Discovering Exodus

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DISCOVERING EXODUS


Discovering Biblical Texts Content, Interpretation, Reception Comprehensive, up-to-date and student-friendly introductions to the books of the Bible: their structure, content, theological concerns, key interpretative debates and historical reception.

Published Iain Provan, Discovering Genesis Ralph K. Hawkins, Discovering Exodus Jerome F. D. Creach, Discovering Psalms Ian Boxall, Discovering Matthew Ruth B. Edwards, Discovering John Anthony C. Thiselton, Discovering Romans David A. deSilva, Discovering Revelation


DISCOVERING EXODUS Content, Interpretation, Reception

Ralph K. Hawkins

William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company Grand Rapids, Michigan


First published 2021 in Great Britain by Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge 36 Causton Street London SW1P 4ST This edition published 2021 in the United States of America by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. 4035 Park East Court SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49546 www.eerdmans.com © 2021 Ralph K. Hawkins All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America 27 26 25 24 23 22 21   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ISBN 978-0-8028-7262-3 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are taken from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Anglicized edition, © 1989, 1995 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Scripture quotations marked niv are taken from The Holy Bible, New International Version, Anglicized edition, © 1979, 1984, 2011 by Biblica. Used by permission of Hodder & Stoughton Ltd, an Hachette UK company. All rights reserved. ‘NIV’ is a registered trademark of Biblica. UK trademark number 1448790. Scripture quotations marked wbt are taken from Webster’s Bible (Wipf & Stock, 2016). The publisher and author acknowledge with thanks permission to reproduce extracts from the following: ‘On Eagle's Wings’ by Michael Joncas, © 1979, OCP. All rights reserved. Used with permission. Every effort has been made to seek permission to use copyright material reproduced in this book. The publisher apologizes for those cases where permission might not have been sought and, if notified, will formally seek permission at the earliest opportunity.


To the blessed memory of The Revd Dr Donald S. Armentrout The Revd Dr Reginald H. Fuller The Revd Marion J. Hatchett The Very Revd Guy Fitch Lytle III



Contents Acknowledgements xi List of abbreviations xii A note about style xiii 1 Introduction 1 The structure of Exodus 2 The story of Exodus 3 The distinctiveness of Exodus 8 2 Reading Exodus as literature 12 The Enlightenment and the rise of source criticism 12 Paradigm shift from source criticism to literary criticism 17 Conclusions 20 3 The realia of Exodus 21 The absence of evidence for the exodus 22 The date of the exodus 25 The supply cities 27 The number of Israelites who left Egypt 30 Hebrews in the wilderness 31 The location of Mt Sinai 34 The exodus tradition 36 Conclusions 38 4 Beginnings 40 The early life and call of Moses 40 The revelation of the divine name 52 Passover 61 The beginnings of the Israelite nation 63 Conclusions 64

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5 The portrayal of Moses as a leader in the book of Exodus 66 The traditional portrayal of Moses as a prophet 67 Other portrayals of Moses in Exodus 68 Moses as equal to Pharaoh 76 The uniqueness of Moses 76 Conclusions 78 6 The power of God in Exodus The weakness of Moses and the power of God Miracles and the modern mind Theological meaning of the miracles of Exodus The hardening of Pharaoh’s heart Conclusions

79 79 85 92 107 108

7 The law of God in Exodus Ancient Near Eastern background of the covenant concept The suzerain–vassal covenant form in Exodus The Ten Commandments The Book of the Covenant The conquest of Canaan promised The ratification of the covenant Conclusions

109 110 114 118 126 127 128 129

8 The presence of God in Exodus The tabernacle texts Historicity of the tabernacle and the ark of the covenant Theology of the tabernacle Conclusions

130 130 135 141 145

9 The gospel of Israel in Exodus Sin and restoration at Sinai Rebellion and renewal The Lord’s revelation to Moses The Divine Attribute Formula in Old Testament and apocryphal prayers The appropriation of the Divine Attribute Formula in liturgy Conclusions

147 147 152 157

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159 163 165


Contents

10 Secondary characters in Exodus The Hebrew midwives Aaron Miriam Jethro Joshua Conclusions

167 168 170 172 176 178 179

11 Echoes of Exodus in the Old Testament Moses Circumcision Passover The covenant The Ten Commandments The tabernacle The ark of the covenant The priesthood The exodus itself Conclusions

181 181 183 185 186 191 195 197 200 202 208

12 Echoes of Exodus in the New Testament Exodus and its themes in the Gospels Exodus in the Acts of the Apostles Exodus in the epistles of Paul and the Pastoral Epistles Exodus in Hebrews and the General Epistles Exodus in Revelation Conclusions

209 209 217 219 225 227 228

13 Echoes of Exodus in Western culture Art Architecture Cinema Music Politics Conclusions

230 230 233 235 238 241 255

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Bibliography 256 Index of biblical references 289 Index of subjects 301

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Acknowledgements I would like to thank the excellent staff of the Blount Library over the last several years for their help with this project. Peggy Adkins and Jim Verdini have gone above and beyond the call of duty in helping me secure references. My appreciation goes to the students in my ‘Discovering Exodus’ classes in 2016 and 2018 who helped me think through many of the issues in the book of Exodus. I am grateful to the School of Theology at the University of the South, which invited me to be a Fellow-in-Residence in 2018, and to Romulus Stefanut, Director of the School of Theology Library, who provided me with an office, secured resources for me and extended his friendship. I would like to thank James Hoffmeier, Gordon Johnston, Paul Lawrence and Gary Rendsburg, all of whom discussed various aspects of the project with me. I appreciate their collegial support, while acknowledging that any deficiencies in the work are my responsibility. I am grateful to my wife, Cathy, and to our children, Hannah, Sarah, Mary and Adam, for their love and support. Finally, I would like to thank Philip Law and SPCK, as well as Andrew Knapp and Eerdmans, for the opportunity to write this volume. My prayer is that it might be a blessing to many. Soli Deo gloria! Ralph K. Hawkins Feast day of St Ambrose of Milan Danville, Virginia

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Abbreviations Only abbreviations not currently found in the SBL Handbook of Style are included here. Arab. Arch. Epig. Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy AUSDDS

Andrews University Seminary Doctoral Dissertation Series

csb

Christian Standard Bible

EAnth

Encyclopedia of Anthropology. 5 vols. Ed. H. James Birx. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2006.

ECNT

Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament

ETS

Evangelical Theological Society

exb

Expanded Bible

gw

GOD’S WORD Translation

isv

International Standard Version

KEL

Kregel Exegetical Library

leb

Lexham English Bible

LGRB

Lives of Great Religious Books

MBI

Methods in Biblical Interpretation

ncv

New Century Version

NEASB

Near East Archaeology Society Bulletin

nog

Names of God Bible

OEBI

The Oxford Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation. Ed. Steven L. McKenzie. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.

PHSC

Perspectives on Hebrew Scriptures and Its Contexts

SBEC

Studies in the Bible and Early Christianity

SRA

Studies in Religion and the Arts

TatC

Texts @ Contexts

ylt

Young’s Literal Translation xii


A note about style All translations follow the New Revised Standard Version (nrsv) unless other­ wise indicated in the text. All transliterations follow the General-Purpose Style presented in the SBL Handbook of Style. The project was completed during the 2020 COVID-19 quarantine, during which time library access was very limited, with the result that some of the references in the volume are to works earlier than their current editions. Finally, in this volume, I follow the nrsv’s convention of rendering the divine name as ‘the Lord’.

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1 Introduction Exodus is an individual book, but it is not meant to be read alone. Instead, it is a chapter in the broader story of the Pentateuch. Preceding the book of Exodus is the story of Abraham, whom God had called to leave his home and its gods and travel to a land he would show him (Gen. 12.1). God promised that he would build a great nation through Abraham’s descendants and that, through it, he would bless all humankind (Gen. 12.2–3). In order to bring about these promises, God would give Abraham’s descendants the land of Canaan, where they would eventually take root and grow into a nation (Gen. 12.4–7).1 The promise that they would inherit the land of Canaan was reaffirmed to his descendants, Isaac and Jacob.2 The book of Exodus begins with multiple ironies. At the beginning of the book, the Israelites are living in Egypt rather than in the land that God had promised to them. And yet, one aspect of the Abrahamic promises was being fulfilled. When the family of Jacob migrated to Egypt in order to escape a famine that had struck Canaan, there were only 70 of them (Exod. 1.5). But these 70 ‘were fruitful and prolific’ and ‘multiplied and grew exceedingly strong, so that the land was filled with them’ (1.7). God had promised Abraham that his descendants would grow into a great nation, and this was indeed happening. At the beginning of the book of Exodus, the Israelites are on the brink of becoming a nation, but in a foreign land. However, the growth in number of the Israelites evoked the ire of the pharaoh, who enslaved them (Exod. 1.7–11) and, as they continued to multiply, implemented a policy of infanticide against their male children (1.15–22). This commences a theme that was first introduced in Genesis and continues throughout the book of Exodus: the threat to the Abrahamic promises. God had promised to provide Abraham with an heir in order to begin building him 1 Cf. Gen. 12.4–7. The psalmist likened Israel to a vine that God brought out of Egypt and planted in Canaan (Ps. 80.8). 2 Abraham repeats the Abrahamic promises to Eleazar, his servant, as part of his instructions about securing a wife for Isaac (Gen. 24.1–7) and then, later, God himself reaffirms those promises to Isaac (Gen. 26.3). Isaac echoes the Abrahamic promises in his deathbed blessing of Jacob (Gen. 27.27–29), and God himself affirms the promises to him in a dream at Bethel (Gen. 28.13–15).

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Introduction

into a great nation but, throughout the Abraham cycle (Gen. 11.27—25.11), the fulfilment of that promise came under threat in a series of crises.3 In Exodus, those same promises are reiterated over and over,4 but they continue to come under threat as ‘Israel is repeatedly brought to the brink of failure and extinction, and then pulled out of it at the last minute by God’s grace’.5 Throughout the book of Exodus, God overcomes each obstacle and preserves Israel until he has built it into a nation and established his presence among its people. The book of Exodus is, thus, a vital part of the larger story of the Pentateuch. Genesis gives an account of God’s promise to build Abraham’s p ­ osterity into a nation; Exodus recounts Israel’s salvation and establishment as a nation in covenant with its God; and Exodus through Deuteronomy provide the details of the terms of its national covenant. Together, these books comprise the Pentateuch, the Magna Carta of early Israel and the raison d’être for Israel’s national existence. As one of these, Exodus provides part of the foundation for the entire Bible.

The structure of Exodus In the book of Genesis, a formula stands at the beginning of each section, marking the units off from one another throughout the book. The Hebrew formula elleh toledot can mean ‘these are the generations of’, ‘this is the family history of’ or ‘this is the account of’, depending on the context. There are 11 of these toledot formulas in the book of Genesis and they thus divide the book into 11 sections. Conversely, the book of Exodus does not have any headings or titles marking any divisions in the book; instead, its narrative just continues from one event to the next. In the case of Exodus, its content rather than its form must provide the key for delineating its units. Exodus can be divided into two main sections, chapters 1—18 and chapters 19—40, which ‘might be called Liberation and Covenant’, providing ‘a compositional scheme that embraces the physical and spiritual birth of the ­people of Israel’.6 While some commentators separate the chapters related to

3 Larry R. Helyer, ‘Abraham’s eight crises: the bumpy road to fulfilling God’s promise of an heir’, in Abraham and Family: New insights into the patriarchal narratives, ed. Hershel Shanks (Washington, DC: Biblical Archaeology Society, 2000), 41–52. 4 Cf. Exod. 3.8, 17; 6.4, 8; 12.25; 13.5, 11; 16.5; 20.12; 23.20–33; 32.13; 33.1–3; 34.11–16, 24. 5 Richard S. Hess, The Old Testament: A historical, theological, and critical introduction (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2016), 57. 6 J. P. Fokkelman, ‘Exodus’, in The Literary Guide to the Bible, ed. Robert Alter and Frank Kermode (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1987), 56. I follow Fokkelman’s division of the book into these two

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Introduction

the tabernacle into a third section, it is the covenant that facilitates God’s presence in the midst of the people. The instructions for building the tabernacle and the account of its construction therefore fall under the auspices of the covenant. Part I: Liberation Slavery and genocide (1.1–22); Moses’ birth and early life (2.1–22); Moses’ call and mission (2.23—4.31); Confrontation with Pharaoh (5.1—7.13); The ten plagues (7.14—11.10); The exodus from Egypt (12.1—15.21); The journey to Sinai (15.22—18.27). Part II: Covenant Revelation at Mt Sinai (19.1—20.21); Laws and rules (20.22—23.33); Establishment of the covenant (24.1–18); Instructions for building the tabernacle (25.1—31.18); The golden calf episode (32.1—34.35); Construction of the tabernacle (35.1—40.38).

The story of Exodus The author of the book of Exodus uses a timeless literary technique that Peter Ellis calls ‘the obstacle story’ to engage readers and keep the story moving. He explains that: Few literary techniques have enjoyed so universal and perennial a vogue as the obstacle story. It is found in ancient and modern literature from the Gilgamesh epic and the Odyssey to the Perils of Pauline and the latest novel. Its character is episodal. [The episodes are] not self-contained but find [their] raison d’être in relation to the larger story or narrative of which [they are] a part. [The] purpose is to arouse suspense and sustain interest by recounting episodes which threaten or retard the fulfillment of what the reader either suspects or hopes or knows to be the ending of the story.7 sections dealing with liberation and covenant. However, whereas he divides these sections into 1—15 and 16—40, I divide them into 1—18 and 19—40. 7 Peter Ellis, The Yahwist: The Bible’s first theologian (Notre Dame, IN: Fides, 1968), 136. Cited in Helyer, ‘Abraham’s eight crises’, 41.

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Introduction

The book of Exodus begins in crisis. While God had promised Abraham that his descendants would inherit the land of Canaan, the opening verses of Exodus find them settled in Egypt (1.1–7). Initially, it appears that the Abrahamic blessings were being fulfilled there since, while there were originally only 70 who had migrated to Egypt in the days of Joseph (1.5), they had ‘multiplied and grew exceedingly strong, so that the land was filled with them’ (1.7). In time, however, a new king, who did not know Joseph, came to power in Egypt, and observed that ‘the Israelite people are more powerful than we’ (1.8–9). In order to prevent them from ever overpowering the Egyptians and leaving their land, he enslaved them to build the supply cities of ‘Pithom and Rameses’ (1.10–11). When the Hebrews continued to grow, the pharaoh finally issued a decree that ‘every boy that is born to the Hebrews you shall throw into the Nile, but you shall let every girl live’ (1.22). Here is the first crisis: how can the Hebrew people flourish when they are trapped in slavery in a foreign land? How can the Israelites become a nation that can bring blessings to all humankind when the ruler of the mightiest nation on earth implements a policy of genocide against their children? It appears that, in the book of Exodus, the Abrahamic promises may crash and burn before leaving the runway. Into this situation of crisis, a deliverer was born. A Levite couple had a child and, when his mother saw that he was a particularly ‘fine’ baby, she attempted to hide him (2.2). After three months, however, this became impossible, and it seemed that he too might fall victim to Pharaoh’s genocidal machinations. Would crisis overtake Israel’s deliverer even in his infancy? The child’s mother refused to allow this to happen. She hid him in a basket and placed it in the River Nile among the reeds outside Pharaoh’s daughter’s residence (2.1–3). When she discovered the basket, she had her maid take it out of the water. She realized that the baby must be one of the Hebrew children, and agreed that a Hebrew nursemaid should be sought out to breastfeed the child. Miriam, who was close at hand, brought the child’s mother, who nursed him until he was weaned and then brought him back to the pharaoh’s daughter (2.5– 10a). She named him ‘Moses’, because she drew him out of the water (2.10b). One day, after Moses had grown up, he went out to the camp of the Hebrew slaves and surveyed their situation. He saw an Egyptian taskmaster beating one of the Hebrews and, after looking around to make sure no one was watching, he killed the Egyptian and hid his body in the sand (2.11–12). The next day, he saw two Hebrews arguing and tried to arbitrate between them. They harshly rejected his efforts to mediate between them and made it clear that they knew he had killed an Egyptian the day before (2.13–14). When Pharaoh heard about what had happened, he tried to kill Moses (2.15a). 4


Introduction

Faced with this new crisis, Moses fled into the desert of Midian, where he began a new life (2.15b). He married into the family of Jethro, a local Midianite priest. He and his wife, Zipporah, had a son, whom Moses named Gershom. And, while it may appear that, with these blessings of his new life, Moses was able to forget the situation in Egypt and put the past behind him, this was not the case. Moses named his son Gershom, based on the Hebrew word for ‘alien’ (gēr), as an illustration of the fact that he had not fully assimilated into Midianite society but viewed himself as an ‘alien’ (gēr) whose true home was in Egypt (2.22). Nonetheless, Moses spent the next 40 years as a shepherd for his father-in-law (2.23). One day, while he was out tending sheep, Moses discovered a strange phenomenon – a burning bush that was not consumed by the flames (3.1–3). God spoke to him from the bush, calling him closer but commanding him to remove his shoes since he was on holy ground (3.5). He told Moses that he was going to liberate the Israelites and finally fulfil the promise he had made to Abraham to give them the land of Canaan, a land flowing with milk and honey (3.7–8). God told Moses that he could assure the Israelites that he was the same God their ancestors had known, and that he had sent him to accompany the elders of Israel to stand before the pharaoh and ask that he let the Israelites go a three days’ journey into the wilderness to sacrifice to him (3.15–18). Moses resisted on the basis that he was unworthy to undertake such a momentous task (3.11), and this presents another crisis: would Moses’ sense of inadequacy prevent him from answering God’s call to serve as the deliverer of his people? The Lord overcame Moses’ repeated protestations by assuring Moses that he would be with him, that he would empower him and that he would also send his brother Aaron along with him as his mouthpiece (3.11—4.17). Moses and Aaron returned to Egypt and confronted Pharaoh, but he was unimpressed. He said, ‘Who is the Lord, that I should heed him and let Israel go? I do not know the Lord, and I will not let Israel go’ (5.2). Pharaoh was indignant and simply increased the Hebrews’ workload (5.1–23). The Lord sent Moses and Aaron to Pharaoh again and, this time, they demonstrated the power of God by turning a staff into a snake (6.28—7.12). However, ‘Pharaoh’s heart was hardened, and he would not listen to them’ (7.13). God now launches a series of ten plagues against Egypt in order to impress upon the Pharaoh that he is the Lord (7.17). The first nine plagues were a ser­ ies of disasters and climatological catastrophes that included: the waters of the Nile turning to blood; swarms of frogs, gnats, flies and locusts; the cattle being devastated by disease; an outbreak of boils; thunder and hail; and darkness (7.14—10.29). The plagues were God’s judgement against Egypt, by which 5


Introduction

the Lord would make ‘fools’ of the Egyptians (10.2) and execute judgement against all their gods (12.12). Instead of leading the pharaoh to release the Heb­ rews, however, each plague simply triggered a new crisis when he responded by hardening his heart.8 The tenth and final plague was the culmination of the plagues and triggered the exodus. In this plague, the Lord himself would go throughout Egypt and smite the firstborn child of every household (11.4–6). The Hebrews would be saved from this plague by sacrificing a spotless lamb and painting the doorframes of their houses with its blood (12.1–6). When the angel of death passed through Egypt that night, he would ‘pass over’ those homes where he saw the doorframes painted with blood (12.13). When the death plague struck, ‘there was a loud cry in Egypt, for there was not a house without someone dead’ (12.30). In the middle of the night, Pharaoh summoned Moses and Aaron and told them that they could finally leave Egypt and go worship the Lord, and he asked that they would bring a blessing upon him too (12.31–32). After the Israelites had left Egypt, however, a new crisis arose when the pharaoh changed his mind about having let them go, mustered a massive chariot force and set out after them. The Egyptians overtook the Israelites, who were camped by the sea (14.5–9). It appeared that this crisis might result in either the recapture or the destruction of Israel. The people cried out in desperation, afraid for their lives, but Moses assured them that the Lord would deliver them (14.13). At the Lord’s prompting, Moses stretched out his hand over the sea and the waters were divided, so that the Israelites were able to cross on dry land. When the Egyptians pursued them into the sea, the waters returned to their normal depth and they were drowned (14.21–29). ‘Thus the Lord saved Israel that day from the Egyptians’ (14.30). Moses led the Israelites deep into the desert, where they faced one crisis after another. From the beginning of their wilderness journey, they were in danger of getting lost in the desert. They could not find water (15.22–24; 17.1–3). There was no food (16.1–3). They were attacked by the Amalekites (17.8). And Moses himself nearly became overwhelmed with the judicial tasks required of him in his leadership of the Hebrew people (18.13–16). In each of these crises, however, the Lord intervened in order to save and preserve his people. The Lord led the Israelites in the form of a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night (13.21– 22). He led them to water (15.25a; 17.4–6) and provided food (16.4–36). He enabled the Israelites to defeat the Amalekites (17.9–16). And, through Jethro, he appointed judges to provide for a just and ordered society (18.17–27). 8 Cf. 8.15, 32; 9.7, 12, 34; 10.1, 20, 27; 11.10.

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Introduction

About two months after leaving Egypt,9 the Israelites arrived at Mt Sinai (19.1–2). Moses ascended the mountain to meet God, who told him that, if Israel would obey his voice and keep his covenant, it would be his treasured possession out of all the peoples of the earth, ‘a priestly kingdom and a holy nation’ (19.5–6). Moses came down from the mountain and told the people what the Lord had said, and they agreed that they would enter into a covenant with him (19.7–9a). After the people’s consecration, the Lord descended upon the mountain in the form of thunder, lightning and a thick cloud, and the people gathered around the foot of the mountain to meet him (19.16–17). Moses now ascends the mountain again and receives the covenant, and the text recounts a summary of its stipulations known as the Decalogue, or the Ten Commandments (20.1–17), as well as a selection of civil and religious laws (20.22—23.33) collected in a text known as the Book of the Covenant (24.7). Moses led the people in a ceremony to ratify the covenant. They swore that they would adhere to its stipulations (24.3, 7), and their commitment was sealed with blood (24.5–8) and followed by a theophany to Moses, Aaron, Nadab, Abihu and 70 of the elders of Israel (24.9–11). The focus of the Sinai covenant and all of its laws and regulations was God’s presence with his people, and the ensuing chapters recount how God himself gave instructions about several things that would facilitate it (25.1—31.18). First, God gave instructions for the construction of a portable sanctuary called the ‘tabernacle’, where he would dwell in the midst of the people. Second, he gave instructions for designing the vestments for the priests who would service the tabernacle. And, third, God repeated the command for a Sabbath rest. These institutions would facilitate God’s continuing presence in the midst of the people. During Moses’ long absence while he was receiving these instructions from God, Israel faced its most profound crisis yet. The people demanded that Aaron ‘make gods’ for them (32.1). He cast an image of a calf, and the people proclaimed, ‘These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt!’ (32.4). They made sacrifices to the image, ate and drank, and ‘rose up to revel’ (32.6). God was furious and Moses had to plead for the lives of the Israelites (32.7–14). He descended Mt Sinai and smashed the tablets of the covenant at the foot of the mountain, ground the idol into powder, mixed it with water and made the people drink it, and commanded the Levites to kill those who had participated in the idolatry. In return for their faithfulness, the Levites were ordained for service to the Lord (32.15–29). Moses pleaded to God 9 Duane A. Garrett, A Commentary on Exodus (KEL; Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic, 2014), 451, n. 82.

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Introduction

on behalf of Israel but, while the Lord affirmed that he would still lead the Israelites to the land he had promised to give them, he nonetheless sent a plague among them because they had worshipped the golden calf (32.30–35). God could not live in the midst of a sinful people; Israel must be a holy nation. Moses pleaded for the Israelites again, and the Lord revealed himself to him as a merciful and gracious, but also as a just, God (33.12—34.9). Despite Israel’s sin, God would renew the covenant and give the people the land of Canaan. God summoned Moses back up the mountain, made new tablets and renewed the covenant with Israel (34.10–28). Moses descended the mountain with his face shining from his encounter with God (34.29–35). The Israelites observed the Sabbath, and then they built the tabernacle and its accoutrements in the middle of the camp (35.1—40.33). In a dramatic conclusion, God’s cloud descended and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle before the eyes of all Israel (40.34–38).

The distinctiveness of Exodus In a 1991 lecture, Baruch Halpern stated that ‘the closest parallel to the Book of Exodus in the ancient West is Homer’s Odyssey’ and explained that ‘both are stories of migration – of identity suspended until the protagonist – Odysseus or Israel – reaches a home’.10 The comparison is apt. The Odyssey is focused on the Greek hero Odysseus, king of Ithaca, and his journey home after the fall of Troy. Although he had already fought for ten years in the Trojan War, his journey home proved to be just as difficult. He was waylaid by sorceresses, attacked by one-eyed cannibals and lured off his path by sirens. His return journey took another ten years. The book of Exodus is focused on the hero Moses and his efforts to lead the Israelites to Canaan, a land flowing with milk and honey, after liberating them from Egypt where they had been enslaved for 430 years. But the journey to the promised land proved very difficult. The Israelites were in danger of getting lost in the desert, had no food and water, and were attacked by desert dwellers. It took them another 40 years to get there. However, Exodus is far more than the epic journey of a nation that faces one obstacle after another in order to reach the land where it can be planted. When the book’s contents are closely examined, it becomes clear that it is distinct in a number of profound ways. First, Exodus recounts Ancient Israel’s seminal salvation events, including the Passover, the exodus from Egypt and the crossing of the Red Sea. Israel’s 10 Baruch Halpern, ‘The exodus from Egypt: myth or reality?’, in The Rise of Ancient Israel, ed. Hershel Shanks (Washington, DC: Biblical Archaeology Society, 1992), 87.

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Introduction

very existence was accounted for by these formative events in its past. They provide the foundation of the Ten Commandments, which begin with the words ‘I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery’ (Exod. 20.2). Throughout the rest of Israel’s history, both ancient and modern, its theological reflection, hymnody and liturgy have all focused on these events.11 Second, when the people of Israel agreed to the terms of the Sinai covenant, ‘they became not simply a “nation” but a nation unlike any other’.12 By accepting the covenant stipulations, they became the Lord’s ‘treasured possession out of all the peoples’, and were to be ‘a priestly kingdom and a holy nation’ (Exod. 19.5–6). They ‘were to behave toward all the other nations on earth as priests to the profane’.13 Third, the author of Deuteronomy viewed the laws associated with the covenant as more just than those of other societies. Deuteronomy 4.8 asks, ‘What other great nation has statutes and ordinances as just as this entire law that I am setting before you today?’ While a number of the laws of Exodus have parallels in other ancient law codes, many of them reflect ethical ideals unsurpassed in contemporaneous cultures.14 Fourth, the Lord’s revelation of himself to Moses provides a central theme in the Old Testament. When the Lord passed before Moses, he proclaimed: The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for the thousandth generation, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, yet by no means clearing the guilty, but visiting the iniquity of the parents upon the children and the children’s children, to the third and the fourth generation. (Exod. 34.6–7)

11 This ‘reception history’ will be explored in later chapters. 12 Jan Assmann, The Invention of Religion: Faith and covenant in the book of Exodus, trans. Robert Savage (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2018), 187. 13 Assmann, Invention of Religion, 187. 14 Some of these will be explored in later chapters.

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Introduction

This divine self-revelation provides a veritable vocabulary of mercy and grace. It is quoted or alluded to throughout the Old Testament and in intertestamental literature, and has come to serve as a creedal statement in Judaism known as the Thirteen Attributes of God. It is recited on festival days when the Torah scroll is taken from the Torah Ark, where it is housed in the synagogue. In addition, the emphasis on mercy and grace has certainly influenced Christian traditions about the nature and character of God. Fifth, the fact that the Lord takes up residence among humankind, in the midst of the Israelites, is profoundly significant. In Genesis 3, when the first human couple sinned, they were irreversibly expelled from the Garden of Paradise. Christian theology understands their expulsion as having been predicated on the idea that sinful human beings cannot dwell with a holy God. A major result of the ‘Fall’, therefore, is the estrangement of humankind from God, a condition that persisted from that point forward, throughout the ages covered in the rest of the book of Genesis, up until God made provision to dwell in the midst of the Israelites in the tabernacle. Moshe Greenberg captures the profundity of the Lord’s ‘tabernacling’ among the Israelites this way: It is possible to epitomize the entire story of Exodus in the movement of the fiery manifestation of the divine presence. At first the fire burned momentarily in a bush on the sacred mountain, as God announced his plan to redeem Israel; later it appeared for months in the sight of all Israel as God descended on the mountain to conclude his Covenant with the redeemed; finally it rested permanently on the tent-sanctuary, as God’s presence settled there. The book thus recounts the stages in the descent of the divine presence to take up its abode for the first time among one of the peoples of the earth.15 Even though it was only the Israelites who had access to the tabernacle – and a quite restricted access at that – the Lord’s condescension to dwell in the midst of people once again was an act of tremendous grace. Sixth, God wants to be known by Egypt and all humankind, just as much as he wants to be known by Israel.16 In roughly the first half of the book, God proclaims ‘I am the Lord’ five times to Israel,17 but also five times to the Egyp15 Moshe Greenberg, Understanding Exodus: A holistic commentary on Exodus 1–11 (2nd edn; Eugene, OR: Cascade, 2013), 14. 16 Fokkelman, ‘Exodus’, 64. 17 Cf. Exod. 6.2, 6, 7, 8, 29.

10


Introduction

tians.18 The proclamation appears at various points too in the second half of the book.19 The repetition of this statement reflects the idea that the God of Israel is also the God of all peoples, even though other nations may not realize this. The vision of the Old Testament is that all people would eventually come to acknowledge the Lord as God.20 Each of these foci provides part of the rationale for Israel’s existence. The nation of Israel existed because of what God had done for it in the Passover, the exodus and the crossing of the Red Sea. By accepting the terms of the covenant, Israel had become not only a nation, but also a priestly kingdom and a holy nation, brokers of the knowledge of God to all the earth. By living out its unique law, Israel was to create a just and equitable society. It was to share the message of the mercy and grace of the Lord. Israel was to live in fellowship with the God who tabernacled in its midst. And Israel was to disseminate knowledge of the Lord to the nations. In discussing Exodus in the context of the Torah, Greenberg points out that: Israel’s absorbing concern over its reason for being – which made the Torah so cherished a treasure – is unprecedented in antiquity. No Near Eastern analogues to a national literature like that of the Torah are available. Whether the literatures of the Arameans, the Moabites, or the Edomites once contained similar material is unknown. But the considerable remains of Egypt, Babylonia, the Hittites and Ugarit offer no parallels to the message of, and the national function served by, the Torah.21 The book of Exodus, as part of the larger Torah story, is certainly a very distinctive book.

18 Cf. Exod. 7.5, 17; 8.22; 14.4, 18. 19 Cf. Fokkelman, ‘Exodus’, 64. 20 Cf. the discussion of ‘election’ in Walter Brueggemann, Reverberations of Faith: A theological handbook of Old Testament themes (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2002), 61–4. 21 Greenberg, Understanding Exodus, 9.

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2 Reading Exodus as literature The traditional approach to reading Exodus, as well as the rest of the Pentateuch, was as a single, unified work written by a single author, Moses. According to Jewish and Christian tradition, Moses wrote the book of Exodus in connection with the covenant experience at Mt Sinai.1 Philo, a Hellenistic Jew who lived and wrote in Alexandria in the first century bc, began his study of the creation narratives with the observation that ‘Moses says, “In the beginning”’ (Opif. 26). Josephus likewise states that Moses wrote the first five books of the Pentateuch (Ag. Ap. 1.37–40). In the same way, the rabbis believed that Moses had written the Pentateuch (B. Bat. 14b) and that its origin was divine (Sanh. 99a). Early Christian writers shared the view that Moses, under divine inspiration, had written the Pentateuch. Paul refers to it as the ‘law of Moses’ (e.g. 1 Cor. 9.9), and Luke refers to it simply as ‘Moses’.2 According to the Gospels, Jesus referred to it using both of these appellations.3 The traditional approach generally prevailed until the eighteenth century, the Age of Enlightenment.

The Enlightenment and the rise of source criticism

The Enlightenment was an intellectual and philosophical movement that predominated in Europe throughout the eighteenth century. It was an age of rationalism and scepticism. During this period, the idea of deism became prominent. Deists believed that God existed and was even responsible for the initial creation of the universe, but that he does not continue to be involved with the created world nor does he intervene in it. This meant that miracles, predictive prophecy and even divine inspiration were all impossible by definition. The implication

1 Cf. Exod. 17.14; 24.4; 34.27. 2 Luke writes that the Jews had proclaimed ‘Moses’ for generations and had read him aloud every Sabbath (Acts 15.21). The distinctive Lukan formula, ‘Moses and the prophets’, makes it clear that his use of ‘Moses’ is a reference to the Pentateuch (cf. Luke 16.29, 31; 24.27; Acts 15.21; 26.22). 3 E.g. Mark 7.10; Luke 24.44.

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Reading Exodus as literature

was that natural explanations had to be sought not only for biological processes, but for supposedly supernatural ones as well. In the wake of the publication of Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species (1859), anthropologists and scholars in various fields of religion began to reconceive of religion through evolutionary lenses. In this view, religion evolved from simple to complex forms.

The Documentary Hypothesis In 1883, in the wake of these intellectual trends, Julius Wellhausen, who was then Professor of Old Testament at the University of Greifswald in Pomerania, wrote A Prolegomena to the History of Israel, in which he completely reconfigured the history of Israelite religion along developmental lines. The foundation of his understanding of Israel’s history lay in his identification and separation of four literary sources, a theory that came to be known as the Documentary Hypothesis. He postulated that five features within the Pentateuch indicated that it was made up of multiple sources: (1) the use of different names for God; (2) variations in vocabulary and style; (3) contradictions and differences in viewpoint; (4) duplications and repetitions; and (5) indications of composite structure in the sections. On the basis of these literary indicators, Wellhausen identified four sources, which had been composed at different stages of Israel’s history and woven together to form the Pentateuch. In Wellhausen’s original formulation, the four sources were J, E, D and P.4 The J source was the earliest, and had been written in the tenth century bc by scribes of the court of Judah who referred to God using the divine name Yahweh, which in German (Wellhausen’s mother tongue) begins with a ‘J’. The E document was produced in the mid eighth century bc by their rivals in the northern kingdom of Israel, who referred to God as Elohim. After the fall of Samaria in 722 bc, a redactor combined these two disparate sources into a single document, JE. The D document, which was mainly the book of Deuteronomy, was composed in 622 bc by King Josiah’s scribes as a tool for his religious reformation. The P document was written by priests early in the Second Temple period, after the Jews’ return from exile, in the late sixth or early fifth century bc. All these sources were then combined in or around 450 or 400 bc to form the Pentateuch.5 4 Wellhausen was not the first to postulate that sources lay behind the Pentateuch. Others, going back as early as the seventeenth century, had also proposed to identify sources. Such proposals paved the way for Wellhausen’s hypothesis. For a review of source-critical enquiry, see Joseph Blenkinsopp, The Pentateuch: An introduction to the first five books of the Bible (New York, NY: Doubleday, 1992), 1–30. 5 For the details of Wellhausen’s source divisions, see S. R. Driver, An Introduction to the Literature of the Old Testament (repr.; Cleveland, OH and New York, NY: Meridian, 1956), 1–159.

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Reading Exodus as literature

The ‘real novelty’ of Wellhausen’s conclusions was not so much his literary-critical conclusions, since others had been postulating since the seventeenth century that sources were used in the composition of the Pentateuch, as his use of source criticism to completely reconstruct Israel’s history.6 In his reconstruction, Wellhausen relegated the Priestly material, with all of its cultic laws and regulations, to the post-exilic period. While later redactors had retrofitted them to the time of Moses in order to fit their canonical portrayal of Israel’s history, the reality was that written law was a later development of post-exilic Judaism. According to Wellhausen, J and E reflected a primitive stage of nature religion based on the kinship group. During this time, worship was spontaneous; it was simply the result of a person’s yearning to respond to the divine. Worship was not regulated by cultic institutions and their laws, since these things only evolved later. Instead, Wellhausen believed that the prophets, disassociated from these later cultic institutions, stoked the fires of early Israel’s ethical but non-institutional worship. When prophecy ceased in Ancient Israel, it was the death knell of Israel’s spontaneous and free worship life. When the law developed in later periods, it distorted and stultified the primitive worship of Israel’s earlier periods. Whereas early Israel had enjoyed free and uninhibited worship, the development of written cultic legislation represented the devolution to wooden or even dead religion. Wellhausen’s Prolegomena is a reconstruction of Ancient Israel’s history based on this hypothesis. With regard to the book of Exodus, analysis of it on the basis of the Documentary Hypothesis was made available to English readers in S. R. Driver’s 1897 Introduction to the Literature of the Old Testament and in his commentary on Exodus, published in 1911.7 In this view, the final copy of the book of Exodus was the product of a basic J source having been combined with a more fragmentary and incomplete E account. This combined JE account was expanded with the addition of P material, which provided aetiological stories for many of Ancient Israel’s cultic practices, including circumcision, the death of the firstborn, Passover, the Feast of Unleavened Bread, the giving of first fruits, Sabbath observance and the construction of the tabernacle with its associated cultic rituals. The narrative reached its final form when a post-exilic compiler arranged these materials into a clear and powerful story.

6 Rudolf Smend, From Astruc to Zimmerli: Old Testament scholarship in three centuries, trans. M. Kohl (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2007), 95–6. 7 Driver, Introduction to the Literature of the Old Testament; S. R. Driver, The Book of Exodus (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1911).

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Reading Exodus as literature

Criticism, embrace and the fading of the traditional consensus Wellhausen’s publication of his Prolegomena caused pandemonium in theological circles. He was branded a heretic. In Germany, Franz Delitzsch criticized the Documentary Hypothesis as ‘merely the application of Darwinism to the sphere of theology and criticism’.8 In America, William Henry Green published a substantial tome refuting the hypothesis and defending the unity of the Penta­ teuch. Several of those who supported Wellhausen, including Charles Briggs, a Presbyterian minister and Professor of Hebrew and Cognate Languages at Union Theological Seminary, were defrocked, and William Robertson Smith, a theology professor at Aberdeen, was dismissed from his teaching position. In the middle-to-final decades of the nineteenth century, archaeological excavations had begun to be conducted at Khorsabad, Nimrud and Nineveh in Mesopotamia, and at Tell el-Hesi in Israel. By the early decades of the twentieth century, a wealth of completely new data – which had not been available when Wellhausen constructed his four-source model – revealed problems with some of the main premises of the Documentary Hypothesis. For example, it became evident that deities in the Ancient Near East often had multiple names with different shades of meaning, and authors of ancient texts varied their usage of the names depending on which was more appropriate to the given context. In another example, it became clear from the study of Semitic literature that duplication was not an indication of multiple sources but rather a Semitic technique for emphasizing an idea. The author of Genesis uses this principle to explain Pharaoh’s two dreams forecasting famine in the land: ‘the doubling of Pharaoh’s dream means that the thing is fixed by God, and God will shortly bring it about’ (Gen. 41.32). One of the first to use this new data to mount a systematic refutation of the Documentary Hypothesis was Umberto Cassuto (1883–1951), Professor of Hebrew Language and Literature at the University of Florence, later Chair of Hebrew at the University of Rome and, finally, Chair of Bible Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.9 Despite the new archaeological and literary data being retrieved in the Near East, the four-source theory was quickly embraced. In fairly short order, it became the critical orthodoxy and was widely replicated, sometimes with some slight variations, in introductions to the Old Testament. By the mid twentieth century, nearly all introductions to the Old Testament presented 8 Rudolf Smend, ‘Julius Wellhausen and his Prolegomena to the History of Israel’, Semeia 25 (1982): 14. 9 Umberto Cassuto, The Documentary Hypothesis and the Composition of the Pentateuch (Jerusalem and New York, NY: Shalem Press, 2006). The eight lectures presented in this volume were originally presented by Cassuto in 1940.

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Reading Exodus as literature

the Documentary Hypothesis as ‘the consensus opinion and the received wisdom’.10 The most influential of all the twentieth-century introductions was probably The Old Testament: An introduction, by Otto Eissfeldt, which went through three editions.11 In the twenty-first century, the standard introductions continue to present the Documentary Hypothesis as the normative model for understanding the formation of the Pentateuch.12 There has been a growing awareness, however, of the nineteenth-century ideological assumptions upon which the Documentary Hypothesis is based, some of which are no longer considered valid. In a survey of Pentateuchal scholarship, Joseph Blenkinsopp points out that, ‘as closely argued and brilliantly original as it is, Wellhausen’s historical reconstruction is very much a product of the intellectual milieu of the late nineteenth century’.13 The influence of the nineteenth century upon his thought can be seen in at least three ways. First, as we have already noted, Wellhausen was heavily influenced by the concept of development. His model was not concerned with simply identifying multiple source documents, but with using them to reconstruct Israel’s religious development in distinct theological stages. Second, he was heavily influenced by romanticism, in which every cultural phenomenon has primitive, classical and decadent stages. Wellhausen’s J and E sources represented the more primitive stage of nature religion in early Israel; D brought the period of prophecy to an end by its production of a written law; and P marked the replacement of the natural religion with institutionalism, dead law and formalized worship.14 Third, Wellhausen was influenced by nineteenth-century German Protestant theology, which could often be anti-Jewish.15 In Wellhausen’s reconstruction, the law was not a natural development in Ancient Israelite religion, but an imposition by a post-exilic religious sect. It was a later distortion of early Israel’s primitive worship. Whereas the worship of early Israel 10 Blenkinsopp, Pentateuch, 19. 11 Otto Eissfeldt, The Old Testament: An introduction (3rd edn; New York, NY: Harper & Row, 1966). 12 E.g. Barry L. Bandstra, Reading the Old Testament: Introduction to the Hebrew Bible (4th edn; Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2008); Lawrence Boadt, Reading the Old Testament: An introduction (2nd edn; New York, NY: Paulist Press, 2012); John J. Collins, Introduction to the Hebrew Bible (3rd edn; Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2018); Michael D. Coogan, The Old Testament: A historical and literary introduction to the Hebrew Bible (4th edn; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017); Norman K. Gottwald, The Hebrew Bible: A socio-literary introduction (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2002). 13 Blenkinsopp, Pentateuch, 11. 14 On German idealism, see Andrew Bowie, Introduction to German Philosophy: From Kant to Habermas (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2003), 41–93. 15 Cf. Lou H. Silberman, ‘Wellhausen and Judaism’, Semeia 25 (1982): 75–82. For a thorough study of this subject, see Anders Gerdmar, The Roots of Theological Anti-Semitism: German biblical interpretation and the Jews, from Herder to Kittel and Bultmann (Leiden: Brill, 2009).

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Reading Exodus as literature

had been free, natural and spontaneous, in post-exilic Israel it was ‘banished into institutions’.16 This is the opposite of the biblical view, in which the law is the Magna Carta of earliest Israel, not an invention of post-exilic Judaism. In North America, the traditional Documentary Hypothesis remains the conventional wisdom. One recent monograph, for example, argues that the Documentary Hypothesis still provides the most persuasive explanation of the composition and meaning of the Pentateuch,17 and another proposes to present its assured results.18 However, the increasing recognition of the the­ ory’s commitment to nineteenth-century ideologies, along with the fact that its practitioners continue to produce contradictory results and even new sources, has led to some disillusionment with it.19 Thomas Römer writes that, ‘In the current debate about the formulation of the Torah, the traditional consensus built on the documentary hypothesis has faded away’, and that ‘in Europe, most scholars have given up the Wellhausen paradigm’.20 There is in North America and Israel a so-called Neo-Documentarian movement, but it simply builds upon the Documentary Hypothesis.

Paradigm shift from source criticism to literary criticism

This is not to say that newer approaches should reject source criticism altogether. If there is one thing historical criticism has done, it has made it clear that no single individual, including Moses, was responsible for producing all the materials contained in the Pentateuch or, in our case, the book of Exodus. The internal evidence of the book of Exodus makes it clear that various materials came from different sources. Moses is said to have written down the instructions about holy war (17.14), recorded certain laws (24.4; 34.27–28) and composed the Song of Moses (15.1–18). Some of the contents, however, are directly

16 Julius Wellhausen, Geschichte Israels (Erster Band; Berlin: G. Reimer, 1878), 413. Quoted in Silberman, ‘Wellhausen and Judaism’, 77. 17 Joel S. Baden, The Composition of the Pentateuch: Renewing the Documentary Hypothesis (New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 2012). 18 Richard Elliott Friedman, The Bible with Sources Revealed: A new view into the five books of Moses (New York, NY: HarperSanFrancisco, 2003). 19 For a recent critique, see Joshua A. Berman, Inconsistency in the Torah: Ancient literary convention and the limits of source criticism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017). 20 Thomas Römer, ‘The revelation of the divine name to Moses and the construction of a memory about the origins of the encounter between Yhwh and Israel’, in Israel’s Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective: Text, archaeology, culture, and geoscience, ed. Thomas E. Levy, Thomas Schneider and William H. C. Propp (New York, NY: Springer, 2015), 308.

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Reading Exodus as literature

attributed to God: the Ten Commandments are said to have been spoken by God himself (20.1); the contents of the Book of the Covenant (20.22—23.33) were first spoken by God, who then commanded Moses to write them down; and the instructions for the manufacture of the tabernacle and related matters are said to have been spoken by God to Moses (25—31), and oral or written accounts of these materials must have been preserved. Other portions are attributed to other parties. For example, the text seems to imply that Miriam composed the song that she sang in commemoration of the crossing of the Red Sea (15.21). In another example, the genealogical information given in Exodus 6.14–25 is unattributed, but it must have been drawn from family records. The foregoing examples suggest that the ultimate author(s) of the book of Exodus utilized sources. Many additional examples could be cited. George Coats identifies 89 distinct genres in Exodus, along with 20 stereotyped formulas.21 All of the texts reflecting these genres were preserved in either oral or written form (or both) after the events they record had occurred. With regard to passages dealing with cultic instructions, recent studies have shown that such materials were preserved by priestly communities.22 Surely, other groups preserved other materials, such as families preserving their own genealogies, and so on. The author of Exodus collected all of these materials and wove them together to create the book of Exodus. There are several clues that suggest that someone other than Moses compiled Exodus in its present form. Most of the book is comprised of third-person narratives, one of which praises Moses (11.3). Throughout the book, there are several parenthetical notes aimed at clarifying matters for later readers, one of which refers to events that occurred after the time of Moses (16.31–36; cf. Josh. 5.10– 12). It is certainly possible that the materials attributed to Moses could have been preserved and assembled by someone contemporaneous with him, such as his acolyte Joshua or the priest Eleazar. The remaining third-person narrative accounts could have been preserved as oral tradition. These materials could have then been woven together, with some light editing to modernize archaic words and geographic place names (e.g. 15.23). Exodus and the rest of the Pentateuch may have existed in a primitive form as early as the days of the elders of Israel (Josh. 24.31), or the era of Samuel and the early monarchy (1 Sam. 3.19–21).

21 George W. Coats, Exodus 1–18 (FOTL 2A; Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999), 155–78. 22 E.g. Bryan C. Babcock, Sacred Ritual: A study of the West Semitic ritual calendars in Leviticus 23 and the Akkadian text Emar 446 (BBRSup 9; Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2014); Daniel E. Fleming, Time at Emar: The cultic calendar and the rituals from the diviner’s house (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2000).

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Reading Exodus as literature

In source criticism, however, identifying sources in a given book tends to be the focus. Introductions and commentaries that take a source-critical perspective often devote much – if not most – of their examination of the text to the identification and separation of sources. In William Propp’s massive, two-volume commentary on Exodus, for example, he subjects every passage in Exodus to a highly detailed source analysis in which he identifies ­passages and their parts with the conventional sources J, E or P.23 Thomas Dozeman, on the other hand, concludes that E does not feature in the compositional his­ tory of Exodus, and instead identifies a ‘P History’ and a ‘Non-P History’ as its chief sources.24 This focus is a necessity to source criticism because, in this approach, the literary identification and separation of the sources is the means to a proper understanding of Israel’s history of religion. Beginning in the 1940s, a paradigm shift from source criticism to literary criticism had begun to occur.25 It did not begin to gain traction, however, until the 1979 publication of Brevard Childs’ Introduction to the Old Testament as Scripture, in which he urged that, in addition to dissecting the texts, we must also try to read and interpret them as they have come down to us, a process he called ‘canonical interpretation’.26 Childs was not calling for a departure from the historical-critical method, but rather a change in the focus. Whereas the traditional interest of historical-critical scholarship is in the presumed earlier stages of the text, Childs was arguing that the text also needs to be considered in its final form. He emphasized that the Old Testament was the sacred Scripture of a faith community and should be read as such. Since the publication of Child’s Introduction, the literary study of the Old Testament has burgeoned. In a popularly written 1989 article, Rolf Rendtorff wrote that ‘recently, some of us have been asking, What about the book [of Exodus]? Should we not ask what the final author (or authors) of the book wanted to tell the readers?’27 Indeed, more and more, scholars are focusing on the final form of the text, paying attention to the text as a carefully constructed whole. Handbooks like The Art of Biblical Narrative, The Literary Guide to the Bible, Poetics and Interpretation of Biblical Narrative and The Poetics of Biblical 23 William H. C. Propp, Exodus 1–18: A new translation with introduction and commentary (AB 2; New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1999); William H. C. Propp, Exodus 19–40: A new translation with introduction and commentary (AB 2A; New York, NY: Doubleday, 2006). 24 Thomas B. Dozeman, Exodus (ECC; Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2009), 35–43. 25 The beginning of the paradigm shift could be associated with the lectures given by Umberto Cassuto in 1940 (see above, n. 8). 26 Brevard S. Childs, Introduction to the Old Testament as Scripture (Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1979). 27 Rolf Rendtorff, ‘What we miss by taking the Bible apart’, BRev 14.1 (1998): 44.

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Reading Exodus as literature

Narrative have shown that the Bible is a serious literary work, utilizes sophisticated literary techniques and warrants careful literary study.28 Since the late 1960s, there have been a number of commentaries on Exodus published that focus on the literary analysis of the book in its final form.29 It should also be noted that, in its final form, the book of Exodus can be said to be ‘Mosaic’. Whether or not a form of Exodus and the rest of the Pentateuch came into existence during the days of the elders of Israel, or the era of Samuel or later, their contents are Mosaic regardless. They are comprised of some materials that may have actually been composed by Moses, other materials that preserve the teachings of Moses, and accounts that conserve trad­itions about Moses. In this sense, when Philo, Josephus and the rabbis attributed the books of the Pentateuch to Moses, they were not wrong. When Jesus, Paul and Luke referred to the law as the ‘law of Moses’, or even simply as ‘Moses’, they were not mistaken. Indeed, the Pentateuch in general and the book of Exodus in particular contain the teachings of Moses.

Conclusions There is a great deal more that could be said about reading the book of Exodus as literature.30 In this chapter, however, we have focused on the rise of source criticism, its predominance in the academy, and the recent paradigm shift from source criticism to literary criticism. Whereas source criticism focuses on the identification of literary sources in a given book in an effort to reconstruct the history of Ancient Israel’s religion, literary criticism studies the final form of the text, in the context of the whole canon of Scripture, in order to determine what its final author or authors wanted to tell its readers. In the ensuing chapters, we will relate to the book in its final form, rather than to its proposed constituent parts.

28 Robert Alter, The Art of Biblical Narrative (New York, NY: Basic, 1981); Robert Alter and Frank Kermode, eds, The Literary Guide to the Bible (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1987); Adele Berlin, Poetics and Interpretation of Biblical Narrative (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1994); Meir Sternberg, The Poetics of Biblical Narrative: Ideological literature and the drama of reading (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1985). 29 Walter Brueggemann, ‘The book of Exodus’, in vol. 1 of The New Interpreter’s Bible, ed. L. Keck et al. (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1994), 676–981; Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Exodus (repr.; Jerusalem: Magnes Press, 1997); Brevard S. Childs, The Book of Exodus: A critical, theological commentary (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster Press, 1974); Nahum M. Sarna, Exodus (JPS Torah Commentary; Philadelphia, PA: Jewish Publication Society, 1991). 30 See, for example, the essays in Thomas B. Dozeman, ed., Methods for Exodus (MBI; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010).

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