3 1924 074 445 200 Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924074445200 THEOLOGICAL TRANSLATION LIBRARY Edited by the Eev. T. K. CHEYNE, M.A., D.D., Oriel Professor OF Interpretation, Oxford ; and the Eev. A. B. BRUCE, D.D., Professor ©p Apologetics and New Testament Exegesis, Free Church College, Glasgow. VOL. III. KITTEL'S HISTOEY OF THE HEBEEWS. Vol. I. A HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS By R KITTEL ORDINARy PROFESSOR OF THEOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF BRESLAU IN TWO VOLUMES VOL. I. SOURCES OP INFORMATION AND HISTORY OF THE PERIOD UP TO THE DEATH OF JOSHUA TRANSLATED BY JOHN TAYLOR, D.Lit., M.A. WILLIAMS AND NORGATE 14 HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN, LONDON AND 20 SOUTH FREDERICK STREET, EDINBURGH ' 1895 s S.15 f /, J .£f>: ^- /li .. / Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to Her Majesty PEEFACE BY THE EDITOR The selection of the present work as the first in this series which deals with the Old Testament . has been made with special reference to the actual condition of critical studies in England. Long and arduous efforts have been required to naturalise Old Testament criticism among us, but our students still find great difficulty in mastering methods and assimilating results. The deliberateness of Professor Kittel's procedure and the comparative conservatism of his conclusions (so far as they are presented here) should ensure his work a cordial reception among us, while the attention which he has given to archaeological data furnish one more proof that Old Testament criticism has passed for good and all out of the purely literary stage which lasted from Eichhorn to Colenso. It was necessary to premise this to save the reader from two possible disappointments : — 1. The title, ' His- tory of the Hebrews,' might lead him to expect a narra- tive, fragmentary perhaps, but undisturbed by discussion, of the outer and inner history of the Israelitish people. For such a narrative he will seek in vain in Professor Kittel's work ; but in lieu of it he will in general find something which for him may perhaps be more useful, viz., careful and honest discussions of the limits and vi PREFACE BY THE EDITOR character of the sources, and of the inferences to be drawn from them, carried on with an earnest desire not to deviate more than is absolutely necessary from tradi- tion. Certainly, the author's treatment of the traditions respecting Moses and the Mosaic religion, however much we may differ from his conclusions, is worthy of the most respectful consideration. 2. The reader who desires to avoid more unlearning than is necessary, and to start from the point actually reached by investigation, might naturally suppose that Professor Kittel assumes the position of most cautious and moderately advanced critics in 1888-1892. Such most assuredly is not the case. Vols. I. and II. of Kuenen's Onderzoek — a work which for its combined caution and consistency is unrivalled among text-books — were published in 1885-1889, and how wide is the differ- ence in some important respects between the criticisms of this work and that of Professor Kittel's ! But let not the English Church-student disparage the latter on that account. There are many compensations in the slow, dehberate process of English theological development. And as a help in the inevitable transition, there is per- haps no better book than that of this devout Churchman and former pastor. Professor Rudolf Kittel. T. K. CHEYNE. Oxford, January 1895. AUTHOE'S PEEFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION Shortly after the appearance of the first vohune of the History of the Hebrews, and still more after the second had appeared, the author was repeatedly asked by English-speaking scholars to allow the book to be translated into English, so that it might be accessible not only to the learned but also to the wider circle of students and of clergy and laity in England who are interested in the Old Testament. I have readily complied with this wish, and my pleasure in doing so has been increased by the fact that the publishers, Messrs. Williams & Norgate, were able to inform me that the translation would be made under the experienced guidance of Professor T. K. Cheyne. I am bound to offer here my earnest thanks to the distinguished Oxford scholar for all the care and pains he has taken with reference to the book. For those readers who are not acquainted with the book in its German form, I venture to observe that the first volume appeared in 1888 and the second in 1892. In the present English Edition I have made additions to a considerable number of passages. Yet it cannot altogether be denied that the first volume represents the position of affairs six years ago rather than that of to-day. Those who are conversant with the topics it discusses know quite well that if I had wished to obliterate all traces of the difference I should have had to revise the volume throughout. Although this has not been done, I hope that something may yet be learned from the book. fiii PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION I have called it a ' History of the Hebrews/ because its aim is to write the history of the ancient Hebrew people, from their first beginnings up to the time when, first in Babylonia and then in Palestine, they pass over into the small community of Jiodaism. Hereafter I may perhaps be able to supplement the History of the Hehreivs with one of the Jews. The book differs from other works of a like kind by the large amount of space devoted to the investigation of the sources. To many of my readers this will seem to be carried to an excess. Perhaps they may alter their opinion when they remember that it is impossible to build with a good conscience until you have assured yourself as to the nature of the ground on which you would build, and the fitness of the materials for the use to which you would put them. RUDOLF KITTEL, Doctw and Ordinary Professor of Theolo'jy. Beeslau, 21s« February 1894. THE PEINCIPAL ABBREVIATIONS AT. . Badek.= Bib. -Lex. Bleek^ Dillm. ExLtv DUlm. GeiiJ Dillm. NuDtJo . Ebers, AgBMo . Ebers, Gosen- Ew. Gesck. Isr. . HWB . JDTh . JPTh . Kohlev {Bibl.) Gesch. Knen., Ond^ {O') PBE" . Old Testament. Palastina und Syrien. Handbuch f iir Eeisende. Heraus- gegeben von K. Badeker. 2 Aiifl. ISSO (bearbeitet Ton Socin). The references are to the pages of the first English Edition. Bibellexikon, Real-worterbuchzumHandgebrauch,u.s.\r., herausgegeben von D. Sohenkel, Leipzig, 1S69-1S75. Einleitung in das Alte Testament von Friedr. Bleek. 4 Aufl. von Wellhausen, 1S78. Die Biicher Exodus und Leviticus. Xeu bearbeitet von A. Dillmann, 1S80. Die Genesis. Erklart von A. Dillmann. 5 Aufl. ISSo. Die Biicher Numeri, Deuteronominm und Josua. Xeu bearbeitet von A. Dillmann, 1886. Agypten und die Biicher Mose. Sachlicher Kommentar zu der agyptischen Stellen in Genesis und Exodus. Von Georg Ebers, I. 1870. Durch Gosen zum Sinai. Aus dem Wanderbuch xind der Bibliothek. Von Georg Ebers. 2 Aufl. 1881. Geschichte des Volkes Israel. 1 Aufl. lS43fif. ; 2 Aufl. ISolfif. ; 3 Aufl. 1864 £f. Handworterbuch des bibUschen Altertums fiir gebildete BibeUeser. Herausg. von Ed. Riehm, 1874-1884. Jahrbiicher fiir Deutsche Theologie. Jahrbiioher fiir Protestant. Theologie. Lehrbuch der biblisohen Geschichte des alten Testaments von A. Kohler, lS7o S. Historisoh-critisch Onderzoek naar het ontstaan en de verzameling van de boeken des Ouden Terbonds door A. Kuenen. 2 Uitg. L 1, 1885. Realencyklopiidie fiir Protestantische Theologie und Kirche. 2 Aufl. von Herzog-Hauck-Plitt. Leipzig, 1877-1888. THE PKINCIPAL ABBEEVIATIONS Reuss, Gesch. d. A T. Ritter, Erdh. Sohrader, KAT- Sohrader, KOF . StKr . ThStW Wellh. Einl." Wellh. Gesch. Isr. WeUh. ProV- Wellh. xxi., xxii. ZAW . ZDMG ZDPV ZKWL Gesohichte der Heiligen Schriften dea Alien Testaments von Ed. Reuss, 1881. Erdkunde im Verhaltniss zur Natur und Geschichte des Menschen. Von C. Ritter, 1850 flf. Die Keilinschriften und das Alte Testament von Eberh. Schrader. 2 Aufl. 1883, Eng. Trans. The Cunei form Inscriptions and the Old Testament, 1885, 1888. Keilinschriften und Geschichtsforsohung von Eb. Schrader, 1878. Theologische Studien und Kritiken. Theologische Studien aus Wiirtemberg. See Bleek". Geschichte Israels von J. Wellhausen. 1 Band, 1878. Prolegomena zur Geschichte Israels von J. Wellhausen. 2 Ausgabe der Geschichte Israels. Bd. i., 1883. Eng. Trans., Prolegomena, etc., 1885. Wellhausen in the Jahrbiichern fiir Deutsche Theologie, Bd. xxi. und xxii. Zeitschrift fiir die Alttestamentliche Wissensohaft. Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischeu Gesell- schaft. Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palastinavereins. Zeitschrift fiir kirkliche Wissenschaft und kirklichen Leben. CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION. § 1. Interest of the Subject and Method of Treatment § 2. Scientific Works on Hebrew History § 3. Israel's Land and its Products 1. The Land ... 2. Climate, Flora and Fauna § 4. The Inhabitants and Neighbours of Canaan 1. The Inhabitants 2. Israel's Neighbours 8 8 15 18 18 23 BOOK I THE PERIOD ENDING WITH THE CONQUEST OF CANAAN. K.— SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON THIS PERIOD. I. — The Old Testament Hexateuch § 5. Tradition and^its Authority • .27 § 6. History of Criticism . . ■ • ■ First Period, to K. H. Graf Second Period. Since Graf 36 36 43 xii CONTENTS PAGE § 7. Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomic Fragments . . 48 1. The Compilation of the extant Book of Deu- teronomy. The Original Kernel . . 48 2. Date of the Composition of D . . .57 3. The Deuteronomic Fragments in the Book of Joshua . . . . .66 § 8. The Sources J and E. Their relation to each other and to D . . . . .69 1. Relation to Deuteronomy . . .70 2. Relation to each other. Their Combination . 72 3. Priority. . . .76 4. Age and Origin . . , . .81 5. Sources of E and J . . . .90 § 9. The Priestly Writing . . .96 § 10. Continuation. The grounds on which P is considered Post-Exilic . . . . . ,107 1. Archseological Considerations : — Place of Divine Worship. Sacrifices. Festivals. Priests and Levites . . . . .107 2. Literary and Linguistic Considerations . . 124 3. Result ...... 131 II. — The Remaining. Sources 'B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD. CHAPTER I THE PATRIARCHAL AGE I, — The Tradition in the Sources § 12. E's Narrative . . . . . .136 1. Abraham . . . . .136 2. Isaac ...... 140 §11- CONTENTS xiii PAGE 3. Jacob . 141 4. Joseph . 144 § 1 3. J's Narrative . 147 1. The Yahvist 147 2. Abraham 149 3. Isaac 153 4. Jacob 154 5. Joseph . 157 § 14. The Priestly Writing and its Editing 161 1. The Priestly Writing . 161 2. The Editor 165 II. — The Historical Substance of the Patriarchal Story § 15. The Patriarchs in General .168 § 16. Abraham . . . . 172 § 17. The Original Home of Abraham and the Hebrews 180 §18. The Immigration of the Hebrews into Egypt . . 183 §19. The Personality of Joseph . . . .186 CHAPTEE II MOSES AND THE JOURNEY THROUGH THE DESERT I. The Tradition in the Sources § 20. J's Narrative . . . .192 1. To the Arrival at Sinai . . .192 2. The Events at Sinai . . . .197 3. The End of the Journey through the Desert . 200 CONTENTS § 21. E's Narrative ..... 1. To the Arrival at Sinai . 2. The Events at Sinai 3. The End of the Journey through the Desert § 22. The Narrative Material of P. . PAGE 203 203 207 212 215 II. The Historical Substance of the Story of Moses § 23. The Statements of the Old Testament 1. A Summary View 2. The Passage of the Eed Sea 3. The Fight with Sihon . 4. The Forty Years in the Desert 5. The Events at Sinai 6. The Camping Grounds. The Number of the People. The Tabernacle § 24:. The same Subject continued — Moses and his religion 1. Moses a Historical Personage 2. Moses as Legislator and Founder of a Eeligion 3. Whence came his knowledge of God ? § 25. Foreign Accounts .... 1, Tell el Maskhuta 2. The Pharaoh of the Exodus 222 222 225 228 231 232 236 238 238 240 249 252 253 256 CHAPTER III THE CONQUEST OF CANAAN. § 26. The Survey of the Conquest in Judges i. and ii. 1-5 . 264 1. The Text . . . . .264 2. The Division of the Land, and Joshua 270 3. Eesult ...... 275 CONTENTS XV PAGE § 27. The Conquest of Canaan, up to the Alliance with Gibeon, according to the Book of Joshua . . .2 78 1. Joshua at the Head of all Israel . . .279 2. Joshua at the Head of the House of Joseph . 285 §28. The Historical character of the Narrative . . 291 1. The Mode of Invasion . . .292 2. The Several Events . .297 § 29. The Events that followed the Alliance with Gibeon . 302 1. The Battle of Gibeon . .302 2. The Eest of the Narratives . . .308 INTRODUCTION § 1. The Interest of the Subject. The Method of Treatment. The interest which is aroused by the history of the Hebrew race is of varied kinds. The sympathy which man naturally feels with his fellows, and the impulse which moves us to psychological observation, would of themselves suffice to awaken a more than ordinarily strong desire to trace out the fortunes of this people. For it is a people which has had vitality enough to weather all the storms of the history of mankind and a thousand sufferings peculiar to itself. And its tenacious clinging to its own nationality and to its hereditary peculiarities still presents the most perplex- ing of problems to the statesman and the student. Nor is that all. When we endeavour to grasp the influence which its history has exercised over the other nations, nay, over the whole world and its fortunes, feelings of interest of a still loftier kind at once assert themselves. Although the history of man's spiritual life since the beginning of our era has been largely affected by the ideas that flowed from Greece and Eome, it has received from no quarter a stronger or more lasting fertilising energy than from the small land of Judaea. But the spirit creates for itself its own forms in external life. Christianity, the embodiment of these new thoughts, has not been content with drawing into its province the faith, the mode of thought, the moral habits of the nations. It has also taken possession of their outward life, their culture and their politics, oivinc to these the form it would. There is hardly an event of A 2 HISTORY OF THE HEBEEWS true significance in the history of the nations touched by Chris- tianity, the genesis and development of which can be shown to be unaffected by these fundamental facts. The religion of Jesus of ISTazareth, or rather, the work He wrought, comprehending, as it did, the whole world and the entire life of man, did not grow simply out of the soil of Judsea and the religious characteristics of the nation to which He belonged. The jSTature and, yet more markedly, the teaching of the Founder of the Christian religion, have their deepest roots in the past of His people and the ideas which the Old Testament supplied. The deeper our inquiry into the sources of our own faith the more intimately will it come into contact with the thoughts of Hebrew antiquity. The part played by the Hebrew race has been that of a seed-plot for ripening the fruit of the new ideas that were destined to conquer the world. But seed-plot and fruit are always very closely related. The elements of which the plant is formed are hidden in the soil and ready at any time to come into action. They need only a new germ of life to quicken them into develop- ment and give them their predestined shape. Islam also has drawn its best parts from these sources. Israel has reached this altogether peculiar position, which is not even distantly approached by any other people, through its religion, its idea of the Divine. Not its religion in the abstract, apart from the rest of its national life. We mean rather its religion as standing in the closest connection, the most vital and palpable reciprocity, with the national character ; on the one hand determined in part and matured by the idiosyncrasies and the fortunes of the people, and on the other determining and visibly influencing them itself. No power on earth is equal to the influence of religious life. It is this which has made the Hebrew race so great and given it a still perceptible influence. The Phoenicians who settled near them might traverse lands and seas, heaping up the treasures of three continents. The dwellers by the Nile and the Euphrates might reduce half the world to subjection. Greece, by its philosophy INTRODUCTION 3 and the imperishable creations of its art, Eome, by the genius that fashioned laws and states, might make for themselves a name in history. The Hebrew race towers far above them in its enduring, far-reaching influence on the fortunes of the nations and the cast of their thought. Infinitesimally small as is its native land, insignificant as are its possessions and its external dominion, yet it has exercised a unique power over the world and won a world-empire of its own. Christianity has deepened and ennobled the piety which Israel practised, but it is, after all, Israelite piety which the other nations have accepted. Only a few remarks will be needed to place before the reader the light in which this book will seek to set the History of the People of Israel. History has not completed its task when it has related facts and arranged them in their proper order. It must also explain the origin, growth, and decay of nations from the inner necessity of the forces at work in the nations themselves and from their connection with the general objects and aims of the history of the world. There is hardly any field where the attempt to do this meets with a richer reward than in the one that lies before us. Nowhere is the historian more deeply impressed with its propriety and necessity. In fact, he finds here a series of phenomena which, looked at apart, seem strange and perplexing, and only obtain their full significance and manifest value when regarded as links in the chain which binds human things together. One example will suffice. We usually find a nation displaying its loftiest powers at the time when the community is growing and prospering. A people in its decline can at most gather together all its forces for one supreme, final effort, as the setting sun exhibits all his splendour when the day is dying. But in the case of this most remarkable of all peoples, the overthrow of the nation is the source of its continuance. The observer is confronted with this astonishing sight, that the ruin of the commonwealth and the termination of the national independence issues in a fresh revival 4 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS of the national spirit. Nor is it merely as with other nations in their decline, which, amidst the ruins of the past, have clung tenaciously to the memory of bygone splendour and to a passionate regret for their evil fate. That which in other races was destruc- tion was for Israel the occasion of a lasting reformation. Here again religion is the cause. Eeligion, the most precious jewel of the Hebrew people ! The State has perished. But this is the one race in which the national religion is stronger than the State, thus showing itself to be more than national. The people's life climbs up anew, round the supports furnished by its religion, and produces embodiments of itself that will endure and surpass all preceding ones. Israel henceforward is politically subordinate, and indeed altogether insignificant, yet her ideas conquer the world. The picture we have drawn is surprising, in fact, startling, till we see it in the light of the object to which the whole tends. Judaism, so called, that is, the later or Jewish phase of the people of Israel, which repels us when compared with that of the Hebrew period, and is a caricature of true and healthy life, full of absurdity and of bad taste, loses its confusedness and meanness when we look at the brilliant goal after which it strives. In the following history the ruling principle will therefore be the description of events in accordance with the sequence of cause and effect. When a man acts it is because he has a single object in view. But each several event becomes a link in the chain of universal history and there alone finds its true place. So also the single object aimed at by the individual is absorbed in that more universal object, which stands above it and expresses the ultimate idea of the whole process of history. If history does not demonstrate the truth of a teleological view of the world, we, at all events, cannot understand history without carrying the latter idea in our minds. Wlien history deals with the past it is compelled so to study the event as to find out what were the determining causes. And when it looks into the future it must point out the already existing germ of what is hereafter to be. Yet more. Out of the INTRODUCTION 5 action and reaction it must educe the law to which all human life is subject and the goal which it seeks. And no less surely must the recognition of the purpose of the whole enrich and deepen the inquirer's comprehension of each several part. We are far from wishing to construe history according to our own ideas and prepossessions. We would rather study the ex- ternal course of events in such a way as to learn from the facts the ideas they embody, believing that in every occurrence these are the really essential elements. In this we know ourselves to be of one mind with the great master of historical writinsr.^ § 2. Scientific Worhs on Hchreiu Historij. Kohler '^ has given a careful account of the older works on Israelite history from Sulpicius Severus to about the middle of the present century. The first to produce a comprehensive and grandly designed history of Israel, founded on critical principles, was Heinrich Ewald.3 Some of his critical assumptions failed from the first to win general acceptance, and others can no longer be maintained. Yet the work of which they are the foundation is the most im- posing phenomenon which has thus far been seen in the field of Hebrew history : in many respects it has opened the way and led to further investigation. Prior to Ewald, Bertheau* had brought out a valuable book which is still worthy of attention. Weber and Holtzmann's^ history is greatly influenced by Ewald in its first part, but shows more independence in the second. ' For Ranke's view of history compare not only his own works but also especially C. Rossler, in Preuss. Jahrb. , Bd. Iviii. p. 64 ff. 2 Lehrb. d. bibl. Gench. d. Alien Btmde-i, i. (1875), p. 7 ff. For the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in particular, rf. Diestel, Gesch. d. Alien Tesiamenis, pp. 460ff.,577ff. ■> Gesch. des Volken Israel, 1843 ff., 3rd Edition 1864 ff. * Zur Geschichte der Israeliien. Two Enaays. Gott. 1842. ^ Gesch. des Volkes Israel und der Enistehung des Chrisientums, 2 vols., Leipzig. 1867. 6 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS Hitzig's 1 treatment of our subject is in many respects helpful, is rich in fresh combinations, but abounds almost more even than his other writings in arbitrary ideas and baseless hypotheses as well as in acuteness. L. Seinecke ^ has recently surpassed Hitzig, not indeed in learning and philological equipment, but in lack of critical method and historical caution. Hengsteuberg, ^ Hofmann, * and Kurtz ^ are amongst the most notable workers on the old traditional lines. The first named of these follows the older school more closely and with less modification than the two latter. A. Kohler <* has lately taken up a similar position in a work which is remarkable, in each successive part, for its ful- ness of detail and thoroughness, its learning, depth, and objectivity. Wellhausen^ has inaugurated a new epoch in the treatment of Hebrew history. We shall mention elsewhere the writings of Vatke, Graf, and Kuenen which have served as his starting-point. His assumptions and conclusions will also require considerable attention. Excepting in the 'Abriss,' Wellhausen has for the most part confined himself to the criticism of the documents, laying especial stress, however, on the elements supplied by matters of fact. Stade, ^ on the other hand, following in his steps, has just issued the first volume of a real history of Israel. It is character- ised by clearness of exposition and many fresh results, as well as ^ Gesch. d. V. Israel von Anberjinn his zv/r Erobenmg Masadas im Jahrc 72 A.u. Lpz., 1S69. Two parts. •-■ Gesch. d. V. Isratl, i. Giitt., 1876; ii. Gott., 1884. * Gesch. des Seiches Goltes unter dem A. Bimde, Berl., 1869 ff. ■* Weissarfung und ErfiUluruj, Ncirdl., 1841, 44. = Gesch. des Allen Bundes, Berlin, 1848 ff. (3rd Edition, 1864). « Lehrb. der bibl. Gesch. d. A. Bund., Erlg. First Half, 1875; Second Half, First Part, 1-3, 1877-1884 ; Second Half, Second Part, 1893. ' Gesch. Israels, vol. i., Berl. 1878; 2nd and 3rd Editions and Title: Pro- leyomena zur Gesch. Isr. 1883 and 1886; Abriss der Gesch. Israels mid Judas in Skizzen und Vorarbeiten, 1 Heft, Berl. 1884 (an enlarged translation of the article, 'Israel' in the Encyc. Brit., vol. xiii.). [Die Oomp. des Hexateuchs u. der hist. Backer d. A. Test., Berl., 1889.] * Gesch. des V. Israel (in Oncken's Series of Ancient Histories), vol. i. Berl. , 1881-1886. [Stade wrote part of vol. ii. (1888), bringing us down to the beginning of the Hellenistic period. From that point to a.d. 70 the story is carried on by O. Holtzmann.] INTRODUCTION 7 by great fulness of description and a many-sided treatment of the subject. This first-rate book suffers unmistakably from its author's inadequate sense of the value of tradition. Keuss's^ work, which is primarily devoted to the Literature, contributes largely to the History also. "We have now also a complete work on the subject by Ernest Eenan, entitled Histoirc du Feuj^le d'Israel, (1887-94). It exhibits all Eenan 's characteristic merits, charming delineation, richness of fancy, plastic power : but not seldom it displays an astonishing lack of historical sensibility. On the whole, the book does not contribute to the advancement of our science to the extent which might have been anticipated from its author's extraordinary learning. Much help is furnished by the EncyclopEedias, especially Sdhenkel's ,£ibellexicon, Eiehm's Handu-orterluch des hibl. Alter- tuvis, and, although in a less uniform fashion, the Eealcncyclo- pddie fur prot. Theologie. We have still to mention the books which treat of the entire history of the ancient East. Amongst foreign works the very comprehensive histories of Maspero^ and Lenormant^ must be mentioned. The former is, in any case, an Egyptologist rathei than an authority on the Old Testament. Hence his book, though containing a multitude of valuable details, loses much of its im- portance so far as our subject is concerned. Lenormant, too, does not possess a critical acquaintance with Hebrew antiquity. Or the other hand. Max Duncker,* in Germany, has succeeded ir bringing within the framework of a universal history of antiquitj a view of Hebrew history derived from careful criticism, auc setting in a clear light Israel's relations to other nations. It ii indeed true that the critical foundations on which this view rest: have now ceased to be tenable. Ed. Meyer ^ has succeeded stil 1 Geach. derlieil. Schriften des A. Test., Braunsohw., 1S81. Second Edition 1890. - Histmre ancienne des peuples d'Orient, ed. 4, Paris, 1886. ' Histoire ancienne de I'Oi-ient, etc., ed. 9, 1881 ff. ■• Gesch. des AUertums, i., ed. 5, Leipzig, 1878. =* Gesch. des AUertums, i., Stuttg., 1884. 8 HISTORY OF THE HEBKKWS better in giving a magnificent survey of the history of the various peoples and their relations to each other. His conclusions are drawn from an independent investigation of almost the v^hole of the available material. Unfortunately this very excellent work suffers from the same defect as Stade's where Hebrew history is concerned. § 3. Israel's Land and its Products. 1. The Land} — The southern portion of Syria, extending from the foot of Lebanon to the Desert which divides Egypt from Asia, and from the Mediterranean to the Syro-Arabian Desert, is the land which Israel occupied, and regarded as allotted to it by God. Reckoning from the south end of the Dead Sea to the sources of ^ Special information respecting the extraordinarily abundant literature on this subject is given in Tobler, Bibliographia geographica Palaestinae, Lpz. 1867 (to which add Walsborne in the Serapeuni, 1S69, and Tobler, Bibl. geogr. Pal. ah anil. 33.3-1000, Dresd., 1875); Robinson, Pal iii., App. i. ; F. W. Schultz in PRE.- xi. p. 800 ff. ; Socin in ZDPV., yearly. In this book we have made special use of Robinson, Pa/, and LBR. , Russegger, Eeisen ; Ritter, Erdlc. XV. f., and Badek. In addition to these, particular mention should be made of the following : U. J. Seetzen, Bcisen (lurch Si/rien, etc., Berlin, 1854, ff. ; J. L. Burckhardt, Eeisen in Syrien mid Pcdiist. , 1 823 ; V. Schubert, Reise nach d. Morgeid. Erl. 1838, if. ; Strauss, Sinai und Golgotha, Berlin, 1847 ; Wolff, Reiae ins gel. Land, 1849 ; Van de Velde, jyarr. of a Journey through Syria and Palestine, 1854 ; Furrer, Wanderungen durch Pal., 1SG5 ; V. Orelli, durchs h. Land, 1S78 ; Kiepert, Alte Geogr., 1878, p. 178 ff . ; Lortet, La Syrie d'avjourdlmi, 1884 ; Ebers u. Guthe, Pcdcist. in Bild mid Wort, 1883 f. (new and cheap edition, 1886 f. ). We must also refer to the publications of the Palestine Exploration Fund: Quarterly Statements, etc., 1869 ff. ; Surrey of We.-itern Palestine, 1881, ff . ; Our Work in Pal., 1873; Twenty-one Years' Worl: in the Holy Land, 1887. See also the geographical articles in Schenkel's Bib. Lex., Riehm's HWB. and PRE.'- The great map of Western Palestine, by Conder and Kitchener, published by the Palestine Exploration Fund, is a very fine piece of cartography. Fisher and Guthe have recently published an excellent Hand Map, Neue Handkarte von Palaest. , 1890. [Amongst the more recent English works we may refer to the geographical articles in the second edition of the Dirtionar")/ of the Bible, revised by Sir C. Wilson, and in a few instances by Major Conder; to Sir C. Wilson's Picturesque Palestine, and to the later publications of the Palestine Exploration Fund, such as the 3Iap of Eastern Palestine, The Geology of Palestine and Arabia Pelrea, Names and Places in the Old Testament and Apocrypha, Tent Work in Palestine, The City and the Land. Cf. also Wellhausen, Israelitische und JUdische Geschichle, 1894, pp. 1-5.] INTEODUCTION 9 the Jordan, it lies between 31° aud a little over 33° north latitude. Its breadth is comprised between 34° 20' and 36° east longitude. Its superficial area is not much more than 520 square miles. The Hebrews themselves call their territory the Land of Kena'an (Canaan), or, at all events, the country west of the Jordan is so called in the Old Testament. The territory east of the Jordan bears the name of Gilead ; its northern half is also called Bashan. Palestine, the usual name at the present day, comes from Pelesheth, the title commonly given by the Hebrews to the Philistine plain beside the sea: from being employed in this limited sense it has been extended to designate the entire country. The name Kena'an is found on the Egyptian monuments.' Its origin and meaning have not yet been determined. Formerly it was the . almost universal custom to say that it meant the Lowland, in contrast with Aram, the Highlands. To this it was an obvious objection that the land of Israel is, for the most part, mountainous, and that plains and valleys can only be found in a few districts. It was replied that a designation originally given to the Phoenician settlers on the coast and to their country spread along with the people themselves, so that as they advanced east- wards from the sea to the mountains the name accompanied them until it had embraced the whole western region.^ That is to say, a process went on in ancient times similar to the one to which we owe the name Palestine. But if the possibility of such a process is granted there is one fact which tells very forcibly against the entire opinion. The sense of Aram as highland in antithesis to Kena'an as lowland is more and more seen to be doubtful.^ If the true meaning of Aram is the Country of the Exalted, of the I>robles, of the ' Aryans ' (bne shem), we should be more inclined to see in the Canaanites the Humiliated, the Subdued,* and so to ' See E. Meyer in ZA W. , iii. p. SOS, for the statements respecting Rameses in. and Seti I. 2 By Bertheau, e.;/., Zur O'vicfi. d. Israel, p. 153 f. ; dubiously by Reuss, Gesch. d. h. Schr. d. AT., p. 43 f. ■' E. Meyer, Gtudi. d. AUerl., i. p. 213 ; Tiele, Babyl.-Ass. Gesch., p. 64. ^ Cf. the frequent employment in this sense of the Hebrew verbs VJ^n and J?J2:. U) HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS ake it as a name given to the conquered race. But if it be proved, as seems almost certain, that the name was known in Egypt at a very early date, it cannot have been invented by the Hebrews as a designation of the Canaanites whom they subdued. Yet one can hardly imagine its having any other origin. For the present we must rest content with a non liquet. More recent scholars have maintained in various forma a view which lies midway between the two just mentioned. Abandoning the contrast with Aram, they have seen in Canaan simply the Depression, the hollow by the sea and the Jordan : from these quarters the name is supposed to have been transferred to the hill-country west of the Jordan.^ The entire land of Palestine is divided into two halves by a cleft which runs from north to south, and extends beyond the territory of Israel as far as the Arabian Gulf. From the foot of Hermon to the Dead Sea it forms the valley of the Jordan, Israel's most important river. This remarkable ravine begins at the foot of Hermon, at a comparatively small elevation above the Mediter- ranean. It reaches its lowest point, 394 metres^ below the sea- level, at the spot where the Jordan enters the Dead Sea. Then it pursues its course to the Arabian Gulf, rising slowly all the way till it reaches a considerable height above the sea. The distance between the Sea of Gennesaret and the Dead Sea is scarcely fifteen geographical miles. In traversing it the Jordan falls about 200 metres. The fall is much more rapid in the upper stretches. Before reaching the Sea of Huleh it sinks about 437 metres, and between this and the Sea of Galilee about 274. This excessive fall and the consequent swiftness of the stream render the navigation of the Jordan everywhere unsafe. It is true that in the Ghor, the strip between the Sea of Galilee and the mouth of the Jordan, the river is compelled to wind about to such an extent as to draw out its length to some forty (German) miles. ' Dillmann in Schenkel'a Bib. -Lex., iii. p. 513 ff. ; and Gen.^ p. 179; Kautzsoh in Riehm's HWB., p. 216 ; F. W. Schultz in PRE.^ iii. p. 116. - [A metre = 39 -37 inches.] INTRODUCTION 11 Hence, of course, the stream is somewhat less rapid. But naviga- tion is next to impossible, owing to the cascades and whirlpools. The woods and deserts that surround the stream ; the deficiency of fords ; the thoroughly tropical heat of the deep hollow, from which the hills on either hand keep off all cooling winds — these, and an abundance of other unfavourable conditions, are adverse to traffic on and around the Jordan. The Jordan and the Mle have often been compared with each other. Both of them divide their country into two halves. But the Nile is the source of fruitfulness to its country and the most im- portant channel of communication. The Jordan, on the contrary, separates the two halves of its country to such an extent that in many respects they have an independent existence in history.^ Amongst the remaining streams of Canaan the tributaries of the Jordan are first to be mentioned. On the west are the Nahr Jalud and the Wady el-Fari'a. On the east are the Yarmuk and the Jabbok. The Kidron, in the west, and the Arnon, in the east, How into the Dead Sea. The Nahr el Jalud rises, in all probability, in the neighbour- hood of the ancient Jezreel, in two springs which there come to the surface, one of them being the spring of Harod mentioned in the Book of Judges, or the spring of Jezreel, familiar to us in the history of Saul. Passing along the foot of Mt. Gilboa it flows by Beth Shan into the Jordan. One of the finest^ streams in the Holy Land is the Wady el-Fari'a. It has abundance of water and along part of its course gives rise to a luxurious vegetation.^ Eising not far from Nablus it flows to Qarn Sartabeh, the mountain which overhangs the valley of the Jordan. From this point it follows an almost due southerly course, and reaches the Jordan nearly at the 32° north latitude. In the Gh6r its waters diminish considerably. The Yarmuk flows into the other side of the Jordan, ^ For more information respecting the Jordan, see Robinson, Pal. ii. pp. 255- 267 ; iii. 309 ff. , 3i7 ff. ; Phys. Geogr. d. h. Landes, p. 140 ff. ; and especially Lynch, Narrative of the U.S. Expedition to the River Jordan, 1849 ; and Ritter, Der Jordan und die Benchiffung des T.M., Berlin, 1850. 2 Robinson, LBR., p. 303. = Baedeker", Eng. ed., p. 336. 12 HISTORY OF THE HEBKEWS on the iiurtli. The Greeks called it Hieromax. Two hours youth of the Sea of Galilee it empties itself into the Jordan at a sharp angle. It rises in the Hauran, and is fed by many copious tributaries, especially from the north, so that it may be reckoned the largest river in Palestine except the Jordan. At its mouth it is as great a stream as the one which it joins. ^ From the rich pasture-land of Gilead flows the splendid Jabbok, now called Xahr ez-Zerka. Its true source, the JS^ahr 'Amman, is near the city Ilabbath- Amnion, which is so well known in the Old Testament. It flows first to the north-east, then turns west and south-west, and enters the Jordan almost precisely at the 32nd parallel of latitude, a little south of the AVady Fari'a. When swollen by rain storms the passage is difficult.- The xVrnon, now called Wady Mojib, flows into the Dead Sea from the east. As it nears the Dead Sea its valley becomes continually narrower. Steep cliffs approach each other till they form a splendid gorge through which the raging stream cuts its way into the Dead Sea. From the west the Kidron empties itself into the Dead Sea. The valley of the Kidron begins half an hour north-west of Jerusalem and surrounds two sides of the city, the north and the east. Then the ravine runs to the Dead Sea in a south-easterly direction. It is only after a heavy rainfall that the valley is filled with water.^ The Mediterranean Sea receives only one important stream from the Holy Land, namely, the Xishon, now called el Muqatta. It flows through the fruitful plain of Megiddo, which also bore in Hebrew the name 'Emeq Jezreel, and now is called Merj ibn Amir. This plain separates Samaria from Galilee, the hill country of Ephraim from that of North I'alestine. It was the true battle-field of the Holy Land and has ' drunk the blood of the centuries ' from the days of Thothmes III., Deborah and Gideon, Ahab and Pharaoh Necho, to those of the Crusaders and Napoleon i. The Kishon is made up of a 1 Baedeker, Eng. ed., pp. 338, 398. - Ibid. p. 390; Biehm, II WB. p. U51 ; Wellluuiseu, /.■■■. u. J. <;i:.^rli., p. 4, thinks that tlie Yarmuk, not the Zerka, is to be identified with the Jabbok. '■' Robinson, Pal. i. p. 402; Baedeker, p. 21,3. INTRODUCTION 13 number of little springs and winter torrents that come partly from Gilboa, Tabor and Little Hermon, partly from the hills of Ephraim. It falls into the sea near Mt. Carmel.^ Besides these streams, the Holy Land possesses three consider- able lakes. They all lie in the line drawn by the Jordan from north to south. Even in its upper course the principal river of Israel is twice interrupted by fairly large basins of fresh water. Both are formed by dikes of volcanic origin, which run across the valley of the Jordan. The first is called by the Arabs, Bahr el Huleh. Modern geographers follow Reland in identifying it conjecturally with the Waters of ilerom mentioned in the Book of Joshua. To this marshy expanse of waters they therefore give the name Sea of Merom. It is 83 metres above the sea level. A few hours south of this the Jordan reaches the second fresh- water lake, the Sea of Kinnereth (Kinnaroth), called the Sea of Gennesaret in the New Testament and Josephus. The river enters the lake through a deep ravine, after a course marked by many picturesque waterfalls. The lake is 208 metres - below the sea, 21 kilometres" long, about 10 broad,* and reaches a depth of .50 metres. It abounds in fish, and is navigable. Surrounded on every hand by hills, it usually lies in perfect peace, looking like a blue mirror ; but occasionally violent storms arise and lash it into fury.^ The Jordan Valley comes to an end in vast beds of rock-salt, heaped together at the southern extremity of the great Depression, and surrounded by lofty perpendicular precipices. Between these lies a broad basin, 73 kilometres long and 17-8 broad, into which the Jordan pours, forming thus a straggling Salt Sea, the Dead Sea. It is entitled to both names. The masses of salt on its soutliern shore, and the other mineral constituents left behind by the extraordinary evaporation,^ cause the water to taste extremely 1 Ou the Plain of Jezreel, see Ebers-Guthe, i. p. 276 S. "' Baedeker, p. 370, following Lynch: Kiepert, Alte Geogr., p. 173, says 191 metres. ' i-^ kilometre is 1000 metres.] ■" Varying with the height of the water. = Baedeker, p. 370. ^ The Jordan is supposed to bring six million tons of water into the Dead Sea daily, and all this is evaporated. Baedeker, p. 268 f. U HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS salt ^ and disagreeably bitter. They also make its specific gravity greater than that of a human body, so that it is impossible for a man to sink. Consequently no living thing can exist in it. There is neither fish nor shell nor coral.^ Yet it is 'the centre of a landscape of peculiar beauty and manifold charms.'^ Its surface is now 394 metres below the sea, but at one time it stood 106 metres higher. The extraordinary and long-continued evaporation has gradually diminished the quantity of water. Its greatest depth is 399 metres; in the middle it is 329 metres; in the southern cove it is only about 3 metres.* In addition to the low land of the Jordan and the Plain of Megiddo, the land of Canaan possesses only one important de- pression, the great stretch of level country which forms the coast of the Mediterranean from Gaza to Caesarea and D6r. Its southern half is called Shefela, its northern Sharon. The Old Testament,^ like modern travellers,^ extols the fertility and beauty of this plain. All the rest of the country is mountainous. On both sides of the Jordan it is taken up with two great chains of hills, the continuation of Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon. Speaking broadly, there are limestone hills right from the north to the south, but these are broken into in many places by valleys and ravines. They reach a very fair height — 1200 to 1300 metres — in Galilee, a little over 800 or 900 in the other parts of the west, and somewhat over 1000 metres to the east of the Jordan. Although it is evident that the mountains of Israel cannot compare with those of the Lebanon and Hermon, which are as much as 3000 metres high, they are noble hills, especially when viewed from the Jordan Valley far below the sea level. Few of them are solitary peaks. ' According to Kiepert, Alte Geor/r., p. 174, more than 18 per cent., i.e. from five to six times as much as that of the ocean. = O. Fraas, in Riehm's HWB., p. 973. ' Ebers-Guthe, Palant. i. p. 170. '' For further particulars respecting the Dead Sea, see O. Fraas, Das T. M. , Stuttg. 1867, and the remaining literature in Ebers-Guthe, i. p. 494. ^ Canticles ii. 1 ; Isa. xxxiii. 9 ; xxxv. 2 ; Ixv. 10. « Cf. Ritter, Erdkunde, xvi. p. 566 ff. ; Robinson, Pal., ii. pp. 25, 29, 31 : Fraas, A.d. Orient., p. 198. INTRODUCTION 15 For the most part they form plateaus, and accordingly are adapted to agriculture up to the very summit, so that even the mountains are, as a rule, arable and fertile. The two mountain districts of Ephraim and Judah are but slightly separated from each other. One might in fact speak more correctly of two parts of the one mountain district which runs southwards from Carmel and the Kishon Valley. This was the principal theatre of the history of Judah. The hill-country of Ephraim contains much fertile land and many rich pastures, especially in its northern half. It is only towards the Plain of Sharon,^ and particularly towards the east, that the mountains are less cultivated. Here the hills are in parts rough and barren, and cleft with wild ravines. But fruitful districts are also to be found. And a series of ruins leads us to the conclusion that this portion of the country may formerly have been more highly cultivated.^ The mountain range of Judah presents, on the whole, the appearance of a sterile hill- country, scored with ravines more deeply than Mount Ephraim itself.^ Yet even at the present day its hills and valleys abound in cornfields, oliveyards, and vineyards.* Doubtless in ancient times they were even more highly cultivated. 2. Climate, Flora and Fauna.^Owing to the remarkable differences of elevation, the climate of Palestine is by no means uniform. There are, however, a certain number of phenomena common to the entire country." And perhaps the more careful cultivation which once prevailed may have caused the climate then to be slightly different from what it is now. Yet, on the whole, we are entitled to believe that the present climate of the Holy Land resembles that of ancient times. As we should expect from the latitude, the climate is sub- 1 Robinson, Later Biblical Researches, p. 117, etc. - Bitter, Erdk. xvi. p. 462 if. ; Robinson, Later Biblical Besearches, p. 361, etc. "■ F. W.'schultz in PBE."- xi. p. 746. J Robinson, Pal. ii. pp. Ill, 157 ; Russeger, iii. p. 74 S. 5 For further details, see Riehm's HWB., p. 1761 ff. ; F. W. Schultz in PBE.'ixi. p. 744 ff. 16 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS tropical. On the coast and the high lands it approaches that of the temperate zone. In the deep and sheltered Ghor it is nearly that of the tropics. Beside the Dead Sea it is thoroughly tropical. Palestine has but two seasons, summer and winter, i.e. the rainless season and the rainy. The so-called ' early rain ' falls at the end of October. It derives its name from the fact that it makes the land again fit for cultivation after long drought. The rainy season follows it immediately. November is often mild and bright. December is dull and stormy. But January and February are the true winter months. On the plains they are accompanied with storms and rains ; on the hills, not unfrequently, with snow. March and April bring the 'late rain,' which pro- motes growth and ripens the winter crops. In ancient times the failure of this rain brought the country into danger of famine, and the same consequence, to a great extent, follows still. Summer begins in May. From then to the end of October, clouds and rain are exceptional. The mists too, which for a while continue to be visible in the mountain region, gradually disappear. For months there is a cloudless sky. At night the moon and stars shine with marvellous brilliancy. If the days are hot, the nights are for the most part delightfully cool, and the air is then made fragrant by the refreshing dew. Excepting in the higher districts, wheat is mostly ready for cutting in May : in the low lands barley is often ready in April. In consequence of the higher tempera- ture of the Ghor everything ripens earlier there than elsewhere.^ On the whole, the flora of Palestine is that common to the Mediterranean countries, but it has many things peculiar to itself. From the historical standpoint interest centres chiefly in the list of food-plants and trees. Corn, oil and wine, the chief products of the Holy Land, obtained at the threshing-floor and the press, are very frequently mentioned together in the Old Testament. We learn from the 1 Robinson, Pal. ii. pp. 99, 100, 262, 263; Ritter, Erdt xv. 1. p. r)04 if.; xvi. p. 134 f. INTRODUCTION 17 history of Solomon that the country was capable of feeding itself and exporting considerable quantities of grain and oil.' Wheat both was and is the most valuable kind of grain. Barley is looked upon as the food of the poor, but is often enough mentioned. Spelt, millet, rye, maize, beans, lentiles, and a great number of pot-herbs, are extensively grown.- Besides the products of the arable soil we nmst consider those of the vine and olive, as well as of the fio-. When the blessings of the land are proclaimed in the Old Testament, ' vine, olive and fig-tree ' are usually named together. The vine grows everywhere, especially in the Lebanon and the hill-country of Judah. Its fruit, whether in the form of grapes or of wine, takes the highest rank as a food and a delicacy.^ The oHve flourishes best on the coast of Phoenicia. The fig-tree bears fruit almost all through the year. Figs are highly esteemed, both when fresh gathered and when dried and pressed. Sycomore figs and pomegranates, apples and pears, almonds, peaches, apricots, oranges and other fruits are also grown, though not so extensively as the vine, the olive, and the fig. Save in exceptional instances the date-palm brings its fruit to maturity only at Jericho, ' the city of palm-trees,' and a few other places. In addition to the fruit-trees every reader of the Old Testament is familiar with the noblest tree of Palestine, the cedar of Lebanon, which at one time covered the ridges and slopes of that range, but is now becoming extinct. Oaks, terebinths, tamarisks, and cypresses are also as much at home in the Old Testament as in the Palestine of to-day. Sheep and oxen are the domestic animals most frequently mentioned in the Old Testament. The rearing of sheep flourishes now all over the country as much as formerly, but oxen appear to be far less common and the breed to have degenerated. 1 1 Kings V. 11. '■^ See Riitachi's article ' Ernte ' in PRE.- and Eiehm's ' Ackerbau ' in IIWB. ' Cf. V. Hehn, Kultiirpflanzen und Haustiere in ihr. t/bergange a. Aden, etc. (^1874), p. 62 fF. ; also the articles on ' Wein ' in the BecUworterb. B 18 HISTORY OF THE HEBEEWS Goats and asses are greatly prized, the former for their milk, the latter for riding and as beasts of burden. The horse did not obtain a footing in Israel until the period of the Kings ; ^ now it is much used in Palestine. When first introduced it seems to have been a costly possession, within reach only of tlie king and the nobles. The Israelites were quite familiar with the camel, but it is more used by the Bedouins of the desert than by the settled population. The wandering dog, without a master, connnon tliroughout the East ; and the cat, seldom domesticated in the Holy Land, may be counted amongst the wild animals. At the head of this class stands the lion, which is frequently mentioned in the poetry and the prose of Israel. He has now disappeared from Palestine but seems to have been pretty frequently met with in ancient times, especially in the thickets of the Jordan valley and in the Lebanon. Wolves and bears are still found in the Lebanon. Hya?nas and jackals are common in all parts of the country. In ancient times northern Syria was acquainted with the elephant (Meyer, Gescli.. Aegypt., p. 241). § 4. Tlie Inhabitants and Neiglibours of Ganaanr 1. The Inhabitants. — The people who settled in Canaan after the time of Moses, to whose history this book is devoted, called tliemselves Sons of Israel. In the historical period this name was for a long time specially applied to the northern tribes, and it would seem probable that it belonged originally to a single leading tribe.^ Owing to its importance this tribe would be able to impose its own name, first on the northern group and subsequently on the entire people. Many other tribal names have gone through a similar process, becoming ultimately the names of nations. The patriarchal history states further that Israel is a later '■ On this, see Helm, Kulturpjl. und Haust., p. 20 ff. ; Riehm in HWB., p. 1179 if. = Of. Wellh., Isr. u. J. Gesch., pp. 5-9. » Stade, Gench. Isr., i. p. 12-1 ff. INTRODUCTION 19 name for the founder of the tribe, and that originally he was called Jacob. From this it may be concluded that there was at one time a tribe called Jacob which afterwards blended with and took the name of the tribe of Israel to which it was related. In point oi fact Ed. Meyer believes that he has found the name Jacob in the list of Palestinian populations conquered by Thothnies iii.^ It thus becomes increasingly probable that Israel was once the name oi a tribe. According to Meyer the name Israel must have specially attached itself to the east of the Jordan and to the mountain district of Ephraim, and the name Jacob to south Palestine. These and other tribes must subseqixently ^ have coalesced in the one tribe of Israel : the original owner of the name then disappeared entirely; other tribes, such as Joseph, whose name Meyer believes he has also found in the list of Thothmes in., kept their places as subordinate tribes to Israel-Jacob riglit up to the historical period. It may no doubt be surprising that the tribe which, as being the most important, gave its name to the rest of those out of which at a later day the nation was formed, should disappear entirely. Yet it is scarcely possible to explain in any other way the fact that the people of the Holy Land bore the name Israel. Here we obtain a little insight into the origin of the twelve tribes. Jacob and Joseph, and many other clans, at one time formed separate clans, but afterwards became unable to maintain the position of independent tribes. Community of blood, of interests and of country had already brought them into more or less intimate relations. As time passed on they came closer together and gradually began to constitute a united people.^ Foreigners called Israel by the name 'Ibrim, Hebrews. The same title is used when they are contrasted with foreigners. The word means people from the other side, and doubtless points to 1 In the form nsapU' (1 = ^). See ZA W. vi. (1886), p. 1 ff. - But not at so late a date as the times of Saul and David, as Meyer thinks. The names found in the pre-Egyptian period indicate that it was during that period the confusion of tribes took place. Cf. the Song of Deborah. * Following the lead of Ewald, Stade has dealt thoroughly with the history of the origin of the several tribes, especially in Gesch. lar. i. p. 145 ff. 20 HISTOEY OF THE HEBREWS the iuiiiiigration of these tribes into a district which they had not previously owned. This title used to be deemed a reminiscence of the migration of the Hebrew tribes from Mesopotamia and their crossing the Euphrates. Now, however, the prevalent view is that the Israelites were called Hebrews from their having come across the Jordan.^ Such investigations as we are able to make into the history of the langTiage of Israel lead to the conclusion that it was that branch of the great Semitic family of languages ^ which is briefly named Hebrew. "With the exception of a few minor dialectal differences, such as occur even in Israel itself — both in the north and in the south — Israel spoke the same Hebrew tongue as the Canaanite-Phoenician population which held the land previously, and the related peoples which came in at the same time or earlier or later. It is true there are a few questions that cannot be definitely answered. Did Israel adopt the language of the Canaanite ' aborigines,' ^ in which case the language should be called rather Canaanite or Phoenician 1 ^ Or was it the Canaanites who at some time in the remote past exchanged their mother- tongue for a language so closely related to the Hebrew ? ^ Or had Israel and Canaan the same speechfrom the fivst,** and were they thus more closely connected in race and language than tradition seems to imply ? These are points which cannot be finally decided.'' At any rate the question, so far as it is ripe for decision, is very closely connected with that which we have now to touch upon, viz., the origin of the Canaanites. It is certain that before the Israelites forced their way into the ' Redslob, Altt. Namen, p. 13; Stade, Hehr. Gram., i. p. 1; Gesch. Inr., i. p. 110 ; Meyer, ZA W, i. p. 142 ; Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. 5-2. ^ See Hommel, Die Semit. Voll: unci Sprach., 1881 ; Stade, Hehr. Gram., i. p. 2 flf. ; Noldeke, Die Semit. Sprachen, 1887, especially p. 1 £f., 17 ff. " Reusa, Gesch. d. AT., p. 53, and many others. ■* Cf. Isa. xix. 18, 'Language of Canaan.' ' Kautzsch in Rielim'a HWB., p. 1201. " Smend in Riehm's ffWB., p. 1526. ' For another possible answer, nearly related to the second of the above- named, see Bertheau'a Hebr, Sprache in PRE." v. p. 687. INTRODUCTION 21 country the Canaanites dwelt there. We have already (§1) dis- cussed the meaning of their name. At a later time the name Canaanite, in its more restricted sense, was given to the Phoenicians settled on the northern half of the Mediterranean coast, the remnant of the original population who had been driven back into that district. The name as thus applied may be taken to mean simply 'Phoenician trader.'^ The origin of the race remains uncertain. Some ^ follow the Old Testament, which calls Canaan a son of Ham : * to them the Canaanites are a Hamitic people from the south. Others think themselves entitled confidently to maintain the Semitic origin of this people because of its Semitic speech.* It would be dif&cult to prove the second of these theories conclusively, and that for two reasons : in the first place, the possibility of a change of language cannot be peremptorily set aside; and secondly, the statements of the Old Testament cannot be shown to proceed from racial animosity," seeing that the Babylonians also, but not the Assyrians, are traced to Ham in the Table of Nations (Gen. x.). On the side of the Old Testament, also, is the testimony of the ancients." It is only J amongst the authors of the Hexateuch, and the writers who more or less followed him, that use the nam€ Canaanite with reference to the entire pre-Israelite population. I usually, if not always, calls that ancient people Amorites.' This designation, like that of Canaanite, is proved by Egyptiar ' Isa. xxiii. 8; Ezek. xvii. 4; Hosea xii. 8; Zeph. i. 11; Zeoh. xiv. 21; Prov xxxi. 24 ; Job xl. 30. - Bertheau, Zur Geach., p. 163 fiF. ; Ewald, Gesch. Isr.' i. p. 343, (Eng Trans., i. p. 232); Hitzig, Gesch. Isr., p. 26 f. ; DUlin. Gen/' p. 179; Kautzsd in Riehm's HWB., p. 1200 f. s Gen. X. 6, 15 f. ; cf. ix. 20 S. * Movers, PhOnicier, i. p. 1 flf. ; Keuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. 43; Meyer, Gesch d. Altert., i. p. 214 f. 5 Sprenger, Geogr. Aral)., p. 294 f. ; Tuch, Genesis, p. 196 f. ^ On this see especially Bertheau tit supra, p. 163 ff. 7 Wellhausen, JDTh., xxi. p. 602. Steinthal, Zeitschr. f. Volkerspsych. und Sprachwiss, xii. p. 267. And especially Ed. Meyer, ZAW., i. p. 122 ff Whether E employs the name exclusively or only predominantly depends on tht decision as to single passages, such as Judges i. 34 f. 22 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS evidences to have been a very ancient name of races dwelling in Palestine, current as early as the sixteenth century B.c.^ Besides the two principal names, which evidently represent the two^ most important ethnic elements in the pre-Israelitish population, we find, especially among later writers, references to a number of subordinate Canaanite tribes: Girgashites, Perizzites (Pheresites), Hivvites, Jebusites, and Hittites. Some of these names belong to special localities. The Jebus- ites, for example, were the inhabitants of Jebus and its vicinity, and the Hivvites -were the population of Gibeon and Shechem. The significance of others cannot now be satisfactorily determined. It is disputed whether the name Hittites has been transferred^ from the well-known civilised nation of that name in the north of Palestine, or whether it belongs properly to a smaller tribe in Palestine, a severed branch perhaps of the greater people. The latter opinion is probably true. Of late there have not been wanting those who maintain that all these smaller tribes have been inter- polated into the narratives by the Deuteronomistic redactor. Tliis view has been just as strenuously opposed.* The question cannot be settled until the various sources of the Hexateuch have been carefully and definitely distinguished from each other. And this task has not yet been accomplished. For my part, at all events, I must confess that my mind is not made up.^ The Old Testament itself shows that the Canaanites were not aborigines, for it gives expression to a faint remembrance of the predecessors whom they drove out. That these latter are 1 Meyer, ZA W., i. p. 127 ; iii. p. 306 flf. ; Gescli. d. Altert., i. p. 213 f. ^ I am still uuable to assert that both names have precisely the same significa- tion. The double name is an argument against this, as is also the use of two names, Kanana and Amar, on the Egyptian monuments. ' The view especially of Meyer, ZAW., 1. p. 125; Stade, Oesch. Isr., i. p. 143 ; Budde, Urgesch., p. 347 f. Dillmann opposes it. Gen.' p. 190. ■» Of. Wellh., xxi. p. 403 f. ; Meyer, ZA W., i. p. 124 ff. ; Budde, Urgesch., p. 222. On the other side, Dillm. Gen.^ p. 189 ; NuDlJo., p. 272. ' It is certain that in many passages they are interpolated : the question is whether this applies to all. But even if it does, the names cannot be baseless inventions. Their insertion is due to the necessity felt by later writers of entering more into detail. INTRODUCTION 23 called giants (Eephaim, Anakim) is no good reason for relegating them to the domain of fiction. The districts around Israel, wliii h in later times were occupied by the tribes we are next to do.il with, were believed to have been previously held by men of similar gigantic stature whose race and extraction are no longer clear. In Moab and Ammon were the Zamzummim and the,Emim; in Edom and Philistia, the Horites and 'Avvites. 2. Israel's NeigKbours. — The Sons of Moab, Ammon and Edom, are looked upon as the most closely related neighbouring peoples, and consequently are classed with Israel amongst the Hebrew tribes in the wider sense of the term. Edom is considered a brother tribe iu the full sense of the word, the progeny of Jacob's brother Esau. Edom is the elder of the two. He became in- dependent sooner than his brother. But the latter took away his birthright, i.e. outstripped him. Accordingly we learn that long before Saul's time there was a kingdom in Edom.^ After the reigns of Saul and David Edom became more and more dependent on Israel.^ As to their nationality, the Edomites introduced many foreign elements into their original Hebrew blood. The aboriginal Horite^ inhabitants of the districts owned by Edom appear tc have gradually blended with the conquerors, but to have been a long time before they lost their special characteristics.* The Edomites also took into union with themselves some of the tribes of the Arabian desert, especially when they pushed towards the south. In the south of Judah, the northern part of their territory they allied themselves with Canaanites. In addition to a Horite woman, Esau marries an Ishmaelite and a Hittite.^ The domair of Edom is that wild and broken mountain-land of Seir, whicli seems to recommend to its possessors the pursuits of plunder and 1 Gen. xxxvi. 3] ff. ; Num. xx. 21 ; Judges xi. 17. -' 1 Sam. xiv. 47 ; Ps. Ix. 2 : 1 Chron. xix. 12; 2 Sam. viii. 13 ff. (for D^^ read ms)- 3 = Troglodytes. On the abundance of caves in the land of Edom, see Robinson Pal., ii. p. 424. On the Horites, see also Meyer, Oesch. Aeg., p. 227, Anm. 3. ^'See Dillm. (?en.= p. 375 ; Stade, Ge-ich. Isr., i. p. 122. = Gen. xxvi. 34 ; xxviii. 9 ; xxxvi. 2 ; on the last passage see especially Dillm Gen.'^ 24 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS the chase rather than agriculture and cattle-breeding. The Old Testament uses this name of the mountainous country between the Dead Sea and the Elanitic Gulf. But whilst the earlier documents speak of the Arabah/ the strip of land which runs from the Dead Sea to the Eed Sea, as the eastern boundary, later authorities ^ include the district to the east of this. The chief towns of Edom known to us, such as Elath, Ezion-Geber, Sela, etc., were situated in this eastern half. From the western half, and from the north of Judah, the Edomites were ultimately expelled. Israel's south-eastern neighbour, Moab, was another closely related tribe, connected with it in many ways. Its territory was bounded on the west by the Dead Sea, on the south, towards Edom, by the Arabah (Nachal ha 'Arabah) : on the east by the desert and by the land of Ammon, which touched its north-eastern frontier. In later times, subsequent to Mesha, the Arnon was its northern boundary. More anciently the Moabites, no doubt, extended much farther north, as far as the district of Jericho. We shall have to speak again aboiit the northern boundary of Moab in the days of Moses. This mountain-land is well watered by numerous streams, and there are many indications of its having been well cultivated formerly. In speech, civilisation and religion, its inhabitants seem to have closely resembled the Israelites. The inscription of Mesha affords evidence of a comparatively developed taste for literature and composition. The brother-tribe of Moab which lived to the north-east was Ammon. Its territory lay between the desert and the southern portion of the country inhabited by Eeuben, Gad and Manasseh, eastward of the Jordan. Ordinarily it would seem to have ex- tended from the Upper Jabbok as its north-westerly limit * to the Arnon in the south. But the Ammonites often attempted to enlarge their borders. Their chief successes in these attempts seem to have been won towards the north. The very position of Eabbath-Ammon, their capital, on the Jabbok itself, as well as 1 Judges V. 4 ; Deut. xxxiii. 2 ; Gen. xiv. 6. - Deut. ii. 1 £f. ; Ezek. xxv. 8 ; xxxv. 15. ^ Deut. iii. 16. INTRODUCTION 25 their later struggles for the possession of Gilead, makes this probable. On the south-west Israel came into contact with the warlike race of the Philistines (Heb. Pelishtim), who were frequently in antagonism with their neighbours. They held the southern half of the Mediterranean coast-land, from Gaza to Japho, i.e. from the Egyptian to. the Phoenician border. Along this line they pre- vented the Israelites from obtaining access to the sea. They had a number of strong cities, governed by independent princes : Gaza, Ashdod, Ashkelon, Gath, Ekron. From these points they partially succeeded in pushing their way far into Canaan Proper. The usually accepted etymology of their name is sufficient to show that they were not indigenous to Canaan. The Old Testament ^ speaks of them as immigrants from Caphtor, which in all pro- bability is not the Egyptian Delta,'- but the island of Crete.^ There can be no doubt that in the later stages of their history they present a purely Semitic appearance. AVe may go even further and assert that the most probable view of all is that they were true Semites but belonged to a branch of the race which contained many foreign elements, many traits and peculiarities, in fact, of Pelasgic origin.* The Phoenicians are in line with the Philistines on the north. As we have explained above, they were the remnant of the Canaanites which had retired to the coast. They appear to have not only exercised considerable influence on the material civilisa- tion of Northern Israel through their wealth and commercial supremacy, but also to have largely determined the form of the 1 Amos ix. 7 ; Deut. ii. 23. On Gen. x. 13 f., see Dillm. Gtn.^ 2 Ebers, Aeg. unci BB. Mo.-<., p. 127 ff. ; Stark, Gaza, p. 76 f. ; Dietrich in Merx, Archil-., i. p. 313 S. ; Kijhler, Gesch. i. p. 83. ■■' Bertheau, Zur. Gesch., p. 187 ff. ; Ewald, Gexch. /»r.-' i. p. 353 f. (Eng. Trans., i. p. 245) ; Hitzig, PhilisL, p. 16 f. ; Dillm. Gen.^ p. 189 ; Stade, Gesch. Ixr., i. p. 142. As to the conjectural date of the immigration, <•/. Mej'er, Gesch. d. Altert., i. p. 319 f. •• See Schrader, KAT.'' p. 167 (Eng. Trans., p. 155),; Baur, in Riehm^s HWB., p. 1198 ; Stade, Ge--le, Kuenen, Ond.'- % 3, notes 17-19. 32 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. culture and town-lite; and nowhere, except in Deuteronomy, is there any reference to the transition from the nomadic to the settled state. Nor can there be found, except in Deuteronomy, the assump- tion that the laws which are here promulgated will become binding in the future only. The commentary on the Decalogue implies the existence of servants, handmaids, cattle, and strangers in the cities of Israel. The Book of the Covenant knows slavery in a form which could not conceivably exist among nomads. When it mentions vineyards and corn, olives and figs, oxen and asses, and especially strangers and sojourners, it is in a tone which implies that these do not belong simply to the future but will be under- stood at once, without explanation, by the people whom the law- giver addresses. i Thus also Deuteronomy and the Priestly Writing, the former consciously, the latter more implicitly, are well ac- quainted with the Wandering in the Desert, but in a way which at the same time arouses the suspicion as to whether the lawgiver does not know the life in Canaan very well from personal experience. Such institutions as the sacrificial office and the festivals, or the presentation of the first-born and the tithes, could not be carried into effect except in the land, yet are depicted with a minuteness of detail and with such a thorough acquaintance with the actual practice that it seems hardly feasible to any one who did not himself live in the land and know the religious life of the people.^ And finally, if the regulations on legal relations given in the Hexateuch had been imposed on a nation which was not yet familiar with the life of the country, an explanation would have been required of the way and manner in which they were to be carried out, almost fuller than that required by those concern- ing worship and everyday life. If such explanations are not afforded, this is a clear indication that the reader could ascertain by experience all that he needed to know ; in other words, that the laws were meant for a people already possessed of a settled con- 1 Ex. XX. 10 ; xxi. 1 tf. ; xxii. 4 f., 28 ; xxiii. 4 f., 10-12, 16, 19. ^ On this point cf. Lev. xiv. 40 f., 45, 53 ; xix. 9 f., 19 ; xxv. ; xxvii. 16 tf. ; Deut. XX. 5 f. ; xxi. 3 ; xxii. S ; xxiii. 25. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OP CANAAN 33 stitution, for Israel in Canaan.^ Moreover, it has been correctly pointed out ^ that the precepts, scanty on the whole, concerning the domestic politics and the public law of Israel are so limited in number and detail that this is an evidence against their Mosaic origin. For one of the primary needs of a people that is passing from a nomadic into a settled state is legal regulation of its civic life. If this is largely lacking, it is a token that when the laws were given Israel already possessed regulations and rules of civic life. Add to this what has already been made clear, viz., that many pre- cepts are repeated, some of them more than once, some in forms that vary considerably. From all these considerations it will be seen that the verdict which refuses to credit Moses with the laws of the Hexateuch as a whole can hardly meet with a serious contradiction. A somewhat closer inquiry into the historical portions of the Hexateuch leads to the same results. Here also one of the first impressions made on us is that the whole narrative-material in the Hexateuch falls into a series of strata, all the members of which are closely connected with one another in language, style, and characteristic phraseology, but is most markedly unlike the others even where the narratives are similar or related in contents. The close connection between the narratives and the laws would, of itself, have prepared us for this discovery. Examples of this occur continually in the historical material of the Hexateuch. Reading quite superficially the accounts which the original text gives of the Creation of the world and of the People of Israel we are confronted with these examples at every turn without our looking for them. To convince one's-self of the truth of this it is only needful to look at the two accounts of the Creation, the various constituents of the story of the Flood, the histories of the calling of Moses, of the Plagues of Egypt, of the Passage of the Eed Sea, of the Giving of the Law on Sinai,^ and many others. 1 Cf. Ex. xxi. 6 ; xxii. 7 f. ; Deut. x\-ii. 8-13 ; and on these Kuen. Ondfi p. 25. - See, for example, Dlllm. NvtDtJo., p. 595. 2 Gen. i. f., vi. f. ; Ex. iii. and vi., xiv., xix f. 34 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. As might have been expected it also appears in this connection that the narratives contain many differences and repetitions. "We have two or more accounts of a great number of the Hexateuch narratives. Thus, besides the events already mentioned, we may instance the accounts of the Dispersion of the Nations, the origin of certain names and sanctuaries, the particulars of the history of Joseph, the publication of the name Yahv^, the apostasy which followed the giving of the Law, the quails and the manna, the spies, the faction of Korah, the history of Balaam, the appointment of Joshua.^ Examples of this kind could easily be multiplied to any extent. As a last resort it might be said of a number of these repetitions that they are due to the writer's own purpose. Such au explanation would, at least, be admissible were it not that in almost every case the repetition of the statement of facts is closely accompanied by the above-mentioned dissimilarity of language. This makes it extremely unlikely that the repetition can be ex- plained as an addition from the hand of the one author or a re- sumption by him of the previously dropped thread of the narrative. The improbability becomes an impossibility when we observe that in almost every case the two or more narratives of the same event disagree materially in a number of traits of more or less importance. The second of the above-mentioned accounts of the Creation knows nothing about six days and recognises a quite different order in the creative acts,^ — the result of a different historical point of view. As to the Deluge, we are told on the one hand that seven couples of clean animals went into the ark,^ and on the other hand that one couple of every sort entered. The names Beersheba, Bethel, Israel are explained in ways so entirely different that one and the same author cannot be credited with them all. Joseph is in one account said to have been cast into a pit at Eeuben's suggestion and to have ' Gen. X. and xi. 1 fF. ; xxi. 31 and xxvi. 33 ; xxxii. 29 and xxxv. 10 ; xxviii. 18 f. and xxxv. 14 f. ; xxxvii. 19 ff. ; xxxix. 1 ff. ; Ex. iii. and vi. xxxii.; Num. xi. and Ex. xvi.; Num. xiii. f., xvi., xxii.-xxiv. and xxv. ; xxvii. 15 flF. and Deut. xxxi. 7 ff. * Man — Trees and Vegetables — Animals — Woman : Gen. ii. 7 ff., 19, 21 f. 3 Gf. Gen. vii. 2 f. and vi. 19 f. ; vii. 8 f., 14 f. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 3E been stolen by Midianites ; again, we learn that by Judah's advict he was sold to Tshmaelites.^ The father-in-law of Moses is sometimes called Jethro, sometimes Eeuel.^ In the leading nar- rative the Tabernacle is located in the midst of the camp : close by, it stands outside the camp.^ This small selection of examples may suffice, as the reader in the further course of this book will be able to compare separately the various strata of the Hexateuch narratives, and by so doing to increase the material which is here brought together in anticipa- tion. But the specimens we have given place it beyond doubt that the phenomena already adduced, in themselves, and, above all, in their mutual connections, can be satisfactorily explained only by admitting that the narratives of the Hexateuch, like its laws, proceeded not from one but from a series of authors. All these differences in speech and style, in contents and ideas, can only be regarded as proofs of the presence of various groups and strata oi narratives into which the story of the Hexateuch may be resolved. Before we are competent to decide as to the historical validity oi their statements we shall need to determine their character more precisely and to arrange them in their original condition. For the present we have only to deal with the fact itself. It would, however, be possible to allow that diversity oi authorship has been proved and yet to hold that the whole was composed in the days of Moses, perhaps by some of his helpers, perhaps in conjunction with himself. Even in this preliminary inquiry we are entitled to declare that such a supposition will not hold good, at any rate for a considerable portion of the narratives. For a long time past attention has been quite justifiably called to the main notices in the Hexateuch narrative which presuppose occurrences and circumstances of a later period,* especially of the 1 See below, §§ 12 and 13. - Of. Ex. iii. 1 ; iv. 18 ; xviii. 1 f. and ii. 18, 21. On Hobab see below, § 23, No. 5. 3 Of. Num. ii. ff. and Ex. xxxiii. 7 ff. ; Num. xi. 16, 26 ; xii. 4 ; Deut. xxxi. 14 f. ■* Generally indicated by the oft-used expression: 'unto this day.' Cf. especially. Deut. iii. 14; x. 8 ; xxxiv. 6; Josh. vi. 25; xix. 14; xv. 63. But the 36 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. days of the Judges and those of the earlier, and, to some extent, of the later times of the Kings. Thus the Mosaic period ^ and the dislodgement of the Canaanites are treated as events long past ; ^ the Israelites dwell in the land of Canaan ; ^ the regions of the sky- are in part called by names which would only be appropriate in Canaan ; * Israel has kings.^ § 6. History of Criticism.^ First Period. To K. H. Graf. 1. The first attempts at a critical treatment of the Hexateuch, isolated indeed, and without system or method, were made com- paratively early. They were confined for the most part to inci- dental remarks about various passages that excited suspicion.'' Hobbes* and Isaac Peyrerius,^ and especially Spinoza^'' and Eichard Simon, ^^ take a somewhat broader ground. While Peyrerius had already hit upon such passages as Deut. i. 5, other passages also belong here, such as Gen. xix. 37 f. ; xxvi. 33 ; xxxv. 20 ; xlvii. 26 ; Deut. ii, 22 ; xi. 4 ; Josh. iv. 9 ; v. 9 ; vii. 26 ; viii. 28 f. ; ix 27 ; x. 27 ; xiii. 13 ; xvi. 10. 1 Deut. iii. 11 ; Num. xxi. 14; cf. Josh. x. 13. - Gen. xii. 6 ; xiii. 7 ; xl. 15. ■' Deut. ii. 12 ; xix. 14a. Cf. Gen. xiv. 14 ; Deut. xxxiv. 1 ; Josh. xix. 47- * Cf- The designation D'' ; also 3J3, and for the land east of the Jordan, ^ Gen. xxxvi. 31, and the many allusions to the kingly period in the Songs, Gen. xlix. ; Ex. xv. ; Num. xxiv. ; Deut. xxxii. f. « Cf. Kuenen, Theol. Tijdschrift, iv. p. 396 ff ; Merx, Nachwort zur 2 A^tfl. von TucTis Kommentar uber die Genesis (1871), p. 1. xxix. S. ; Diestel, Gesch. d. Alten Testaments (1869), § 61 ; Bleek-Wellhausen, Einleit., p. 152 tf. ; Reuss, L'histoire sainte et la loi, p. 10 ff; Vuilleumier in Eev. de Theol. et de Philos. (Lau3.) 1882, ff ; Steiner in Theol. Zeitschr. a. d. Schweitz, 1887, pp. 42 ff., 203 ff; Cheyne, Founders of Old Testament Criticism (from Geddes and Vater to Driver), 1893; Westphal, Les Sources du Pentateuqiie, i., 1888 : Le prohUme littiraire, ii. i 892 : Le probUme historique. ' A number of names are given by Strack, Einleit. ins AT. (in Zookler's Handb. d. Theol. Wiss.^), p. 131. 8 Leviathan (1651), chap, xxxiii. ' Systema Theologicum ex praeadamitarum hypothesi (1655), book iv. '" Tractatus Theolor/ico-politicus, etc. Hamb. 1670. Of. Siegfried, Spinoza als Kritiker und Ausleg. d. A T. 1867. " ffistoire critique du V. Test., 1678. Cf. Bernus, Rich. Sim., Lausanne, 1869. Chap. L] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 37 iii. 14, xi., and the statement in Num. xxi., that a Zi&er bellorum Bet was extant which had not been composed by Moses, Spinoza added a number of others (Deut. xxxi. 9; Gen. xii. 6; xxii. 14 Deut. xxxiv.), besides daring to attempt a positive view of tht whole subject. He maintained that Ezra was the author of these passages. On the other hand, ' the learned Oratorian,' to us€ Reuss's words, ' who belonged to the last brilliant period of Catholic science,' though he did not contribute largely to the specia question in which we are interested, by writing his critical historj of the Old Testament became the true founder of Old Testamen' Introduction as a science. Up to this time, however, no sure foundation had been laid fo positive propositions concerning the genesis of the Hexateuch o of the Pentateuch — for attention was mostly limited to the lattei It was reserved for a layman, Jean Astruc,^ physician to Loui XIV., to give the first impulse in this direction. He made th^ step from mere remarks and vague conjectures to the discovery o characteristic distinctions. Astruc perceived the trace of differen documents in the alternation of the divine names Yahvd am Elohim in Genesis. Starting from this principle it was possibl to prosecute the work further. 2. Starting in the main from Astruc's results, but workin with more penetration and an incomparably larger store of know ledge, Joh. Gottfr. Eichhorn^ developed and deepened the dig covery made by his predecessor. Not the divine names only, bu to an equal degree the contents of the book, indicated to hii the presence of different sources in Genesis. He held that th 'genius' of the Book of Genesis compelled the belief that th greater part of this book was made up of parts of two distinc historical works. Only in this way could he understand th manifold repetitions, the varying style and phraseology, th character of the writings. ' Conjectures sur les mdmoires originaux dont . . . Moyse s'est servi, etc., ITS. On him c/. Bohmer's Art. ' Astruc' in PUB. " Einhitung iu das AT., Leipz. 1780, ff. (4th ed. 1823 ft). a- 38 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. K. Dav. Ilgeu ^ carried criticism a step in advance. He aimed at making a critical contribution ' to the History of Eeligion and Politics ' by bringing into order the documents belonging to the temple archives which in the course of time have been 'torn, broken into fragments, and then blended together ' ( Vorrede, p. xiv.). The novelty by which Ilgen is distinguished from Eichhorn is his observation that there are two distinct sources in the sections where the name Elohim is employed. Moreover, it strikes him that these sections resemble in character the Yehovistic ones (p. 393). He thus becomes the discoverer of what has long been called the later Elohist. Subsequently Ilgen's theory of a second Elohist was adopted by Hupfeld and Bohmer, and has maintained a place alongside that of Astruc up to the present day, although the manner in which it was applied, especially at the beginning of Genesis, was arbitrary and untenable. 3. Three sources having thus been discovered, it was easy to think of a fourth and a fifth. Vater's Fragment Hypothesis was developed spontaneously out of Astruc's and Ilgen's Document Hypothesis by an undue extension of the correct principle. At the same time Vater ^ extended the inquiry from Genesis to the whole Pentateuch, and came to the conclusion that all the books of the Pentateuch fall into a number of portions, larger or smaller, of which it cannot be shown that they were originally connected. Only occasionally is the thread of the narrative continued for some distance : elsewhere each book is put together as patchwork. Vater treated also the question as to when the books were thus put together, and handled it skilfully and successfully. Eichhorn had imagined that Moses kept a journal, a so-called Diary of Travel, whilst in the desert, and afterwards composed the Penta- teuch from this. Vater rejected this idea, and laid most stress on the historical evidences which are to be found in the Pentateuch or other parts of the Old Testament. It does not escape him that these fail to prove the Mosaic authorship of the entire Pentateuch. ^ Die. Urkimden des jeruisalemischen Tempelarchiva in Hirer Urgestalt, 1798. ^ Oommentar iiber den PentateticJi, Halle, 1802 ff. Chap. I.] PEBIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 39 At the same time, Vater already trod the path of historical criticism with good results. A number of the facts to which he gave prominence still retain their validity in the form in which he set them forth. To him the only question for consideration was: In which of the periods subsequent to Moses was the collection formed ? His answer was as follows : Deuteronomy did not originate untU about the time of David or Solomon. The other parts of the Pentateuch were gradually added to it. The collection of the whole was finished about the time of the Exile. 4. At this point De Wette ^ struck in in epoch-making fashion. Vater had at least begun to make use of the material of history in addition to the literature of history, and De Wette lays all his stress on this. He is the first to make the history his starting- point in investigating the age of the Pentateuch, and he inquires whether the historical picture contained in the other historical records agrees with that given in the Pentateuch. Besides this he is quite as fortunate in dealing with the literary element of the problem, and is, too, the first to subject Deuteronomy to an inde- pendent and thorough examination. Attention was first called by him to the relation between the Chronicles on the one hand and the Books of Samuel and the Kings on the other, as regards their representation of the Worship and the Priesthood. He lays down the fundamental principle that the Chronicles are not entitled to a voice in determining the age of the Pentateuch. He is also the first to examine closely and determine the value of 2 Kings xxii., the standard passage for Deuteronomy, which relates the finding of a law-book in Joshua's reign. With him, too, originated the employment of Jer. vii. 21 ff. in Pentateuch criticism. It will therefore be seen that De Wette has already sketched in bold outlines a history of Worship in Israel, in order to obtain from it the standard by which the Pentateuch may be criticised. The question as to the place for divine worship was treated by him in a spirited manner. Whilst he comes in the first place to ' Seitrdge zur EMeitung ins AUe Test., 1806, f. 40 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. the conclusion that Deuteronomy was edited in the time of Josiah, he finds that the other books can scarcely be of very early date. The proof of this he gets chiefly from the character of the older history (Beiir. ii.). De Wette thus became the vanquisher of the old Eafcionalism in this matter. Por its forced, disingenuous and tasteless explanation of words he substitutes the poetic and aesthetic mode of viewing things. The authors of the pristine Hebrew history are to him poets, and the history itself is the national epos of the Hebrew theocracy. The principles which De Wette thus formulated in the work of his youth continued to be presented by him in the Manuel,^ which he edited no fewer than six times. His acceptance of an epos, carried out on the lines of a definite plan, already involved at the outset a breach with Vater's Fragment-Hypothesis. In this book he completed with ever-increasing clearness the step from this to the Supplement-Hypothesis, until, in the sixth edition, he formally declared his abandonment of it in favour of Stahelin's Supplement-Hypothesis. 5. De Wette gave his attention mainly to the date and char- acter of the Pentateuch and its several books. His co-workers and successors in the first half of our century, on the other hand, again occupied themselves rather with the question of the com- position of the Pentateuch. The result was that for a time attention was once more to a certain extent limited to Genesis. The youthful Ewald, in his first book,- became a powerful ally of De Wette's in the endeavour to overcome the mechanical ex- ternality of Vater's Fragment Theory by laying stress on the unity of plan and the sustained connection. So deeply was he impressed by the well-considered regularity of plan discernible in the primal history that he actually believed it necessary to abandon for it the idea of a variety of sources. It was not till a later period that he became convinced of the compatibility of the 1 Lehrb. der histor.-krit. Mnl. in die Kanon. und Apob: Biicher des Allen Test., Berlin, 1817; 6th ed. 1844; 8th ed., see below. ° Die Componition der Genesis, 1823. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING "WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 41 two ideas.^ He then adopted the essential features "- of Stiihelin's view which had been propounded in opposition to his own. At a still later period he maintained this view in his principal work,^ enriching it, however, with many observations of his own, and modifying it, as time went on, in accordance with the progress of science. Stiihelin* was the actual founder of this Supplement-Hypo- thesis, for which De Wette prepared the way and which Ewald took up at least in part. According to him, an ancient writing, Elohistic as far as Ex. vi., lies at the basis of our present Penta- teuch, and remnants of it are found in all the five books. Then there arose a second writing, which ascribes to the earlier period later customs and the use of the name Yahve, although it employs the name Elohim in other parts of the work. A third writer united the two, supplementing the first by the second. Bleek ^ also fell in with this view, but introduced a not unimportant modification which has ever since formed part of the Supplement- Hypothesis, maintaining that the supplementer and editor was not a third person but the author of the Yahvistic Writing. The detailed arguments for this hypothesis were given by Tuch,^ also by Bleek in his posthumous Introduction? To Tucli is also due the name ' Grundschrift ' which has so long been used. 6. Previous to Tuch and Bleek tlie analysis of the sources was based chiefly on the obvious differences in the divine names. To these two authors is due the credit of laying a deeper foundation in internal characteristics. On the other hand, their hypothesis contained an element which necessarily led to a stage yet further 1 Stud, und Krit., 1831, p. 595 ff. = But from the very first he takes up an independent attitude with regard to it : cf. Bleek,< p. 169, note 2. = Gesch. des Volkes Israel, 1st ed. 1843 ff.; 2nd ed. 1851 ff.; 3rd ed., 1846 ff. ■• Kritische Untersuchungen uber die Genesis, 1830. * In his Bonn Programme, De libri Geneseos origine ac indole, etc., 183G, a work which in other respects is directed against Bohlen ^ Gommentar uber die Genesis, first ed. 1838. ' EiiU. ins Alte Test, fierausg. von Joh. Bleek und A. Kamphausen, 1860. Third ed., edited by Kamphausen, 1870 ; 4th ed., see below. 42 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. iu advance. They ascribed to the Yehovist or supplementer things that were mutually incompatible. They made him a mere casual supplementer and at the same time the representative of a peculiar religious theory which is to be distinctly recognisable in his work. From this it was clear that more than two persons are to be brought in. Hupfeld^ took this step, Ewald having previously expressed some doubt. The Supplement-Hypothesis was thus overcome, and its place taken by a tendency allied to the earliest of the great hypotheses but carrying it deeper. It may thus be called the later Document Theory. The outlines of Hupfeld's view have retained their validity to the present day. Amongst the many results obtained in his book are chiefly three of abiding value, — (1.) The Yehovist, as truly as the Elohist, is an independent writer; his narratives, like the Elohist's, are connected accounts. (2.) So far is the Yahvist from being a mere supplementer that it might be asserted that he was not even acquainted with the Elohist. This is clear from the repetitions and contradictions that are found. (3.) llgen's Second Elohist must really be recognised as an inde- pendent source. For Hupfeld finds, in addition to the Funda- mental Writing, a second Elohistic Writing in Genesis, of later date than the first. This furnished a foundation on which further building could proceed. Bohmer ^ was the first to undertake it. He analysed many passages more carefully, paid special attention to the later Elohist and editor, and brought distinctly to view the cleavage of the sources. Schrader undertook the work that remained, inde- pendently of Hupfeld in the first instance,^ and afterwards using his results in De Wette's Introduetmi* Schrader has been specially meritorious in his careful discrimination of the sources. Knobel's Commentary has the same merit.^ Both works exhibit a kind of mediation between the Supplement and the Document- ' Die Quellen der Genesis, 1853. - Liber Genesis Pentateuchtcits, 1860. Das erste Buck tier Thora, 1862. ^ Studien zur Krit. und Erld. d. bibl. Urgeschichte, 1863. * Eighth edition, 1869. ' Commentar zum PeiUateuch und Josua, 1852-61. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 43 Hypotteses. The same remark applies to Ewald's Histoi-y of Israel already mentioned, with this difference, that Knobel and Schrader show their strength more in their observation of details, Ewald more in broad and general reflections. Colenso's ^ noble work finds its most fitting mention in this connection in so far as it deals with the literary question : its strength is mainly spent on the historic. In 1854 Eiehm- restored Deuteronomy to its right position, after it had been for a long time unduly neglected. Specially the question whether this book had for a while a separate existence was finally set at rest by him. The further progress of criticisui showed how important this recognition was. The questions that concern the division and the nature of the sources had thus reached a sort of provisional solution. Although they were by no means finally settled, those concerning the relative and absolute age of the sources now take their place beside or instead of them. Second Period. Criticism, since Grafs time. 1. EL H. Graf's name indicates a fresh turn of Pentateuch criticism, because he undertook to combat the idea till then almost universally prevalent, that the so-called Foundation Writ- ing of the Elohist was prior to the other writings in the Penta- teuch, especially to Deuteronomy. At a much earlier date, Eeuss,^ Vatke,* George," and Bohlen'' had indeed maintained the same view, and Popper'' had done so shortly before Graf's work ap- peared. But they had not succeeded in winning attention. Graf was the first to set forth a methodical and thorough proof of the ^ Tlie Peutateiich aiui Book of Joshua Critically Examined, 1862 fF. ^ Die Gesetzgehiirui Mosis im Laiide JHoab, 1854. ^ At first in Theses, published in the year 1833, then in the article 'Judentum,' in Ersch und Grvher, Skt. ii. Bd. 27, published in 1850. ■» BiU. Theologie, i. (1835). ^ Die alterenjudischen Feste, 1835. * CoTnnientar zur Genesis, 1835. ' Der hibl. BerieJU fiber die StiftshvUe, 1862. 44 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. hypothesis, which is, therefore, rightly named after him. Especially did he again bring out effectively that historical standpoint which is so universally suggestive, but since De Wette's time had beer almost entirely neglected. Graf's ^ work falls into two monographs. The first treats oi Chronicles as a historical source, and comes back to De Wette's negative conclusions concerning this book. The second, which is much the more important, is an examination of the historical books from Gen. i. to 2 Kings xxv., laying special stress, however on the Pentateuch. Graf starts with two assumptions. In the first place he works on the basis of the Supplement-Hypothesis without taking any notice of Hupfeld. He recognises a Founda- tion "Writing, supplemented by the Yahvist, otherwise indeed than Tuch and his friends, without the Levitical Law. Having demonstrated that Deuteronomy was composed in Josiah's time he believes that this is the fixed point from which the remaininc books may be estimated. Taking Deuteronomy as its starting- point, Graf's investigation compares it with the rest of the Pentateuch, and seeks thus to determine which portions of the Pentateuch presuppose it, and which, on the other hand, are presupposed by it. After an extensive and many-sided inquiry he reaches the result that Deuteronomy indeed knows the Yahvistic laws in Exod. xiii., xx.-xxiii., xxxiv., but not the great Elohistic Lawbook. The latter was composed after the Exile, as is clear also from the external evidence supplied by the prophets, and Ezra was most probably its compiler. Graf's work gave occasion to a controversy between him and Riehm.2 The latter exposed the weakness of a number of Graf's assertions, and, at all events, compelled him to define his positions more clearly. Eiehm was particularly successful in demonstrating the artificiality of the separation between the legal and the narrative portions of the Elohist. Graf at once admitted that he ' Die geschichtlichen Bilcher des Alien Test., 1866. •^ Cf. Riehm in StKr., 1868 p. 350 ff.; Graf in Merx' Archio. fur wissensch. Erforsch. d. Alien Testament, 1869, p. 446 ff.; Riehm in StKr., 1872, p. 283 ff. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OP CANAAN 45 had been mistaken in single points, but only in order to establish his main position the more surely. He concedes to Eiehm that the separation is impossible. He acknowledges also, in favour of Hupfeld's Document Theory, that the Supplement-Hypothesis is not tenable.^ But he draws the very opposite conclusion to Eiehm's. If the Law and the History of the Elohist belong together, this proves to him, not that the Law has been taken up by the History into the ancient time, but that on the contrary the History has been brought down by the Law into the post-Exile period. The problem was thus, for the first time, correctly stated. Further investigation was compelled to devote itself to the Founda- tion Writing and its disputed character. 2. Noldeke's^ work does this. He makes real use of Hupfeld's idea that the Fundamental Writing and the Yahvist were inde- pendent of each other. Such independence implies that unless considerable portions have been lost the former document can be traced through the whole Hexateuch as a connected work. The expectation was fiilfilled, and from that time forward the dispute as to the extent of the Foundation Writing was substantially at an end. When this first part of the work had been done there could not be much difficulty in determining clearly the literary character of the book. Here, also, Noldeke led the way. He showed that the tendency of the book was mainly legislative, not historical : he exhibited the artificial plan of the book, its priestly origin, and the pains taken to clothe its material in the garb of the Mosaic period. Noldeke admits that Graf's deductions respecting the Foun- dation Writing are in great part correct. It is only in the main point, the dating of the book after the Exile, that he unhesitatingly repudiates his conclusions. Yet he concedes to Graf that there is absolutely no justification for the assertion that the so-called ' At all events in its usual form. Speaking strictly, he reverses the order and explains the Fundamental Writing as a supplement to the Yehovist. Against this view see Riehm, StKr., 1872, p. 283 S. 2 Unters. z. Kritik. d. AT. (i. Die sogen. Grundschrift des Pentat.), 1869. 46 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I Foundation Writing must be the oldest amongst the sources oi the Pentateuch. 3. Notwithstanding this opposition, an increasing number oJ voices now began to be heard on Graf's side. The weightiest of these was first raised outside Germany. A. Kuenen, in his Introduetimi} had followed in the main the then prevalent theory, though making many contributions of his own. Now,^ however, he vigorously espoused Grafs thesis and enlisted many adherents, first in Holland, then by degrees in Germany also. He was followed in Germany by A. Kayser,^ who undertook to sub- stantiate Graf's theory by the literary -historical method, and by Duhm,* who fixed his attention on the relation between the prophets and the Law. Smend^ took the field against Duhm, whilst Kleinert," limiting himself to Deuteronomy as being Grafs fulcrum, sought to prove that if it was not written by Moses it was edited soon after his death, at the very latest, say, by Samuel ; Graf, on the other hand, having admitted that it was prior to the Foundation Writing. Finally Dillmann ^ opposed Graf ; dealing in the first place with Genesis, making use of exegesis and the exact analysis of the sources; whilst Wellhausen, in his Komposition des Hexateuch^ and afterwards in his revision of Bleek's JEinleitung^ laid the foundation for his History of Israel}'^ a comprehensive reconstruc- tion on the lines of Grafs theory. ' Hintor. -crit. onderzoek naar het ontstaan en de verzameling van de hoehen des Ouden Verhmidn. Leiden, i., 1861. - De Godsdienst van Israel, Harl., 1869 f. De vijf hoehen van Moaes, Leid., 1872. Numerous contributions to the Theol. Tijdnchr., xi. flf. " Das vorexilische Buck der Urgeschichte I-^iraels, 1874. * Theologie der Profeten, 1875. ■' Cf. Mosen apud prophetas {as early as 1875), then StKr., 1876, p. 599 ff. * Das Deuteronomium und der Deuteronomiker, 1872. ' Third ed. of Knobel's Genesis, 1875. 8 JDTh., xxi. (1876), pp. 392 ff., 532 ffi, xxii. (1877), p. 407 ffi Reprinted in Skizzen und Vorarbeiten, ii., 1885. 9 Fourth ed., 1878. " Of. also Delitzsoh in Zeitschr. f. luih. Theol., 1877, p. 445 ff. ; Klostermann in the same, p. 401 ff., and StKr,, 1877, p. 391 ff, ; Lagarde, Symmicta, 1877, p. 116 ff. Chap. I] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 47 Wellhausen's History of Israel'^ brings the history of our question down to our own time. The movement which he initiated still continues, and the pronouncements concerning the Hexateuch which have been made since the appearance of his work all refer to the problem as he has restated it. They must, therefore, be dealt with when the matter itself is discussed, and it will be sufficient for the present if we simply mention the most noteworthy productions. We do not aim at a complete biblio- graphy, and this least of all with regard to the, in some measure, ephemeral Anglo-American literature. The following works may be compared : S. Y. Curtiss, Be aaronici sacerdotii atque tliorae eloh. origine, 1878 (see even earlier The Lev. Priests, 1877); Eyssel, De elohistae pentateuchi sermone, Lips., 1878; 'Renss, L'Mstoire sainte et la hi, 1879; D. Hoffmann in Magazin f. TVissensch. d. Judentums, 1879 f. ; Valeton in Studien (Theol. Tijdschr.), 1879 ff. ; Delitzsch in Zeitschr. f. Kirkl. Wissensch, etc., 1880; Dillmann, Komm. zu Exodus imd Leviticus, 1880; Marti in JPTh., 1880, p. 127 £f., 308 ff.; Giesebrecht in ZAW., 1881, p. 177 ff. ; E. Eeuss, GeschicMe der heiligen Schriften des Alien Test., 1881 ; Horst, Levit. xvii.-xxvi. and Hezelciel, 1881 ; Eobertson Smith, The Old Testament in the Jeiuish Church, 1881 (second edition, 1892); Kayser in JPTh., 1881, p. 326 ff'., 520 ff., 630 ff. ; Bredenkamp, Gesetz und Profeten, 1881 ; E. Kittel in TkStW., 1881, p. 29 ff., U7 if., 1882, p. 278 ff. ; Delitzsch in ZKWL., 1882; Dillmann, Genesis,*^ 1882; Driver in Jo^lrn. of PhiloL, 1882, p. 201 ff.; Jiilicher, JPTh., 1882, p. 79 ff., 272 ff. ; Bruston in Bevue The'ologique (Montaub.), 1882, p. 13 ff., 97 ff., and in Pevue de TMol. et Philos. (Laus.), 1883, p. 329 ff.; Strack, Einleit. ins Alte Testament (in Zockler's Handb. d. Theol. Wiss.), 1882, and Art. 'Pentateuch' in PEE.^ (1883); Budde, Die bibl. Urgeschichte, 1883; Maybaum in Zeitschr. fur Volkerpsych., 1883, p. 191 ff. ; Bissel, Proposed Beconstr. of the Pentat., in Bibl. Sacra (Andov.), 1883 ff.; Wurster in ZAW., 1884, p. 112 ff.; Curtiss, ' Gesehichie Israels, i. 1878. Second and third editions, under the title Prolegomeiui z. Oesch. Lir. , 1883 and 1886. 48 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Sketches of Pent. Grit, MM. Sacra, 1884; Bruston in Bev. de Thiol, et Philos., 1885, p. 5 ff., 499 ff., 602 ff., 1886, p. 33 ff. ; Vatke's Ansicht in Zeitschr. f. Wiss. Theol., p. 52 if., 156 if.; Vatiie, Einleit. ins Alte Test, (edited by Preiss), 1886; Kuenen, Hist.-crit. Onderzr i. 1, 1885 (translated into German by Weber, 1886, 1887); Dillmann, Komment. zur Genesis^ 1886; Komment. zu Numeri, Beuter., und Jos., 1886 ; Finsler, Darstell. mid Krit. d. Ans. Wellh., 1887 ; Steiner in Tlieol. Zeitschr. a.d. Schr., 1887, p. 203 ff. ; Kautzsch und Socin, Die Genesis mit ailsserer Unterscheidung der Quellenschriften, 1888 (2nd ed.); Horst, Etudes sur le Beuteron. {Rev. de I'hist. d. relig., 1888, ff ) ; Baudissin, Gesch. d. cdttest. Priester- tums, 1889 ; Kautzsch, Die heil. Schrift Alt. Test, iihersetzt, 1890 ff. ; Driver, Introduction, 1891; Cornill, ^mZ. ins AT.,- 1892; Dillm. Gen.^ 1892; Kdnig, Einl. ins AT, 1893; Holzinger, -E'mZ. in den Hexat, 1893 ; Klostermann, Der Pentat., 1893. § 7. Deuteronomy and the Deiiterononiic Fragments. 1. THE COMPILATION OF THE EXTANT BOOK OF DEUTEEONOMY. THE ORIGINAL KERNEL. The history of criticism gives the reader such an idea of the attempts hitherto made at solving the problem as will convince him that before Hebrew history can be written, the main sources of the Hexateuch must be separated and dated. This applies especially to the great Elohistic Priestly Writing (formerly called the Foundation Writing), the Yahvist and the so-called second Elohist. The better way of referring to them is as P, J, and E, respectively. But the position of these writings can only be determined by fixing first their relation to Deuteronomy. The latter contains much less historical material than the other writings just mentioned, yet it must be our starting-point. For Deuteronomy may be looked on as the fixed point from which we can work both backwards and forwards. By ascertaining their relation to this book we shall therefore at least discover the general limits of time within which the other writings lie. We know that in the reign Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OE CANAAN 49 of Josiah a Law Book was discovered in the Temple at Jerusalem, which we have preponderating reasons for believing to have been our Book of Deuteronomy.^ It is, however, just as certain that the Law Book found in Josiah's time did not contain the whole book now comprised under tlie name of Deuteronomy. The first question, therefore, that arises refers to the constituent elements and the original kernel of the present Deuteronomy. If chaps, i.-iv. and xxvii, ff. are compared with the extensive section in the middle of the book, or with each other, it becomes plain that the present Deuteronomy is not a perfectly homogeneous book.2 If those two outer parts, the Introduction, chap, i.-iv., and the Epilogue, chap, xxvii. ff., be provisionally taken away, the remainder, chap, v.-xxvi., will be the true kernel of the book. Wellhausen has opposed this view.* In his opinion the original Deuteronomy includes* no more than chap, xii.-xxvi. He can hardly think that we have a part of the original work in the longer Introduction, chap, v.-xi., 'that insistent demand for the observance of commandments which have not yet been given and of which the contents are but partially indicated in advance.' For ' the laws begin at chap. xii. Up to then Moses is always about to come to the point but never does so.' As early as chap. v. 1, he announces the statutes and judgments which the people are to observe in the laud of Canaan, but immediately becomes involved in the historic recital. At the opening of chap. vi. he again makes as though he would promulgate the statutes and judgments, but again leaves this undone. So is it in the following chapters.^ N"o one who reads Deuteronomy continuously wiU be inclined to deny that this is a correct account of the relation between the two parts, Deut. v.-xi., and Deut. xii.-xxvi. Yet the question » Wellh., JDTh. xxii. p. 458 f. - Wellh. xxii. p. 460 f. •' JDTh. xxii. p. 462 ff. ■" Following Vater, Abhandlung iiber Mones mid die Verfasser den Peniateuchs. {Coram, iii. pp. 393-738, especially 458 flf.) But compare now Wellhausen's remarks in Deutsch. Lit. Zeit., 1887, No. 14, where an attempt is also made to distinguish certain elements from the rest of the original Deuteronomy. 5 Similarly Valeton, Sludien, vi. p. 157 ff. D 50 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. must be asked whether the conclusions Wellhausen has drawn from this are justified. For they are neither intrinsically necessary nor do they explain what they are supposed to explain. If in other respects the Introduction hears the marks of close connection with the exposition, then the fact of its being written in a circum- stantial fashion which does not come to the point, does not prove it to be due to a different hand from that which wrote the latter. And on the other hand the relation between the two series of chapters is not fully explained by this supposition. An author may linger over his preparatory matter and his announcements of what he means to do, and for a long time fail to reach his real subject. In our daily experience we frequently find both speakers and writers acting thus, and as long as the world stands this will be psychologically comprehensible. But that another man should have felt himself compelled to provide a long-winded prologue like Deut. v.-xi. for a book which is fairly well arranged and for the most part tells its own tale, is an undertaking which it would not be easy to comprehend. The entire procedure would be meaningless. Wellhausen has entirely failed to establish the diversity of authorship by a comparison of statements or of language. In fact these considerations tell against his view. So far as facts are concerned the situation is precisely the same in chap, xii.-xxvi. as in v.-xi. Kuenen^ rightly calls atten- tion to the identity of standpoint in xii. ff. with that of the Superscription ^ to v.-xxvi. Chap, xii.-xxvi. seem to be as clearlj^ founded on this superscription as chap, v.-xi. The Decalogue in chap. v. should also be borne in mind.^ Considering the close relation in which chap, xii.-xxvi. stand to the older law — to use this expression by anticipation — it would be in the highest degree astonishing if the editor of these chapters had not reproduced also the principal constituent of that law, the Decalogue. If he placed the Ten Commandments in chap, v., at the head of his book, its 1 Ond.- § 7, No. 7. - Dent. iv. 45-49. » See also Kayscr, JPTh. \ii. p. 5.32. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 51 omission afterwards is explained. But if the original book con- sisted only of chap, xii.-xxvi. the absence of the Decalogue is highly surprising.! But the comparison of the phraseolgy, which has been carried out with almost absolute completeness by Kuenen and Dillmann,^ is of peculiar importance. Any one who will compare the character- istic turns of speech in chap, v.-xi. with those in xii.-xxvi. will find the agreement in form so close that the idea of a diversity of authorship will only seem to introduce a new problem, the solving of which would involve incomparably greater difficulties than those which are pressed upon him by the acceptance of the unity of authorship. It is no doubt another question whether Deut. v.-xi. was written at the same time and on the same impulse as xii.-xxvi. or not. Kuenen, who unhesitatingly, and, as I believe, with con- vincing reasons, maintains the unity of authorship, has contested this. He holds that the editor of chap, xii.-xxvi. wrote the Intro- ductiwu (v.-xi.), afterwards referring in it to the laws which had then already been collected. I cannot give my adhesion to this view of Kuenen's. A con- siderable portion of the objections already taken to the diversity of authorship seem to me to tell against the difference of dates accepted by him. The absence of the Ten Commandments, the introduction of which, according to this view, would wear the same character of a mere later emendation which it has on Wellhausen's view; the strangeness of so prolix a preface being added sub- sequently; the complete correspondence of the whole with the superscription of the first part, a correspondence far less to be expected if a lengthy interval had elapsed between the editing of the two parts than if they were edited at the same time ; all these considerations seem to refute Kuenen's suggestion.* If then we may regard the section, Deut. v.-xxvi., whether with ' On other points, c/. Kuenen, Ond.^ § 7, Nos. 8 and 9. - Kuenen, Ond.^ § 7, Nos. 4 and 10 ; Dillm. NnBtJo , pp. 2m f., 292. = Ond.2 § 7, No. 11. ^ Further cf. Dillm. NuDtJo., pp. 263 f., 292 f. 52 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. or without its Superscription (iv. 45-49), as a homogeneous whole, composed at one and the same time, we may recognise in this section the very Deuteronomy which was discovered in Josiah's reign. We call this original kernel of our present Deuteronomy by the brief designation D. What is the relation between it and its framework, chap, i.-iv. 44, and chap, xxvii. ff. ? As far as the introductory chapters (i.-iv. 44) are concerned, it has long been recognised that they do not stand on quite the same footing as the kernel of the book. The very fact of tlieir being followed by the detailed heading (iv. 45-49), which gives circum- stantial information about dates and places as if they were new, although they have long been familiar to the reader from i. ff. ; the further fact that the legislation proper of chap. xii. ff. is already sufficiently provided with an introduction in chap, v.-xi. ; finally, a number of discrepancies of statement, all confirm, this conclusion. On these grounds, and especially because of the differences between their respective contents,^ Klostermann,^ Hollenberg,^ Wellhausen,'' Valeton,'' Kuenen,^ and others,^ have concluded that chap, i.-iv. were not written by D himself but by another author. But the close agreement in phraseology between this section and the one written by D^ compels us to believe that the author must in any case have been closely connected with D, whether he be recognised as K'' or an earlier writer, belonging to D's school (D^). HoUenberg's opinion that the author of Deut. i.-iv. is to be considered as identical with E*^ is out of harmony with the important consideration that the contents of Deut. i.-iv. presup- poses the narratives in Exodus and Numbers.^ An editor who wished to write Deuteronomy with the rest of the books could ' On these see especially Kueneii, Oiid.'-' § 7, No. 17- 2 StKr., 1871, p. 253 S. ^ StKr., 1874, p. 467 ff. * JDTh. xxii. p. 460 ff. "' Studien, vi. p. 460 ff. « Ond.-ip. 116 ff. ' For instance, Reuss, Hist. Salute, etc., p. 209 ff. ; Kayser, JDTh. vii. p. 533. 8 See especially Kuenen, 0)!rf.= § 17, No. 16; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 229. '■' Kosters, Die histoi-ie-beschomoing van den Detcteronomist, p. 32 ff. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OP CANAAN 53 have had no reason for repeating the narratives already given,^ and that, too, with some discrepancies of detail. On the contrary, this repetition has no object unless it was conceived and com- posed as a portion of the still independent Deuteronomy. Moved by this consideration the rest of the scholars mentioned above have ascribed Deut. i.-iv. to a successor of the original D spiritually related to him. Both characteristics of Deut. i.-iv., its similarity to D and its divergence from him, appear to be satis- factorily explained on this supposition, especially as it is thought possible to show the likelihood of the similarity in phraseology — which, however, is modified by single differences in detail — having arisen through imitation.^ This view is decidedly preferable to the older' one of Knobel, Graf, Kosters, and others, according to which D himself, sooner or later, after the composition of Deut. v.-xxvi., prefixed this In- troduction to his book. On that view the manifold differences between the two parts remain unexplained. Dillmann, however, has recently opposed the newer view with great energy.* He attempts an entirely new and peculiar solution of the problem. Starting with the characteristic differences between the two main portions of which Deut. i. 6-iv. 43 is made up, i.e. Deut. i. 6-iii. 29 on the one hand and iv. 1-40 on the other, he believes that a distinction must be drawn between them. He explains the first as a historical Introduction to Deuteronomy subsequently transformed by E'^ into a speech by Moses. The motive of E'^'s procedure is obvious. There seemed to him to be no meaning in a historical Introduction to Deuteronomy substantially identical with the narrative in Exodus and Numbers. He did not feel justified in omitting it entirely ; he therefore altered it into an introductory speech by Moses, the ostensible object of which should be the bringing the historical situation before the eyes of his audience. Dillmann is of course able to appeal first in favour of this view to the marked agreement in phraseology and statement 1 Kuenen, Ond.- § 7, No. 15 ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 228. - Kuenen, Ond.^ § 7, No. 16. '' Die Biioher, NuDiJo., pp. 228 ff., 599. 54 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. between these chapters and D himself, an agreement which will always carry weight, whereas the majority of the differences may easily be credited to E"", the reviser.^ Variations as to facts would not be explicable thus, but Dillmann does not think there are any.^ The matter presents a somewhat different aspect to Dillmann when he turns to the second portion, iv. 1-40. He, like others, sees that this hortatory address is proved to be out of place by the long exhortation which follows. He ascribes to E* its removal to the place it now occupies. But he has no hesitation in attributing the speech itself to D, holding that it originally stood amongst the concluding speeches after chap. xxvi. This satisfactorily explains the designation of the immediately succeed- ing Deuteronomy as ' this law,' a designation which in the present order of the chapters has given rise to well-grounded objections.^ It cannot be denied that this theory of the relation between the first four chapters and the rest of Deuteronomy is an exceed- ingly noteworthy contribution to the solution of a very complicated problem.* I frankly admit that it is not only as probable as the other explanation which attributes i.-iv. to D^, but that it has many decided advantages over it. Amongst the points in its favour I specially reckon the altogether unforced manner in which it explains, on the one hand, the great similarity between the language of these chapters and of D respectively, and the smaller differences by which they are distinguished, and, on the other hand, the fact of tliis Introduction being prefixed to D. The introduction as it now runs presents great difficulties even on the supposition that D^ was the author. Plausible reasons may per- haps be adduced to show how a successor, and at the same time imitator, of D came to preface his predecessor's book with an ' Especially ii. 14 fF. He thus finds the explanation of the collision into which this passages comes with v. 2 f. and xi. 2 fif. ^ As to the principal passage, ii. 29, in relation to xxiii. 5, ef. his Kommentai- ; also Graf, Oesch. Such., p. 18 ; Kleinert, Das Dtideron., etc., pp. 34, 181. 5 Dent. iv. 8 and v. On this c/., e.g., Wellhauseu, xxii. p. 462. * Dillmann is necessitated by his general treatment of the subject to assign the superscription, iv. 44 ff., to R"'. In point of language there is nothing to be said against this. Cf. NuDtJo., p. 261. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 55 Introduction (i.-iii.) drawn up from Exodus and Numbers. But the hortatory portion of these chapters, i.e. chap, iv., will not be accounted for so easily. The admonitory introduction of the law is sufficiently given in chap, v.-xi. Chap. iv. makes no fresh contribu- tion. To me this difficulty seems to preclude the idea of a D^ having written Deut. i.-iv. On the theory that chap. iv. belonged to the hortatory peroration there is nothing surprising save its position, and Dillmann can explain this satisfactorily. Besides which his account of the origin of chap, i.-iii. is more attractive than the other. For our present Deuteronomy, from chap, i.-xi., pursues its course in an undeniably heavy and awkward fashion. Must not the supposed D- himself have felt how clumsy his own introductory speech would look when prefixed to the one con- tained in his model ? Perhaps a future scholar may deduce from this the conclusion that for this very reason i.-iv., or at least i.-iii., was originally written by D^ in narrative form and afterwards transformed into an address by E'^. For my own part I shrink from any further complication of the problem. But I deem it certain that Deut. i.-iii. was not composed in its present form. I believe Dillmann to be right in holding that an author could only have prefixed a narrative introduction to the lengthy speech. The chapters as they now stand must, in my judgment, have been the work of a reviser who, if he did not wish to damage unduly the material at his disposal, had no choice but to change the narrative into a speech. For the narrative in Deut. i.-iii. would lose all its significance as a narrative when Deuteronomy came to be joined to the accounts from Exodus and Numbers which are here reproduced. Dillmann's view would be more assured if he succeeded in his attempt to show that the writer had J and E before him as independent writings. If in spite of this I cannot make up my mind to assent unreservedly to his view, this is because the suspicion of disagreement between some passages on points of fad remains. Hence it seems to me that even Dillmann's explanatior has not provided a final solution of the problem. Unless we art prepared to venture on a fresh explanation we must leave th< 56 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. question open, seeing what difficulties there are in the interpreta- tion offered by Kuenen and the others. It is but of subordinate importance in determining our estimate of the history. As to the closing portion of Deuteronomy, chap, xxvii.-xxxiv., there is a substantial agreement in many directions. The section, xxxii. 48-52,^ some elements of chap, xxxiv.,^ the Song, chap, xxxii. 1-44, and the Blessing, chap, xxxiii. 1-29,* are acknow- ledged in any case to have no connection with the original Deuteronomy. The same conclusion may with great probability be drawn of chap. xxxi. 14-23.* The only passages in the second part of the concluding section, xxxi.-xxxiv., that are Deuteronomic in contents and in language are some elements of chap, xxxiv.,^ together with the small fragments, Deut. xxxii. 45-47, and xxxi. 24-30. In their case as in that of the decidedly Deutero- nomic mass of the first part, chap, xxvii. 1-xxxi. 13, the question must arise in the same way as for chap, i.-iv. whether they are to be ascribed to D himself or to one of his successors. It is admitted that Deut. xxvii. 9, 10, and xxxi. 9-13'' are from D himself. And notwithstanding Wellhausen's '' and Kleinert's ® contradiction this can also be proved of chap, xxviii.,^ although, according to the nature of the case, minor additions to this speech by E^ in not altogether inconsiderable numbers are not excluded. 1 See below, § 22. = See below, §§ 20, 21, 22. = See below, § 21. This is denied by Schultz, Deut., p. 649 if., and Keil, NxiDtJo., p. 537 f. * See below, § 21. On the relation between m\ 14 f., 23 and vv. 16-22, see Klostermann, StKr., 1871, p. 249 ff. ; Kuenen, Ond.- § 7, No. 20; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 388. ^ At all events v. 11 f. belongs to this, as well as parts of v. 4 (Dillm., parts of 5 and 1 ?) and 6. "See Kuenen, Ond.- § 7, No. 21; Dillm. NuDtJo., pp. 364, 386 f. For the rest, with reference to chap, xxvii., cf. especially Kuenen in Theol. Tijdnchr. xii. p. 297 ff. ' JDTh. xxii. p. 461 (the whole chapter secondary). ^ Das Denteronomium, etc. p. 205 f. (considerable portions secondary) : cf. also Valeton, Studien, vii. p. 44 f., and Kayser, JPT/i., 1881, p. 530 f. 5 See Kuenen, Oml.'^ § 7, No. 21 ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 370. Likewise Graf, Oesch. Buck., p. 8; Klostermann, Hollenberg. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 57 Of the remaining sections it is recognised that the following are not from D himself: Deut. xxvii. 1-8, 11-13, 14-26.1 ^i^ey point to a writer who followed D's thoughts and language. There is less certainty about the rest: — the great hortatory address in Deut. xxviii. 69-xxx. 20; the sections xxxi. 24-30, xxxii. 45-47 ; and chap, xxxiv., in so far as it is Deuteronomic. There can be no doubt that several of these sections, particularly the speech in chap. xxix. f , are deeply stamped with the signs of a later hand.^ This may easily have been E''. On the other hand the possibility that the substance of them comes from D is not to be rejected on u priori grounds.^ It may be that a conclusive answer, especially with reference to such sections as chap, xxxiv., cannot be given : at all events it cannot here. The question is connected with our judgment respecting D in the Book of Joshua. We have already seen that there are many reasons for thinking D was in possession of a narrative. If so, and if he continued it beyond chap, xxvi., especially into the Book of Joshua, there is obviously no reason for denying that he wrote the story of the death of Moses. If this was not the case, there can be no further dispute concerning these sections. 2. DATE OF THE COMPOSITION OF D. The question as to the composition of D, with which we are here concerned, will not be directly touched by the answer to that other question, whether Deut. iv. 44-xxvi., together with Deut. xxviii. and the elements separated from chap, xxvii. and xxxi., formed the original contents of Deuteronomy or, on the other hand, it consisted of Deut. i.-xxx., excluding here also minor additions by E*", but taking in some fragments of the following chapters and elements of the Book of Joshua. Not till we come to discuss the Deuteronomic portions of the Book of 1 Graf, Gesch. Biich., p. 8; Kayser, Vorexil. Buck., p. 101; Kuenen, Thtol. Tijdschr. xii. p. 297 ff., and Ond.^ § 7, No. 22 ; Dillm. NuDUo., p. 364. 2 Hence Kuenen, § 7, Noa. 20 and 22, ascribes them to D-. '■> Dillm. NuDlJo., pp. 379, 390, asserts this of chap. xxix. f. and xxxi. 24-30, whilst attributing xxxii. 45-47 (p. 412) to D alone. 58 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Joshua will the opportunity be likely to arise of drawing from the result here obtained a further conclusion respecting the probable compass of D. The Book of Kings contains,^ as is known, a full account of the discovery of a Law Book in the Temple at Jerusalem. In the eighteenth year of King Josiah a book was found in the temple. The priest Hilkiah, through whose hands it passes, gives it to Shaphan, the king's scribe, with the remark that this is ' the ' Law Book. The king himself has the book read to him, and is terror-stricken by the threatenings it contains. On the advice of the prophetess Huldah, he introduces a reform in the cultus, the outlines of which are described by the Book of Kings. The account bears all the marks of trustworthiness. It may have been composed not much more than fifty years after the events it narrates. Xor can there be any doubt that when Hilkiah spoke of the Law Book he was thinking of a Mosaic ^ book, although he does not mention the name of Moses. For obvious reasons it was long believed that this book was our Pentateuch.^ It was supposed to have been completed centuries before,* and then to have been lost in the course of time, especially during the reigns of Josiah's idolatrous predecessors. The sole remaining copy, buried in the temple amidst rubbish and lumber, was found in Josiah's time. This theory is for many reasons untenable. We briefly mention the most important : ^ — (1.) 'AH the words of the book,' consequently the whole of the contents of the book, were publicly read aloud twice within a ' 2 Kings xxii. and xxiii. = Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. 352. ' The older writers. In modern times Hengstenberg, Keil and others, espe- cially Eiehm, Gesetzgebung Mosis im Lande Moab, p. 98, and Kleinert, Deutero- nommm, p. 251 ff. ■• According to Eiehm, ut s^ipra, p. 98 ff., Deuteronomy was not composed till Manasseh's reign, when it was added to the rest. Subsequently Riebm pro- nounced in favour of its having been composed in Hezekiah's time. Kleinert believes it was written in Samuel's time. On this see below, p. 61. ^ Cf. especially De Wette-Schrader, Eiiil.' p. 323; Reuss, Gesch. . 2 Kuenen, Ovd.'' § 10, Nos. 24, 25. •' 2 Kings xxii. 13. * Cf. Deut. vi. \-) ; viii. 19 f. ; ix. 13 ; xi. 28. ' Seinicke, OumJi. d. Volh. Israd, i. p. 386 f. , opposes this argument becan»( the threatenings in Deuteronomy are only hypothetical. Against this, sec Kuenen, Ond.'^ § 12, No. 3. « 2 Kings xxiii. 4 IF. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 61 and enchanters are got rid of.^ It is only in Deuteronomy that these reforms are prescribed, but in it the prescriptions are as definite as possible.^ (c.) The further consequence of the acquaintance with that book is a great celebration of the Passover by the whole people. It is pre-supposed and expressly declared that the ceremony is to be in accordance with the newly-found law.^ Now the details of the festival correspond with the laws of the Passover in Deuteronomy and not with those given elsewhere in the Pentateuch.* The law-book found in Josiah's reign must consequently have been D. This indeed involves no assertion respecting the age of D. The only deduction that can be made from what has hitherto been advanced, is that the argument under c, p. 60, is not altogether favourable to the idea of D's great antiquity. If it is quite incredible that the entire Pentateuch, after being published, and for a long time openly recognised, disappeared, and, as the narrative in the Book of Kings assumes, left not a trace behind, then the same kind of incredibility, though not in the same degree, attaches to the loss of an essential part of the whole. Every one can understand single copies of the book being lost. But it is difficult to believe that all the copies had completely disappeared, •and all memory of its contents been obliterated from the hearts of Yahv^'s worshippers, and this at a time when in many quarters His worship was faithfully preserved. For the Book of Kings treats the discovered book as something entirely novel, until then, or at least at that time, unknown.^ With this agrees the fact, that the book itself supplies proofs of being a comparatively late writing." The language of Deuteronomy has many points of contact M-ith that of the eighth and seventh centuries. Its manner of state- ' 2 Kings xxiii. 24 f. = Deut. xii. 8 ; xviii. 9 f. Of. further xiii. 1 ffi, 7 tf., 13 ff. ; xiv. 23 ff; xv. 20 ; xvii. 8, 10 ; xxvi. 2. = 2 Kings xxiii. 21 f. * Deut. xvi. 1 flf. '■' Of. Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. 352 f. ^ Against Kleinert, Da-i DetUeronomium mid der Deuteronomihtr, 1872, who, as is well known, seeks to prove that it was composed in Samuel's days, (/. especially Riehm, StKr., 1873, p. 165 ff. ; Kuenen, Ond." § 12, No. S. 62 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. ment sounds anything but fresh and original. Frequent repeti- tions, marked prolixity, a certain breadth of statement and not infrequent broken constructions are the characteristics of its style. Obviously they do not point to the mere beginnings of a literature but to an advanced stage of familiarity with the arts of public writing and speaking.^ This argument is considerably strengthened by the relation of dependence which, as we are about to show,^ our book sustains towards other parts of the Hexateuch. The contents of the book lead to the same conclusion. Here also attention is to be directed in the first place to the relation now to be pointed out between D on the one hand, and J and E, particularly E, on the other. But apart from this many reasons prove a later date. The law of the king ^ in D is shown to belong to the period of the Kings by the fact that the actual evil courses pursued by the kings who followed Solomon are reproved in it.* There is nothing to justify us in separating ^ this portion from the rest of D.^ The law relating to the appellate jurisdiction ' pre- supposes that for some time there had already been such a jurisdiction in Jerusalem. Now, neither in the period of the judges, nor in that of the earlier kings, have we any notice of its existence. But we learn from the Chronicles^ that Jeho- shaphat established a court of this kind. Further, the frequent references to the place which Yahv^ would choose, can hardly point to anything but the Temple at Jerusalem.^ Taken by themselves, we might, no doubt, understand them as predictions concerning the one sanctuary which should afterwards be chosen. But a closer examination of the language and context of the declarations in question creates a definite impression that the 1 SeeDillm. .iVMi3y Isaiah.^ Hezekiah was the first to make a practical attempt to bring about the centralisation.^ But it seems to have been only an attempt.* At any rate Hezekiah did not appeal to a law-book '" like Deuteronomy, as he certainly must have done if he had been acquainted with it. And the opinion that D was in existence in Hezekiah's time, but had not yet been discovered, is also rendered improbable by the warning which the book contaiiis^_against the worship of the host of heaven^ as a special form of idolatry. This points to a somewhat lower date, namely, that of Manasseh. We hear of that kind of worship for the first time from the prophets of the seventh century," such as Jeremiah ^ and Zephaniah,^ whilst the Book of Kings expressly states that it was introduced by Manasseh.^" Hence the only remaining question is whether the book origin- ated in Manasseh's reign and remained concealed till Josiah's, or ' Of. especially T'£23B' TnS3 in the whole context of the speech. It would almost be allowable to render : ' In the well-known tribe. ' - Isa. ii. 2 f . ; iv. 5 ; xviii. 7 ; xxviii. 16 ; xxx. 29 ; xxxi. 9 ; xxxiii. 14, 20. ^ 2 Kings xviii. 4, 22 ; xxi. 3. ^ The doubt as to its being a historical occurrence (Wellh. Proleg.^ p. 26, 48 f. ; Eng. Trans., pp. 46, 47) is unjustifiable. See Kuenen, Ond.- § 11, No. 9. = See Kuenen, Ond.'' % 12, No. 2. « Deut. xvii. 3 f. ; iv. 19. ' Kleinert gives a wrong interpretation of it (Deuter. p. 106 ff.). Against the entire argument with respect to the later origin of D, see Kleinert, p. 83 flF. and also Kuenen, Ond.- § 12, No. 5. 8 Jer. viii. 2 ; xix. 13 f. ; xxxiii. 32. » Zeph. i. 5. ^i" 2 Kings xxi. 3, 5 ; cf. xxiii. 4 f. 64 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. whether it was published immediately after its composition and so was composed in the time of Josiah. In the latter case, if it was not actually written by Hilkiah and Shaphan, this probably was done with their knowledge and co-operation. ^ Each of these views has found advocates.^ In proof of its having been published immediately after its composition under Josiah it is urged that from the outset Deu- teronomy was meant for publication,^ not for concealment: and special stress is laid on the consideration that on the other view those who took part in carrying out the reform, not being, at the same time, its intellectual originators, played the part of mere blind tools.* I cannot regard these reasons as conclusive. At all events it is impossible to determine how long the book was hidden iu the Temple. But the fact of its having been found on the occasion of a structural alteration of the Temple seems to me to prove that it had been actually hidden and this for a fair length of time, not a few days or weeks merely. This presupposes that it was quite accidentally found in some out-of-the-way place and did not lie open to any one's observation in the Temple — otherwise we must admit that a mystification was attempted. The last-named idea is absolutely precluded by the narrative in the Book of Kings, the credibility of which we have no ground for doubting. Besides this, Hilkiah's co-operation is made highly improbable by Deuteronomy itself.^ Now the theocratic disposition of Josiah renders it impossible to imagine any sufficient motive for the temporary concealment of the book. Hence it seems to me to be the most correct view that Manasseh's reign should be regarded as the time when D was composed. ' E.g. Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. .352: 'nominally a discovery of the priests.' - Manasseh's reign : Ewald (fortified by a daring hypothesis founded on xxviii. 68), Biehm (earlier), Bleek, Valeton, Driver. Josiah's reign : Knobel, Graf, Schrader, Reuss, Kuenen, Dillmann, Kautzsch, Cheyne, Baudissin, Cornill, Holzinger — partly with a denial of Hilkiah's co-operation. 3 Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 614. ■• Kuenen, Ond." § 12, No. 6. ^ Deut. xviii. 6-8, and the comparatively small endowment which it usually gives to the priests, particularly when contrasted with P. Gf. also the language used in Deut. xii. 12, 19 : it does not suit the mouth of a priest in Jerusalem. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OP CANAAN 65 The process can be most simply represented as follows. A man of prophetic character, faithful to Yahv^, stirred by Hezekiah's attempted reform and by Manasseh's idolatry, wrote the book in the reign of the latter. The troubles of the times and the hostile disposition of the king deterred him from publishing it. He had no wish to risk his own safety and the usefulness of his book. Hoping for better days, he concealed it in the Temple. The author may not have survived the long reign of Manasseh, or he would soon have come forward with his book after Josiah's accession. It appears to have been thus forgotten and only found by a fortunate accident in the eighteenth year of Josiah.^ Hilkiah and Shaphan are thus exculpated from every kind of disingenuousness. And what is more, this reproach, which has frequently been made against the author,- cannot seriously touch him. He felt that he was propounding to his people Mosaic ideas and Mosaic ordinances, provided merely with a new dress and application. Still further, as a man of indubitably prophetic mind, he was conscious that in giving new point to the ancient Mosaic ordinances, and in adapting to the needs of a more advanced and in many respects corrupt age much that had originated with Moses, or in the course of time had been added in his spirit and therefore under his name, he was filled with the special commission and the revealing light of his God. Have we of to-day, who with our modern ideas, can only with difficulty and to a slight extent transport ourselves into the spiritual life of those ancient days, the right to censure a man who so unmistakably bears the mark of the true God-inspired prophet ? Have we a right to reproach him with fraud, pious or impious ? May we doubt the divineness of that commission by virtue of which he called to life again the 1 There is no reason for adopting a still later date, as, e.g., B. Vatke, MrU. ins. AT. p. 385 f., would. The passages adduced in proof are partly to be explained in another way and partly to be set down to R*. Zunz in ZDMG. xxvii. p. 670 £f., and Colenso, 3'Ae Pentat. and Book of Joshua, vii., App. p. 85 ff., maintained that Jeremiah was the composer. Against them see Klein., DeiU. p. 186 ff. ; Duhm, Theol. d. Proph., p. 240 ff. ; Kuenen, Ond.-%\0, No. 14; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 614. 2 Orelli, e.g., repeats this, PBE."^ xiv. p. 720 ff. 66 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. earliest heroic figure of the theocracy for the benefit of a generation which was sinking into idolatry and a false worship of Yahv(5, and drawing upon the words and the spirit of the greatest lawgiver set before later times a law that was new and yet was the old Mosaic one ? He knew that what he propounded was Yahv^'s revelation and Moses's meaning. Had Moses looked on the author's times he could not have spoken otherwise than he makes him speak. He therefore bids Moses himself in prophetic garb lift up his voice to the generation that is gone, but with a glance at a distant future. But the harmlessness, the half-poetic character, of the garb is ensured by the almost intentional manner in which the actual state of affairs is now and again allowed to pass through. 3. THE DEUTEEONOMIC FRAGMENTS IN THE BOOK OF JOSHUA. There yet remains the difficult question as to the origin of the Deuteronomic elements in the Book of Joshua. It has long been admitted that this book contains considerable portions which exhibit a surprising likeness to D in terminology and ideas.^ In the first part of the book, chap, i.-xii., they can be distinguished with a fair amount of ease and unanimity, but as to the second part, chap, xiii.-xxiv., there is as yet but little agreement. Yet the essen- tial features in the character of these elements can be determined by means of the first half. HoUenberg,^ in a thorough and meritorious investigation, was the first to treat the question with precision. He came to the conclusion that the Deuteronomic portions of the Book of Joshua were not written by D but by the editor (E''), who united D to the rest of the Hexateuch, and, according to Hollenberg, also wrote Deut. i.-iv. and xxvii., xxix.-xxxi. Wellhausen substantially agrees with him.^ To say nothing of the impossibility of Deut. i.-iv. having been ' On both points cf. the thorough investigation in Kuen. Ond.^ § 7, No. 26 ; also Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 440. "- StKr., 1874, pp. 462-506. ' JDTh. xxi. p. 585 ff. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 67 written by E'', which we have already proved,^ there are weighty arguments against such an editor having been the author of frag- ments so extensive. Granted that E'^ in all probability altered his text much more largely and freely than E*". But the author of these fragments went far beyond a mere editor's procedure and in some points contradicted it.^ It may therefore be confidently held that in these Deuteronomic portions, as in others, E"^ worked in accordance with sources which he deemed himself bound to respect. Hence Kueneu ^ is riaht in claimino- for these constituents an independent author who is to be distinguished from E"*. He discovers him in a D"^, who is closely connected with the author of Deut. i.-iv. and xxvii. ff. or in some writers of like character. Dillmann* starts with the same recognition of an independent authorship, but, in accordance with his position towards Deut. i.-iv. and xxvii. ff., he ascribes the ground-work of this Deuteronomic revision of the Book of Joshua to D himself. A number of signs lead him to the conclusion that at the very outset D not only provided his work with a historical Introduction but also furnished it with the same kind of conclusion, and that the latter was ex- tended beyond the death of Moses so as to treat briefly of the events that happened under Joshua. The possibility of this idea of Dillmann's can hardly be denied. But there seem to me to be many reasons which do not altogether recommend it in this form. No doubt we must allow that, in comparison with the main question as to whether E"* worked independently or used an already extant source, the other question as to whether this source is identical with D or with D^ is but oi subordinate importance. We have already recognised that Dill- mann's hypothesis concerning Deut. i.-iv. is somewhat more probable than Kuenen's, and have admitted the entire justifi- 1 P. 52. 2 On individual contradictions between the Deuteronomic and other sections of the Book of Joshua, see especially Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 440. 3 Ond.' § 7, Nos. 30, 31. * NuDlJo., pp. 440, 600. 68 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. ableness of the expectation that D himself would prefix to his work an Introduction explaining the events that happened between Horeb and the close of the law-giving. But we cannot pronounce the same judgment on the theor}^ of a historical conclusion. Our reasons are as follows : — (a.) Deuteronomy is not a history-book as the other books are. It did not contain any independent historical writing, not even after the brief fashion of P. When it had brought the reader to the point where Moses is speaking in the land of Moab it had effected all it deemed necessary. These passages do not contain an arbitrary decision concerning D's intentions, but are tlie result of the relation between the two historical narratives. That in Deut. i.-iv., as might be expected from its merely recapitulatory character, depends almost wholly on E (and J). The Deuteronomic source in Joshua is much less dependent on E and J. It is not a simple explanatory extract from those documents, but an inde- pendent work. (&.) The effect which the Book of Kings assumes to have been produced by the reading of D culminates in Josiah's alarm at the grievous threatenings contained in the book. This result not only tells against the idea that the whole Pentateuch was read aloud, but it also decisively dissuades us from thinking that D closed with an extended narrative dealing with the history of Joshua. The overpowering effect which the book assuredly sought to pro- duce, and did produce, might much more confidently be looked for if the curses formed its close. (c.) It is true that subjective impressions may in part have caused the observation that the Deuteronomic author in Joshua z" attaches himself ^ more closely to Deut. i.-iv. and xxvii. ff. than to Deut. v.-xxvi. But it cannot altogether be denied that there are certain distinctions between D and those fragments in Joshua.^ This ' HoUenberg, StKr., 1874, p. 472 ff. ^ Gf. Josh. i. 3-5, with Deut. xi. 24, and on this see HoUenberg, ib. p. 474 ; Wellhausen, xxi. p. 586; Kuen. Ond." § 7, No. 30; but also Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 443. On Josh. viii. 30-35 compared with Deut. xxvii. 1 ff., see HoUenberg, p. 479 f., and against him Kuenen, ih. ; Dillmann, p. 477 f. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 69 is in favour of their having been written by an author (D^) who worked in the manner and with the languacfe of D. It is difficult to say whether this D^ is a distinct person from J)} or the same person writing later to supplement his former work. The strong linguistic resemblance to D^ is in favour of the latter view,^ whilst the minor differences as to matters of fact speak for a distinct author. At all events the D^ of Joshua arose from an attempt to work up the early post-Mosaic history given by the other documents by way of sequel to D and in D 's manner and spirit. And in all probability D^, when he composed D, saw no necessity as yet for taking this work in hand, though afterwards he himself or some other may have felt it incumbent on him to do so. The verdict on those Deuteronomic portions of Deut. xxvii. ff. which do not belong immediately to D himself, which was just now reserved, becomes self-evident. Originally they and D^ formed the beginning of Joshua : it was E"* who placed them at the close ofD. § 8. The Sources J and E. Their Relation to each other and to D. If we leave aside Deuteronomy and the fragments related to it there remains within the Hexateuch almost the whole of the four first books, Genesis to Numbers, as well as a large part of the book of Joshua. By easily recognisable and long recognised signs the whole of this material is divided into two great main groups which may be designated in accordance with their most general character as the 'priestly' group and the 'prophetic' We are here concerned with the latter. Formerly those elements in it which deviate from its prevalent character were assigned to the priestly group, and it was regarded as being otherwise a solid unity : this is not even admissible as a question now. The group divides into two principal writings. The group which differs from the other sources that treat of the primitive history by using the divine name Yahvd from the very ' This is especially pressed by Dillm. NuDtJo. , p. 440. ro HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. beginning onwards derives from this peculiarity the uaiue Yahvistic Writing (J). The other, in relating the earliest history down to the time of Moses, employs throughout the designation Elohim for God, and not seldom adheres to this even after the revelation of the name Yahve.^ Hence it is called the Elohistic Writing (E). Its author used to be called the ' later Elohist ' to distinguish his work from the Priestly Writing (P) which adopts the same principle. But that was when P was almost universally admitted to be the ' Foundation Writing ' of the Hexateuch. At the present day many prefer to call him the older Elohist, or, with a more correct brevity, the Elohist. Dillmann designates this writing by B and the Yahvistic by C. Herm. Schultz, on the contrary, uses B for the Yahvistic and C for the Elohistic. 1. Belation to Deuteronomy. — To obtain a probable starting-point from which to determine the age of these prophetic fragments it is desirable in the first place that we should fix our attention on them as a united whole and compare them with Deuteronomy, the aa;e of which we now know. The historical narrative of D (and of D^ in case and in so far as such an author must be recognised) shows clearly the depend- ence of this writer on the prophetic account. When in the foundation part of Deuteronomy (chaps, v.-xxvi.) the older history is spoken of — this is specially the case in chaps, v., ix. and x. — it is reproduced with constant reference to that portion of the ancient tradition. In a number of instances a distinct verbal BErreement O can be perceived.^ This necessitates our admitting the dependence of one of the representations on the other, and there can be no doubt on which side it lies. Useing for brevity's sake the symbol JE, which Wellhausen invented, we may say that in it we have a progressive narrative, flowing in two main streams, whereas in ' Dillmann, NuDtJo., p. 017, maintains that tliis was the case everywhere, and that the name Yahve in E, even after Ex. iii., always comes from editorial revision. ^ Cf. Deut. v., ix., X. with Ex. xix.-xxiv. , xxxii.-xxxiv., but especially Deut. ix. 9 with Ex. xxiv. 18, xxxiv. 28 ; Deut. ix. 10 with Ex. xxxi. 18, xxxii. 16 ; Deut. ix. 12-14 with Ex. xxxii. 7-10, and many others. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 71 D we have a hortatory recapitulation, frequently desultory, in some places giving a brief reference, in others a broad description. The Introduction, Deut. i.-iv., displays the same character on an even larger scale. And although its author diverges from JE in many points,^ JE is the fountain from which he chiefly draws. The variations may have arisen partly from a free treatment of his material and partly from the use of other sources or other strata of tradition. At all events there is nothing to render questionable the dependence of this stratum also of the Deuteronomic narra- tive on JE? The prophetic narrative is therefore older than Deuteronomy, and this is indeed universally admitted.^ Special interest attaches to another phenomenon, on which Dillmann* has recently laid stress, viz., the marked preference which Deuteronomy shows for E in its reproduction of the older narrative preserved in J and E. There can be no doubt that the author is acquainted with J and uses it as a source.'^ But he sticks far closer to E, and this in a manner which leads us to guess that he stood in a nearer relation to this source than to ^ J. This nearer relation could scarcely be explained on the supposition that the author had E and J before him as an already united whole.'^ The inference would rather seem to be that he possessed both books as independent writings and preferred E. There are also some special indications which point in the same direction.^ ' See Wellh. JD'fh. xxii. p. 469; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 610. - Cf. especially Deut. 1. 6-19 with Ex. xviii. 13-27 and Num. xi. 11-17, 24-29 ; Deut. li. 2-23 with Num. xx. 14-23, xxi. 1 ffi, etc. " Cf, Graf, Gesch. BB., p. 9 ff. ; Kosters, Die historie-beschotm-ing van den DeiUeronomist, etc. (1S68) ; Kayser, Vorexil Buck., p. 141 S. ; Wellh. JDTh. xxii. p. 465 tf. ; Kuen. Ond."' § 9, No. 5 ; Dillm. NuDlJo., p. 609. * NuDtJo., p. 609. '' ^ Cf. Deut. ix. 9-x. 5, with Ex. xxxii. -xxxiv. ; and Deut. i. 11, with Num. xi. 11, 17. * Horeb, not Sinai, Deut. i. 2, and elsewhere. Amorites, not Canaanites, Deut. i. 7 and elsewhere. Cf. further the contents of the majority of the parallels. ' See Meyer, in ZA W., i. p. 123. Kuen. Ond.- p. 242, holds that J and B were combined so as to form JE in the period between D' and D'^. ' See the observations in Dillmann, p. 609, respecting the date of what ii related in Ex. xviii., and the relation between Num. xiii. f. and Deut. i. 20 if. 72 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. If the history is older in J and E than in D, the same relation should hold good in the legal portions. In the case of the Decalogue, which is common to both books,^ it must be admitted that both JE and D give the original contents with later addi- tions ; ^ and yet the formulation of the Ten Words in D presents a number of elements ^ not found in JE, which show decisively that the form in D is the later one.* In like manner E's Book of the Covenant ^ is in many ways used and consequently presupposed ^ in D's laws. This is especially true of the laws in Deut. xii.-xx.^ The same relation is not quite so demonstrable in the section Deut. xxL-xxv., but possibly exists there also.^ It can be traced too in the first part of D, Deut. v.-xi.*' On these points scholars are unanimous. With regard to that section of J which stands in the place of the Book of the Covenantj^" and to some other historical sections ^^ in this book, the same unanimity does not prevail, Dillmann^^ holds that D is dependent on them, while Kuenen^^ only admits this with considerable reserve. The dis- agreement arises from Kuenen's peculiar division of the documents in these passages. On that, of course, the decision of the question depends. Yet there can be no real doubt about this : — in so far as these laws actually belong to J, they are older than D ; if some portions of them are to be assigned to a later editor (whom we should designate E"^), they may possibly depend on D. 2. The Relation hetween E and J. Their Comhination. — Both writings, E and J, deal substantially with the same material. 1 Ex. XX. 2-17, and Deut. v. 6-18. 2 In Ex. XX. 10, 12. On Ex. xx. 11, contrasted with Deut. v. W"", 15, see Kuen. Ond:^ § 9, No. 2. = See Deut. v. 12, 14, 16, 18. * Gf. Graf, Gesch. BB., p. 19 f. = Ex. xx. 23-xxiii. 33. » See Graf, Geach. BB., p. 21 flf. ; Klein., Das Deut., p. 47 flf. ; Kayser, Vorex. Buck., p. 136 f. ; Kuen. Ond.'^ § 9, No. 3 ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 604 f. ' See Graf, ib. ; Kuen. ih. 8 See Graf, ih. p. 24 ; Kuen., p. 161 ; Dillm., p. 604. Possibly D here builds on another older collection of laws. ^ Graf, ib. , p. 20 f. 1" Ex. xxxiv. 10-26. " Ex. xiii. 3-6 ; xii. 21-27. ^^ NuDtJo. , t^. ^5. 13 Ond.^ § 9, No. 4. According to § 13, Nos. 21, 29, they belong in part to the seventh century, and in part to the end of the seventh or beginning of the sixth. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 73 They relate the history of the holy people from the remotest times to the settlement in Canaan. Both preface ^ this history of Israel with a recital of the earliest history of mankind down to Abraham. We still possess this Introduction by J ; whether we have remnants of E's is not certain.^ It is easy to understand how this sameness of material, and the similarity of treatment to which both authors have in many respects subjected it, has prompted the inquiry whether one of these writings was not composed with an eye to and an actual use of the other. This is a topic which would naturally form the close of our discussion of J and E. But we must deal with it here, because our decision as to the reciprocal relation of the two sources may possibly involve our verdict on their aare. ISToldeke has answered the question with an uncompromising affirmative.^ He believes he can prove, not only that J was ac- quainted with and made use of E, but that he directly incorporated E's book into his own and blended the two. Wellhausen * em- phatically opposes him. He undertakes to prove that J and E diverge from each other in such a way as to make it impossible to believe that either writer welded the other's work with his own. And it must be admitted that he makes out his case. He is, for example, fully justified in saying of Gen. xx. ff., that on Noldeke's supposition J ' would have been compelled to adjust and accommo- date to the foreign elements he was adopting a narrative of his own which, as author and originator, he could shape at his will ; but his procedure was just the opposite.' ^ The same observation can be made at other points in the narrative, where we can still see that the two sources are combined." Perhaps the clearest; instance of it in Genesis is the history of Joseph, where the dis- crepant statements stand in such immediate juxtaposition and conflict so severely with each other as to demonstrate at once the 1 Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 617. ^ See below, § 12. 3 Untera. z. Kritik. d.AT.,y.Z f. 23. * JDTh. xxi. p. 406 ff., 419, 440, 450. 5 JDTh. xxi. p. 406. " e.g. in Gen. xxvili. ff. 74 HISTOKY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. untenableness of tliis view, which for a time was very popular.^ In the Book of Exodus, I specially mention the history of the events at Sinai, Ex. xix. ff., where the same result again comes out with all possible clearness.^ From all these facts we must conclude that the combination of J and E was not the work of either of the original authors, but of a third person. He must have stood in so entirely objective a position with regard to the two frequently contradictory sources that both of them seemed to him equally precious and his one concern, as editor, was to unite them in an acceptable manner, without omitting any more of either than was absolutely necessary. It is therefore safe to hold that J and E at one time existed as separate compositions, though this does not involve the ad- mission that their authors planned and shaped them independently. But here agreement ceases. How the two writings were combined by a third hand, and what, more precisely, was their reciprocal relation is still disputable. Wellhausen was the first to give a detailed proof of the combination of J and E by a third hand, and he imagines that this reviser lived not very long after the com- position of the second source which he used, but prior to Deuter- onomy. It is true, this man was already, he thinks, influenced by the spirit of Deuteronomy.^ As the one in whom J and E are brought together, Wellhausen names him JE. He founds the idea of there having been such a JE on what he deems the fact that all through the Hexateuch, J and E stand in a much closer re- lation to each other than to P, so that, in his opinion, the reviser who incorporated P into our present Hexateuch, cannot have been the first to join J and E together, and at the same time join them with P.* Dillmann ^ declares his assent to the idea of an inde- pendent authorship, but opposes the distinction between JE and ' Gen. xxxvii. 39 ff. On this see Kuen. Ond.- § 1, No. 26. '■' Compare the analysis of the events at Sinai in §§ 20 and 21 : it will then be impossible to doubt the untenableness of this idea. = JDTh. xxi. p. 564 ; Gesch. Isi:^ p. 372. ^ JDTh. xxi. pp. 425, 440, 564 ; Bleek- Wellhausen, EM.'> p. 178. 5 Gen.^ p. xviii. NuDtJo., p. 677 f. Chap. L] PEEIOD ENDING "WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 75 R He believes the closer connection of R with J and E than with P to be explicable from internal reasons : he also finds in- stances where R has united J or E more intimately with P. The decision of this CLuestion depends in part very materially on the dating of P. Yet there are some points of view which can be vindicated apart from this. It is in the Book of Joshua that the reader is most struck by the extraordinarily close welding together of the two writings, J and E, which in many cases looks more like the work of a writer who freely remoulds his materials than of a mere editor. The portions from J and E and those from D are there woven together by a hand which makes weighty alterations and not seldom narrates with perfect freedom.^ It seems to me that, at least for the Book of Joshua, it can be made probable that this Deuteronomic editor (Pi"^) — the same who retouched D (or D^) and united it with J and E — is also to be identified with the one who blended J and E together. This view is strongly sup- ported by the additional fact that D himself, both in what is acknowledged to be the kernel of his work and in Deut. i.-iv. (D^ ?), does not convey the impression of having been acquainted with J and E in the form of "Wellhausen's JE, that is, as a con- nected unity. D attaches himself, iir the most striking manner, almost exclusively to the narrative in E -, ignoring almost entirely that of J. It is this especially ^ which makes it probable that he had not the united JE to work from, but used E as his favourite source, and whilst employing J also, regarded the latter as of only secondary value. In many instances it is simply inconceivable how D could have detached E 's account from an already united whole and left J on one side. It is consequently more than probable than J and E were con- nected with each other after the publication of Deuteronomy. But if so, and if Wellhausen admits so close a relationship between JE and D that formerly it even seemed to him doubt- ful* whether JE should be distinguished from the Deuteronomic ' Of. Josh. i. f., iii. f., chap. vi. and others. - See above, No. 1. 3 See also Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 123, n. ■* Oesch. Jsr.^ p. 372. 76 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. reviser, I can see no reason for believing in a JE distinct from E"*. The belief in JE's existence is principally due to the idea that J and E were joined together before Deuteronomy appeared, though Kuenen adheres to the belief without maintaining this idea. If it does not hold good it will not be too much to ascribe to E'' the joining of J and E and the addition thereto of D and — if we must distinguish — of D^. Perhaps Dillmann might be able to fall in with this solution rather than with Wellhausen's. For it cannot well be denied that there are traces of E'' in Genesis, Exodus, and Numbers, although they are less frequent than in Joshua. If another hand than the latest E (whom I designate E*" because he formed our present Hexateucli out of the sources) has been at work, and if again the mutual connection of J and E or of J, E, and D is much closer than their connection with P, an independent working up of these sources will have to be reckoned amongst the possibilities. 3. Priority. — It is even more difficult to answer the question, ' Which of the two sources, J or E, is the earlier ? ' Opinions on this point are diametrically opposed, and the reasons alleged on both sides are not so convincing as to allow of our accepting them without further inquiry. The difficulty of arriving at a decisive verdict is increased by the circumstance that neither of the sources J and E is strictly homogeneous. However true it may be as a general statement that each of them is a finished whole, yet in J as well as E there are unmistakable instances where the present state of the writing seems to evince the workmanship of another, and, for the most part, later hand. Budde^ especially, following Wellhausen's suggestions, has sought to prove this of J. In the primaeval history, at all events, he has distinguished from J himself (J^), a later Yahvistic source (J^), and a Yahvistic editor (J^), who joined the other two. Kuenen^ objects to J^ but agrees with the remaining important points of Budde's analysis. And Kuenen himself has conjectured a series of later additions to E. We shall 1 Budde, Die bibl. Urgeschichte, 1883. ^ Theol. Tijdschr. xviii. p. 121 ff. Chap. L] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 77 have to state more precisely our position in respect to Budde's results on Gen. i.-xi. when we come to treat of the connexion of the writing J. In the same volume he maintains the possible co-operation of another hand in certain other passages, e.g. Ex. iv. and Num. xxiii. f. Our view of Kuenen's conjectures finds expression more than once when we treat of E, § 21. But even where a later hand, a J^ and E^, can be recognised in the present condition of the writing J and E, the question remains whether we have a later addition or merely a later embellishment of a piece originally from J and E. The latter is far more pro- bable, seeing that in cases where the historical, and especially the linguistic, characteristics of a source are maintained, later additions always arouse suspicion. Noldeke's opinion, stated above, as to the manner in which J and E were united is self-evidently connected with the assump- tion that E is older than J. This used to be generally held, and Schrader and Kayser continue to maintain it. Wellhausen has recently opposed it. His opinion has been adopted by a number of other investigators, H. Schultz,^ Meyer,^ Stade,^ Kuenen, etc. The reasons alleged by Wellhausen* in support of his view are these : — (a.) J is least touched by the specifically prophetic spirit, whereas E exhibits a more developed and more theoretical re- ligiousness. This is shown by E's view of the golden calf, the representation of Abraham as a Nabi, etc. (6.) A more primitive conception of the deity is found in J : He draws near to men in bodily form. In E God calls from heaven or reveals himself in dreams. (c.) Events which in J are thought of as resulting from natural causes are referred to the operation of God in E. 1 Alttest. Theol.- p. 58 (English Translation, p. 67). 2 ZA W. i. pp. 132, 141 ff. ' Gesch. Isr. i. p. 58. " Especially Oesch. Isr., p. 370 S. So far as I can seethe exposition here given is not repeated in the Prolegomena, but Wellhausen has nowhere explained that it no longer corresponds to his views. (But cf. Prol.^ 377. At all events Kuenen has adopted it as his own— see next page. ) 78 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. {cl.) E is nearer than J to Deuteronomy and the Priests' Code. (e.) The comparison of individual parallel passages in J and E shows that E depends on J. Gen. xx. compared with Gen. xxvi. 6-11 is the most instructive on this point. Kuenen has expressed his concurrence with these reasons of Wellhausen's. But he has conceded, on the one hand, that the comparison of the parallel narratives does not of itself lead to a perfectly certain result.^ And on the other hand, he has decisively repudiated the unduly far-going conclusions which Ed. Meyer,- and after him Stade,^ have built on the assumption of J's priority to E.* The fact is that a literary dependence of E on J cannot be really proved either by the examples on which Wellhausen lays stress^ or by those which Kuenen adduces.'' And if some of them appear to exhibit an earlier shape of the narrative matter in J, there can be set against them at least as many and more weighty examples of the dependence of J on E. Especially does the history of Joseph in E convey throughout the impression that we have in it the more original version, that in J being an elaboration. It seems also to me that Dillmann^ is right in making the same as- sertion concerning the beginning of the history of Moses, Ex. i.-v. And two narratives of such critical importance must be allowed to be more weighty than detached smaller portions. The further reasons adduced by Wellhausen are not so cogent as they would have been if the parallel narratives had furnished an absolutely certain demonstration of the greater antiquity of either document. So far as they correspond with the actual state of facts they can be satisfactorily explained in another way. Dillmann^ has recently urged this quite justifiably. 1 Ond. § 13, No. 11. = *. = Oesch. d. V. Israel, i. p. 113 ff. * Theol. Tijdsch. xviii. p. 516 ff. Ojid.- % 13, Nos. 13, 14. Cf. also Meyer's reply, ZA W. v. p. 36 ff. * On the parallelism between Gen. xx. and xxvi. 6 ff. , see below, §13, from which it appears that this does not prove E's dependence on J. On the golden calf, see §§ 20, 21. ^ Gen. xvi. 1 f., 3-14 contrasted with xxi. 22-31 ; xxx. 28-43 contrasted with xxxi. 4-13, etc. ^ NuDtJo., p. 628. « NuDtJo., p. 630 f. Chap. L] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 79 Dillmann unreservedly admits that especially from the time of Moses downwards J possesses many extremely antique narra- tives and statements, so that in many cases more credence is due to him than to the accounts of E and D which the editor has preferred. But in this he can only see an indication that J had at his disposal other and, in part, better sources for the times of Moses and Joshua than E. The latter point is in some instances indisputable ; in others E was beyond all question able to avail himself of more exact^ and ancient^ information. With regard to Welhausen's reasons, b. and c, Dillmann fully admits the facts. It is true that E displays more inclination than J to emphasise the supernatural and shrinks somewhat from anthropomorphic views of God.^ But why should a later date be deduced from this distinctive mode of thought ? We must acknowledge that in this Dillmann is right. The tracing an event back to divine interposition, coupled with a comparative putting into the background of natural second causes, is no proof of the author's lack of acquaintance with the latter: it only shows the greater importance of the former to his religiously disposed mind. Perhaps we may bring forward as an analogy the relation in which the Greek historians Herodotus and Thucydides stood to each other. It is Herodotus, the earlier writer and the one who tells his story naively, who everywhere lays stress on the divine action, in contrast with Thucydides, who points to the human causes. Ought the same peculiarity in E to be taken as a sign of later date ? ' Cf. his names, such as Eliezer, Deborah, Potiphar, Pithom, Puah, Shiphrah, (Gen. XV. 2; xxxv. 8; xxxvii. 36; Ex. i. 11, 15; xvii. 12; xxiv. 14.) Data con- cerning ancient burial-places, altars, and the like, such as Gen. xxxi. 8, 19, f. ; Josh. xxiv. 30, 32, 33; Gen. xxxiii. 19 f. ; xxviii. IS f. (mac9eba) ; Josh. iv. 9 ; V. 3 (?) ; xxiv. 26 ; Num. xxi. 9. 2 If we are unable to credit E with the invention of the many names and facts which he gives us, still less can we ascribe to this cause the multifarious statements and expressions which have an antique appearance, e.g. Gen. xv. 2; XX. 16, or such notices as Gen. xxxi. 19 ff ; xxxv. 2 ff. (Aramaic origin of the teraphim) ; Ex. xv. 22 S. ; Josh. xxiv. 26 ; on which see Dillm. NuDtJo. , p. 619 f. ^ Yet on the whole there are but few instances in which E. gives the super- natural and J the natural view (see Dillm. NuDlJo., p. 611, top), whereas elsewhere J, as well as E, holds to the faith in divine interposition. 80 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. And J's strong inclination to speak of God anthropomorphically, especially when the many anthropomorphisms of the prophets are considered, is far less a proof of his greater antiquity than of the fact that his modes of thought and speech, though penetrated with religious and ethical convictions, were such as belonged to the populace, but not so steeped in theological reflection. To the same peculiarity may be traced his carrying back the worship of Yahv^ into the remotest antiquity, unless, as Dillmann prefers to think.i this is due to a deliberate purpose.- But when Wellhausen (see a. and d. above) finds E to be in closer contact than J with the specifically prophetic spirit and con- sequently deems it nearer to Deuteronomy, this arises, at any rate in part, from his altogether peculiar analysis of J, an analysis which, again, is based on this character assigned to J by him. In a number of passages, which might quite well belong to J so far as their contents and form are concerned, Wellhausen and, after him, the critics who have adopted his view, have denied J's authorship and ascribed them to JE, solely because they bear a stronger resem- blance to prophetic language. However true it may be that the older sources stand under the influence of a Deuteronomic revision, there is nothing to justify our eliminating from J all the passages that accord with this revision and thus making of J a source en- tirely untouched by the prophetic spirit. This it is as little as E, in fact almost less. The correctness of this proposition, and therefore the incorrect- ness of that critical thesis which is based on the purely 'pre- prophetic ' character of J, is quite clear from the passages which are allowed to belong to J. The whole structure and circle of thoughts belonging to this source in Genesis might far better be termed prophetic than pre-prophetic. The way and manner in which J speaks of the origin and spread of sin in the world,^ of the call of Abraham and Israel's mission of salvation amongst • NuDtJo., p. 631. - Cf. such passages as Gen. iv. 26 ; xii. 7 f ; xiii. 4 ; xxi. 33 ; xxvi. 25. 2 Gen. ii.-iv. ; viii. 1-6, 21 ; ix. 22 ff. ; xi. J £F. ; lix. 1 ff. Chai-. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 81 the nations/ of faith and the divine decree,^ and many other things,^ is proof enough of this. If it is remembered that although prophetifc ideas are by no means absent from E, yet they do not pervade the whole book to the same extent, it will be evident that, looked at from this side also, J cannot be set down as earlier than E. On the ground of their relation to each other the question as to the respective ages of the two sources at any rate cannot be answered in Wellhausen's sense. And if the manifold similarities of their contents appear to exclude that possibility of their being independent writings, which the results hitherto obtained might perhaps have allowed us to think of, we must decide in favour of E's originality rather than of J's. This somewhat indefinite preliminary result will be established in a more definite form when we have taken into account the remaining elements of the problem, particularly the origin of the two writings. 4. Age and Origin. — In contrast with this preliminary result, which excludes one opinion rather than asserts the opposite, it is desirable now to enter directly on the investigation of the age of J and E, withorrt seeking help from the comparison of the two sources. If it is once established that J and E are older than D, the first starting-point from which to date back the two writings will have to be sought in the prophets who committed their message to writing. The earliest prophets of this kind who can be certainly determined are Amos and Hosea, in the beginning of the eighth century. Comparison leads to the conclusion that our two writings are earlier than these two prophets. On general "rounds it might have been expected that historical literature would precede prophetic. Moreover, the prophetic tone and the mode of speech in Amos, and especially in Hosea, unmistakably exhibit a more advanced stage of prophecy than these prophetical > Gen. xii. 1-3 ; xxiv. 7 ; xviii. 18 f. ; xxvii. 29 f. ; Num. xxiv. 9. - Gen. XV. 6 ; Ex. iv. 1, 5, 8 f. ; xiv. 31 ; Gen. iii. 15 ; v. 29 ; viii. 21 ; ix. 25- 27 ; xii. 2 f. ; xviii. 18 f. ; xxviii. 14 ; Num. xxiv. 17 f. ■' See Dilhn. NuDtJo., p. 629, in so far as the passages there cited belong to J according to our analysis in §§ 13 and 20. F 82 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. portions of the Torah. This is indeed rather to be felt than to be strictly proved. But no one who, for example, reads Hosea a while and then turns to J or E will be able to resist the impres- sion.^ Finally, Amos as well as Hosea contains references to the earlier history of the people which is treated in J and E. By far the simplest explanations of them is that which takes them to be quotations from writings already in existence, especially seeing that they are larger in extent than might have been expected. It is, indeed, difficult, if not absolutely impossible, to produce a convincing proof that a written document lies at the base of a historical allusion when the author has not specifically named the source from which he is quoting. But the very fact that in these prophets there is a frequent reference to the history shows that the historical impulse had been awakened in the consciousness of the people. We might almost anticipate that if this impulse had not already found satisfaction, Amos and Hosea would have needed to put their allusions differently, and, in fact, to make them f uUer. They would not have been at liberty to take things for granted, but would have been compelled to narrate. If Amos and Hosea confine themselves to allusions, the allu- sions are in consequence all the more numerous. Hosea touches on Israel's trangression with Baal Peor,- the circumstances attending the birth of Jacob,^ the Patriarch's struggle with God,* his flight to Mesopotamia and fortunes there.^ He calls Moses a prophet," as E delights to designate him. Amos mentions the character of Esau.^ He calls the Canaanite aborigines Araorites,^ as E is accustomed to do. Like the History of the Spies he recognises the Amorites as a strong and gigantic race.^ He calls to mind the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah.^" Many of these co- ■ Note such ideas as ' whoring,' the rejection of the high places, and the like. = Hos. ix. 10 ; <■/. Num. xxv. 3 (E). ' Hos. xii. 4a ; cf. Gen. xxv. 26a (E). * Hos. xii. 46, 5 ; cf. Gen. xxxii. 25 S. (J). = Hos. xii. 13 ; cf. Gen. xxxi. 41 (E) ; xxvii. 43 (J and E) ; xxix. 18 ff. (E). « Hos. xii. 14. ' Am. i. 11 ; cf. Gen. xxvii. 40 (J and E). « Am. ii. 10. 9 Am. ii. 9 ; cf. Num. xiii. 27 flf. (J and E). " Am. iv. 11 ; cf. Gen. xix. 25 (J). Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 83 iucideuces would have no weight if they stood alone. Each of them contributes to the proof when taken along with the others. For myself it is a strong confirmation of my opinion that I com- pleted the analysis of sources which is presupposed in the notes without any reference to these passages in the prophets.^ The year 800, or probably a few years, if not a few decades, earlier, must therefore be regarded as the latest date at which the two writings can have been composed. The writing J actually brings us to this period, as is evident when we ascertain the quarter whence it came. The kingdom of Judah was obviously its native country. If we compare the history of Joseph given by this source with that in E, the fact that Reuben stands at the head of the brethren in E and Judah in J,^ forces itself on us as one of the weightiest differences. The history of Joseph could always be applied to the glorification of the northern tribes, Ephraim and Manasseh, and it clearly betrays its north Israelitish origin : yet in the form found in J it has passed through a Judsean hand. That is the only possible meaning of Judah's exaltation. The same is expressed by the Blessing of Jacob which J has handed down, with its glorification of Judah and his kingdom, and its harsh reproof of Eeuben.^ In like manner it will be more correct to designate Gen. xxxviii. as a Judaean tribal liistory, written expressly in favour of Judah, than to see in it a bitter mock at Judah.* It is also significant that in J Abraham's fixed abode is^ at the ancient Judsean capital, Hebron," whereas, according to E, he prefers to live in the Negeb, the district of Beersheba,^ a sanctuary which the ' Kuenen, Oiul.'- p. 221, will not admit any reference to E but only to J : Dillmann, NuDtJo., p. 630, cannot see any acquaintance with J, but only with E. I cannot assent to either view. 2 Gen. xxxvii. 26 ff. ; xliii. 3 S. ; xliv. 16 ff. ; xlvi. 28. ■> Gen. xlix. 3 f., S ff. * See Reuss, Gesch. d. H. Schr. d. AT., p. 250. '' Gen. xiii. 18 ; xviii. 1. * In like manner as in the Priestly Writing, which is also Judoaan. ' It is to be observed that J also makes Abraham dwell for a time in Bethel, Shechem, and the south, just as, according to E, he stays temporarily in Hebron (see below, §§ 12 and 13). 84 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. northern Israelites also held in honour. Again, Balaam's speeches in J clearl}' make reference to the kingdom of David.^ And, finally,^ although E also probably did not pass over in silence the transgression of Israel with the golden calf, it is J who relates it in special detail and reliukes it with special acer- bitj^3 This demonstration that not a few of the narratives in J have been revised in a Judtean sense renders the Judaean derivation of the document certain. We may be allowed to assume here that we possess parallel narratives of Joseph and Abraham from the Israelite point of view. Now that J's home has been determined it will probably be possible to form a more detailed judgment as to the relation between the two sources than was possible before. To put into shape and writing the history of Joseph was the first and most natural motive amongst the northern tribes, because the very subject-matter of the history served to glorify the northern kingdom. We should expect beforehand that it would be written first in the north, and not by J in the south. But apart from this Eeuben is the firstborn of the sons of Jacob. To set him at the head of the brethren is the natural and intrinsically iitting pro- cedure. Judah's primacy is of later date, of gradual growth, and never recognised without dispute. Clearly the Israelite form of E is the original, and that in J a calculated remodelling in accordance with Juda;an ideas. The same applies to the history of Abraham.* Now that we know the form narrated in J to be the Judsean one, the patriarch's settlement at Hebron seems to contain a later development. E also is no doubt acquainted with Hebron as an abode of Abraham's, but he ascribes no importance to it. J alone lays stress on Hebron, but knows also the other places.^ Abraham's abode iu the centre and the south of the land is common to both sources, and seems therefore to be the ' Num. xxiv. 17. - To those who regard Judges i. as a part of J the preference given to JudaU ill that chapter will be another proof. ' Ex. xxxii. For greater detail see §§ 20 and 21. ■* Against Kuen. Oiid." § 13, No. 7. '' See above, p. 83, Note 7. Chap. L] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 85 original idea, whereas the stress laid on Hebron is a later develop- ment.^ The reasons mentioned above make it impossible to assert that J originated in northern Israel.^ Single words pointing to a northern origin ^ do not prove a great deal. After what has been said we need occupy ourselves no further with the history of Joseph and Abraham. And the fact that J as well as E holds the north Israelite sanctuaries in honour * only shows that in his day the temple at Jerusalem had not yet won such paramount importance as to prevent writers and readers in Judah from re- cognising the holiness of those places of sacrifices which were stUl common to the entire people. It seems to us an unnecessary com- plication of the problem when Kuenen^ seeks to explain the character of J (and E) by the hypothesis of a double ' edition ' of each source, first an Israelite, and secondly a Judaean. E has no double character : in J it is explained far more simply by that dependence of J and E which we have now ascertained. "We are thus enabled to determine the author's period a little more exactly. However near he stands, when judged by his other leading ideas, to the new phase of prophecy represented by Amos and Hosea, he estimates the ancient sanctuaries quite differently fromjihose prophets.^ This confirms the conjecture we have already made that we must cross the threshold of the eighth century into the close of the ninth. We are hindered from going ^ There is, in anj- case, just as much intrinsic fitness in thinking of Abraham in connection with Shechem and Beersheba as with Hebron. From this point of view also we have therefore no right to think of Abraham as a peculiarly Judsean figure. - Schrader, Reuss, and Kuenen assert it. 3 Schrader, Einl.'^ p. 322 f. On the other side see Dillniann, NuDtJo,, p. 627. * Kuen. Ond.' § 13, No. 7, and p. 223. ' Ond:'%\Z, No. 25. « Dillmann, NuDtJo., disputes this and consequently holds it possible to gc earlier than Hezekiah. But according to Am. iii. 14 ; iv. 4 ; v. 5, viii. 14 ; ano Hos. iv. 15 ; ix. 15 ; x. 5, 15, it would have been impossible to write then aboul Bethel and Beersheba in such terms as Gen. xii. 8, xxviii. 16, 13 fi'., xxi. 3! (xxvi. 23 J ?) : at all events a man of prophetic spirit could not have done it even i: he had laid stress on the statement that it was Yahv6 who was worshipped there 86 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. further back by the markedly prophetic spirit, by J's dependence in many points on E, which by this time has become highly probable, and by the fact that the Assyrian Empire already stands out so prominently before the author's eyes.i This points to the second half of the ninth century. Within it we may probably go as far back as the last decades (830-800). There is no necessity to go further. For it is not certain that Josh. vi. 26, as it now stands, came from J : under no circumstances need the passage be a vaticinium post eventum? In like manner, if the last speeches of Balaam come from J and are not rather to be regarded as later additions,^ they might easily have been written under the influence of that universal consciousness of the threatening hostility of Assyria for which there was such abundant reason from 850 downwards. E carries us a few decades further back. We have not found it proved above that the narratives belonging to this source evince dependence on J. In fact we have seen the contrary demonstrated in some instances. If our former assumption is now really vindicated and E's home is to be sought in the northern kingdom, the probability of its being the older source of the two is thus enhanced. The north-Israelite origin of E may be regarded as certain.'' For only the northern kingdom can have been the true place for the composition of the early Hebrew history. Here the vigorous pulsations of national life were felt in the first centuries after the division of the kingdom, and, to a great extent, previously thereto. Here, doubtless, those narratives of- Jacob, Israel, and Joseph, of Abraham too and Isaac, of Moses and Joshua, took shape. If J has been shown to be their Judtean form, E, for this very reason, must be the Ephraimite. Here in Ephraim the majority of them were probably first moulded into that definite shape which found 1 Gen. X. 8-12 ; xi. 1 ff. ^ So Reu8s, Gench. d. H. Schr., p. 250: see another explanation in Kuenen, OndJ § 1.3, No. 15. " Which in any case must be admitted of Num. xxiv. 2.3 f. ^ On this see especially Kuen. Ond." p. 223 ff. Chap. I.] PEEIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 87 general acceptance, and, with a few modifications, was adopted by J.I To these considerations must be added the specifically Ephrai- mite character of the narrative in E, which comes out in the histories of Joseph - and Abraham,^ and in the close connection of the tradition with those ancient sanctuaries which specially belong to the northern kingdom, Bethel, Shechem, Gilgal, Ebal, Mahan- aim and Penuel. Moreover the Ephraimite origin of E is speci- ally indicated by the following facts : it distinctly mentions Bethel as the place whither the tithes are brought to Yahve ; * in the Blessing of Jacob, Joseph, with his sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, are distinguished in a very remarkable way ; * finally, the author takes pleasure in noting the existence of the grave of one of the famous personages of the heroic age, a Joseph, Joshua, Eleazar, Deborah or Eachel, when the spot is pointed out in the northern realm.^ These results require a different date for E from that obtained by Wellhausen,'' Kuenen,^ and Stade." The lower limit in this case also is supplied by Amos and Hosea. And according to the highly probable conclusions we have reached concerning the rela- tions between E and J we must go higher than J's appearance. To say nothing about the quotations found in those prophets, we have already seen that the high esteem which J has no hesitation ^ It is but in a comparatively small number of instances that J has an inde- pendent and discrepant account of what happened. Hence it is quite easy to understand why the attempt recently made (Kuen. Ond.- % 13, No. 9) to prove that J is the older of the two sources, was supported first of all by an attempt to prove its Ephraimite origin. Only thus is there any prospect of securing belief in its priority. But that proof will always be questioned, owing to the distinctly Judsean character of J. 2 Cf. Gen. xxxvii. 22, 29, xlii. 22, .S7. Reuben here stands at the head of the brethren. 3 See above, p. 83. Compared with the districts of Sheoheni and Beersheba the part which Hebron plays in E is a merely subordinate one. ■• Gen. xxviii. 22. = Gen. xlviii. 8 ff., a narrative which J also may probably have been in possession of, but it can hardly have originated in Judah. « Josh. xxiv. 32 ; Josh. xxiv. .30, 33 ; Gen. xxxv. 8, 19 f. ' Gesch. Isr.^ p. 371 ff. ' 0n4.= § 13, No. 24. ' Gesch. d. Voiles. Israel, i. p. 59. 88 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. in testifying for the ancient local sanctuaries puts liim earlier than Amos and Hosea. This is the case with E to an even greater extent. In a much less forced and more natural manner than J does E mention and treat as holy such ancient spots as Bethel,^ Beersheba,^ Shechem,^ and Gilgal,* with their altars, ma(;Qebas, holy stones, and trees. A desecration of them by idolatrous worship is nowhere intimated, not even in the incidental fashion which is thought to occur in J.^ Looked at from this side also E precedes J. With this it agrees that E gives no hint of that depression or decay of the kingdom of Israel which began after Jeroboam ii.'s day. Such a blossom- ing forth of the writing of the nation's history as E exhibits implies a period of prosperity and dominion. And although, roughly speaking, there are no political allusions, the whole tone of E bears witness to a certain satisfaction of the national consciousness and joy over what has been won.'' This joy over the present state of affairs finds a very high-pitched expression in the speeches of Balaam given by E.'' This brings us considerably beyond Jeroboam ii., and conse- quently, in any case, within the ninth century. Taking account of the prophetical spirit of the book, Dillmann has therefore sug- gested that E dates from the period of Elijah and Elisha, the first half of the ninth century.^ It will be necessary to go at least so far back. Nay, if it is a characteristic of this author that he knows the cultus of thQ high places in a form which is manifestly free from idolatry," we might be inclined to go some distance beyond ^ Gen. xxviii. 18 f. ; xxxi. 13 ; xxxv. 7. - Gen. xxi. 31 f. ; xlvi. 1 f. ' Gen. xxxiii. 19 f. ; xxxv. 4 (E. ?) ; Josh. xxiv. 26. ■* Josh. v. ?,. 5 Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 630, end of No. 5. * No conclusion can be drawn from Gen. xxvii. 40, for tlie words which ex- press a deliverance of Edom may very well be a later addition. If that is not the case, and if — which also is uncertain— the words belong to E, we shall be brought down to the period after Joram. ' Num. xxiii. 9 ff., 21 fif. s NuDtJo., p. 621. 9 We speak here of officially recognised idolatry conducted on a large scale. As a matter of course there were at all times isolated instances of lapse into heathen nature- worship. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 89 Elijah, to the begiuning of the ninth century (circa 900).^ If E had written subsequently to the stern fight which Elijah waged against the desecration of Yahve's service by the intermixture of Baal-worship, he would have felt obliged to express himself more carefully, for he was a sympathiser with the ideas of the prophets. If, on the other hand, the warning against strange gods,^ which may be detected once or twice in E, should be referred to Elijah's war against Baal, we might very easily suppose the author to be a contemporary of Elijah or Elisha. But this is uncertain. When we have once acknowledged E to be a comparatively ancient author it can scarcely be doubted that he belonged approxi- mately to the age and circle of those prophets. We shall not be able in any case to go further back than Solomon and the Division of the Kingdom.^ The structure of E's narrative is not stamped with the prophetic, didactic spirit,* in the same vray as J's, yet his religious view of the world is rich in thoughts which could only have had vitality in genuinely prophetic circles. He prizes divine revelation highly ,5 looking on it as communicated in dreams. He knows of God's plan of grace for the salvation of man.* ISTay, he expressly calls Abraham a prophet,^ and treats Moses entirely as such. * For it also corresponds with this that he decidedly condemns the adoration of Yahvd at Bethel and Dan under the image of a bull. I cannot think Dillmann " justified in holding it impossible for a north-Israelite prophet to have framed the protest in Ex. xxxii. against Jeroboam's bull-worship. This would be im- 1 Schrader, Eiid.^ p. 318, wishes to go as far back as 975-950, whereas Bohmer, Das 1 Bitch, der Thora, p. 119 f., comes as low as Jeroboam ii. - Josh. xxiv. U S., Gen. xxxv. 2-4, the latter not quite proved to belong to E. ^ See, for instance, Deut. xxxiii. 7, words which must be referred to the 0ivision of the Kingdom (c/. Wellh. Prol."' p. 296, Eng. Trans, p. 275 ; Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 177 ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 420). And note, in general, what falls to be said later, on the age of the Seplier ha- Yashdr and the other sources of E. * The only place where this comes out more strongly is the history of Joseph. » Gen. XV. 1 ff. ; xx. 6 (xxi. 12 xxii. 1) ; xxviii. 11 f. ; xxxi. 10 f., 24, 29 ; xxxvii. 6 fif. ; xl. f. ; Num. xxii. 8 ff. « Gen. 1. 20. ' Gen. xx. 7. 8 Deut. xxxiii. 1 ; Josh. xiv. 6, cf. Ex. iii. ; xxxiii. 7 ff. : Num. xii. 9 ExLev., p. 322 ; but see also NuDtJo., p. 627. 90 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. possible only on the supposition either of his not feeling the apostasy involved in the worship or not daring to assert it. There is no ground for believing either. Consequently, if the analysis of sources suggests that E contributed to the narrative of the golden calf, we have no right to deny it on a i^nori grounds. So much the less does such a right exist seeing that the prohibition of images by the Decalogue,^ if E did not find it already extant, is due to himself. The man who knew or wrote this prohibition could not but oppose Jeroboam's bull-image, although, as a north- Israelite, he would do it more gently than the Judfean J. 5. Sources of E and J. — In forming a historical estimate of the two writings E and J, it would be of the utmost importance if we could obtain more exact information as to the sources whence their authors drew. Certain as is the fact that such sources, probably even in documentary form to some extent, lay before E as well as J, there is not much more to be made out with certainty about them. Many discrepancies within J and E, which are now summarily adjudged to be later additions to E and J, might be satisfactorily explained in this way, if we knew more about the documents they made use of. We are in a better position as to E than as to J. The case with regard to it is comparatively clear. In some cases E several times expressly mentions more ancient sources ; in some, they manifest their presence in another distinctly recognisable fashion. And this may also be taken as a further incidental proof that E is older than J. For we cannot fairly ascribe to such a writer as E the tendency to feign that he is using older sources. We are acquainted with at least two writings which E directly appeals to as sources from which he has drawn, Tlie Book of the Wai's of Yahvi^ and The Sepher ha-Yashdr? We must undoubtedly regard the former as an ancient book of songs in honour of the heroic age of Israel and its fights. Ed. Meyer * and Stade ^ are certainly wrong in asserting that the ' Ex. XX. 4. ' Num. xxi. 14 f., and probably 27 ff. '' Josh. x. 12 f. ■• ZA W. i. p. 130 f. = ZA W. i. p. 146 ; Gench. d. V. Isr. i. pp. 50, 117 f. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 91 conflicts of the heroic age which it depicts are not those of the period of the conquest of the country but Israel's wars witli the neighbouring tribes in the ninth century. Our determination of the date of E is of itself sufficient to make this idea impossible to us. But apart from this, even if we accepted a comparatively late date for the composition of E, the hypothesis in question implies such a confusion of historical ideas in Israel as is wholly inconceivable. In that case E must either have shared in this confusion or have assumed it in his readers and availed himself of it. Consequently he must have made songs refer to ancient times which had been composed with reference to a period that lay so short a while before his own. This is a process for which, leaving all other considerations aside, a much longer interval is required than that of about a century, which is supposed to separate E from the Songs.^ But E's readers must also have known that Book of Songs. And there must probably have been some amongst them who were familar with the fights of Omri's time, either through their own youthful recollections or the narratives of their fathers. In any case there must have been people then living who knew the alleged origin and original application of the proverbial sayings. How then could E venture on such a substitution ? Or how could it have originated prior to him ? ^ As the songs of that book refer rather to the ancient days, so are we quite at liberty to fix on the period of Solomon or David as that in which they were collected and at the same time connected together by means of a brief accompanying text.* The period of national unification and exaltation could not but call up of itself the recollection of the battles of ancient times, and suggest the collection of the heroic songs which had survived from thence. The songs themselves are therefore naturally to be dated still earlier,* and as a rule will have followed very closely after the events they depict. 1 See Stade, Ge«ch. i. p. 59 (E about 750). - The comparison with the Sepher ha- Yashdr furnishes a further reason (see p. 92). » Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. 202. * Ewald, GescJi.'^ i. p. 99 fif., Eng. Trans, p. 74. 92 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. The other book cannot have been compiled earlier than David's reign, for it contained a songi ascribed to him. The meaning of its name is not quite clear,^ but may most probably be taken to be ' The Book of the Excellent,' its burden, accordingly, being the noble deeds of Israel's choicest sons.^ According to the two fragments which have been preserved to us,* it was a national book of songs resembling the Book of the Wars. The very circumstance that its contents were partly taken up with the battles of the conquest period throws light on Meyer's view as to the Book of the Wars which we have already opposed. Furthermore, we have a number of elements in E's work concerning which he does not directly assert that what he here relates or communicates is taken from a specifically mentioned book, but declares that it was sung as he gives it, in ancient times or the most ancient times, by the populace or by certain definite individuals, or was written down by persons whom he mentions. The first and the last class of these references to a former time, at all events, justify the inference that ancient sources, whether oral or written, were made use of. The following belong to the first class : the Song concerning the fights in the territory of Moab^ and the Song of the Well.''' The contents of the former are fairly conclusive as to its belonging to the Book of the Wars of Yahve. To the second class belong the Psean after the passage through the Eed Sea,^ which is found in two forms, a shorter and an enlarged one; the saying of Moses when the Ark set forward in the Wilderness ; ^ the so-called 1 2 Sam. i. 18. It is in the highest degree uncertain whether Bleek-Wellhausen, Einl., p. 36, is right in adding 1 Kings viii. 35, according to the LXX. ' Reuss, Gesch. der hciliijtn Schriften A T. , p. 202, thinks of the opening words of the first song. ^ The majority think so. See Dillm. NaDtJo., p. 48S. ^ Besides 2 Sam. i. 18 it contained Josh. x. 12 f. ■'' Num. xxi. 27-30. " Num. xxi. 17, 18a. ' Ex. XV. 20 f. This is the beginning of the oldest form of the song ascribed to Miriam. In addition to it E (probably J also) is acquainted with a more enlarged form of the song (Ex. xv. 1-19), which is placed in the mouth of Moses. See below, §§ 21 and 23. 8 Num. X. 35 f. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 93 Blessing of Moses ; ^ and a Song of Moses which is no longer extant in the form handed down by E.^ The Book of the Covenant, together with the Decalogue ^ and the account of the slaughter of the Amalekites,* must be reckoned in the third class. There can hardly be a doubt that in all these cases E made use of ancient materials. In the two last-named cases the idea that written matter was used is demanded by E's direct assertion to this effect. The infrequency of his appeal to written documents ought to prevent our deeming it a fiction when it does occur.° In most of the other cases the probabilities are the same. The passages of folk-song probably circulated orally: the songs may have found their way into one of the two collections named above, or into others similar to them, long before E's time. The Blessing of Moses, like that of Jacob in J (Gen. xlix.), was doubtless originally a separate writing. It is difficult to fix the date of these ancient materials. The Song of Moses at the Eed Sea, perhaps also that which once stood in Deut. xxxii., may probably be regarded as the first to find a place in the Scpher ha- Yashdr. The Song at the Sea, at any rate in its enlarged form, points to Canaan, probably indeed to the time of David or Solomon.'' The ground-work of the Song may very well go back to the time of iloses. Wellhausen^ and Kuenen ® place J's Blessing of Jacob in the time of theljonflict between Aram and the kingdom of Ephraim in the ninth century, Stade" in Ahab's time. But far more reasons than those in favour of a late composition can be urged for a considerably earlier period, coming indeed within that of the 1 Deut. xxxiii. The Blessing of Jacob in Gen. xlix. was much more readily adopted by J than by E. See below, § 13. - See below, § 21. ' Ex. XX. 1-17 (except r. 11 and isolated additions), 18-26; Ex. xxi., xxii., xxiii. 1-7, 20-22 ; cf. Ex. xxiv. 4, 7. On the Book of the Covenant cf. Rothstein, Das BundeshucJi, i. 1888 ; Nauman, Dekcdog und Bumhiibuch, ZK WL. 1888, 551 if. ; Montefiore, Jtio. Qa. liei:, 1891, p. 285 fl'. ; Budde, ZA W. 1891, p. 99 ff. ; Baentsch, Das Sundesbuch, 1892. * Ex. xvii. 8-16 ; cf. v. 14. ^ Julicher, at least at Ex. xvii. ^ V. 13 ff. presupposes the settlement in the country, and v. 17 probably that around the sanctuary. See below, § 21. ' Gesch. Isr.^ p. 375. 8 Ond.^ § 13, No. 16. " Oesch. d. V. /s?-., p. 150. 94 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Judges.^ The Blessing of ]\Ioses, on the contrary, is certainly later than the Division of the Kingdom,'- but in all probability not much later. For the manner in which that event is mentioned shows that is still an open wound. It will therefore be needful to think rather of the period of Jeroboam i.^ than of that when Jero- boam 11.^ reigned. The date of the Decalogue and of the Book of the Covenant must be dealt with more closely when we come to treat of the ilosaic history. It must suffice here to establish the fact that E in any case had written material to work from ; ^ and further, that the Book of the Covenant now extant, allowing for such individual traces of later revision'' as are quite intelligible in so fundamental a document, may very well date from a time considerably earlier than the monarchy. No reference to that period can anywhere be detected. Nor is there anything in the book that conveys the impression of our not having to do with a monument of the oldest Hebrew literature, as E asserts. The only question is whether the Book of the Covenant presupposes Israel's settled life in the land or its abode in the wilderness. The former of the two alternatives has been accepted, in accordance with a number of indications, and is probably correct. It would indeed be possible to explain the references to the settled life in Canaan contained in the Book of the Covenant by saying that before Israel entered the land the lawgiver made preparatory arrangements in which he took the settlement for granted. Hence that idea cannot be declared im- possible. But the manner in which this abode in Canaan is here presupposed and treated as a fact needing no explanation, makes 1 Dillmann, Gen.* p. 448, follows Ewald and many others In this. The fact that the tribe of Levi is still supposed to be depressed tells against Reuss, Oesch. d. AT., p. 200 (David— Solomon). ^ Because of Deut. xxxiii. 7, see above, p. 89. ■' See De Wette-Schrader, EM.« p. 318 £f. * As Reusa does, Gesch. d. AT., §§ 213, 216, following Graf and Bleek. Also Kuen. Ond.- § 13, No. 16, and Stade, Oesch. Isr. i. p. 160. * See above, and especially Dillm. ExLev., p. 220 f. " Especially at the close of chap. xxii. (c. 19-20?), and in chap, xxiii. (at all events v. 23 ff). Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 95 it seem more natural to the unprejudiced reader that the laws in their present shape were drawn up in Canaan itself, and were based on the procedure customary there.^ This would bring us to the time subsequent to Israel's entrance into Canaan. I do not venture to offer precise details with regard to the authorship of the book. The one opinion which seems to me altogether doubt- ful 3 is that which takes the points of contact between the prophets of the eighth century and the Book of the Covenant and the Decalogue as tokens of their having been written contempora- neously. If E regards the book as an extremely ancient com- position and brings it before his readers as such, this would be an incomprehensibly daring proceeding supposing, as Kuenen does, the work were scarcely a few decades old. Besides the sources expressly named by E, he must have had many others at his disposal which have left in his work several traces of their existence. For example, E recounts the last stations of Israel's march to Canaan in a piece, the style of which is in the highest degree peculiar,^ and the continuation of which is found in quite another place : ■* in its complete shape it probably formed the parallel to the more detailed list handed down ^ in P. It is probable that the source here used contained other matter than the mere list of stations, and also that other experiences of Israel in the earliest times were recorded in the book where E found the account of the slaughter of the Amalekites.* When we remember that Gen. xiv. also, in all probability, points to a special document which E was able to make use of, it cannot seem unduly bold to sum up our final judgment on the writing E as follows : — In many cases it is demonstrable that E worked in accordance with sources that were ancient and, in part, very ancient. And further, where this cannot now be discerned, we may accept his descriptionsasresting on older material, oral or written, exceptwhere there are conclusive reasons of a special kind to the contrary. ' See above, § 5. - Kuen. Ond." § 13, No. 20. ■> Num. xxi. 12 f., 186-20. ■■ Deut. x. 6 f. ' Num. xxxiii. ^ Ex. xvii. H. 06 HISTORY OV THE HEBREWS [Book I. We do not seem to be so favourably situated with regard to the writing J. There is but one instance where it can be held with certainty that J expressly mentions a document.^ What is meant is the brief law-book appended to the Decalogue, which in J takes the place of the Book of the Covenant,^ and has been mistakenly asserted to be the original Decalogue.^ Moreover, it is certain that J possessed the Decalogue in a form essentially identical with E's, which the reviser accordingly thought it un- necessary to retain. And it is probable, or at least possible, that J also gave the enlarged form of the Song at the Sea.* There are no direct indications of the employment of other documents.^ At the most it can only be inferred from the context in J that the author knew and used the ancient account of the slaughter of the Amalekites." But seeing it has already been shown that E's book lay before J and was largely used by him, his contributions, where they coincide with E's, are guaranteed by the character of this writing. Examples have been adduced above and must be taken into account, proving that he treated with a somewhat free hand the material he took from E. It is also intrinsically likely that, in addition to E, J had before him, in whole or in part, the sources from which E drew. The old songs and proverbs, for example, had not lost their voice in his day ; the old books of the heroes were not yet lost. Where, however, J deviates from E, each case must be decided on its merits. In many instances of this kind, there are clear indications that, besides the stores of information accessible to E, J knew independently of other ancient and precious ones, and embodied them in his work. § 9. The Priestly Writing. If we remove from our present Hexateuch the portions which have been treated of hitherto, there will remain, in addition to a ' Ex. xxxiv. 27. - Ex. xxxiv. 11-26. •' See more details under § 20 f. * Ex. xv. 1-19 ; see above, p. 92. ■' Except perhaps Gen. xlix., on which see above, p. 92 f. " Ex. xvii. 8 ff. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 97 comparatively small number of editorial additions, a large con- nected document. In terminology and ideas it is markedly dis- tinguished from the other sources of the Hexateuch. Its peculiar style,^ not very flowing, usually characterised by prolix phraseology and extensive repetitions; its formal and constantly recurring phrases ; the rigid system " on which it is constructed ; its almost everywhere evident fondness for discussions ' on matters of law ; these, and many other signs, have made it feasible to distinguish the constituents of this book more certainly than those of any other source of the Hexateuch. There is an almost universal agreement as to its extent. The book used to be called the ' Grundschrift ' of the Hexateuch, so long as it was believed to be very ancient : now it is more correctly entitled the Priestly Writing (P), or, by Wellhausen, the Priests' Code (PC). The justification of this title is unequivocally furnished by the characteristics which everywhere confront us.^ But the designation, 'Fundamental Writing,' could only reckon on general acceptance to-day in the restricted sense that the editor pieced together the various writings of the Hexateuch in such a way as almost everywhere to make P's line of thought the foundation of the whole, and wherever possible to work the other writings into this. But whilst this book, as a whole, is bound together by many striking tokens of connection, it is not a perfect unity in the strict sense of a writing conceived and written out by the same author, uno tenm^e. There are a number of pieces which, according to their characteristics, lie within the general framework of the Priestly 1 For more particulars respecting its style and narration, see Dillmann, NuDtJo., pp. 648 f., 663. = On this, see especially the essay by Noldeke, which will be mentioned im- mediately. ^ Among others, cf. Wurster, Zur Charakteristik und Gesch. des Priester- codex, etc., in ZA W. iv. p. Ill ff. * Especially since the appearance of Noldeke's writing, Unterauchungen zur Kritihdes AT., 1869, i.. Die sogen. Grundschrift des Pentateuchs. Further, cf. especially Kuen. Ond.^ § 6; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 634 ff., and the analysis of P's narratives given by us in §§ 14 and 22. " On this see Kuenen, Ond.' § 5, p. 54; § 6, p. 72 f. ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 652 f. G 98 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Writing ; but when sifted more thoroughly are found to be different from the genuine constituents of P. This comes about partly in the following manner : the author of the great historico -legal work, P, found ready to hand a number of older legal pieces, and incor- porated them in his work with greater or smaller modifications. And partly it came about as follows : subsequently to the com- position of the main work, P, which was founded on those older laws, a later writer, working, however, in P's spirit and language, made various additions which, again, were chiefly of a legal nature. The essential resemblance between all three stages of the entire work has led to the retention of the title P for them all, with P^ as the name of the older groundwork, P^ as that of the main work, the priestly history from the Creation to the Settlement in Canaan, and P^ as that of the later additions, The principle is undoubtedly correct. For it lies in the nature of the case, and is demonstrable by many tokens, that the com- position of the great legal work took place in stages. They have, however, not yet been analysed in such a way as to command universal assent. Amongst later writers Kayser,^ Wellhausen,^ and Horst ^ particularly have taken pains with the analysis of the groundwork, especially in Lev. xvii.-xxvi. I myself have endea- voured to follow the traces of earlier portions of the Priestly Writing even beyond the limits of the body of laws just named.* Kuenen ^ and Dillmann ® have recently maintained that P^ found certain longer passages already extant. Wellhausen ^ and Kuenen,* in particular, have designated some passages as later elements (P*), but in part have been opposed by Dillmann.^ This question, in other respects a purely literary one, is only important to us in so far as it may supply a starting-point for dating the Priestly 1 Das vorexil. Buck der Urgeschichte Israel's mid seine Erweiterung, p. 64 ff. 2 JDTh. xxii. p. 422 flf. " Levit. xvii.-xxvi. und Sezechid, 1881. * ThStW. ii. pp. 160-162, p. 44 f . ; iii. p. 263 f. In greater detail see p. 120, Note 4. = Ond.^ § 6. " NuDlJo., pp. 637 f., 639 ff. ' JDTh. xxii. p. 407 ff. passim. 8 Ond.^ § 6. » NuDtJo., pp. 641 ff., 672 ff. Chap. I.] PEEIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OP CANAAN 99 Writing proper (Kuenen's P^), and thus indirectly fixing the age of its earlier and later interpolations. On this point, the fixing of P's age, our interest in this writing reaches its climax. It seemed formerly as though the problem had been resolved by the almost undisputed acceptance of the early part of the kingly period as the time when the Grundschrift was composed. But the question was re-started by K. H. Graf. Within the last decade Wellhausen's History of Israel has brought it into the very foreground of discussion and made it the burning question in the historiography of the people of Israel, nay, in Old Testament criticism generally. As yet it has not received a final, or, at all events, a universally accepted answer. It is well known how Graf and Kayser, in the first instance following the lead of Keuss and Vatke, and then especially Kuenen and Wellhausen, have advocated the view^ that the Priestly Writing stands at the close, not the opening, of the Hexateuch literature, and that its earliest portions orignated in the exilic, its main mass in the post-exilic period. According to this, the so-called Grafian hypothesis, the priestly law-book which Ezra gave to the people who had returned from Babylon was a docu- ment which had only just come into being, not one that had been extant earlier. When this hypothesis was first propounded, a strong inclina- tion was felt ill many quarters to regard it as an insubstantial phantom, the product of wanton hypercriticism. Nor was it other- wise when Graf and Wellhausen adopted it. Such a verdict is no longer possible. In consequence of the defence, in many respects brilliant, and the undeniably thorough method of proof pursued especially by Wellhausen and Kuenen, an unprejudiced judgment must concede that the reasons advanced in favour of this view are real and in some measure weighty. The completeness and finish of the picture of Israel's religious history, seemingly obtained through this view of the composition of the Priest's Code, contributes more than any other cause to give it a telling 1 See above, the Survey of the Course of Criticism, § 6. 100 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. influence over many minds. Tlie marked distinction which it enables us to make between the various periods : the regularly pro- gressive development of the course of history which unfolds before our eyes when we occupy this standpoint : the simple explanation which this theory gives of the artificial system found in P, and of the ideal picture, which in many respects does not strictly accord with history — all these things really compel us to think. Yet, after going afresh through all the elements of the problem, I am still unable to agree with this view. "Weightier reasons on the other side have left on me the impression that this picture of a development satisfactory in itself, and, in fact, of a building up of Israel's history coming about naturally and growing as it were of its own accord, though dazzling at the first glance, is but an illusion containing more of fallacious appearance than of enduring reality.^ 1. In the first place, the whole method by which these con- clusions are reached excites a certain amount of distrust.^ AH the advocates of the Grafian hypothesis from Graf downwards have appealed primarily to the contrast between the ritual conditions and usages recognisable in P and those which are to be seen in the rest of the Hexateuch, as well as in the rest of the Old Testament. Compared with this evidence derived from the ritual, that fur- nished by linguistic and literary considerations always stands in the background, and supplies a merely supplementary confirma- tion of the result already obtained.^ Considering how the case stands this will be found quite natural. The result itself is reached as follows. In several places in P institutions are assumed to be already in existence, which, as a matter of fact, did not obtain unquestioned recognition till after the Exile. The argu- ment is that, seeing P assumes them to be already in existence, this work cannot have been written till after the Exile, or, at any rate, till these ordinances were legally established. * On this see also Steiner in Theol. Zeitschr. a. d. Schr., 1S87, p. 207. ^ With reference to Wellhausen, cf. my detailed discussion of this point in ThStW. ii. (1881) p. 150 «., also p. 40. 2 Kayser, Vorexil. Buck. , p. 3 : ' The result obtained from the history of law and worship must be tested by that won from the literary history.' Chap. 1.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 101 This method of proof might appear suitable if P were to be treated as an historical document in the ordinary sense of the word. P is not a document of that kind, and cannot be used without further proof as a source of historical information re- specting the circumstances actually prevalent at the time of its composition. The advocates of the view in question are without exception convinced themselves that P is not a strictly historical monument of its own times. The only possible question for them is whether P is a fiction invented for a purpose and ascribed to primal antiquity, or an ideal sketch drawn with a real belief that the privileges it insists ou belong to the priests. In either case their conclusion has been reached prematurely. The facts merely entitle sober criticism to infer that P arose at a time when those demands were made, not when they were complied with. For if it is one of P's literary characteristics that he describes what he aims at as existing in the time of Moses, it must be impossible to argue from his depicting an institution as existing that it does actually exist: obviously the only conclusion is, that P desired and demanded it. 2. The entire theory rests on the assumption that the national life and religious institutions of Israel developed in a straight liue.^ But it is at least unproved, and as a matter of fact is highly improbable, that the whole history of Israel admits of the application of such a standard. The true state of affairs is more like this. Deuteronomy and the Priestly Writing, each in its own way, are programmes of legislation. Now we see at a glance that in a number of cases P shows progress, a more advanced stage of development as compared with D. From this it is, as a rule, concluded that D is prior to P. This conclusion may be correct in many cases, and we shall carry it out where other 1 For the rest, see Stade in Theol. Liil. Zeit, 1887, No. 9. But when E, J, and D are compared with the prophetic literature in a different way from P, this is not due to inconsistency, but to the fact that we are dealing with a priestly writing which has little connexion with prophetic circles or prophetic ideas. 102 HISTOKY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I reasons permit or demand it. But in, and for itself, and applied to every case, it is not justified. To make it legitimate D and P would have to be legislators of precisely the same kind and tendency. But they are not. Their points of view and circum- stances are totally dissimilar. P is a priestly author, writing in the interest of the priesthood. D is a prophetic author, whose story is composed in the interests of the people in general. This is suf&cient to prevent all surprise if P, in a number of instances, is found advancing claims on behalf of the priesthood, which go further than D,^ though written contemporaneously with or even before the latter. The theory of a post-Deuteronomic date for P, based on all cases of this kind, is therefore another instance of a conclusion pushed too far. 3. In reaching the result obtained by the Grafian hypothesis the argumentum e silentio is very largely used. There are, in fact, a number of occasions in D and the pre-exilic prophets where P must infallibly have been mentioned, or at least referred to, if it had been a publicly recognised and binding law-book. If in several cases there is no such mention, the conclusion seems self- evident that P was composed after the Exile, especially seeing that the post-exilic prophets and writers suddenly refer to P in a striking fashion. But this conclusion becomes at least doubtful as soon as we observe that the whole character of P proves it to have been originally not a public ecclesiastical law, but — though not a merely private document — a programme known at first to the priests alone, and struggling long for recognition till favouring circumstances helped it to obtain this. Granted that it was subsequent to tiie Exile that this was reached, yet the fact of the book not being named, as well as the above-mentioned fact that it was not obeyed in earlier times, is far from being a conclusive proof of its not having been composed prior to the Exile. That the Priestly Writing is not named in places when it might have been expected allows not only of the conclusion that it was not in 1 See also my discussion of the subject in ThStW. ii. p. 37, and Bau- dissin, Der Jieutige Stand, der aittest. Wissensch. p. 50 f. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 103 existence, but of two other conclusions which are not to be rejected without examination. P may have been extant and the prophetical writers have been unacquainted with it, or they may have known the priestly writing and have declined to recognise it. In either case there was no reason why they should refer to P as a public law-book of admitted authority. Nor can it be objected that in the first of the supposed cases P would have led an unnaturally hidden ' trance-like ' existence. Its requirements as laid down by the priests of Jerusalem might very well be familiar to the prophets without the latter knowing and stating that they were codified and were ascribed to Moses. For this nothing was needed save that the prophets should be unacquainted with the esoteric literature of the priestly circle. And this is not an unheard-of assumption. Still less can the second supposition be summarily dismissed as im- possible. For it is a matter of fact that during the last centuries of the Jewish commonwealth previous to the Exile there was a cer- tain opposition between priests and prophets, and a polemic of the latter against the former on many points. Some of these attacks on the priests by the prophets actually originated in certain laws promulgated by the priests which seemed to the prophets arbi- trary and selfish.^ And though these priestly Toroth may not necessarily be identical with P or with some of its constituents, these circumstances would sufficiently justify some mistrust on the part of prophecy towards the legislation of the priestly circle.^ 4. Fourthly, and finally, to these general considerations must be added a number of details which appear to preclude the idea of the post-exilic composition of P (a.) The account in Neh. viii.-x. of Ezra's public reading of the law-book of Moses on the new moon of the seventh month in the year 445, does not convey the impression that this law-book had only just been composed. And that idea becomes still harder to accept when we remember that in all probability the law then 1 See also ThStW. ii. p. 530. - On this compare also again Vatke, Einl., p. 402 f. 104 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. read aloud was not merely P but the whole Pentateuch.^ The contrary opinion has indeed been unhesitatingly maintained,^ but is not easily tenable in face of the definite data ^ found in Neh. viii. ff. On the assumption * that Ezra read nothing but the Priestly Writing to the people, it has been deemed possible to draw a parallel between the discovery and promulgation of Deuteronomy on the one hand and of the Priestly Writing on the other. The latter procedure appeared thus to be a mere copy of the former. As Josiah in former days laid before the people a newly-found law-book, the contents of which had not previously been known, so Ezra now.^ But it is evident that if Ezra's law-book contained not only P but other admittedly older writings as well, the parallel will not hold good. Moreover, there are otlier reasons against it. Josiah's law-book is first of all found ; the circumstances attending its discovery are described in detail ; it comes before the reader as a something entirely unknown, or at all events no longer known, in Judah. Of Ezra's law-book it is merely said that he brought it with him from Babylonia, because he was the man called to do this. There is nowhere anything said about its being just found or its coming to light in any unexpected way. But if we are to believe that its history is parallel to that of Deuteronomy, we should at least expect to be informed how Ezra came into posses- sion of it. This also is not done. On the contrary, the people already know of the existence of the book,^ and appear simply to ^ Colenso ; Kuen. Religion of Israel, ii. p. 223 if. ; Wellh. Proleg.^ pp. 430, 434 (Eng. Trans., p. 407, etc.), and JBTh. xxii. p. 459; D. Hoflfmann in the Magaz.f. d. Wissenscha/t d. Judent., 1879, p. 5 f. ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 672. 2 ReuBS, Histoire Sainle, p. 233 ff. ; Gesch. d. AT., p. 462 S. ; Kayser, Vot-ex. Buck, p. 195 f . ; JPTh., 1881, p. 534 S. ; Kuen. Ond."- § 12, No. 11, § 15, No. 25 (p. 294 f.) ; Kosters, ffet Herstel van Isr-ael, 1894, p. 90. ' Of. Neh. X. 31 with Ex. xxxiv. 12, 15 f. Dent. vii. 2 ff. Neh. x. 326 with Deut. XV. 2 (Ex. xxiii. 11). * Wellhausen, and Kuenen in Religion of Israel, without this assumption. But in that case the essential point In the parallel does not correspond, and the parallelism at once falls to the ground. ^ Kuen., Religion of Israel, ii. p. 230 if.; Lagarde, Gstt. gel. Anz., 1870, p. 1557 f. ; Wellh. Proleg." p. 433 f. (Eng. Trans, p. 408 f.) ^ Neh. viii. 1 : ' The people gathered together . . . and spake unto Ezra to bring the book of the law of Moses.' Quite otherwise as to Deuteronomy, at 2 Kings xxiii. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 105 have failed to observe its contents. With this it agrees that in Ezra, Nehemiah, and Haggai, there is an evident acquaintance with some of P's laws prior to this re-introduction of the Law.^ The novelty therefore would seem to consist rather in the editing of the book that was read, and the placing it in the canon, than in its contents. (b.) The chief weapons for the vindication of this theory have been forged oat of the relation between P on the one hand and D and Ezekiel on the other. Yet that very relation, even when looked at from a general point of view, is altogether unfavourable to the idea. The differences between P on the one side and D and Ezekiel on the other, are so striking that it is difficult to understand how an entirely new law-book could win recognition alongside the latter. It is indeed maintained that although the book is new it claimed to be the ancient product of Moses and thus was able to conceal the lateness of its origin. But how could it create a belief in its Mosaic authorship, opposed as it is to D and Ezekiel ? This is a riddle which can only be read on the assumption that P did not first arise after the Exile, but existed previously, even if it were only as a sort of private document known only to the priests. In this way it is conceivable how a book, which increased in influence alongside Deuteronomy, and after the Exile was handed down as a historical factor like Deuteronomy and Ezekiel, could, notwithstanding its discrepancies with these writings, be worked up with D by the editor, and acknowledged like it by the people. The admission of P in spite of its differences from D and Ezekiel can therefore be explained in no other way than by saying that it was not composed after the Exile, but its laws, being already in existence, were then revised. It is not at all astonishing that Ezekiel differs from P.^ This is explained not only by the fact that P had not yet obtained official recognition — for the prophet allows himself to vary also from D, which had been officially adopted — but yet more by the 1 Ezra ii. 36 ff. ; Neh. vi. 10 f., xii. 35, 41 ; Hagg. ii. 11. 2 As Kuenen thinks, Ond.^ § 12, No. 8. 106 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. prophet's freedom to remould by virtue of his original divine inspiration what he found already existent and acknowledged.^ (c.) But leaving aside details, it is inconceivable how the ancient writings should for a long time have been largely read and have become common property, and then, in the fifth century, new traditions of a legal, and especially of a historical nature, deviating entirely from the old, should have sprung up in such abundance as we find in P. Dillmann ^ rightly instances such parallels as Gen. i. compared with Gen. ii. f., or as to the localties of the deaths of Moses and Aaron, and the like. There would be no sense in the putting P on a level with the other writings if its contents had not been genuine ancient traditions. Its peculiar tendency is far from suf&cing to explain all its divergences from the other sources of the Hexateuch. And here again it is easy to understand the action taken by a post-exilic editor who reverently puts together the materials handed down from ancient times, although in some parts they are mutually contradictory, but difficult to understand that of a post-exilic author of P. (d.) Finally, attention has with good reason been called to a number of elements in P which have no connection with the circumstances of Israel after the Exile. On the other hand, the omission of institutions which in that very period had become of special importance is almost more striking still. As to the latter point the precepts respecting the pilgrimages, for example, deserve to be emphasised : they were much thought of in later times, but they have no place in P. And with reference to the former point DiUmann^ specifies the statutes relating to the territories of the tribes, the cities of the Levites and of Eefuge, the law of war and of booty, the laws too concerning the Ark of the Coveiiant, Urim and Thummim, the anointing of the High Priest, and the agrarian laws which take for granted the right to dispose freely of land. ' Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 667 ; Baudissin, Der heut. Stand, d. altt. Wiss., p. 52. = NuDtJo., p. 670. » NuDtJo., p. 670. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OP CANAAN 107 § 10. Continuation. The Grounds on which P is considered Post-Exilic. It must be confessed that thus far we have only adduced a number of arguments against the post-exilic composition of P. Yet there has been no attempt to suppress the fact that reasons of no inconsiderable force can be urged in favour of that theory. I now proceed to set forth the main points in these reasons, leaving the reader to form a decided opinion on this hitherto unsettled dispute. I myself am not at present convinced that these argu- ments prove P to have been composed after the Exile. I therefore immediately subjoin the considerations which appear to me to detract considerably from the cogency of these arguments. The general principles laid down above will serve for our guidance here. 1. Archaeological Considerations. — The proofs alleged for the Grafian hypothesis divide into three classes.^ The advocates of this view have explored the Hexateuch on the linguistic, the literary, and the material {i.e. the archceological, ceremonial-history) sides, to collect on these three roads materials for the establishment of their theory. The most important of these regions is the history of the ritual. Graf ^ himself preferred to appeal to it, and Well- hausen^ has taken it up again with peculiar skill and success. The weightiest factors in the question are the place of divine service, the sacrifices, the festivals, the holy persons. As to the place * set apart for divine service the history outside • Stade, Theol. Litt. Zeit., 1S87, No. 9, has recently advanced a fourth point of view, the religious. We can but agree with him. But the bulk of the work in this respect is yet to be done. The views which Stade there goes on to pro- pound will arouse much suspicion on this ground alone, that according to the view of most students Jesus attached himself much less to P than to the religious consciousness of the prophets. How can P (with sacrificial worship, Levitical purity, etc.) stand nearer than the prophets to the salvation of the New Testament? ^ Die geschiclit. Bitch, d. AT., pp. 36-68. 3 Prole/j. zur Oesch. Isr.^ pp. 17-174 (Eng. Trans, pp. 17-171). * For this c/., in general, Wellh. Proleg.^ pp. 17-54 (Eng. Trans, pp. 17-52), and Kuen., Ond.^ § 11, pp. 194-197; on the other side my discussion in ThStW. ii. pp. 33-47 ; Bredenkamp, Gesetz. und Proph., pp. 129-171. 108 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. the Hexateuch clearly exhibits three main stages of development. Hebrew antiquity, after the settlement in Canaan and from the period of the Judges downwards, shows a certain amount of freedom. Before the building of the Temple an offering could be presented anywhere, that is, wherever a place of sacrifice already existed,^ or the worshipper made one by rearing an altar.- And after the building of the temple this freedom of movement may have lasted unopposed for some time.^ How long this continued is open to question, because the utterances of the prophets of the eighth century and also of Micah on this point * are not quite above doubt. Josiah, at all events, introduced a change. His reformation did away with the local sanctuaries, called high-places, in favour of the Temple in Jerusalem. After his death much of his reform appears to have fallen into decay. It is not till the post-exilic period that we see the picture of a divine service centralised in Jerusalem without opposition and without exception. Using this statement of the matter as a test for the Priestly Writing it is easy to reach the result that it was composed after the Exile. So far as the place of divine service is concerned the Book of the Covenant and the narrative of E and J, which allow of many altars in the land, ' in every place where I make My Name to be honoured,' ^ are in accord with the older custom. D, which demands the centralisation of worship, is a product of the seventh century : P, it is therefore argued, must belong to the time of the Restoration. For only then could the unity of the sanctuary be taken for granted. Both P and D wish to have only one sanctu- ary allowed. The essential difference between them is, that whereas ^ Cy., as to Bochim, Ophrah, Mispah, Gilgal, Bethlehem, etc., the passages Judges li. 5, vi. 24 ff. ; viii. 27 ; xx. 1 ; 1 Sam. ^ai. 9 ; Judges xx. 23, 26 £f. ; xxi. 2, 4 ; 1 Sam. x. 3, 5 ; x. 8 ; xi. 15 ; xiii. 9 ; x\-i. 4 S. ; xx. 29. ' Cf. 1 Sam. vii. 17 ; xiv. 35 ; 2 Sam. vi. passim. ' Of. Elijah, 1 Kings xviii. 30 ff. (xix. 10, 14) ; pious kings like Asa, Jehosha- phat, Joash, Amaziah, Uzziah, Jotham. ■* On Micah i. 5 see Kuen. OruL- § II, Xo. 8. The lxx., when 5a is taken into account, makes the reading niD3, not indeed impossible, but somewhat doubtful. ^ Ex. XX. 24, cf. Dillm. in loc. It is true that this condition does not allow of the using any spot indifferently as a place of sacrifice, but it admits any where a manifestation of Yahv^ can be shown to have occurred. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 109 the latter only demands the establishment of this unity, the former can assume that the demand has heen complied with. But it must not be overlooked that weighty objections can be urged against this argument. Does the Priestly Writing really pre-suppose the centralisation ? And if it does, is the author ac- quainted with this as an accomplished historical fact ? Further, does the demand for centralisation appear in Deuteronomy (or under Josiah) for the first time, or can we trace it earlier ? There is no question that when P prescribes the unity of the sanctuary, he rather assumes its existence than orders it. But we must deny that he takes it for granted absolutely. If only a few cases can be indicated where P as well as D demands the cen- tralisation, there will be very weighty evidences in favour of the opinion now to be maintained. For it goes without saying that we ought not to reckon on finding a large number of cases, seeing that we are dealing with exceptions to the rule. I find such cases in Lev. xvii. and Num. xvi. 8 ff. It will hardly be possible to dispute that the latter passage, the account of Korah's faction, has certain historical conflicts between priests and Levites for its historical background. True, the unity of the sanctuary is not directly in question. But indirectly it is. For those conflicts must have been most intimately connected with the exclusion of the Levites from the sacrificial office, which was the natural con- sequence of the centralisation. There is nothing to suggest post- exilic complications.^ If we here for the first time come across the attempt to set aside the Levites and unify in the Temple the service of God, we also see the same in Lev. xvii. 3 if. Here, too, there is nothing to imply that the centralisation has actually been effected. We have but a demand for it.^ There is nothing to prevent our use of this passage as illustrating P's views ^ in the fact that Lev. xvii.-xxvi. 1 As Kayser thinks, JPTh. vii. p. 642, and Wurster, ZA W. iv. p. 116, note. Reusa also, Oesch. d. AT., recognises here a pre-exilic antagonism, although he declines to draw the conclusion. 2 Wellhausen also thinks thus, Proleg? p. 400 (Eng. Trans, p. .370 f.). ' Wellh. ProUg.'^ p. 53 (Eng. Trans, p. 86). 110 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. originally existed in an independent, though simpler form, and sub- sequently was adopted by P. If he or one of his successors ^ adopted it, the probability is extremely great in favour of his having agreed with it. Besides which he adapted,^ as well as adopted it, without altering the demand which is alleged to be opposed to his own views. Finally, it is impossible to discover in it any contradiction of the principles elsewhere maintained by P.^ Even such a contradiction would not be directly fatal to our view. Yet it must be granted that, as a rule, P looks on the centralisa- tion as needing no explanation, no enforcing. He takes it for granted, as a custom established and unopposed from ancient times. But the exceptions just indicated must not be lost sight of. What then does this fact point to when you are dealing with a writing of such a nature and tendency as the Priests' Code ? Ee- membering the canon laid down at p. 101, can we infer more than that P made use of this form of statement in order to bring about the unity of the sanctuary ; in other words, that in his time it was not actually established but was striven after 1 To what period does this bring us ? If the propositions already advanced are correct, we may reply in general terms that it is the period immediately after the attempt at unification began. For it would have been strange if P's circle, the priesthood of Jerusalem, had not, from the very first, taken advantage of the idea of the uni- fication of all sacrificial worship at Jerusalem. It is not equally easy to fix the date more precisely. Natural as it is to believe that there was a vigorous striving for unification immediately after the 1 See below, p. 128. 2 Wellh. JDTh. xxii. p. 425. Kayser, Das vorex. Buck, p. 69, and JPTh.,' 1881, p. 541 ff. Horst, Lev. xvii.-xxvi. ?mrf Ilez., p. 14 £f. Kuen. Ond.^ § 6, No. 27 f. ' On Gen. ix. 3 f. and Lev. vii. 22 ff. see Dillmann, ExLev., p. 535, also ThStW. ii. p. 43. Differently Wurster, ZA W. iv. p. 120. But in Gen. ix. there is a perfectly general permission to eat flesh : no account is taken as to whether the animal is clean or unclean, fit or unfit for sacrifice. As is usual in P when the pre-Mosaic times are described, it is not sacrifices that are spoken of : we are therefore only able to decide whether slaughter for other purposes is permitted by studying later passages in P, Lev, xvii. in particular. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 111 building of Solomon's Temple^ there are just as few tangible points of support for this in early times. But it is in any case a mistake to maintain with Wellhausen^ that the demand for unification did not arise prior to Josiah. Before Josiah's reform there was an attempt at reform by Hezekiah, on which Wellhausen^ casts doubt without suflBcient reasons.* It may have produced little result, but it is a conclusive proof that eighty years before Josiah's work the same thought had struck vigorous root. Hezekiah's attempted reform is therefore the remotest point in the history to which we are driven by the idea of unity represented in P. But on the other hand it is not advisable to go further back, at all events for the author who adopted and worked up Lev. xvii. ff. The killing of the sacrifices at Jerusalem could hardly be insisted on with the northern kingdom in view. But it might when this had been led into exile.* P.'s theory of sacrifice is another point where we may compare this documentwith the customs exemplified in the history. Thiscom- parison is supposed to lead anew to the conclusion, that prior to the Exile the sacrificial Torah of the Priestly Writing was unknown.* Here again the history exhibits considerable freedom. In earlier times sacrifices were offered with little or no regard to the ritual codified in P.^ Many of these liberties may perhaps be explained by local circumstances or old-established abuses. But it is clear from the state of affairs depicted in the historical books that in earlier times and up to the Exile the ritual in P as a whole was not recognised as practically binding. Wellhausen^ concludes 1 Noldeke, Unters. z. Krit. d. AT., p. 127 f. = Proleg.- p. 28 (Eng. Trans, p. 27). 2 Proleg." pp. 26, 48 ff. (Eng. Trans, pp. 25, 46 ff.). ■• See 2 Kings xviii. p. 4, and especially v. 22, and on this Kuen. Ond.^ § 11, No. 9 ; Finsler, Darstell. und Krit. der Amicht Wellh. (Zurich, 1887), p. 54. ' What Kuenen, § 11, No. 20a, says concerning the time when Lev. xvii. be- came practicable is not clear. The law in its present form was not practicable whilst the many sanctuaries were standing. But in its original form it probably arose at that time, and Kuenen, § 14, No. 6, denies this without justification. 6 See Wellh. Proleg." pp. 54-85; Kuen. Ond." § 11, pp. 204-206. ' Cf. Judges vi. 19-21 ; 1 Sam. ii. 13 ff. (vii. 6) ; xiv. 35 ; 1 Kings xix. 21 ; 2 Kings v. 17. ' ProUg." p. 62 (Eng. Trans, p. 60). 112 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. from this that whilst the temple stood there was no established ritual. He thinks Ezekiel began the codification of the precepts relating to sacrifice, and finds it easy to understand how ' the holy customs of former days became the subject-matter of theory and writing ' in and after the Exile.^ These theses are contradicted by much which they are unable to explain. We may readily grant that the ritual in P, especially in Lev. i.-vii., received its present shape in comparatively recent times. This is in fact indicated by the condition in which we find these laws, in which ancient elements, some of them very ancient, may be distinguished from more recent ones.^ But it is in the highest degree improbable that the groimdwork, at least, of the extant sacrificial ritual did not exist, both orally and in writing, as the rule for the priests to act on, especially those belonging to the Temple after Solomon's time. Occasional sacrifices brought by individuals, which the historical books are specially fond of relat- ing, may have been offered loosely and according to peculiar ancient traditions, especially in the remoter periods. The great sacrifices at the Temple, which in the course of time gathered roimd itself a stately priesthood, cannot possibly have been con- ducted without rule and according to the hurry of the moment. It is intrinsically unlikely that the ritual began to be put into shape during the Exile and from memory.^ The greater the zeal of the people which the prophets rebuked, the more reasonable is the idea that the sacrifices so zealously performed were subjected to certain fixed rules. When Jeremiah* directly attacks commands relating to sacrifice he supplies the proof that he is acquainted with such. Whether it was P's ritual or another's is not the question here. To conclude that the ritual did not belong to the Torah because the latter at the same time, and in many respects perhaps essentially, consisted of oral and ethical teaching, is to go too far. This is proved not only by passages which mention precepts on subjects related 1 Wellh. Proleg.- p. 62 (Eng. Trans, p. 60). 2 See Dillm. JExLev., pp. 373 ff., 386 ; Wurster, ZA W. iv. p. 127. » Wellh. Proleg.^ p. 62 (Eng. Trans, p. 60). ■* Jer. vii. 22. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 113 to and not more important than sacrifices ; ^ the nature of the case and the analogy of the other nations of antiquity are still more strongly in favour of this view. Israel came out of, and always continued to be connected with, a country where external pre- scriptions and rules played their part in all ages. As in Egypt, so in Babylonia and Assyria, rules were laid down for sacrificial worship at an early period. The Marseilles Table of Offerings^ has brought the same fact to light as regards the Phcenicians. Is it to be believed that with all this scrupulosity on the part of the sur- rounding priesthoods ^ a primitive informalism, of which there is no other example, prevailed in Israel alone until the days of the Eestoration ? Could the later tyranny of form and letter have been a mere product of that later time, whilst Jeremiah* himself was obliged to oppose priestly misconduct and priests' prescriptions of every kind ? But the sacrificial Torah in P is also supposed to betray its character as a product of the Eestoration period by certain novelties that stand in contrast with pre- exilic customs. Well- hausen^ traces in P a gradual refinement of the sacrifices, the displacement of the flour-offering by the burnt-offering, the in- troduction of fresh kinds of sacrifices — facts which to him place the post-exilic origin of this Torah beyond doubt. The general principles thus adduced are beyond dispute. The prevalence of the priests' ritual might easily bring about a refine- ment of the sacrifices in many directions. And the meal-offering in particular, which plays the chief part on the occasions of popular interest depicted in the stories of earlier times, might be thrown into the shade by the burnt-offering. But this only in- dicates the natural tendency and actual result of the Torah. It furnishes no proof of later origin, particularly as in P the position 1 Lev. XX. 25; Deut. xiv. 24, 8 ; cf. Dillm. ExLev., p. 386. '^ See Dillm. NuDlJo., pp. 647, 662; also Baethgen in Theol. Litt. Zeitg., 1887, No. 4. ^ In addition to this, see also Ribbeck, Die Dichtung der EOmer, 1887, p. 1 £f. * Jer. vii. 22 ; viii. 8 ; cf. Isa. xxix. 13. 5 Proleg.- 63 S. (Eng. Trans, p. 61 ff.). H 114 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. of the thank-offering is fully recognised.^ The case would indeed be different if it could be shown that certain important kinds of sacrifices mentioned in the Torah are entirely unsupported by pre- exilic custom. Wellhausen has asserted this of the incense-offer- ing and the sin-offering.^ I cannot admit the correctness of his view except so far as this : — these two forms of sacrifice did not obtain recognition till a comparatively late date, and probably as a result of the developed temple-service. The earlier period, imme- diately subsequent to Moses, knew them not. But it will be difficult to disprove that both of them were extant and were practised in the kingly period prior to the Exile.^ Kuenen,* in opposition to Wellhausen, has recently admitted that Hosea^ was acquainted with the sin-offering. But it can also be shown that Ezekiel, the very author who is asserted to have introduced the sin-offering,^ knew P's law of the sin-offering. I have endeavoured to set forth the proof of this elsewhere/ and may now simply refer to that place. Kayser's^ rejoinders do not lessen the force of my argument. The incense -offering stands in a similar position. To me it seems to have probably originated in the Temple usages of the kingly period. The altar of incense men- tioned in the law may also probably be a mere later addition to P. But neither incense-offering^ nor incense-altar^" indicate a period later than the Exile. The festivals ^^ of Israel provide an additional opportunity for comparing the Priests' Torah with the life of the people before the Exile. Here, too, the lack of information as to the celebrations, prior to the Exile, of festivals, corresponding to the laws in P, has 1 Lev. iii. 7, 11-34; c/. xxii. 21 flf., 29 flf. ; xxili. 38. On this compare my discussion in ThSt W. ii. p. 57 f . 2 Proleg., pp. m t, 75 f. (Eng. Trans, p. 64 f., 72 f.). 3 Cf. also Delitzsch, ZKWL., 1880, p. 8. ■* iv. 8. ^ Ond:' § 11, No. 26. s Wellh. Proleg.' p. 77 (Eng. Trans, p. 73). ' ThStW. ii. p. 59 ff. 8 jPTh., 1881, p. 646 f. 8 Of. ThStW. ii. p. 53 f., and on the other side, Kayser, JPTh. vii. p. 647. " Cf. Delitzsch, ZKWL. i. p. 113 fif. " As to these see Graf, Gesch. BB., p. 36 ff. ; Wellh. Proleg.'^ pp. 85-124 (Eng. Trans, p. 83-121). Kuen., Oiui:' § 11, pp. 201-204. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 115 led to the inference that there were no such laws then. Yet it seenas to me that this is a most striking instance of the faultiness of the argumentum e silentio. No one denies that the festival laws of the Book of the Covenant and of Deuteronomy were in existence before the Exile. But how many celebrations corresponding to these does the history tell of ? If the scanty information in the historical and prophetic books is to be the only accepted evidence of legal prescriptions having been given, then the only prescrip- tion which will stand the test is the one bearing on the Feast of Tabernacles. Putting aside a few faiut hints, we seek in vain for any historical celebration of the Mazzoth Feast, or the Feast of "Weeks. Where are they, seeing that the laws which are admitted to be most ancient prescribe them 1 ^ How is it that the Day of Atone- ment and the New Moon of the seventh month are not mentioned before the Exile ? And this is all the more forcible seeing that you seek in vain for the Day of Atonement ^ after, as well as before, the Exile. If we abide by the rule in question, the great harvest- festival was the only one actually celebrated, and the others had no existence outside the law. But if two festivals existed merely in the law, why not more ? The Feast of the New Moon is men- tioned only by P, yet it played a great part in the historical life of the people.^ Such a fact is enough to show how cautious we must be in charging P with mere invention, even on the occasions when he goes beyond J and D. It is also asserted that the older legislation knows the festivals merely in their original import as agricultural feasts, whereas P connects them with historical events, and thus strips them of their naturalistic character. But this needs qualification to make it correct. Much dexterity is required to eliminate from the more ancient laws * the reference of the Mazzoth Feast to the Exodus, and to prove that this reference was brought in from Deutero- nomy.* The agrarian character of the festival is also thoroughly 1 Ex. xxiii. 15 f. ; xxxiv. 18 ff. 2 For further particulars on this, see especially Dillm. EzLev. , p. 525 ; Delitzsch, ZKWL. i. p. 173 ff. ^ cf^ -DiXha. ExLev., p. 580. •• Ex. xxiii. 15; xxxiv. 18. » Wellh. Proleg.- ^. 87 ff. (Eng. Tr. p. 84 ff.) 116 HISTOEY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. maintained in the law of Lev. xxiii..^ which belongs to P. In Num. xxviii., xxix., for the first time, the agrarian character of the festival stands quite in the background, whilst the fixing of the calendar and the formal enumeration of the offerings comes to the front. But on other grounds ^ it is extremely probable that both these chapters belong to the very latest additions to P. There can be no dispute as to their exhibiting an advance upon D. Nor can we fail to recognise in them the influence of the centralisation.^ But this does not bring us lower than the times when, as we have shown, the centralisation began to be an object aimed at by the priesthood. For it will not be maintained that such laws as are found in Num. xxviii. f. are to be taken merely as a later regulation of an earlier custom and not also as a theory. Finally, since Grafs time,* special emphasis has been laid on the peculiar Passover ritual ^ in P as a proof of the later origin of the Priestly Writing. I confess that this is another proof which I am unable to deem conclusive. Suspicion is at once aroused by the fact that, at all events immediately after the Exile, the Passover does not appear to have been celebrated in strict accordance with^ P. And the very late origin of the ritual described in Ex. xii. becomes yet more improbable when we compare it with Deuteronomy. The notice in D, forbidding ^ It seems to me indisputable that the cliapter as it now stands is from P. George {Die alt. Jild. Feste, pp. 127, 143) formerly, and Wellhausen (JDTh. xxii. p. 431 flf.) recently, have attempted to distinguish two quite separate parts, a non-Elohistic (vv. 'A-11 and 39-43), and an Blohistio (the remainder). But this is invalidated by the many marks of P in the supposed non-Elohistio part, and by the fact that in this case neither part would possess a complete Festival Law (Dillmann, ExLev., p. 576). Nor does Kuenen's idea (Ond.- § 6, No. 27) that vv. 9-22 and 39-44 belongs to P^ explain the introduction of expressions and turns elsewhere characteristic of P^. We must therefore be content to hold that, as in other parts of these chapters so here, P adopted older laws, revised and supplemented them. The detailed analysis is a failure, as is shown by the wide differences in the attempts (Hupfeld, Oommentatio de prim, festorum ratione, ii. p. 3 ff. ; Graf, Gesch. Bucli., p. 78; Kayser, Vorex. Buck, p. 73 £f.), and especially by the extremely mechanical analysis of Horst {Lev. xvii. und Hez., p. 26). 2 Noldeke, UiUers. p. 90. Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 181. 3 Wellh. Proleg."- p. 106 (Eng. Trans, p. 108). ■* Gesch. Biich., p. 34 f. 5 Ex. xii. 1 ff. 6 2 Chron. xxx. 15 ff. ; xxxv. 1 £f. Chap. L] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 117 the celebration of the Passover ^ ' within any of thy gates,' hardly admits of any explanation save that the Passover had until then been kept at home. We are precluded from explaining the 'gates' as meaning the many places in Israel where sanc- tuaries stood, not only by other passages ^ where the word occurs, but also by this prohibition being applied to the Passover alone, and not to the other festivals. The pilgrimage to the high-places is forbidden with the remark that the feast is to be celebrated at the place which Yahve shall choose : ^ the celebration of the Passover at home, with the statement that the Passover is not to be kept in the gates of Israel. For the rest, the question as to when Ex. xii. originated may still be an unsolved riddle, but the considerations now adduced seem to me to prove that the domestic celebration sprang up before the Exile. But the principal reason thus vanishes for holding the Passover law in P to be post- exilic. Beside the three things already named, the place of divine service, the sacrificial system, and the regulation of the festivals, an evidence of the post-exilic composition of the Priestly Writing is drawn from the relation between Priests and Levites as pre- sented in P.* This is an extremely wide subject, demanding a special and thorough investigation. But we cannot do more than treat the decisive leading points.^ Every one is aware how P carries out a sharp division between ^ Deut. xvi. 5. = e.g., Deut. xii. 12, 17, IS, 21; xvi. 11, 14, gate = dwelling. The high- places are designated DlpO, xii. 13, 2, 3 (c/. v. 18, xvi. 2, 6, etc.): 'place (of worship) which YahvS chooses,' in contrast with the multitude of (~?D) ' places, which thou seest (round about thee,' xii. 13). ' Deut. xvi. 2, 11, 15, 16. In the ancient ritual the Mazzoth Feast, in the later ritual of D the Passover, was a Pilgrimage Festival. * Gf. in general : Graf, Gesch. Buck., p. 42-51 ; Wellh. Proleg." pp. 125-157 (Eng. Trans, pp. 121-153) ; Maybaum, Gesch. d. Isr. Priestertums, 1880 ; Kuenen, Ond.'' § 11, pp. 197-201. On the other side : Curtis, The Levitical Priests, 1877 ; Dillm. ExLev., p. 457 ff. ; Kittel, ThStW. ii. pp. 147-169; iii. pp. 278-314; Bredenkamp, Ges. und Proph., pp. 172-202; and add the articles treating of thf subject in Riehm's HWB. and Herzog's RE." ^ Compare my more exhaustive exposition of the subject in tlie essay just named. 118 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. priests and Levites ; the former alone, termed the sons of Aaron, are to minister at the altar ; the Levites are subordinated to them as temple-serfs. Ezekiel carries out a similar distinction.^ To him there are no priests save the sons of Zadok, the family that traces its descent to Solomon's chief priest ; the Levites are sub- jected to them. Deuteronomy, on the contrary, does not carry through that sharp division. In it the priests are at the same time called Levites, and the whole tribe of Levi together is designated as entitled to the priesthood. The older historical books, too, know nothing of that strict separation between priests and Levites which P and Ezekiel carry out. Not that they esteem member- ship of the tribe of Levi an indifferent or superfluous point,^ although laymen somewhat frequently hold the priest's office.^ On the contrary, a Levitical priest is preferred to any other.* But nothing is said of a strict classification of the Levites according to rank and position. These principal data have been so grouped as to seem to lead necessarily to the conclusion that P was written after the Exile. P and Ezekiel, it was urged, lie evidently on one line, D and the older historical narratives on another. The two former know of the distinction within the holy circle, the latter do not. More- over, v/ithin the former group there is a further difference between the two who maintain the distinction: P treats the division as already effected and legally established in his day; Ezekiel announces it as a demand for something yet to be accomplished, and a demand now made for the first time. Hence it follows of itself that P rests on Ezekiel, the prophet of the Exile, and con- ' Ezek. xliv. 5-16. 2 This is indeed denied by Wellhausen, ProUg.- p. 131 ff. (Eng. Tr. p. 124 flf.), in contradistinction to wliom Kuenen, Ond.' § ii. p. 197 f., at all events allows that Levites ' were deemed more suitable than others. ' But the simple fact that Eli, according to 1 Sam. ii. , is indisputably regarded as a descendant of the ancient legitimate priestly race, taken in connection with such passages as Judges xvii. 7 ff., must be admitted to prove the point. ' C/., among other passages. Judges vi. 26; xiii. 19; xvii. 5; 2 Sam. viii. 18; xx. 26. * Judges xvii. 12 f. ; xviii. 19 f., 27, 30 f. ; xix. 18. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 119 sequently is later than the Exile ; and Ezekiel himself comes after D. The entire process is in three stages : — Unity of Priests and Levites ; Demand for their Division ; Completed Separa- tion. Wellhausen has treated this subject in a striking and almost exhaustive manner. Yet apt as many of his reasonings are, and strongly as one is disposed to believe that things developed just in the manner he describes, it is impossible to repress grave suspicions. How are we to account for the fact that only a mere handful of Levites returned from the Exile,^ if their degradation had not yet been effected ? That fact can only be explained on the assumption that the change had previously been made. But if it were granted that they were deterred from returning by Ezekiel's vision — al- though that vision gained little enough influence over the practical arrangements of life^ — other difficulties would present themselves. How can the rise of the priesthood of the Sons of Aaron be under- stood if it dates merely from the time of the Eeturn and could allege no connection with a similar pre-exilic institution to justify its existence ? ^ Ezra would not have ventured to insist on this sacerdotal privilege of the sons of Aaron if it had not existed before the Exile and he had not been able to appeal to that fact.* For Ezekiel's authority could not be invoked on this point. In fact what he wishes is that the sons of Zadok may have the priest- hood. And finally, if P is the expression of the post-exilic arrange- ments concerning the ministers of religion, we expect to find an actual correspondence between it and them. When we see that the arrangement of things after the return does not agree with P, that expectation is not realised. In the one case the ministers of religion consist of two classes ; the sons of Aaron as priests and the rest of the Levites as their attendants. In the other, there are not only priests and Levites, but also a by no means inconsiderable class of ' Ezra ii. 36 ff., c/. vili. 15 £f. - Of. e.g. on Ezraiii. 3 flf. ; Delitzsch in ZKWL. i. p. 281. = Kuen. Ond.- p. 198 : ' No writer of the time prior to Ezra knows any- tliin" about Aaron, the ancestor of the legitimate priests.' °Cf. my discussion in ThSt W. iii. p. 313 f. 120 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. other temple-servants, the so-called singers, doorkeepers and Nethinim.i Apart from such objections to individual points, there are difficulties of a more general nature connected with this theory of the development of the priesthood. I cannot find that P simply takes for granted that the dis- tinction between priests and Levites is actually completed in his time. I recognise two divergent views on the subject in this document, corresponding to its not quite homogeneous character. In the earlier stratum the separation does not appear to have entered P's field of vision. Or if it have, it has not become an object of interest and discussion to such an extent as to affect P's legislation. It is not noticeable. I consider the account of the blossoming of Aaron's rod to belong to this stratum.^ Clearly we have here no contrast between Aaron and Levi, and therefore no Aaronic priesthood in distinction from the rest of the tribe of Levi, but simply the choice of Levi to be the priestly tribe in distinction from the rest. P is here the advocate for Levi- Aaron as against the people in general, rather than, as elsewhere, for Aaron against Levi.^ To the same class belong all those parts of P concerning which we may believe that they contain older priestly laws, which have been so treated by the author (P^) of our present Priestly Writing as to give it thus its specific colouring.* In many cases these laws are to be recognised by their still containing, or at all events having originally contained, no reference to the Aaronic ' Ezra ii. 41-58. See Baudissin, Der heiitige Stand, der cUttest. Wissensch. (1885), p. 51 f. - Num. xvii. 16-28. ' See the more detailed exposition of the passage in ThSt W. ii. p. 162 ff. * Especially in Lev. i.-vii., chap. xvii. (on which ThStW. ii. pp. 160-162, 44 f. ; iii. p. 293 f. should be compared), also in Lev. xi.-xv., where, e.g., in chap, xiii. (on which Wurster in ZA W. iv. p. 124, should be compared), almost every verse has ' the priest,' and only v. 2 has ' Aaron and his sons ' as an interpolation from P^). It is much the same in chap. xii. 14 f. The Tabernacle also, xv. 29, certainly belongs to P^. To this ancient stratum must also be assigned the fol- lowing : Lev. xxi. (as to the manner in which Aaron came into the text, cf. Horst, Ler. xrii., etc., pp. 20, 22), large portions of Lev. xxiii. (cf. vv. 10 and 20), and probably xxii. 9 ff. ; but in any case large fragments of Num. v. f. (which are also reckoned as belonging to the Law of Holiness by Wurster, ut supra, p. 125 f.). Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 121 priesthood. In these sections there is no contrast hetween priests and Levites. The separation therefore is so far from being effected that it is not even thought of. The passages in question occupy the same standpoint as Deuteronomy and the historical books. Unquestionably the separation is implied in the other part of P, the portions of the whole which come from the actual author of the Priestly Writing (P^). Where this is the case in the portions of P^, this treatment of the subject is accounted for by what we have already said on the general character of this book. P^ not only clothes his material as a whole in the garb of the Mosaic times ; he retains this garb when he comes to speak of the relation between priests and Levites. He assumes the separation to be complete, in order to set vividly before his contemporaries the ideal at which he aims. Many passages prove that he knew it was not actually accomplished.^ If then P neither in its earlier nor in its later main stratum assumes that the separation of priests and Levites has been really carried out in his day, the chief reason is removed for dating this document after the Exile, at all events so far as that reason is derived from this matter of the priests. Still more is this the case if it can be shown that what has been adduced in support of that thesis from Ezekiel, Deuteronomy and the historical books, is untenable. As to Ezekiel, this can at least be made probable ; as to Deuter- onomy and the historical books it can be shown to be certain. Wellhausen takes the words of the prophet Ezekiel, chap. xliv. 6-16,^ as the starting-point of his whole discussion. And Kuenen^ declares that the man who does not acknowledge that Ezekiel regards the degradation of the Levites as something new and pre- viously unheard of, is to be pitied rather than refuted. Yet we 1 Num. xvi. 8-11; Num. iii. 4, 18. On this <•/. ThSlW. ii. pp. 164-166, and, in opposition to Kayser, JPTh. vii. p. 642 f., iii. p. 293 f. On account of Num. viii. 23, compared with Ezek. xliv. 10, see ThStW. ii. p. 167 f. in opposition to Smend, EzecUel, p. 363. 3 Besides the writings already mentioned, cf. Delitzsch in ZKWL. i. p. 279 £f. ; Dillm. ExLev., p. 461 ; Baudissin, StKr., 1883, p. 839 f. ; on the other side, Smend, Mzechiel, in loc. ' Ond." % 11, No. 14. 122 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. believe the explanation thus rejected will eventually turn out to be the only practicable one. It agrees with the context, which does not deal in the first instance with the degradation of the Levites, but with the exclusion of aliens and the maintenance of the sanctity of the temple. It is further recommended by the circumstance that Ezekiel never represents the measure which he advocates against the Levites as anything uew.^ It is almost demanded when we bring into connection with these considerations the fact that Ezekiel has already long before taken for granted that the priests are sons of Zadok.3 If their degradation in chap, xliv. were altogether new, it could not be looked on as understood in chaps, xl. and xiiii. The matter is still clearer in Deuteronomy. It is admitted that this work lays stress on the unity of the priests and Levites, and gives no intimation of there being a sharp distinction between them. But is it entirely unaware of that distinction ? Is it really thinking only of the tribe of Levi as the priestly tribe, under the supposition that every member thereof has precisely the same rank and the same right to minister at the altar ? That is neither more nor less than impossible. The historical circumstances with which D is most intimately connected, and the whole tendency of the book, unconditionally require that separation within the tribe of Levi. The removal of the rural Levites from the high-places is one of D's chief de- mands. The book may say nothing about hindrances in the way of this measure, but many such must have been experienced, and many struggles and complications of every kind have ensued.^ For the compidsory humiliation of the Levites was intended, and this certainly could not be effected so peaceably as would appear from the Book of Kings.* D disregards these inevitable compli- cations as though they were not within his field of view. In precisely the same manner he treats that setting aside of the ' 'They shall not come near unto me,' v. 13, is couched in much too general terms to allow of such far-going conclusions being built on it. We should at least expect a HIV iO. - Ezek. xl. 45 f., xliii. 19. 3 See Dillm. ExLev., p. 459. ■■ 2 Kings xxiii. 9. Chap. I.] PEEIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 123 priests ^ of the high-places which he desires, as a perfectly harmless and peaceful matter, the carrying out of which is not at all likely to injure the Levites seriously. After that event, as before it, they will still be members of the great priestly tribe. It is on this latter point of view that he is continually laying stress. Hence, if the other considerations are neglected, it may seem as though D neither knew nor foresaw any distinctions within the tribe of Levi. Yet he is the very person who has evoked the chief distinction of all, and that, assuredly, not without knowing and wishing it. D's language^ respecting the relation between the priests and Levites is so wavering and variable as almost to imply an intentional indefiniteness of expression : ^ the leading passages, however, make at least one conclusion certain. The popular notion that D gave the Levites of the sanctuaries at the high- places, who were deprived of their office and their livelihood, a full right to become at will priests at the Temple in Jerusalem,* finds no support in D himself. It is the same with the other notion of the complete equalisation of Levites and priests. D knows quite well how to distinguish between the Temple priests settled at Jerusalem, and the lower class of rural Levites.® He knows nothing about a migration to Jerusalem at their pleasure ^ and being received into the high order of Temple priests. What he considers an equitable concession to those Levites is simply this : if one of them, noiv and then, came up to Jerusalem from his home in the country, he may take part with his more exalted 'brethren' in the sacrificial worship there offered. In other 1 That these Levites were priests of the high-places, but in the main were not idolatrous priests, see ThSt W. iii. 288 f . On the other side (besides the authors there named), Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 327. But in my opinion it is a temporary indulgence, not a granting of equal rights, that is in question. See Reuss, Oesch. d. Xf., pp. 350, 358. - On this cf. my discussion of all D's utterances on the point, in TliStW. iii. pp. 278-294. ' Especially Deut. xviii. 1-8. * e.g. Kuenen, Ond.- % 15, No. 15. ' At Deut. xviii. 3-5 the one, and at vv. 6-8, the other class is spoken of. See ThStW. iii. pp. 284-289; Dillm. NuDtJo., pp. 324-327. 8 Thus Kayser, JPTh. vii. p. 640 ; Kiehm, HWB. , p. 12335 ; in ExLev. , p. 458, and again in NuDtJo., y. 326 f., Dillmann seems to give this view the preference. Against it, besides ThStW. iii. p. 288, see also Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. 350. 124 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. respects he continues to be what he was before, and at the end of a day or two returns to his own place.^ He does not get his proper living hence, but from the sacrificial offerings and the benevolence of the well-to-do. Finally, in proof of the thesis that ' Aaron does not appear in a single pre-exilic writing as the ancestor of the legitimate priests,' ^ and of the supposition connected with it, that in earlier times non- Levitical priests were the rule, the case of Zadok, the progenitor of the priests, is confidently appealed to. It is maintained that as a matter of fact he was not a Levite, but the founder of a new line, illegitimate in the eyes of the later priesthood, a priestly usurper of foreign blood.3 In Wellhausen's opinion^ the immediate con- sequence was that previous to the Exile the priests could not be called sons of Aaron because it was too well known that Zadok belonged neither to the family of Aaron nor to that of Levi. This notion also can be refuted. Zadok was as much a Levite as Abiathar and Eli, so that he was in no way a usurper : in aU probability he too was descended from Aaron. But it will be better to bring forward the proof of this when we narrate in the history the events to which it belongs.^ 2. The Literary and Linguistic Considerations. — Besides these archaeological considerations two other points of view have been urged in proof of the post-exilic origin of P, the purely literary, and the linguistic. Kayser and Marti specially took up the former, the literary side of the problem. Kayser® endeavoured 'to obtain a conclusion 1 The words WV IJ, v. 6, like T'1J?K'3 It^N in Deut. xiv. 27, 29; xvi. 11, 14 (c/. xxvi. 11 £f.), clearly point to this. 2 So Kuenen, Otid,' § 15, No. 15. But as to the designation of Aaron as priest, to some extent in contrast with the whole tribe of Levi, cf. Deut. x. 6 ff. (E), and see also the pre-exilic passages from the law in our analysis of the sources, § 21 f. ' Wellh. Proleg.- p. 130 f. (Eng. Trans, p. 123 f.) * Jbid. p. 131 (Eng. Trans, p. 124). ^ A preliminary comparison may be made of Riehm, HWB., p. 1221 f. ; Dilhn. ExLev., p. 459 f. ; Bredenkamp, Gesetz. und Proph., p. 180 ff. ; Kittel, ThStW. iii. pp. 294-314. " Das vorexilische Bitrh der Urgeschkhte Is^-ads imd seine Enreitenmf/en, Strassburg, 1874. Chap. L] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 125 as to the relative age of the various components of the Pentateuch by considerations derived purely from the history of the litera- ture, that is, by means of quotations and allusions in the other writings of the Old Testament,' and his result was that besides D only the Yahvistic narrative and legislation were extant prior to the Exile.i Starting from Deuteronomy as a fixed point Kayser first compared, as to their origin, all the passages in the rest of the Hexateuch which contain resemblances to D. In this way he found that D knew and largely used the Yahvistic book (J and E), but made no reference to the Elohist (P), and therefore nowhere implied its existence.^ Kayser then extended his inquiry to the writings of the Old Testament outside the Hexateuch, and found his former result confirmed by the pre-exilic historical books as well as by the pre-exiHc prophets. Graf,^ and then Wellhausen,* had already laid stress on the well-known declarations against sacrifice made by some of the prophets : ^ Kayser considered these declarations a confirmation of his view. But he discovered the positive proof of his thesis in the literary characteristics of the jieculiar body of laws. Lev. xvii.-xxvi. On account of its many remarkable points of contact with Ezekiel he followed Graf^ in ascribing it to the hand of that prophet.^ Marti, in his essay on the traces of the so-called Fundamental Writing of the Hexateuch found in the pre-exilic prophets of the Old Testament, strongly opposed Kayser as to the comparison of the prophetic writings with P.^ On the one hand he opposed the explanation offered by Graf and Kayser of those prophetic utterances in which the over-estimate of sacrifices is rebuked. On the other he believed himself able to point out a number of positive references to P in prophets earlier than the Exile. Marti him- self fully admits that in this second attempt he went too far. ' ut supra, p. 4 f. - lU supra, p. 148. ' Gesch. Bitch., p. 69 f. * Proleg. ^ p. 58 ff. (Eng. Trans, p. 56 ff. ) = Amos v. 25 ; Jer. vii. 22 f . , etc. « Gesch. Biich., p. 75 ff., especially 82 f. ; Bertheau, JDTh., 1866, p. 150 ff., and Colenso, The Pentat. , etc. , vi. p. 1 ff. , agree with him. ' Vorexil. Buck, p. 176 S. ; cj. JPTh., 1881, p. 548 ff. 8 JPTh., 1880, pp. 127-161, and pp. 338-354. [But cf. Marti's recent Old Test. Theology.] 126 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Wellliausen 1 adopted Kayser's theory of Lev. xvii.-xxvi. in the main, but agreed with Noldeke" and Kuenen^ in denying that Ezekiel was the author. Dillniann/ and earlier still Klostermann,^ emphatically opposed it. Afterwards it received strong support from Horst's work on the subject.'' Horst deems Kayser's conclu- sions respecting these chapters and their relation to Ezekiel — leaving aside minor variations — to be substantially proved. He agrees that with the exception of P's contributions they arose during the Exile, and believes that Ezekiel should be held to be the author. Opponents have alleged numerous discrepancies between Ezekiel and the Law of Holiness, as Klostermann ' aptly called the Corpus. Horst is prepared to get over these by a subsidiary hypothesis : on the one hand Ezekiel himself need not have framed all these laws ; he may have adopted and elaborated some; on the other hand he may have occupied himself with Lev. xvii. ff. at a much earlier time than the composition of his own book; in the interval many alterations of the legislation became necessary.^ Kuenen's revised Historiscli-kritisch Onderzoek^ supplied a strong reinforcement to Kayser and Horst, both as regards the Law of Holiness and the other points. It does indeed reject the idea of Ezekiel being the author, and agrees with Wellhausen and Eeuss in thinking of a man who worked after the manner of that prophet.^" Dillmann has recently treated the whole subject from another standpoint, and comes to entirely different conclu- sions in almost every particular.^^ Setting aside the parts that 1 JDTh. xxii. pp. 440 f., 422-444 ; Bleek, EM.* p. 173. Cf. Proleg.^ p. 399 ff. (Eng. Trans. , p. 376 ff. ). - JPTh. , 1875, p. 355 ff. Cf. previously U-iUers. , p. 67 ff. * Religion of Israel, ii. p. 190 ff. It was denied also by Reuss, L'histoire sainie, etc. i. p. 252 ff. * ExLev., p. 533 ff. = ZeiUchr.f. luth. Thtol., 1877, p. 406 ff. ; cf. further, Delitzsch in ZKLW. i. p. 617 ff. ^ 2>ei.'. xvii.-xxvi. und Hezechiel. Ein Beitragzur Pentaleuchkritik [Colmav, 1881). ' Horst, ut sup., p. 416. « Ibid. pp. 91, 93 f. ; cf. p. 52 f. " § 10 and § 14 f. should be specially compared. 10 Wurster, ZA W. iv. p. 123, agrees with them : on the other hand Horst produces decisive traces of the priority of H to Ezekiel. " NuDtJo., especially pp. 603 ff., 637 ff., 644 ff., 654 ff. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 127 beloug to A, he sees iu Lev. xvii.-xxvi. a work that has passed through many hands and did not form a rounded whole (p. 639). Portions of Lev. xi. and some others resemble it (640 f.) But in any case this compound (S) was used both by D and P (Dill- mann's A). Accordingly it is ancient, and at all events was neither written nor compiled by Ezekiel. The conclusion alone (Lev. xxvi. 3 ff.) was retouched during the Exile (p. 646 f.). As to the relation of P to E and J, Dillmann unconditionally admits that P used E, and at least conditionally that he used J (p. 655 f.). He regards the external evidences as of subordinate value, not testifying against the earlier composition of P (p. 662), but not directly witnessing in its favour (p. 666 f.). When I survey the course of these investigations and endeavour to form an idea of the results obtained by the inquiry which has been thus far prosecuted in the literary domain, it seems to me that our main question has not gained many sure results. To mention first the Law of Holiness in Lev. xvii. S.^ ' that compendium of the history of the literature of the Pentateuch.' ^ The manifold and striking relations with Ezekiel, which it indis- putably exhibits, cannot, I think, be satisfactorily accounted for by a mere preference felt by the prophet for this section of the Torah. Klostermann's ^ carefully developed proof that the formula ' I am Yahv^,' of which both are fond, was also common in other parts of the Old Testament, in the law and the prophets, neither explains how the use of it has here become a positive mannerism nor the many other points of contact, which in Lev. xxvi. are positively overpowering.* The Corpus must have passed through Ezekiel's hands. The key of the riddle seems to me to be furnished by the fact that the correspondences with Ezekiel are largely confined to the preambles and conclusions of the laws. The prophet found the substance of the laws ready to his hand and edited them in his 1 To which Lev. xi. also probably belongs, and very likely some other passages. 2 Wellh. Proleg."- p. 399 (Eng. Trans, p. 376). = ut mjjra, p. 436 fif. * See Horst, lit supra, p. 72 £F. 128 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. own language. He contributed almost the whole of Lev. xxvi. himself. The most natural view as to the subsequent history of the collection is that soon afterwards in the Exile, a compiler who was master of P's mode of speech incorporated the collection with P, and furnished it with additions in P's manner. But if it is true, as has already been shown, that parts of the Elohistic revision decidedly point to an earlier period, it is also true that no objection can be advanced that would disprove the converse pro- cedure. Ezekiel's revision did not come till after P's. The reason why Ezekiel chose just this part of P for a renewed revision can- not be fully explained. I hold it most probable that one of P's successors, not P himself, moulded it into its new form and that consequently it was not inserted in P till after Ezekiel's time. If Lev. xi. xvii.-xxv. were current as an independent collection of laws there is nothing remarkable in Ezekiel's taking them up and remoulding them. On the other hand, this would explain the heterogeneousness of the parts of this section. ^ But I cannot admit that I am convinced by Horst's^ and Kuenen's* attempts to prove that the Law of Holiness, in its groundwork, depends on Deuteronomy. The coincidences are of such a nature as to afford far more ground for concluding that D depends on our Corpus.* If then the Law of Holiness must also have passed through Ezekiel's hands, its kernel nevertheless con- tains pre-Deuteronomic and fairly ancient laws. It also seems to me that after Kayser's demonstration it is impossible to deny the dependence of P on J and E, as used frequently to be done. So much the less, however, can I attach any importance to the arguments respecting P which are drawn either from the silence or from the utterances of the pre-exilic prophets. Eor the general conclusion on this question I refer to the propositions already laid down,^ and restrict myself here to a ' On this see Dillm. NuDtJo. , p. 638 f . - Horst, ut mipra, p. 55 f. » Oiid.-^ § 14, No. 6 ; § 15, No. 8 ff. < On this see Dillm. NuDtJo., pp. 605 if., 644 f. = Cf. p. 102, No. 3. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN I2f few leading passages.^ Amos," for instance, in order to put down the exaggerated estimate of the sacrificial system, recalls the fact that Israel brought no sacrifices to Yahve during the forty years in the wilderness. But we can hardly infer much from this as regards the sacrificial legislation. The only inference his words allow is that Amos knew nothing about a cultus actually established in the wilderness. They admit of absolutely no conclusion as to whether he knew and disagreed with P, or was unacquainted with him. Even if the second alternative were correct this would not show that P could not have been extant. The priestly ritual may possibly not have been accessible to the shepherd of Tekoa. But it seems by far the more probable supposition that Amos meant to say reproachfully that the idolatrous people,^ even before thej' left the desert, failed to observe the commands respecting sacrifice given by j\Ioses. When, moreover, Jeremiah * expressly cries : ' I spake not unto your fathers, nor commanded them, when I brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning burnt-offerings and sacrifices,' it does not seem to me quite certain that the usual in- terpretation will suffice. It makes these words to be simply a ver)' strong expression of the general idea that sacrifices are unessential, and the Sacrificial Torah consequently unessential in comparison with moral conduct. In the face of other very outspoken declara- tions concerning sacrifice made by the prophets, I cannot deem this explanation an impossible one. It gains in probability when we consider that, taken literally, the words ' nothing concerning sacrifices' would imply that Jeremiah also repudiated, as non- extant, the sacrificial oixiinances in the Book of the Covenant and Deuteronomy.^ If it is thought that this difficulty can be got ' For the rest c/. Wellh. ProUr,.- p. 58 ff. (Eng. Trans, p. 56 ff.), and on this ThSt If. ii. p. 49 ff. - V. 25. On this see Graf, Gessth. Biidi., p. 69; Kayser, Vorexil Biich., p. 161 f ; Wellh. ProUg.^ p. 59 (Eng. Trans, p. 56). Also Bredenkanip, c;t\<. mid Prvph. , p. S3 ff. ; Steiner in the Commentary on the passage. ^ Cf. the allusion in r. 26. * Tii. 22 ff. See Grafs Commentary in loc. ; Gesch. Buch., p. 70; Kayser, VorexU Buch., p. 166 f. ; Wellh. Pi-oleg.^ p. 61 (Eng. Trans, p. 58) ; Cheyne, Life of Jeremiah, pp. 119, 157. On the other side, Bredenkamp, Ges. undPi-oph., p. 105 ff. ' On this see Bredenkamp, ibid. pp. 109, 111 ; Orelli, /.-sa/a imd Jeremia, in loc. I 130 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. over there remains the more obvious explanation that Jeremiah intentionally ignored the priestly Torah: ' this would preclude the necessity of concluding that P was actually not extant. The only requisite presupposition is, that P had not obtained public recog- nition in Jeremiah's time.- On the other hand, it is impossible that there should be entire agreement as to P's relation to D. We have already * laid down the general lines on which opinion should run, especially as regards the facts of the case. With regard to the older strata of P, Dillmann * appears to me to be correct in pointing out that D frequently refers to P, even without naming it. For the later portions of the Priestly Writing, however, such as the portions of Lev. xvii. 4 S., which belong to P, or Num. xxviii. f., we come to the post-Deuteronomic period. It still remains to glance at the proofs drawn from the language of the Priestly Writing. V. Ryssel^ was the first to investi- gate it thoroughly. He divides the history of the Hebrew lan- guage into three periods. The first extends to the year 700. The second closes with the end of the sixth century. The third reaches from the beginning or middle of the fifth century to the cessation of the Old Testament literature. With reference to the Priestly Writing, he comes to the conclusion that considerable groups of laws * belonging to it bear a comparatively recent stamp, but are to be ascribed to the second of these three periods and to its first, pre-exilic, half. The rest of the laws, and the narrative from Gen. i. to Exod. vi., Eyssel ascribes to the first period of the language, and he actually believes that they ' Which is not excluded by xvii. 26 (Wellh. Proleg." p. 61 ; Eng. Trans, p. 59), if we compare such utterances as Jer. viii. 8 ; xviii. 18 ; Isa. xxix. 13. On this see ThStW. ii. p. 50. ^ Bredenkamp, ut supra, p. 110, explains it in the sense of '''HST ?]li etc. , which would be a much simpler solution. = P. 101, No. 2. * NuDtJo., p. 605 ff. ■' De elohistae pentateuchici sermone, Lips., 1878. Cf. already Wellh. Gesch. Isr. i. p. 397 ff. * Exod. xxv.-xxxi., xxxv.-xl. ; Lev. viii.-x. 27 ; Num. i.-x., xv.-xix., xxvi. ff. On a certain inconsistency in his statements see Kuen. Ond.^ § 15, No. 11. Chap. I.] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 13: must be placed at the very threshold of Hebrew literature.' Giesebrecht,^ in his fresh investigation of the subject, has raised serious objections to Eyssel's method. He wishes the books com- posed between 536 and 450 (Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi), nol those written after 450 (Ezra and Nehemiah), to be first placed it comparison with P. Giesebrecht thus reaches the conclusion thai P does not belong to the linguistic period which ends with 700 but that, on the contrary, the points of contact with P become increasingly numerous in the seventh, and especially in the sixth century, P being thus seen to be more recent than Jeremiah, Ezekiel. and Deutero-Isaiah. If there are phenomena which point to the Silver Age of the literature, it must be remembered that the Elohist was a scholar conversant with the older literature, and careful to write a pure, non-Aramaic Hebrew.^ Well-founded objections have, however, been raised against Giesebrecht's assump- tions and conclusions, particularly by Driver,* so that even Kuenen ^ is obliged to own that the history of the language cannot decide the question, and up to the present has yielded only the negative result of proving it useless to attempt dating P early on linguistic grounds. This carries with it the admission that they cannot be adduced as independent supports of the Grafian Theory.* And if the theory has not yet approved itself to us as true, the result derived from the history of the language possesses no intrinsic force to prove it. 3. Result. — We are now in a position to sum up the con- clusions that have been reached, and pronounce our judgment on the probable date of the composition of P. It has already become abundantly evident that the Priestly Writing is not a homogeneous work, and consequently that its composition cannot be referred to one and the same period throughout. A distinction must therefore 1 Ut supra, p. 82. 2 Zur Hexateuchhritik ZA W. i. p. 177 ff. See also Kayser in JPTh.. vii. p. 362. On Eyssel's distinction between Gen. i.-Ex. vi. and the rest of P, see Kuen. Ond."^ § 15, No. 21. ' TJt supra, p. 269. ^ Journal of Philology, xi. p. 201 ff. Cf. also Steiner in Theol. Zeitscli. au.i der ScMueitz, iv. (1887), p. 422 ff. ' Ond.^ § 15, No. 11, 8 See further Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 663 ff. 132 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. be draM'n between its various strata. The oldest stratum, partly containing the groundwork of the Law of Holiness, and partly that of P2, may justifiably be placed in a comparatively early period, at any rate from that of Solomon downwards (tenth and ninth century). Originally it existed in the form of detached documents, but these are now connected together so as to form the oldest groundwork of the Priestly Writing : the brief designation pi will serve for it. The second stratum comes from the actual author of the Priests' Book (P "), and brings us into the eighth centur)^ It contains the priestly narrative, the revised form of the matter adopted from P^, and so edited as to support the Aaronic priesthood, the centralisation of the cultus at the sanctu- ary (the Tabernacle), and a number of fresh legal ordinances. We have shown above that it is not to be dated later than Hezekiah. From Lev. xvii. ff. it is certain that the reviser of the Law of Holiness (P^) did not live previously to Hezekiah and the Captivity of the Northern Kingdom. Hence the later por- tions of P run fairly parallel to Deuteronomy, and possibly come as low down as Jeremiah's time. The last supposition will at any rate be allowable, if, as we have held probable, a certain amount of opposition towards P can be detected in this pro- phet's attitude. When the people went into Exile they took the completed law- book with them, and it was wrought up with the other extant legal writings into our present Hexateuch, in, or rather after, the Exile. When this occurred the reviser of the Hexateuch (R'^) may have made many additions, some his own, others taken from sources related to P. Isolated additions were made afterwards. During the Exile or a little before it a reviser (E^) who worked in harmony with D's views had prepared the way for R*" by connecting E and J with each other as well as with D and D^ and by partially re-editing them. Especially in our present Book of Joshua he handles his materials in a much freer manner than R*", and thus shows himself to have been the earlier of the two. Chap. L] PERIOD ENDING WITH CONQUEST OF CANAAN 133 II. THE REMAINING SOURCES. § 11. Besides the great work dealing with the earliest history of Israel which we possess in the first six books of the Old Testa- ment, there are, of course, scattered notices in the rest of the Old Testament which throw light on this portion of Hebrew histor}'. But, with few exceptions, they are merely casual, fragmentary statements, requiring no independent discussion of the sources whence they are derived. Each must be considered in its own place. Israel has not left behind any kind of contemporary or later monumental inscriptions bearing on this period. Xo such monu- ments have been found, and there is no good reason for expect- ing that any will hereafter be discovered. N"or do we possess any monument belonging to or dealing with that period from the hands of the Phoenicians or other neighbours of Israel.^ It is otherwise with Egypt and Babylon. Both the cuneiform inscriptions of Babylon and the Egyptian monuments of the most varied kinds reach much further back than the period now in question. In the later course of its history Israel was in many ways brought into momentous relations with the Babylonian- Assyrian Empire on the one hand and Egypt on the other, The monuments of those peoples furnish very important information concerning these relations. And Hebrew tradition tells of occa- sions when Israel was brought into fateful contact with the peoples of the Nile and Euphrates valleys in the very earliest times. Hence we cannot do less than cherish the expectation that the contemporary historical documents of those peoples may throw some light on the history of the beginnings of Israel. The ex- position of our subject must show whether the expectation is fulfilled. This is not the place for a fuller statement respecting the ^ On a Fhoenician stone which is said to have been seen in ancient times, see below, § 28. 134 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. general character of these foreign monuments. We must refer to the works which treat expressly of Egyptian, Babylonian, and Assyrian history, especially to the volumes in this series dealing with these subjects.^ The small contributions which later authors, writing in the G-reek language, make to the knowledge of this period will also be more appropriately dealt with each in its own place. Josephus would naturally be first thought of, because in his Archfeology he gives a continuous history of the Hebrews, and thus supplies a parallel narrative to that of the Bible. But his account is, in almost all points, marked by two characteristics. It is unduly embellished and exaggerated till it becomes fabulous. It is coloured with an intentional bias in favour of the Levitical and hierarchical. The consequence is that, at any rate so far as this period is concerned, it nowhere bears the character of an original document which might be set over against the Old Testament.- But his appeal to Manetho in the work against Apion will here- after claim a minuter investigation. ' Wiedemann, Agyptische Genchichte, i. ii., 1884; Tiele, Babyloniach-asnyriicht Geschichte, i. 1886. - Respecting him see Reuss in Ersch and Gruber's Encylcl., ii. 31, p. 104 ff. ; Baumgarten in JDTh., 1864, p. 616 ff. ; Hausrath in Sybel's Hist. Ztschr., J864, p. 285 flf. ; Schiirer in PKE.- vi\. p. 109 S. ; and especially Rankc, Wdlgesch. iii. 2, p. 12 S. B. HISTOEY OF THE PEEIOD. CHAPTEE I THE PATKIAECHAL AGE In the following pages we first give a complete presentation of the material furnished by Biblical tradition for chapters i. and ii., i.e. for the historical narrative of the Pentateuch.^ We then append a detailed examination into the historical reliableness of each narrative. For all details respecting the age and the reciprocal relations of the main sources of the Hexateuch, the conclusions already reached are taken for granted. Our attention is here fixed on the internal connection of each source and the mode in which each has used and reproduced the historical material. The analysis which we have given shows the present state ol the inquiry into the sources of the Hexateuch. By this arrange- ment I hope to be of service even to the reader who is not conversant with the tedious analysis of the sources. If any one is anxious to form a judgment on the historical trustworthi- ness of the old Israelite tradition it is of primary import- ance that he become acquainted with the various strata oi that tradition which run independently alongside of or are built up on one another, seeing each of these in its own connection and apart from the rest. This applies to every reader, whatever hif standpoint, whatever his view of Israelite history as a whole whether he be professed liistoriau or layman. Thus only will i1 ' This method is not so suitable for the Book of Joshua, because the re\-isioi has here been carried out with incomparably greater thoroughness. 135 136 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. be possible to form our own judgment as to the mutual relation and the value of those strata of tradition. I. THE TRADITION IN THE SOURCES § 12. E's Narrative. Nothing/ or at most only a few scanty remains "^ belonging to this source, have been preserved among those dealing with the primaeval history. Nor does it give us in Genesis any infor- mation as to the origin and descent of Abraham, the ancestor of the Israelites. Neither his paternal home, nor his journey to Canaan, nor his marriage with Sarah, nor his relation to Lot,^ is definitely stated. Not till we reach Josh. xxiv. 2 f. do we come upon a brief but valuable notice on these mattei'S. The first of the larger connected accounts of Abraham, indubitably belonging to this source, is contained in chap. xx. But the opening of the narrative clearly indicates that its author has previously given some informa- tion respecting Abraham.* Possibly a few stray portions of the account once contained in this source are preserved in our present text at xii., 6a and 8a, and almost certainly there are a few members of it in chap. xv. And although the indubitably very ancient frag- ment. Gen. xiv., did not originate with our author, but came from an older source of which we have no other knowledge, many indications point to the conclusion that the Elohist admitted it into his book. 1. The following, then, is E's picture of Abraham. We find Abraham wandering up and down in the land of Canaan as a nomad chief. He has immigrated hither from a distant land.^ Sometimes he pitches his tent at Shechem, sometimes he turns towards Bethel,® building altars and founding sanctuaries ' at both ' According to Wellhauaen, JDTh. xxi. p. 407 ff. ; Kuenen, Ond." § 8, No. S. - According to Dillm. (Jen.* p. xii. (less decisively Gen.^ p. xii.). ^ The statement at xiv. 12 is a gloss. ' Gen. XX. 1: 'And Abraham jom'neyed from thence.' If, as is probable, chap. xiv. vfas adopted by E {cf. xiv. 3), the addition DtS'D also (against Dillm. ) belongs to E. = Gen. xx. 13. ' Gen. xii. 6a, 8a. ' Doubtless this must be regarded as the meaning of these notices in E also, even though the present form of xii. 6-8 belong to J. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 137 places. Sometimes he dwells in the Negeb or under the terebinths of Mamie, at Hebron.^ Lot is his relative. There is an offensive and defensive alliance between him and the Amorites of the Hebron district. After a vassalage of twelve years' duration the kings of Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboim, and Bela have rebelled against their oppressor, Chedorlaomer, king of Elam. Chedorlaomer and his allies march against the Canaanites by a circuitous route through the south. In the Yale of Siddim there is a battle. The Canaanite kings are beaten and their towns plundered. The victors march off to the north with a rich booty of men, cattle, and goods. Amongst the captives is Lot, Abraham's nephew, a resident in Sodom. As soon as Abraham hears of his fate he arms three hundred and eighteen trained men, all of them home-born slaves. He summons also the militia of his Amorite allies," and pursues the Elamite marauders. In a nocturnal attack he surprises those of the Elamites who have remained farthest in the rear, appre- hending no danger, drunk with victory. They are beaten, and Abraham pursues them as far as Hobah. Prisoners and spoil are taken from them and brought back to Sodom. The king of Sodom offers Abraham a rich reward. Magnanimously and proudly he refuses it, but accepts the benediction pronounced by Melchizedek, king of a Canaanite town, whose religion resembles his own, whose god is El Elyon.* At some indefinite time after these events God appears to Abraham in a vision and promises him a great reward.* Abraham incredulously replies to God : ' What wilt Thou give me, seeing I go childless and he that shall be possessor (heir) of my house is Damascus of Eliezer ( = EUezer of Damascus) ? ' But God leads him outside the tent and shows him the countless stars. His seed ' Gen. xii. 9, E [or R] (not J, see below) ; xiv. 13. - Gen. xiv. 24. ' Gen. xiv. 1-16, 21-24, omitting re\-iser's additions and glosses. Also the main portion of it. 17-20, but probably without Shalem and the tenths. * Gen. XV. 1 : so it ran in the portion of this verse which belongs to E. According to others, the verse belongs to J, but this is a mistake. 138 HISTOEY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. shall be like them in number. Abraham believes, and God reckons his faith to him for righteousness. In more or less close connection with this, E no doubt described a covenanting of God with Abraham, but of this there remain only a few touches, which have been worked into the text of J.i From the terebinths of Mamre Abraham moves on to the Negeb proper, the south of Canaan, where he settles in Gerar. Abimelech, the kiug of Gerar, takes from him his wife Sarah, whom he has represented to be his sister. God appears to Abi- melech in a dream, and threatens him with death because Sarah is Abraham's wife and Abraham himself a prophet. Abimelech, seized with fear, reproaches Abraham for his misleading conduct. Abraham excuses himself on the ground of Sarah's being his half- sister as well as his wife. They had agreed together when they left his paternal home that she should call herself his sister. Abimelech restores Sarah, giving her rich presents by way of compensation. To Abraham also he gives rich presents, and free permission to dwell in the country round Gerar. On Abraham's intercession God relieves Abimelech and his wives of a secret ailment which had prevented the king from injuring Sarah.^ No account of Sarah's long barrenness and Ishmael's being born of Hagar is contained in our source, but it is necessarily implied by the sequel. The same is true of Isaac's birth. The only words from E preserved in the present context are those which give the peculiar explanation of the name Isaac : ' Sarah said, God hath prepared laughter for me.' ^ The child grows, and Abraham makes a feast on the day that he is weaned.* At this feast Sarah sees Hagar's son^ playing in youthful light-heartedness." Her maternal jealousy is aroused, and she ' Gen. XV. The elements of this chapter derived from E are as follows : from E alone, w. 2, 5 ; belonging both to E and J, w. 1 and 6 ; probably also some words in iw. 9 and 12, and very likely in v. 18. See below, § 13, No. 2. ' Gen. XX. 1-17. V. 18 is from R, and does not agree with v. 6. 3 Against Dillm.*, p. 266 f. (^ p. 278), cf. Budde, Bibl. Urgesch., pp. 215. 224, * Only xxi. 6a, 8 here belong to E. ' The name Ishmael is not mentioned, but was originally introduced and explained in v. 17 ; (/. Dillm.', p. 281. * Nothing is said about mockery. Chap. L] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 139 begins to be anxious about her son's future inheritance. She wishes the mother and son to be sent away. Abraham is not at first inclined to comply, but God leads him to carry out Sarah's will. The son of the bondwoman is also to become a people. Abraham puts the lad with some food on Hagar's shoulder and sends them away. She wanders in the wilderness of Beersheba, and when the water in the water-skin is exhausted she casts the lad under a shrub and removes to some distance that she may not see him die. But the angel of God calls to her out of heaven, bidding her be of good courage and put her trust in God. Her eyes are miraculously opened so that she sees a well of water and gives her lad drink. He remains here and becomes a dweller in the desert and an archer, the true father of the Itursean and Kedarene bowmen. His mother, herself an Egyptian, takes for him an Egyptian wife.^ At this time Abimelech's attention is again attracted by Abraham's prosperity, and he proposes a covenant with the patriarch. Abraham is willing, but desires that a quarrel over a well which his servants have dug should first be settled. Abime- lech defends his own conduct. The well is assigned to Abraham, the agreement is made, and the place receives the name Beer- sheba, "Well of the Oath. Abimelech^ returns to Gerar^ with Phicol, the captain of his host, who had accompanied him. The last portion of our narrator's very fragmentary history of Abraham is chapter xxii.* Its fundamental idea corresponds with XV. 5 f. Isaac, the only son of his old age, who has grown into a young man in the meantime, is to serve as the touchstone of Abraham's obedience and faith. He is to take and sacrifice him upon 'one of the mountains' which God will tell him of.^ » Gen. xxi. 9-21. = Gen. xxi. 22-32. ' So, probably, in the original text of E. The reading, ' in the land of tlie Philistines,' is a harmonising interpolation introduced by R because of chap. xxvi. * The main stem of the chapter belongs to E, but there are many traces of J : hence it is natural to think that J also had an account of this event. 5 Wellhausen {JDTh., xxi. p. 410) conjectures that the original name was Dnon 'K ; Dillmann ", p. 287, gives '"IDKH 'H as probable. 140 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Abraham rises up with Isaac and sets out, and on the third day sees the place afar off which God had told him of. He leaves the servants behind, and goes to the place with Isaac to sacrifice liim. At the last moment God's voice is heard, bidding him hold his hand, teaching him that God does not wish for human sacrifices, but has tested Abraham's readiness to submit to His will.^ 2. In its present condition our source has but little to tell us of Isaac's history. It would almost seem that originally the document was in much the same state. Only on this supposition can we understand E's endeavour to supply a little more informa- tion, which is clearly to be traced in chap. xxvi. This chapter contains matter which originally stood in J, and other matter which undoubtedly is due to E's own imagination. But it has also constituents which irresistibly remind us of E and are taken almost literally from him, although they did not occupy the same position in that source as here. R has here repeated parts of E's history of Abraham, modifying them slightly as his object required.- Hence hardly anything more is said about Isaac's own life. The story takes up the fortunes of his sons. Isaac is now re- garded simply as the father of his two sons. Their birth is narrated in a couple of verses which at least in part must belong to our author.^ They are twins. The first is of a ruddy colour (Edom), and his entire body is covered with hair (Seir), as with a hairy mantle; his name is Esau (hairy). The second is called Jacob (heel-holder), because he held back his brother by the heel when they were born. Esau becomes a hunter in the fields and therefore his father's darling, for Isaac 'loved venison.' Jacob, a quiet man, remaining in the tents, is his mother's * favourite. 1 Geu. xxii. 1-13, except isolated expressions in vv. 2 and 11, and probably also in V. 13. ' Obviously this seems to be the case in m>. 26-33, except v. 27. It is similar in V. 15, xviii. 7 ff., only that R here goes to work with still gi-eater freedom. ' Gen. XXV. 24, 27 f . , common to E and J ; xxv. 26a, E (against Buddo, p. 217). * Whether the name Rebekah occurred in E is not guaranteed, but the circum- stances of the case make it probable. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 141 With this we may almost be said to take our leave of Isaac. No doubt our source in its original form possessed a more complete account of him. But in our present text the revision has inter- woven it so closely with a similar narrative of J's that it is difficult to set forth consecutively the parts due to the individual authors.^ "We must confine ourselves to the mention of a few characteristics.- E at all events told, though with many an additional trait, how Isaac at the end of his life commissioned Esau to bring him a dainty dish, for he would fain give him his blessing ere dying. Their mother wished to divert the blessing in favour of her beloved Jacob, and takes the curse upon herself. She gives Esau's raiment to Jacob. He goes in to his father and represents himself to be Esau, whereupon he is blessed with dew of heaven and fatness of the earth and abundance of corn and new wine. Then comes Esau, learns what has happened, and weeps immoderately. Esau meditates revenge. Their mother bids Jacob ilee to Laban. Erom this it is evident that E originally must at least have said something about Isaac's marriage and Eebekah's relationship to Laban. But it is more probable that he gave a detailed narrative which E has suppressed or was not acquainted with. 3. Jacob now becomes the subject of the story, which flows again more copiously in dealing with him. Jacob leaves home and sets out for the East.^ On the way he spends the night on a stone. There he sees in a dream a ladder joining earth to heaven. The angels of God ascend and descend on it. He believes this to be the gate of heaven and calls the place Bethel. He anoints the stone with oil and makes of it a maq(5eba. Moreover Jacob vows that if he return home in safety the mac^eba shaU. become a temple, and the tenth of all God's gifts be given to it.* Then he resumes his journey ' to the land of the sons of the east.' ^ ' Gen. xx\'ii. = Probably the following belong to E : xxvii. 16, 4, 11, 13 (part of 15), 18, 21-23, 28, 306, 335, 34, 42. ^ According to xxix. 1 this idea stood in place of xxviii. 10. « Gen. xxviii. 11 f., 17 f., 20, 21a, 22. » Gen, xxix. 1. 142 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Our narrator certainly gave a fuller account of Jacob's arrival and experiences there tlian is found in the present text of chap, xxix. f. But the editors seem to have preferred in many respects the prophetical description of J to the more popular one of E. Jacob proffers his services to Laban. They arrange that the reward for his seven years' service shall be Laban's younger and more beautiful daughter Eachel, with whom he has fallen in love. At the expiration of the time Jacob demands his wife. Laban substitutes the older daughter Leah. Jacob finds himself de- ceived. Laban mockingly i proposes that he shall serve another term of years for Eachel. He does so. Eachel is at first barren, and gives her handmaid Bilhah to Jacob. She bears Dan and Naphtali. Leah, who has previously borne children to Jacob,^ now has Issachar, Zebulun, and a daughter Dinah. Eachel, by God's blessing, bears Joseph.* Jacob is now seized with home-sickness. Laban will not let him go, but wishes to hear the terms on which he will continue to serve him.^ Jacob states his terms and remains.* God blesses him, and the class of animals which he has stipulated shall be his wages multiplies exceedingly. Laban several times alters the conditions, but it always turns to Jacob's advantage. Weary of the fraud and summoned in a dream by the God of Bethel, Jacob resolves to flee homewards. He sends for his two wives to come to the field and they fall in with his plan. Advantage is taken of Laban's absence at a sheep-shearing. Thus 'did Jacob deceive the heart of Laban the Aramaean ; ' but Eachel steals his terapliim.^ Laban does not overtake him till he is far beyond the Euphrates on the mountain-range of Gilead. A vision of the night forbids him to lay hands on Jacob. Laban merely demands ' The excuse, v. 26, ia from J, or more probably from R (against Dillmann). 2 Gen. xxix. 15a-23, 25, 27 f., 30. = According to Gen. xxx. 1, 17. « Gen. xxx. l-3a, 6, 8, 17-20a, 20c, 24a. = Gen. xxx. 26, 28 (with Dillm. against Wellh.). " To be gathered from Gen. xxxi. 7, 41. ' Gen. xxxi. 2, 4-9, U, 13-17, 19-21. Vv. 10 and 12 are from R. Chap. I.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 143 the restoration of his gods. Whoever is in possession of these must die. Laban searches the tents, but Eachel is able to save herself by a stratagem. Jacob is wroth, and bitterly reproaches his father-in-law. Laban is touched and ashamed, and proposes a covenant with him.^ He ^ raises a ma99eba on the spot : Jacob piles up a mound {gal) of stones. Here they hold the covenant feast. The mound is to be witness (ed). Hence the mountain-mass is called Gilead.^ Jacob continues his journey and sees the camp of the angels (Mahanaim).* Nothing is now to be dreaded except Esau's revenge. Jacob sends messengers to him to Edom with rich presents in separate companies.^ He places his household and cattle on the farther side of the Jabbok, but himself remains on this side of the stream.^ From the source before us we do not now ' learn anything about what he did or what happened to him here. But in all probability it once contained a quite similar account to the one J gives of Jacob's struggle with God. In place of this there immediately . follows a brief description of the meeting with Esau, which passes off in a perfectly friendly manner. The gifts which Esau has received ^ in the meantime are accepted by him at Jacob's special request. Jacob safely reaches the neighbourhood of Shechem, where he buys land and raises ^ a maQQeba.i" Starting hence he journeys up and down the land as a nomad, going first to Bethel to fulfil the vow he formerly made there. He builds an altar there and gives the place its name.^^ After a short 1 Gen. xxxi. 22-24, except 25, 27. ^ V. 45, Laban as subject instead of Jacob. » V. 45 f. (against Wellh. Dillm.), 48-50 (except 486, 49); also 53 f., chap, xxxii. 1. * Gen. xxxii. 2 f. = Gen. xxxii. 4, 146-22. ' Gen. xxxii. 24, 2oa'. ' Wellhausen, JDTh. xxi. p. 434, also agrees %vith this ; Dillmann,>re loc. does not. ' Giea. xxxiii. 11. ' Probably to be preferred to mizbeach on account of the verb. " Gen. xxxiii. 46, 56, 11. Parts of 19 f. " Gen. XXXV. 1, 3, 7. Possibly vv. 2 and 4 also belong to this (Wellh. xxi. p. 437 f. ) ; cf. Josh. xxiv. 14 ff. : yet we might also think of an extract from P byR. 144 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. interval he moves on farther. Eachel dies near Ephrath in giving birth to Benjamin. There too Jacob sets up a macqeba.^ 4. The history of Jose-ph. As a youth of seventeen years old Joseph tends his father's flocks along -with his brethren. By telling tales to his father he makes himself hated by his brothers.^ This hatred is aggravated by the vain dreams which his father rebukes but thinks a great deal of." One day Jacob calls Joseph and sends him to his brothers. When they see him they resolve to kill the dreamer. They will give out that a wild beast has devoured him. Eeiiben, wishing to save him and restore him to his father, advises them not to shed blood but to cast him into a pit. Falling in with this counsel they strip Joseph of his coat, cast him into the pit, and go away to eat food.* Meanwhile there passes by a company of Midianite merchants. They take Joseph out of the pit and bring him to Egypt. But when Eeuben goes back to the pit and fails to find Joseph he returns weeping to his brethren. They take Joseph's coat, dip it in blood, and bring it to their father. Jacob recognises his son's coat, and mourns for his death. The Midianites sell Joseph in Egypt to Potiphar, one of Pharaoh's eunuchs, and chief of his executioners (palace-guard). Joseph becomes this man's servant and is soon set by him over his house and property .* After some time Pharaoh is wroth with two of his eunuchs, the chief baker and the cupbearer. They are put in prison in the house of the chief of the executioners. Joseph is told off to attend on them (as Potiphar's slave, not as a prisoner). He interprets ' Gen. XXXV. 16-20. " Against Dillmann, Gen.'^ p. 372 ff., also Gen.* p. 386 ff. The garment with sleeves indeed belongs to J. But the garment and the special love of his father would only excite envy ; whereas the tale-telling is the likely cause of the hatred. Hence the sleeved garment, the envy and the love, belong to J. The hatred and the tale-telling accordingly are seen to be E's, and to him, for other reasons, the dreams also are to be assigned. ^ Gen. xxxvii. 2a and c (^DV to |SV3and fromN3M onwards), 46-10, 116. * Vv. 135 (from i\^^), 19 f. (except : ' and cast into a pit,') 22, 23a5o, 24, 25aa. = Gen. xxxvii. 28a5ft 29-31, parts of 32 and 33, 34, the three last words of 35, 36, In chap, xxxix. a few words in v. 4 (IflX mC'l) and v. 5 f. Chap. L] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 145 their strange dreams and his interpretation is marvellously ful- filled.^ Two years later Pharaoh also has remarkable dreams which no one in Egypt can interpret for him. The cupbearer, who, as Joseph predicted, has been set free in the meanwhile, remembers the chief executioner's bondman and mentions him to Pharaoh. He is sent for, and explains Pharaoh's dreams as prognosticating the immediate coming of a time of great plenty which will be suc- ceeded by a period of famine. Joseph goes on to advise that in the years of superfluity the fifth part of the grain be taken up and kept in storehouses for the time of need.^ Pharaoh perceives that the spirit of God is in Joseph. He makes him the first man in the kingdom, intrusts him with the royal finger-ring, clothes him in garments of byssus, and places a chain of gold about his neck. He confers on him the title of Zaphenath-paneah, explained by Jerome as meaning creator niundi, and certainly bearing some such sense. He gives him Asenath, daughter of one of the priests, to wife. All happens as Joseph had announced. Himself carries out the plan he had proposed. His wife bears to him Manasseh and Ephraim. The years of famine gradually draw nigh, and are felt far beyond the bounds of Egypt.3 Jacob thereupon sends his sons, with the exception of Benjamin, to buy corn in Egypt. They fall on their faces before Joseph. He recognises them, and remembers his dreams, but at first treats them unkindly. They are spies, he says, and to prove the truth of their declarations they must bring their youngest brother from home to him. Simeon shall remain as surety in Joseph's hands, and the rest, supplied with corn, may go home. They consent, with a heavy heart, and admonished by Eeuben, they see their guiltiness in the fate which has overtaken them. Joseph has their money put in their sacks. They reach home and bring the bad news to 1 Gen. xl. laa, 2, 3a, 4-22, excepting small additions in vo. 5 and 15, made by R from J. - Gen. xli. 1-16, 25-36, leaving out small additions from J in w. 7, 31, 34 f. = Gen. xli. 37-40, 42, 43a, 45 f., 47 f., 51 f., parts of 53-57. K 146 HISTOKY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Jacob. He complains : ' Joseph is no more ; Simeon is no more ; of Benjamin ye will bereave me.' Reuben pledges his two sous that he will bring Benjamin back to him in safety.^ And now that E has spoken so fully, J comes in again, so that to him alone we owe almost the entire account of the second, journey. Only a couple of E's statements have been preserved.^ Jacob, with profound anxiety, allows Benjamin to go with his brothers. Joseph brings Simeon out to them. From the ter- minology which is strictly adhered to in other parts of the con- text we are justified in concluding that the designations of the oldest and youngest brothers^ in chap. xliv. show that in this chapter also there are traces of a narrative by E of the subsequent events in Egypt. Xot tin the solemn manifestation scene does E again make full use of both sources. At the outset E once more forms the founda- tion. Joseph dismisses his attendants, that he may make himself known to his brethren. At the same time he comforts his terrified brethren, telling them that it is God who has sent him hither to be the preserver of his family during the five remaining years of famine. They are to hasten and invite their father to Egypt. The news reaches Pharaoh, who also bids Jacob and his sons come to Egypt. They shall eat the fat of the land, and shall have waggons from Egypt to carry their wives and children. They return home laden with gifts, and bring the message to Jacob. He cannot believe until he sees Joseph's Egyptian waggons.* In Beersheba, where, according to E, Jacob at this time dwelt,'' he offers a sacrifice to the God of his father, and is encouraged by a nocturnal vision to go to Egypt, because he will there become a great nation. Thence, too, shall he return. Thus encouraged, he resolves to set out with his household. When they are come Joseph provides for their sustenance.'' At this point E inserts, in what is now a somewhat unsuitable 1 Gen. xUi. 1, 26-4(i, 5, 6c, laa, 76-26, 29-37. " Gen. xliii. 14, 23c. " Especially in v. 12 ; possibly also in vv. 2, 23, 26. Against Wellh. and Dilbn. < Gen. xlv. 16, 3, 4a6, 5a(3, 56-9, 11 f., 15-27. ^ Dillm.' p. 428 ' Gen. xlvi. 16-5 (except Israel, v. 2) ; xlvii. 12. Chap. I.] £.— HISTOEY OF THE PERIOD 147 connection, an account of Joseph's services to the land of Egypt.^ It is so compounded of J and E that we cannot assign the con- stituents to their respective authors. All the money in Egypt is paid away for corn. Joseph then induces the people to make over themselves and all the lands in Egypt to the crown, in con- sideration of their receiving corn from the store-houses during the scarcity. Thus the ground and soil in Egypt become henceforward the property of the king, and every year the people pay for it a fifth part of th^ produce. The priests alone are exempt from this vassalage. Then the end of Jacob's life is narrated in another fragment, which bears deep traces of E's revising handiwork. On his death- bed Jacob is visited by Joseph, who is accompanied by his two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim. Jacob blesses the father and sons, putting Ephraim before Manasseh. He promises that Joseph shall return to Canaan and possess there a portion of land which himself had taken from the Amorite with his sword and bow. Joseph mourns for his dead father, and has him embalmed. He reassures his brothers, whose consciences again become active after their father's death. Joseph himself dies in Egypt, one hundred and ten years old. He stipulates with his brothers that they shall take back his bones to Canaan. - § 13. J's Narrative In common with the Priestly Writing the Yahvist is charac- terised by an endeavour to set forth the history of Israel in its relations to the world and the nations in general. Accordingly he traces, in a few rapid strokes, Israel's origin and its relationship to the other peoples, up to the first beginnings of the formation of nations after the great flood, or after the dispersion of the nations from Babel. 1 Gen. xlvii. 13-26. " Gen. xlviii. 1, 2a, 8, 9a, lOi, 11 t., 15 f., 20, 21 f. (of these 8, 11, 21 are common to E and J), 1. 1-3 (common to E and J), 15-26 (except parts of J in 18, 21 f., 24). Cf. moreover, Wellh. xxi. p. 449 ; Dillm. in loc. ; Budde in ZA W., 1883, p. 57 ff. ; Kuen. Ond."- § 8, No. 5. 148 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. The presence of these alternatives in the narrative points to two main streams which have united to form J. Wellhausen and Budde call them J^ and J^. In the primitive history they flow alongside each other. From the history of Abraham's immigration into Canaan they run in the same bed.^ Ji is the main stem of the Yahvistic narrative. It is not acquainted with the Deluge,^ but in place of it puts the origin of the races of mankind from Babel, which ensued on the dispersion of the peoples. To it Noah's sons are Shem, Japheth, and Canaan. Abraham is de- scended from Noah and Shem, being the seventh in the line from the former. He sets out towards Canaan from Haran. J- inserted the account of the Deluge. He does not state where the ark landed.^ To him Noah's sons are Shem, Ham, and Japheth. Abraham sets out from Ur Kasdim and comes to Haran. Mankind, then, according to J^, consists of three great families of nations, the descendants of Noah's sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth. In our present text of J we have no further information concern- ing Japheth's posterity. Cush, Mizraim, and Canaan* are derived from Ham. Gush's son is Nimrod, the first ruler on earth. He first founds a kingdom in Shinar, with the cities Babylon, Erech, Accad, and Calneh. Then he turns towards Assyria and builds Nineveh, Eehoboth-Ir, Calah, and Eesen. A number of tribes are derived from Mizraim, amongst them the Philistines, and the Caphtorim in Crete. Zidon, Heth, and the Canaanite peoples are descended from Canaan.^ Amongst Shem's sons the most important for J (J^ and J-) is Eber. So much is this the case ' that he is regarded as equivalent 1 There is one exception at Gen. xv. 7 if. For my position with regard to the question see further particulars in ThStW. vii. (1886), p. 201 f. : cf. also especially Riehm in StKr., 1885, Heft 4. ^ At most it was but briefly mentioned. See 7'hSt W. vii. p. 202 ; Hommel, Gesch. Bab. und Ash., p. 159. ' There is no reason for thinking of a southern mountain as the landing-place (Budde, Urgesch., p. 438). * Gen. X. 8-19, with the exception of r. 9. ' Probably x. 16-18 also belong to J (but this is opposed by Wellhausen, JDTh. xxi. p. 404 ; Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 124 f. ; Budde, Urgench., p. 222). Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 149 to Shem.'^ Shem is the father of all the Hebrews. Peleg and Joktaii are Eber's sons. From the latter, the South Semitic Arabic tribes spring ; from Peleg, no doubt, the ISTorth Semites. Abraham and Nahor, tlie sons of Terah, with their brother Haran, who died early, are the last links in this now broken genealogical chain,^ which Wellhausen thinks possibly once consisted of seven members. Sarah is Abraham's wife, Slilcah is Nahor's ; the former is barren."' In its original form this source states that Aram- Naharaim was their home. In the form which it took somewhat later after being edited and expanded — to which I believe Gen. XV. 17 ff. also belongs — Ur Kasdim* is substituted. This name is inserted in xi. 28 as the starting-point of the migration, either by the editor ^ just mentioned, or afterwards by E. 2. J has thus supplied the statements needful to allow of his proceeding with Abrahavi's history. In his home at Aram-Naharaim Abraham receives Yahve's command to leave home and fatherland for a country which He will show him. There Yahve will make of him a great nation, will bless him and cause all the families of the earth to bless themselves in him. Abraham believingly obeys the divine com- mand. Lot accompanies him." Abraham reaches Canaan'' and makes his way to Shechem. Yahve appears to him there and assures him that this is the destined land which he is to possess. Abraham moves about from place to place as a no nad chief, resting first in Shechem and Bethel, and building altars. 1 Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 396. ■^ This also was probably found in J^ and adopted by J-. 3 Gen. X. 21, 25-30 ; xi. 28-30. Cf. Bohmer, Lib. Gen. (1860), p. 21 ; Das 1 Buck der Thora, p. 32 ; also Budde, p. 414 if. ; and my discussion of the passage in ThStW., 1886, p. 193 f. * As to this passage belonging to J, cf. Budde, pp. 418 f., 439 f. As to the position of Ur Kasdim according to J^, see below, § 17- = As Budde maintains, Urgesch., p. 442. '* Gen. xii. l-4n. 7 This must be supplied from the context : R has omitted it on account of v. 5. 8 Gen. xii. 6-8, with the possible exception of 66, and also excepting isolated notices from E (see above). V. 9 also belongs to (E or) B (against Dillmann,= p. 219; Budde, p. 7, Note) on account of xiii. 1-4 ff., which Wellhausen, xxi. IJ. 414, uses in proof of this. 150 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Abraham and Lot are very rich in cattle. Their herdsmen come into collision in the narrow land. Abraham wishes to avoid disputes, and proposes that they shall separate as brothers, generously leaving to Lot the choice of the better part. Lot chooses the fertile pastures of the Jordan, the Ghor as far as the south end of the Dead Sea, a district into which there flow numerous streams from the mountains. Abraham, on the other hand, as a token of God's approbation of his conduct, receives a fresh revelation from Yahve, promising him anew the possession of the land. He travels through the length and breadth thereof, and finally takes up his abode under the terebinths of Mamre, near Hebron. There he builds an altar.^ A famine drives Abraham into Egypt. He represents Sarah to be his sister. Pharaoh takes her from him, and is consequently smitten with grievous plagues. He sets Sarah free, and Abraham returns to the south of Canaan. - Here the word of Yahve comes to him, promising him rich blessing. Abraham objects that he has no children, and that his (chief) domestic servant will be his heir. Yahve promises that he shall have a son to be his heir. Abraham believes Yahve, and this is reckoned to him for righteousness.^ To this E has appended a narrative of J's which originally stood in a different context, and contains elements belonging to E. It tells of a solemn covenant made by Yahv^ with Abraham. Yahve, who brought Abraham from Ur Kasdim,* promises that he shall possess the land. Abraham cannot believe this, and asks for a sign. Yahve bids him cut in pieces the sacrificial animals. When the sun has gone down He causes sleep to fall upon him, ^ Gen. xiii. 2, 5, 7-lla, 126-18, verses which are immediately connected with xii. 8 ; cf. Dillm.* p. 212 (=, p. 223). ^ Gen. xii. 10-xiii. 1 (except USV D171 ; cf. against Wellh. xxi. pp. 413, 419 (E) ; Dillm.6 p. 223 ; Budde, p. 6 f. ^ Gen. XV. 1, 3 f., 6 {vv. 1 and 6 common with E). Our analysis here deviates from that of Wellh. xxi. p. 411 f. ; Dillm.'' p. 230 f. (^ p. 242) ; Budde, p. 416 f. Cf. also Kuen. Ond.'^ § 8, Nos. 4, 8. ^ On this account the narrative is probably a fragment from J-. That v. 7 = J cf. Budde, p. 439. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OP THE PERIOD 151 and announces to him that his descendants shall dwell in Egypt four hundred years, and then shall return and possess the land. A flame of fire, instead of Yahvd Himself, passes between the pieces of the offering; thus has Yahve made a covenant with Abraham.! For a time Sarah continues barren. Consequently she gives to Abraham her handmaid Hagar, who conceives, and therefore despises her barren mistress. Sarah asserts her rights as mistress, whereupon Hagar runs away. The angel of Yahv^ finds her by a fountain in the wilderness, and assures her that Yahve has noted her affliction, and that Ishmael, her son, shall be ^ a free, in- domitable son of the desert.^ One day three men appear at Abraham's tent under the terebinths of Mamre. Abraham invites them to accept his hos- pitality. They inquire after Sarah, and one of the three, who is eventually recognised as Yahve, promises her a son next year Sarah, who is already aged, laughs incredulously. The men sel out towards Sodom. On the way Yahve makes known to Abraham who is accompanying Him, His intention to punish the ungodlj inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah. But Abraham's intercessioi obtains the assurance that Yahve will spare the city if He fine ten righteous men in it. Abraham returns home. Yahve join: the two angels in Sodom.* The angels who have preceded Him to Sodom are hospitabb 1 Gen. XV. 7-18 (except part of E in vv. 9, 12 [14 P?] and possibly v. 18) Most expositors (Dillm. Gen.* p. 231 ; Wellh. xxi. p. 411 f.) deny that the res of the narrative (except vv. 19-21) comes entirely from J, simply because the; look for an immediate connection with what has preceded. Possibly the won B'T was the occasion of the insertion of the fragment in this place. For furthe details see ThStW., 1886, p. 195 S., and, in opposition to Dillm. GenJ, ibid p. 220. - Gen. xvi. 16-14. Vv. 8-10 may possibly be an addition, as Bohmer, Das erst Buck der Thora, p. 203, and Wellh. xxi. p. 410, think. 3 It depends on vv. 8-10 whether J thought of Ishmael as born and bred in th desert, or related that Hagar returned to Abraham. ■• Gen. xviii. The omission of the concluding statement is the only importan flaw in the beautiful narrative. As to the unity of the chapter <•/. (agains WeUh.) Dillm.= p. 260. 152 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. received by Lot, but threatened with the foulest indignity by the Sodomites. They make Lot leave the city along with his family, because Yahve will destroy it. Yahve rains fire and brimstone on Sodom and Gomorrah. Lot escapes with his two daughters to Zoar. His wife looks round whilst they are on the way, and is turned into a pillar of salt. Abraham sees from afar the smoke of the burnt cities.'^ Wellhausen has laid down a rule, the intrinsic correctness of which is indisputable, to the effect that ethical objections are not critical ones.^ But admitting this, it remains doubtful whether the story of the origin of Moab and Ammon,^ which now follows, belonged to the source before us. For it does not correspond with the picture of Lot which J elsewhere draws. It will tlierefore be ad\dsable to follow Dillmann in ascribing it to the popular wit of the Hebrews, which in this way expressed its animosity against Moab-Ammon.* To Sarah's astonishment the promise made to her is fulfilled ; she fears that those who hear the news will laugh at her.^ Our source also appears to confirm the statement that Abraham dwelt in Beersheba during Isaac's childhood.^ And this is supported by the fact that J still contains elements of a narrative concerning the journey from Beersheba to sacrifice Isaac," unless, indeed, as Dillmann thinks, these belong to E himself.^ As an introduction to the marriage negotiations on Isaac's behalf, J next inserts a section peculiar to himself respecting the family of Nahor, Abraham's brother.* Next we have a short digression on a second marriage of Abraham after Sarah's death and the contemporaneous independent settlement of Isaac near 1 Gen. xix. 1-28. - JDTh. xxi. p. 417. = Gen. xix. 30-38. ■> Gen.^ p. 272. = Gen. xxi. la, 7, 66 (r/. Budde, pp. 224, 215). •i Gen. xxi. 33 ; cf. Dillm.'* p. 284. ' In Gen. xxii. 2, 11, 14, and probably also ?•. 13. Against Dillm.^ p. 285, who refers to xxi. 19, cf. xviii. 2 ; xxiv. 63 ; xxxiii. 1 ; xxxvii. 25 (xxxi. 10, 12). 8 Gen* p. 274 (=, p. 286). " Gen. xxii. 20-24. As to its belonging to J, cf. against Noldcke (A) and VVellh. xxi. pp. 417, 419 (E), Dilliii.^ p, 289 f., ami Budde, p. 423 f. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 153 the well Lahai-roi.i Then comes the actual marriage negotiation and the marriage of Isaac with Eebekah.^ In a lovely idyllic narrative, which reminds us in many respects of the author of chap, xviii. f., we are told how Abraham in his old age took steps to prevent his son from forming an alliance with the Canaanites that dwelt in the land, and to procure him a wife from his own home, Aram-Naharaim. He sends his house-steward thither to the city of Nahor. Under the evident guidance of Yahve the steward succeeds in reaching his goal and finding the maiden destined for Isaac. It is Eebekah, the daughter of Bethuel, Abraham's nephew. The servant conducts her to Canaan, and Isaac brings her into his mother's tent and takes comfort in her after his father's death.* A further statement concerning Abra- ham's death in the interval seems to have dropped out. Rebekah thus becomes the second ancestress of the people of Israel. 3. Our source tells us more than E about Isaac's subsequent life, but the information it gives is comparatively small. A famine tempts him to do as his father had done, and go into Egypt. Yahve forbids him to do this. He remains near Lahai- roi in the district of Gerar, and Yahvd blesses him with abundant riches. On this account Abimelech, king of Gerar, thinks him too powerful, and sends him away. Isaac turns south-eastward to the Nachal Gerar. His servants dig wells here, but this brings them into coniiict with the herdmen of Gerar. Hence the stations in the wilderness are called Esek, Sitnah (Shutein), Eehoboth (Ruhaibe).* Eebekah, like Sarah, is barren. Isaac prays for her, and she conceives. Two children struggle in her womb. She inquires of Yahv(^ and learns that two peoples shall be separated from her 1 Gen. XXV. 1-6, Hi. As to the position of this section cf. Wellh. xxi. p. 417 f. ; Dillm.' p. 295 ; as to its belonging to J, Budde, p. 225. - Gen. xxiv. = V. 67, according to the reading V'2'^, proposed by Wellh. xxi. p. 418. '^ Gen. xxvi. J's narrative is represented by the famine in v. 1, then vv. 2, 12-17 (except 15), 19-22. On account of xii. 10 ff. the rest cannot have come from J (against Wellh. xxi. p. 419; Dillm." p. 317; Biidde, p. 7, Note): cf. further Kuen. Oiid.- § 13, No. 11. 154 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. bowels, the elder of whom must serve the younger. She bears twins, Esau, his father's favourite, who becomes a wandering hunter, and Jacob, beloved by his mother, because he is a quiet man and dwells in the tents. One day Jacob prepared lentile- pottage for himself. Esau comes in from the fields and wants some of it to eat. Jacob, with cunning selfishness, takes advantage of his brother's hunger and names the birthright as the price. Esau, carelessly despising his privilege, gives it up, and is now called the Eed (Edom).i The difference between the two brothers, which thus finds expression, is exacerbated and brought to a point by Jacob's fraudulent appropriation of the firstborn's blessing. The story of this in chap, xxvii. contains many touches derived from E, but it is still possible to distinguish a number of portions of the original narrative of our source.^ The course of events is almost precisely the same as we have found in E. The only point peculiar to J is Esau's reference to his brother's name;^ Jacob, lie says, once before took hold of his heel when he bought the birthright ; he has now done it a second time. J therefore does not trace the name Jacob back to the birth of the brothers. 4. From Beersheba, which in any case is not far from Nachal Gerar, the last of Isaac's dwelling-places mentioned in our source, Jacob sets out for Haran. One night* he dreams that Yahve stands beside him, reveals Himself as the God of Abraham and Isaac, and promises that he shall return home prosperously and possess the land, and his seed shall spread abroad to the four winds of heaven. When he awakes he perceives that Yahve is in this place, and calls it Bethel.^ E has omitted a statement in J, concerning the continuation of 1 Gen. XXV. 21-24, 27-34 (ot. 24, 27 f. also in E). As to its being placed after chap. xxvi. see Dillm.' p. 312 ; as to v. 27, Budde, p. 217. " To J probably belonged v. 7, part of 15 (against Dillm. ; cf. indeed Dillm.' p. 333 as to xxix. 6, 18, with the authorship he ascribes to xxvii. 15, at p. 322), 20, 24-27, 296, 30a, 35-38, 45. ' V. 35. ■* At least the substance of xxviii. 11a must have stood in J as well as E. ' Gen. xxviii. 10 (11a), 13-16, 19a. Chap. L] jB.— HISTOEY OF THE PERIOD 155 the journey, analogous to chap. xxix. 1. We next find Jacob before a well in the open country, where he enters into conversation with the shepherds who are watering their sheep. He learns that he is talking with the servants of Laban, son of ISTahor, and brother of his mother. Laban's own daughter Eachel soon conies. Jacob, as a relative, kisses her and weeps for joy. Laban himself greets his sister's son, takes him into his house, and after Jacob has served him for some time, offers to arrange with him about wages.^ The negotiations concerning Eachel, the substitution of Leah, and the final winning of Eachel by another seven years' service, are now told by E from E. Nothing seems to point to our author except Laban's excusing himself by alleging a custom of the country.^ Leah bears Eeuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah, but Eachel is barren. By her handmaid, Bilhah, Jacob begets Dan and Naphtali ; by Leah's handmaid, Zilpah, Gad and Asher. For Eeuben's love- apple Leah purchases from Eachel the privilege of cohabiting with Jacob. Leah bears Issachar and Zebulun ; Eachel bears Joseph.^ Jacob now wishes to return home. Laban will not let him go, and is ready to enter into fresh negotiations. Jacob does not want any wage, but would like to have all the lambs of unusual colours which are dropped henceforward by Laban's ewes. Laban consents. But Jacob is clever enough so to use all kinds of shepherds' tricks as to render the arrangement an advantageous one to himself.* Jacob's prosperity arouses the discontent of Laban and his sons. Yahv^ therefore bids Jacob turn homewards. Laban pursues him, overtakes him on Mount Gilead, and takes him to task.^ Our source must have contained some account of the negotiations between Jacob and Laban which ended in their ' Gen. xxix. 2-15o. On v. 4 f., as on xxviii. 10, <•/. ThStW., 1886, p. 195. 2 V. 26, because of n^VV and 1133. » Gen. xxix. 31-35 ; xxx. 36-5, 7, 9-16, 206, 246. ■> Gen. xxx. 25, 27, 29-43. = Gen. xxxi. 1, 3, 25, 27. 156 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. recouciliation. E has suppressed it in favour of the more com- plete narrative of E. Laban piles up a heap which is to be a witness that neither of the two parties shall cross this boundary to injure the other (Galeed).i Jacob sends messengers before him to Esau. They return with the news that Esau is coming with four hundred men to meet Jacob. Jacob takes this to mean hostility, and in order to save at least the half, divides his people and flocks into two companies. He implores the protection of Yahve, and seeks at the same time to win Esau's favour by valuable presents.- By the ford of the Jabbok he awaits the night, and when it falls crosses the stream with his wives and children. Here a man wrestles with him. Overcome by Jacob, the stranger calls him Israel, Striver with God. But at the same time he puts Jacob's thigh out of joint.3 It is only through this conflict with God, first in prayer and then in act, that Jacob's former sin against Esau is expiated. The meeting with Esau has now no perils for him. Esau comes to him reconciled, and Jacob moves on in safety to Succoth. Passing thence he settles at Shechem, according to this source also.* We are not told much about the subsequent abode of Jacob- Israel in Canaan until we come to the history of Joseph. The chief piece is chap, xxxiv., the story of Dinah, a combination of P and J. On this subject Wellhausen and Dillmann differ strongly, but it seems to me that the latter's analysis rests on a more correct observation of the facts. Shechem, the son of Hamor, ^ V. 51 f., but omittiug n3SD, which is a harmonistic gloss, since (against Wellh. xxi. p. 431 f.) the verb m'' agrees only with PJ ; cf. D'pn, v. 45. - This follows from xxxiii. 9 f. = Gen. xxxii. 5-14a, 23, 25-33 {v. 30 f., possibly from R). To me the chief reason for recognising J in 25 ff. (with Wellh. against Dillm.), together with linguistic tokens, is the name Israel, which thenceforward is a sign of J. The name Jacob is only employed, for the sake of hannony, in the remainder of tliis very chapter and in chap, xxxiv. (doubtless through R's editing). As to Elohim ef. Dillm. = p. 360, line 20. ■■ Gen. xxxiii. l-4a, 4c, 5a, 6-10, 12-17 (parts of r. 19 f. ?). Chap. L] J3.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 157 the priuce of the land, dishonours Jacob's daughter Dinah. He loves her, and when Jacob's sons ^ call him to account is prepared to comply with any conditions if he may be allowed to marry her. They require the circumcision of the Shechemites. Simeon and Levi treacherously fall on the Shechemites whilst they are suffering from their wounds, murder every male in the city and take Dinah away. Jacob dreads the consequences of the deed and strongly rebukes his sons."- Possibly in consequence of this deed Israel leaves Shechem and comes to the tower of the flocks near Bethlehem. The reviser, referring to chap. xxxv. 10, here for the first time leaves the name Israel unaltered in J. At this place Reuben lies with his father's concubine Bilhah.^ Perhaps a few portions of chap, xxvi., the list of the clans of Esau and the Edomites, and especially the beginning, belong to our source.* But the analysis is exceedingly uncertain and disputed. I do not feel called on to add to the controversy. 5. When we come to Joseph and his fortunes, our source again gives a connected narrative, parallel to that in E. The differences from E correspond entirely with those characteristics of J with which we have already become acquainted. Dreams fall into the background, and where they constitute an essential feature of the tradition, the section in question is at all events much less cir- cumstantially worked out than in E. Judah takes Eeuben's place as chief amongst the brothers. J's description gives the following picture. Joseph lives with his half-brothers as a helper. Jacob-Israel, who now lives at Hebron, loves him because he is the son of his old age, and gives him a sleeved-garment. This makes the brothers jealous of Joseph.^ They move towards Shechem from the pastur- * As to the name Jacob see the last note bvit one, and what immediately follows. = Gen. xxxiv. 16, 26, 3, 5, 7, 11-13, 14, 19, 25 f., 30 f. But on the other side see ■\Vellh. xxi. p. 435 ff. ; Kuen. Theol. Tijdschr., xiv. p. 256 ff. ; Ond.' § 16, jJq 12. ° Gen. xxxv. 21 f. * So Dillm.'' p. 362 (somewhat altered in =, p. 376). Biidde differently, p. 347 f. Cf. also Bruston in Bev. Theol. (Montaub.), 18S2, pp. 18 ff., 134 ff. 5 Gen. XXX vii. 26, 3, 4a, 11a. On the grounds for the analysis, see above, § 12. 158 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. age they have beeu in, which the narrator thinks of as near their father. Israel sends Joseph to see how they do. A man informs him that they have departed to Dothan, and he finds them there. When they see him afar off they resolve to kill him. Judah ^ opposes this and succeeds in carrying out another scheme. "When Joseph comes up he is stripped of his sleeved-garment and sold to a caravan of Ishmaelites which is passing at the time. They send the sleeved-garment to their father, who recognises it and mourns him as torn in pieces by a wild beast. The sons pay a hypocritical visit to their father to comfort him.- The author utilises the interval, until we come to learn more about Joseph's experiences, by inserting chap, xxxviii., an account of the origin of certain clans belonging to Judah which were in existence at a later date. The clans Er and Onan disappeared early. Their places were taken by Perez and Zerah. This is traced back to events in the family of Judah. Judah marries a Canaanitish wife and begets of her Er, Onan, and Shelah. Er dies childless, and Onan, as brother-in-law to the widow Tamar, is bound to raise up children to his brother by her. Because he refuses he is carried off by an early death. Judah is so troubled by the fate of his two sons that he withholds the third from Tamar, who therefore manages by artifice to lie with her father- in-law. The twins Perez and Zerah are Judah's sons by Tamar.^ Joseph's history is now resumed. He is brought by the Ishmaelites to Egypt and sold as a slave to an Egyptian. He wins his master's confidence and is set by him over the whole house. But his master's wife cast her eyes on the young man and makes proposals to him from which he escapes by a speedy flight. His mistress, dreading discovery, calumniates him to her husband, who thereupon has him cast into prison. But Yahve here also gives him favour with the governor of the prison (whom J does ' At i: 21, read Judah instead of Reuben. - Gen. xxxvii. 12, 1.3a, 14-18, 21, 236, 23aj3-27, 286a, 32 f. (for the most part), 35 (except the close). ' As to the district where the narrative originated, cf. Dillm.^ p. 392 ; Reuss, Gesoh. A. AT., p. 250 ; Kuen. Ond.- § 13, No. 9. Chap. I.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 159 uot identify with Joseph's first master). Hence he too sets Joseph over his house.^ Only from a few scattered indications,^ taken together with the entire later development of the story, do we gather that our source also told of Joseph's being set at liberty and exalted as in E, though much more briefly. Here also Joseph rises through interpreting Pharaoh's dreams as referring to a period of plenty and of want in Egypt, and is set by Pharaoh over Egypt, especially over the granaries of the country. But it is in the description of Joseph's contact with his brethren, occasioned by the famine in Canaan, especially after their second journey, chap. xlii. ff., that J comes in again more copiously and more consecutively. Jacob sends his sons to Egypt. Benjamin alone, of whom we now hear for the first time, is to stay with his father. Joseph, the ruler of Egypt, recognises them but conceals his own identity. He inquires after their father and brother,^ and demands to see Benjamin in proof of their truthful- ness. Nothing is said about Simeon being kept as a security. They travel home and on the journey find the money of one of them replaced in his sack. The others discover theirs when they reach home.'* The famine grows more serious and compels Jacob to send his sons again to Egypt. Judali reminds him that they must not go there without Benjamin. He pledges himself to his father for him. Arrived in Egypt, they are invited to Joseph's house and treated with distinction, Benjamin especially. It is only by a violent effort that Joseph refrains from making himself known.^ Yet he put them through one more trial. They are dismissed, and not only is their money put in their sacks along with the corn but in Benjamin's sack Joseph's silver cup is placed. Scarcely have they left the city when they are pursued and Joseph's cup > Gen. xxxix. laftft 2 f., 4 (except IHN mt5'''1), 56-23. - Gen. xl. 1 (except the first four words) ; 35; fragments in 5 and 15 and xli. 7 ; c/. further xli. 31, 34a, 35o, 41, 436, 44, 49, 55. Dillmann even seems inclined to ascribe xli. 17-24 to J. ^ Gen. xliii. 7. ■• Gen. xliii. 12. » Gen. xlii. 2a, 46, 6o6, 7aj3, 27 f., 38 ; xliii. 1-13, 15-23a6, 24-34. 160 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. found iu Benjamin's sack. They return. Judah enters Josepli'.s house at the head of the brethren. He makes no attempt to justify them, but acknowledges — and this is the one object aimed at in the contrivance — God's requiting finger in their fate. He tells Joseph all his old father's grief about Joseph and Benjamin and begs to be kept in bondage instead of the latter.' Joseph is now overpowered with emotion. Weeping aloud he makes himself known to his brethren. They are to acquaint his father with his glory and invite him to Goshen. Jacob's mind is at once made up ; - bringing with him all his possessions, he sets out from Hebron, where we last left him, for Beersheba.^ This is the starting-point of the journey. Judah is sent on in advance to give Joseph notice. The latter receives his father and brethren splendidly and sends Pharaoh word. Their request for leave to pasture their flocks in the land of Goshen is granted. For not only the shepherd's trade,* but also the unsettled life of nomads '' is an abomination to the Egyptians. It is probable from certain tokens" that chap, xlvii. 13-26, the account of the good done to Egypt by Joseph, also stood in J, though in a somewhat different position. On his deathbed Jacob-Israel sends once more for Joseph and binds him by an oath not to leave his corpse in Egypt, but to bury him with his fathers in Canaan.''' At the same time Jacob blesses the sons of Joseph, deliberately preferring the younger Ephraim to the older Manasseh.^ It is highly probable that chap. xlix. 1-28, with the so-called Blessing of Jacob, though not composed by J himself, was adopted by him and had a place in this source. The pre-eminence ascribed to Judah, as well as the rejection of Eeuben and Simeon,® is in ' Gen. xliv. ; but cf. above, p. 145. - Gen. xlv. la, 2, 4f, 5aa7, 10, 13 f., 2S. ^ Gen. xlvi. la. It is not certain, but it is probable, that some contributions from J, f.ij., 126, 19 f., are to be found in the list of the members of Jacob's family which follows. * V. 66. '' Gen. xlvi. 2S-xlvii. 5a,66. « In vv. 13 and 25 ; possibly also in 17. '' Gen. xlvii. 27 Dm eriUe Buck der Thora, pp. 123-302. •■ Gf. especially p. 300 ff. 168 HISTORY 01-' THE HEBllEWS [Book I. II. THE HISTORICAL SUBSTANCE OF THE STORY OF THK PATRIAUCHS. § 15. The Patriarchs in General. Glance now over the collective contents of the documentary sources of Israel's earliest history which are stratified in the manner we have described. According to what has already been said of the relative and absolute age of these sources, it is plain that none of them can be used immediately as a document stating nothing but historical facts. All three main sources, as well as the editor's work of connecting them together, are too far removed from the events tliey narrate to make any well-grounded claim to this. Consequently we are unable, without essential modifications, to recognise the validity of the attempt to take as the foundation one of these sources, say the oldest of them, E (or, as others think, P or J), as exclusively representing the historical facts. Nor is it any more justifiable to use our present text,i which was the work of the editor, as an immediate source or as an authentic addition to the original documents. But, on the other hand, there is an important fact confronting this preliminary negative result. A complete laying bare of the strata that make up the mass of tradition forces us to see that although there are many differences in detail, there is throughout a remarkable agreement as to the general course of events. Under the circumstances, it must be admitted that the fact of a state- ment being made in all the sources accessible to us does not con- clusively demonstrate its historical trustworthiness. But it does prove the existence of a solid core of harmonious traditional matter. The value of this core is by no means small, for it supplies the primary condition of a real history. If the traditions were confusedly intermixed, this would stamp them as arbitrary manufactures, or products of popular fancy. Their not being so, though far from proving their reliableness as history, justifies ' As Kcihler wishes to do, although he acknowledges the iustiflcation of doouiueiitaiy analysis ; cf. FRE.'-\, p. 97. Chap. I.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 169 the presumption that we may perhaps succeed in finding a historic core in the history of the patriarchs. For actually reaching that core, as nearly as the means now at our command allow, there is but one means. We must endeavour to find confirmation of prominent facts belonging to the patriarchal history in witnesses brought from the Bible or elsewhere which can lay claim to historic credibility. It has indeed been thought right by some authors to entirely deny beforehand the historical validity of the patriarchal story. The absolutely unhistorical character of the narrative is main- tained on such grounds as the following : — It wears the garb of a mere family history ; the patriarchs are at one and the same time individuals and the ancestors of the tribes of Israel ; their history is in many respects interwoven with reminiscences of a later period and filled with views, sympathies, and antipathies which belong to the times of the author.^ Now it cannot be denied that no nation known to us in history can be traced back to a single progenitor. The spaces of time that intervene between the progenitor or progenitors and the nation are always too vast, and the complications and tribal mixtures too varied and numerous to allow of the development being traced back to those ancestors.^ It must likewise be admitted that the life and thought of a later time are in many respects interwoven in the story of Genesis. The characters of Esau and Ishmael obviously present the traits of the peoples derived from them. Ishmael, the wild son of the desert, is evidently the type of the Bedouin of the Arabian desert. The rough hunter, Esau, whom Jacob cozens and deprives of his birthright, is the model of the Edomites, who reached an independent national existence before Israel, but were soon siirpassed and subdued by the latter.^ ^ Dozy, Die Israeliten zu Melclca, 1864 ; Bernstein, Der XJrsprwng dtr Sagen uber Ahraham, Igaak und Jakob, 1871 ; Kuenen in Theol. Tijdschri/t, 1871, p. 255 ff. ; Goldziher, Mythology among the ffebrews, 1877 ; Popper, Ursprung den Monotheism, 1879. Among others cf. also Stade, Oesch. Isr., i. p. 127 f. ; Wellh. Proleg? p. 336. - Bernstein, ut supra, pp. 10 f., 38 ; Stade, ZA W. i. p. 347 ff. 3 Wellh. Proleg." p. 340 (Eng. Trans, p. 322). 170 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. But what does all this prove except that our sources are not historical documents in the strictest sense of the word ? If we wished to ascribe a historical character to the very words of Genesis or of one of its sources, we should at all events be going in opposition to the mode in which Genesis itself tells its story, as well as to the facts which we know concerning the origin of the nations. But none of the reasons alleged against the historical value of the core of the primitive history forbids our regarding the patriarchs as tribal chiefs, each of whom stood at the head of a nomad tribe already existent and subject to himself, to which, as its leader, he gave the name it subsequently bore. The family histories of Genesis are thus simply the form in which the events of a far distant past were preserved in the popular tradition of later generations. But in that tradition there survives matter which, though not historical in its every feature, must be held genuinely such in a number of essential leading points. Ewald 1 attributed great importance to the consideration that the tradition consistently describes the patriarchs as nomadic herdsmen, unacquainted with the blessings of an orderly, settled mode of life, whereas the Canaanites round about them had reached this long before. In this consciousness of having started from the life of wandering nomads, which the later Hebrews preserved, Ewald finds a reminiscence of the state of affairs preceding the stay in Egypt. Now it must be conceded that the force of this argument is somewhat diminished by the possibility of this later surviving consciousness having really originated in the nomadic life which the Hebrews lived after their stay in Egypt, and then being transferred to the period prior to that stay. But there is another consideration, also urged by Ewald, the force of which it is impossible to evade. He reminds us ^ that whilst all the accounts agree in representing it as the divine purpose that Abraham and the other patriarchs shall provisionally take posses- sion of the land of Canaan, they are never represented as actually ' Gesdi. Isr.^ i. p. 433 (Eng. Trans, i. p. 302). - lar.^ p. 437 f. (Eng. Trans, i. p. 305 f.). Chap. I.] Ji.-HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 171 possessing the whole. They confine themselves to small portions, and these, for the most part, of minor importance. Abraham settles in the south, pasturing alternately in the districts of Mamre-Hebron and Beersheba-Gerar. Isaac is found chiefly in the latter district, and Jacob in the country about Shechem. If the patriarchs had never actually lived in Canaan ; ^ if their abode there and their very personality had belonged merely to the realm of legend, it might have been confidently expected that the later legend would have been able to provide a more lasting and strong foundation for the claim to the whole land advanced by the Hebrews than this mere partial possession by their fathers. Nor is there any such great difficulty as Stade ^ imagines in believing that the Canaanites afterwards adopted sanctuaries founded by Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. If the Israelites subsequently did this with the Canaanite sanctuaries, and no one counts this impossible,* why should a like procedure on the part of the Canaanites be a thing so totally unheard of ? Another hypothesis has been proposed, according to which the ancestors of the people of Israel, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, are in the last resort nothing but original tribal deities.* Almost without exception its advocates have brought this forward as a mere conjecture without attempting to adduce any solid proof. As a matter of fact, there are no ' clear traces of this in our tradition.^ And it would seem self-contradictory^ to accept this theory and then admit that the genealogy of Abraham could ' Noldeke, Unters., p. 156 £f. ; Stade, Gesch. Ist: i. p. 110. = Gesch. i. p. 127. = Gf. Stade, Gesch. i. p. 128. * Noldeke, Untersuch., p. 157 ; Dozy, ut supra, p. 21 if. (likewise Goldziher and Popper) ; for Abraham, Meyer, Gesch. d. Alt. i. p. 374, and especially ZA W. vi. 16, viii. 43. — Abraham = Dusares — also Lagarde, Armen. Studien, 1877, p. 162, and Ubersicht, p. 93. Against the equation Abraham = Dusares, cf. also what Well- hausen adduces respecting Shar^, Seste arab. Heident., p. 45 ff. Cf. also Sayce, Hibbert Lect., 1887, pp. 285, 163 f., 181 ; W. R. Smith, Relig. of Sera." ^.iffi ; and Hewitt in Joum. of Roy. As. Soc, 1890, p. 754 ff. ' Jacob, on the contrary, is probably an ancient tribal name. It is only in the case of Esau that we might with some reason remember the later name Obed- Edom. On the other hand, the equation Abraham = Dusares (besides Lagarde and Mordtmann, see also now Ed. Meyer in ZA W. vi. 16) has too few tangible points of support to be held correct. " Cf. Dillm. Geii.' p. 215 f. 172 HISTORY OF THE HEBKEWS [Book I. also originate, for in it the tribal ancestors of Israel, whether they be persons or peoples, evidently find their place as progenitors of the people. § 16. Abraham} If we now proceed from this starting-point to test parti- culars, it will appear that in many respects we have historic ground beneath our feet — especially at the beginning and the end of the patriarchal history, the accounts of Abraham and Joseph. Later times have preserved the truest recollection of the two most important landmarks in the earliest history, the immigration into Canaan and the settlement in Egypt. It is a fixed point in Israelite tradition that the Hebrew nationality did not originate iu Canaan, but on the other side the Euphrates. Abraham separated himself from his father's house- hold, which had its home there, and set out westwards with a portion of the paternal tribe. He settled in Canaan as a nomad chief, and under special divine guidance came to look on this land as belong- ing to himself and his tribe. There needs no proof that, as this tradition indicates, the origin of the Hebrews points to the land of the two rivers. The fixed tradition of the Hebrews in E, J, P (Deut. xxvi. 5, Isa. xli. 9), the natural relationship between the Israelite and the Aramaean races, as well as the similarity in their speech, declare unmistakably in favour of this view. Hence the fact is unanimously admitted by all investigators, and the only outstanding question which will be dealt with below is, whether Haran is to be taken as the actual fatherland or as a merely temporary abode of the Hebrews. But Israelite tradition does more than mention the immigration of the tribe from the East ; it connects this in the most definite manner with the person of Abraham. What of the historical value of the picture which tradition gives of him ? ' On this subject cf. also Schrader in Silz.-Bcr. d. Burl. Akad. d. Wissensch., 1887, p. 600 ff. ; Wellh. Comp. d. Hex.'' 1889, p. 310 f. ; Hal6vy, Rev. des chides juiven, pp. 1 ff., 178 ff., 199. Chap. I.] i.'.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 173 It might seem as though the first thing to be done was to appeal to the mention of Abraham in the prophetical writings ^ of the Old Testament in proof of his historic reality. But the appeal would not give promise of any large result. The older of these passages are called in question.^ And all of them together bring us down to the period which is later than the oldest informa- tion respecting Abraham in Genesis. Consequently they only avail to show that in the time of those prophetic writings, especi- ally in the Exile, the figure of Abraham formed a fixed part of the popular consciousness, and was readily referred to by the prophets. The fact of Amos ^ or his immediate successors* not mentioning Abraham, as they do Isaac and Jacob, cannot lead to the conclu- sion that Abraham is the youngest patriarchal figure.^ In E and J, one at least of which precedes the earlier prophets, the figure of Abraham stands firmly beside Isaac and Jacob. And the special recollection of him during the Exile is easily explicable on other grounds.^ It is impossible not to recognise a certain amount of arbitrari- ness in the assertion that the name Abram is not historical but symbolical,^ invented therefore in the service of an idea, simply because it has a meaning ('exalted father'). If Abram, as seems quite plausible, is identical with Abiram, the historical employ- ment of the name, not only in Israel but also in Assyria,* can be directly shown. So much on the assumption that Abram is the original form. But if Abraham is the older, as Stade is inclined to think,^ we get at once the desired inexplicableness. Finally, unless we are willing to give up the mission of Moses and the prophetic idea of him — a course which even Wellhausen i" ' Micah vii. 20 ; Isa. xxix, 22 f. ; xli. 8 f . ; lii. 2 ; Ixiii. 16 ; Jer. xxxiii. 26 ; Ezek. xxxiii. 24 ; (Ps. cv. 6). " On Micah vii. 20, and Isa. xxix. 23, see Wellhausen, Proleg.' p. 338 (Eng. Trans, p. 320). ^ Amos vii. 9, 16 (Isaac). ■> Hosea xii. 3 f. ; Isa. ii. 3 ; ix. 8 ; x. 20 ; Micah i. 5. '• So Wellh. Proleg.^ p. 338 (Eng. Trans, p. 320). 6 Cf. Rosoh in StKr., 1885, p. 349. " Noldeke, ut supra, p. 157 ; Dozy, ut supra, p. 21 ff. 8 Schrader, KAT.' p. 200 (Eng. Trans, i. p. 190). " ZA W. i. p. 348 f. '" Abriss der Oesch. Isr. und Judas, p. 1 ff. (English Edition, p. 1 ff.). 174 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. and Smend ^ do not declare for — the patriarchal period, especially that of Abraham, must be regarded as the necessary presupposition for the Mosaic period. The religious position of Moses stands before us unsupported and incomprehensible unless we believe the tradition according to which he appealed to the God of their fathers. Moses would scarcely have made his way amongst his people if he had come in the name of a strange and hitherto unheard-of God. But he might reasonably hope for success if a fresh revelation had been made to him by the God of Abraham, who was still worshipped in some circles and still lived in the memory of the people. And what was there to induce the Israelite mythology to refrain from concentrating all the glory of founding the national Church and State on Moses, the greatest man in the nation's history ? Why should it not have made the history of the people open with the splendid triumph over the Egyptian bondage, the revelation of Yahvd to Moses on Sinai, the glorious conquest of Canaan ? To obtain a land assigned and presented to the people by Yahve in the time of Moses was not by a single hair's-breadth less legitimate than to inherit one made over and promised to their fathers. In either case it belonged to the people without any external title through a divine and therefore righteous appointment. If, in spite of all this, Israelite tradition, both in history and prophecy, goes further back than Moses and finds in the patriarchs the first roots not only of the possession of the land, but also of the people's higher worship of God, this can only be accounted for by assuming that memory had retained a hold of the actual course of events. It may, therefore, be assumed that the person of Abraham rests on a historical background. In particular, it seems pretty certain that what we are told concerning his higher knowledge of God cannot be regarded as mere fiction. It is noteworthy that the very oldest source ascribes his separation from his fellow-tribesmen to the religious position which he took up,^ and that in general his ' ZA W. ii. p. 199. •J Josh. xxiv. 2 f. (E). Cf. H. Schultz, ATL. Thfol.^ pp. 10.3 f., 112 (Eng. Trans, i. pp. 94, 97, 108). Chap. I.] B.- HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 175 significance from the religious point of view is repeatedly brought forward.! This idea of Abraham finds a strong confirmation in Gen. xiv., a portion of our sources which is distinguished in a remarkable way above all the rest of our information concerning Abraham by its contact with non-Israelite accounts of ancient date.^ But manifold objections have been raised against this narrative. Its literary peculiarities, both in speech and matter, are obvious and universally recognised ; hence it has been maintained that it did not find its place in the present union of the sources till very late, and indeed was not composed till late.^ But its contents especially aroused suspicion. Its object was believed to be trans- parent, the glorification, that is, as a heroic warrior, of the Abraham who till now has seemed to be but a 'Muslim and a prophet.' The names of the rebellious Canaanite kings were explained as symbols of rebellion ; the invading chiefs from the east were sup- posed to have been partly pure inventions and partly names put together out of remnants of tradition, the meaning of which had grown uncertain through the lapse of time. The plan of campaign adopted by the foreign kings was declared to be absurd, the forces called out by Abraham inadequate to a ' fight of nations,' the allies of Abraham to be heroes eponymi of the Hebron district. Melchi- zedek, the priest-king of Salem, who met Abraham, shared the same fate. His name is asserted to be symbolic and therefore unhistorical, his city to be a later reflex of Jerusalem, his two-fold dignity invented in support of a ' tendency,' his adoration of God historically impossible.* ' Cf. Gen. XV. 6 ; chap. xxii. ; Gen. xii. 2 f. ; xviii. 18 ; xxii. 18 ; xxvi. 4. ° On the Assyriologists' side, cf. especially Schrader, KAT.- p. 135 ff. (Eng. Trans, i. 120 ff.); Fr. Delitzsch, Par., p. 224; F. Hommel, Allg. Zeitg., 1880, No. 112; his Gtsch. Assyr. und Baby I., 1885, pp. 9, 150, 158; Tiele, Sab.-Assyr. Gesch., p. 123 f. Besides these, especially Ewald, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 432 (Eng. Trans, i. p. 301); Dillm. on Gen. xiv. ; Eosch, StKr., 1885, p. 321 ff. : in the last-named passage additional literature is given. = Meyer, Gesch. d. Altert., p. 165 f. ; with some reserve Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 414 f. ; Justi, Gesch. d. Altert., p. 155. •• Cf. especially Noldeke, Unters. z. Kritik d. AT., p. 156 ff. ; also Hitzig, Gesch. Isr., pp. 25, 44 f., and Bohlen earlier. 176 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Bop^ I. But these reasons are not sufficient to prove tlie occurrence unhistoric. Obviously and admittedly the literary character of Gen. xiv. forbids our placing it directly in an)' of the larger documents we possess, although in character and matter it stands nearest to E. A number of glosses and later notices prove it to have been re- vised by E, and it is to this revision that the reference to Jeru- salem and the payment of tithes there are due. But this does not justify the theory that the passage was composed late. For on the other hand there are unmistakable tokens of great antiquity. It gives us names which are found nowhere else save on the Assyrian monuments, and there point to a great antiquity. It is acquainted with circumstances in Canaan which survive also in the ancient reminiscences both of natives ' and of foreigners.'- 1 1 is conversant with the most ancient designation of God, found on Phoenician and Assyrian monuments, and within the Old Testa- ment in the portion dealing with Balaam, which also no doubt rests on ancient tradition. And if we cannot fit it directly into any of the extant sources a satisfactory explanation is forthcoming. The real explanation of its literary peculiarity is not that it was composed very late, but that it is of foreign origin. That E, rather than any other writer, should have worked up this foreign material, which bears on its face the stamp of its external origin, is quite natural. Ewald' correctly inferred its non-Israelite origin from its calling Abraham a Hebrew. Add to this the consideration that the narrative bears the stamp of antiquity, and there will be found good reason for the conjecture that it is an original ancient docu- ment of Canaanitish-Phoenician * origin, which probably came into being amidst a Canaanite priesthood before Israel inhabited the land ; the priests told the story at the sacrificial meals, and from them it subsequently passed over to the Israelite priests.-"* 1 Riehm. in StKr., 1885, p. 329. ^ Cf. the long list of Canaanite city-states in the catalogue of the successes of Thothmes ill., given by Brugsch, Oesch. Agijpt., p. 331 ff. (Eng. Trans, i. p. 351). 3 Gesch. /«•. i. p. 79 f. (Eng. Trans, i. p. 52). •" Dillm. Gen.' p. 232. •'■ Riisch, StKr., 1885, p. 355 f., after Stade, ZA W. i. p. 349. Chap. I.] iJ.— HISTORY OF THE PEEIOD 177 If this was the origin of our narrative the conjecture that it was invented for the purpose of glorifying Abraham by repre- senting him as a martial hero is materially shaken. That con- jecture has no reasonable basis save in the supposition that the narrative is modern. Still more markedly is this the case if its historical character can be independently shown to be probable on other grounds, apart from the antiquity of the story. In the first place this can be done for two of the Elamite names, the second and third, Arioch of Ellasar and Chedorlaomer of Elam. The opinion that we have here merely imaginary names and persons loses its probability in view of two facts on which Assyriologists are almost unanimous.^ The first is that Arioch must be regarded as identical with a King Eri[m]''-Aku of Larsa[m].* The second is that Chedorlaomer can be shown to be a quite probable name, on the one hand by the analogy of Kudur- Mabug, Eri-Aku's father, and on the other by the divine name Lagamar corresponding to the second half of the word. For we learn from an inscription of Assurbanipal's that in ancient times a king, who also had the prsenomen Kudur, Kudur-Nanhurdi of Elam, exercised (possibly 'founded'? circa 2280)* the Elamite suzerainty over Babylon. Consequently the designation of the foreigners as Elamites, striking as it is in itself, corresponds thoroughly with the monuments, whereas it would not be easy to explain it as a late invention. Other indications ^ appear to show that Kudur-Mabug also certainly belonged to the Elamite dynasty. Hence it must be looked on as established that Kudur- Lagamar belonged to that dynasty, although his name has not yet been found.'' This has been further confirmed by the discovery that Lagamar is the name of a specifically Elamite-Susian idol. It may possibly be inferred that Kudur-Lagamar was the elder ' Tiele is the only one, so far as I know, who has recently expressed doubts, see 11^ mpra, p. 124. " Solirader, Iri-Aht ; Tiele, Erim-Agit Schrader, Lama v. * Frd. Delitzsch, Calwer Bibelkx. p. 170; Meyer, Gesch. d. Altert., p. 164; Tiele, Bab.-Asn. Oesch., p. 118. » Schrader, KAT.'^^p. 135, 1.S7 (Eng. Trans, i. 120, 12-2). « Thus also Meyer, § 136. M 178 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. brother of Eriaku, seeing that Gen. xiv. represents him as a con- temporary of Eriaku, the son of Kudur-Mabug. Another important point is that at least traces of the campaign described in Gen. xiv. are met with in the tradition recorded on the monuments. The Elamite king mentioned above calls him- self king of Martu — the West— which implies a conquering campaign of the Elamites against Syria, and Palestine.^ Moreover, he appears as king of Sumii-, Accad and Ur, that is, as the supreme king to whom Eriaku would stand in the relation of a vassal prince so long as his father lived. ^ If we might assume that Kudur-Lagamar was a Kuduride of the same dynasty, older brother, say, to Eriaku, the commanding position towards the other kings taken by the Chedorlaomer of the Bible would be explained.^ E. Hommel believes that the campaign may be dated approxi- mately 2150 B.C.* This being the state of the case it seems to me to be in the highest degree probable that in Gen. xiv. we have a historical reminiscence of ancient date. At any rate this theory enables us far more easily to imagine how the passage originated than the other hypothesis does. The latter traces our story back in the most forced, nay almost impossible, manner to the historical learning of a Jew who lived in the Exile. Perhaps nothing more can be said about the names of the defeated kings, the signification of which defies explanation, except that they are possibly unintelligible Hebraized foreign names. In any case the explanations proposed by the Eabbis, and partially adopted by Hitzig and Noldeke, according to which they mean villain, rogue, etc., are humorous fancies rather than scientific etymologies. On the other hand, if the campaign of the Elamites is a fact, we are not entitled to speak of an absurd plan of cani- 1 This is opposed by Tiele, ul supra, p. 124. But his own view is merely conjectural ; on the other side, cf. the campaigns of Sargon i. against Syria : Tiele, p. 114 (113). - Schrader, KAT.^ p. 135 (Eng. Tr. i. 121). » Gen. xiv. 4 f. '' Die Semit. Volk. undSpr., i. p. 342; whereas he formerly brought it down to about the year 1700, Munch. Ally. Z. 1880, No. 112; also in the Abriss der Bah.-Ass. Ocfch., p. 3 '' As Meyer does, p. 166. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 179 paign.i seeing that we do not know enough about the extent of their dominion in 'the west land,' or the events contemporary with this campaign. And the text of the narrative shows plainly enough that it is not describing a victory over the enemy in pitched battle or a battle of nations. It is a mere surprise of the enemy's rearguard and a recovering of a portion of their booty. For this purpose Abraham's three hundred and eighteen picked servants, aided by the forces of his allies, were sufficient. To the existence of one of these allied tribes, that of Mamre, testimony is in all probability borne by the well-known list of the Palestinian populations conquered by Thothmes iii.^ It is an indication of the historical character of our tradition that the name of this old South-Canaanite region is mentioned nowhere in the Old Testament except in Genesis. Hence it would seem that even as a place, Mamre had no later existence. This appears to exclude the possibility of later events having been transferred in legendary form to the earliest period. The portion of Gen. xiv. which treats of the enigmatical figure of Melchizedek, has been very largely revised by E. Yet the balance of evidence is in favour of its being regarded as historical. It is not correct to speak of the name as the product of invention. Melchizedek is doubtless an old Canaanite or Phoenician name of the same form and meaning as Adoni-zedek.^ It is open to doubt whether the Moloch or Adon on the one hand or the Zedek on the other, is the proper name of the divinity. Both views have found representatives.* In any case the analogy before us is far from justifying the assertion that the name is unhistoric. The twofold dignity of priest-king which is ascribed to Melchizedek in Gen. xiv. is just as little in favour of that assertion. Tor not only have we ' On this c/. Dillm. GenS' p. 232, and especially Hommel, Bah. -Ass. Gesch., p. 170, where the movement here mentioned is brought into connection with the Hyksos. - Marmaama, in Brugsch, Gesch. Agyp., p. 333 (Eng. Trans, i. 351), No. 85. Less confidently, Wiedemann, Agyp. Gesch., p. 349. ' Joshua X. 1. See below, § 29. ■• For one of them, cf. E. Nestle, Isr. Eigennamen, p. 175 ff; for the other, W. V. Baudissin, Stud. z. sem. Peligloni'geschichte, i. p. 15. 180 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. n Moses' father-in-law, Keuel-Jethro, such a priest-priuce of very ancient date.^ but the history of Egypt presents us with an entire period (Twenty-first Dynasty) of priest-kings.^ Still less permissible is it to found the doubt of Melchizedek's being a historical personage on the statement that he worshipped the Most High God (El- elyon). El-elyon seems to have been a primitive Semitic name of the deity and therefore contains nothing artificial and nothing that would be impossible in Abraham's time. In fact, El =11 is the oldest divine name common to the Babylonians, Assyrians, Phoenicians and Sabffians.^ Babylonians as well as Phoenicians acknowledge a most higli God, the latter even in name, the former at all events in fact.* We do not say that their god is the same as Abraham worshipped. But he stood nearer than any other to Abraham's god and therefore could most easily be acknowledged by the patriarch. For this monolatric title ' most high God ' did at any rate mark a higher stage than that of the grossest heathenism. § 17. The Original Home of Abraham and the Hebrews.^ Comparison of the sources has shown us that they are in complete agreement as to the derivation of Abraham and his tribe from the Aramaean north-east (Haran : Charrag). On the other hand, the examination of the sources has shown that though E and the main stream of the Yahvistic source do not mention a more remote home of Abraham's, J and especially '^ P have preserved a more exact recollection. According to them, Haran is only a station of Abraham's on the road from his proper home to Canaan. ' See Eosch, id sujyi-a, p. 338. - Jiisti, Gesch. d. Altert., p. 219. ' Noldeke in Sitz.-Ber. d. Berl. Akad. d. W., 1880, p. 760 ff. ; Meyer, Gesch. der Alt. i. 173 ff. ; <■/• -^-^ ^^- '^i- P- 5- ; ^l^o Lagarde, Orient, ii. p. 3 ff. ; Mittheil. i. p. 94 ff. *' See the proofs in Rosch, «/ supra, p. 342 ; cf. also Num. xxiv. 16. 5 For more particulars see my article, Die Herhmft der Herhraer nach dem AT., in ThStW. vii. (1886), pp. 187-220. Cf. also Brown, in the Jmim. of Soc. of Bib. Lit. and Exeg., 1887, p. 46 ff. ; Winckler, Unters. zur allorient. Gesch., p. 66 ff. ; and Dillmann, Gen.^ p. 214 f. * The words ClbS 11ND, Gen. xi. 316, can in no case be taken away from P ; ./. Budde, Urfje^ch., p. 427, and ThSlW. vii. pp. 190f., 220. Chap. I.] J5.— HISTORY OP THE PERIOD 181 This true home of his is here called Ur Kasdim. The question is whether and in what way these data can be harmonised. Assyriology has long believed itself to have discovered the Biblical Ur Kasdim in the ancient Babylonian seat of culture, Uru, on the Lower Euphrates.^ The city of Uru corresponds to the present heap of ruins at Mugheir.- The facts brought out by Assyriologists preclude all doubt as to the existence of a place and kingdom called Uru in the land which afterwards belonged to the Chaldees. But this affords no proof of the identity of this Ur with the Biblical Ur of Abraham-^^ Their identity could not be confidently maintained unless the tenor of the Biblical statements led us to think that Abraham started from a district in the south of Babylonia. But this is not the case. It is clear that P did not look for Ur Kasdim in the district where the Ur of south Babylonia lies, for the following reasons : 1. There can be no doubt that the genealogy given by P in Gen. xi. 10 ff. takes for granted the gradual onward movement of the Semites of Arpachsad's line from the north of Armenia to Mesopotamia. They then finally move straight on to Haran, and make a temporary stay there. 2. The name Kasdim is indeed mainly used of the popula- tion inhabiting the south of Babylonia. But it has been demon- strated that a tribe of Chaldeans * also dwelt in Armenia, in the ' Sohrader, KAT.^ p. 129 ff. (Eng. Trans, i. 114 ff.) ; KGF., p. 94 ff. ; and in Riehm's HWB., Art. 'Ur Kasdim;' Delitzsch, Parad., pp. 200, 226 f. ; Hommel, Geseh. Ass. und Bob., p. 115 (map). ^ For the position of Mugheir see the map in Schrader's KA T. and that in Hommel's Gesch. Assyr., p. 115. •■ Besides Halevy. Cf. also now Tiele, Bab.-Ass. Gesch., p. 85. * Dillm. Gen.^ p. 194; Justi, Gesch. des AUert., Map on p. 119; also Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 126, allows at least the possibility. Somewhat differently now in Dillmann, Gen." 195 f. But the entire question assumes a new aspect if tlie statements from the Armenian Cuneiform Inscriptions can be supported. Cf. especially Sayoe, ' The Cuneif. Inscrip. of Van,' Joum. Roy. As. Soc, xiv. p. 377 ff., and Lehmann, Zeitschr. fiir Eihnolor/ie, 1892, p. 128 ff. Chaldis (Haldis) are there spoken of (D''^7^ ?)• It is therefore no longer allowable to talk of Armenian Chaldaeans (D'ltJ'3)- The statements of Xenophon and Stephen of Byzantium (see Lehmann, ut supra, p. 131) thus receive a striking confirmation. But it becomes so much the more difficult to make use of them in determining the locality of Ur Kasdim. 182 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. land near the Upper Tigris. Possibly the second half of the name Arpachsad refers to them.^ Xenophon, too, mentions Chal- deans in Armenia, and although Strabo identifies these with the Chalybes it does not follow that Xenophon himself^ confounded the two. It was Strabo who did this, and his error does not invalidate Xenophon's statement. 3. In harmony with Gen. xi. 10 ff. (see No. 1) P states that the ark rested on the mountains of Ararat,^ which must be in the north or north-west of Assyria. Accordingly he makes that the starting-point of the subsequent history and spread of mankind. It is therefore almost impossible to imagine him suddenly trans- planting the Semites to the mouth of the Euphrates, and making this their starting-point, simply to bring them back again to the place where they once stood with Serug. The same considerations apply to J, but with even additional force. Here too, at all events in the J ^ stratum, we meet with the name Ur Kasdim.* J does not state where the ark landed. Budde has therefore now adopted the view that this source must liave meant a mountain in the south of the land of the Two Eivers,^ corresponding to the Babylonian tradition of Mount Nizir. From this point Noah's descendants will then have pressed on to Ur, in the not very far distant south of Babylonia. Terah and Abraham are then supposed to have wandered to Haran. I doubt whether this conjecture is adapted to solve the difficulty. Its probability is diminished by the fact that we are acquainted with a native Assyrio-Babylonian tradition, which places the mountain where the ark landed considerably farther to the north ^ (in the Gordian mountain-range). This shews that another site for tlie landing of the ark, beside that in South Babylonia, is quite within the bounds of possibility. And the assertion that ^ So Kwald, Geaenius, Dillmann. On the reference to the name "IM see ThSt W. vii. p. 216 ff. = So Schrader in Riehm's HWB., p. 1702. ' Cf. against Reuss, Budde, Urgeach., p. 269 ff. ■* This refutes the suspicion that the name is a later interpolation, expressed by Wellhausen, Proleg." p. 330 (Eng. Trans, p. 313), after Lagarde. ^ Budde, Urgeach., p. 438. " Berossus ; cf. Budde, p. 435. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 183 the moimtaius of Ararat are entirely unsupported by tradition, and are a mere scholastic tradition,^ is seen to be groundless. But the idea that the mountain on which the ark grounded was in the south is found worthless when we remember that it does not make it any easier to understand how J should represent Ur as being in South Babylonia. In the first place it is a fact that J (J 1 and J -), as well as P, knows that the pre-Abrahamic Semites dwelt in the north. What a marvellous zis-zaa: we must ascribe to J - if we make him take the Semites from the mountain in the south on which they landed, to Mesopotamia in the north (Pelug, Serug), thence to Ur-Mugheir, and thence to Haran. Budde himself acknowledges that the route in P, Ararat, Ur- Mugheir, Haran, constitutes a difficulty.- How much more must he feel the difficulty in J ! Thus it becomes clear : — for the connection and the under- standing of the sources P and J the equation Ur = Mugheir is valueless. It is absolutely impossible to understand how these two sources could have harmonised the origin of Abraham in South Babylonia with the rest of their statements. But, as we have seen above, all our sources (whether mentioning Haran or not) point to the Mesopotamian north, the land of Aram. And Ur, in the south of Babylonia, agrees neither with Isa. xli. 9 nor with Deut. xxvi. 5. It may therefore be confident^ believed that the origin of the Hebrews from Southern Babylonia finds no support in Biblical tradition. The consentient testimony of the sources leads us rather to look for their native land in Aram, the Mesopotamian north, whither they may perhaps have emigrated from the moun- tain regions that lie still farther north. § 18. The Immigration of the Hebrews into Egypt. The sources found in our He.xateuch unanimously assert that Abraham's descendants, after living for an undefined period in Canaan, passed over to Egypt and settled there. On this, as on » Budde, p. 4.i0. - Urgesch., p. 4,")S. 1S4 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. other statements, criticism has fastened, and the opinion has recently been propounded that a settlement of the ancestors of Israel in Egypt is altogether improbable, or, at any rate, in the liighest degree uncertain.^ The point chiefly relied on is the supposed total absence of native Egyptian statements respecting the presence of the Hebrews. When we come to the history of Joseph and of Moses we shall have to inquire whether there is this perfect blank which people are now inclined to assume. Our task would be greatly lightened if we were at liberty to identify the designation 'Apuriu which is found in the Egyptian records with ' Ibrim,' and attach it directly to the Israelites.- This would settle the question as to the latter having lived iu Egypt. The possibility seems all the more tempting, seeing that we have two hieratic papyri at Leyden, according to which these 'Apuriu were not only a people subject to the Egyptians, but were actually employed in severe forced labours, just in the same way as the Book of Exodus relates of the Israelites." But linguistic and historical reasons render this iden- tification of 'Apuriu and Hebrews so doubtful * that it would at least be difficult to rely thereon for a historical determination of the abode of the Hebrews in Egypt.'' Yet if we leave aside the name 'Apuriu, the fact is certain that from ancient times, and therefore doubtless in those days which would correspond with the immigration of the Hebrews under Joseph, Semites frequently wandered into Egypt from the Peninsula of Sinai. We know from the Egyptian monuments that the fertile land of Egypt was from of old the granary of the sur- rounding nations, and that the productive Nile Valley repeatedly ' Stade, Geach. Im-. i. p. 128 f. ; Meyer, Gesch. d. Altert. i. p. 348 ; Justi, Ge.'ich. d. Orient. V., p. 272. - Chabas, Melanges igyplol. i. p. 42 f. ; Eech. p. sero., etc., p. 142 if. ; Ebers, AyBMos., p. 316; Gosen,- p. 505 f. Cf. further Wiedemann, Arj. Gesch., p. 491. - Brugsch, Gesdt. Agypt., p. 541 (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 88). * Cf. especially Brugsch, ut siipra, p. 582 f. (Eng. Trans. 11. 129) ; further, Kohler, £ibl. Gesch., i. p. 240 f. ' We shall have to speak of Naville's latest excavations and their results when we reach the history of Moses. Chap. I.] JS.— HISTOEY OF THE PERIOD 185 attracted the longing gaze of the Bedouins who lived sparely in the desert-district of the north.^ When the Hebrew tradition itself mentions that the patriarchs who preceded Joseph several times took refuge in Egypt in periods of famine, this certainly comes from old recollections, although we are no longer in a position to indicate precisely the several occasions. It is true that tribes such as the 'Amu and Shashu are named on the monuments as having paid such visits, whilst the Hebrews are not mentioned. But this is not to be wondered at, considering how many such foreign immigrations took place, especially during the Middle Egyptian Kingdom. There is not a single statement in the old Egyptian monuments which can be unhesitatingly explained as referring to the immigration of the so-called Hyhsos. Yet this was of far more significance to Egypt than that of the Hebrews. To determine when and whence the Hyksos came we have to depend almost entirely on late and inadequate information. The monuments do not even give their name. This being so, it is simply marvellous how the silence of the monuments with respect to the Hebrews could have been adduced as a weighty argument against their having stayed in Egypt. And what robs this evidence of any pre- tence to validity is the fact that we can indicate reasons which forbade Egyptian national pride to mention the immigration and exodus of the Hebrews. 'To depict these events would have involved the humiliating confession that God had punished them ; a patriotic writer living in the court of the Pharaohs could not easily have brought himself to this.' ^ And it is at the same time almost incredible that a people whose national sentiment was so developed, so almost arrogant, as was the case with the Hebrews, would have invented the fiction of a long-continued, shameful bondage suffered by their forefathers.^ Moreover, there is no event in the entire history of Israel that has more deeply imprinted itself in the memory of later generations of this people than the abode in Egypt and the exodus from the 1 Ebers, AgBMoa., pp. 98 f., 196, 256 f. = Brugsch, ut supra, p. 583 (Eng. Trans, ii. 130). 2 See Ebers, in Mnnch. Ag. Zeit., 1885, No. 110. 186 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. land of the Nile.^ Samuel, Saul, Solomon, almost David himself, stand in the background compared with the Egyptian house of bondage and the glorious deliverance thence. Evidently we have here no mere creation of the legends of the patriarchs, but a fact which lived deep down in the consciousness of the people in quite early times from Hosea and the Book of Samuel onwards, a fact graven deep in their memory. It would betoken_a_high and more than normal degree of deficiency of historical sense. in the Israelite national character, if a purely mythical occurrence gave the key- note of the whole national life and formed the starting-point of the entire circle of religious thought as early as the days of the first literary prophets. § 19. Tlie PersoTuditij of Joseph. If we have thus ascertained that the children of Israel actually dwelt in Egypt, we may also expect to find a core of historical fact in the ancient tradition about Joseph. Eecent authors have with good reason shown an inclination to recognise in the history of Joseph a more than ordinary number of historical reminiscences.^ In the earliest conflicts of Israel, we see the lead taken by the tribe of Joseph ^ or the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh,* which were descended from him. That cannot be accidental. It must be the reflection of an old recollection dating from the earliest days of the Hebrew nationality. But Joseph owes this subsequent leadership to the position of initiative and rule which he held in Egypt. It need hardly be said that the history of Joseph is not to be ' Cf., eg., 1 Sam. ii. 27 ; vi. 6 ; Amos ix. 7 ; Hos. xi. 1 ; xii. 14 ; xiii. 4 ; Isa. X. 24 ; Micah vi. 3 f. ; vii. 15 ; Jer. ii. 6 ; \i\. 25 ; Ezek. xx. 6 f. ; Isa. xliii. 16 f. ; U. 9 ff. ; bciii. 11. - Ewald, Gesch. Iir.^ i. p. 580 S. (Eng. Trans, p. 405 ff.), Ebers, AgBMos., p. 256; Dillm. Gen.'- pp. 397 f., 438 f. ; Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., -p. 64; Bragsch, Gesch. Ag., p. 243 S. (Eng. Trans, i. 261 ff.) ; Wiedemann, Atjypt. Gesch., p. 293 (with reservations). = Judges i. 22 ff: ; Josh. xvii. 14 ff., and below, § 27, Xo. 2. ' Judges ^-iii. 1 f. ; ix. 1 f. ; xii. If. Cf. WeUh. Prolef/.- p. 341 (Eng. Trans, p. 323) ; Reuss, Gesch. d. AT., p. 64. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 187 taken as a mere record of family history.^ When he emigrated into Egypt his tribesmen ^ were certainly with him, and we shall doubtless be justified in regarding his immigration and that of his tribe as precisely parallel to the movements of other Semitic tribes, known to us from the tombs of Beni-Hasan and elsewhere, who made their way into the Nile Valley. It is impossible to state definitely the cause of Joseph's migration. The most obvious supposition, according both with the idea of the family historj' and the characteristics of nomad tribes, is a disagree- ment with the other Abrahamic tribes which compelled Joseph to turn southwards. Perhaps we should not go far wrong in ascribing the flight into Egypt to undeserved hostility and treachery practised by his brother-tribes against Joseph.* In any case we may hold to this as a settled and historical feature of the tradi- tion ; the tribe of Joseph, driven out by the rest, reached Egypt iu a mean position, made its way there to power and dignity, drew its brother-tribes after it, and then gained the leadership over them. We regard Joseph then as having been the chief of a tribe, and seek to lift his history in part, like that of the other patriarchs, out of the narrow frame of a mere popular picture of family life. The history of Abraham has already shown that we are not thus precluded from believing that such a person as Joseph really lived. As to the name, indeed, opinions might differ, for it is admitted that Joseph is the ancient name of a tribe which disappeared afterwards. There is still more room for discussion as to the relationship which the tradition asserts between this tribal chief and Abraham and Jacob. Frequently enough these family rela- tions are but the forms in which the larger tribal relations are expressed. But there must have existed some such person as the Joseph depicted in Genesis. The tribe of Joseph which 1 Ewald, i.' p. 580 £f. (Eng. Trans., i. p. 405 ff.); Ebers, AgBMos., p. 255; Dillm. Gen.^ p. 397 ; Beuss, Geseh. d. AT., p. 64. - Cf. especially Ed. Meyer's interesting article in ZA W. vi. (1886), p. 1 ff. He believes that in the well-known list of the tribes subdued by Thothmes in. he has found, in addition to the name Jacob, that for Joseph (IXSC' ; T = ?)) in the form Joseph-el. On this see above, § 4, No. 1 . ^ Reuss, ?(< snpra, p. 64. 18S HISTOEY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. immigrated into Egypt must certainly have possessed a prominent chieftain who stood in a special relation to Egypt. Ti-adition gives him the same name as the tribe. The history of Joseph evinces a close acquaintance with Egyptian affairs and customs. Ebers,^ especially, has set this forth with much knowledge and care. This has been a favourite argument for the historic existence of Joseph, and the truthfulness of the account Genesis gives of him. It is evident that the fact, however valuable in itself, cannot be admitted to prove the case completely. It only shows that our author or authors were well acquainted with Egypt. There is indeed more force in the appeal to this fact when such a critical view of our documents is taken as we have so far maintained than there was when the Pentateuch was held to be a literary unity. In opposition to that view it was comparatively easy to maintain that an author who knew Egypt, and had perhaps lived there for a while, composed the story of Joseph, and clothed it in an Egyptian garb. This account of the matter is almost impossible now that two distinct main sources for the history of Joseph, J and E, are imiversally recognised. Tlie sources vary so widely from each other that they must have been written at different times and places. They contain many differences of no small importance, so that they can hardly be traced back to a common literary original, yet they agree completely in bearing the genuine Egyptian stamp. It must also be admitted that the Egyptian element in the narrative cannot be mere literary colouring. It must belong to the core of the narrative. This points to a comparatively high antiquity and testifies to the existence of an ancient tradition, dating as far back as the Egyptian period itself. The Egyptian colouring of the narrative does not immediately prove its historical reliableness, but the proof of that reliableness is materially supported by a noteworthy argument in favour of its high antiquity. Brugsch^ has ascribed especial importance to the account ^ Agypten und d. BB. Monia ; see also Riehm in HWB. Art. ' Josef.' ■' Gesch. Agypt., p. l'44 ff. (Eng. Trans, i. •2'u ff.) Chap. I.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 189 which he brought to light of a long-continued famine in Egypt. It is contained in an inscription at El-Kab in the grave of a certain Baba, whom Brugsch has shown to have very probably been the father of the well-known admiral Aahmes. The Nile overflows with such extraordinary regularity as to make a really long-continued famine one of the rarest of events. Brugsch, therefore, believes that the famine here recorded may be very confidently identified with that of seven years' duration which Genesis connects with the name of Joseph. Another point is that the period in which Brugsch places this famine comes well within those general limits of time to which Joseph's abode in Egypt must belong. Nor is this affected by our decision as to whether the period of Ea-Saqenen is to be connected with that of King Apepi, or whether the latter name shall be given up (see below). We know, indeed, that Aahmes, who is said to have played a great part under his namesake Aahmes i., founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty, was born under King Ea-Saqenen of the Seventeenth Dynasty.^ This would make Ea-Saqenen of the Seventeenth Dynasty to be Joseph's Pharaoh. But we have another ancient account, according to which Joseph reached Egypt in the days of a king called Apepi. Brugsch, therefore, brings the two data into agreement by the hypothesis that the Hyksos king,^ Ea-Saqenen, with whom Joseph had to do, ruled contemporaneously with the native king, Apepi, and the dynasty was reckoned, in the national Egyptian sources, after the name of the latter.^ Wiede- mann, on the contrary, takes no account of this famine, believes it to be, at least, probable that Joseph's elevation took place under King Apepi [l.], and reckons this monarch as belonging to the Sixteenth Dynasty. According to this view the two dynasties were not contemporaneous, and Joseph's date falls a little earlier ' Weidemann, vX awpra, p. 301. " Lepsius, Ghronol. i. p. 389 ff., and PEE.- i. p. 174, and Ebers, AgBMo.i., p. 260, pronounce against the idea of an immigration under a Hyksos king. But the Hyksos, at all events, adopted the Egyptian language and manners. » Brugsch, ut supra, p. 247 (Eng. Trans, i. 260). 190 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. than Brugsch would make it, about 1842, Brugsch giving 1750. It is impossible to decide the point. We do not hesitate to admit that the coincidence of the time of the famine with the conjectural date of Joseph, together with the extraordinary inf requency of great famines in Egypt,^ seems tc us to be of real weight in favour of the identification of the two famines, and consequently in support of the history of Joseph generally. The only plausible objection is the general uncertainty in our determination of the dates connected with the Middle Egyptian Kingdom. But that uncertainty applies to Aahnies (whose connection with Baba hardly admits of dispute) far less than to most of the other persons and epochs of the period. The native Egyptian monuments do then at least render it highly probable that there was a famine in Joseph's time. Eoi the rest of his history, however, and especially for his successes in Egypt, we are not in the same position. Above all else we have no ancient Egyptian account of Joseph's famous financial measures, by which the entire country, excepting the estates oi the priests, was made crown property, and the people were bound as a sort of serfs to cultivate the king's land and pay the fifth oi the produce as rent. At any rate we know that these statements correspond on the whole with the picture given us in other sources of the constitution and administration of Egypt.- But the monu- ments neither inform us that the fifth was the proportion paid noi mention the name of the author of the plan. The Greek narrators. Herodotus and Diodorus,^ equally fail to supply certain informa- tion on the point. But it seems to us that one fixed datum is furnished by a discrepancy between these two Greek authors and ' In opposition to which it would not be well to adduce such passages as Isa. xiv 5 ff., Zech. xiv. 18 (Kohler, Bibl. Gesch. i. p. 158), which do not refer to actual events, but to possibilities expressed in prophetical language. - Herod, ii. 109 : Sesostris divided the land amongst all the Egyptians, so that each received an equal quadrilateral portion, from which the king then derived his revenue in the shape of an annual tribute. Further, e.ij., Ebers, in Kiehm'aHWB.,p. 326. ■' I refer to the thorough treatment of this subject, where all the passages are discussed, in Riehm, HWB., p. 76.S. Chap. I.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 191 the Biblical story. The latter states that the priests were not under the necessity of selling their lands, because they received their maintenance from the king. To this corresponds the fact that the priests always appear in ancient Egyptian narratives as great landowners.^ But it does not seem to harmonise with this when both Herodotus and Diodorus^ mention the warriors as land- owners, together with the king and priests. Herodotus,-^ however, relates that an earlier king than Sethos handed over to the mili- tary class their estates, and that Sethos took them back again. Diodorus,^ on the other hand, gives to the first of these kings the very name Sesostris. Hence, whatever may have been the his- torical relation between the two kings,'' Sethos and Sesostris, it is clear that Diodorus agreed with Herodotus in believing that at an earlier period none but the priests and the king held land. The classical writers and Genesis are therefore quite at one on this matter. As, then, the classics admit of the belief that the military class were made landowners at a comparatively early date, it follows that the reminiscence which the Old Testament, has pre- served on this point also is very ancient. Our narrative must go back beyond the times of the Sesostris of Diodorus, and the credibility of at least its leading statements is thus proved probable.^ 1 Ebers, in Riehm's HWB., p. 326. - Herod, ii. 168 ; Diod. i. 73 f. '' Herod, ii. 141. ■" Herod, i. 54. According to the context the jjassage can only refer to the estates handed over to the military class. * Sesostris is usually looked on as a blending of Sethi I. and Rameses ii. (Ebers in Riehm's HWB., p. 332). ^ On the opposite side, cf. Kuenen, Theol. Tijdnchr. v. (1871) p. 266 ff., where, however, reference is made only to Herod, ii. 109 and Diod. i. .54, 57. The discrepancies within the Biblical narrative itself (p. 268 ff.) prove nothing, for the question is not as to the form, but as to the essential contents of the account. CHAPTER II. MOSES AND THE JOUENEY THKOUGH THE DESERT. I. THE TEADITION IN THE SOURCES. § 20. J's Narrative. Almost everywhere from Exodus to Joshua the two oldest sources, J and E, are utilised with such freedom by the Deuteronomic editor as to make it much more difficult to keep them apart than it is in Genesis. We might therefore be inclined to abandon in despair the attempt at a searching analysis, and to base our his- torical investigation on that form of their union and blending which lies before us in the Deuteronomic edition (E"*, Well- hausen's JE). But as a matter of fact such abundant traces of those original sources come to light as to compel the historian to fix his attention on each by itself whenever the two oldest accounts can be distinguished. Hence we prefer to venture once more on the attempt to hear separately the reports of these two documents. This will naturally fail to issue in a perfectly reliable conclusion as to some points, but in the weightiest events of the Mosaic history it yields many an interesting and surprising result. I cannot hold J to be older than E, but I put it first here because in many respects it strikes the key-note, and several general ques- tions are brought to an issue in dealing with it better than inE. J's Writing, at all events, contained some statement respect- ing the increase of Jacob's descendants in Egypt and the measures taken against them by Pharaoh, especially the order to slay the 192 Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 193 male children of the Israelites. But it is difficult to make out with certainty the traces of this narrative in the context as it now stands. Here, and in the sequel, they are only to be seen in single fragments.^ Naturally they allow us to infer the existence at one time of a fuller narrative, running parallel to the one we now have from E. A still-existing remnant ^ shows that J also had an account of the exposure of Moses and his being found and adopted by Pharaoh's daughter. "When Moses is grown up he slays an Egyptian and flees to Midian. Here he dwells with Eeuel, the priest of Midian, whose daughter, Sippora, he wins to wife. She bears him Gershom.^ The angel of the Lord appears to him on Sinai in a burning bush and reveals to him Yahv^'s purpose of delivering Israel out of the hand of the Egyptians and leading them into the land of the Canaanites. Moses is to return to Egypt and make known to the people * Yahve's resolve. He is at the same time to demand from Pharaoh permission for the people to go three days' journey into the wilderness to sacrifice to Yahve. With. this, how- ever, the prospect is set before him that Pharaoh will not willingly let them go.^ Moses endeavours to evade Yahve's commission by objecting that the people wiU not believe him. By way of credentials Yahv^ therefore gives him three signs which he is to perform before Israel: the staff which he casts on the ground becomes a serpent ; his hand, placed in his bosom, becomes leprous ; Nile water, which he is to pour out, shall become blood. Moses objects a second time, saying that he is of a slow tongue. Yahv^ meets this with the question : ' Who hath given speech to man ? ' and the assurance that He will be with him.« The final despondent refusal of Moses : ^ ' Send whom Thou 1 At least Exod. i. 22 (against Dillmann) and 206 (against Kuenen) belong to these ; possibly also some words in v. 14. ' Exod. ii. 6. 3 Exod. ii. 11-14 (Wellh. against Dillm.), 16-23. * In place o£ the communication to the elders it probably stood thus originally in J. 5 Parts of Exod. jii. 2 (especially 2aa) ; further, iii. 4a, 7 f. (probably excepting 8bS) 166-22 (leaving out some small portions in this section, especially in v. 18). 'Exod. iv. 1-12. ' Exod. iv. 13-16 ; rf. Wellh. xxi. p. 541. 194 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. wilt send/ is answered wrathfully by Yahv4, who says that Aaron is now coming to meet him and shall speak what Moses puts in his mouth. "Whether this belongs to the original context depends on our view of the further appearance of Aaron in this connection. Affecting as it does the entire historical position and significance of Aaron, the question demands a somewhat detailed discussion. Both in J and E Moses himself is his own spokesman before Pharaoh, whereas in P Aaron speaks and acts for Moses as the latter directs. A glance at the text before us is enough to show that Aaron is introduced suddenly, in a somewhat unceremonious fashion and a somewhat dilapidated context. 'This suggests the sus- picion that the editor may have interpolated the passage. And the suspicion appears to be confirmed by the fact that almost always after Moses has spoken, Pharaoh suddenly assumes that Aaron is present, and usually addresses Moses and Aaron, whereas Moses alone then comes in again as the intercessor.^ Wellhausen ^ has thus been led to the conclusion that the introduction of Aaron is due to the Yehovist (JE) who ' deemed Aaron's assistance especi- ally suitable on occasions of intercession.' But we have seen more than one reason for doubting the existence of Wellhausen's JE. And his interposition on this particular occasion is all the more open to doubt if neither J nor E knew of Aaron's co- operation here. JE cannot have brought in Aaron as a pure invention. If it is imagined that we have here an editorial inter- polation, it must have been made by E"* or E*" from P. For the latter source is the only one that lays such stress on Aaron's co- operation as might have led an editor who was familiar with this source to attempt to adjust other narratives to it. But the way and manner of Aaron's appearance in the text renders it more than doubtful to me whether we have here an instance of a mere editor's activity. If an editor ascribed special importance to Aaron's presence because he was inclined to attribute to Aaron 1 Cf. Exod. vii. 14, 26; viii. 16; ix. 1, 13; with viii. 4, 21, 24; ix. 27, 28; X. 3, 8, 11, 16, on the one hand, and with viii. 5, 22, 25 ; ix. 29, and viii. 8, 26 ; ix. 33 ; X. 18, on the other. 2 JDTh. xi. pp. 5.38, 541. Chap. II.] £.— HISTOKY OF THE PERIOD 195 a leading part in the entire affair, he would have had to introduce the missing name everywhere, or, at all events, whenever Moses came before Pharaoh. But this is just what he does not do. This proves that we have an original text to deal with, and not a designed editorial correction. It appears to me, after all is said, to be possible that the pre- liminary announcement of the co-operation of Aaron the Levite, in chap. iv. 13-16, was slightly altered^ by the last editor or the Deuter- onomic editor in conformity with the text of P in its original con- dition. Chap. iv. 27-31 may also be due to this later hand.^ But I think the events that happened in Pharaoh's presence are nar- rated in precise accordance with the original sources. The casual, accidental, and unpretentious manner in which Aaron is mentioned speaks decidedly in favour of this view. In opposition to it the question, it is true, may be raised, whether we have not here another instance of a twofold current within J,^ one of which thought of the occurrence without Aaron, whilst the other pre- supposed his co-operation.* In any case, Aaron the Levite seems to belong to the original form of J, as this source now lies before us. In obedience to Yahv^'s command, Moses returns to Egypt.* Yahv4 meets him on the way and threatens him with death — apparently because Moses is not circumcised. He does not leave him alone until Zipporah has circumcised their son with a flint and touched Moses with the child's foreskin.^ 1 This is indicated by the dilapidation of the context and by the representa- tion of Aaron as not only present on this occasion, but also speaking. 2 The elders of Israel and Aaron are here placed beside Moses. In this con- text the former remind us of E, the latter of J. 3 See also Bruston, Les deux Jdhovistes, in Revrie de TMol. et Phil, 1885, p. 6. * Vatke, Minteit., p. 175, offers another solution. He holds that wherever Moses appears alone it is E that is speaking (vii. 15 would then not refer to iv. 3 f., but to an account of the first miracle by E, now lost). The second part of the narrative, where Aaron is present, has on this theory been added from J. The hypothesis would satisfactorily explain Aaron's absence at the beginning. But what about the elders, iii. 18 ? 5 Exod. iv. 19 (?), and, in addition thereto, some kind of statement correspond- ing to V. 20a. ^ Exod. iv. 24-2(5, 196 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. When Moses arrives in Egypt, he appears before the king (accompanied by Aaron) and demands that the people be let go into the desert to hold a feast unto Yahv^. He is rebuffed arro- gantly by the king ; repeats his demand next day several times in Aaron's presence, almost in the same words, announcing each time a fresh plague on the king and his land in case Pharaoh will not yield.^ Our author assumes that these plagues are inflicted, but does not himself narrate this. For in the majority of cases Pharaoh calls Moses and Aaron into his presence and begs them pray to Yahv^ to turn away the plague. But it is in harmony with this style of narrative that J assumes Moses to be not the actual executant of these plagues, Yahvd carrying them into exe- cution, Moses simply announcing them.^ The final plague, the death of all the firstborn in Egypt, induces the king at last to give the order for Israel's departure. The Egyptians themselves importune Israel to leave the land. With such speed is their departure effected that they have not time to bake their bread. They take the unleavened dough with them and make cakes of it on the way. They also induce the Egyptians to give them costly vessels and garments as they are going. Thus do they set out, and Yahvd Himself points out their way, going before them by day in a pillar of cloud, and by night in a pillar of fire.* It is not till after their departure that Pharaoh's officials realise the fact that Israel has not merely gone for a sacrificial feast in the desert, but has actually escaped from bondage to the Egyptians. Pharaoh assembles his army and pursues Israel. Beside the Eed Sea Israel suddenly perceives the Egyptians behind them. The people murmur against Moses, who bids them look for Yahv^'s 1 Exod. V. 16, 2, 4 ; vii. 14-176a (turning of the Nile into blood) ; vii. 23 (JiiUcher, JPTh., 1882, pp. 83, 87), 25-29; viii. 4-1 la (Frogs) ; viii. 16-28 (Vermin) ; ix. 1-7 (Murrain) ; ix. 13-21, 236 (against Vatke), 27-30 (Hail ; the last verses belong to J, notwithstanding Wellhausen, Dillmann, and Vatke ; the word Wrh^ also proves nothing here, Jiil., p. 93), 33, 34 ; x. 1-11, 135, 145-20 (Locusts ; a slightly different division, c/. Jiil., p. 95) ; xi. 1 f. (?), 4-7 (Death of the First- bom). ^ Of. especially Wellh. xxi. p. 533 ff. ' Exod.'xii. 29, 30o^6, 31-36 (as to the main point), 39 ; xiii. 21 f. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 197 help. The pillar of cloud leaves its usual place, goes behind Israel, and stands in such a position between Israel and the Egyptians, that the armies cannot approach each other during the night. Meanwhile Yahv^ dries up the sea during the night by a strong east ■wind.^ As the night wears on both armies cross, and the fight begins on the farther side.^ Towards morning Yahv^ throws the Egyptians into confusion by means of the pillar of fire. At the same time He clogs the wheels of their chariots, so that the Egyptians flee back in disorder, whilst the sea, returning to its wonted flow, swallows them up.^ From the Eed Sea the people journey to the place afterwards called Massah and Meribah, where they beg Moses to give them water. Yahv^ commands him : ' Pass on befoi'e the people . . . I stand before thee there upon a rock . . .'* Very probably J as well as E gave the account of the defeat of the Amalekites,^ which came from an ancient source. The next point in the narrative must have been the arrival at the Mount of God, which J calls Sinai, whereas the title Horeb is the current one in E. Thereupon Yahv^ announces to i\Ioses that He will now reveal Himself to him, and on the third day will come down on Sinai before the eyes of all the people. In a majestic theophany He descends and calls Moses up the mouutain. Moses is ordered to charge the people that no one come near the mountain.^ 2. From this point we lose the original thread of J still more completely. Obviously the editor here found in his sources large sections having precisely similar contents. In the purely historical portions of the sources it was possible to divide such sections according to their members and then work them into each other mosaic-fashion. But here this could not be done : some parts had to be omitted entirely. A very large portion of J's account of the events at Sinai seems to have suffered this fate. The pan 1 Exod. xiv. 5 f., 9ao (to DnnHN), lOaba (to ISD), 11-14, 196, 20, 21o^. 2 This is not stated in the now extant text, but the sequel compels us to supply it. Cf. WelUi. xxi. p. 646. ' Vv. 24 f., 27o,3ft, 286, 30 f. * Exod. xvii. 16j3, 2, 7, and the words we have quoted from vv. 5 and 6. 5 Exod. xvii. 8-16. " Exod. xix. (9a?), 11, 12, 18, 20, 21. 198 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. which survived naturally had to take a quite different place from the one which originally belonged to it. This compels us to search carefully for the fragments of J, and bring some of them together from remote places. Hence it is not to be wondered at if one or other member can only be fitted into the context by transferring ^ it from its present position to another. E could not possibly have reported the Decalogue twice here. The fact of its only being given once is no proof of its absence from J. It is certainly a mistake to assert that the small law- book which is preserved to us in Exod. xxxiv. 11-26, is a correspond- ing code to that of the Decalogue, nay, that it is the original Ten Words.^ It requires the utmost arbitrariness even to find in it the number Ten. In it we really have the surviving remnant of the ' laws and statutes,' which J as well as E placed after the Decalogue, an abbreviated analogue, that is, to chaps, xxi-xxiii. The transposition of the whole to this place needs no further ex- planation after what has been said above. We shall therefore not be in error if we think of the Decalogue as preceding this law- book and prefix it to chap, xxxiv. 11. In J's narrative the course of events at Sinai may accordingly be conjectured to have run as follows. After the arrival at Sinai, and the preliminaries mentioned in chap, xix., Yahv4 promulgates the Decalogue. Moses is then called up the mountain.^ He stays there forty days and nights,* whilst Yahv^'' writes for him on ^ Dillm. Ex Lev., p. 334, treats Exod. xxxiv. 11-26 in this way. 2 See Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 551 flf. ; Gesch. /sr.i p. 404 ff. ' Each of the main sources, J included, must have its share in the statement which occurs thrice at Exod. xxiv. 13-18 : ' And Moses went up the mountain.' At xxxiv. 1 ff. another explanation is possible : see below. ■* xxxiv. 28, a verse which is quite out of place where it now stands, belongs to this passage. It cannot possibly be the continuation of xxxiv. 27, because V. 27 makes xxxiv. 11-26 to have been written by Moses. For Moses cannot have spent the forty days in loriting the commandments : it must have been in receiving them. But in this passage he is supposed to have received them long before. R* did not know what to make of the verse in the context where he found it. He therefore placed it quite at the close of his account of what happened at Sinai ; where it would certainly cause some confusion. ^ Yahv^, not Moses, is the subject of 2r\y) in the original context as well as in the present one {v. 1). Of. the frequent change of subject in this very Chap. II.] B.— HISTOEY OP THE PERIOD 199 the tables of stone the ten covenant-words of the Decalogue. As in E God adds to the Ten Words the rest of the laws and statutes, and commands Moses to write down these words, i.e. the contents of these laws.^ After their tenor the covenant is made with Israel. It is no longer possible to determine the precise part of J where the concluding of the covenant was inserted. Meanwhile, however, the people have grown impatient at the long absence of Moses, and have compelled Aaron to make them gods who shall go before them. Aaron has made a molten calf out of the ornaments of the Israelites, and arranged a feast for it. Yahve himself tells Moses what has happened below, and bids him go down from the mountain.^ When he comes nigh unto the camp he casts the tables to the ground so that they are broken in pieces. He upbraids Aaron and the people for their grievous offence. On the morrow he again ascends the mountain and beseeches God for forgiveness. Yahv6 declares that in due season he will punish the sin. For the present Moses and the people are to set out towards the place He has appointed, and He will send His angel before him.* The people mournfully strip them- selves of their ornaments, out of which Moses makes the source. Wellhausen's view (xxi. p. 554) is disproved by the fact (see above) that what Moses wrote has already been given in v. 27, so that the words of the Covenant mentioned in v. 28 cannot be the contents of xxxiv. 11-26. And 3n3M w. 1 is dead against him. Nor is anything said in v. 27 about either tables of stone or Ten Words. V. 27 is written in a book, v. 28 on tables of stone : cf. also Vatke, Einl., p. 352. 1 In Ex. xxxiv. 27, we find the following injunction : ' Write these words, for after the tenor of these words I have made a covenant with thee and with Israel. ' And in xxi v. 4, 7, we read : ' And Moses wrote the words of Yahve . . . and took the book of the covenant and read it in the audience of the people.' Compar- ing these two passages we see that according to v. 27 what is written (xxxiv. 11-26) cannot be the Ten Words but is the analogue to the Book of the Covenant now surviving in a mutilated form. Obviously the tables mentioned in v. 28 are not contemplated here. 2 Exod. xxxii. 1-8. Kuenen, Ond." pp. 244, 246, ascribes this to E° and E^ but on insufficient grounds. 2 Exod. xxxii. 19, (20), 21-24, 30-34. V. 30 indicates that vv. 9-14 are probably an addition due to R"* ( Wellh. JE) : but these verses may possibly be original, and consequently 30-34 an addition. At all events xxxii. 36, 4 belong to this. 200 HISTOKY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Tabernacle,^ which from this time forwards must be the substitute for Yahv^'s immediate presence on Sinai. Ere they depart Moses is bidden to bring two new tables up the mountain instead of those he had broken, that Yahvd may- write on them anew.^ During their stay at Sinai, Moses had visited his father-in-law Hobab (ben Eeuel).* . . . Now that Israel, in obedience to Yahve's command, is leaving the holy mountain, Moses begs Hobab to act as guide to the people : he knows the camping grounds of the desert and could therefore be ' their eyes.' He promises him an abundant reward in Canaan. Hobab objects at first, but seems to have consented afterwards, for Israel in later days recognises as part of the nation a Kenite clan which traces its descent from Hobab.* 3. The people resume their march through the desert and murmur against Moses because they have no bread. Yahve tells Moses that He will rain bread from heaven, but at the same time will see whether the people keep His law. They are to gather some every day except the Sabbath, but a double portion on the ^ This must have been stated here : Wellhausen, xxi. p. 563, note. It is not easy to fit the next section, xxxiii. 12-23, into the context of the original source. Wellhausen (p. 563 f. ) attributes much of it to JE. And it is quite possible that Rii or another, having made additions of his own previously, felt specially free so to do in this passage vrhere the important subject of the reconciliation of Yahv^ with Israel is dealt with. Parts of the narrative, particularly in w. 19-23, may well have belonged to E originally, but still better to J. But the dilapidated state of these elements precludes the possibility of restoring the connection that existed at first. " Exod. xxxiv. 1-5 (Kuenen partly E, but cf. ^^D, f. 4), whereas vv. 6-9, may probably be an addition by K^. Wellhausen, xxi. p. 553, sees an addition by JE in V. 1, from D''JE'X"I3 onwards, and accordingly looks on the verse as a whole as an account of the Jirst appearance of Moses on Sinai. This explanation is not absolutely necessary, but the general impression left by the verse forbids my rejecting it as altogether mpossible. But even if Wellhausen is right, nothing need be set down as an editoria ddition except D'iti'XIJ, and from ^B'^? to the end of the verse. In that case we should have here the beginning of J's account of the events at Sinai, the right place for which is after chap. xix. Next would come the proclamation of the Decalogue (to Moses, not to the people). The narrative then follows the course described above. ^ Chap, xviii. belongs to this place : v. lb, and parts of 9-11 are J's. These remnants imply a fuller narrative, which probably corresponded to E's. * Num. X. 29-32. R omits Hobab's compliance, because of Exod. xviii. 27. But cf. such passages as Judges i. 16 ; iv. 1 1 ; 1 Sam. xv. 5 f. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 201 day before the Sabbath. Next day they perceive small grains on the ground resembling hoar-frost, and call them manna. They gather these, many of them taking more than was needed for one day; the overplus is uneatable. Thus is Israel fed by Yahv^ until they reach the frontier of Canaan.^ But the mixed multitude which came up with Israel out of Egypt led the people to take a dislike to the manna and long for the flesh and vegetables which Egypt had supplied in abundance. Moses is displeased at this, and remonstrates \Yith Yahve for making him alone bear the burden of the people. Yahv^ associates with him seventy of the elders of Israel whom Moses already knows and has made use of as elders and officers of the people. But He promises the people that they shall have flesh in super-abundance on the morrow. Joshua is one of the chosen seventy.2 When they reach Kadesh Moses sends spies into Canaan, one man from each tribe, Joshua and Caleb being of the number. They are to go into the Negeb and the mountain district and find out the nature of the land and people. They come to Hebron, which was built seven years before Zoan in Egypt (and therefore was already in existence). There the children of the giants, Ahiman, Sheshai, and Talmai, rule. . . . They report to Moses that they came to a land of milk and honey, but that, on the other hand, its people are strong, its cities fenced, its inhabitants giants.^ Amalek dwells in the Negeb, the Canaanite by the sea and along the Jordan. The people are alarmed, spend the night weeping ^ 1 The Sabbatic Law, as well as w. 9 f., 23, 33 f. (Ewald., Dillm.), show that this is the place for Exod. xvi. Vv. 4 f., 14-16, 186-21, 27-30 (? Wellh. D'-) 356. stood in J. Jiilioher disagrees with this. He finds no connected narrative in Exod. xvi. save that of P. 2 Num. xi. 4-6, 10-29, with Dillmann. But these verses (c/. e.g., the number 600,000) must have been retouched. Kuenen's view, Ond.^ pp. 155, 244, is quite different : he brings in E^ : 24-19 may also belong to R^. 3 Num. xiii. 176-19, 22, 27 (against Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 139 ; v. 266|3 is par- allel and therefore not from the same source ; cf. too the change of number, 28 f . Kuenen, Ond.^ p. 151, will not hear of any narrative of J's. * On this verse see Meyer, p. 124 ; on the other side Dillmann, who ascribes V. 29 to E. The decision may be doubtful. ' Num. xiv. 16 (see Dillm. NuDtJo., pp. 74 f.), 3 f., 8 f., 30-33. 202 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. and murmur agaiust Yaliv^ and Moses. Caleb and Joshua en- courage them. But Yahve determines to punish the people ; none of them save Caleb and Joshua shall enter the promised land. The people now repent and wish to go up, but are beaten back by the Canaanite and Amalekite inhabitants ^ (as far as Hormah ?). At this time the Canaanite king of Arad comes out against Israel and takes some of them prisoners. Israel vows that, if Yahve will give victory, the Canaanite cities shall be utterly destroyed.^ When Yahv^ afterwards delivered the Canaanites into the hand of Israel, the name of that place ^ was called Hormah.* . . . The people dwell many years in Kadesh, and Miriam dies there.^ . . . The fight with the Amorites recorded in E is not mentioned here. An indefinite but certainly long time after those events Israel at last reaches the south-east boundary of Canaan, ready to push forward against the land. Before arriving here Israel must encounter Moab. Balak, king of Moab, trembles for his possessions. In concert with that branch of the Midianites ® which is settled in the district, Balak sends to the land of the Ammon- ites ' for the soothsayer Balaam. He premises that all the trea- sures of Balak cannot induce him to curse Israel without Yahv^'s consent, but he accompanies the messengers. On the journey his beast speaks, and he is thus miraculously made aware of God's displeasure at his going. But he is now to go on with the men, taking care to speak only what God may say to him.^ Balak receives him and brings him to the city of Streets (Kerioth='Ar ' As to traces of J in Num. xiv. 19-45, see Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 80. The reading ''3V33 should not be absolutely rejected, as by Meyer, ZA W. i. 133 ; it is a remnant of J. HDin and IDD do not suit J. ^ Num. xxi. 1, 2. The verses are best understood as a direct continuation of xiv. 39 ff. Neither requires the omission of the other (Meyer). Between the two narratives Billmann finds remnants of a history of Korah due to J. ' Arad itself is not the scene of the battle, but Zephath, as Judges i. 17 shows. * F". 3 is an anticipatory statement ; cf. Judges i. 17. " Num. XX. la/36 (Wellh. xxi. p. 577). ° This indeed suggests difficulties ; hence perhaps we should follow Wellhausen, xxi. p. 579, in taking it to be an interpolation from P. Against this see DiUmann,. p. 141. ' According to the reading pDJ? 'ja, Dillm., p. 142. ' Num. xxii. 3a, 4 (but see above, note 2), 5a^, 7a, 18, a, 22-35a. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 203 Moab ?). But instead of a curse, Balaam has to pronounce a blessing on Israel.' Both J and E have at least two prophecies by Balaam. The present juxtaposition of the four speeches is due to the editor. Balaam's utterances seem to have prevented Balak from bring- ing the matter to the arbitrament of battle. Israel consequently advances unhindered as far as Shittim and dwells there. Here the people are seduced into fornication with the Moabite women and participation in their idol-festivals. The chiefs who took part in this are punished by being cut off from the community.^ The two tribes, Gad and Eeubeu, own many cattle and there- fore wish to remain here on the east of the Jordan. Moses looks on this as betraying a lack of public spirit. He will not consent to their request until they promise to fight by the side of the other tribes for the conquest of the west.^ Deuteronomy* here comes in and throws into confusion the connection of all three principal sources. The thread cannot be taken up till the end of that book. Our source closes the history of Moses in the briefest possible manner. Possibly we still have the prediction of his death* which it certainly once contained. But after this it hastens on to the death itself. Moses dies on the top of Pisgah, after Yahv^ has shown him the whole land of Gilead as far as Dan." § 21. E's Narrative. 1. After the death of Joseph and the whole of that generation a new king arises in Egypt who knows not Joseph. The sons of 1 Num. xxiv. 2-19, 25 ; cf. xxii. 18= J. Vv. 20-24 is a later addition, and the three last words oiv. 10 were added by R"*. ' Num. xxv. 1, 2, 4. ^ Some parts of Num. xxxii. certainly belonged to J., but the chapter has been so thoroughly retouched that it is not easy to distinguish them. We must, however, with Dillmann, ascribe to it the core of the narrative, 16, 2a, 3, 5-13, 23, 25-27. On this see Kuenen, Ond.'^ p. 248. * Dillmann insists that a few more verses in the Book of Numbers, viz.. Num. xxxiii. 52, 55 f., come from J. = Dillmann finds it in Deut. xxxi. 16-22 ; even if this be so, the passage has been altered. ' Deut. xxxiv. lo/S6 (Dillm. v. 4, which, however, probably belongs to R"!). 204 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Israel grow too numerous for his liking. He fears their joining the enemies of Egypt. They are therefore oppressed with forced labour in building Pithom and Eaamses.i Moreover, Pharaoh orders the Hebrew midwives, Shiphrah and Puah, to kill all the Hebrew male-children as soon as they are born.^ A married couple of the tribe of Levi therefore conceal their infant boy at first and afterwards expose him in the Nile, where Pharaoh's daughter discovers and saves him. The king's daughter brings the lad up, and calls him Mosheh because she drew him out of the water.^ When he has reached manhood he has to flee to Midian on account of an offence which comes to Pharaoh's ears. There he becomes son-in-law to the priest Jethro.* One day, whilst tending his father-in-law's sheep, he came to Horeb, the primaeval mountain of God. There God appears to him in a burning bush. He reveals Himself as the God of their fathers, and bids him go to Pharaoh and demand the release of Israel from Egypt. This source, like the other, represents him as endeavouring to evade the divine commission. God promises His assistance and, as the sign of his divine mission, declares that after the people have been set free they shall serve God at this mountain. To contribute further to his "aiiiinc; the confidence of the sons of Israel He tells him His name Yahvd He bids him gather together the elders of Israel in Egypt and go with them to Pharaoh to demand Israel's release.^ Moreover he is to take the rod of God in his hand, to work miracles with it in God's name. Moses accordingly returns to his father-in-law Jethro (Yether), and informs him of his intended departure to Egypt. Jethro dismisses him in peace.* ^ Exod. i. 6 (against Kuenen and Wellhausen), S-12. => Exod. i. 15-20a, 21 ; Kuenen adds 206, and Dillmann 22. ' Exod. ii. l-6a, 7-10. ■* Probably the only verse in chap. ii. that belongs to this narrative is v. 15, but it implies such an account as is given in w. 11-14. ° Exod. iii. 1-3 (as to the chief matter), vv. 46-6, 9-16a, and in v. 18 at least the first words after the Athnach. * Exod. iv. 7 (a verse which originally formed the conclusion of a narrative by E of the signs given to Moses), 18 (Vatke, against Wellhausen), 206-23. According to E ((■/. xviii. 2a) Moses temporarily left his wife and child in Midian. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 205 Moses returns to Egypt, and in company with the elders ^ of Israel goes to the king and demands that Pharaoh shall let Israel go to celebrate a feast in the wilderness. Pharaoh refuses to grant the requests, and adds to Israel's burdens. The straw for their brick-making, which has been delivered to them hitherto, is no longer to be allowed. The people reproach Moses. He turns to Yahv^, who promises help.^ • Our author, like J, comes thus to the plagues. Of the account which he gave of these nothing but fragments remain. But they are enough to show plainly how the story ran. Moses (accompanied by the elders) comes to Pharaoh and announces that he will turn the Nile into blood with his staff, that the fishes shall die and the water become undrinkable. Pharaoh remains inflexible, and Moses carries out his threat.^ . . . This source does not appear again until the plague of hail, when it tells how Moses, at God's command, again stretches out his rod, this time towards heaven, that it may thunder and hail : Goshen alone is spared.* A short account of the plague of locusts by this writer also survives. The editor places alongside it a state- ment, peculiar to our source, respecting the sentence of three days' darkness pronounced against the whole land of Egypt. Pharaoh is now prepared to let Israel go, but without their cattle. Moses will not accept this condition, and the king forbids him to appear again in the royal presence. He leaves with the words : ' I will not see thy face again, but thy servants shall come to me.' ^ . . . We no longer possess E's account of the death of the 1 Exod. V. la. The text of E, here and at v. 20, had {jNlB" ^Jpf instead of inns, in accordance with iii. 16a, 18. The alteration was here made by R, and is due to the mention of Aaron in J and P. Cf. Wellh. xxi. p. 542 ; Dillmann, ExLev., p. 48; Vatke, Einl., p. 173. ^ Exod. V. 3, 5-vi. 1. In v. 20, the original reading (see above) was : ' the elders.' 3 Exod. vii. 17 f. (Jiil.), 20a^6, 21a (against Dillmann), 24(?). * Exod. ix. 22, 23a, 24-26 (WeUh. xxi. p. 535), 31 f., 35a. 5 Exod. X. 12, 13aa, 14ao, 21-27, 28 f. (Jiil., 98, against Wellhausen, Dillmann) ; xi. 8 (this verse belongs to E, and this is precisely its right place, against Wellhausen, Dillmann, Jiil.). 206 HISTORY OF THE HEBBEWS [Book I. firstborn, but the context implies that there was one. Moved by this visitation, Pharaoh sends his servants to Moses in the middle of the night, to tell Israel that they may leave the land speedily. Israel accordingly sets out (from Eaamses ?) to Succoth, . . . men on foot, besides women and children. Moreover, a numerous mixed population goes with them out of Egypt.^ God does not lead Israel by the direct route through the land of the Philistines, because they are not sufficiently inured to war to meet this martial race. He bids them rather march towards the Eed Sea. They take Joseph's bones with them.^ But Pharaoh pursues them with all his chariots, amongst which are six hundred chosen ones. God's command comes to Moses : ' Lift up thy rod, stretch out thine hand over the sea, and divide it, so that the children of Israel may pass through the sea on dry ground.' The angel of God then moves from the van to the rear of the host and under his protection the Israelites pass through dryshod.^ . . . Reaching the other side, Miriam the prophetess, Aaron's sister, takes her timbrel and the women of Israel follow her in the dance. She sings the song of triumph : ' Sing ye unto Yahve, for He hath glorified Himself ; Horse and rider cast He into the sea.' * Aaron's name meets us here for the first time in E. The poem may very likely, in this form also, have contained more strophes than these two, but E has not given it in full because he was acquainted with another version of the song of triumph in a fuller form, derived from a different source. He supplies this version also, putting it into the mouth of Moses.^ That ' xii. 30aa, and possibly some points in w. 32 and 35 : the whole of v. 37 f. (with the probable exception of the number 600,000, and the name Raamses, which may have been inserted from P). ^ Exod. xiii. 17-19. Kuenen adds 21 f., but this can hardly be correct. ' Exod. xiv. 7, 9ay, 16, 19a, 22a. Here E breaks off. Cf. also Josh. xxiv. 7. * Exod. XV. 20 f. The word nx"'33 and the passage. Num. xii. 1 ff., render it indubitable that this belongs to E. The absence of the name Miriam from ii. 1 ff. (Jul., p. 124) is no proof to the contrary. The name of Moses also is not men- ±ioned there. ' Exod. xv. 1-18, to which v. 19 also belongs. Chap. II.] £.— HISTOEY OF THE PEKIOD 207 older form, which perhaps came down from the very days of Moses, is here transformed into an artistically membered psalm for the use of the people in Canaan. Probably it is from an ancient song-boob.^ From the Red Sea the people journey into the wilderness of Shur and come to Marah. The bitter water is made sweet by the branch of a tree which Moses places in the spring. But Moses here gives to the people ' a statute and ordinance,' i.e. settles its disputes.^ On their forward journey they again contend with Moses about water, in a locality which E does not clearly define. Yahvd orders Moses to go up the mountain with some of the elders of Israel and smite the rock with his rod, and water shall come out.^ The Bedouin tribe of the Amalekites attack Israel. A battle is fought at Eephidim. Joshua and the chosen men of Israel fight, whilst Moses, supported by Aaron and Hur, holds up the rod of God which brings victory to Israel.* 2. The defeat of the Amalekites is doubtless conceived of as happening near Sinai, the Mount of God.* The fight may have been for the oasis near Sinai. Moses purposed making a some- what long stay here with the people. Israel will thus be able to camp unhindered near the ancient sacred mountain. Great events, ever to be remembered by the people, are to happen here. Moses ascends the mountain to God. The command comes to him that the people are to hold themselves in readiness on 1 Of. Dillmann, ExLev., pp. 154, 160. On v. 17, cf. Wellh. Frol.^ p. 23, note (Eng. Trans, p. 22), but see also p. 374, note, and Kuen. Ond.^ p. 233. It is also quite possible that J's report of the song is from this source. " Exod. XV. 22-25 (Dillmami and Kuenen B, against Jiil.). The next verse, in which the judicial activity of Moses is regarded as legislative activity, is an addition due to R"*. ° Exod. xvii. 3-6, but mingled in 5 f. with portions from J. The mention of the staff and the elders proves that it belongs to E, against Vatke. For 31 n3, V. 6, which Jiil. and Vatke take to be a gloss, read ^^3. Chap. xvi. should follow Num. X. •• Exod. xvii. S-16, according to a special source (w. 14), of obvious antiquity, probably used here by E. ° Jethro's visit, chap, xviii., like chap, xvi., belongs to a later time, as is clear from m 16, 20. 208 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. the third day. In point of fact, on that day thunder and lightning proclaim God's descent on the mountain. Moses leads the people out of the camp to meet God at the foot of the mountain.^ God speaks the Ten "Words to the people from the mountain. The people are affrighted by the thunders that accompany the voice of God, and beg that Moses alone may speak with God, and then declare His will to them. Accordingly God speaks to Moses, revealing to him the other statutes and ordinances which the people are to keep.^ They form a somewhat motley collection of precepts for the civic life of Israel, of the nature of civil and religious law. And along with them there are brief directions concerning the sacrifices and festivals. There is no sufficient ground for denying that E wrote this so-called Book of the Covenant, as Wellhausen, following Stahelin, does.^ After receiving the divine law Moses returns to communicate to the people what God has said. They promise to observe all His commandments. Moses writes them out, and then builds an altar at the foot of the mountain, and causes a covenant-sacrifice to be offered by the young men of Israel. Next he reads aloud to the people the Book of the Covenant which he has written, and pledges them to the law of the Covenant.* Hereupon God calls him again to come up the mountain, that He may hand over to him the tables of stone on which the commandments are written. Moses goes up again with his minister Joshua. He leaves the 1 Exod. xix. 26, 3a, 10, 13-17, 19. ^ Exod. XX. 1-10, 12-17, but with many later additions by 'Bfi-, especially in the first half. Vv. 18-26 (the transposition of v. 18 f., so as to bring it before v. 1, [Jill. Kuenen] is not necessary). Chap, xxi., xxii., xxiii., 1-7, 20-22. ' Wellh. xxi. p. 556 f. According to him chap. xxi. -xxiii., together with xix. 20-25, XX. 23-26, xxiv. 3-8, belong to J. But we cannot help being surprised at his basing this solely on considerations, some of them very far-fetched, drawn from statements as to facts. The language used speaks decisively for E ; cf. D'n^X, HDK, etc. Against Wellh. see Dillm. ExLev., p. 219 f. ; Jul., p. 305 ff. ; Kuen. Ond.2 p. 149 f. ; Vatke, Einl., p. 340 f. * Exod. xxiv. 3-8. Wellhausen concludes that the people only bind themselves to the ordinances promulgated by Moses (xxi. p. 556). This is clearly disproved by the language employed : ' All the words which Yahv6 hath spoken will we do,' w. 3, 7. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PEKIOD 20! people 1 in charge of Aaron and Hur. He remains there fort) days and nights to receive the tables of stone,^ written with th« finger of God.^ As they return Joshua hears a loud noise in the camp anc thinks it is a shout of war. Moses hears better and declares thai it is not a war-cry but an antiphonal song. Drawing nigh to the camp he sees the people who had been intrusted to the care ol Aaron and Hiir dancing round a golden calf and indulging in un- bridled licence. In hot anger he breaks the tables of stone in pieces, grinds the image to powder and strews it in the spring from which the people must drink. Helped by the Levites, who range themselves on his side and Yahve's and slay a number of the people, he restores order. Hence the priesthood of Yahv^ is trans- ferred to the tribe of Levi.* The apostasy of the people is punished by their being ordered to leave Horeb. Their sin pre- cludes any longer abode in God's dwelling-place. But an angel is to be their guide.* Their ornaments, which they had worn since they came from Horeb,® they now take off. Moses employs them in making the Tabernacle (probably the ark too'), which he pitches without the camp. Joshua, the minister of Moses, is in- trusted with the care of the tent.* The camping-grounds on Horeb are the district where Moses formerly dwelt when he was Jethro's shepherd. His wife's relatives pitch their tents here, southwards and eastwards, towards the gulf. According to our author Moses had left her ^ This, not 'the elders,' is the true reading in v. 14. R introduced the present reading to make v. 14 correspond with 2 and 10. ^ Cf. the separation of the Ten Words in Vatke, p. 338. It may fairly be believed that the contents of the two tables were as Vatke represents. But the source from which E (and J) drew probably contained rather more matter. ' Exod. xxiv. 12-14, 186. ; xxxi. 186. '* Exod. xxxii. 15-20 (Kuenen and Dillmann stop at 19aa, but it is questionable whether the remainder of 19 and 20 should be separated from the preceding. The mention of the tables, v. 15 f . , is only intended to prepare the way for the recital of their subsequent fate), 25-29. 5 Exod. xxxiii. l-3a, but with additions by R*. ^ See Billm. ExLev., p. 345, as to the explanation of xxxiii. 6. ^ This must be supplied between w. 6 and 7. Wellh. xxi. p. 562 f. ; Dillm. ExLev., p. 345. ' Exod. xxxiii. 5-11. 210 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. and their children here at home. Jethro, therefore, hearing what has happened in Egypt and on Horeb, hastens to visit Moses, bringing Zipporah and the children.^ Moses gives Jethro fuller details of what Yahv^ has done for Israel, and Jethro blesses Israel's God as the highest among all gods, and offers sacrifices to Him. Aaron and the elders of Israel take part in the meal. On the morrow Jethro sees how Moses alone, without helpers, judges the people. He counsels Moses to continue acting as mediator between the people and God, thus making known to them the divine statutes and directions, but to take to his help competent men from amongst the people, making them heads over thousands, hundreds, fifties and tens, and leaving the easier causes to their decision. Moses follows Jethro's advice and arranges thus the judicial procedure of his people ' for all seasons,' and Israel then, in obedience to the divine command, leaves the mountain of God, and travels onwards three days. The ark of the covenant leads the way^ and points out the camping-places. When it sets for- wards Moses cries, ' Eise up, Yahvd, and let thine enemies be scattered . . . ,' and when it rests, ' Eeturn, Yahve, unto the myriads of the thousands of Israel.'^ Both sayings are un- doubtedly ancient, handed down continuously in the tradition of the heroic age, and possibly retained in use in later days when the ark was carried in procession.* On the march, as a punishment for the discontented murmur- ing of the people, fire breaks out in the uttermost part of the camp, and is only stayed at the intercession of Moses. From this the place is called Taberah.* The miraculous feeding with manna also, which our source, like J, relates in detail, soon becomes un- satisfactory to the people. They long for flesh. Yahv^ is angry ^ This is probably the right place for the narrative which R places before the occurrences at Sinai, Exod. xviii. la, 2a (26 is a harmonistic interpolation), 3-27, but in w. 8-10, mixed with small portions from J. 2 The words 'three days' journey' are probably a gloss (Wellh., Kuen. Ond." p. 322). ^ Num. X. 33-36. * Ewald, Oesch, Isr.^ ii. p. 31; Delitzsch in ZkWL. (1882), p. 235; Dillm. SuDtJo., p. 53 ; and especially Kautzach, ZAW. vi. p. 19. 5 Num. xi. 1-3 (Kuen., Dillm. E). Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 211 and sends a wind which brings great multitudes of quails from the sea,. But whilst the quails are in the mouths of the people a great plague smites them. The place is named Kibrothr Hattaavah.^ Because of a Cushite woman whom Moses has married, either during the lifetime of Zipporah, or, more probably, after her death, Miriam and Aaron rise against him.^ Seeing that God has spoken with them also and not with Moses only, they claim an equal prophetic position. All three are to assemble at the Tabernacle before the camp. Miriam becomes leprous, but is healed at the prayer of Moses.^ When they reach the south-east frontier of Canaan, jMoses despatches from Kadesh twelve spies, Caleb amongst the number, to the promised land. Joshua remains with Moses. They are to explore the land and bring back some of its fruits. The spies get as far as the Cluster Brook, not far from Hebron, whence they bring a cluster of grapes as well as other fruits. They show the fruits of the land to their people. . . . Caleb calms the dispirited people. His comrades faint-heartedly dissuade them from going up, because giants live there.* The people listen to their persuasions and Yahv^'s punishment consequently follows.^ . . . Israel now repents and would fain press on into Canaan. When Moses dissuades them they attempt it on their own account. But the Amorites, who inhabit the mountain-range, come down and drive Israel back to Hormah.* Our source maintains an almost total silence concerning that long sojourn in the desert which now began anew. Only two 1 Num. xi. 1-9 is a remnant of this narrative. It is continued in the words nSD "''• «!« ■in''1. V. 10 (c/. vv. 1, 33, also Wellh. xxi. p. 569), and in w. 30-34. = See DUlm., p. 64, on v. 16, against Wellh., p. 569. 3 Num. xii. 1-15. Kuen. Ond.^ p. 224, attributes the chapter to E,^ v. 1 J)eing probably his chief reason. * Num. xiii. 20, 23 f., 266ft 30 f, 32c, 33. V. 30 f.=E (with Dillmann against Meyer), for otherwise there would be a repetition in xiv. 8 f. » The account of this has been displaced by J. « Num. XXV. 39-45. The main narratives is from E (Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 153). In the text we have given the better reading, 'IDSn, from Deut. i. 44. In vv. 43, 45, it displaces E's original reading. 212 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I, occurrences are localised in it, the rebellion of Dathan and Abiram, and the sin of Moses. Those two Eeubenites rise up against the leadership of Moses (and Aaron ?) As members of the first tribe they claim equal privileges with the tribe of Levi. Moses announces that God will be the Judge. The rebels are swallowed up by the earth.^ The place where this happens is not stated, but the pro- ceedings at the "Waters of Strife are next mentioned, and this clearly fixes the scene in the district of Kadesh, where Israel there- fore, according to this source also,^ must have stayed a somewhat long, or even a really long, time. The text as it now stands does not give a clear view of the course of events. The only certain fact is that a murmuring of the people for water led Moses and Aaron into sin.* 3. When . the time of waiting has expired Moses sends messengers from Kadesh to the king of Edom to request a free passage through his territory. Edom refuses, and Israel is thus necessitated to make a wide circuit in order to avoid his land. On the journey the people become dispirited through lack of food and water. God punishes them with fiery serpents. Moses sets up a serpent of brass, by means of which those who had been bitten are healed. The heathenish serpent- worship is introduced into the service of the living God.* Some of the camping-places of Israel, after they had made the circuit of Edom, are now adduced, from an old list of stations which Deuteronomy also makes use of ; the Wady of the Upper Zered and the south bank of the (Upper) Arnon.* Israel conse- quently now stands on the south-east boundary of the Amorite country, over against Moab. Our author quotes an old book of * Num. xvi. 16, 2aa, 12-14, 15b, 25f, 276-31 (34?). The main narrative seems to be due to E (Kuen. ). Billmann thinks he also finds traces of one from J. ^ Even if xx. la/35, as we hold, belongs to J. Cf. Deut. i. 46, Judges xi. 17, passages which probably go back to E. ' Num. XX. 3-5, 7-11, 13. But the many correspondences with P may give rise to doubt as to whether this belongs to E. * Num. XX. 14-21 (Meyer, Kuen., Dillm., against WeUh.) ; xxi. 4aj36, 5-9. Of. Baudiasin, Stnd. i. p. 289 ; Reuss, Gesch. d.AT., p. 166 ; Dillm. NuDtJo. p. 120. » Num. xxi. 12 f. Cf. Deut. x. 6 f. ; Meyer, p. 119 ; Dillm., p. 121. Chap. II.] iJ.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 213 songs which dates from the age of the heroic struggles, ' the Book of the Wars of Yahve ; ' which sang this song concerning the campaign now undertaken against the Amorites : — ' The Waheb in Suphah [we passed through] and the wadies of the Arnon, And the slope of the valleys that inclineth toward the dwelling of Ar, and leaneth upon the border of Moab.' ^ North of the Arnon, Israel resumes its march on the edge of the desert to Beer, a well-station, of which the people used to sing in later times in these antique strophes : — ' Spring up, Well ! Sing ye unto it ! To the well which princes digged — which the nobles of the people delved, With the sceptre, with their staves.' ^ And now E makes use once more, by anticipation, of the above-mentioned ancient list of stations. From the wilderness (on the border of which the well lay) they journey to Mattanah, thence to the Brook of God, thence to Bamoth, thence to the valley in the field of Moab on the top of Pisgah. Pisgah is pro- bably the Nebo of the Priestly Writing ; this brings Israel to the north end of the Dead Sea, over against the mouth of the Jordan.^ But Israel has previously sent messengers from the Arnon * to Sihon, king of the Amorites, with a like request to that they had previously addressed to Edom. Sihon, however, inarches against Israel and they join battle at Jahaz. Israel vanquishes him and conquers his land, from the Arnon to the Jabbok on the north, and on the east up to Jazer, which marks the Ammonite boundary.^ Israel takes possession of the cities of the Amorites and dwells in (occupies) Heshbon and her daughter-towns. This Heshbon was at first a Moabite city, but Sihon in a recent campaign against Moab had taken it from the former king of Moab. E inserts here 1 Num. xxi. 14 f. ^ Num. xxi. 16-18a. 3 Num. xxi. 186-20. For the relation of these verses to the preceding and the following, cf. Kuen. Oni.'' p. 152. * Deut. ii. 26 names the place more definitely, Midbar Kedemoth. The scene lies earlier than 186. ° See Dillmann on Num. xxi. 24. 214 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. an ancient poem ^ which refers to this overthrow of Moab, and at the same time (at the opening and the close) to Israel's victory over Sihon : — ' Come [even] to Heshboa — let the city of Sihon be built and established. For fire went out from Heshbon — a flame from the city of Sihon ; It devoured the city of Moab — the lords of the high-places of Arnon. Woe to thee, Moab ! Thou art undone, O people of Chemosh ! He gave his sons as fugitives — his daughters as captives to Sihon, king of the Amorites. . . . We shot at them ; Heshbon perished unto Dibon — we set fire even as far as Nophah, as far as Medebah.' " The Moabite king, Balak, made anxious by Israel's victory over the Amorites, is here also represented as sending for the seer Balaam, and that from Pethor on the Euphrates, to check Israel's advance. He refuses at first to come, but consents when God gives him permission. Balak goes to meet him at the border of his territory, at 'Ir ('Ar) Moab on the Arnon. From there he takes him to the district occupied by Israel north of the Arnon, to Bamoth Baal. Instead of cursing, Balaam blesses Israel. This is repeated when Balak changes the standpoint, taking him to the Field of the Watchmen.^ It does not come to a war with Moab. But Israel attaches itself (in Shittim ?) to the service of Baal-Peor, who is worshipped in that region. Moses punishes the guilty, having them mas- sacred.* 1 Ed. Meyer, ZA W. i. 128 f., and ZA W. v. 36 flF., makes the poem refer to the period immediately prior to our author, i.e. to the wars of Mesha. Against this view of its age see Kuen. Theol. Tijdschr. xviii. p. 479 £f., and Ond.^ p. 230 ; Dillm. NuDUo., p. 129, and the discussion on p. 91 above. See also Kuen. Onrf.^ p. 230, as to the idea that v. 26 was a mere gloss, there having really been no Amorite kingdom. If the author did not know the name of the former king of Moab and was unwilling to introduce one of his own invention, it is not clear how he was to express himself otherwise than by pCKlH HNID ^?D, imless he resorted to a lengthy circumlocution (cf. Meyer, ZA W. v. p. 41). - Num. xxi. 27-30. In v. 27 the speech passes over from Israel to the Amor- ites ; V. 28 f. relate Sihon's victory over Moab ; v. 30, Israel's victory over Sihon ; w. 31-35 is probably a later addition. ' Num. xxii.2, 36, 5-17 (except trifling points in vv. 5 and 7), 19, 216, 356, 36-38, 40; xxiii. 1-22, 24 f. (against Wellhausen, cj. D'H^JN, 3KD ''ItJ', v. 17, and mp, as in Exod. iii. 18, v. 3) ; w. 23 and 26 ff. weie added by R*. ; * Num. XXV. 3, 5. But see Josh, xxi v. 9, and on it Dillm. NuDtJo. , p. 585. Chap. II.] iJ.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 215 The tribes of Gad and Reuben ask for the pasture-land on the east of the Jordan. They wish to leave here their wives, children, and cattle, but declare their readiness to help the people in con- quering the west before settling down permanently in their own abode. Gad obtains eight towns, Eeuben six, to build or rebuild, as the case may be, in the southern part of the land east of the Jordan.^ The Manassite clans, Machir and Jair, afterwards con- quer Gilead, the northern part of the east country. A clan of the name of Nobah also conquers the district of Kenath,^ which has perhaps been discovered in the ruins called Kanawat, on the slope of the Hauran range.* The extensive interpolation occasioned by the insertion of Deuteronomy has broken the connection in E, as in the rest. It is not till Deut. xxxi. that the thread is resumed. Yahve an- nounces to Moses that he is to die, and appoints Joshua to be his successor.* In the original E there next came a song of Moses ^ and his Blessing,® taken from an older source. (Moses dies) : henceforth there arises no prophet in Israel who had seen God face to face.'^ § 22. — The Narrative-Material of P. The sons of Israel, having gone into Egypt, multiply there exceedingly. The Egyptians consequently embitter their lives with severe forced labour.* They groan, and their cry reaches to ^ Of Num. xxxil., a chapter which in any case has undergone considerable revision, v, 16 f. , 24, 34-38, and probably some details in 1 ff. , belong here. 2 Num. xxxii. 39, 41 f., a statement which E has inserted here by anticipation. It gave rise to the view in (? P and) R that half the tribe of Manasseh held part of the land east of the Jordan as early as the Mosaic period. 3 Kenath need not be supposed farther south (Bad.' p. 313 (Eng. Ed. p. 415). * Deut. xxxi. 14-23 (?). Cf. Kuen. Ond."^ pp. 124, 152, 250. He claims the section for JE. Dillmann ascribes 16-22 to J. = This is indicated by Deut. xxxii. 44, a verse which presupposes a Song of Moses. The Song, Deut. xxxii. 1-43, which is now attributed to Moses (against Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 394) cannot have come from either E or J, but is of later date. R* found it extant and substituted it for E'a more ancient Song of Mosea. See also Stade, ZA W. v. 297 fif. « Deut. xxxiii. 1-29 {v. 1 added by E). ' Deut. xxxiv. 10. 8 Exod. i. 1-5, 7 (oyS probably an addition by R), 13, 14 (in part). 216 HISTOEY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. God : He remembers His covenant with their fathers.^ He tells Moses how He appeared unto their fathers as El Shaddai but did not reveal unto them His name Yahv^. He will bring Israel out of Egypt.2 He has made Moses to be god over Pharaoh, and Aaron, his brother, is to be his prophet. Moses is to give orders to Aaron, who will thereupon work the miracles with his rod. But Yahv^ will harden Pharaoh's heart so that he will not let the sons of Israel go. Moses is at that time eighty years old, Aaron eighty- three. At the bidding of Moses, Aaron performs the first miracle (the turning the rod into a serpent). The Egyptian magicians do likewise.^ In the same manner the second sign (the changing all the water in Egypt into blood), and the third (the frogs) are per- formed.* At the fourth sign (lice) the magicians' skill fails and they themselves are smitten with the fifth (boils).* Before narrating the Exodus P introduces the institution of the Passover, after which he briefly sketches the march out of Egypt. They journey from Eaamses to Succoth, six hundred thou- sand men strong, after dwelling in Egypt four hundred and thirty years.^ The dedication of the firstborn is also commanded imme- diately after their setting out.^ Erom Succoth they journej'- to Etham, where God bids them turn to Pi-hahiroth on the Eed Sea. Thither Pharaoh pursues them. Israel cries to the Lord. Moses stretches out his hand over the sea, and the waters are divided . . . the Egyptians pur- sue the Israelites into the midst of the sea. . . . Moses again stretches out his hand, and the sea returns,* and covers the Egyp- tians. They reach Elim, where they find twelve springs and seventy palm-trees.^ 1 Exod. ii. 23a^-25. = Bxod. vi. 2-30 (Kuen. 6-8, 13-30=B). s Exod. vii. 1-13. * Exod. vii. 19, 20ao, 22, 23 (? see above) ; viii. 1-3. * Exod. viii. lla/36-15 ; ix. 8-12. xi. 9 f. probably belongs to this, forming its conclusion; but see Jiil., p. 86. « Exod. xii. 1-20, 28, 37 partly (see above), 40 f., 43-51. The order is here disturbed by R. Dillmann puts w. 14-20 after 49, and v. 40 f. after 50, and the exe- cution of the judgment after v. 28. Jiil. attributes xii. 1-14 to P and 15-20 to P2 (but cf. Wra, V. 7). ' Exod. xiii. 1, 2 (against Jiil.). « Exod. xiii. 20 ; xiv. 1-4 (Wellh. v. 3 f. =E), 8, 9o;86, 106/3, 15, 17, 18, 21ao6, 226, 23, 26, 2Sa. V. 29 ia probably a gloss. « Exod. xv. 27. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 217 Departing thence they come to the desert of Sin, between Elim and Sinai, on the fifteenth day of the second month after the Exodus. The whole congregation murmur against Moses and Aaron for bread and flesh. The glory of the Lord appears in the cloud, and Yahv^ promises the people flesh in the evening and bread in the morning. The people obtain quails and manna.^ We have already shown that J originally put this event after the occurrences at Sinai : in P it is connected with a locality which they came to before reaching Sinai. Eephidim is the next encampment.^ E has used J and E in his account of what happened here. Leaving here, the people reach the desert of Sinai (in the third month after the Exodus).^ The events at Sinai also are, in the first instance, reported quite ou the lines of the older sources. There can hardly be any doubt that P, like the rest, contained the Decalogue. The same asser- tion could scarcely be made concerning the Book of the Covenant. The probabilities rather are that instead of the latter, P had the description of the Tabernacle and the detailed priestly legislation. So far as the connection of our source can now be made out, it would appear that P represented Moses as being summoned to ascend the mountain on the seventh day after the arrival at Sinai * -to receive the description of the Tabernacle,^ the Decalogue not having been promulgated as yet. Now follows this description itself, and in immediate connection with it the account of the construction of the Tabernacle.® Before Moses is dismissed from the mountain to carry out the work, he receives the two tables of the testimony.^ Between the revelation 1 Exod. xvi. 1-3, 9-13, 14 f. (at least in part), 165-18a, 22-26, 31-35a. Wellh. V. 14 f. = E. Jiil. ascribes the whole to P except 4 f., 28, 30, 32-34, which he assigns to B''. Kuenen assigns 22-27 also to R. * Exod. xvii. \aha. ' Exod. xix. 2a. V. 1, with its note of time, seems to be an addition (V^Yj. * Unless, as is quite probable (cf. Nadab and Abihu), fragments of P are pre- served in xxiv. 1-3, 9-11. Neither context, form, nor contents allow of the verses being assigned to any of the other sources (Dillm. J, Kuen. E, see Wellh. xxi. p. 557, and again p. 558 ; also Jiil., p. 315). ° Exod. xxiv. 15&-18a comes immediately after xix. 2a (Kuen. 18a=E). * Exod. XXV. 1-xxxi. 17 ; xxxv. 1-xI. 38. ' Exod. xxxi. 18o. -18 HISTOKY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. and the coDstruction of the Tabernacle, P may possibly have inserted a statement about the golden calf; yet the words in question may be a gloss.^ Hence it is more likely that P omitted a story so little to Aaron's credit, and thought of Moses as descend- ing the mountain with no further cause of trouble.^ P's narrative is now considerably interrupted by the insertion of that great body of laws which we have discussed more closely elsewhere. They are supposed to be given to Moses from the Tabernacle immediately after its erection. They occupy the entire book of Leviticus and a considerable part of Numbers. It is not till Num. X. 1 1 that the long-lost thread of the narrative is pro- visionally taken up again. In the second month of the second year, that is to say, after about a year's abode at Sinai, the cloud rises above the habitation of the Testimony; the sons of Israel leave the wilderness of Sinai and travel to the wilderness of Paran.^ Kibroth-Hattaavah is passed en route ; thence the people move on towards Haseroth,* and come thus to the wilderness of Paran.^ This wilderness stretches in the north as far as the Negeb of Judah. Accordingly, spies are sent hence to Canaan. They are twelve tribal chiefs, and their names are given by P. Prom the desert of Sin (at the northern extremity of Paran) they pene- trate to Eehob in the far north of Canaan. At the end of forty days they return to Moses, Aaron, and the congregation, with the information that the land devours its inhabitants.^ The people begin to murmur against Moses and Aaron. Joshua and Caleb, who were of the number of the spies, seek to encourage them. But Yahv4 sentences the sons of Israel from twenty years old and upward to die in the wilderness ; they are to wander there forty ^ Part of Exod. xxxii. 15, to which v. 35 should probably be added, may belong to this. 2 He probably had here the account of the shining face of Moses, Exod. xxxiv. 29-32 (33-35). So Wellh., p. 566, Dillm., p. 332 (Kuen. =R). ' Num. X. 11 f. Vv. 13-28 are not improbably a later addition to P. ^ Num. xi. 35. Possibly P contained a history of the occurrences at Kibroth- Hattaavah, Of. the traces in xi. 24a and in vv. 18-22. = Num. xii. 16. " Num. xiii. l-17o, 21, 25, 26aba, 32ab. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 219 years, according to the forty days taken up by the spies. None but Joshua and Caleb shall see the land.^ The rebellion of Korah and his company takes 'place at some time during the thirty-eight years' wandering. It is probable that two narratives of it from P have been preserved to us. At all events, Korah had originally nothing in common with the Eeu- benites, Dathan and Abiram, save a mutinous disposition. Accord- ing to one of the narratives he is an apostate Levite (Wellh. Judahite ?), and makes common cause with two hundred and fifty heads of the people, who do not belong to the tribe of Levi, against Moses and Aaron, especially against the Levitical priesthood. They assert the holiness of the entire congregation, and protest, in the name of the lay tribes, against the priestly prerogatives of Levi. The glory of the Lord, before the Tabernacle, decides against them. Yahve is about to destroy the entire people, but allows himself to be prevailed on to cause the earth to swallow up Korah and his men with their households.^ A second, later narra- tive in P represents Korah as the head of a conspiracy formed by two hundred and fifty Levites Kke-minded with himself. Having been reduced to an inferior position they would now attack the Aaronic priesthood. They are consumed, near the Tabernacle, by a fire which comes forth from Yahvd.^ To the former of these narratives, the principal one in P, is attached the account of the blossoming of Aaron's rod. When the people murmur because of the destruction of the rebels, they are thus shown that the priesthood belongs to the tribe of Levi as against the lay tribes (not to Aaron as against the other Levites).* * Num. xiv. la, 2, 5-7, 10 (with Dillmann, Kuenen makes la, 2a, 3, 5-7, 10, 26-38 = P), 26-29 (Kuenen says edited by R), 34-39. 2 This is the account given by P' in Num. xvi. 2-7a, 15a (18), 19-23, parts of 24, 26, 27 (the reading, m.T pB'Di', ■■ i ., Dillm., is not necessary ; P' and E both mention the same kind of death and are intermingled here), 32-34. 3 Thus P= in Num. xvi. la, 76, 8-11, 16, 17 (18), 35 ; xvii. 1-5. On the whole chapter cf. Wellh. xxi. p. 572 £f. ; Kuen. Th.Tijd. xu. p. 139 ff. ; Dillm., JSTuDUo, p. 87 fF. ; also Kittel, TkSt W. ii. pp. 39, 162-165. Cf. further Kautzsch, in Ersoh and Gruber's EncyU. ii. 39, p. 36 ff. * Num. xvii. 6-28. Cf. my discussion of the passage in ThSt W. ii. p. 162 f. 220 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. No doubt the two laws that follow, relating to the position of the priests and Levites and the uncleanness caused by dead bodies/ also owe their present position in P, if not their origin, to their connection with the story of Korah. The events at Kadesh, in the desert of Sin, also belong in P to the thirty-eight years. And Israel has its principal settlement in this region (Paran) according to P also. The people murmur for water, and this leads Moses and Aaron to sin in some way which, here too, is no longer clear. On this account they also are not to see the promised land.^ After the departure from Kadesh, Israel comes to Mount Hor, in the fortieth year of the Exodus.^ This brings them to the border of Edom. The border of Edom mentioned here * must be the southern one. Aaron dies here.^ The stations of Oboth and lye-abarim are next mentioned, Salmonah and Punon ^ having been omitted (probably by accident). They have thus reached the eastern boundary of Moab, and consequently, as in E, have gone round the south of Edom and the east of Moab." For P, as for the other sources, Balaam's name is connected with these regions, though he plays here another part. The women of Midian ^ lead the Israelite men into fornication ; a plague from Yahv6 carries off twenty-four thousand Israelites, till Phinehas by his vigorous interposition brings it to an end.** According to P this sin is due to Balaam, who counselled Midian to effect Israel's destruc- tion by the wrath of God in this fashion.^" The result is that Israel undertakes a war of extermination against Midian.^^ The ' Num. xviii., xix. - Num. xx. laa, 2, 6, 12; cf. v. 24. ' Num. xxxiii. 38 ; the number missing in chap. xx. is to be supplied from this * At all events, the H'iSpZ of v. 23 precludes our looking for Hor in Edom. See Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 116. » Num. xx. 22-29. ° Cf. Num. xxxiii. 41, 42. ' Num. xxL 4ao, 10, 11. * On this account it is possible to believe that there are remnants of P in Num. xxii. 4, 7 : see above, ' Num. XXV. 6-19. Kuenen holds w. 16-18, and Dillmann w. 10-13, to be a later addition in P. '" Num. xxxi. 8, 16, which is to be supplied here. '' Num. xxxi. The present text is a fairly late addition to P, occasioned probably by the statements which origiaally belonged to Num. xxv. 6 S. Chap. IL] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 221 numbering of Israel at the close of the journey through the desert, a few laws,^ and, finally, the announcement of the death of Moses, and the consecration of Joshua as his successor, are inserted in P between the two narratives last mentioned. Moses is to die on Mount Abarim after viewing the land.^ Keuben and Gad (and half Manasseh?) beg for and obtain districts in the east. Afterwards the Manassite clan of Machir joins them.^ The Book of Numbers ends with the list of stations,* in which a final glance is cast over the march through the desert, the command to exterminate the inhabitants of the land, the deter- mination of its boundaries, and a few supplementary ordinances.^ It is not till the end of Deuteronomy that our source for a brief space again emerges to view. For reasons that can easily be understood R has placed here, instead of in their original position, the few notices it contains of the events that happened prior to the actual conquest of the land. Moses is commanded to go up Mount Abarim, Mount Kebo in the land of Moab, over against Jericho, to see the land of Canaan, and then die.® He does so (and dies), being a hundred and twenty years old. Joshua succeeds him.'' After the exposition we have given in § 14, No. 2, it is un- necessary to characterise in detail the course pursued by the editor (R'') in this part of the Pentateuch. On the whole he takes the same line here as in Genesis. The only distinction is that in 1 The numbering in Num. xxvi., the laws in xxvii. 1-11, xxviii. xxx. 1. On Num. xxx. 2 ff., see Dillm., p. 185. ^ Num. xxvii. 12-23. ' Num. xxxiv. 14 f. and Josh. xiii. 15 S. suffice to show that at least parts of Num. xxxii. belong to P. Cf. Kuen. Ond.^ p. 100 f., Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 193. Vv. 2 4 18-22, 28-32, 40 probably come from P. It is uncertain whether ' half Manasseh ' in «. 33 is also from P, or is due to R ; the latter, however, is more probable. * Num. xxxiii. 1-49. P gives this list, which he probably drew from older writings. In its present form it bears many marks of the hand of R (abbreviating and in some places enlarging or altering the sense, see below § 23, No. 6). For the rest see Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 202; Kayser, Vorexil, Buck., p. 97 ff. ; Wellh. xxii. p. 453 ; Kuen. Ond.^ pp. 101, 325. ' Num. xxxiii. 51, 54; xxxiv. -xxxvi. ^ Deut. xxxii. 48-52. ' Deut. xxxiv. laa, la, 8 f . Dillmann adds v. 5, but I prefer assigning this to J. 222 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. the other books E'^ has, in some places, made far more alterations than in Genesis. Consequently E** was in many respects antici- pated. Otherwise his main task continues the same as in Genesis, the harmonious grouping of all his material on the lines furnished by P. The task is more difficult than in Genesis, because the material is more abundant and varied. It is not his fault that he has accomplished his purpose less successfully here than there. II. THE HISTORICAL SUBSTANCE OF THE STOKY OF MOSES. § 23. The Statements of the Old Testament. 1. We are now to bring together again the threads of the texture presented by our extant tradition which we have hitherto been taking asunder. The result is a picture which, with manifold diversity of detail, exhibits nevertheless a remarkable harmony in almost all essential points, besides a considerable number of obviously trustworthy features. The following is a brief sketch of the chief features of the picture which our tradition gives of that epoch in Hebrew history. Israel, with the tribe of Joseph at its head, forsakes its ancient settlements in the neighbourhood of its brother-tribe Edom, and wanders into Egypt. There the people dwell, for an undefined length of time,^ in the land of Goshen. They retain their own language,, their nomadic customs, and, at all events partially, their ancestral religion.^ The tenacity with which they cling to their national and religious peculiarities, coupled with the dread lest they should make common cause ^ with the enemies of Egypt, 1 P, at Exod. xii. 40 f . , makes it four hundred and thirty years ; Gen. xv. 3 (in round numbers) four hundred ; other passages (Exod. vi. 16 flf.. Num. xxvi. 29 ff., Ruth iv. 18 flf., 1 Chron. ii. 18 ff., vii. 22 ff., etc.) much less. The Jews, accord- ing to Sam., Lxx., and Josephus, say two hundred and fifteen years, as do many Fathers of the Church and moderns. Cf. Dillm. ExLev., p. 120 f. 2 Cf. the phrase, ' the God of thy fathers,' Exod. iii. 6, xv. 2, xviii. 4. At least in the family from which Moses sprang the ancient God must therefore have been worshipped, though not under the name Yahv^ (see below). But on the other hand, for the rest (the larger part?) of the people, see Josh. xxiv. 14 ff., Ez. xvi. S, XX. 5 ff., 23 ff. (Amos v. 25 f. ?) s Exod. i. 9 f. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 223 induces the Egyptians to treat with ever-increasing harshness the strangers whom they formerly left unmolested. Especially are they compelled to do severe forced labour. Since they would not voluntarily become incorporated with the Egyptians they should be deprived of their nationality by force and by sustained pressure.^ Israel smarts under a bondage to which the native Egyptians have grown . accustomed through long usage, but which free shepherds deem disgraceful.^ Yet they do not summon up strength and resolution to shake off the yoke. Then a deliverer arises for Israel in the person of Moses. Moved by love for his people, he kills an Egyptian, and is consequently under the necessity of fleeing to the wilderness near Sinai. There he becomes son-in-law to one of the Arabian shepherd-princes. In intercourse with this man, who is tlie priest of his tribe, and. yet more, in the impressive solitude of the Desert of Sinai, which seems to bring God nearer to man, Moses acquires a new know- ledge of God. Yahv^, the living God, reveals to him His nature. In Him he perceives the power by which his people may be delivered. He returns to Egypt and preaches the new God, who at the same time is the God of the fathers of Israel. AVith this fresh faith in Israel's God, he arouses the courage and self-reliance of the people. Israel is ready to leave Egypt and follow Moses into the wilderness. Moses and his compatriots take advantage of punish- ments inflicted by God on the Egyptians,* and make their escape. His purpose is to lead them first to the wilderness and to the Mount of God, which has long been known as the abode of the Deity, and to himself has become a holy place. There he will make them more closely acquainted with their God. On the shore of the Eed Sea Israel is overtaken by the pursu- ing Egyptians ; the work of Moses, but just born, is threatened with destruction. A suddenly intervening natural occurrence, . 1 See Ewald, Oesch. Isr.^ ii. p. 11 ff. (Eng. Tiuns. ii. p. -1 ff.) - Cf. the oft-repeated expression, ' house of bondage.' > The traditions vary with regard to the plagues : see above, § 20 ff. But all asree aa to the main fact. 224 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. in which Israel ever afterwards saw the delivering hand of its God, enables Israel to pass unscathed through the sea, whilst the foes, with their chariots and horses, pressing after them, are swallowed in the waves. At Sinai Moses makes known to the rescued people the will of their God. In Yahve's name he gives them a law, and makes God's covenant with them. Israel has now become Yahvd's possession and people. Moses gives an ark to the people to be the visible pledge of God's presence, the place where He may be adored, the sacred palladium. The Tabernacle is its sheltering tent. On leaving Sinai, Israel wanders about in the wilderness, pasturing its flocks at large. But it does not lose sight of the wish to win its ancient settlements in the north of the Peninsula. Accordingly the people come to Kadesh, a desert station on the south edge of the Holy Land. An attempt to press northwards is defeated through their own cowardice. Wasted and beaten, they must wait for years ere they can again contemplate a forward march. Thus are their cowardliness and lack of faith in Yahv6 punished by their having to live several decades in and around Kadesh. Power and opportunity for carrying out their intentions do not come till a generation has passed away. A branch of the Amorites, the people which at that time held the greater part of Canaan, has, under its king, Sihon, driven from their homes Israel's relatives, the Hebrew tribes of Moab and Ammon. Ammon loses the dis- trict of the Upper Jabbok, Moab that which runs northward from the Arnon as far as the Lower Jabbok. Heshbon becomes the capital of this new Canaanite kingdom. Moses seizes the oppor- tunity, takes part in the conflict, and makes himself master of Sihon's kingdom.^ He retains that part of the Moabite territory which Sihon had conquered. He leaves to Balak the remainder of his kingdom, which Sihon had also, no doubt, begun to threaten. ' On the probable agreement amongst the sources respecting this point, also see below, p. 229 f. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 225 Towards Ammon he seems to have pursued the same line of action.^ Moses apportions the conquered district to the tribes of Eeuben and Gad. He then dies, without having crossed the Jordan, and leaves his work to be carried out by his minister Joshua. 2. This sketch brings together the main statements which are unanimously made by the sources or in all probability were originally made by them. But it is evident that the historic credibility of the Mosaic story is not conclusively evinced, either by this substantial harmony of the sources or by the impression of trustworthiness which is thus created. For alongside the general agreement of our narratives there are in other points undeniable discrepancies. And, as a rule, we are not in a position to judge of the extent to which statements which agree with an earlier source are made independently or are reproduced by the later writer from that source. Moreover, as we have seen, the dates of our three main sources, E, J, and P, fall some centuries later than the Mosaic period. We must, therefore, seek for other proofs of the credibility of the events recorded in the Mosaic story. The examination of the documents has shown that in E especially, but also in J, ancient writings, some of them con- temporary with the events, were made use of. We must fix our attention on these. First of all we come across those ancient songs which E especially has woven into his accoiint. It may be assumed that they were the accompaniments of the several supreme moments in the Mosaic history, serving as the hallowed expression of the feelings excited by great events. Afterwards they were written down or passed on from mouth to mouth. They begin with the Song at the Sea,^ the enthusiastic psean over Israel's deliverance at the Eed Sea, which in one place is put into the lips of Moses, and in another into Miriam's. The structure of the song enables us to distinguish between a shorter, older form, and an enlarged, later ' According to Judges xi. On this see below. = Exod. XV. 1-19, 20 f. See above, pp. 92 and 206. P 226 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. one. If the latter, which is a psalm composed according to the rules of art, received its present shape after the settlement in Canaan, the shorter poem is at all events far older. It bears the stamp of originality, and doubtless would not lose this if, instead of the fragment^ we now possess, the entire poem in its original shape were preserved. It would be groundless scepticism to maintain that the song is an artificial echo of the later legends concerning the passage through the Eed Sea. Such an idea is psychologically incomprehensible, and is absolutely condemned by the exquisite simplicity and grandeur of the poem. Where is there an instance of fiction consciously produced by later genera- tions displaying such strength and purity of inspiration ? If the song is original it is a brief but expressive documentary proof of a tremendous catastrophe having occurred, when Yahv6 cast the enemies of Israel into the sea ' with the horse and riders.' That the sea can have been no other than the Eed Sea, the enemies none but the Egyptians pursuing Israel, and the time that of the Exodus, is shown, not only by the commentary which accompanies the second form of the song, but also by the corre- sponding tradition in our Old Testament sources. But if these latter are confirmed, with respect to the central event, the catastrophe, by a document so important as the Song at the Sea, it follows that the historical context in which they set it gains in historical light and importance. Moreover, this is the only event that can be referred to, and no one will seriously think of another. The fact of our narrators making use of traditions which differ as to the attendant circumstances does not disprove the reality of the Passage through the Sea and the destruction of the Egyptian pursuers. The well-ascertained result as to the event itself cannot be touched even by our inability to disengage from the varying strata of tradition each single incident as it actually occurred and set it in clear light. Wellhausen,^ following J's account, has attempted to trace the actual course of events. According to him ' Exod. XV. 20 f. = Abriss der Gesch. Isr., p. 6 (Eng. Ed. p. 3 f.). Chap. II.] £.— HISTOEY OF THE PERIOD 227 the view to which P (and probably ^ E) gave currency, that the pursuing enemies were surprised by the returning waves does not correspond precisely with the facts. Instead of this, as J states, both armies cross the arm of the sea which has been denuded of water by a wind blowing during the night. The battle takes place on the farther shore: the locality is not favourable to the full employment of forces consisting largely of horses and chariots. They are thrown into confusion and begin to retreat, hoping the land-wind will hold out. As they return through the bed of the sea the wind changes, the waves return and cover them. Compared with the other view this is preferable as giving a perfectly comprehensible picture, the naturalness of which is self- evident. Nor is there any justification for thinking that this is a rationalising of what had at first been a purely miraculous account. True, the description in J brings out clearly the natural instrumen- tality employed in executing God's sentence, the coming and going of the land-wind. But nothing is further from the writer's mind than the inclination to set aside Yahv^'s miraculous intervention in the physical occurrence. The wind and the confusion of the enemy come from Yahv^. Obviously J has here the most ancient source to draw from. He narrates the process in which God's miraculous help came, as it, no doubt, really unfolded itself ; giving all the details just as the narrator himself had almost experienced them, or, at least, as he must have drawn them from a very early tradition which closely followed the actual occurrence. E and P represent a later stage of the tradition, in which the religious consciousness has kept hold of the essential point, the interposition of Yahv^, but has blurred the historical sense of the details and of the natural basis of the divine act. The result we have obtained is historically rich in consequences. Not only the Song, but all three main sources have historic ground beneath them. The Passage through the Sea is a historical fact. But this is a link of a chain which impUes others, earlier as well 1 As we now have it, E breaks off at the Passage of the Sea (see § 21 ), but his account probably resembled P rather than J. 228 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. as later. The abode in Egypt, the Exodus thence, the continued journeying in the Desert towards Sinai, are thereby all made certain, 3, It is desirable to pass at once from the beginning of the journey through the Desert and to fix our attention on its close. Our sources are all at one^ in speaking of a long-continued abode of Israel in Kadesh. And they are perfectly agreed that when the Israelites at last moved from Kadesh they did not take the direct route to Palestine from south to north, but turned eastwards so as to enter the country west of the Jordan some- where near the mouth of that river. Each of the three narrators ^ was therefore obliged to ask what arransrements Israel made with the populations settled on its line of march, Edom and Moab (and Ammon). It is expressly stated by E, and at least mentioned by P, that the first of these districts, Edom, was not passed through, but was avoided by taking a wide circuit.* According to P, and especially to Judges xi. 17, it must be held that Moab was treated in the same ' way. E tells us further how Moses sent also to request from Sihon, king of the Amorites, a passage through his land, but did not take the refusal so patiently as in the case of Edom and Moab, being the less inclined to this because Sihon's refusal took the form of preparation for war. A war ensues. Moses is victorious. Sihon's kingdom just taken from his pre- decessors the Moabites (and Ammonites) falls into Israel's hands. It is exceedingly remarkable that neither J nor P mentions the fight with Sihon. This consideration alone suffices to render Meyer's and Stade's view plausible.* They think that the fight with Sihon was not an original element of the tradition, much less a historical fact, but a mere fiction of E's. Meyer ® is mistaken in maintaining that J and P believe Israel 1 See above, §§ 20-22. ' We need not remark in further detail on the account in Deut. i. ff. It does not claim to be an independent narrative, but a free, hortatory version of the narrative matter which it found in E. ' See above, p. 220. * See above, pp. 90, 213 f. » ZA W. V. p. 47 f. On P, r/. above, p. 220 ; on J the following. Chap. II.] J?.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 229 to have made a peaceful marcli through Edom and Moab. But although he is mistaken on this point, the silence of the two sources as regards Sihon excites a reasonable suspicion. Meyer's theory fails, however, to remove the difficulty, at any rate as far as P is concerned. For whether E introduced Sihon without any support from facts or not, P is considerably more recent than E. In fact, Meyer and Stade scarcely regard him as a historian ; he is to them a mere compiler from earlier sources. What inducement, then, could he have for striking out the fight with Sihon, an event which could only enhance Israel's glory ? It is evident that the omission of Sihon cannot well be due to P himself. It must be ascribed to E, who found in E the fullest narrative, founded for the most part on authentic documents, and therefore gave it the preference. The same considerations apply to J, if it is admitted that J is later than E and acquainted with that source. And even those who believe J to be the older cannot but admit the weight of the argument drawn from the fragmentary and obviously mutilated condition of this part of J. It is not Sihon only who is left unmentioned. Not a word is said about Israel's relations to Edom, whether the latter country was passed through or avoided. Immediately after Israel's abode in Kadesh the Balaam episode is introduced.^ J certainly did not write in that abrupt fashion. And although the reason for the mutilation may possibly be found in certain discrepancies between his text and E, there is no ground for concluding from the present state of his text that he did not here relate the fight with Sihon. I proceed therefore on the assumption that J and P as well as E were acquainted with the fight against Sihon, and that their apparent silence is due to E. This assumption is strongly recommended by the fact that the conquest of the land east of the Jordan cannot be understood apart from the war with the Amorites. Balak's action, and his fears for the remainder of his terri- tory are meaningless if Israel marched peacefully through Moab, as Meyer holds P to have followed J in stating.'' If Israel came ' See above, p. 202. ' lU siipra. 230 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. simply as a friend and was welcomed into the land of Moab, what reason had Balak for getting this friend cursed? But if Israel had shown itself to be a considerable military power and was now occupying Moabite territory instead of restoring it to Balak, his fears were well grounded. Moreover, P and J agree with E as to there having been no war with Moab. But if the territory of Moab was the starting- point of the invasion of Canaan, and if it is incredible that Moab willingly allowed Israel to stay a long time in the Arboth Moab, the only possible conclusion is that P and J assume what E states, viz., that Moab had had to give up a portion of its territory to Sihon not long before, and Israel now took from him this Moabite territory. The same result is reached when we take into account the unanimity of the tradition as to the avoidance of a conflict with Moab and Edom. If a struggle with Sihon is not admitted, the implication is that Israel reached the Jordan without once drawing the sword. This can hardly have been the meaning of the narrative in J and P. The evidence of the sources is then, as has already been shown,^ strongly in favour of the idea that the action against Sihon, which is common to all the chief sources, really occurred. The doubts which Meyer and Stade have expressed as to the great antiquity of the Song ^ which E inserted in his narrative have been found by us to be ill-founded. On the contrary we have here to do with an ancient historical document of the highest value, which certifies us that in the Mosaic period the Canaanites (Amorites) under Sihon established themselves also in the land east of the Jordan, and partially expelled Moab and Ammon from their homes.* Israel believes itself justified in fighting the intruder, but retains for itself the territory recovered from him. This explains Balak's anxiety for the rest of his land and his proceedings against Israel. But E 's narrative is pronounced untrustworthy on the ground that it contradicts facts. Meyer says that the districts which the ' See above, p. 90, also p. 213 f. = Num. xxi. 27-30. ' To be supplied according to Judges xi, 12 if. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PEEIOD 231 narrative and the Song call the kingdom of Sihon were in point of fact purely Moabite. The proofs of this are drawn from the times of Mesha and Isaiah. No one doubts the truth of the assertion so far as those periods are concerned. But what do we know about the extent of the Moabite territory in the days of Moses except from E 's accounts ? ^ In so far as the sources designate this district ' the territory of the Moabites ' they are fully justified, seeing that the country was Moabite both previously and subsequently, and therefore probably bore the name ' Arboth Moab ' as a fixed geo- graphical title.2 4. If the fight with Sihon is established this casts light both forwards and backwards. We have here to deal with the latter. The sources are unanimous as to Israel's having dwelt a long time in Kadesh and the neighbourhood before setting out for the field of Moab.3 Almost every one now * thinks that P differs from the other sources in not bringing Israel to Kadesh till the close of the journey through the Desert. I cannot deem this view neces- sary.5 But on the supposition of its truth the various accounts do yet agree again significantly in making the Israelites remain a long ' Meyer in ZA W. i. p. 128. - Nor can I believe Meyer correct in holding {ZA W. v. ', p. 44) that even Judges xi. does not mean that Sihon's kingdom was carved out of Moab and Ammon, but that it was originally Amorite territory. Had this been the case the Ammonite in Judges xi. 13 would have had nothing to go on in claiming the district as his property. His only exaggeration is in putting Ammon instead of Ammon and Moab ; Jephthah corrects him, v. 15. The only possible meaning of his reasoning is that Moab and Ammon had at one time possessed the district but had been dispossessed by Sihon, not by the Israelites, and consequently had no right to require Israel to restore it to them. If this were not the fundamental idea there was no need for Jephthah to take part in the discussion. ' See above, pp. 202, 212, 220, and add Deut. i. 46 ; Judges xi. 17. " See Riehm's HWB., pp. 802, 822 ; DUlm. NuDtJo., p. 110. ° On p. 220 we have placed the arrival at Kadesh within the thirty-eight years. We cannot learn much by appealing to Num. xxxiii. 36 f. ; here, too, some of the forty stations must be thought of as occupied a very long time. Kadesh will be one of them. It is very striking too that in this passage the stay in the Wilder- ness of Paran, to which P ascribes so much importance, is quite passed over in the list ; and, in general, P in his text only partially adheres to Num. xxxiii. See below, p. 230. 232 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. time, and that unwillingly, in the district of Kadesh,^ i.e. in the Wilderness of Sin, the noi'thern part of the Wilderness of Paran, near to Canaan. The tradition states that about thirty-eight years were spent in the Desert, the greater part of the time in the district of Kadesh. And the sources are again at one in ascribing this to Israel's cowardly refusal to carry out a scheme for the con- quest of Canaan from the south, framed by Moses, at Yahv^'s command, in the second year after the Exodus from Egypt. As to J this has been denied,^ and the assertion made that he is not acquainted with the forty years' abode in the Desert. But the analysis of the sources which we have given above ^ makes such a deviation of J from E and P improbable. 1 can see no reason for doubting that Israel did actually sojourn forty years in the Wilderness.* It is too well supported both by the Pentateuch and also by Amos v. 25. Supposing this to be the case, the most probable view will always be that Israel did not wander up and down the Desert the whole time, but for the greatest part of it had a fixed centre in Kadesh itself. That holds good whether we explain it in Wellhausen's way or in the one we have attempted above, whether, therefore, we adhere to there having been a prior scheme for conquering Canaan from the south or not. 5. Now we come to the events at Sinai. If the Passage through the Eed Sea has been shown to be a historical fact, as we believe we have proved above, the natural direction of the Israelite march would be towards Sinai. If Egypt opposed the Exodus of the sons of Israel there was no better and likelier method of escaping from this disturbing influence than for Moses to interpose the broad arm of the sea between Egypt and Israel, in other words, to turn towards the southern end of the peninsula.^ The proof that this direction was taken is actually furnished ^ As to the position of the place, see Palmer, The Desert of the Exodus, p. 350 £F. ; Palestine Exploration Fund, 1871, p. 20 f. ; and especially Trumbull, Kadesh Bamea, 1884; Hommel, Gesch. Bah. u. Ass., p. 369. 2 Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 140. ' Cf. p. 200 f. ■* Hitzig also does this, Gesch. Isr., p. 67 ; see also Duncker, Gesch. d. Altert.^ i. p. 416. ■' See Duncker, Gesch. d. Altert.^ i. p. 419. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 233 by an ancient fragment^ which tells of a fight with Amalek and is ascribed by E, probably also by J, to Moses himself. "Whether it was really composed by Moses or was written down by a later hand the fact remains, that one, if not both, of the narrators just mentioned had it and used it as a document of great antiquity. I look upon its Mosaic origin as quite possible. In any case the fragment must be regarded as a well - authenticated document concerning an event that happened in the time of Moses. According to it Israel has a hostile encounter with Amalek shortly before reaching Sinai. The tradition has preserved for us the recollection that Moses was connected by marriage with the Arab tribe of the Midianites, who dwell near Sinai, and that he had lived a long time amongst them before placing himself at the head of Israel. Hence it is intrinsically probable that if Moses did not wish to meet with invincible obstacles to the deliverance of his people he would make sure of the help of the Arab tribes of SinaL If he did not find amongst them friends for himself and his followers the enterprise was foredoomed to failure. It is therefore a thoroughly trustworthy feature of the narrative that the priestly sheikh of the Midianites, whose name, owing to the discrepancy of the traditions,- we are not quite sure of, stood in a close personal connection with Moses, his tribe, too, being in friendly relationship with Israel. The credibility of the state- ment that one of the Sinaitic Arab tribes approved of Israel's march through the Peninsula is not diminished by the fact that the name of the tribe remains doubtful.^ On the one hand, then, Israel meets with a welcome on the road and a recognition of the close relationship in origin and earlier history which connects it with the Arabs of the Peninsula of Sinai. But on the other hand, another of these tribes, the war- 1 Exod. xvii. 8 ff. " E calls him Jethro ; J, Reuel ; whilst Hobab (ben Reuel) appears as Zip- porah's brother. See above, §§ 20, 21, especially p. 200. ' Usually called Midianites (in E and J), but beside this Kenites (Cain) : see below, § 26, No. 1 ; also Stade, Gesch. i. p. 131 f. ; Ewald, Gesch. Isr? ii. p. 64 f. (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 44 £f); Dillm. ExLev. p. 18. 234 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. like Amalek, seeks to prevent it from reaching Sinai. The action of the Amalekites arises from their feeling that the oases of Sinai are their property and are hardly large enough to furnish pasture grounds which will suffice to support Israel as well as themselves. The battle is fought at Eephidim.^ By Yahv^'s help Israel gains the victory. This leaves the road to Sinai open to Moses. He leads his people thither. The district round Sinai serves as their abode for a considerable period until they move on towards the north and so reach the border of the land which afterwards becomes their own. Events of the utmost importance to the people, affecting, indeed, their whole future, are to happen at the mountain so long sacred, in the midst of the most impressive surroundings to be found in the peninsula. Yahve their God reveals Himself to them through Moses. Moses, the deliverer and leader of his people, here becomes their prophet and lawgiver. The transactions at Sinai, so far as their details are concerned, are surrounded with a deep and almost impenetrable obscurity. There is hardly a point in the entire Old Testament tradition where the accounts are so complicated and confused as here. This is due to the editorial effort to give unity to the weightiest passage in the national history. Not even with respect to the name of the mountain do the traditions agree completely. Yet there can hardly be a doubt that it is one and the same mountain which E calls Horeb and J and P Sinai.^ Still less is it possible to determine with absolute certainty, from the data supplied by our sources, which mountain of the great mountain-mass in the south of the peninsula is the one designated by that double name in the Old Testament* There can, however, be no doubt that they actually marched to Horeb-Sinai, i.e. to the mountain called by this name in Hebrew antiquity. The well-authenticated fight with the hostile Amalek ^ On the position of the place, see Ebers, Durch Gosen zti Sinai^ (1881), p. 221 ff. = On this see Dillm. ExLev., p. 24 f. * Cf. the thorough discussion, where every relevant point is dealt with, in Ebera, Durch Gosen zu Sinai,' p. .392 ff. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 235 made the road thither passable. If that is historical the onward inarch to Sinai is a fact. Moreover, we are in possession of in- dependent information as to the purport of what happened at Sinai ; with it we have a proof of the actual march, even when we leave aside the battle with the Amalekites. The various threads of the narrative may be much tangled at this point also ; but one thing stands out as the most important point in all the narratives : — the centre of everything that happens here is the revelation of Yahv4 at Sinai in a law which is to rule the life of the people. With respect to the contents and compass of this law the narrators vary from each other more widely almost than as to the external history of the law-giving. ISTothing could be more natural. For no other event could so interest the people ; none would be so frequently reported as this. But with all their differences the narrators agree as to the thing itself. If we now succeed in extracting the original kernel from the laws which to-day bear the name of Moses, we thereby make it very probable that we have in it the true Mosaic law, i.e. the rules which Moses himself laid down at Sinai for the regulation of his people's life. This probability would become certainty if we found ourselves in a position to trace the kernel back to Moses. For both points the requisite evidence is forthcoming. The oldest elements, the very kernel of the Pentateuch legislation, are, as has already appeared, the portions included under the two titles, the Decalogue and the Book of the Covenant. Now our documents^ relate that the latter law was written by Moses him- self at the bidding of Yahve, and that the former, the Decalogue, was written by Yahve on two tables of stone and delivered to Moses ^ Comparing the characteristics of the two portions with these statements, we cannot but see that neither the Decalogue nor the Book of the Covenant in their present form can be directly Mosaic. Criticism must be allowed a free hand in separating the later additions and enlargements, which here also are quite in- telligible. When this is done the original kernel both of the one ^ Exod. xxiv. 4, 7 ; xxxiv. 27. " Exod. xxxi. 18 ; xxxiv. 28 ; cf, v. 1. 236 HISTOEY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. document and of the other must remain. Their Mosaic origin is witnessed to in a manner which deserves the fullest credence : the infrequency with which such witness is borne ; the contents, as well as the concise and lapidary style of these two fundamental laws; the history of the circumstances amidst which we have shown they originated — are sufficient proofs.^ 6. This completes the circle of those leading facts which in my opinion can be directly shown to be historical from the Old Testament narratives. I do not deny that a number, possibly a considerable number, of statements found in the sources have equal claims to historical reliableness. But we are without the means to substantiate them. We have yet to speak of some details, few in number, but not unimportant. For the camping-grounds of Israel in the desert we have not only the incidental statement in J and the remains of an ancient list of stations^ in E, but also another much more complete enumeration* in P. This claims to be from the hand of Moses. At least P declares, in his introduction to the list, that Jloses wrote it. It must therefore be concluded that P made use of an ancient list which was ascribed to Moses. But whether P himself enlarged and to some extent altered the ancient copy or one of his successors introduced changes, certain it is that Num. xxxiii. as it now stands is not the original, authentic list of stations which P found in existence. For in its present condition it agrees with P as little as with the other writers. It does not bring the people to Kadesh till the end of the journeyings.* At least it seems so : nothing is said about a prolonged stay at that place ; and from there to the Jordan only nine stations are mentioned, whereas twenty-one have preceded. On the other hand the sojourn, which to P is so important, in the Desert of Paran-Sin, to which Kadesh belongs, is not so much as mentioned. This proves that P neither drew up the list nor used it in this ^ In §§ 20 and 21 we have dealt fully with Wellhausen's denial of this and the consequences which he goes on to draw. = Num. xxi. 12 f., 186-20 ; Dent. x. 6. ,^ Num. xxxii. ; <•/. above, p. 231. ■* Num. xxxiii. 36 ; c/. v. 37. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 237 form. It must have been considerably modified by E, who, besides making some additions, greatly abbreviated or altered, especially in r. 36 £ To bring the list into harmony with the composite narra- tive of the Pentateuch as now arranged, he either omitted the stations after Kadesh or put Kadesh in a far later position than it occupied in the document he was working from.^ This gives rise to the appearance that Israel did not reach Kadesh till so late a period, whereas E, J, and P bring them there (or to Paran) earlier. Hence it is clear that Num. xxxiii. no longer gives us thoroughly reliable information respecting Israel's camping- grounds in the desert. For although it is based on an ancient document which, with its many names, was originally of the highest value, we no longer have it in its purity and in the order of the original, iloreover, it is just those names which are not mentioned in the narrative parts of the Pentateuch that present the greatest difficulties in the way of explanation. ^ We also know very little about the numerical strength of the sons of Israel when they left Egypt and when they invaded Canaan. P gives the number of men capable of bearing arms as six hundred thousand.^ This would imply a total of two or three million souls, an estimate decidedly too high. The circumstances of Israel itself as well as those of Goshen and the Desert leave no doubt on that point.'* Unfortunately E's endeavour after unity has led him to strike out the number E also gave, which was certainly not so high.* We are reduced to conjecture and our only datum is that supplied in the Song of Deborah.® But we shall have to put the number much higher than is mentioned there. Finally, we must glance at the Desert Sanctuary set up by Moses. The elaborate picture drawn by P ^ of a costly Taber- 1 Of. above, pp. 231 and 221. 2 See Dillmann, NuDUo., on Num. xxxiii. ; for the rest cf. Biehnj, JSWB. Art. 'Lagerstatten.' = Exod. xii. 37 ; Num. 1 f. (xi. 21 R?). * See Schleiden, Die Landenge von Sites, p. 186 ff. ; Noldeke, Unters. , p. 115 ; Reuss, L'histoire gainte, p. 85 ff. ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 5 ff. But cf. also Ewald, Geach. IsrJ ii. 276 ff. (Eng. Trans, pp. 279 ff.); Kohler, Bibl. Gesch. i. p. 198. » Exod. xiL 37. See above, p. 206. « Judges V. 8 ; ' Forty thousand in Israel,' i.e. fit for arms. ' Exod. xxv. ff. 2.38 HISTORY OF THE HEBREW'S [Book I. nacle in which the holy Ark was to be kept cannot be historical. This appears, not so much from the impossibility of constructing so costly and artistic a tent/ as from the fact that E's description gives us a glimpse into the far simpler character of the Mosaic Tent in the "Wilderness.^ E also knows that the tent was made out of the ornaments of the Israelites, being therefore a somewhat costly structure, yet it remains an ordinary tent, not a work of art and splendour. This is the historical fact.^ The description in P corresponds to the idea which people in later times, influ- enced probably by what they saw of the continually increasing costliness of their sanctuaries, formed of the sacred desert-tent of the days of Moses. But the holy ark seems, even in the days of iloses, to have been the sanctuary, strictly so called, where Yahve's presence was revealed.* It corresponds to the arks of other nations. As in later days it accompanied Israel to battle ^ in pledge of God's presence and help, so in the days of Moses it marches at the head of the people. But there was nothing in it save the two tables of the law. There is not a trace of its having resembled the heathen arks in containing an image of Yahve or a holy stone."^ § 21. Tlie same Siibject continued. — Moses and his Religion. 1. In the preceding paragraphs the name of Moses has been intentionally avoided as a rule, and only mentioned incidentally. But the tradition admittedly attributes to him the work of freeing Israel, leading them through the desert, and giving them their religion. The powerful and resolute personality of Moses is to it the deliverer of Israel, the author of its national life, the prophetic ^ See the literature from Vater and de Wette to Graf, Colenso, and Kuenen, in Dillm. ExLev., p. 269, and in the Dictionaries. On the other side, especially Riggenbach, Die mos. Stiftshutte^ (1867). 2 Exod. xxxiii. 6 flF. The construction of it has dropped out between w, 6 and 7, on account of Exod. xxv. ff. , xxxi. ff. Cf. Num. x. 33 ff. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 20, 65, mentions a similar object, the leph, axrivri of the Carthaginians. • Num. x. 33 ff. * On this see especially Kautzsch, ZA W. vL 17 if. * As Seinecke supposes, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 165 f. ; Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. pp. 448, 457 ; Meyer, Gesch. d. Altert. i. p. 358. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 239 founder of its religion. Has this view a historical foundation, or is it poetic legend that has created this figure and placed it as a brilliant phenomenon at the head of the history of the nation ? It has been shown that the story of the Exodus and of the "Wandering through the Desert contains at least a few leading state- ments the historical validity of which is beyond question. Israel left Egypt, passed through the Eed Sea to Sinai, received there the system of worship and of life which it afterwards observed, pursued its journey thence to Kadesh and then to the eastern boundary of Canaan. In fact, we still possess some documents that claim, and in all probability justly claim, to belong to that period of wandering in the desert, which is briefly designated the Mosaic age. It is true that only one of those ancient documents actually contains the name of Moses.^ But considering how meagre is our oldest information, that one is important. Besides this the narrators are careful to bring into the closest connection with Moses not only the entire work wrought by the nation in those days but also in particular a portion of those documents. Some also amongst the earlier of the prophets who made use of writing,^ even when they do not expressly mention Moses, are not able to think of the height reached in the ancient days except in connection with his person. But there is also a general consideration which fully evinces the historical existence of Moses. If the events of that period are, as a whole, beyond dispute, they demand for their explanation such a personality as the sources give us in Moses. Everything shows that Israel in Egypt had no pretension to be a nation : its nationality had yet to be created. The spirit of national unity and self-assertion had yet to be breathed into the oppressed and enslaved masses which were in danger of losing their individuality. Such a work does not accomplish itself. It is only wrought when there is a personality behind the mass, towering above them, urging them on, setting on fire with its own holy enthusiasm the ' The account of the fight with the Amalekites, Exod. xvii. ' Hos. xii. 14; Micah vi. 4; cf. Jer. vii. 25; Isa. Ixiii. 11. 240 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. consciousness of nationality. Israel became a nation at the Exodus. Moses created it. Without him Israel would have remained what it was before. Then came the Exodus itself and the events at Sinai. The march from Egypt and through the "Wilderness, the fight with the pursuing Egyptians and the hostile Amalekites, and all the rest of the desert experiences, imply that the movement was directed by a single strong hand. Such a work could not have been carried out by the unorganised Hebrew families which Moses found in Egypt, which attached themselves to him. There needed a captain, able to sway the multitude, to hold together conflicting elements, to support the faint-hearted, to ward off the foe, to compose quarrels — in short, a leader of genius, a circumspect general and judge, a resolute, daring patriot at the head of the newly formed nation.^ There remains still a class of facts which are even less capable than the successes already mentioned of being explained apart from a specially inspired prophetic personality. I mean the new religious creation in Israel; the new revelation of God and of law, which is so closely connected with the stay in the Desert. Nothing is less likely to arise spontaneously out of the depths of a people's life than those new creations which make epochs in the history of religion and morals. They slumber there, but they do not come to the surface until a single spirit, of whom they have taken entire possession, finds them in himself, grasps them, understands and proclaims them, and thus becomes the religious and moral hero, the prophet of his people. The mere name Moses would do nothing. If legend had created the bearer of that name, another must have actually filled his place. But seeing that it is well authenticated and hardly has a Hebrew ring,^ we have every reason for retaining it. 2. If, then, Moses is a historical person, his chief importance > See Duncker, Gesch. d. Altert.^ i. p. 397 f. 2 See Josephus. Arch. ii. 9. 6 ; c. Apion, i. 31 ; but, more correctly, Lepsius, Chronol. i. p. 326 ; Ebers, Durch Gosen,^ p. 539. Chap. IL] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 241 will consist in the religious and moral creation he effected. This is the grandest, most fruitful, and enduring of his productions. It gave a certain durability and firmness in later days to that pro- visional unity of the people, which in the first place was due to his personal character and the pressure of circumstances. It was the foundation on which the state-life of Israel was afterwards bunt. And though the latter was speedily destroyed, that creation survived. Amidst the crushing blows of fate which the centuries of history have dealt Israel's nationality, this creation has preserved it from destruction, for a long time keeping it in vigour, and to the present day maintaining it in feeble life, though in many respects degenerate and perverted. Long after the state was de- voted to destruction and the people given up to divisions and fruitless party strife, the religion of Israel continued to bring to ripeness impulses vigorous with life and subduing the world. How is this enigma of history to be explained ? Certainly not from any attempt on the part of Moses to establish a world-wide religion. JSTor was it from any specially favourable destiny or cir- cumstances giving his people and work an advantage over others. Amongst other nations, indeed, whose power was immeasurably greater or whose influence was much more likely to ensure the spread and perpetuation of their religion, the external conditions were far more favourable. Why, then, was not the same significance attained by the faith of the Nileland, by that of Mesopotamia, by the religious systems of the Philistines and the seafaring Canaanites ? There must have been something in the religion of Moses from the very first which made a special development possible. There must have lived within it a power of gradually unfolding until it reached the might and splendour, the purity, power, and elevation which we see in later times. Unfavourable circumstances could not stay this, neither could the weakness and ruin of the nation ; nay, it vanquished at last every unfavourable element, drawing each of these into its own service. In other words, Moses himself must have given something to his people that raised their faith above that of the other nations, making it Q 242 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. purer, more fruitful, more capable of development. We must inquire what this was. In the prophets, from Amos and Hosea downwards, the so- called ethical monotheism of Israel finds its complete expression. Several attempts have recently i been made, in continuation of still earlier ones,^ to prove that this was not the religion of the Mosaic age, but a product of that period of the literary prophets which has been called in the stricter sense the prophetic age. The prophetic faith is supposed to have necessarily developed in its purity, under the influence of world-wide events, out of the so- called pre-prophetic faith which Israel held in the age preceding the prophetic one. It would, of course, be difficult to deny that the faith of the earlier age, and consequently that of Moses himself, must in many respects have been of a different kind and a less developed form than that of the prophetic epoch. The idea of the world and the world-empire, which was beaten into the trembling hearts of the prophets by the pitiless hammer-strokes of fate, was unknown to Moses and his age. Assyria first taught what a world-empire and a world-ruler was. Not till then did the prophets contrast the super-earthly universal King, the world-ruler Yahv6, with the earthly Great King, and the empire of God with the empire of the ■world. And if the world-empire and the world were outside the ■circle of Moses's vision, it follows that the same is true of that ■divine moral government of the world which moves everything in it so as to serve the ends of the Kingdom of God. The prophets ■only became acquainted with this through the conflict betwixt the ideal and the real, through the cruel distresses of their age, the struggle after harmony and after the reconciliation of the bitter realities of Israel's hopeless present with the idea they held of God. They did not invent that idea of the Kingdom of God and ' Kuenen, Oodsdienst van Israel; Duhm, Theologie der Propheten; Wellh. Abriss (Sketch of the Hist, of Isr. and Judah) ; Stade, Oesch. Isr. ; Kuen. Hibhert Lectures on National Helir/iona and Universal Religions. ' Especially Vatke's Bill. Theol. i. For the rest of the literature, see Kouig, Die Hauplprobleme der altisr. Iteligiomgesch. (1884), p. 2 f. Chap. II.] P.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 243 the moral government of the world, but they discovered it as soon as they drew together the threads of the faith they had inherited from Moses, and wove thereinto the picture of their own quite different times. On the other hand, however, there is no justification for ex- plaining the progress which the prophets made by developing the Mosaic ideas, in such a way as to imply that the earlier period, including that of Moses, was a time of mere nature-religion, whilst Moses himself retained the heathenism common to all the Semites, merely transferring to it the name Yahvd.^ If this had been the case, and the religion of Moses had been nothing more than the heathenism of all the Semites, practised under the name of Yahv6, there would be no way of explaining the effects which that religion produced in the earlier days of Israel or the powerful development which we have already spoken of. For it would then be incomprehensible why Chemosh or Baal, or Amon-Ea and Ilu, were not able to rival Yahve. The view which we thus reject loses sight of two points. In the first place the prophets never aimed at founding a new faith.^ Fully conscious that they were adapting Israel's ancient faith to fresh circumstances, their constant purpose was simply to uphold and renew the old faith which in their time had been forgotten and left aside. When they proclaim their weightiest traths they feel themselves in full accord with the Torah of Yahv^, which the people knew, and had heard long before.^ Further, I cannot agree with the practice which has recently found many adherents of taking the whole period prior to the prophets as a homogeneous whole and contrasting it with the prophetic period. We cannot deny that in the days of the Judges and of the first kings Israel ' Against older writers, such as Kaiser, Daumer, Ghillany and others, see Dillm. Ueber den Urajn-ung. d. alltest, Rdig., 1865; also, more recently, Konig, JIauptprobl. p. 7 ff. 2 See Konig, JIauptprobl,, p. 14 f. ' Of. such expressions as Amos ii. 4, ' Judah rejects the Torah of YahviS ; ' HoBca ii. 15, ' Israel lias forgotten Yahv6 ' ; iv. 6, ' He hath forgotten the Torah of his God ; ' viii. 12, ' Yahv(S hath written for Israel a multitude of Toroth ; ' Micah vi. 8, ' Man is told what Yahve requires.' £44 HISTOET OF THE HEBREWS [Book L appropriated many elements of the Canaanire nature-religion. But tMs does not justafy us in ignoring the fact that in many respects those times show a declension as compared with the Mosaic. The elevation of the Mosaic period, the living, original force and enthusiasm of a great creative age, which it undeniably manifested, are quite forgotten when the popuhrr belief and the institutions of the age after Moses are taken as the standard for the so-called pre-prophetic period, and the Mosaic age is depicted in accordance with it. The Mosaic age and the work of Moses must rather be understood by considering what they were in themselves, and what were the forces that lived in them. The key to these can only be found in the scanty, yet suthcieut sources of the history of Moses. For our question, the Mosaic Decalogue is decisive. The peculiarity of the religion of Moses must be learned from it The Decalogue as we now have it is provided with many explanatory additions and enl;\igemeuts. The Ten "Words which were inscribed on the tables of stone may have run as fol- lows : ^ — 1. I am Yahve thy God (who brought thee out of the land of Egypt). I. Thou shalt have no other gods besides Me. II. Make to thyself no image. III. Thou shalt not use the name of Yahve thy God to deceive. lY. Eemember the Sabbath Day, to keep it holy. Y. Honour thy father and mother. 2. YI. Do no murder. VII. Do not commit adultery. Yin. Do not steal. 1 Cf. Ewald, Gesch IsrML p. 231 (Eng. Trans, ii p. 231) ; Vatke, EM. p. 33S. Vatke strikes out No. ii, and places the superscription as Xo. i, but this intro- duces confusion, compelling us to begin the second table with Xo. v. Chap. IL] A— HISTORY OF THE PEEIOD 245 IX. Do not bear false witness against thy neighbour. X. Do not covet thy neighbour's house. The programme of the new religion is contained in the sen- tence which introduces the Ten Words : ' I am Yahv^ thy God.' ^ This introduction to the Decalogue, combined with the definite assertion ^ on the subject by E and P as well as by the prophets,^ make it extremely difBcult to believe that the name Yahv6 was known to Israel prior to Moses.* The solitary name compounded with Yahv^ in earlier times, that of Jochebed, the mother of Moses, does not seem to me to be any proof of this. Its meaning ^ is so obscure as to make it very possible that it has been altered into a form more in accordance with the new faith. Opinions vary as to the significance of the name Tahv6. In any case, it cannot be right to seek it outside the limits of the Hebrew,^ not to say the Semitic tongues.^ But within that range there remains a choice between two leading explanations, one of which makes the word to be a Qal.s the other a Hiphil * form. The former would mean : ' He who is,' the latter : ' He who causes to be, the Creator.'^" In either case the import of the name ' Wellh. Ahriss, p. 9 ff. (Eng. Ed. p. 8), lays special, but unduly exclusive, stress on this. ' Exod. iii. 14 ; vi. 3. J's use of the name in the primal history is not due to a theory, but to a naive lack of historical exactness. ' Hos. xii. 10 ; xiii. 4 ; Ezek. xx. 5. < Tholuck, Ueb. d. Ursprung d. Nam. Jahvi ( Verm. Schr. 1867), p. 201 ; Nestle, Isr. Eigennam., p. 80; Kuen. Godsd. i. p. 276. ° See Nestle, Eigennam. , p. 77. ' As Hartmann, Land, Movers, Lenormant, do ; moreover Delitzsch, Parodies, p. 158 ff. ; Sohrader, KAT.^ pp. 23 ff., 162 ff. (Eng. Trans, i. pp. 23 ff. 150 ff.) On the other side see Baud. Studien, i. p. 222 ff. ; Nestle, Eigennam., p. 83f. ;Dillm. ExLev. t^. Zi ; Philippi, in .^iscftr. /ijr VOlkerpsi/ch., 1883, p. 175 ff. ' Vatke, Bibl. Theol. p. 672 ; J. G. Miiller, BieSemiten in ihrVerh. zu d. Indog. p. 163 ff. ; Roth, Gesch. una. Ahendl. Phil. L p. 146. 8 Dillm. ExLev., p. 33 ; DeUtzseh in PSE.'^ vi. p. 503 ; Miihlau-Volck, iez." p. 326. » Lagarde, ZDMG. xxii. p. 330 f. ; Psalter juxta Sebr. Eier., p. 153 ff. ; Schrader, ZDMG. xxxiv. p. 404, and in Schenkel's Bibl. Lex., Art. 'Jahve;' Baud. Studien, i. p. 229 ; Nestle, Eigennam., pp. 89, 91 ff. '" I prefer the second explanation : the first appears to me too abstract (see my remarks in the Lit. Centr. Bl., 1881, Sp. 171). Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 429, has recently conjectured that it means ' He who strikes down : ' prior to him cf. also Nestle, Eigenn., p. 92. 246 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. chosen for God gives rise to a striking difference, altogether in favour of Israel, between the divine names used by the neighbour- ing peoples and that used in Israel. Baal, Moloch, Milcom, etc., express nothing but the consciousness of dependence : the adoring man is at the same time the ministering slave. It is true that Yahv^, like all other gods, is often enough called the Lord. But the essence of His relation to Israel, as expressed in His chief name, is not ruling might and lordly power, but the aid that helps one forward. The basis is thus already laid for the idea that Israel is God's firstborn son, that God loves Israel.^ The very name Yahv^ when the depth of its meaning is grasped, rises above the nature-religions. If Israel afterwards frequently enough looked on it as being merely one divine name amongst the rest,^ even interchanging it with Baal, this was a forgetting of its meaning. To Moses the name must have signified more. The prohibition of the worship of other gods besides Yahve raises Israel's faith still higher above that of other nations. We know not whether Moses believed in the existence of other gods besides Yahv^ ; he says nothing about this. Israel after Moses did partially admit it.^ Hence we cannot say whether Moses con- nected with this command an absolute or a relative monotheism, God's sole unity in the strictest sense or simply His unlikeness to all others. In any case his idea is loftier by far than that of the surrounding religions. In them a single god may claim the first place as supreme over the other gods; but he tolerates them alongside himself. Each of these deities has a female principle corresponding to him, or minor deities subordinate to him. Yahve alone allows of no other God besides Himself.^ Polytheism and its unfailing accompaniment, nature-religion, are thus in principle vanquished. ' Exod. iv. 22. ' See the next note. Our admission does not imply that Israel took up just the same position towards Yahv^ as Moab to Chemosh, Ammon to Milcom, etc. (Kuen. Godsd. i. p. 222; Stade, Oesch. Isr. i. pp. 5, 113, 429; and especially Meyer, Gesch. d. Alt. i. p. 372). See Konig, Mauptpr., p. 39. 3 Especially Judges xi. 24 ; 1 Sam. xxvi. 19 f. On this see especially Baud. Studien, i. p. 55 S. * Stade's view also, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 438. Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 247 Israel is Jahv^'s people. It receives His help iu war^ and in the bounties of nature.^ But this help may be withheld if Israel has brought on itself. Yahv^'s wratli.^ Moreover, it receives from Him His Torah, the declaration of His will. In the name of Yahv^, Moses pronounces judgment* and gives laws. This again may be found amongst other nations. To them too the gods are not mere givers of life and blessing, but may be guardians of justice and morality, avengers of human guilt. In comparatively early times, the Assyrians sang searching penitential psalms. But everything depends on the contents of the law and the ordinances. The law revealed by Moses is a purer, chaster, more complete expression of what is good than can be found in the ordinances and morals of their neighbours. And if its prescrip- tions are closely related to those given in the Egj-ptian Book of the Dead,^ it yet breathes another spirit, that of genuine piety, true humanity, noble dignity, liberty and respect for man.® It is a matter of dispute wliether Mosaism was conver- sant with the idea of Yahve's moral holiness, because later times often understood His holiness as a physical quality, as consuming power and uuapproachableness.^ But if the idea was lacking it is evident, as regards the thing itself, that a religion in which God Himself, in so many respects, is the fountain and guardian, not merely of what is supposed to be good, but of the really good and morally pure, i.e. of the holy, cannot have been far removed from divine holiness in that higher sense. And if jMoses had not reached the idea of the moral government of the world, no one can deny that he had reached that of the moral government of the nation. Investigators are also not agreed as to whether Moses had grasped the notion of the covenant which Yahve made with Israel, and had 1 Exod. xiv. f. (Judges v.) ; Exod. xvii. ; the ' Wars of Yahv(5.' " Exod. xiv. 21 (D'lp Hn) ; also sustenance in the Desert and the leading them into Canaan. s Num. xiv. ; see above, p. 231 f. * Exod. xv. 26 ; <•/. Josh. xxiv. 25. 5 Ebers in Riehm's HWB., p. 322a; Dillin. ExLev., p. 206. « See my Siltliche Fragen (1885), p. 131. ' Kuenen, Hibbert Led., p. 112 f. ; Stade, G&sfA. Isr. i. p. -133 f. On the other side Bredenkamp, Ges. mid Prof., p. 41 tf. ; Konig, Hauptpr., p. SO ff. 248 HISTORY OF THE HEBEEWS [Book I. made it known to his age.^ Here again the thought of a contract, based on a reciprocity of obligations, may very probably have originated in the reflection of later times. But the thing itself, the conclusion at Sinai of a covenant, the terms of which are contained in the 'Book of the Covenant,' is too plainly handed down^ to allow of our deeming it a mere transference of later ideas to earlier times. If the herith was at first conceived of, not as a contract, but as an arrangement made by one of the parties, God, it would be easy afterwards to advance to that idea of a reciprocal obligation which is involved in the word itself. This might come about spontaneously, and, as Canaanite analogy shows, earlier than the prophetic age.* We may believe that the idea of a Baal Berith passed over from Israel to the heathen, rather than vice versd. If then the Yahve of Moses in so many respects stands above the gods of the neighbouring tribes, we cannot possibly be sur- prised to see that Moses teaches that no images of Him may be formed.* This is the part of the Decalogue on which most doubt has been thrown.^ And appeal has been specially made to the undeniable fact that, in post-Mosaic times, Yahv^ was long wor- shipped under an image, and that this met with comparatively little opposition.^ But the difficulty thus created is not got rid of by striking out of the Decalogue the prohibition of images. The central sanctuary with which we become acquainted in the times of Solomon, David, and Eli, undoubtedly possessed no image of Yahv^.^ Hence those times must have known of the prohibition. And yet in spite of the prohibition we find the inclination to image-worship in the times of the Judges and the Kings. So 1 WeUh. Geach. Jsr.^ p. 434 f. ; Prol.' p. 443 f. (Eng. Trans., p. 417 f.); Abriss, p. 44 (Eng. Trans., p. 114). On the other side, Bredenkamp, Ges. und Prof., p. 21 ff. ; Konig, Hauptpr., p. 84 ff. "- Exod. xxiv. 4 ff. 3 See Baethgen in TUol. Lit. Z., 1887, No. 4. * See Konig, Die Bildlosigheit des legitimen JahvecuUus (1886) ; also his Hauptpr., p. 53 ff. ; Dillm. ExLev., p. 208 f. 5 Vatke, Bibl. Theol. i. p. 233 f. ; Dozy, Die Isr. zu Melclca, p. 38 ; Kuen. i. pp. 232 f., 283 ff. ; Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 466. * See especially Stade, Gesch Isr. i. p. 499 ff. ' Stade, p. 466, seems to contest this. Chap. H.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 249 firmly did it at last establish its fixed seats in the northern kingdom from the time of Jeroboam L onwards, that even Elijah and Elisha in their stru^le against the foreign cultns were obliged to tolerate this illegitimate cultus of Tahve. At least we know of no declaration against it on their part. This shows con- clnsively that the actual practice of image-worship does not justify the inference that there was no prohibition of it. The same conclusion is reached by comparing the occasional practice of a foreign cultns, in which even Solomon took part, with the prohibi- tion of the worship of other gods. If, on the other hand, we investigate the history in order to discover the point where this prohibition could have arisen, we are inevitably carried back to the time of Moses. The prohibition of images must therefore have formed part of his legislation. By it he meant to place the worship of Yahv^ in definite contrast to that materialising of the deity which was common in heathenism. By it his religion reached its highest point above the sensuous nature-worship of poljrtheism. Let us now bring together the peculiarities which raised the religion founded by Moses above the heathen religions ensuring to it the future, making it the most precious possession of Israel and of mankind : it knows its God, not as the mighty potentate, but as the life-giving helper, in whom the idea of Love is in- volved ; it knows Him as the God sui generis, who allows of the existence of no other, and in this exclusiveness involves His absolute Unity ; it recognises Him as the dispenser of justice and the judge, from the loftiness of whose commands and judicial sentences it divines His holiness and covenant-faithfulness: it acknowledges Him as the non-sensuous, the spiritual, and thus completes its protest against the prevalent forms of faith. 3. A word remains to be said as to the source whence Moses drew this faith. The negative side of the answer has already been given. If we may take it as proved that the name Yahve was not of foreign origin, it follows that the idea and worship of Yahv^ cannot have been borrowed from abroad. Egypt is the only land i"0 Zlir : ST OF THE HEBEEW5 ^Bx-Z L '.-2.'. c-i" c-5 Srr:'.i=lv i'.o^riT of in tris c I'lm^iticiL Tex y^" h rime it wes a fivcrrl:^ c^iniin tLa: ilcses aioprei t'r.e ii^i of lezzthv r-~ti:l:ii no-:^.^ Ir -duIJ be -or- :o the point to "" ~~'~- vvhetlier liises Sfic't-te-i tlie naine and '^orsiux- cf i3-i~- tliit he afterTiris ~i; inf^tie^eed. bv tii= man, ani i:ti_y, tuit It ii'iit te leli then t':tat Tiivr. tie Creit-Tr of life, the st'e so far a; the narte,. ::i;t the tt:ir;r: of the idea, '^as et-itcetttet. "T r- ir- crtatns.-^- IntptLLses r:tiV have teen. ;tr2.mtLti:.atel to rira from wittctit. A the nttiltirlieitv, the senstiotisiiess and the niiwort:tii:ess of the deities wcrshitrei hv the ErTrttans and the .Sei^tes. Then, in the Klirtiie of the desert, he 5. d. aJrrisT. i; =,.'., p. lii f. ; Ssde, Geici. Ur. L r. 131 KSniz, Hz-ji-zJipr., p. 31 ; 5a-.-.--ATe. Edt^emsje^di., p. 317. A-i is t.j li^ srp posed -^ --"- ?~ ^ o- tb= ^1^^ oi '>:•! in Egj-pi. tv:ei£rr,s.r-^, AgtfpL. GtsA., p. -ii"J bat abo ilejer. Ge«i. ^.:^J?'t.. »- 19*. 196, 2i5 £., 260 C * T:ti dir Aim ; Ti^Li, Vixjd. '^i-ciiii, p. 353 5. ; Cempead., p. &4 ; Sade, (^eai /«r. L p. L30 i- _ V.:-r. Si'lI'.'x. i. B. 2S. ■ Eiod. irm. Chap. IL] B.— HIS TOBY OF THE FEEIOD 251 Hjol that the greatest loon he could confer on the people he was detennined to deKver was tKe knowledge of the Deirr. Thns he entered on a struggle on hehalf of Li; people and — protablv not knowing,, vet possiblj sii=pecting its greatness — for the whole oi mankind, a struggle than which there ha-= been none n^ightier in the realm of the spirit and of civilisation, in the KiHtorv of the world. The significance of that stmsgle for a new ccncettion of Go-i can te estimated by any one who possesses tvro qualificaticns. He niTist knoTT the illnsions and the degrading bondage in vrhich the people of the Xileland were held, owing, doubtless, to their view of God. He must reflect on the religious nsages of Hither A=:;. which deeply wounded man's moral sense and trampled the dignity of human nature in the dust : these, with their bewilder- ii.g orgies, he mnst compare with the spiri: uf the religion of iloses.^ Xature-reHgion, with its tendency to enslave man, to set at nought his natural freedom and moral dignity, could not but rob the nations in ever-increasing measure of their civilisation and humanity. By his religion Moses won for his people and the world the. road to fnedom, human digrdty, and the dAX(.l:jrw.f.nt of '£iure humaniiy. How did that new and lofty knowledge of God find.^ its way iiito the sonl of Moses? That remains the secret of his great spirit' Every genius on earth is a riddle for history. The re- ligious genius is the greatest enigma of aU. The history of its time enables you to explain in part each new creation of genius, bnt leaves an unexplained residuum. Yet the religious creation leaves the largest residuum, because it pierces deepest into the hidden foundations of life. The historian finds himself confronted here with a mystery to which there is hardly any parallel in history, A solution can only be found by inserting into that blank a factor, the historical justification of which we are not in a position to make out strictly. There are points in the life of mankind where history passes over ' See Banke, WeUgexh. L L p. .37 f. 252 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. into the philosopliy of history, and speculation, with its inter- preting light, must illuminate the steps of a historical process which otherwise will remain obscure. We have such a point here. Nothing but an immediate contact of God Himself with man can produce the true knowledge of God or bring man a real step nearer thereto.^ Tor in himself man finds only the world and his own individuality. Neither the one nor the other of these leads beyond heathenism ; that to a lower, this to a higher form. "When the thought flashed across the mind of Moses that God was neither the world nor an idealised image of man, but that He was the Lord of life, the Author of the moral law, enthroned above the manifold and the world of sense, ennobling and not depressing man, that knowledge came neither from his age nor from himself : it came to him from the immediate revelation of this God in his heart. § 25. Tlie, Foreign Accounts. It used to be thought very important that the proofs of the real occurrence of the events ascribed to this period should be supported by foreign accounts,^ Egyptian in particular. Of late, however, these attempts have often been looked on very sceptically, perhaps too sceptically.^ I have endeavoured to show that the credibility of the main features of the Mosaic history does not stand in need of foreign support. With all the less prepossession, therefore, will it now be possible to estimate the value of those documents from outside Israel. If those sup- ports turn out unreliable we shall have no need to lament ; if any one of them hold good, it will but serve as a welcome confirma- tion of our results. We have already seen* that much stress was laid on the ^ See Dillm. Ueber d. Ursp. d. altt. Seligion, p. 19 S. - As to the later extra-Biblical narratives concerning Moses, especially Jewish ones, see L. v. Ranke's essay, Ueber die Darstellung der Geschichte des Moses in den Antiquitaten des Flav. Josephus, in his Weltgesch. iii. 2, p. 12 f. 3 Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 129 ; Meyer, Gesch. d. Altt. i. p. 349. * See above, p. 183, and especially Wiedemann, Agypt. Gesch., p. 491 ; and now see especially Meyer, Oesch. Agypt., p. 297 (Apuriu = Workman, not the name of a people at all). Chap. II.] S.— HISTOKY OF THE PERIOD 253 supposed finding of the name of the Hebrews in Egyptian wit- nesses. Could this be verified, it would obviously be of the utmost importance to us. But we saw that although there is much to be said for the identification of the Egyptian 'Apuriu with our 'Ibrim it is in the highest degree uncertain, and consequently cannot be used in support of the Biblical statements. Still more emphatically does this verdict apply to the name Moses, which was also supposed to be found in Egyptian sources.'- The question is whether Ed. Naville's latest excavations have introduced any important change into the state of the problem.^ Hence we must examine them somewhat more in detail. In the first place they have at all events done something for Biblical geography. Formerly almost every one agreed in looking for the site of Pithom, a town which plays a part in the Mosaic history, at Tell el-Kebir, or a little south-west of it at Tell Abu-Suleiman : * Eaamses, on the other hand, was located at Tell el-Maskhuta (Abu Keishib *). But Naville has proved that Tell el-Maskhuta occupies the site of the ancient Pithom.^ There is another point where his 1 See Lauth, Moses der Ebrder, 1868, and Moses Osarsyph. in ZDMG. xxv. (1871), p. 139 fif. Of. also Moses Hosarsyphos, 1879, and Aiis Agypt. Vorzeit, 1881. On the other side see Kohler, Bibl. Ges. i. p. 236; Dillm. ExLev.,Tp. 16; Ebers, Oosen," p. 561 ; Orelli in PRE." x. p. 305 ; Wiedemann, Agypt. Gesch., p. 492. 2 Ed. Naville, The Store City of Pithom and the Route of the Exodtis (2nd ed.), Lond. 1885. Of. especially Dillm. Ueber Pithom, Hero, Klysma in Sitz-Ber. d. Berl. Akad. d. Wiss., 1885, xxxix. ; also Naville, Pithom-Heroopolis in Acad. xxv. (22nd March 1884) ; Brugsch, Pithom und Ramses in Deutsche Revrn, Marz, 1884 ; R. S. Poole, Pithom in Acad. xxv. (24th May 1884) ; Ebers in Milnch. Alg. Zeitg.,- 1885, No. 110 f. (Beil.), and in Zeitschr. f. Agypt. Spr., 1885, p. 45 fF; Lansing, 'Pithom the Treasure City,' in Monthly Interp. ,T!!ov. 1885; Meyer, Gesch. Ag. p. 297 ; Bunsen, ' The Pharaoh of Moses, etc.,' Proc. Soc. Bibl. Arch., 1890 (xii.), p. 157 ff. ; Lewis, 'Some Suggestions respecting the Exodus,' ibid., p. 167 ff. ; Brugsch, ' Pithom and Ramses,' Jud. Lit. Blat.i 1890, Nos. 14-18. » Lepsius, Chrmol., pp. 345, 357 ; Ewald, Gesch. Isr.' ii. p. 20 f. (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 13) ; Schleiden, Landenge von Suis, pp. 165, 173 f. ; Dillm. ExLev. p. 7 ; Ebers, Durch Gosen,^ p. 496. * Lepsius, Chrmol, p. 345 ff. ; Ewald, Gesch. Isr.^ ii. p. 18 (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 11) ; Schleiden, Landenge von SuSs, p. 175 f. ; Dillm. ExLev. p. 8 ; Ebers, Durch Gosenf p. 514 ff. » See Naville, Store City of Pithom, p. 5 ff., and on the other side Lepsius, Zeitschr. f. Agypt. Spr., 1883, p. 41 ff. and p. 29 ff. Cf. Dillm. Pithom, Hero, Klysma, p. 2 f. 254 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. conclusion can hardly be disputed. In Tell-el-Maskhuta he found the remains of rectangular rooms, built of brick, and open above. He infers that these were granaries, and Pithom, as Exodus repre- sents it, a town that contained public storehouses.^ The situation of the place on the eastern border of Egypt, and the fact that the Pharaohs engaged in many campaigns against Syria do but confirm this view. What does history gain by this ? "We get the con^dction that the writer who mentions Pithom was well informed both as to its situation and as to the purpose for which it was destined. His knowledge of these facts is fitted to inspire confidence in his description of other matters. There was nothing to prevent his connecting legendary events with places known to history and familiar to himself. More than this we may not infer. Naville, however, believes that his excavations have done more than merely contribute to this rectification of our geographical knowledge. The following names of kings, permitting of a de- termination of the date of the respective portions of the exca- vation, have been found at Pithom: Barneses ir., Sheshonq i., Osorkon ii. But no name points to a ruler earlier than the time of Eameses ii.^ We already know from other sources that Eameses ii. did some building in this neighbourhood.^ And when the Bible states that Pharaoh built a town called Eaamses* aloncr with Pithom, it is natural to think of Eameses li. as the builder of both towns.^ We cannot, then, avoid ascribing considerable weight to the fact on which ISTaville lays stress. If it receives further confirmation and no names of earlier kings or other proofs of higher antiquity are discovered in Tell el-Maskhuta, we shall be . \ Store City of Pithom, p. 9 f. Lansing, ut supra, objects that, the grain being kept without protection from above, these open rooms would be exposed to the inundation. [But they would hardly be more exposed than unprotected heaps of grain.] " Naville, Store City of Pithom, p. 11 f. ' See Weidemanu, Agypt. Gesch., pp. 441, 443 f. ^ Exod. i. 11. » We can hardly think of Rameses i. He seems to have shown no inclination towards building (Wiedemann, Agypt. Gesch., p. 414). Chap. II.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PEEIOD 255 compelled by this concurrence of indications to believe that Eameses ii. was the actual builder of Pithom.^ This, however, does not amount to a direct statement on the monuments that Eameses II. oppressed the Hebrews. Much less do they state that it was with their help he built Pithom and Eaamses, and that thereupon they filed from Egypt under him or his successor. The Egyptian sources of information do not supply a convincing proof of the actual occurrence of these facts. But they do furnish a not inconsiderable support to the Biblical narra- tive. Eor these discoveries compel us, at any rate for the present, to date the building of the towns within the period in which the Bible fixes the oppression of the Israelites in Egypt. If, then, the Biblical narrator, after the lapse of centuries, knew the precise time when this building took place, he must have had an acquaint- ance with the past which shews, far more than his geographical knowledge, how well informed he was. Naturally we have not yet eliminated the possibility of E's having obtained information respecting the building of Pithom and Eaamses by means of scholarly investigation and then having attached to this the national tradition of the Israelites concerning the oppression and Exodus of the Hebrews. But every one will admit that this supposition involves grave difficulties. Any Hebrew who had once been in Egypt could easily ascertain the existence, situation, and character of the Egyptian cities. To investigate the history of a city several centuries old would be a much more difficult task, especially to a foreigner. Unhesitatingly, and with a good historical conscience, we may assert that the theory ac- cording to which E here followed an ancient tradition, still living amongst his people, keeping the actual events in memory, which is now supported by the discovery that the statements about Pithom are correct, is far more probable than the , theory that E collected literary information in Egypt respecting the ^ Wiedemajan, Agypt. Geach., p. 444, also holds that Rameses ii. built Tanis, which must probably be identified with the Biblical Raamses (see Meyer, § 240). But according to Exod. i. 11, Raamses and Pithom go together. 256 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. building of those cities and connected it with the Israelite legend. If the Egyptian testimonies thus make it highly probable that Eameses li. built Pithom, and, as the Bible subjoins, employed the Hebrews in this work, the question as to the date of the Exodus would be at least approximately solved. Eameses il. would be the Pharaoh of the Oppression, and the only remaining question would be whether the Exodus took place under him or one of his successors. Hence the majority of recent inquirers have agreed that Eameses ii, is the Pharaoh of the Oppression, and have assigned the Exodus of the Hebrews partly to the reign of his successor Merenptah and partly to the disturbed period of the transition from the nineteenth to the twentieth Egyptian dynasty. People used to be inclined to follow an ancient tradition which connected Israel's abode in Egypt with the invasion of the so-called Hyksos. More recently opinion has inclined to the view that the expulsion of the lepers from Egypt, related by Manetho, has a much better claim to be brought into connection with that event. The main facts of the case are as follows : — Josephus ^ asserts that a narrative which he gives was contained in Manetho's History. It states that during the reign of the Egyptian king, Timseus (Timaos and Timaios), foreigners of un- known origin^ attacked Egypt from the east and conquered it. The natives were ill-treated, the temples demolished, and one of the barbarians, called Salatis, became king of Egypt. He lived at Memphis, and fortified specially the east of the country against an invasion which he dreaded from the powerful Assyrians. In the Saite (more correctly Seth-roite)* Nome he built the city which according to an ancient legend * was called Avaris, so as to 1 Against Apion, i. 14. Cf. Euseb. Prcep. Evang. x. 13; Jul. Afrio. and Buseb. in Syncell., ed. Bonn, i. p. 113 f. ^ According to Manetho, as reported by Josephus, some said that they were Arabs. In Afric. and Euseb. they are called Phoenicians. ^ So in Jul. Afric. and Euseb. For Salatis these writers have Saites. * Respecting the locality of this town (=Hatu'ar), see Meyer, Gesch. d. Alt. i. § .110. Chap. II.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 257 make of it a very strong fortress. It held a garrison of two hundred and forty thousand men and became the mainstay of his power. He was succeeded by a line of rulers whose names Manetho gives.^ The people bore the name of Hyksos. Hyk is said to have meant, in the sacred tongue, king, and Sos signified shepherd, so that the sense of the whole was shepherd kings? When the strangers had ruled over Egypt five hundred and eleven years * Alisphragmuthosis (Misphragmuthosis) * succeeded at last in conquering them, and his son Thummosis arranged for their peaceable withdrawal. They went into the desert, settled after- wards in Judsea, and founded Jerusalem. Josephus * maintains that this history of the strangers refers to the Hebrews, although he explains it differently from the authority on whom he relies. His views have been adopted by learned men in later times.* In spite of many incongruities, which must be ascribed to anachronism or later invention,'^ Manetho's account may contain a kernel of historical truth.^ This appears both from the linguis- tically-correct derivation of the name Hyksos and from the intrinsic probability of such a nomadic invasion, together with the state- ments of the Sallier i. Papyrus. But the Hyksos can in no case 1 On these names and their variants in Eusebius, Africanus, and the Scholiast on Plato, see Meyer, Oesch. d. Alt. i. p. 137 f . ; Wiedemann, Agypt. Oesch., p. 284. ^ Josephus gives a second etymology of Hyksos (=prisoners of war), -which he professes to derive from another copy of Manetho. On this see especially Wiede- mann, Agypt. Oesch., p. 285 f. As to the correct explanation of the name see ibid. p. 286, and also the reading Hykussos in Euseb. Prcep. Evang. x. 13. » Other figures in Jul. Afric. See Duncker, Oesch. d. Alt. i.^ p. 107 f. ; Meyer 8 112. * ^ Eusebius. » C Gen. xliii. 32 ; xlvi. 34. 2 See Ewald, Qesch. Isr. ii.^ p. 110 ff. (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 76 ff.) ; Wiedemann, Agypt. Gesch., p. 495, and the majority of the writers mentioned in Note 1, p. 261. ^ More precisely, in Josephua : Khampses, Amenophis, Sethos-Ehamesses ; in Julius Africanus and Syncellus : Khapsakes (Rhampses), Amenephthes (Men.), Rhamesses. See Lepsius, Konigsbuch, Anh., p. 16 f. ; Ebers, Gosen,' p. 536. Chap. II.] J5.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 261 the Exodus.^ And, as a matter of fact, it is impossible to deny that by the Amenophis of Josephus, Manetho cannot have meant any one but Merenptah.^ • Yet even if the relation between the lepers and the Hebrews is admitted, many reasons, recently advanced, tell against Mer- enptah. Under him Egypt's power was still at its climax, not feeble and in peril, as Manetho's account would imply. ^ And the question is settled by the fact that Merenptah died in peace at a good old age, not in war against the foreigners or whilst pursuing them. * And if Manetho himself wrote Amenophis, which is not likely, considering that he mentions the father and the son, this name would point to Amenhotep, not Merenptah. ^ On the other hand the state of affairs presupposed in Manetho and in the Book of Exodus reminds us much more forcibly of the circumstances which the Harris Papyrus depicts as prevailing in the time subse- quent to the death of Merenptah and Seti ii. The Pharaoh of the Exodus must therefore have been Amen-meses or Sa-ptah, one of the immediate predecessors of Set-nechts, the founder of the Twentieth Dynasty* This points to about 1300 B.C. But it is evident, from what has been said above, that this also is a conjecture rather than a certain result. The Egyptian accounts, so far as they are at present known, point with some degree of certainty to Eameses ii. as the Pharaoh of the Oppres- 1 Lepsius, Chronol, p. 323 ff., and PRE.'^ i. p. 173 f. ; Bunsen, Bibdwerh, i. p. ccxii, and v. p. 133 flf. ; Chabas, Melanges ^gypt, i. p. 43 f., and Recherchea, p. 139 f. ; Ewald, Gesch. Isr. ii.' p. 110 ff. (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 76 ff.); Delitzsch, Genes.* p. 450; Duncker, Gtsch. d. Alt. i.,^ p. 400; Bnigsoh, Gesch. Agypt., p. 582 (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 128 ; Ebers, Gosen,' p. 78, and in HWB., p. 333. ' The proof is that Julius Af ricanus and Syncellus actually give [ A]menephtheB in place of Amenophis. Amenophis must therefore be due to a misunderstanding on the part of Josephus, or an ancient clerical error in his copy of Manetho. ' Maspero, Gesch. d. morg. VUlh, p. 257 f ; Wiedemann, Agypt. Gesch., pp. 477, 493. But see now Meyer, GescJi. Ag., p. 287 ff., where a somewhat different picture comes out. * Wiedemann, ut supra, p. 477. Hence he must have escaped. And this is not excluded. ° See Meyer, Gesch. d. Alt., p. 271. * Wiedemann, Agypt. Gesch., p. 493, agrees in this with Maspero and Eisenlohr. Cf. Mahler, in Zeitschr. f. Ag. Spr., 1890, p. 32 ff., where Eameses il. is placed in 1348-1281. 262 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. sion. The position of the Exodus in Egyptian history cannot at present be determined more nearly than is involved in saying that it occurred after the time of Eameses II. and before the beginning of the Twentieth Dynasty. Nor can the direction of the march be fixed more precisely by means of the identifications of Biblical places thus far gained from the monuments.^ Only one assertion can be confidently made. Brugsch's suggestion^ that the route of the Israelites lay across the low ground of the Serbonian Lake does not correspond with the facts : and the Sea of Eeeds in Exodus must still be identified with the Eed Sea. ^ * Against E. Naville see Dillmann, Pithom, Hero, Klysma, pp. 3 f., 9 f. ^ Beport of Proceedings of the Second. Intern. Congr. of Orient. (Lond. 1874), p. 28; L'Exode (Leipzig, 1875), p. 11 ff. Prior to him cf. Sohleiden, Landenge von Sues, p. 191 ff. s See especially Ebers, Gosen,'' p. 107 ff. ; Riehm, in the HWB., p. 552 ff. CHAPTEE III THE CONQUEST OF CANAAN It is a tradition common to all our sources that Moses died before the entry of his people into the land west of the Jordan. Only- after his decease did the tribes of Israel prepare to win that chief portion of the Promised Land. The history of the conquest is related consecutively in the Book of Joshua. But here also several accoTints can be distinguished. Speaking generally they are, as has already been shown, the same sources as the Pentateuch presents, but with this difference, that the ancient accounts E and J, which flow with such copiousness there, are here preserved much more spar- ingly. Besides which the comparatively few traces which point at all decisively to J frequently allow of the assumption that they no longer have precisely the same form as when they came from the author's pen. E is in almost the same case : of this source, too, there are only a few remnants in the Book of Joshua ; subse- quent inquiry must determine whether elements from it can be detected in the Book of Judges and even in Samuel. The later accounts, into which we find these fragments interwoven, though much fuller of. detail and much more considerable in extent, contribute little or no material towards our knowledge of the course of events. The material they use is that supplied by the older tradition, and they work it up afresh from their own ethical and theocratic points of view. Our information as to the events of the conquest is therefore 263 264 HISTORY OF THE HBBEEWS [Book I. limited to a small number of statements of very high value but very little compass. Happily for our knowledge of that period the Book of Judges has preserved a large section of J which contains a number of valuable notices. Our first concern is with this important con- stituent of the oldest tradition. § 26. The Survey of the Conquest in Judges I. and II., 1-5. 1. The Text. — Although this piece of narrative ^ is externally joined to the Book of Judges it has for some time been seen that its contents require it to be connected with the Book of Joshua instead. It cannot originally have served, as now, as an intro- duction to the Period of the Judges. At least if it did, it was not intended to suggest that the events it mentions occurred after Joshua's death. Its title alone gave rise to some misunderstand- ing formerly. Take that away,^ and there can be no doubt that we have here another narrative of what happened at the Con- quest, parallel to the first part of our present Book of Joshua. Strictly speaking the fragment is a summary rather than an actual narrative. The question may therefore well be asked, whether it is not a mere extract from a detailed work which was parallel to our present Book of Joshua.^ We are helped in dealing with the question by the welcome fact that we still possess in our present Book of Joshua parallels to some verses of this fragment, parts of which agree verbally. Meyer and Budde have dealt with the reciprocal relations of the ' For a general view of the subject see Studer, Das Buck. d. Eichter, 1835, (21842), p. 1 flf. ; Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 585, note 2; and Eird.* p. 181 ff. ; Ed. Meyer, Kritik der Berichie uber die Eroh. Palast in ZA W. i. (1881), p. 117 ff. ; Bertheau, Das Buck der Richter,^ 1883, p. 1 flf. ; Budde, Eichter und Josua in ZA W. vii. (1887), p. 93 fif., and now Eichter und Samuel (1890), 1 £f. 2 Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 585, thought the words 'after the death of Moses' more appropriate. But it does not follow that this was the original reading. The formula is due to the editors of the book. For the rest see Bertheau, Richt.^ p. 5 f. ; Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 135 ; Wellh. Einl.* p. 181 ; Stade, Oesch. Isr. i. p. 136. 3 Decided thus by Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 585. Chap. III.] £.— HISTOKY OF THE PEEIOD 265 corresponding sections. The former^ prefers the text of Judges throughout, and looks on the corresponding notices in Joshua as simply borrowed from it. Budde,^ however, has, I believe, proved that the Book of Joshua, in a number of instances, has the earlier text.* This result enhances the probability that Judges i. is merely an extract, or, to speak more precisely, a greatly abbreviated and here and there somewhat altered re- production, of what was once a fuller account of the Conquest of Canaan. Scanty remains of that ancient narrative have been pre- served to us in the parallel verses of the Book of Joshua,* and it would seem that in some points, though not in all, they more nearly resemble the original form. But neither has that extract as it now lies before us in the Book of Judges been left untouched. It has been worked over in several places by the editor's hand and accommodated to the contents of the book. Hence the title. ^ The importance of this constituent of our oldest tradition contained in Judges i. makes it necessary in the first place to determine as far as possible the very, words of this summary of the Conquest in the oldest form that can now be reached. "What we have said above shows that this can only be done by the aid of the parallel text in the Book of Joshua, to which a few other fragments of that book which go together with Judges i. must be added. '. . . And the sons® of Joseph spake unto Joshua, saying. Why hast thou given me but one lot and one part for an in- heritance, seeing I am a numerous people, forasmuch as ^ hitherto Yahve hath blessed me ? And Joshua answered them. If thou art a numerous people, get thee up to the forest of Gilead ^ and cut ' ZA W. i., p. 134 f. ; Bertheau agrees with him, p. xviii. 2 ZA W. vii. p. 97 flf. ; cf. still earlier Dillm., NuDtJo., p. 442. 3 Although this is not always the case, e.g., in Josh. xv. 13 ; in Josh. xvii. 11, also there is a partly later text. * Cf. Budde, ZA W., p. 115 f. 5 Judges i. 1 a. " Perhaps originally : ' The house of Joseph ' ; cf. Dillm., NuDtJo., p. 546. ' Eead ItfN'^y- ° According to Budde, p. 125. 266 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. down there for thyself,^ if the hill-country of Ephraim is too narrow for thee. — And the sons of Joseph said : The hill-country is not enough for us, but all the Canaanites that dwell in the land of the valley have chariots of iron, (especially) they who are in Beth-shean and her daughter-towns, and they who are in the valley of Jezreel. Joshua answered the house of Joseph : ^ Thou art a numerous people, and hast great strength : thou shalt not have one lot only. The hill-country of Gilead shall be thine,^ for it is still forest and thou mayest cut it down and obtain the goings out thereof ( = pass beyond it into the plain). For thou wilt (then) drive out the Canaanite although he has chariots of iron and is strong (Josh. xvii. 14-18''). . . .' ' Then the children of Israel asked of Yahv6 : Who of us shall go up first against the Canaanite, to fight against him ? Yahv^ said : Judah shall go up ; behold, I have delivered the land into his hand. But Judah said unto Simeon his brother : Come up with me into my lot, that we may fight (together) against the Canaanite ; and I likewise will go with thee into thy lot. So Simeon went with him . . .^ And they found Adoni-bezek in Bezek,^ and fought against him and smote the Canaanite and the Perizzite.' But Adoni-bezek fled, and they pursued after him and ' The following words, 'in the land of the Perizzites and of the Rephaim' are not found in the Lxx., and therefore probably are a gloss. ^ The words ' Ephraim and Manasseh ' are also to be deleted ; the lxx. omits them. ' According to Budde, p. 125. * It is quite within the bounds of possibility that the whole of this passage may be a unity. In that case the discourse is resumed at v. 1 6. This is Budde's view, p. 125 f. But it is much simpler to see in v. 16. the beginning of another account (c/. Dillm., p. 548). V. 14 f. will then =E, v. 16-18=J. Nor does this seem to me to involve such a confusion as Budde complains of. Such peculiarities of form as prove J's authorship are only found in v. 16 ff. At the beginning of the speech in v. 16 a few words must probably be supplied in a similar form to the question in v. 14. Cf. also Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 600, and Stade, Gesch. Isr. p. 163. ° In f . 4 the specially surprising point, besides certain expressions, is the ap- pearance of Judah alone. I therefore prefer to follow Budde in leaving it out ^^ZA W. vii. p. 95). Possibly in place of it there stood some such words as still have been preserved : ' And Yahv^ delivered the Canaanite into their hand. ' ° As to Budde's proposal, p. 149, to read ' King of Jerusalem ' instead of ' in Bezek,' see below in our examination of chap. x. ' Meyer, p. 135, unjustifiably strikes out v. 5. Chap. III.] L'.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 267 caught him, and cut off his thumbs and his great toes. Then said Adoni-bezek : Threescore and ten kings/ having their thumbs and their great toes cut off, gleaned under my table : as I have done so God hath requited me. And they ^ brought him to Jerusalem and he died there (Judges i. lh-3, .5-7). And Yahv^ was with Judah, and he conquered the hill-country. But he could not drive out the inhabitants of the valley, for they had chariots of iron. Neither could ^ the sons of Judah * drive out the Jebusites that inhabited Jerusalem, and the Jebusites dwelt amongst them in Jerusalem unto this day' (Judges i. 19, 21 ;^ Josh. xv. 63). ' But unto Caleb the son of Kenaz "^ he (Joshua) gave an in- heritance among the sons of Judah, even Hebron, as Moses '' had commanded. And Caleb* went against the Canaanites that dwelt in Hebron. Now the name of Hebron beforetime was Kiriath- arba. And Caleb smote (drave out ?) the three sons of the giants, Sheshai, Ahiman, and Talmai. From thence he went up^ against the inhabitants of Debir. Now the name of Debir beforetime was Kiriath-sepher. And Caleb said : He that smiteth Kiriath-sepher and taketh it, to him will I give Achsah my daughter to wife. Othniel, the son of Kenaz, Caleb's^" younger ^^ brother, took it: ' Possibly we oiight to read nVSC, seven. ^ Naturally ' they ' are his own people : so think Reuas, Cassel, Budde, p. 95 f. The ancient misunderstanding which made Judah the subject of the sentence led the reviser to add v. 8, in entire dissonance with v. 21. V. 9 also (Ti>) may have originated in connection therewith and from the same hand. 5 Budde, p, 99, in accordance with Josh. xv. 63. There is still a remnant of the cancelled idea in the B'^lin N? of v. 19. * Instead of Benjamin, according to Josh. xv. 6.3. * The insertion of these two verses here, as well as that of v. 20, and their transposition, is required by Josh. xv. 13 ff. See Meyer, p. 137 ; Budde, p. 97 ff. * ' Son of Jephunneh,' Josh. xv. 13, can hardly be original. J appears to have a different tradition respecting Caleb's father. ' Judges i. 20 is at this point nearer the original than Josh. xv. 13. We have tried above to make out the original text from this verse and from Judges i. 10, 20. " According to the context he must be put in place of Judah at Judges i. 10. The alteration there is due to the misplacement of the verse which mentions Caleb. » Follow HoUenberg, ZA W. i. p. 101, in reading ^i;''1. Judges i. 11. '" The only way of understanding the passage. See Dilhn. NuDtJo., p. 523. !• Omitted in Josh. xv. 17. 268 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. then Caleb gave him his daughter Achsah to wife. And when Achsah was brought unto him she moved him (Othniel) to ask of her father a field.^ She lighted down from off her ass, and Caleb said unto her : What wouldest thou ? She said unto him : Give me yet a blessing ; for seeing thou hast set me in a dry (southern) land, give me springs of water ! Then he gave her springs in the high land and in the low.' (Josh. xv. 13, 14 = Judges i. 20 and part of 10 ; Judges i. ll-15 = Josh. xv. 15-19). ' And the sous of Hobab ^ the Kenite, the father-in-law of Closes, went up from the city of palms ^ to the sons of Judah in the wilderness of Judah which lieth on the slope* of Arad.^ And they rose up and dwelt ^ with the Amalekites.'' And Judah went with Simeon his brother, and they smote the Canaanites that inhabited Zephath ^ and devoted it to destruction, and he called the name of the place Hormah. And the territory of the Edomites * reached from the ascent of Akrabbim to Petra^" and beyond.' (Judges i. 16, 17, 36). 'And the sons^^ of Joseph, for their part, went up against ^ At Judges i. 14, read mtJ', with the lxx. in Joshua. ^ Eead "'J''pn ''J3. The name, no doubt, has fallen out. In spite of Judges iv. 11, where l^p is ' the Kenite clan,' Meyer's proposal {ZA W. i. p. 137, adopted by Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 152) that we should read ' Cain, the father-in- law of Moses,' is proved impossible by the fact that the father-in-law of Moses is nowhere else called Cain : according to Num. x. 29 (J) Hobab is the only cue of the two names contained in the lxx. that can have stood here. Judges iv. 11 establishes this. ' Our ignorance respecting the decision arrived at by Hobab (Num. x. 29 £F. ) makes it uncertain whether Jericho is here meant. A Tamar in the south might be intended (see Bertheau on the passage). In that case, however, '33-7K must be read. But the probabilities are in favour of Jericho. ■* According to the reading 111D3, which van Doominck and Budde (p. 102) follow. Of. LXX. (Luc.) iirl Kara^iffeus 'Apid. ° There is no reason for substituting Zephath (Meyer, p. 137). ^ Either the verbs must be read in the plural or the clan name Kenite has here dropped out. ' This is Hollenberg's view, ZA W. i. p. 102. * It is not necessary to read Arad instead (Meyer, pp. 132, 137). See above on § 14. ' According to Hollenberg, ZA W. i. p. 104, and, more precisely, Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 109. 1° y?Dn> Budde, p. 110. See ibid, with respect to the misplacement of this verse. " Bead ''33 Cf. Beftheau, p. 35, Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OP THE PERIOD 269 Bethel, Joshua ^ was with them. And the sons of Joseph sent to spy out Bethel. Now the name of the city beforetime was Luz. Then the watchers saw a man come forth out of the city. They said unto him : Shew us now the entrance into the city, and we will deal kindly with thee. He shewed them the entrance into the city. And they smote the city with the edge of the sword, and they let the man go and all his family. The man went into the land of the Hittites, and built a city, and called its name Luz ; which is the name thereof unto this day . . .' (Judges i. 22-26.) 'But the sons of Israel drave not out the Geshurites, and the Maachathites ; and the Geshurite and the Maachathite dwell in Israel unto this day.^ And Manasseh was not able ^ to take Beth-shean, Taanach, Dor, Ibleam, Megiddo, and their daughter-towns. The Canaanites therefore would dwell in that land. But when the sons of Israel waxed strong they reduced the Canaanites to serfdom, but did not drive them out (Judges i. 27f. = Joshua xvii. 11-13)*. Ephraim was not able to drive out the Canaanites that dwelt in Gezer ; but the Canaanites dwelt in the midst of Ephraim unto this day, and became tributary.^ Zebulun was not able to drive out the inhabitants of Kitron and of Nahalol ; but the Canaanites dwelt among them, and became tributary. Asher was not able to drive out the inhabitants of Accho, Zidon, Ahlab, Achzib, Helbah, Aphik, and Eehob. But Asher dwelt among the Canaanites, the inhabitants of that land, for they were ^ Budde, p. 144, proposes to follow the LXX. (Luc.) in reading miiT' in place of nin', and regarding it as a substitution for Jf£J'in\ This appears arbitrary, but seems to me to be well-grounded. If the reading of the LXX. did not stand in the text it is inexplicable. And on the other hand we have abundant evidence that the reviser was disposed to insert the name of Judah in Judges i. 's As to this verse (Josh. xiii. 13), belonging to our context, see Budde, p. 117 f. ' 1^3'' a? in Joshua (xvii. 12) seems to be another instance of a more original text. * On the relation between the two texts see Bertheau, Hichter,^ p. 37 ff. ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 544 f . ; Budde, ZAW. vii. p. 104 f. On the whole, the original text has here been best preserved in Judges. The absence of certain town-names from the txx. (Vat. ) perhaps corresponds to the primary state of the text of Joshua (Bertheau, Budde), or may be due to intentional curtailment (Dillm. ) ° Supplied from Josh. xvi. 10. 270 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. not able to drive them out. Naphtali could not drive out the inhabitants of Beth-shemesh and of Beth-anath, but dwelt among the Canaanites, and these became tributary.' (Judges i. 29 = Josh. XV. 10; Judges i. 30-33.) ' And the Amorites forced the sons of Dan into the hill country, and would not suffer them to come down to the valley.^ Thus did they make their inheritance too strait for them.^ Then the sons of Dan went up and fought against Leshem,^ and took it, and smote it with the edge of the sword, and possessed it and dwelt therein, and called Leshem Dan, after the name of Dan their father. Thus the Amorites would dwell in Har-heres, Aijalon, and Shaalbim. But when the hand of the house of Joseph lay heavy (lxx., upon them) they became tributary ' (Judges i. 34 *+ Josh. xix. 47a [ = Josh. xix. 476 of the lxx., according to which text'^ it is partly to be restored]; Josh. xix. 476; Judges i. 35). ' And the angel of Yahv^ came up from Gilgal to Bethel to the house of Israel.^ And they sacrificed there unto Yahvd ' (ii. la, 56). 2. The Division of the Land, and Joshua. — The first glance at the whole account in this piece enables us to see that its thread does not run on unbroken. At several points it is cut off, and some art is needed to restore it. Yet it is plain that the now dis- located members are parts of what was once a well-arranged whole. ^ We must read with Budde, according to the lxx. of Josh. xix. 47, koX oiJk ^t(j3v aiJroi^s, DUnj XPV 2 See Budde, p. 120. The LXX. continues as follows : i6\i^a.v air' airCiv rh Spiov T^s iicplSoi. I believe Budde is right in thinking that this (in Heb. Ipi^fl Dnpnj ?133 DnD)> lies at the foundation of the peculiar Masoretio reading (Josh. xix. 47a) DHD p "|J3 ^123 KVV ^ Possibly Wellh. De Gent. Jud. , p. 37, is right in pronouncing it Lesham. * Meyer wrongly objects to w. 34-36. HDNn, v. 34, may have been his chief reason. ^ On the relation between the two texts, see especially Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 567, and Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 119 flf. The lxx. obviously keeps an older and more complete text in Josh. xix. 47 f., from which the MT of the Joshua and Judges passages is in each case peculiarly abbreviated. * So Budde, p. 166, partially after the LXX. Possibly we might also think of Shiloh, on account of Josh, xviii. 1. At all events J here, like P at xviii. 1, appears still to preserve a recollection that prior to David the Ark of the Cove- nant was not in Judah. Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 169, ascribes vv. 1 and 5 to E. Chap. III.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 271 i^ot only do they all contain the same linguistic marks ^ and, with- out exception, justify the inference that J was the author, but they are also all controlled by one consentient line of thought, and point thus to a definite idea as to how Canaan was conquered, which, in any case, established itself at a very early date in Israelite tradition. If we have arranged the fragments correctly, the fundamental idea is that the country was apportioned to the various tribes before they set about the conquest. According to the meaning of the whole summary, it does not seem to have been left to accident to determine what possessions the several tribes should obtain in Canaan. On the contrary, an agreement is arrived at and a certain district given to each tribe as its lot. This regula- tion assumes that the people are divided into tribes. We are not told when that division was effected. It is taken for granted as being practically complete. The individual clans are regarded as sufficiently welded together internally to stand for the most part by themselves and independently take possession of their terri- tories, although they feel themselves members of the whole body. This idea comes out very distinctly; each tribe, so far as their proceedings are here described, acts for itself. If an exception occurs it is expressly mentioned; Judah joins with Simeon; the house of Joseph sets to work unitedly. We are told concerning almost all the tribes here named what the dis- tricts were which they could not conquer : from this it is to be inferred that the narrator supposes the conquest of their tribal territory to be their own special business, not that of united Israel, and doubtless that he related the steps they actually took to win their territories. This necessarily gives rise to the question: Is not the idea of such a preliminary partition of the land in contradiction with the idea of its having been subsequently conquered by the tribes separately ? Can one and the same author have narrated both ? At first sight one is inclined to reply that the very fact of the conquest having ' Besides Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 138, see especially Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 97 ffi, in several places. 272 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. been made in sections, which comes out as a trustworthy historical reminiscence, precludes the possibility of there having been a previous partition. For if the tribes were sufficiently united to agree on the partition of the country, prudence and duty would have recommended common action in conquering it rather than the leaving each tribe to look after itself. This leads us to suspect that the preparatory partition belongs to an artificial system; while the other idea is recommended by its accordance with the natural order of events. Hence the actual course of events might be supposed to run as follows : as time went on, one tribe after another crossed the Jordan ; each won for itself the territory which attracted it or which was brought within its grasp by favouring circumstances : thus it came about that, after the lapse of a con- siderable time, all the tribes by degrees established themselves, at all events in the hill-country of the land west of the Jordan. No preliminary partition seems requisite. In fact, it seems unnatural, supported by few historical analogies, and therefore bearing on its face the tokens of later invention. Two circumstances appear to me to remove the suspicion which undoubtedly attaches to a previous partition. First, there are the traces of an actual joint operation of the tribes which can be found, in any case, before the partition, but also afterwards as well. Secondly, there is Joshua's leadership of all Israel, at least up to a certain point. From Judges i. onwards Israel falls into two main groups in our narratives. Judah and Simeon have an independent existence. Beside them is the house of Joseph and the rest of the tribes attached to it, that is, substantially the northern tribes. "We should not be justified in supposing that this twofold division is a mere reflex of the state of affairs in the post-Solomonic period. On the contrary, the marked difference between the tribes of Joseph and the house of Judah is as old as Israel itself. It is reflected in the entire history, and the separation under Jeroboam is not its cause, but merely one of its effects. Within this division, however, the presence of something in common is unmistakable. Not only does Judah go along with Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 273 Simeon, but the house of Joseph also advances, at first with united front, and it is only as time passes that the tribes separate. The manner in which our author, whilst using the collective desig- nation, ' House of Joseph,' ^ perfectly well manages to bring out the distinction between Ephraim and Manasseh,^ is specially signi- ficant. In the one case, the two leading tribes act in common ; in the other, each stands for itself. But if they work in concert we may at once assume that the smaller brother-tribes joined them, in fact that the title. House of Joseph, was to some extent a name for the northern tribes in general, the subsequent King- dom of Israel. This is still evident from the survival of the title. Sons of Israel,^ in a single place belonging to this passage. Hence it is clear that the tradition respecting the conquest of Canaan must have known of something besides the independent action of the several tribes. Together with Judah's advance, in aUianee with Joseph, it must have been acquainted with a common movement of the Joseph-tribes, i.e. of the main portion of Israel. The two-fold indications of the tradition may be brought into agreement by the assumption that until a certain goal was reached the northern tribes acted in concert, but that afterwards, when the main work was done, each was left to act for itself. If we are right in looking upon this as J's account of the course of events, we have found, both for J and for the actual course of things, the fulfilment of the condition implied in a preliminary partition.* The separate advance of the various tribes can then no longer be adduced against this supposition. For this was not made to such an extent as at first sight appears. And in no case was this the only point with which the tradition was conversant. Our theory is essentially confirmed by the clear » Judges i. 27 f. ( = Josh. xvii. 11 S.), v. 29 (=Josh. xvi. 10). " Judges i. 22 ; Josh. xvii. 14. ' Josh. xiii. 13. * At most the only question which can arise is whether J, as we shall after- wards see was the case with E, in the first instance mentioned only the assign- ment of territory to Judah -Simeon, and Joseph, bringing in the other tribes afterwards. On this see below, § 29. S 274 HISTOEY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. glimpses which the sources afford of Joshua's single leadership of united Israel. In recent times it has been believed by several writers that Joshua cannot be looked on as a historical person. He has seemed to be merely the legendary reflection of the brilliant figure of the great Moses. If the legend so moulded to its will the Conquest of Canaan as here also to substitute in place of the actual course of events a picture of an unnatural cohesion of the tribes, painted after the model of the Mosaic times, this combination would need embodying in a commander, filled with the spirit of Moses, and bringing to a close, in his way, the work that he had begun. The idea that the source J did not know Joshua,^ and described the conquest of the land without reference to him, seemed to furnish a specially welcome confirmation of this setting aside of Joshua. When it was observed, on the other hand, that E, tlc]^ Ephraimite source, frequently mentioned Joshua and actually still knew of his sepulchre in Mount Ephraim, there seemed to be sufficient ground for the conclusion that Joshua, instead of being a person, was an Ephraimite clan whose eponymous tribal hero was thought to be buried in Timnath-serah.^ The validity of this line of argument is impugned in the first place by the fact that Joshua is found in J as well as in E ; this has been dwelt on by Kueneu,^ then by Dillmann,* and again, most recently, by Budde.^ As a matter of fact there can hardly be any doubt about it. The opposite view has derived considerable sup- port from the fact that whilst Joshua undoubtedly appears in J his name is entirely absent from Judges i. But his omission here is only too naturally explained by the necessity of setting him aside if the narrative were to find a place in the Book of Judges. The opening words of the book, ' after the death of Joshua,' which are confidently recognised as an editorial addition, put an end to ' Meyer, ut supra, p. 134 ; and earlier, Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 585 ; moreover, Stade, ZA W. i. p. 147 ; Gesch. Isr. i. pp. 135, 161. 2 Meyer, ut supra, p. 143, note 2. ^ Ond.- § 13, No. 14. * In several passages of the Commentary on NuDtJo. •- ZA W. vii. p. 130 f. Chap. Ill] B.— HISTORY OP THE PERIOD 275 all doubt. On the other hand, as Budde ^ has rightly remarked, the Summary which we have reproduced above opens with the question, ' Who shall begin the fight ? ' and the territory of each tribe is called its ' lot ' ; two facts which clearly enough presuppose a previous common agreement, this, in its turn, implying union under a single leader. Judges i. cannot in any case be the be- ginning of an independent story ; it necessarily points back to an earlier one. Of that earlier one we have found at least a remnant in the Book of Joshua. But that remnant is closely connected with the person of Joshua : as soon as we follow the threads of the narrative outside the Book of Judges where his name was necessarily expunged, Joshua spontaneously appears at the head — a clear token that the tradition of J knew him very well. 3. Result. — The main points in the progress of the conquest, as related in our Summary, are thus brought out. Whilst Moses was still their leader, the children of Israel won the territory east of the Jordan, at least in its southern half. The tribes of Eeuben and Gad settle there, and consequently are not mentioned again in the Summary. The mass of the nation cross the Jordan near the Dead Sea at Gilgal. This is done under the chieftainship of the Ephraimite Joshua,^ who undertook the leader- ship of Israel after the death of Moses. Gilgal is the base from which the attack on the country west of the Jordan is made ; in fact it continues to be the stationary camp of the people: the angel of the Lord and the ark of the covenant remain here until they advance to Bethel after it is conquered. They probably continue for a while to return to their great cantonment at Gilgal after each achievement. At any rate till the conquest of Jericho the tribes advance together. Now that they have obtained a firm footing in the west country they separate into the two divisions of related tribes, Judah and Joseph, each taking with it its dependent tribes and clans. But previously to this a definite district in the land now to be con- ^ vt supra, pp. 96, 128 f. ^ Josh. xvii. (14 f.) 16 ff. ; Judges i. 22, if it is right to read iiis name there. See above, p. 269. 276 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. quered is assigned, at any rate to the leading tribes and probably to all, under the leadership of Joshua. Judah, accompanied by Simeon, the tribe whose territory brings it into close association with him, advances iirst at Yahvd's behest, conquers a Canaanite paramount king, Adoni-bezek, and establishes himself in the hill-country of Judah. The Judsean chieftain Caleb, who sprang from the clan of Kenaz which had become blended with Judah, receives the ancient fortress Kiriath-arba, in reward for his services during the Desert March. He subdues the gigantic inhabitants and calls the city Hebron. Othniel, another district- chief of Judeeo-Kenizzite origin, who is designated Caleb's (younger) brother, conquers Debir in the south of Judah and becomes Caleb's son-in-law. Judah is also joined by the Bedouin tribe of the Kenites which came from the peninsula of Sinai and was closely allied with Israel through Moses. Either it had joined Israel in general, crossed the Jordan with them, then, after the conquest of Jericho and the speedily ensuing separation of Judah from the bulk of the tribes, accompanied that tribe to the south; or else, after Israel's departure from the Sinai district, it may have waited a while in the Desert, then, to establish a junction with Israel, moved gradually northwards, and now have joined hands with Judah from the Negeb. In the "Wilderness of Judah it continued its Bedouin mode of life. Simeon, also helped by Judah, estab- lishes itself south of Judah, having the Kenite and Amalekite Bedouins on its boundaries, and probably in several places actually dwelling amongst them. The pass of Saf^, called in Judges the Ascent of Akrabbim, was looked upon as the southern boundary between Edom and the Promised Land. Judah turns southwards from Jericho j the tribes of Joseph northwards. The Ephraimite leader Joshua attaches himself to the latter. Kot that our sources mean us to take him as a mere tribal hero^ belonging to Ephraim. The fragment already given of an apportionment of territory by Joshua ^ undoubtedly proceeds ^ Kuenen, ut supra, is inclined to do this ; cf. already Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 585. For the rest, see, more below, p. 279 fif. " Josh. xvii. 14 ff. Chap. III.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 277 on the assumption that the leader determined the abode of the other families in the same manner as he appointed their lot to the house of Joseph. Nor do we ever find envy or tribal discord assigned as the reason why Judah advanced separately and apart from Joshua's leadership. The course things took is rather thought of as the natural one under the circumstances. If the tribes advanced from the Jordan their roads must diverge at Jericho. Judah, with Simeon, and the certainly not insignificant under-tribes of the Kenites and the Kenizzites, could very well maintain the contest with the southern Canaanites, as soon as Joshua and his followers had cut off the approach of enemies from the north. But this also implies that at least in this tradition there is no support for the theory that Judah invaded the land from the south.^ The separation at Jericho points to a previous crossing of the Jordan by all the tribes together. The taking of Bethel, which was facilitated by the treason of one of its citizens, must certainly be regarded as the work of the united tribes of Joseph under Joshua's leadership. Here our Summary breaks off. The editor's task was to supply the connecting link between the Books of Joshua and Judges. Hence he is no longer occupied with the successes, but with the failures which explain the circumstances of the period of the Judges. But assuredly J's narrative once told of Joshua's other feats of arms at the head of the combined tribes, as well as of the taking of Bethel, and also related the successes of the individual tribes.^ We have already shown. that traces remain of a fuller form of his narrative than Judges i. contains. Our next business wUl be to follow it, or elements allied to it, yet further. If it should turn out that other successes were gained by united Israel — not including Judah and Simeon — this would justify us in taking it as a confirmation of the view indicated above. That is 1 Budde, p. 129, appears inclined to join Kuenen and others in holding this view, although he admits that J's tradition points to a united passage over the river near Jericho. 2 See Budde, ZA W. vii. pp. 104, 128 ; Bertheau, Eichter,'^ pp. xxviii, 2 f. 278 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. to say, Joshua, at the head of the combined Joseph tribes, to which the smaller northern tribes had attached themselves, carried out the conquest up to a certain point. Then he left each tribe to itself and remained at the head of Ephraim alone, the chief of the Joseph tribes. "We cannot fix provisionally on a fitter point for Joshua's thus confining himself to Ephraim than the conquest of the hill-country of Ephraim. § 27. The Conquest of Canaan until the Alliance with Gibeon, according to the Booh of Joshua. The expectation is fulfilled. A number of sections in the Book of Joshua carry on the threads which have been started in the Summary, and that in such a way as to make them fit into and fill up the spaces there left vacant. It is desirable in each case to fix our attention first of all on such of the pieces as are more nearly related to Judges i., and must therefore be ascribed to J. In this way we shall best bring out their connection with the Summary with which we are acquainted. It is true that a literary question immediately arises. Assum- ing that Judges i. is a piece which almost in every point bears the character of an excerpt, and must, as a matter of fact, be looked on as an extract from a larger narrative; assuming, too, that several passages in Joshua resemble Judges i. in this respect,^ and therefore are to be attached to that chapter ; then the question is whether the J-elements of the Book of Joshua which are now before us are of the same kind. As to their mode of telling the story, although they are for the most part brief accounts, preserved only in fragmentary form, they do not seem to bear the character of mere excerpts. We shall therefore be obliged to hold them to be parallels to Judges i., rather than direct continuations of if, belonging, perhaps, to the original work from which the still extant extract in Judges i. was taken. Intrinsically, however, they would admit of our thinking them to be a later edition of it. ' With reference to an undeniable difference, see above, pp. 265, 269f. Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 279 1. Joshua at the head of All Israel. — Judges i. sanctions the idea that Joshua was here thought of as crossing the Jordan at the head of the whole people and pressing on from Gilgal against Jericho and the hill-country. This view is raised to a certainty by the first chapters of Joshua. They give us a series of accounts, partly standing in close connection with Judges i., partly inde- pendent of that summary, in which the events happen after the manner indicated there. The Deuteronomistic revision has partly enlarged and partly somewhat modified these older accounts, but without entirely obliterating their original character. An Introduction,^ Deuteronomistic in character, prefaces the crossing of the Jordan and the struggle for the Promised Land. It has perhaps made use of a few older elements,^ but on the whole it is freely worked into the context by ^ D^. As a rhetorical and hortatory introduction we can make no use of it for our purpose. And the narrative of the spying out of Jericho which is attached to it must also be passed over provisionally.* It is closely con- nected with the history of the conquest of that city. The first leading event we are confronted with is the crossing of the Jordan.* Wellhausen has distinguished two ancient accounts of it,^ which in all probability must be recognised as the narratives of E and J. The main idea in his analysis holds good I en ^ the division be made somewhat differently.'^ The course of the narrative in J may be restored somewhat as follows : — From Shittim, where the people had lain some time, Joshua advances towards the Jordan.^ Here he leads the people to expect Yahv^'s miraculous help on the morrow.** Then he gives them the sign by which they may know the omnipotence of Yahv^ ; the ark of Yahve, the Lord of the Earth, shall go before ' Josh. i. On this and the following see now also Albers, Die Quellenlerichte in Jos. i.-xii. (1891). ^ This might be discussed with reference to uv. 1, 2, 10, 11. 3 See HoUenberg, StKr., 1874, p. 473; Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 586; Kuen. Ond.^% 1, No. 26. * Chap. ii. ' Chaps, iii. and iv. « JDTh. xxi. p. 586 flf. ' Of. also Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 450 £f. 8 Josh. iii. labp; cf. Num. xxv. 1=J. 9 Josh. iii. 5 ; cf. Num. xi. 18 (Exod. xix. 22?)= J. 280 HISTOKY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. them, and when the feet of the priests that bear it stand in the water, the waters shall be cut off and stand in a heap. This comes to pass. When the people are ready to cross the Jordan, and the priests bearing the ark touch the water, the waters that are flow- ing down stand still and the rest run off. The priests remain with the ark in the midst of the bed of the river until all the people have passed through.^ When this is done Joshua is ordered to take twelve stones from the place where the priests had stood in the Jordan and put them in the quarters where they are to lodge next night, to be signs amongst them.^ The account in E is briefer. Joshua removes to the Jordan with all Israel early in the morning (from Shittim ?). Here he assembles the sons of Israel around him that they may hear Yahv^'s command.^ They are to choose twelve men who shall go before the ark into the midst of the bed of the Jordan. Each of them shall carry thence a stone upon his shoulder for an everlasting memorial unto the sons of Israel. The crossing is then accom- plished : the moment the men that bear the ark come to the Jordan and their feet touch the water it recedes.* . . . The greater simplicity of the second account, its vividness of description, and the greater intrinsic probability of the signs having been set up in the midst of the stream rather than on the bank Cas a memorial of the passage), mark it out as being very likely the older of the two.^ The statements which follow, or are inter- ^ Josh. iii. 10a (106 ia an addition by D-), 11 (instead of ^''^3^ read mn''> Wellh., p. 587), 13 f. (at end of v. U delete finan), 156, 16 f. 2 Josh. iv. la (Dillm. E), 16, 3 (from ISC). 6a (because of Daaip, which suits a memorial set up on the land better), 8. ^ Josh. iii. Iaa7, 9 (in J the verse is superfluous and confusing ; cf. also the first words with those in v. 5). * Josh. iii. 12 ; iv. 5, 76 ; iii. 18a (173133 DrT'Pjm). This transposition is recommended by the fact that iv. 5 necessarily belongs to the time prior to the crossing. V. 4, like v. 2, then becomes superfluous j it was introduced by R"* in order to restore the connection of the misplaced parts. Vv. 66 and 7a also belong to Rd^ or rather to D^ for Vill in 76 should immediately follow v. 5. Chap. iv. 9 is a fresh beginning, and does not belong to either of the two main narratives. ^ Kuenen, Ond.^ § 8, No. 20, ascribes it to J, but with a widely different division. ,Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 281 woven, come partly^ from P, partly ^ from D^ and probably iu part from E"*, but they do not add to our knowledge of what happened. They contribute no new features, but expand E here and J there, or bring the two into harmony. "We probably owe to J the notice that the monument of stones was called Gilgal.3 If these are the facts, they prove that the oldest nucleus of a narrative immediately following that of the passage of the Jordan belongs at least in part to E. This narrative gives a totally different explanation of the place-name Gilgal, which was of such importance in that first period in Canaan, HoUenberg * makes the nucleus of the narrative to be as follows : ' At that time Yahvd said unto Joshua, Make thee knives of flint, and circumcise ^ the sons of Israel. Then Joshua made him knives of flint, and circumcised the sons of Israel at the HiLL of the Foreskins. And when all the people had been circumcised, they remained in the camp till they were whole. And Yahve said unto Joshua, This day have 1 rolled away the reproach of Egypt from off you. And he called the name of the place Gilgal, unto this day.' ^ The narrative is usually regarded as homogeneous ; hence, for the above-named and other reasons, Dillmann ascribes it entirely to E. But it is not so. The double title of the place of circum- cision. Hill of the Foreskins and Gilgal, compels this conclusion. Probably therefore we have here another instance of E describing the same event as J with minor differences.^ This is another of the narratives which E^^ has subjected to ' Possibly in iv. 9, 15-17, 19. 2 Besides the passages already mentioned, especially iii. 2-4, 6-8, and the main substance of what begins at iv. 10. ^ iv. 20 ; but on account of D^pn the source of iv. 9 may be used here. * StKr., 1874, p. 493 f. = Dltyi and IT'JB' are probably to be struck out, with the Lxx. (Vat. and Luc.) » Josh. V. 2f., 8f. ' V. 2 f., 8 (c/. 8a with iii. 176 ; iv. la [Dillmann wrongly ascribes the latter to E]), probably belonged to J. On the other hand v. 9 has an etymology in E's fashion ; its contents suit him, for he, at all events, cannot have derived the name Gilgal from the heap of stones. 282 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. considerable revision.^ His chief object was to harmonise the statement here made that Israel was circumcised on its immigra- tion into Canaan with P's assertion that Abraham adopted circumcision for himself and his posterity. The reviser has also placed here a short notice from P concerning the celebration of the Passover in Gilgal.^ And if we might take Gilgal instead of Jericho as the scene of the man's making himself known to Joshua^ as captain of Yahv^'s host — a notice derived from E — this would be the very place where the story should stand. If the occurrence belongs to Jericho, it would stand better in a later place. The attack on the Canaanites must follow the passage of the Jordan. If the crossing was effected at Shittim, or at all events near the mouth of the Jordan, Jericho was the first obstacle in the way of a further advance. It was the key of the country. The next event is the taking of Jericho.* The narrative of this rests almost entirely on an ancient foundation, and is given in two accounts, each complete in itself, which Wellhausen^ has disentangled with almost exhaustive thoroughness. J's narrative is here the simpler. Yahve com- mands Joshua to make Israel go round the city once a day for six days (in silence), but on the seventh day seven times (with a loud battle-cry) : they shall then be able to force the city. Joshua accordingly gives the people instructions for going round : ' Shout not, and let not your voice be heard, neither let any word proceed from your mouth until the day I bid you : then shall ye raise the battle-cry.' Thus did they compass the city once, and returned into the camp for the night.^ The same is done on the next day and for six days in succession. On the seventh day they go ^ V. 4-7, and probably v. 1, belong to him. Yet we might here think also of D2. 2 Josh. V. 10-12. ' Josh. V. 13-15 ; cf. Exod. iii. 5 = E. ■> Josh. vi. ^ JBTh. xxi. p. 589 f. ° Josh. vi. 3 (the words bracketed above must have stood in the text and wei'e removed by R*), 4a^ (Dillmann, inloc, is possibly right in assigning this to B), 55(3 (most critics assign it to the other account, but n?J?. here and at v. 20, does not agree properly with the fallen walls), 10, 11 (where T"!?!! Siti lao'l is to be read). Chap. III.] JS.— HISTOEY OF THE PERIOD 283 round the city in the same way (seven times ?). Now, at last, Joshua bids them raise the battle-cry. Thus do they force their way into the city and take it.^ E's description of the proceedings is considerably more com- plicated, and therefore probably later. In it Israel is represented as going round the city seven times in one day, the vanguard first, next the priests with the ark, then the army. On the seventh time, the priests blow the trumpets of rams' horns, whereupon the people raise the war-cry, and the walls fall down.^ The kernel of this version lies in the words : ' And Joshua rose early in the morning, and the priests bare the ark of Yahvd. And seven priests bare seven trumpets of rams' horns before the ark of Yahv^, and the armed men went before them, and the rearguard followed the ark of Yahv6. And at the seventh time the priests blew with the trumpets, and when the people heard the sound of the trumpet, they raised a loud battle-cry, so that the walls fell down.' ^ With what is now chap. vi. is closely connected, on the one hand the narrative of the sending the spies to Jericho, and their preserva- tion by the harlot Eahab/ and on the other, that of Achan's theft,^ the former preceding, the latter following it. Especially in the case of the first narrative it is quite credible that it was con- nected with one of the two ancient accounts. If so, it must have originated with J, and there are many indications in favour of this in the piece itself.® In the story of Achan also many signs ' Josh. vi. 14, 15a, 166, 20a, 206/3 (beginning at 7V' '> see the preceding note). These verses contain the minimum. HiWm. NuDt Jo., p. 462, agrees. Wellhausen adds 17a, 19, 21, 24 ; Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 141, probably correctly, adds v. 26. It depends on chap. ii. whether the reference to Rahab in v. 17 and v. 22 also belong to J. I hold it not impossible. 2 Josh. vi. 4aa6, 5a6a, 6, 7-9, 12 f., 16a, 205o. ' Vv. 12, 13aa6 (a;8 is a mistaken addition, as are also the three last words of the verse), 16a, 206a. * Chap. ii. " Chap. vii. " Of. the easy and not prolix style of the narrative ; also D^Dt}*! v. 1, TDfl T\U)3 DDNI V. 14, nCKT (without name) and D''EJ'iXn, r. 3, 4, 5, etc., as frequently in J, e.g. Gen. xviii. 2, 16 ; xix. 12 ; xxxiv. 7, and xxiv. 21, 26, 30, 61 ; xxxvii. 15, 16. Dillmann thinks of E along with J ; «. 10 f. at all events shows that something is due to R"*. 284 HISTORY OF THE HEBEEWS [Book I. of J could be adduced, but R*^ seems to have expanded the narrative considerably. Two leading events, presupposed in the Summary, Judges L, but not narrated there, have novf been related. The Passage of the Jordan has been effected, and Jericho, which must protect the rear whilst an advance is made on the country beyond, has been taken. At Jericho the roads diverge. One runs north-west through the Wady Matja to the hill-country of Ephraim, towards Ai and Bethel ; the other south-west to Jerusalem and the hill country of Judah. Until now Joshua has been the leader of the entire nation that crossed the Jordan. The idea of dividing into two main columns may now have occurred to the tribes, which had not yet coalesced into a solid national unity. Before carrying it out they decide under Joshua's superintendence what portions of the country each tribe is to possess. Thus do the facts we have now ascertained follow without diffi- culty those we ascertained previously. The Passage of the Jordan and the conquest of Jericho form the necessary presupposition to that partition of the country which stands at the head of our above-mentioned Summary, and must have preceded the partition in point of time. It is scarcely possible to ascertain how long Israel stayed in the fortified camp at Gilgal after crossing the Jordan : nevertheless it does not appear to be conceived of as a very short time. Judah, with Simeon, is the first to leave the common cantonment. Next, probably some time later, the sons of Joseph, Ephraim and ]\Ianasseh, set out for the hill-country of Ephraim. The camp in Gilgal is still retained as a place of retreat. This solves the question as to what became of the other tribes. The presumption in any case is that they pursued their way across the hill-country of Ephraim which had yet to be con- quered ; that is, they attached themselves provisionally to Joseph and Joshua. We have thus reached afresh the junction with the Book of Joshua. The continuation of its narrative must be regarded as a description of the success of Joshua at the head of the house of Chap. III.] £.— HISTOEY OF THE PERIOD 285 Joseph and the tribes provisionally attached to it. The fortunes of Judah are for the present left unnoticed. 2. Joshua at the head of the House of Joseph. — The road to the hill-country through the Wady MatjS, is barred by the Canaanite royal city Ai. Joshua's first object is to conquer it. This also is told in a double narrative, as Knobel and Schrader saw, and Wellhausen ^ afterwards still more precisely. The correct analysis has recently been carried out by Dillmann.^ J's narrative presupposes ^ an earlier unsuccessful attempt on Ai, and thus comes into connection with elements of chap. vii. Joshua marches against Ai afresh. Arriving in front of it he despatches * from his position by night three thousand (?) men,^ with orders to lie in ambush behind the city. Himself with the army will attack the city ; if the enemy come out against him, as they did before, he will feign flight ; during the pursuit the ambush are to take possession of the city, which has been left by its defenders, and set it on fire. In accordance with this -command the ambush takes up a position overnight between Bethel and Ai. Van der Velde ^ says that opportunities of concealment are sup- plied by two rocky hills between Tell el-Hajar, the site of Ai, and Beitin, the modern representative of Bethel, three-quarters of an hour to the north-west. Joshua remains all night encamped in the valley^ before the town, the Wady Matja, in order to com- mence the onset in the morning.* When the king of Ai descries 1 JDTh. xxi. p. 592 f. He distinguishes a second account in vv. 3a, 12 f., 14, 18, 20c, 26. Kuenen, Ond.^ % 8, No. 20, agrees witli him, and recognises in it J's account. Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 141 £f., acquiesces, but would prefer to regard 186 alone as original. Cf. also Ewald, Gesch. Isr? ii. p. 350 (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 248 £f.). = NuDtJo., p. 472. » V. 5. * Not from Gilgal, which would naturally involve the consequence that 3a and 36 belong to separate accounts (Wellh., Kuen.). See Dillm., p. 473. " The text has thirty thousand ; perhaps DE'PtJ' should be read. * Narrative, etc., ii. p. 280 ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 473. ' So, with Ewald, Gesch. Isr." ii. p. 350 (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 248), after the reading pDJ?n ^Ifl^. This reading dispenses with the notion that Joshua abode still in Gilgal whilst his ambuscade had been in its place a whole day ! 8 Josh. viii. 3-9. They form an uninterrupted whole, but the connection must not be extended to w. 10 and 11 (Wellh.). The fresh beginning of the discourse, the terminology (DDB'''1, a favourite expression of E's ; the elders, as in Exod. i. £?■.=£), the fresh indication of locality, compared with u. 9, — all show that the other account begins at v. 10. 286 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. Israel (in the morning) he hastens to the attack. Joshua and all Israel allow themselves to be beaten, and flee towards the wilder- ness, i.e. probably eastwards,^ in the direction of the (barren) plateau in front of Ai, between the Wady MatjS, and the Wady Suwenlt. The men of Ai follow them and leave the city open behind. ' Then the ambush arose quickly, entered into the city, and set it on fire. And when the men of Ai looked back they perceived the smoke of their city. And they had no power to flee this way or that, for the Israelites that had fled to the wilderness turned back on the pursuers. And they smote them, and they took the king alive and brought him before Joshua. And when Israel had slain the men of Ai in the field, that is, in the wilder- ness whither they had pursued them, they returned unto Ai and smote it with the edge of the sword, so that on that day there were slain about twelve thousand men and women.' ^ Into this narrative we can see that an account by E has been inwrought.3 Early in the morning Joshua musters the army (in Gilgal) and marches at its head with the elders of Israel to Ai. They encamp on the north of the city, so that the valley lies between them and Ai. This is the same situation as in J, the northern edge of the Wady MatjS,, at the southern edge of which Ai lies. Then Joshua takes five thousand men and sets them in ambush.* . . . Early next morning the men of Ai, the king and ^ Dillm., NuDtJo., p. 475, appears to believe that it was to the western part of the plateau. But this would involve the difficulty of making the flight, and consequently the pursuit by the men of Ai, be in the direction of the ambus- cade. The contrary direction appears to agree better with the text and the facts. '^ Josh. viii. 140076, 15, 16a, 176, 19, 20 (206 also belongs necessarily to this, owing to "I31D). Moreover, the words DmS ISM in v. 22 (the rest of it, like V. 21, is from "R^ ; cf. especially the formula in 225), 23, 24aa6, 25. 2 As to E being the author see above, p. 285, Note 8. * An indication of the locality must have dropped out here. The words now standing in the text : ' Between Bethel and Ai on the west side of the city,' can- not have stood in this place unless Bethel in v. 17 was a gloss. Seeing that this is hardly conceivable, although the word is omitted by the LXX. , it must be re- garded as a harmonistio addition made by R* from J's v. 9. For if the ambush lay between Bethel and Ai the Bethelites would not be able to rush past it to help the men of Ai. Chap. III.] £.— HISTOEY OF THE PEKIOD , 287 all his people make a sortie. [Israel flees] towards the appointed place in the steppe.^ The enemy pursues Joshua and is drawn away from the city, so that there is not a man left in Ai and Bethel. [The Israelites turn back and attack the pursuers, the ambush comes up and helps,^ the men of Ai are beaten] and are all destroyed utterly with the edge of the sword.^ Yahv^ now bids Joshua stretch out his javelin towards Ai, for He has given the city into his hand.* Joshua does so, and does not draw it back till Ai is utterly devoted to destruction.^ It is hard to say which of the two narratives is the more original. Both have peculiar and original features. And, on the whole, the divergence between them is only in subordinate points. The mention of Bethel in E is the solitary instance of a really important discrepancy. It reminds us involuntarily of that con- quest of Bethel by the house of Joseph which we have already become acquainted with through J. The easiest solution of the difficulty would be to take the word to be a mere gloss, as the LXX. suggests. But this is excluded by the fact that such a gloss in the present context would be meaning- less. The LXX. have omitted Bethel because they felt that the present text would not allow of the Bethelites marching past the ambuscade between Bethel and Ai. But if Bethel belongs to E's own narrative, the important consequence follows that, according to E, the expedition was directed against Bethel as well as Ai. The account in Josh, viii., then, becomes no mere parallel to Judges i. 22 f., but the two are complementary halves of one and 1 It is only in this way that the words give a meaning. n3iy means the same as J's "lllD. This is the place to which Joshua tiees. The words in brackets must therefore have formed part of the text. 2 Everything shows that in B the first object aimed at by the onset of the ambush is to beat the enemy, not to gain possession of the city. The city is not taken till afterwards. The supposition that the place of ambush was not the same as in J also agrees better with this. ' Josh. viiL 10-12 (u. 13 is an insertion by B% liapS, 166, 17a ,. . 24a|3. * This seems to be the place where v. 18 at first stood. ' Josh. viii. 18-26. Although some portion of what follows may possibly belong to E, this is not certain : some of it also, e.g., the fate of the king, may have stood in J. 288 HISTOKY OF THE HEBEEWS [Book I. the same history. In J both halves have been preserved for us ; in E the one referring to Bethel has all been lost except this small fragment. The most plausible account we can render of the connection between E's two narratives is, that Bethel, being the neighbouring town, hastened to the help of Ai against the common foe. "We might then suppose that the Bethelites who had marched out against Israel were smitten along with the inhabitants of Ai, and their city, like it, easily captured after its defenders were slain. This aspect of the matter may have induced the reviser to strike out the story because of its marked discrepancy with J. Or, on the other hand, we might adopt the more natural supposition, that E's account agreed more with J's. In that case the Bethelites escaped to their city, and Israel, after taking Ai, must have cap- tured Bethel by means of spies and treachery, in the manner described in Judges i. 22 ff. This omission of the taking of Bethel shows what liberties the revisers of the Book of Joshua took with the materials handed down by tradition. E'' seems to have thought hardly anything worth preserving unless he could see in it a typical significance for after-times. We possess another example of this freedom of treatment, and one that is even more unfavourable to our historical knowledge, in the verses that succeed the story of Ai.^ With Bethel the way to the hill-country and the possibility of an advance northwards were won. Either at once or subsequently, Israel must needs make the attempt to reach this true centre of the Holy Land.^ We know from other quarters that it was conquered, and under Joshua too — for here his grave was afterwards shown — nay, that the pulse of Israel's life in the period of the Judges lay here. But not a scrap of information remains as to when or how it was won. The History of the Conquest is absolutely silent as to Shechem and the middle country. 1 Josh. viii. 30-35. '^ Of. Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 478. Chap. III.] £.— HISTOEY OF THE PERIOD 289 Considering the close connection in which that region stood with Joshua's own name, it is simply incredible that the history had nothing to say about the conquest of this highly important district. We can only suppose that this section of the history of Joshua has been lost.^ In Josh. viii. 30-35 we possess a scanty remnant of it, apparently the only one which E* thought of special importance. Most of it was written by D^, but some parts may be traced to E.^ At all events, it is to this source we owe the statement that Joshua built an altar to Yahv^ on Mount Ebal, and that the people offered burnt-offerings and thank-offerings there.' Such a notice obviously presupposes a narrative of the conquest of the district round Shechem. After these conflicts Joshua returns again to the fortified camp at Gilgal. There is no valid reason for thinking this another place than the Gilgal which we became acquainted with at the Passage of the Jordan.* No doubt there is something surprising in the fact of their returning thither. But it is not inexplicable if we remember that Israel did not consist exclusively of invading warriors, but brought with them women and children. The fortified cantonment on the Jordan could serve the latter at all times as a secure abode and the fighting men themselves as a retreat from the vicissitudes of war. This explains why not only the later sources make Joshua and Israel return to Gilgal after their martial exploits, but also why E and J take the same view.^ Here in Gilgal, after the return from Ai and Shechem, an event happens to Joshua the effects of which are to be felt as late as David's days. Ambassadors present themselves in the camp at Gilgal, with old sacks upon their asses and patched wine-skins. On their feet they wear torn and clouted sandals, on their bodies old clothes ; the bread which they carry as their provisions is dry 1 See Kohler, Bibl. Oesch. d. AT. i. p. 481. 2 As in many other oases, Dillmann believes that D itself was the groundwork. 3 Vv. 30, 316. O/. Josh. xxiv. * On this see A. Vogel, Luth. Zeitschr., 1873, p. 4 £f. ; Hengstenberg, Gesch. d. AB. ii. p. 225 f. ; Kohler, BiU. Gesch. i. p. 482 ; Speaker's Bible, ii. p. 44. 6 Cf. Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 131, note 2. T 290 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. and crumbling. They say unto the men of Israel : ^ ' We are your servants ; ^ make a covenant with us.' The men of Israel say to the strangers : ^ ' Peradventure ye dwell among us ' {i.e. in the midst of the district which Israel was destined to subdue and depopulate) 'and how should we then make a covenant with you?' They asseverate that they are come from a far country, attracted by the name of Yahv^. They have heard what He did to the Egyptians ; therefore have their elders and fellow-countrymen sent them hither and bidden them make this overture unto Israel : ' We are j'our servants ; make therefore a covenant with us.' As a proof of their having come from afar, they point to their bread, their wine-skins, and their clothes, which were new when they brought them from their homes. Then did the men (of Israel) take of their provisions and made a covenant with them/ but asked not counsel at the mouth of Yahve.^ And after three days they heard that they were their neighbours, and dwelt in their midst.® They were jepresentatives of Gibeon,' Chephirah, Beeroth, and Kiriath-jearim.^ ^ The words 'Joshua' and 'and to him,' in v. 6, must be struck out. ^ It seems to me that Budde, p. 138, is right in substituting this for the words, 'we are come from a far country.' The latter words cannot be made to agree with what follows. Such a subjection aa would preclude a covenant (Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 481) need not be meant. It would also be irreconcilable with that state of affairs which the authors must in any case have known of. 2 It is very remarkable that at v. 7 they are designated Hiwites. For the rest see also Thenius, on 2 Sam. xxi. * This must be inserted here from v. 15a ; see Budde, p. 138. ' Budde, id supra, p. 139, conjectures that Joshua, not Yahv6, may once have been the reading liere. " Josh. ix. 3-7, 9, 11-14, 16. If this restoration of the narratives, proposed by Budde, is correct, we possess only one main account of the affair, and this can have originated with no one but J. Budde'a suggestion appears to me to afford quite the best solution that has hitherto been offered of the highly complicated problem presented by this chapter. At the same time it must be admitted that there are some grounds for the theory that two narratives are combined here. This is the view of Hollenberg and Wellhavisen (StKr., 1874, p. 496, and JDTh. xxi. p. 594), and especially, most recently, of Dillmann (NuDtJo., p. 4S0). On the opinion that in E the Gibeonites submitted unconditionally (Dillm.), see above, note 2. Vv. 1 f. , 8, 10, 15, 24 f., are from R^ or W ; iw. 15b, 17-21 from P. ' According to v. 3. * The three last towns are added in accordance with the trustworthy enume- ration in V. 17. As to the situation of the places, cf. besides Riehm, H WB. and Baedeker,^ especially Dillm. NuDtJo. , p. 483. Chap. Ill] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 291 After the conclusion of the compact Joshua appears.^ He has taken no part in the negotiations, probably because he was at a distance. Now he reproaches the Gibeonites with the deceit they have practised on Israel. On them and theirs he lays the curse of perpetual servitude, as hewers of wood and drawers of water for the altar of Yahv^, but he protects them from the fury of the people, who are ready to murder the ambassadors now that their ruse is found out.^ § 28. The Historical Character of the Narrative. Before following the line of tradition further it is desirable to pause a while and inquire into the historical character of the material furnished by tradition which we have discovered up to now. Up to now we have succeeded in tracing a not inconsiderable number of ancient elements belonging to the original sources, and referring to Israel's being led by Joshua across the Jordan and as far as Jericho ; the provisional ideal partition of the country by him; the separation of Judah from the other tribes; Judah's advance with Simeon to the south ; Joshua's successes at the head of the house of Joseph and the tribes attached thereto, up to the point where Shechem is reached. Hitherto J has on several occasions been seen to be the only ^source that continued to flow for us. When there have been two ancient accounts it has been sometimes E, sometimes J, that has taken the first place, as containing the more original form. And so far as the narrative has gone it has been possible to discover in it a well-arranged and consistent progress of events. In one ease, namely in the statement that the country was portioned out beforehand amongst the tribes, it was open to doubt whether the ' Only to this extent is HoUenberg's view, p. 496, correct, that Joshua vas not mentioned originally in the Gibeonite episode ; this view has been followed by the majority of investigators. See Budde, p. 138 f. ^ Vv. 22 f . and 26 are part of the original account ; the latter, in particular, having been worked up by R''. 292 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. narrative was all of a piece. But we believed it possible to dispel that doubt by a closer scrutiny of the entire picture of the pro- ceedings visible in the narrative. All this goes a considerable way towards proving the historical reliableness of the narrative ; it supplies the requisite foundation. But the relation between the sources and the events is of such a kind that when we have shown what are the oldest traditions, and have proved their mutual agreement, we have not demonstrated that things happened as they say. That can only be done if the subsequent course of events confirms it, and no other facts, ascertained by us, disprove it. I believe, however, that the history of Joshua and the Conquest, thus far told, in the arrangement and harmony of its diverse elements which we have attempted, will stand the test. 1. The Mode of Invasion. — In our discussion of the Summary found in Judges i. we have already found ^ ourselves compelled to give a provisional proof that the personality of Joshua cannot be set aside in favour of the view that he was nothing but a tribal hero of the Ephraimites, or a mere eponymous hero of a clan settled in and near Timnath-heres.^ For in the first place it is certainly no disproof of his having lived when we find that his grave was afterwards shown on Mount Ephraim. And secondly, the criticism of the sources has subverted the funda- mental assumption on which this theory rests, the idea that Joshua's name does not occur in J and must have been invented by E, i.e. in Ephraim. With this notion the idea also falls to the ground that the entire Book of Joshua was a fiction composed by 1 See p. 274 f. We should possess a proof from the monuments of the his- torical existence of Joshua, if a Phcenieian inscription could be relied on which is mentioned by Procopius of Caesarea (De Bdlo Vandal, ii. 20) and some others (Suidas, Moses of Chorene). This inscription — according to Suidas there were several — is said to have stood at Tingis (?) in Numidia, and to have been set up by Canaanites in their flight from the ' robber Joshua.' But the transla- tion may be due to a conjecture of Procopius. Cf. Bertheau, Zur Gesch., p. 271 ; Movers, Ph&niz. ii. 2, p. 432 f. ; Ewald, Oesch. /sr. ii.' p. 323 f. (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 2.35 f.); Kohler, Bibl. Gesch. i. p. 488; Ency. Brit. xiii. p. 753. ^ Judges ii. 9 ; to which add Josh. xix. 50 and xxiv. 30, where the place ia called Timnath-serah. ■ Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PEEIOD 293 E and his successors out of devotion to its mythical hero.^ If these objections prove baseless and a full explanation can be given of the absence of Joshua from Judges i., there is nothing to justify any further unwillingness to recognise Joshua as a historical figure. On the contrary, the task that lay before Israel after the death of Moses demanded a successor of the first great leader, who should bring Israel, in his manner and in his spirit, to the Promised Land. Joshua is an Ephraimite. Naturally he stands in close con- nection with his tribe. But this gives no warrant for concluding that, although a historical personage, he is only an Ephraimite tribal chief, and not at the same time leader of the united people.^ Kuenen's weightiest reason for thinking this, when once he has admitted that Joshua appears in J's tradition, is his idea that J's original form was of a north Israelite character. We, on the contrary, believe that J is to be considered a Judeean writing, and Judges i. is a fresh proof of this. If so, it shews how distinctly the fact of Joshua's having been the commander was recognised at an early date in Judah. And, considering how soon the north and south became rivals, this can only be explained by assuming that facts were on Joshua's side. But if Joshua was the leader and general of all Israel so long as the people acted in concert, it follows that no other than he can have conducted the crossing of the Jordan and the step required immediately after this, the conquest of Jericho, as well as the partition of the country, which must needs take place before the separation from Judah. We have already dealt with the latter point. Doubts have lately been cast on the conquest of Jericho and the closely connected fact that Israel crossed into the west country precisely at this point. Whilst Meyer ^ adheres to this as absolutely the only reliable passage in the Israelite tradition concerning the conquest of Canaan, Stade, on the other hand, feels obliged to express serious suspicions of it. In his opinion Israel 1 Meyer, ZA W. i. p. 143. 2 So Kuen. Orad.^g 13, No. 14. ^ ZA W. i. p. 141 f. 294 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. did not make its way into Canaan near Jericho, but crossed the Jordan considerably farther north, in the region of the Jabbok. He has been led to this mainly by his adherence to the view that in the earliest times the district opposite Jericho belonged to Moab, not to Israel.^ We have seen reasons for deeming this a mistake and rejecting it. Stade appeals further to the history of the origin of the tribe of Benjamin.^ The birth of Benjamin in the Holy Land is supposed to indicate that this tribe was formed by a number of clans detaching themselves from Joseph after the immigration into Canaan. Benjamin's territory, to which Jericho and Ai belonged, would therefore be conquered for Israel at a later date from the north. To me there seems to be much against this. If Benjamin was not formed till some time after the conquest of Canaan, it can hardly be explained how the king of Israel was so soon afterwards chosen out of this tribe. The conflicts of the period of the Judges were not so far removed from the time of Saul as to have left no reminiscence of such a fact surviving in his day. And if the tribe of Benjamin had really been of so recent growth, it could hardly have acquired such importance under Saul as is implied in its being the tribe from which the king was to be chosen. But Stade's proposed explanation of the patriarchal history,^ however much truth there may be in its leading ideas, seems to me to lead to contradictions as soon as it is applied in a mechanical fashion. For example, what are we to understand by Benjamin being repre- sented on the one hand as the youngest tribe, not formed till after the arrival in Canaan, and on the other hand, as the uncle of Ephraim and Manasseh, consequently much older than they? If Benjamin was the youngest tribe, formed by separation from Ephraim, why is he then called his uncle and not his son ? Stade, however, perhaps thinks that the division occurred at a time when Ephraim and Manasseh had not been separated but were regarded still as the one tribe of Joseph. In that case why is he ' Qtsch. Isr. i. p. 137 f. 2 ZA W. i. p. 146 f. 3 Cf. also Gesch, Isr. i. p. 160 f. Chap. III.] A— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 295 called Joseph's brother instead of his son, seeing that, at least so far as size is concerned, he, rather than Ephraim and Manasseh, would he fitly called a mere son, i.e. sub-tribe of Joseph ? ^ In short, these explanations lead to no result, and it will be well not to build too many conclusions on them. For instance, we cannot conclude from them that Benjamin did not come into existence until after the Mosaic period. But this gets rid of every difficulty in the way of believing that Jericho was taken in Joshua's time. It is not, however, the personality of Joshua and the crossing near Jericho alone, but the entire representation which our sources give of Israel's invasion of Canaan that has been called in question. Stade 2 holds that the Hebrews reached Canaan, not as conquerors but peaceably. For a long time they led a nomadic life to the east of the Jordan. Eventually they turned to agriculture. Their population increased and they were compelled to seek an out- let on the west of the river. Individual families may have ob- tained land from the aborigines by purchase or agreement. The Canaanites, being superior to the Israelites, would with little trouble have repulsed any attempt at a warlike advance. In course of time one clan after another wandered in. Israel dwelling among the Canaanites became partially blended with them'' and adopted both their culture and their holiest sanctuaries.* The religion alone was Israel's, and thus the mixed race eventually bore the Israelite stamp. The towns continued for some time to resist this peaceful conquest. They also were only in part overcome by force. It is not till the period of the Kings that the two constituents of the nation begin to be estranged from and hostile to each other. This ends in the subjugation of the original inhabitants.^ It must be unreservedly admitted that this account brings 1 Further, what is meant by Ephraim and Manasseh being bora of the daughter of an Egyptian priest? Are Ephraim and Manasseh mixed tribes of Egyptians and Hebrews? Or are they due to a mixture of Hebrew blood with that of an Egyptian priestly tribe ? 2 ZA W. i. p. 148 f. ; Gesch. Isr. i. pp. 133 f., 138 f. 3 Geach. Isr. i. p. 140. ■* ZA }V. i. p. 149. = Gesch. Isr. i. p. 140 f. 296 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. out excellently one important side of the actual event. Israel did not obtain the country solely by force. This is clearly proved by the many instances in which Israel and the Canaanite are seen dwelling side by side in peace during the period of the Judges. Another proof is that Israel was far from conquering the whole country under Joshua and yet had not afterwards to wage any important wars with the aborigines. At the same time, however, we must observe that whilst tradition gives one instance of mutual arrangement, it gives but tliis one, and expressly designates it as the exception to the rule. Hence it is highly questionable whether Israel's immigration into the country west of the Jordan was accom- plished at first solely through peaceable negotiations, and only after- wards in a few isolated instances by force. The tradition on this subject, especially as contained in the plain and simple statements of Judges i., but also as embodied in the Book of Joshua, bears too deeply the stamp of having been drawn from facts to allow of our setting it aside on any but the most convincing grounds. Nor must we make too much of the peace that reigned between the two sections. Israel's inability to drive out the earlier popu- lation made it necessary to come to terms with them. So far as is implied in this we certainly do miss the signs of ' mortal en- mity ' ^ between them. But knowing as we do that as soon as the Israelites were in a position to do it they everywhere reduced the natives to servitude,^ we may be sure that the fairly good under- standing was less a matter of principle than of temporary con- venience. The fact that this subjugation was completed before Solomon ^ does not prove that it was not commenced considerably earlier. On the contrary, Saul's violent measures against the Gibeonites, who, unlike the rest of the Canaanites,* were under the protection of a covenant, plainly shews that he was yielding to a tendency which had long existed amongst those Israelites who were specially moved by national and theocratic feeling.^ The only plausible argument in favour of the settlement having ^ Stade, ut supra, p. 135. - Judges i.27 ff. Cf. v. 21 ; Josh. xiii. 13. 3 2 Sam. xxi.l S. * \ Kings ix. 21. ' 2 Sam. xxi. 26. Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OP THE PERIOD 297 been effected peaceably is the superiority of the Canaanites ovei the Israelites, which finds expression in many passages. But that superiority is sufficiently explained by the fact of Israel's oft- proved inability to conc[uer the towns and the lowlands. That oi itself implies that they afterwards lived side by side with the Canaanites and were under the necessity of entering into friendly arrangements with them. It will be found very difficult to prove that the Canaanites, though able in part to keep their fortified towns, and by means of their chariots to assert their superiority over Israel in battles on the plains, were also able to shut ofl Israel from the hill-country, the district which the older tradition looks on as conquered by Israel. If Israel advanced with a fairly united front it must have been an imposing power in comparisoB with the Canaanites, who possessed but little homogeneity oi organisation and were split up into separate republican common- wealths. The earlier inhabitants, as many tokens shew, were, moreover, a race, the long-standing civilisation of which had de- generated into immorality which probably involved weakness. Their knowledge of the art of war would impress the Israelites more than their natural vigour. Israel confronted them as a people in aU the freshness of unspoiled youthful vigour, accustomed to severe fighting and hard privation. Where the two fought with equal weapons Israel scarcely needed to shun the arbitrament of war. We believe then that these positions are to be adhered to : — Joshua marched into the western land at the head of Israel ; Israel crossed the Jordan near Jericho ; and the entrance into Canaan was a warlike, rather than a peaceable one. 2. The Several Events. — With this as our starting-point there will be no difficulty in forming an opinion respecting the historical value of the rest of the narrative. It is true that the accounts of the Passage of the Jordan and the conquest of Jericho are not in perfect harmony amongst themselves. Yet they present a picture which, in its main features, is clear and transparent. They ex- hibit Israel to us passing the Jordan through Yahv^'s miraculous 298 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. help.and in the strength thereof conquering Jericho. It is impossible at this distance of time to determine in what way the details of the two events occurred. But if Israel was conscious of having experi- enced his God's miraculous aid in an extraordinary degree at this critical commencement of the attack on Canaan, who will venture on that account to relegate the whole to the realm of fiction ? ^ To the crossing of the Jordan the narrative of the circum- cision of Israel attaches itself. Here again we must recognise a genuine historical reminiscence, although it has been freely recast. The ' reproach of Egypt,' ^ which is now rolled away from Israel, makes it absolutely certain, as the history of Moses also indicates,^ that the Israelites in Egypt were uncircumcised.* Circumcision may therefore have been substantially first adopted by Israel after they reached Canaan, or at all events, the custom may then have become universal. And if P,^ as well as J,® regards circumcision as known and practised as early as the patriarchal times, the very fact of J's sharing in this tradi- tion shews that it contains no contradiction of our narrative.'^ The true history of the rite is rather this : the practice of circum- cision began in early times, but was not carried out universally ; in Egypt it fell out of use, and did not become universal till now.* Circumcision is not ordained by the law, but is there taken for granted as carried on from the beginning. This is the strongest confirmation of the view that it did not originate in the Mosaic or post-Mosaic period, but was familiar to the people from the earliest times.' ' NoMeke, Unters. , p. 95, finds in the crossing of the Jordan the mere reflex of the passage through the Ked Sea. It would be more reasonable to derive the story of the march through the Red Sea from the crossing of the Jordan. For if Israel was certain of anything it was of the fact that it once came over the Jordan. ' Josh. v. 9. 3 Exod. xxiv. 24 f. Cf. Wellh. Prol." p. 382 (Eng. Trans, p. 360). * See Ewald, AUert.^p. 126 f. (Eng. Trans, p. 94); HoUenberg, StKr., 1874, p. 493 f. ; Wellh. Gesch. Isr., p. 364 f. ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 460. ^ Gen. xvii. ° Gen. xxxiv. ' Thus Lagarde, Symmicta, i. p. 117; Wellh. Gesch. Isr., p. 365; Stade, GMch. Isr., pp. Ill, 423. « Of. Dillm. Gen.^ p. 254. ' See also Riehm, II WS., Art. ' Beschneidung. ' Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OP THE PERIOD 299 We saw that in the most ancient tradition Joshua's leadership of all Israel terminated with the conquest of Jericho. Judah now separates, together with its connected tribes and with Simeon, and conquers his own district. The manner in which Judah's exploits against Adoni-bezek are narrated ; the description of the conquest of Hebron by Caleb and of Debir by Othniel; the frank confession of Judah's incompetency in the plains and in face of the strong walls of Jebus ; the portraiture of the brave warriors Caleb and Othniel ; the interweaving of the Achsah episode, with its glorification of chivalry and female beauty — all this bears so plainly the colours of life that we have no right to doubt its being historical.^ To say that these events may have actually occurred but belong to a later period ^ is only to increase the difficulty of believing them to have been historical. For the period of the Judges has its own conflicts, and has preserved many valuable reminiscences of them. Joshua, henceforth leader of the house of Joseph and the tribes provisionally connected with it, now attacks the hUl- country of Ephraim and takes Ai and Bethel. The accounts of these proceedings have preserved the recollection that the conquest of Ai was preceded by a disaster and the city idtimately taken by stratagem, also that Bethel fell into the hands of the conquerors through the co-operation of a treacherous inhabitant. Here, too, we are bound to recognise historical material. It is not possible for us now to make out all the details of Joshua's march against the hill-country of Ephraim proper. When he has mastered it, as far as, and probably inclusive of, Shechem, he leads his army back to Gilgal.* At this place, as it would seem during a temporary absence of Joshiia's, the people are deceived by the ambassadors of Gibeon and her daughter- towns. It is not quite easy to fit this narrative into the rest of the story of the events during Joshua's time. This explains the ' So Meyer, ZAW. i. p. 141, and Stade, GeacU. Isr. 1. p. 137: 'not founded on any tradition whatsoever of historical occurrences. ' 2 So probably Wellh. Proleg.' p. 382 (Eng. Trans, p. 360). ' On this see above, p. 289. 300 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. somewhat numerous attempts which have been made to prove that the alliance with Gibeon was not made till later in the period of the Judges,^ or even as late as just before Saul.^ On the other hand it seems to me that the indubitably ancient tradition which tells of a great decisive battle near Gibeon, occasioned by a coalition of Canaanite kings against that city, can only be accounted for by the alliance in question, which the Canaanites would naturally regard as treasonable. Two main reasons are adduced in favour of the later date of the alliance with Gibeon. The Israelites observe the contract into which they have been cozened, but they reduce the Gibeonites to the position of slaves of the sanctuary. Stade holds ^ that this idea cannot have arisen earlier than Solomon. For it was he who first reduced to serfdom the previously unsubdued remnants of the aboriginal population, whereas in David's reign the Gibeonites retained their perfect freedom. But if the statement referred to * is examined more closely, it becomes clear that it says nothing about either dependence or independence on the part of the Gibeonites. What they rise against is not Saul's purposed with- drawal of their perfect freedom, but the bloody extermination of them which he has begun. Hence it is quite possible and intrinsically probable that in Saul's time they already found themselves in a certain state of servitude.^ With this it agrees that when the context explains the peculiar relation between Gibeon and Israel, it does not at all create the impression that the covenant had been made by Saul or some little while be- fore him.* Eather is it regarded as a thing which came down from former generations, an alliance made by the sons of Israel long before, which Saul was now arbitrarily breaking after it had stood for centuries. Budde^ mentions a further reason. The Song of Deborah 1 Budde, ZA W. vii. p. 135. ^ gtade, Qeicli. Isr. i. p. 161. 3 Gesck. Im-. i. p. 135 f. * 2 Sam. xxi. 1 ff. ° Nor does the altar necessarily indicate a later date. The place of sacrifice in Gibeon itself may have been originally intended. ^ Cf.l Sam. xxi. 2 : ' The sons of Israel have sworn to them.' ' ZA W. vii. p. 135. Chap. III.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 301 shews that after Joshua's time there was a deep cleavage between Judah and the house of Joseph. For Deborah, Judah is as though it did not exist. The only possible explanation, in Budde's opinion, is that a strip of Canaanite territory, interrupting the connection between the centre and the south of the land, ran from Jebus, which certainly was in the hands of the Canaanites, to the sea. But this Canaanite wedge could not run uninterruptedly as far as Jebus, unless Gibeon and the towns belonging to it,^ Beeroth, Chephirah, Kiriath-jearim, as well as the surrounding places, Jebus,- Gezer,^ Shaalbim, Aijalon,* continued to be Canaanite in Deborah's day, i.e. unless the alliance was not formed before the later part of the period of the Judges. This argument also is by no means conclusive. For if the enemy held Jebus, which dominated the vicinity as an almost im- pregnable fortress, and if on the other side they held Gezer,^ Shaalbim and Aijalon, Gibeon alone, though a fortified place, could not have very well served Israel for a base of operations. Yet more markedly would this be the case if Gibeon no longer possessed complete independence in the times of the Judges and consequently was discontented and unreliable. Moreover we know hardly anything definite as to the circumstances of Judah itself in the period of the Judges. Its omission by Deborah when she surveys the tribes of Israel is in any case surprising, and the difficulty is not removed however extended we imagine this Canaanite line of separation betwixt Israel and Judah. But the decisive weight seems to me to fall on the already mentioned fact that an important battle was fought at Gibeon in Joshua's time and is brought by tradition into the closest con- nection with the peace concluded between Israel and Gibeon. li that fight proves to be historical, there can be no further doubt as to the alliance having been concluded. Our first business there- fore is to examine the battle of Gibeon. 1 See above, p. 290. " Judges i. 21. 3 Judges i. 29. * Judges i. 35. ' Of. the Maps : Kiepert, Neue Handkarie von Palastina, 1883 ; Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. opposite p. 140 ; Droysen, Hist. HandaUaa, p. 4. 302 HISTORY OP THE HEBREWS [Book I. § 29. The Events that followed the Alliance with Gibeon. 1. The Battle of Gibeon. — The following is the state of the case as presented by the sources. Interwoven in the narrative of the occurrences^ that followed the alliance with Gibeon we find a fragment of an ancient song which immediately catches the atten- tion of the reader; it is accompanied with a short explanatory text: 'Then spake (= sang) Joshua^ of Yahv4' in the day ivhen Yahvi delivered up* the Amorites before Israel; and he said in the sight of Israel : ' Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon — and moon, in the valley of Aijalon^ : And the sun stood still, and the moon stayed — until the people had avenged themselves of their enemies. ' Behold, this is written in the Book of the Upright : And the sun stayed in the midst of heaven and hasted not to go down about a whole day. And there was no day like that before or after, on which Yahvi hearkened unto the voice of a man ; for Yahv6 fought for ^ Israel. ^ The italicised words in the foregoing translation are readily distinguished from the rest by their form and contents as additions made by D^. They correspond in linguistic usage with D^ and make no fresh contribution to the narrative, but simply furnish further explanation of the rest of the text. ^ Leaving aside these additions we have in the rest a passage which in any case is very ' Josh. X. ^ Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 50, wishes, without reason, to delete Joshua here again. See also Budde, p. 146. ' =in praise of Yahv^. 13T followed by ? does not mean ' to speak to one,' except in isolated instances. If we had here an address to Yahv6 the verb at the beginning of the song could not be in the imperative but must be in the third person. ■• For the phrase 135^' 1^3 <lIish(!d yet further the interpretation wliicli the sent; itself gavc^ ami hna turned it into matter-of-fact prose. If the inlerprotation does not satisfy us who live under the influence of the Copernican vi(^\v of the world, we are not on tliat account justified in simiily re- legating the event to the realm of poetic inuij^ory. The lact of a striking continuance of dayliij;lit remains, Miough we may not know the natural law through which it was brounlit ahout.'- Tlie song itself, to say nothinij; of the appended explanation, proves Israel's belief tliat a nuracle was wrought. But if the event is historically testified to, in the manner we have sliown, we (umiuit even at the present day find fault witli, "Ihe religious view of history whicli sees in the marvellous duration of the day a mighty interposition of divine omnipotence on behalf of the chosen people.^ A battle at Gibeon can therefore bo certainly proveil from the very oldest sources. It is true that neither the immediate context nor the song itself enables us to understand the occasion. Consequently nothing' remains to us but conjectures if wo do not attend to the wider context. But these also lead to one certain result. Though the fight took place at Gibeon, it cannot in any case have been nijainst Gibeon. For the tradition Utaves no doubt as to the fact that the inhabitants of this city, in contrast with their fellow-countrymen, were on friendly terms with Lsrael. On the side of the Canaanites this friendly relation is looked on as strange,.*nd, in its character, abnormal ; this alone would make the hostility of their own countrymen more likely. It is not Gibeon ' To him ia duo the turn of oxprossion at v. 1 4b, which makoa tho words of the song soom like a prayer of Joahua'a. This of oourao docia not oxuliidu Iho possi- bility that in Jj^alao the lengthening of the day may an a matter of fart havo fgUofltBd-tJii .Tosliua'a prayer. But in E tho song was not hia i)rayor. Tho die- tinotion has therefore to do with literature rather than with facts. ^ Dillmann's idea, p. 490, that tho obscuring of tho sun made it totally impossible to eatimate the time, will hardly be any longer insisted on, unless wo first admit that tho sun was obscured. ' For tho abundant literature dealing with this narrative, <■/. oapocially Winor, HealswtSrterh. i. p. 013 j Ziiokler, Bewek des Olaubenn, iv. p. 248 il'. ; JCdIilor, Bibl. acncLi. p. 485 ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 490. Chap. III.] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 305 that is beaten in that battle, but the Canaanites who have attacked it because they regard its relation towards Israel as treachery against the common cause. Thus far are we brought by the natural state of the case.^ if we look only at the song itself as the most reliable foundation for our knowledge of these occurrences. If it further appears that the larger framework into which the song is fitted corresponds with this we shall have reached a strong presumption in its favour. The framework in which the song stands is a narrative of a coalition formed by Canaanite princes to punish- Gibeon for its covenant with Israel. At its head stands Adoni-zedek, king of Jerusalem, who is joined, by Hebron, Jarmuth, Lachish and Eglon. Gibeon calls on Joshua for help, and he marches up from Gilgal to give it. He surprises the enemy, defeats thein at Gibeon, and pursues them towards Beth-horon. Whilst they are endeavouring to escape by way of the descent "^'-from the Upper to the Lower Beth-horon a, hailstorm^ from Yahv^ cii^s them to pieces and kills multitudes. The song then describes the protracted pursuit and the help which God continued to give during it to Israel. After the destruction of the foe Joshua returns to the camp at Gilgal.* — Making a fresh beginning, and therefore following another source, the same chapter then gives a detailed account of the con- tin^tion of the pursuit to Makkedah, and the execution of the allied kings who were hidden in a cave at Makkedah.^ 1 Against Budde, ZA 11'. vii. p. 146, who believes there was a battle at Gibeon the motives of which are unknown. ^^ - For ti^e position of the ancient Beth-horon and the modern Bet 'Ur el-f6qa and et-tahta, see Riehm, HWB. p. 180, and Baedeker, p. 142. ^ Volck, in PRE.' vii. p. 121, thinks of meteoric stones. ■* Josh. X. 1-11, 15. If we omit the additions made by D^ verses 1-15 are a unity and probably from E. So Dillmann, except that, like HoUenberg, Well- hausen and Budde, he separates 12-15 as added by D. But although 12-15 have undergone considerable revision they belonged at first to E. V. 15 does not quite harmonise with what follows and must therefore in any case belong to the original source, i.e. E. For the same reasons and appealing to 7N1B'* 73, Dill- mann, NuDtJo., pp. 488, 490, ascribes it to D. = Josh. X. 16-28, probably from J (r/. 216 with Exod. xi. 7 ; v. 24, 'V C^N,), but revised, especially v. 25. I'r. 28-43 is a free addition by D-, and runs counter in several respects to the older tradition ; see below, U 306 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. In considering this account we must first leave aside the dis- crepancy which arises from the premature mention of the return to GOgal in v. 15.^ From what we have already ascertained as to the correspondence of its contents with the facts of the case we might at once accept it as historical were it not that unexpected obstacles are presented by the details of its statements. Hebron, as we saw, was conquered by Judah long before, likewise Debir, the latter of which is also conquered in the continuation of the narrative ^ w^hich is due to D-. It is at least certain that the king of Hebron cannot have been a member of the confederacy. This amounts to the admission that the battle of Gibeon, because it was a brilliant victory, often celebrated in song, soon gave rise to certain additions to the facts of the original. This ought not to be denied for the sake of a false system of har- monising.^ For Hebron was conquered by Caleb. But on the other side it is quite as unjustifiable to throw overboard the whole narrative of a Judseo-Philistine coalition against Joshua simply because Hebron has been erroneously brought in.* The coalition is too well established by what we know of the battle of Gibeon and all the surroundings of the event to make that allowable. Jebus, Jarmuth, Lachish and Eglon are directly or indirectly stated in Judges i. to have not been conquered by Judah ; hence they both could and must, in all probability, take common action against Gibeon. It is indeed attempted to prove the narrative unhistorical by referring especially to Adoni-zedek.^ Instead of this name the LXX. read 'ABcovi^e^eK. This suggests the idea that it is simply the contest of the Judseaus with Adoni-bezek, related in Judges i., that is here reproduced and in accordance with the tendency of the later narrators transformed into a contest of Joshua and all ^ As to its meaning, the verse would come better after i'. 27. ^ Josh. X. 39, where the mistake also occurs of slaying over again the king of Hebron who has long been dead. Cf. v. 26. 3 See Keil, Joshua, p. 88 ; Kohler, Bibl. Gesch. i. p. 486. * Stade, Gesch. Isr. i. p. 133; Budde, ZA W. vii. pp. 154 f., 157. > Wellh. Einl* p. 182 ; Budde, ZA W. p. 147 S. Chap. III.] B.— HtSTOHY OP THE PEHlOB SO? Israel against Jerusalem and Judah. Budde^ in fact makes an ingenious attempt to prove that Adoni-bezek was not really king of Bezek but of Jerusalem. And when we are thus reminded of that other king of Jerusalem, Melchizedek, who also belongs to the realm of legend, it seems as though all the threads were beautifully brought together, from which the web of fiction is woven that here lies around the name of Adoni-bezek. It must be allowed that the theory sounds remarkably well. At the same time we can hardly avoid the suspicion that the agreement is too perfect. Plausible as is the ring of the hypothesis it goes to work with motives too transparent to awake our con- fidence. It is indeed striking that the Lxx. read Aboni-bezek. But it is much easier to believe that a mistaken reading, occasioned by Judges i., crept into the text, than that Adoni-zedek here, and Bezek instead of Jerusalem as his capital, at Judges i., were inserted in the Massoretic text subsequent to the Alexandrine translation. If the later reviser felt no scruple in making these extensive alterations and was so much in earnest in getting rid of contradictions, why did he leave Hebron untouched two verses lower down ''- when he could have changed it at his pleasure for another actual or feigned name ? If iu the one case he has made use of measures for smoothing away discrepancies in this deliberate, well-planned fashion, he is guilty of a self-contradiction which breaks the neck of the whole hypothesis, by failing suddenly to employ the same manoeuvre in a second case in the same context where it is equally necessary. For we have not here a copyist's hasty and incidental alteration, such as gave rise to the LXX. reading.* The innovator is supposed to place Josh. x. and Judges i. before him and compare them to see whether they agree ; would he alter the one passage, and let the other equally great difficulty stand untouched ? That is a much harder riddle than ' ZA W. p. 149. = Josh. X. 3. ' As to the inferior quality of the lxx. text in Joshua, see Dillm. NuDUo. p. 690. 308 iaiSTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book I. the origin of the name Adoni-bezek from a writer of the LXX. who remembered its occurrence in Judges i. This does not involve the assertion that Joshua conquered the south and its fortified towns. In so far as that is stated later in the narrative it appears due to a misapprehension on the part of the later reviser.^ The conquest of the south was the task of Judah and Simeon. Hebron and Debir are conquered by them ; the rest of the cities hardly so at present. Joshua confined him- self to defeating and destroying the enemy. 2. The Rest of the Narratives. — The tradition tells us of another, final feat of arms of Joshua's. At the opposite end of Canaan, in the extreme north,^ Jabin, king of Hazor, allies himself with a number of North Canaanite kings to fight against Joshua. They encamp at the waters of Merom, which can scarcely be any other place 3 than the Lake of Huleh.* Here Joshua, obeying the divine command, takes the enemy by surprise and destroys them utterly.^ Here again we must suppose that the account rests on a histori- cal foundation, although it is impossible now to make out the precise course of events. Doubtless Joshua had occasion to wage isolated wars with the northern Canaanites after conquering the centre of the country, possibly some considerable time after. The tradition which subsequently took shape in D^ and P has interpreted the isolated exploits of Joshua in the south and north, presupposed in this and the preceding chapter, as the completion of the conquest of the country by Joshua. And thus there follows a list of the kings defeated by Joshua,® in which a number of ' Vv. 28-43. Cf. also the examples above, p. 306, note 2. ^ Probably to be sought in the neighbourhood of Kadesh-Naphtali, whether at the modern TeU Harrawi (Gu^rin, Gal. ii. p. 363 £f ; Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 495) or at Tell Khuraibeh (Robinson, LBR., p. 364 ; Riehm, HWB., p. 583 ; Bertheau, Sicht.,^Tp. 83 f.). ' So Ewald, Gesch. ler.^ ii. p. 356 (Eng. Trans, ii. p. 253) ; Hitzig, Gesch. Isr. p. 103 ; Kohler, Bilb. Gesch. i. p. 487 ; Dillm. NuDlJo. p. 497. Against this see also Keil in the Commentary on Josh. xi. 5, and Smend, in Riehm's HWB. p. 983 f. * On it cf. Baedeker, p. 375. '' Josh. xi. 1-9. The verses contain a narrative sketched by D^ probably based on (E or) .J. What follows {vv. 10-23) is an amplification freely contributed by D'-. " Josh. xii. Chap. Ill] £.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 309 districts ^ are included which the older sources represent as not having been conquered at that time. It does not therefore describe Joshua's own successes, but mistakenly transfers to Joshua a state of affairs which came about later.^ Here the history of the Conquest forsakes us. The succeeding chapters of the Book of Joshua ^ belong almost entirely to D- and P, and present an ideal picture of the division of the country amongst the various tribes. They proceed on the assumption that Joshua completely subdued the entire country, leaving hardlj' anything unconquered. In so far as this assumption is erroneous that division may also have attributed to former times a state of affairs which really belonged to later days, in the belief that Joshua himself produced it. Precious as those chapters are, as historical and geographical memorials of the abodes of the various tribes, they cannot be used directly as sources from which to learn the state of affairs in Joshua's time. So far as any information on that point is to be had, we can only seek it in the oldest con- stituents of the chapters. Such constituents are to be found, though not in considerable numbers. In part, that is, so far as they belong to J, we have already set them forth. But some of them may also be traced to E. These must now be considered in connection with the notices from J which we are already acquainted with. , Up to this point the narrative has been able, almost without a break, to follow the clue provided by the Summary in J. At every point it has been evident that the account can be harmonised with the Summary and is rightly guided by it. Joshua crosses the Jordan, conquers Jericho, divides the land, then allows Judah to go south, proceeds himself with the house 1 Gf. V. 21 f. with Judges i. 27 f. - The consciousness that the conquest is incomplete is still felt at Josh. xiii. 1, probably indeed in a different sense from that expressed by the present con- text (D^). V. 1 is older. * Josh. riii. ff. No agreement has yet been reached as to the analysis of the sources : on the chapters in question see Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 496 ff. ; Kuen. Ond.- § a, No. 49 ff., § 7, No. 27 ff. ; Dillm. NuDtJo. 310 HISTORY OF THE HEBREWS [Book t. of Joseph to the hill-country, and after winning it, has still to wage a few battles in defence of what has been acquired. Now that we have reached the close there emerge unex- pectedly some remnants of a slightly different idea of the story, deviating in at least one leading point, and not observable till now. According to it seven tribes had not obtained any terri- tory at the close of the Conquest, and because this has been neglected hitherto, Joshua apportions their shares to them now. We shall not be mistaken in attributing this view of matters to the source E. "We have previously come across a fragment, in all probability belonging to E, which deals with the division of the country.^ According to it E, as well as J, must have told how Joshua undertook to divide the territory ere the western tribes separated into two main branches after the conquest of Jericho. In Joshua xviL 14 ff., J, like E, distinctly presupposes this concerning the house of Joseph. J also assumes that there was such a division by lot for Judah and Simeon,^ probably also for the other tribes.^ But besides the remnants of ancient sources already educed from the Book of Joshua, we now come across an ancient frag- ment* which asserts that after the martial exploits hitherto performed by Joshua, there still remained seven tribes that had obtained no inheritance, but now at last had one assigned them. It is obvious that this element of the tradition does not agree with J. Consequently we must assign it to E, and thus we perceive that in this source Judah-Simeon and Ephraim-Manasseh, the tribes that headed the forward movement, were the only ones that received an inheritance at first, i.e. the only ones authorised to conquer a definite district. When this was done the land they had conquered was assigned to them, and there seem also to be ^ Josh. xvii. 14 f. See above, p. 266, note 4. 2 ^b^M, n^nU, in Judges i. 3. ' The entire situation in Judges i., as well as the question, ' Who shall go up first ? ' V. I suggests this. * Josh, xviii. 2-6, 8-10. Chap. III.] B.— HISTORY OF THE PERIOD 3i: still some accounts of this ia E.^ Then the seven other tribes who, according to Joshua's reproach,^ had long had opportunities for providing themselves with settlements, have these assigned them by Joshua, and that by means of the lot.' Probably this was originally done at Shechem.* One is inclined to regard this as the most original description of what actually happened. Joshua has now finished his life-work. E, with wise caution, does not assert that the seven tribes conquered their districts thoroughly, but J, as has already appeared, tells us what portions of their districts the respective tribes were not able to conquer. Joshua's life-work accordingly consists in beginning the Conquest, and carrying it to such a conclusion as ensured Israel's futicre in the land. By his exertions this was reached. In Shechem he dismisses the tribes, after reminding them of Yahv^'s benefits, and urging them to be faithful to Him. The section in which Joshua's farewell is narrated is of peculiar significance, much revised, but rich in old and valuable notices.^ The main stem of it probably belongs to E, and we can scarcely suppose that the statements respecting the early history here made are at variance with those given by that writer.® ' Josh. xvi. 1-3 (XS'='came out of the urn,' as explained by Dillmann in V. 1, may at all events suit the present context ; originally the word meant the same as in v. 2) ; possibly also xiv. 13-19, but this is uncertain ; moreover parts of chap, xviii. (See Dillmann, p. 53S.) ^ Josh, xviii. 3. 3 Josh, xviii. 6. * Cf. Wellh. JDTh. xxi. p. 597. = Josh. xxiv. On this see especially Kuen. Ond.- § 7, No. 27 ; § 8, No. 16 ; Dillm. NuDtJo. p. 583 ff. " See against Kuen. Ond.- § 8, No. 16, in Dillm. NuDtJo., p. 585 f. Printed by T. and A, Goxstable, Printers to Her Majesty at the Edinburgh University Press ADDENDA ET CORRIGENDA. Page 41. Note 3, for 1846, read 1864. 6X Note 7, after 48f., read (Eng. Trans, pp. 25, 46 f.). 111. Note 6, after pp. 54-85, read (Eng. Trans, pp. 52-82). 169. Note 1, after p. 336, read (Eng. Trans, p. 318). 207. Note 1, after p. 23, line 1, read (Eng. Trans, p. 22), and after p. 374, line 2, read (Eng. Trans, p. 352). 210. Note 4, after p. 31, read (Eng. Trans, p. 21).