A Case for the Old Testament: How Did We Get These Books?

Even if you are a skeptic, or you don’t believe the Bible to be the inspired Word of God, you have to admit that it is very intriguing to find an ancient document like this, the Old Testament in particular, surviving thousands of years with minimal damage to its reputation and content. There is no other book of antiquity that has this amazing longevity in popularity. The Bible is the best selling book of all time and since the invention of the printing press there have been over six billion copies sold (and growing)!

How did we get the books that make up the Old Testament of the Christian Bible?

(Note: CE for “Common Era” and BCE for “Before Common Era” have now replaced AD and BC in academic literature)

It is acknowledged by Biblical scholars that the Old Testament we have today is the same one that was being used by Jesus and the Jewish people of the first century AD/CE, at that time considered the sacred Hebrew Scriptures. But, how do we know the Old Testament, and the Genesis record in particular, is accurate? Moses wasn’t there to witness the Genesis account, although he is the one that records it along with the other four books of the Torah.

We can have confidence in these historical books based on three lines of reasoning with evidence we can follow:

1.  God’s own direction and inspiration:

God Himself has guaranteed that what we are reading today is what He meant for us to get. If God exists (and He does) then miracles are possible. If miracles are possible then God can use miracles to communicate, and preserve, His message through the written word across time. Jesus also used miracles to communicate God’s message during His time here on earth.

We find in Exodus that God Himself wrote some of what He gave to Moses and also directed Moses in his writings: 

When He had finished speaking with him upon Mount Sinai, He gave Moses the two tablets of the testimony, tablets of stone, written by the finger of God.  –Exodus 31:18

When Moses destroyed the tablets after God gave them to him the first time (see story in Exodus) he then went back up the mountain and God re-gave him what we have today.

Now the Lord said to Moses, “Cut out for yourself two stone tablets like the former ones, and I will write on the tablets the words that were on the former tablets which you shattered. So be ready by morning, and come up in the morning to Mount Sinai, and present yourself there to Me on the top of the mountain.”  –Exodus 34:1-2

Then the Lord said to Moses, “Write down these words, for in accordance with these words I have made a covenant with you and with Israel.”  -Exodus 34:27

Based on God’s direction Moses goes on to record what we have today in the first five books of the Bible known as the Torah. God gave the rest of the Old Testament to Jewish prophets and writers who protected and passed it down over the next one thousand years.

From the New Testament Paul tells us: 

“All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work.”  2 Timothy 3:16-17

And, Peter tells us: 

So we have the prophetic word made more sure, to which you do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star arises in your hearts. But know this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation, for no prophecy was ever made by an act of human will, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God.”  2 Peter 1:19-21

One of the most important things to consider when studying the history and reliability of the Bible is that it claims to be the Word of God. If true (and it is) then it would have been easy for Him to make possible the transmission of His Word over time. Three of the greatest characteristics our God possesses, according to Scripture, are omniscience (all-knowing), omnipotence (all-powerful), and omnipresence (present everywhere at all time). This makes the God of the Bible (YHWH) a God we can take comfort in because He is a God that will not, and cannot, make mistakes. His promises are sure, and this includes the great love He has for us all.

2.  Oral Transmission:

Oral transmission of information from antiquity was community oriented and therefore self-correcting. In ancient cultures they did not have the technology we have today and information was memorized and past along in groups. It was not like the “telephone game” we think of today where information gets changed by the time it reaches the end of a line of people because the information was corporate not individual. If someone passed along false information the people in the community, especially the elders, would easily recognize and correct it.

In ancient culture students of the Scriptures could commit the Torah (the first five books of the Bible) to memory, and some still do it today. Historians consider oral transmission very reliable up through the time of the printing press in the fifteenth century AD/CE. What is notable is that oral transmission from Adam to Moses was only about five generations, and this is a remarkably short transmission line to get to the written Word:

*There were only five generations of people who knew each other from Adam to Moses—

*Adam)—*Methuselah—*Shem—*Isaac—*Levi—*Amran—(Moses)

The Generations From Adam to Moses:

  1. Adam (lived 930 years)
  • Died 216 yrs. before the birth of Noah
  1. Seth (Adam’s 3rd son, lived 912 years)
  • Seth knew Noah for 34 years before he died
  1. Enosh (lived 905 years)
  1. Kenen (lived 910 years)
  1. Mealalel (lived 895 years)
  1. Jered (lived 962 years)
  1. Enoch (lived 365 years)
  • Enoch walked with God and God took him (he did not die a natural death)
  1. Methuselah (lived 969 years)
  • Methuselah knew Adam 243 years*
  • Methuselah knew Seth 355 years
  1. Lemech (lived 777 years)
  • died before his father, 5 years before the Flood
  • He is the father of Noah
  1. Noah (lived 950 years)
  • Lived both before and after the Flood
  • Methuselah knew Noah 600 years and died the year of the flood
  1. Shem son of Noah (lived 600 years)
  • Father of all Shemites/Semites
  • Walked with Methuselah 98 years*
  • Lived after the flood 502 years

(After the Flood)

  1. Arpacashad (lived 438 years)
  1. Shelach (lived 433 years)
  1. Eber or Heber (lived 464 years)
  • Knew both Noah and Shem
  • Name is thought to be the root of the term “Hebrew”
  1. Peleg (lived 209 years)
  • In his time the earth was divided
  1. Reu (lived 239 years)
  1. Serug (lived 230 years)
  1. Nahor (lived 148 years)
  1. Terah (lived 205 years)
  • 130 years old when Abraham is born
  • Talked with both Noah and Shem

(The beginning of the Patriarchs)

  1. Abraham (lived 175 years)
  • Abraham knew Shem son of Noah 150 years
  • Noah died 2 years before Abraham was born
  • Heber outlives Abraham by 4 years
  1. Isaac (lived 180 years)
  • Promised son of Abraham and Sarah
  • Knew Shem (son of Noah) 50 years*
  1. Jacob (lived 147 years)
  • God called him Israel
  • Father of the twelve tribes
  • Knew Abraham 20 years
  1. Levi (lived 137 years)
  • Third oldest son of Jacob/Israel
  • Knew Isaac about 45 years*
  • Great grandfather of Moses
  1. Kohath (lived 133 years)
  1. Amran (lived 137 years)
  • Knew Levi his grandfather*
  1. Moses (lived 120 years)
  • Brother of Miriam and Aaron who knew their father Amran about 65 years*
  • Moses receives the history and Law from God and is commanded to write the first five books of the Old Testament

3.  Written Transmission:

From Moses’ time on, the written Word was considered sacred. The job of transmission through copying went to the tribe of Levi and the Scribes (along with the continuation of oral transmission). Scribes used materials such as stone, clay, papyrus, parchment, and eventually paper to record the Scriptures. There are over 10,000 ancient manuscripts of the Old Testament or Tanakh. Our first manuscript copy of the Old Testament (dates from ca. 250 BC/BCE) comes about 150 years after the last original book was written (i.e. Malachi ca. 400 BC/BCE).

The Jewish Bible (Tanakh) contains all of the same books that we have in our Old Testament (39), just in a different grouping and order. These books have long been accepted as God’s Word by Jewish Scribes and historians and are categorized as the Torah, the Writings, and the Prophets. In our Christian Bible we categorized them as the books of Moses, History books, books of Wisdom and Poetry, and the books of the Prophets.

Example evidence of ancient Old Testament documents:

The Septuagint

  • This is the Greek translation and name for the Old Testament
  • The Septuagint was the first translation of the Hebrew Scriptures/Old Testament into Greek ( 300-200 BC/BCE), and this would have been the Scriptures Jesus read from in the first century AD/CE
  • It is the translation used by the early Jews and Christian through the second century AD/CE

Massoretic text (c. 900 AD/CE)

  • The Masoretes were Jewish scribe-scholars between the 6th and 10th centuries AD/CE, based primarily in present-day Israel in the cities of Tiberias and Jerusalem, as well as in Iraq (Babylonia)
  • The Old Testament we have today has been translated mainly from this text family
  • It differs from the Septuagint mainly in grammar, spelling, and in some places word order

Until the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, some reliability issues were questioned because of the one thousand year gap between the manuscripts. Skeptics would say that the writings were changed over time. However, in 1947 the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls debunked that thought! Even though minor differences exist, there are no major theological or doctrinal conflicts as the skeptics had hoped.

Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS) (c. 250 BC/BCE to AD/CE 100)

  • These scrolls were discovered in 1947 in the Qumran Caves of the West Bank, about a mile north of the Dead Sea
  • The DSS contain all of the Old Testament books (with the exception of Esther), and closed the one thousand year gap, quieting the skeptics
  • This discovery also helped confirm the prophecies in the Old Testament, fulfilled by Jesus, were not added or altered after the time of Christ but in fact were there centuries before his birth

What is so exciting is that we can see many of these ancient scrolls in museums, libraries, and Churches around the world today.

Skeptics will also claim that since the Scriptures were copied over and over so many times they cannot be accurate. Careful investigation will show, however, that the skeptics are wrong.

Following Moses, the Scribes were required to copy, protect, and preserve their history and the writings through the generations. Copying of the Scripture had extremely rigorous guidelines and there were very harsh warnings for disobedience—see Deuteronomy 28:56-69.

Watch this quick clip that explains some of the things Scribes had to do:

Here are just a few examples of the over 4000 very strict rules for the treatment of Scripture that could only be performed by Scribes:

  1. Each scroll must contain a specific number of columns, all equal throughout the entire book
  2. Each column’s length must not be less than 48 lines or more than 60
  3. Each column’s breadth must be exactly 30 letters
  4. The copyist must use a specially prepared black ink
  5. The space between every consonant must be the size of a thread
  6. The copyist must sit in full Jewish dress
  7. The copyist must use a fresh quill to pen the sacred name of God
  8. The copyist could copy only letter by letter not word by word
  9. The copyist counted the number of times each letter of the alphabet occurred in each book
  10. The copyist knew the middle letter of the Pentateuch and of the entire Old Testament
  11. After copying the copyist counted forward and backward from the middle letter
  12. The copyist must count all letters and spaces
  13. The copyist must not be interrupted, even if the King walked in, they could not stop
  14. Each manuscript would be compared and read out-loud before the people
  15. Any mistake in any area would require the copyist to burn the copy, or tear it up, and start over

The scribes believed with all their hearts, souls, and minds that this was the Word of God. They were responsible for it and had a reverent fear for what they were doing. Scribes taught and lived by the highest ethical standards and they were willing to die for their job.

Moses wrote these words to the Israelites; the emphasis is to know and pass on the teachings in Scripture:

These are the commands, decrees and laws the Lord your God directed me to teach you to observe in the land that you are crossing the Jordan to possess, so that you, your children and their children after them may fear the Lord your God as long as you live by keeping all his decrees and commands that I give you, and so that you may enjoy long life. Hear, Israel, and be careful to obey so that it may go well with you and that you may increase greatly in a land flowing with milk and honey, just as the Lord, the God of your ancestors, promised you. Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the door frames of your houses and on your gates.  Deuteronomy 6:1-9

Going Deeper:

(Book recommendation) “The Old Testament Documents, Are They Reliable and Relevant?” by Walter C. Kaiser, Jr.

You Tube Presentation: “The Reliability of the Old Testament,” by Dr. Tom Howe, Director of Veritas Graduate School of Apologetics and Professor of Bible and Biblical Languages at Southern Evangelical Seminary:

He has made His wonders to be remembered; The Lord is gracious and compassionate.  Psalm 111:4

Bible Study:

We are working our way, slowly, through the book of Genesis and are currently studying the life of Abraham. Read Genesis chapter 14, then answer the following study questions:

  1. Why was there a “war of the kings” and what cities were involved?
  2. How did Abram find out about this war and why did he get involved?
  3. What was the outcome of this war?
  4. How did Abram respond to what the king of Sodom offered? Why do you think he responded that way?
  5. Who was Melchizedek, and what did Abram give him?

Extra Credit: Cross-reference Melchizedek with the following Scriptures: Psalm 110 and Hebrews chapters 5-7. Why is Jesus considered to be a Priest from the order of Melchizedek?

Join us next week as we continue our “Case for the Old Testament!”

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You will not find this material in the public school curriculum even though it is based on solid evidence and grounded in research. It is ironic that following the evidence to where it leads stops at the door of our public schools as they will not let a “Divine footprint” in!  Join us as we examine evidence for Christianity and learn how to become a thoughtful defender and ambassador of your faith.

Click into the resource page of this website to view many of the top Christian thinkers and apologists along with some of their work; connecting to these types of resources is essential in your Christian growth.

Please let me know what you think: Give feedback, ask questions or send concerns in the comment section of the blog.

Teri Dugan

TeriDugan@truthfaithandreason.com

1 Peter 3:15

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