Joel Baden Profile picture
Sep 21, 2020 9 tweets 2 min read Read on X
#Genesis 29:21-30

Laban pulls a switcheroo on Jacob

Poor Jacob - you take advantage of your dying father’s poor eyesight on his deathbed just once, and now you have to work seven years just to have someone do a body switch on you when you can’t see? FULL CIRCLE, DUDE.
Really the only notable thing here compositionally (aside from the open question of which source anything in here really belongs to) is that the two notices about the handmaids pretty clearly don’t belong, at least not where they are.
They’re patently background information, but presented as if they’re part of the main narrative line (with the wayyiqtol); NRSV puts them in parentheses, JPS makes them pluperfect. Both are recognizing that they are disruptive as written.
They’re there, it would seem, either because they are original to one of the sources that has otherwise been obscured here (an option I tend not to like, as it leaves us with floating shards of text that we call “documents,” which is sort of a mockery of the name)...
Or because someone saw that the two maids entered the story later with no introduction, or explanation of who they were, and took it upon themselves to rectify that perceived gap. Either way, they’re definitely out of place in the story as we read it.
Just for fun, a couple of terms and phrases of note in this passage - in the absence of clear narratological reasons for source assignment, language and style can be (very tentative) evidence. “Give me my wife,” הבה - elsewhere in the Pentateuch only J and D.
“What have you done to me?,” מה-זאת עשית, elsewhere in the Pentateuch only in J, and six times (which feels like a lot when we realize that outside the Pentateuch the phrase occurs only four times total: twice in Judges, once in Jonah, once in Ecclesiastes).
These aren’t much to go on, and it would be foolish to see these and say “this is J” if there were good evidence from the story, the content, that it was from another source. We have to be super careful when using language and style in source criticism.
Despite what you read in textbooks, language and style are neither the main problem with the Pentateuch nor the main solution. They’re supporting evidence at best, and need to be used that way. E can say הבה or מה-זאת עשה once, and only once. No reason why not.

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More from @JoelBaden

Jul 28, 2023
#זDeuteronomy 32:48-52

The beginning of Moses’s death

It’s gonna take a couple of chapters, but this is the beginning of the end. All the law-giving is over - time now for Moses to move toward his last act, which is to die as predicted.
That’s the situation canonically, but it’s also the situation in P, which is where we find ourselves here. The identification is easy: we’ve got explicit reference to Aaron’s death and burial on Mt Hor, which only P has narrated. (Among other indications.)
This P passage, unsurprisingly but nevertheless somewhat remarkably, picks up directly from the previous P verse - which was of course all the way back in Deut 1:3. “On day one of month eleven of year forty Moses said to Israel all the things.” “On that very day YHWH said…”
Read 4 tweets
Jul 27, 2023
#Deuteronomy 32:44-47

The end of D

Just as there are two introductions to the law, and two transitions from law to song, so too there are to conclusions to the song: 32:44, and 32:45-47. And with these words - “it is your life” - the D source comes to an end.
As a wrap-up, 32:46-47 are pretty good - picking up themes from throughout D, and finishing in high rhetorical style, with language that’s both familiar and even somewhat moving, if you think about it as Moses’s last words (which, for D, they are).
What might feel surprising is that D would end here, with Moses’s final words, rather than, you know, at the end of Deuteronomy, with Moses’s death. But it shouldn’t be surprising. D isn’t a biography; it’s not actually interested in the life of Moses. It’s mostly his speech.
Read 6 tweets
Jul 26, 2023
#Deuteronomy 32:1-43

The song of Israel’s future disobedience

The song of Deut 32 is in places a bit complicated in terms of language, but in its basic content is straightforward: it tells the story of how Israel spurned YHWH, and what will result from that. Just like D.
The song’s first task is to lay out YHWH’s faithfulness and Israel’s lack thereof. This is done with epithets and descriptive opposites: YHWH is the Rock: perfect while Israel is blemished, straight while Israel is twisted, righteous while Israel is crooked.
“Is this how you repay YHWH?” the song asks. This is the basic premise of D: YHWH has done all this on your behalf, from Egypt through the wilderness, and you owe him (but seem incapable of the requisite behavior).
Read 9 tweets
Jul 20, 2023
#Deuteronomy 31:24-30

Is there an echo in here?

This section contains the following elements: the writing of the Torah; the giving of it to the Levites; a job for the Levites; the announcement of the song that will witness against Israel; and the introduction to that song.
If that all feels, well, familiar, it’s because we’ve seen it all before, just earlier in this same chapter, in 31:9-13 and 16-22. It’s not verbatim, but it’s structurally basically identical. Which makes sense of what we have in D is a mix of two editions of the same work.
What I think no one has seen or suggested before is that D doesn’t just contain two editions of the introductory speeches preceding the laws of chapters 12-26, but also two editions of the material preceding the song of chapter 32.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 19, 2023
#Deuteronomy 31:16-22

A few predictions

It’s a pretty pessimistic outlook, to give all those laws, and all those speeches exhorting obedience, and to get to the end and say yeah, but I know it’s all for nothing because these Israelites can’t get their shit together.
YHWH is so certain of Israel’s future disobedience that he’s willing to put it in writing. These verses introduce the song of Deut 32, which describes Israel having rejected YHWH, in the past tense - as a fait accompli. That song, written down, is YHWH’s “I told you so.”
In the future, then, when Israel rebels against YHWH, this document, the song, can be held up against them. No one could say they weren’t warned - and perhaps more important, no one could say that YHWH was taken by surprise by what happened.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 18, 2023
#Deuteronomy 31:14-15, 23

Maybe the only time I’m doing verses not in consecutive order, but it’ll make sense (and make my life easier next time). In 31:14-15 we break from the D story into something different, even as the topic is the same. Can you spot the issue(s)?
First, YHWH here tells Moses he’s about to die. But Moses already knew that - even already told the Israelites that. Second, and perhaps most strikingly, we get the Tent of Meeting here for the first and only time in Deuteronomy. And this for sure ain’t P’s tent.
This is the tent that Moses and Joshua can go inside of, that YHWH shows up in a cloud outside of to chat with the folks inside - this is, in short, the tent of E, operating exactly as it has every single time it’s appeared, from Exod 33:7-11 on.
Read 10 tweets

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