will here be noted. In Genesis vi Elohim
- commanded Noah, and told him, "of every living thing of all flesh
- two of every sort shalt thou bring into the ark, to keep them alive
- with thee; and they shall be male and female" (vi, 19); and in vi,
- 22, the Elohist assures us: "Thus did Noah, according to all that
- Elohim commanded him, so did he"; that is, he took in two of every
- kind into the ark.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- But in chapter vii it is Yahveh who speaks, and it is
- recorded: "And Yahveh said unto Noah, Of every clean beast thou
- shalt take to thee; and they shall be male and female" (vi, 19) and
- in vi, 22, the Clean by two, the male and his female" (vii, 2, 3)
- and in vii, 5 the Jahvist states: "And Noah did according to all
- that Yahveh commanded him" -- that is, Noah took into the ark seven
- (or maybe fourteen, seven male and seven female) of all kinds of
- clean beasts and of fowls, and two of all the others. But this
- enumeration is again contradicted by the inspired Elohist: "Of
- clean beasts, and of beasts that are not clean, and of fowls, and
- of everything that creepeth upon the earth, there went in by two
- and two unto Noah into the ark, the male and his female" (Gen. vii,
- 8, 9, 15); thus is restored our faith in the scriptural accuracy of
- the animal rosters of the toy Noah's arks of our trustful
- childhood.
-
- It is curious to note that the distinction between "clean" and
- "unclean" animals was never heard of until the Levitical law of
- kosher was prescribed by Moses, as is alleged, about a thousand
- years later (Lev. xi.). How did Noah know the difference?
-
- A remarkable circumstance, illustrating the great piety, if
- reckless improvidence, of Noah, may be noted in this connection.
- The very first thing Noah did after he and his family and his
- animals landed in the neck-deep mud and slime of the year's Deluge
- was to build an altar and offer up a thanksgiving sacrifice to the
- loving God who in his providence had destroyed all his creation
- except the little Noah family menage. It is recorded that Noah took
- one each "of every clean beast and of every clean fowl, and offered
- burnt offerings on the altar" to Yahveh there in the mud (Gen.
- viii, 20). We have noted that it is curious how Noah knew anything
- about kosher animals, first defined by Moses. But the prime wonder
- is, as there were only two of an these different kinds of animals
- and fowls ("the male and his female") in the ark, and Noah killed
- and burnt in sacrifice one (whether male or female) of each kind,
- how the species was ever afterwards replenished on the earth.
- Revelation -- as so often at crucial points -- is silent on this
- wonder.
-
- A mystery of the ages in connection with the Flood is how
- Noah's venerable grandfather Methuselah survived the universal
- cataclysm which destroyed all life except the Noah menage and
- menagerie in the ark. Methuselah did not die until a year or more
- after the Flood -- fourteen years after according to the
- Septuagint. It is recorded that Methuselah was 187 years old when
- his son Lamech was born (Gen. v, 25), and he lived for 787 years
- afterwards, dying at the ripe age of 969 years (v, 26, 27). Lamech
- was 182 years old when his son Noah was born (v, 28, 29). When the
- Flood began, Noah was in his six hundredth year, or, to be exact,
- he was 599 years, one month, and seventeen days old (vii, 11); and
- Noah lived for 350 years after the Flood, and was 950 years old
- when he died (ix, 28, 29). Methuselah was alive when the Flood
- began and when it ended, if the Bible record is true: 1. From the
- birth of Lamech to the beginning of the Flood was (182 plus 599)
- 781 years; and from the birth of Lamech to the end of the Flood was
- 782 years. If Methuselah lived after he begat Lamech 782 years he
- survived the Flood. Or, again:
-
-
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-
- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- 2. From the birth of Methuselah to the beginning of the Flood
- was (187 plus 182 plus 599 years) 968 years; the Flood ended a year
- later, when Methuselah was 969, and he died at that good old age.
- Or again: 3. From the birth of Methuselah to the death of Noah was
- (187 plus 182 plus 950 years) 1319 years. As Noah died 350 years
- after the Flood, from the birth of Methuselah to the end of the
- Flood was (1319 minus 350 years) 969 years, the age of Methuselah
- at his death, after the Flood.
-
- As Noah shut his own aged grandfather out of the ark, it is a
- holy wonder where and how Methuselah spent that watery last year of
- his advanced old age.
-
- THE TOWER OF BAB-EL
-
- The historical sketch given in Genesis x-xi of the gathering
- of the nations in the Plain of Shinar, their ambitious project of
- building Bab-el -- "a Gate of God" -- to reach to heaven (xi, 4),
- and the consequent "confusion of tongues" by Yahveh, is quite as
- confusing as the resulting babel of their strange new tongues.
-
- Vainly, it may be remarked, may one seek to understand why a
- fatherly God, who would not let a sparrow fall to the ground
- without pitying concern, should have wrought this grievous
- affliction upon the new population of his earth just at the time
- when they would seem to need all the aid and comfort they could
- render each other in order to repair the devastating damage wrought
- by the yet recent Flood, only about 144 years before. But
- speculation aside, we will carefully note the recorded facts of
- sacred history.
-
- Chapter x tells of the families and descendants of the triplet
- sons of Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japhet; and how their prolific
- offspring, in only about 144 years since the Flood, had grown into
- many different nations; and how these nations, of which about a
- score are particularly named, with their great cities, were
- "divided in their lands, every one after his tongue" -- which would
- imply that each nation already spoke a different language; that
- there were, indeed, as many tongues as there were nations sprung so
- suddenly from the three sons of Noah.
-
- This inference that there were already as many different
- languages as there were nations would seem to be strengthened by
- the repetition of that positive statement three times, after the
- account of the off-spring of each of the three sons of Noah. For
- the sacred record, after each catalogue of off-sprung nations,
- asserts that thus the several nations "were divided in their lands;
- every one after his tongue, after their families, in their nations"
- (Gen. X, 5, 20, 31). And for a final assurance it is in the closing
- verse averred: "These are the families of the sons of Noah, after
- their generations, in their nations; and by these were the nations
- divided in the earth after the Flood" (x, 32). And all these
- nations were descended from three sons of Noah, in only 144 years;
- though it took the seed of Abraham 215 years to attain to merely
- seventy souls.
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
- And in the same inspired chapter x we read of the founding by
- these numerous nations of extensive kingdoms and of their building
- of great cities -- including Babel itself (x, 10), and Nineveh (x,
- 11), and a dozen others named in the inspired record. And it is
- recorded that these several large kingdoms extended from Assyria on
- the east unto Gaza, by the Mediterranean Sea, on the west (x, 19),
- many hundreds of miles; and all these wonders of nations and
- kingdoms and cities in 144 years of Bible time since the Flood.
- But, then, when one thinks of what the Yankees did in France in
- just one year, faith is encouraged.
-
- Had one read this in some less inspired and sacred chronicle,
- some more human record, less would be the surprise when one reads
- the first verse of the very next chapter: "And the whole earth was
- of one language, and of one speech." Next follows a truly
- remarkable migration; all the people of the earth, all these widely
- scattered nations in their great kingdoms and cities scattered from
- Euphrates to the sea, suddenly abandoned home, and city, and
- kingdom, and strangely journeyed from the east (though many must
- have come from the west, from towards the sea) and "they found a
- plain in the land of Shinah; and they dwelt there" (xi, 2) camped
- in the open plain, without house or home. "And they said one to
- another, Go to, let us make brick; ... and let us build us a city,
- and a tower, whose top may reach unto Heaven; lest we be scattered
- abroad upon the face of the whole earth" (xi, 3, 4). We need not
- stop to wonder why these nations had left their kingdoms and cities
- to come out in the plain and build one city for them all; nor how,
- speaking each a different language, they could talk understandingly
- together to concert such ambitious projectro.
-
- Yahveh heard of this project, and, with natural curiosity, he
- "came down to see the city and the tower" (xi, 5) which were
- abuilding. And Yahveh said, to someone not named: "Behold, the
- people is one, and they have all one language" (instead of the many
- nations and many tongues of the immediately preceding records). "Go
- to, let us [who besides Yahveh is not specified] go down [though he
- was already come down], and there confound their language, that
- they may not understand one another's speech" (xi, 6, 7). And this
- Yahveh is said to have straightway done, and he "scattered them
- abroad from thence upon the face of all the earth; and they left
- off to build the city" (xi, 8); and it is further recorded:
- "Therefore is the name of it called Babel: because Yahveh did there
- confound the language of all the earth" (xi, 9).
-
- It may be wondered which of them called it Bab-el, for all
- their languages now at least were different, and what would be
- Babel in one of them might be a foreign word meaning the Bowery, or
- Hoboken, or Hell in some of the others. And it is a little curious
- that Bab-el should mean "confusion" (Heb., balel); for already
- there was a city, built by Nimrod, the mighty hunter, named Bab-el
- (Gen. x, 10); and we know that in Assyrian, Hebrew, Arabian, and
- other Semitic languages, Bab-el means "Gate of God," just as
- Beth-el is "house of God"; and Bab-el is exactly the native and
- Hebrew Bible name of what we know as Babylon, the city or Gateway
- of the God El, or Bel, certainly there an entirely pagan deity. But
- as Moses -- if he lived at all -- was "an Egyptian man," and
- probably spoke only the Egyptian language, his mistaking the
-
-
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-
- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- philology of Hebrew words may be excused. What great sin all these
- new inhabitants of the earth had been guilty of, to bring on them
- this new great vengeance, is not revealed: mayhap by trying to
- build a tower to reach to heaven, they provoked a "jealous God" by
- an effort to reach him in such a direct and unorthodox fashion,
- though as yet the world had not received the revelation of the only
- possible route to enter heaven, belief.
-
- JACOB'S LADDER, AND BETH-EL
-
- Notably higher than the abortive Tower of Babel is the justly
- famous ladder of Jacob, which reached from earth actually into
- heaven, so that Yahveh and the winged angels passed back and forth
- upon it. True, Jacob dreamed all this; but then, "Life is a Dream,"
- and are not many of the most historical facts of the Bible admitted
- therein to be dreams? Such was Abram's, of the promise and the
- covenant; and Joseph's, he of the coat of many colors, about the
- sun and the moon and the eleven stars; such also was that of the
- other Joseph, the carpenter, about the paternity of the Virgin-born
- Child of Yahveh. And Jacob's wonderful ladder was at least
- 5,883,928,333,800,000,000,000 miles in length to reach from earth
- to heaven, as is elsewhere shown.
-
- Shortly after Jacob had hoaxed the blessing and the
- inheritance from his blind father, Isaac, thus robbing his elder
- brother Esau of his dearest rights, Jacob started off to look for
- a wife, and was on his way toward Haran. Being overtaken by night,
- be slept on the wayside, a stone for his pillow. In his dream be
- saw the ladder which reached to heaven, with the angels; and Yahveh
- appeared to him and renewed the Promise. On awakening, Jacob
- recalled his dream, set up the stone pillow for a pillar
- (mazzebah), "and he called the name of that place Beth-el; but the
- name of that City was called Luz at first" (Gen. xxviii, 10-19).
-
- The event is quite otherwise related in Genesis xxxii. Here
- Jacob had just tricked his heathen father-in-law Laban by the
- famous device whereby all the cattle were born "ringstreaked,
- speckled, and grizzled" (Gen. xxxi, 8-12); had stolen away in the
- night with his wives and the cattle; and after sundry incidents, on
- his way somewhere (xxxii, 1), he passed over the ford Jabbok
- (xxxii, 22). Here stopping alone over-night, "there wrestled a man
- with him until the breaking of the day" (xxxii, 21,); and the
- stranger, who appeared to be Yahveh, changed Jacob's name to
- Israel, which means Soldier of God -- though Jacob was fighting
- with God. All this happened by the ford Jabbok, which name Jacob
- changed to Peni-el (Gen. xxxii, 24-30). It is a bit mystifying to
- read a little later that Yahveh met Jacob somewhere near a place
- called Padan-Aram, and without any fight at all, and without any
- apparent reason at all, changed Jacob's name to Israel; and Jacob,
- on his part, set up a stone which he had not slept on, for his
- wives were along and he slept with them, and called the name of the
- place Beth-el (Gen. xxxv, 9-15). But the name of the place was
- already Beth-el, for Yahveh had said to Jacob: "Arise, go up to
- Beth-el, and dwell there" (xxxv, 1); "so Jacob came to Luz, that is
- Beth-el" (xxxv, 6); and such had been the name of the place when
- Abraham camped there two hundred years before (Gen. xii, 8, xiii,
- 3).
-
-
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-
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-
- JACOB'S BARGAINING VOW
-
- A very instructive feature of this biography of Jacob is the
- curious instance of his well-known commercial instinct, here
- recorded in connection with the last mentioned bit of sacred
- history. For Jacob vowed a vow to Yahveh (which in the Bible is a
- very solemn thing, but which was coupled here with a bargaining
- condition precedent), saying: "If Elohim will be with me, and will
- keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and
- raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father's house, then
- shall Yahveh be my God" (Gen. xxviii, 20, 21). This seems to prove
- that Jacob had not yet adopted Yahveh. And Jacob makes a peculiar
- offer of bribe to Yahveh, saying: "And of all that thou shalt give
- me I will surely give the tenth unto thee" (xxviii, 22), -- which
- no one can deny was even to a God a liberal commission in return
- for wealth bestowed.
-
- In this proposal Jacob anticipated both the rule and the
- reason of the law, laid down some five hundred or a thousand years
- later: "Remember Yahveh thy God, for it is he that giveth thee
- power to get wealth" (Deut. viii, 18) -- a reason often suggested
- for loving Yahveh. By some it has been thought that this exemplary
- bargain of Jacob served later as the approved precedent for the
- priestly system of tithes decreed by Moses (Lev. xxvii, 30-32), and
- everywhere and always since commanded and cajoled from all the
- faithful. In any event, the constant ecclesiastical refrain has
- ever been the same as that represented in Scripture as of the
- daughters of the horse-leech: "Give, give" (Prov. xxx, 15); and the
- preferred measure has been that of Jacob's offered bribe to Yahveh
- of the tithe.
-
- SUNDRY OTHER CONTRADICTIONS
-
- In addition to these larger contradictions pointed out in a
- small part of Scripture and many others which remain yet to
- examine, there are numbers of minor flat contradictions, of which
- a few may be cited.
-
- It is recorded, "And Yahveh spake unto Moses face to face, as
- a man speaketh unto his friend" (Ex. xxxiii, 11); but just below,
- where Moses is reported as asking Yahveh to show himself to him,
- Yahveh replied: "Thou canst not see my face; for there shall no man
- see me and live" (xxxiii, 20). But Yahveh evidently desired to be
- reasonably accommodating; so he had Moses hide in a cleft of the
- rock, and Yahveh covered Moses with his hand; then Yahveh "passed
- by," and took away his hand, and let Moses see his "back parts,"
- for, he said, "my face shall not be seen" (xxxiii, 22, 23). How
- Yahveh could "pass by" and still keep Moses covered with his band
- is not explained; but it seems to confirm Yahveh's repeated
- description of himself as being of "a mighty hand and an
- outstretched arm."
-
- There must be some mistake, however, in regard to the fatal
- consequences of seeing Yahveh. Holy Writ is full of recorded
- instances of "seeing Yahveh face to face." Yahveh celebrated the
- making of the covenant by a banquet on Sinai to Moses, Aaron,
-
-
-
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-
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-
- Nadab, Abihu, and the seventy elders, "and they saw the Gods [ha-
- Elohim] of Israel," and "they beheld the Gods, and did eat and
- drink" (Ex. xxiv, 9-11).
-
- When Joshua crossed over Jordan between the parted waters,
- whether with the original hosts of Yahveh or with their offspring,
- "an increase of sinful men" (Num. xxxii, 14), Yahveh commanded him
- to take twelve stones out of the middle of the river, "out of the
- place where the priests' feet stood firm," and to set them up "in
- the lodging place where ye shall lodge this night" (Josh. iv, 3)
- for a memorial; and it is stated that Joshua had the twelve stones
- carried "over with them unto the place where they lodged, and laid
- them down there" (iv, 8), which was "in Gilgal, in the east border
- of Jericho" (iv, 20). But in the very next verse it is averred:
- "And Joshua set up twelve stones in the midst of Jordan, in the
- place where the feet of the priests which bare the Ark of the
- Covenant stood: and they are there unto this day" (iv, 9), sticking
- up out of the waters in the middle of the river. It is curious,
- that the stones were piled up in the middle of the river at the
- place where the priests had stood; for that is the very place where
- the stones were to be taken from, as Yahveh commanded in iv, 3.
-
- In 2 Samuel xxiv, 1 it is recorded: "Yahveh moved David to
- number Israel and Judah"; of the same incident it is recorded in I
- Chronicles xxi, 1 that "Satan provoked David to number Israel" --
- a strange confusion of personages.
-
- In 1 Samuel xvi; the first meeting of Saul and David is
- related: "an evil spirit from Yahveh troubled Saul," and music was
- recommended to him as having "power to soothe the savage breast";
- "a son of Jesse" was also recommended as a good musician, "cunning
- in playing, and a mighty man of valor, and a man of war." So Saul
- sent messengers to Jesse, saying "Send me David thy son, which is
- with the sheep"; and Jesse sent David to Saul, who saw him now for
- the first time, and David became Saul's amour-bearer.
-
- But in the next chapter David is introduced to Saul as if
- never heard of before, as the youngest of eight sons of Jesse.
- Three older sons of Jesse were in Saul's army, while the "mighty
- man of war," David, stayed home tending his father's sheep; his
- father sent him to the camp to carry food to his soldier brothers.
- Here David saw Goliath and heard his braggart defiance of the
- "living gods" of Israel, and David wanted to fight him; this was
- reported to Saul, and "Saul sent for David" (xvii, 31), thus for
- the first time meeting David. Saul expostulated with David, saying:
- "Thou art not able to go against this Philistine to fight with him;
- for thou art but a youth, and he is a man of war from his youth"
- (xvii, 33), apparently discounting the immediately preceding
- description of David as "a mighty man of valor, a man of war"
- himself.
-
- But greater surprises follow. Every child in Sunday school
- knows the heroic encounter between David and Goliath; how the
- stripling David went out unarmed save with a sling and some pebbles
- against the full-panoplied giant; how David put a pebble in his
- sling as he ran forward, "and slang it, and smote the Philistine in
- his forehead, that the stone sunk into his forehead; and he fell
-
-
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-
- IS IT GOD'S WORD?
-
- upon his face to the earth" (i Sam. xvii, 49); and David took
- Goliath's sword and cut off the dead giant's head (xvii, 51); and
- David took the head "and brought it to Jerusalem; and he put his
- armor in his tent" (xvii, 54). David, a country shepherd, just come
- to camp to bring dinner, would hardly have had a tent; and surely
- he did not take Goliath's head to Jerusalem; for Jerusalem was the
- stronghold of the Jebusites, and not till David was seven and a
- half years king, many years after, did he enter even a small corner
- of Jerusalem, Sion.
-
- But the tale is entirely robbed of the romance and heroics by
- the flat contradiction of the whole episode; David did not kill
- Goliath at all. Some forty years later, when Saul was long since
- dead, and when David was king and at war with the Philistines,
- "there was again a battle in Gob with the Philistines, where
- Elhanan the son of Jaareoregim, a Bethlehemite, slew Goliath the
- Gittite, the staff of whose spear was like a weaver's beam" (2 Sam.
- xxi, 19)! Here the translators slip in another "pious fraud": the
- verse is made to read "slew the brother of Goliath" -- the words
- the brother of being in italics to indicate to the knowing that
- they are not in the original; nor are they, as any honest scholar
- will admit. The Revised Version fairly omits "the brother of," but
- puts these words in the margin, with a reference to 1 Chronicles
- xx, 5. Here it is quite differently related that "Elhanan the son
- of Jair slew Lahmi the brother of Goliath the Gittite, whose spear
- staff was like a weaver's beam." Further confusion is furnished by
- the duplicated verses about the giant in Gath, with six fingers and
- six toes on each hand and foot, who like Goliath "defied Israel,"
- and "Jonathan the son of Shimeah the brother of David slew him" (2
- Sam. xxi, 20, 21, and 1 Chron. xx, 6, 7).
-
- As for Saul's death, in 1 Samuel xxxi it is related that in a
- battle with the Philistines, Saul's army was defeated, and Saul was
- wounded and in danger of capture; so Saul ordered his amour-bearer
- (clearly not David), to kill him, but the latter refused;
- "therefore Saul took a sword and fell upon it" (xxxi, 4); and "so
- Saul died" (xxxi, 5). But in 2 Samuel i the story is quite
- otherwise: Saul made this request of a young Amalekite (i, 8), who
- "happened by chance" (i, 6) upon the scene of battle at Mt. Gilboa
- (therefore not Saul's amour-bearer), and this stranger complied
- with Saul's request and killed Saul (i, 10), and took his crown and
- bracelet to David, who rewarded him by murdering him on the spot
- (i, 15).
-
- This must suffice for the present; many, many other
- contradictions abound in the inspired records. But these instances
- of patent contradictions suffice to illustrate the constant
- violation of the two rules of reason and of law which I have
- quoted, and to demonstrate that at least one version of each of
- these inspired conflicting records is wholly wanting in truth.
-
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