, showing Exod. 12:25-31, with each verse of the original Hebrew Torah text followed by its Targum (Aramaic) translation The
Torah (or Pentateuch) is collectively the first five books of the Bible:
Genesis,
Exodus,
Leviticus,
Numbers, and
Deuteronomy. According to tradition, they were dictated by God to Moses, but when modern critical scholarship began to be applied to the Bible, it was discovered that the Pentateuch was not the unified text one would expect from a single author. As a result, the
Mosaic authorship of the Torah had been largely rejected by leading scholars by the 17th century, with many modern scholars viewing it as a product of a long evolutionary process. In the mid-18th century, some scholars started a critical study of doublets (parallel accounts of the same incidents), inconsistencies, and changes in style and vocabulary in the Torah. In 1780,
Johann Eichhorn, building on the work of the French doctor and
exegete Jean Astruc's "Conjectures" and others, formulated the "older documentary hypothesis": the idea that Genesis was composed by combining two identifiable sources, the
Jehovist ("J"; also called the Yahwist) and the
Elohist ("E"). These sources were subsequently found to run through the first four books of the Torah, and the number was later expanded to three when
Wilhelm de Wette identified the
Deuteronomist as an additional source found only in Deuteronomy ("D"). Later still the Elohist was split into Elohist and
Priestly ("P") sources, increasing the number to four. These documentary approaches were in competition with two other models, the fragmentary and the
supplementary. The fragmentary hypothesis argued that fragments of varying lengths, rather than continuous documents, lay behind the Torah; this approach accounted for the Torah's diversity but could not account for its structural consistency, particularly regarding chronology. The supplementary hypothesis was better able to explain this unity: it maintained that the Torah was made up of a central core document, the Elohist, supplemented by fragments taken from many sources. The supplementary approach was dominant by the early 1860s, but it was challenged by an important book published by
Hermann Hupfeld in 1853, who argued that the Pentateuch was made up of four documentary sources, the Priestly, Yahwist, and Elohist intertwined in Genesis-Exodus-Leviticus-Numbers, and the stand-alone source of Deuteronomy. At around the same period,
Karl Heinrich Graf argued that the Yahwist and Elohist were the earliest sources and the Priestly source the latest, while
Wilhelm Vatke linked the four to an evolutionary framework: the Yahwist and Elohist to a time of primitive nature and fertility cults, the Deuteronomist to the ethical religion of the Hebrew prophets, and the Priestly source to a form of religion dominated by ritual, sacrifice and law.
Wellhausen and the new documentary hypothesis In 1878,
Julius Wellhausen published ('History of Israel, Vol 1'). The second edition was printed as
Prolegomena zur Geschichte Israels ("Prolegomena to the
History of Israel") in 1883, and the work is better known under that name. (The second volume, a synthetic history titled ['Israelite and Jewish History'], did not appear until 1894 and remains untranslated.) Crucially, this historical portrait was based upon two earlier works of his technical analysis: "Die Composition des Hexateuchs" ('The Composition of the
Hexateuch') of 1876–77, and sections on the "historical books" (Judges–Kings) in his 1878 edition of
Friedrich Bleek's ('Introduction to the Old Testament'). Wellhausen's documentary hypothesis owed little to Wellhausen himself but was mainly the work of Hupfeld,
Eduard Eugène Reuss, Graf, and others, who in turn had built on earlier scholarship. Wellhausen accepted Hupfeld's four sources and, in agreement with Graf, placed the Priestly work last. J was the earliest document, a product of the 10th century BCE and the court of
Solomon; E was from the 9th century BCE in the northern
Kingdom of Israel, and had been combined by a redactor (editor) with J to form a document JE; D, the third source, was a product of the 7th century BCE, by 620 BCE, during the reign of
King Josiah; P (what Wellhausen first named "Q") was a product of the priest-and-temple dominated world of the 6th century BCE; and the final redaction, when P was combined with JED to produce the Torah as we now know it. Wellhausen's explanation of the formation of the Torah was also an explanation of the religious history of Israel. The Yahwist and Elohist described a primitive, spontaneous, and personal world, in keeping with the earliest stage of Israel's history; in Deuteronomy, he saw the influence of the prophets and the development of an ethical outlook, which he felt represented the pinnacle of Jewish religion; and the Priestly source reflected the rigid, ritualistic world of the priest-dominated, post-exilic period. His work, notable for its detailed and wide-ranging scholarship and close argument, entrenched the "new documentary hypothesis" as the dominant explanation of Pentateuchal origins from the late 19th to the late 20th centuries. == Critical reassessment ==