The following is a record of the stories in the Bible that are generally accepted by the wider academic community as having been written by the J source:
Genesis The Jahwist begins with the
Genesis creation narrative at (the creation story at
Genesis 1 is from P), this is followed by the
Garden of Eden story,
Cain and Abel, Cain's descendants, the
Nephilim, a flood story (tightly intertwined with a parallel account from P),
Noah's descendants, the
Curse of Ham, the
Table of Nations, and the
Tower of Babel. These chapters make up the so-called
Primeval History, the story of mankind prior to Abraham, and J and P provide roughly equal amounts of material. The Jahwist provides the bulk of the remainder of Genesis, the material concerning Abraham,
Isaac,
Jacob and
Joseph. Those following the classical documentary hypothesis today describe the J text spanning Genesis 2:4 to Genesis 35 with the end of the renaming of Jacob as Israel and the completion of the patriarchs of the twelve tribes. The Joseph narrative seems to be an addition from a northern "E" narrative due to the more ethereal, pro-active, and prophetic nature of God compared to the reactive and anthropomorphic God of the J text. The latest additions of the P text frame the J narratives. P text "glue" can be perceived in Genesis 1 (framing the book), Genesis 5 recounts Genesis 1 and provides a characteristic priestly lineage detail for Adam and, amongst other locations, Genesis 35, bridging the J text patriarchal narratives to the "E" Joseph narrative with more lineage details assumed important to post-exilic authors for the purpose of rebuilding the nation in the second temple period.
Exodus Scholars argue regarding how much of Exodus is attributable to J and how much to E, as beginning in the E source also refers to God as Yahweh. J provides much of the material of but is closely intertwined with E. Thus, it is difficult to determine what portion of is J and what is E; however, it is easy to see the parallel P strand, which also gives an account of Israel's bondage and the Exodus miracles of its own. After leaving Egypt, J gives its own account of releasing water from a rock and God raining
Manna upon the Israelites. Thereafter, there is almost no J material in Exodus, except J's account of the
Ten Commandments, also known as the Ritual Decalogue. J is generally not focused on law.
Leviticus The vast majority of scholars attribute almost the entirety of
Leviticus to P.
Numbers J begins with , the departure from
Sinai, the story of the spies who are afraid of the giants in
Canaan, and the refusal of the Israelites to enter the
Promised Land—which then brings on the wrath of Yahweh, who condemns them to wander in the wilderness for the next forty years. J resumes at chapter 16, the story of the rebellion of
Dathan and
Abiram, which was spliced together with the account of
Korah's rebellion from P by the Redactor. It is generally also believed that J provides large portions of chapters 21 to 24, covering the story of the bronze serpent,
Balaam and his talking ass (although Friedman attributes this to E), and finally ending with the first verses of the
Heresy of Baal Peor.
Deuteronomy The majority of
Deuteronomy was composed during the era of
Josiah's reforms by the Deuteronomist, or D, writer. However, when Deuteronomy was incorporated into the completed Pentateuch by the Redactor, the events of Moses's death were moved from the end of Numbers to Deuteronomy. Thus, one of the accounts of Moses's death in Deuteronomy is attributable to J, although scholars debate which verses this includes. ==See also==