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The Authorship Of The Book Of Deuteronomy - With Its Bearings On The Higher Criticism Of The Pentateuch (1902) (Paperback)
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The Authorship Of The Book Of Deuteronomy - With Its Bearings On The Higher Criticism Of The Pentateuch (1902) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: any
portion of the Pentateuch, it was most probably the Deutero- nomic
portion of it; for the Book of Deuteronomy, of all the component
elements of the Pentateuch, presents the most unmistakable
appearance of having once formed a compact independent work (p.
48f.). The question here raised is vital in this discussion; that
is, it is vital as respects the analytical theory. With those who
credit the Mosaic authorship of Deuteronomy, it is immaterial
whether the book was the whole Pentateuch or Deuteronomy alone; but
with the other party it is absolutely essential to show that it was
not the whole Pentateuch, because it is an essential part of their
theory that much the greater part of the Pentateuch had not been
written when this book was found. For this reason nearly every
writer in favor of the theory makes some attempt at argument on
this point. The first point of argument in the preceding extract is
that the book was read in too short a time, and that it left
impressions too distinct for the whole Pentateuch. In making this
argument the professor draws on his imagination; for there is
nothing said in the text about the time consumed in the reading.
Mr. Addis goes further still. He says: "It would have been a sheer
impossibility to read the Pentateuch, or even the legal portions of
the Pentateuch, through aloud, in one day; much less could it have
been read twice in one day." He says further that "the kernel of
Deuteronomy (i. e., Deut. iv. 45 to xxvi., or possibly xii. to
xxvi.; xxvii. 9, 10; xxviii.; xxxi. 9-13) exactly meets the
required conditions. It could be read through aloud in between
three and four hours at most'' (D. of II., Ixxv.). Doubtless Mr.
Addis is right in asserting that the portions of Deuteronomy which
he selects as the probable contents of the book...
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