FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 08-04-2012, 09:43 AM   #21
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Auburn ca
Posts: 4,269
Default

Quote:
John Day has an excellent article on it
sources please
outhouse is offline  
Old 08-04-2012, 10:58 AM   #22
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Google is your friend.

John Day "The Flood and the Ten Antediluvian Figures in Berossus and in the Priestly Source in Genesis" in On Stone and Scroll: Essays in Honour of Graham Ivor Davies, 2011, JK Aitken, KJ Dell and BA Mastin (eds.), BZAW 420; Berlin, W de Gruyter, pp.211-23

first page viewable here

summary here
Quote:
John Day read a paper he will be publishing shortly. The paper treated the flood account of the Babylonian priest Berossus and its relationship to P’s account from Genesis. Day’s argument was basically that four connections lead us to conclude that both accounts were drawing (at vastly different time periods) from some of the same source material, which was not utilized by older Mesopotamian accounts, like Gilgamesh or Atrahasis:

...
Toto is offline  
Old 08-04-2012, 11:19 AM   #23
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Auburn ca
Posts: 4,269
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Google is your friend.

John Day "The Flood and the Ten Antediluvian Figures in Berossus and in the Priestly Source in Genesis" in On Stone and Scroll: Essays in Honour of Graham Ivor Davies, 2011, JK Aitken, KJ Dell and BA Mastin (eds.), BZAW 420; Berlin, W de Gruyter, pp.211-23

first page viewable here

summary here
Quote:
John Day read a paper he will be publishing shortly. The paper treated the flood account of the Babylonian priest Berossus and its relationship to P’s account from Genesis. Day’s argument was basically that four connections lead us to conclude that both accounts were drawing (at vastly different time periods) from some of the same source material, which was not utilized by older Mesopotamian accounts, like Gilgamesh or Atrahasis:

...

I think our earlier poster may be confusing the work and what is really happening in this scholarship, and taking it out of context.
outhouse is offline  
Old 08-04-2012, 11:31 AM   #24
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Auburn ca
Posts: 4,269
Default

Quote:
The Genesis story was being written around the time of Berossus

I dont think John Day states this in any way shape or form



amd its pretty obvious it was finished by P in its last compilation.



as far as if Berussus mythology being simular, im sure it is, the legends originated there.

and since Berossus is later then genesis as written, and he worked somewhat on its origins, how much he pulled from genesis is up for debate
outhouse is offline  
Old 08-04-2012, 11:10 PM   #25
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Japan
Posts: 156
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
Quote:
The Genesis story was being written around the time of Berossus

I dont think John Day states this in any way shape or form
What he says, after noting many of the ways in which the Priestly flood story and the preceding list of patriarchs are more similar to Berossus than to Enuma Elish and other more ancient accounts, is that they both independently drew on a common knowledge of late Babylonian traditions.

Day himself still dates the P source to some 220 years earlier than Berossus, but this is relatively close in time.

On the other hand, scholars like Thompson and Lemche have been pointing out how much of the dating of the Pentateuch is circular, and that it's hard to come up with any good evidence for much of Genesis existing before about the 2nd century BC. Even "minimalist" scholars have been guilty of assuming certain places and events to be historical simply because the Bible mentions them, then using that "information" as a basis for proving when different bits were written. This is no longer a tenable approach in Biblical studies. We have to start with the history we know from archaeology and more reliable sources, and then ask whether there's any good evidence for dating a particular book or source any earlier than the Hellenistic or Hasmonean period.

Meanwhile, Finkelstein has been showing the problems with the standard view of a Persian-period compilation of the Pentateuch in Yehud, since archaeology is showing Jerusalem to have been a mere hovel of a town prior to the Hellenistic period, with no chance of supporting the kind of Jewish scribal community that would have been needed for such an undertaking.

However you cut it, it was the last few centuries BCE in which Jewish literary production blossomed, and what works we do have that are old seem entirely unaware of the stories found in Genesis. Heck, only the Hellenistic/Hasmonean author of Chronicles seems to know of any traditions regarding Adam, aside from late pseudepigrapha and the New Testament. The only OT author who connects Noah with a flood outside of Genesis is the writer of Isaiah 54, dating perhaps to the 5th century BCE. However, his language differs from that of Genesis and might be independent (source: Joseph Blenkinsopp, Isaiah 40-55, p. 364).
Tenorikuma is offline  
Old 08-05-2012, 08:47 AM   #26
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: USA
Posts: 393
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tommy View Post
How should one respond to a scriptural literalist who claims we are presuming that the Noah narrative wasn't original and that multiple references to a flood support its historicity?
All responses to a biblical literalist are futile.

He'll just say that Gilgamesh supports the historicity of the global flood, and that the Babylonians copied it from the Israelites.
James The Least is offline  
Old 08-06-2012, 11:50 AM   #27
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Birmingham UK
Posts: 4,876
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tenorikuma View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post


I dont think John Day states this in any way shape or form
What he says, after noting many of the ways in which the Priestly flood story and the preceding list of patriarchs are more similar to Berossus than to Enuma Elish and other more ancient accounts, is that they both independently drew on a common knowledge of late Babylonian traditions.

Day himself still dates the P source to some 220 years earlier than Berossus, but this is relatively close in time.

On the other hand, scholars like Thompson and Lemche have been pointing out how much of the dating of the Pentateuch is circular, and that it's hard to come up with any good evidence for much of Genesis existing before about the 2nd century BC. Even "minimalist" scholars have been guilty of assuming certain places and events to be historical simply because the Bible mentions them, then using that "information" as a basis for proving when different bits were written. This is no longer a tenable approach in Biblical studies. We have to start with the history we know from archaeology and more reliable sources, and then ask whether there's any good evidence for dating a particular book or source any earlier than the Hellenistic or Hasmonean period.

Meanwhile, Finkelstein has been showing the problems with the standard view of a Persian-period compilation of the Pentateuch in Yehud, since archaeology is showing Jerusalem to have been a mere hovel of a town prior to the Hellenistic period, with no chance of supporting the kind of Jewish scribal community that would have been needed for such an undertaking.

However you cut it, it was the last few centuries BCE in which Jewish literary production blossomed, and what works we do have that are old seem entirely unaware of the stories found in Genesis. Heck, only the Hellenistic/Hasmonean author of Chronicles seems to know of any traditions regarding Adam, aside from late pseudepigrapha and the New Testament. The only OT author who connects Noah with a flood outside of Genesis is the writer of Isaiah 54, dating perhaps to the 5th century BCE. However, his language differs from that of Genesis and might be independent (source: Joseph Blenkinsopp, Isaiah 40-55, p. 364).
If Day is correct that the P flood account (but not IIUC the J flood account) can be shown to use late sources, then this would support a late date for the final version of the Genesis flood account, but the original version (J without P) could well be much earlier.

Andrew Criddle
andrewcriddle is offline  
Old 08-06-2012, 12:11 PM   #28
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Auburn ca
Posts: 4,269
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tenorikuma View Post

What he says, after noting many of the ways in which the Priestly flood story and the preceding list of patriarchs are more similar to Berossus than to Enuma Elish and other more ancient accounts, is that they both independently drew on a common knowledge of late Babylonian traditions.

Day himself still dates the P source to some 220 years earlier than Berossus, but this is relatively close in time.

On the other hand, scholars like Thompson and Lemche have been pointing out how much of the dating of the Pentateuch is circular, and that it's hard to come up with any good evidence for much of Genesis existing before about the 2nd century BC. Even "minimalist" scholars have been guilty of assuming certain places and events to be historical simply because the Bible mentions them, then using that "information" as a basis for proving when different bits were written. This is no longer a tenable approach in Biblical studies. We have to start with the history we know from archaeology and more reliable sources, and then ask whether there's any good evidence for dating a particular book or source any earlier than the Hellenistic or Hasmonean period.

Meanwhile, Finkelstein has been showing the problems with the standard view of a Persian-period compilation of the Pentateuch in Yehud, since archaeology is showing Jerusalem to have been a mere hovel of a town prior to the Hellenistic period, with no chance of supporting the kind of Jewish scribal community that would have been needed for such an undertaking.

However you cut it, it was the last few centuries BCE in which Jewish literary production blossomed, and what works we do have that are old seem entirely unaware of the stories found in Genesis. Heck, only the Hellenistic/Hasmonean author of Chronicles seems to know of any traditions regarding Adam, aside from late pseudepigrapha and the New Testament. The only OT author who connects Noah with a flood outside of Genesis is the writer of Isaiah 54, dating perhaps to the 5th century BCE. However, his language differs from that of Genesis and might be independent (source: Joseph Blenkinsopp, Isaiah 40-55, p. 364).
If Day is correct that the P flood account (but not IIUC the J flood account) can be shown to use late sources, then this would support a late date for the final version of the Genesis flood account, but the original version (J without P) could well be much earlier.

Andrew Criddle

really no one is debating at minimum, 2 main sources J and P.


while J is tricky to date, there is no real debate within a 100 years.

P is pretty much nailed down and not debatable
outhouse is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:22 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.