JEDP Theory
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Liberty University *
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Course
500
Subject
Religion
Date
Dec 6, 2023
Type
docx
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1
Uploaded by AndrewPedde
In brief, the JEDP theory states that the first five books of the Bible, Genesis,
Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy, were not written entirely by
Moses, who died in the 1400’s B.C., but also by different authors/compilers
after Moses. The theory is based on the fact that different names for God are
used in different portions of the Pentateuch, and there are detectable
differences in linguistic style. The letters of the JEDP theory stand for the four
supposed authors: the Jahwist/Yahwist who uses
Jehovah
for God’s name, the
Elohist who uses
Elohim
for God’s name, the Deuteronomist (the author of
Deuteronomy), and the priestly author of Leviticus. The JEDP theory goes on
to state that the different portions of the Pentateuch were likely compiled in
the 4th Century B.C., possibly by Ezra.
So, why are there different names for God in books supposedly written by a
single author? For example, Genesis chapter 1 uses the name
Elohim
while
Genesis chapter 2 uses the name
YHWH
. Patterns like this occur quite
frequently in the Pentateuch. The answer is simple. Moses used God’s names
to make a point. In Genesis chapter 1, God is
Elohim
, the mighty Creator
God. In Genesis chapter 2, God is
Yahweh
, the personal God who created and
relates to humanity. This does not point to different authors but to a single
author using God’s various names to emphasize a point and describe
different aspects of His character.
Regarding the different styles, should we not expect an author to have a
different style when he is writing history (Genesis), writing legal statutes
(Exodus, Deuteronomy), and writing intricate details of the sacrificial system
(Leviticus)? The JEDP theory takes the explainable differences in the
Pentateuch and invents an elaborate theory that has no basis in reality or
history. No J, E, D, or P document has ever been discovered. No ancient
Jewish or Christian scholar has even hinted that such documents existed.
The most powerful argument against the JEDP theory is the Bible itself. Jesus,
in
Mark 12:26
, said, “Now about the dead rising—have you not read in the
book of Moses, in the account of the bush, how God said to him, 'I am the
God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob'?” Therefore, Jesus
says plainly that Moses wrote the account of the burning bush in
Exodus 3:1-
3
. Luke, in
Acts 3:22
, comments on a passage in
Deuteronomy 18:15
and
credits Moses as being the author of that passage. Paul, in
Romans 10:5
,
talks about the righteousness Moses describes in
Leviticus 18:5
. Paul,
therefore, testifies that Moses is the author of Leviticus. So, we have Jesus
showing that Moses was the author of Exodus, Luke (in Acts) showing that
Moses wrote Deuteronomy, and Paul saying that Moses was the author of
Leviticus. In order for the JEDP theory to be true, Jesus, Luke, and Paul must
all either be liars or be in error in their understanding of the Old Testament.
Let us put our faith in Jesus and the human authors of Scripture rather than
the ridiculous and baseless JEDP theory (
2 Timothy 3:16-17
).
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