Mr. Hyde wrote:So basically...I'm here looking for some people who can prepare me for what is to come in my Western Civ class.
It sounds like the professor is going to be ripping the historical accuracy of the Bible to shreds over the next few months. Anyone here who can help me out?
I apologize that I don't have questions about specific events yet...but like I said...I'm more looking to be prepared rather than find an objection and then try to refute it.
I would seriously recommend purchasing some of the professional literature on the subject. I would recommend the following academic works:
* Kenneth Kitchen: 'On the Reliability of the Old Testament', 2006
* William Dever: 'What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?: What Archaeology Can Tell Us About the Reality of Ancient Israel', 2002
* James K Hoffmeier: 'Israel in Egypt: The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus Tradition', 1997
* James K Hoffmeier: ' Ancient Israel in Sinai: The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Wilderness Tradition', 2005
I have placed them in order of preference. Now I'll provide some details about them.
Kitchen is a well recognized authority on Egyptology and an evangelical Christian. However, he is not a 'very conservative evangelical Christian'. He makes no attempt to 'prove' the miraculous in the Biblical history, he provides excellent critiques of the real 'very conservative evangelical Christians' who attempt to 'prove' the historicity of the Bible using invalid methods (and abuse of archaeological findings), he is perfectly willing to draw the line between what can be 'proved' and what can't, he very fairly presents alternative explanations and claims in opposition to his own, and although he rejects the Docuementary Hypothesis he is completely comfortable with the fact of the Biblical texts receiving forms of editorial redaction over time.
Not only that, but Kitchen's work is all peer-reviewed, and he's operating in one of the most critically examined fields of scholarship. He is not a hack writer, nor is he a Christian apologist.
Kitchen also quotes extensively from a range of recognized literature in the field, including those who oppose him on one issue or another, and who are not in the least Christian. Indeed, when I see him support his case by quoting from Finkelstein and Silberman, or by citing Dever or Coogan, I find his case all the more convincing.
Kitchen is never in the position of being on the fringe (as Finkelstein and Silberman are on a number of issues), or holding uniquely personal interpretations which are unsupported by any other recognized peer-reviewed sources (as some non-Christian scholars are). He can always point to widespread inter-disciplinary support for his views, which is very telling. When he goes out on a limb and speculates, he does so - and tells you that's exactly what he is doing. He doesn't represent this as dogma or fact. He's very honest.
Provan, Long, and Longman are not specialist archaeologists themselves, but Biblical scholars who assess and evaluate the evidence and arguments presented by those who are specialist archaeologists. Their book provides an excellent overview and analysis of the key issues and evidence, and is a cautious and well presented case (review
here.
Dever is a secular humanist, which means that any time he agrees with Kitchen or Provan/Long/Longman it's a good thing, since he cannot possibly be accused of having a pro-Bible bias. He does believe in the Documentary Hypothesis, and he believes the Israelites were basically indigenous to Canaan rather than being an ethnic group which entered Canaan from Egypt (though he does acknowledge a 'tradition' of a family of 'Joseph' which may have historically come from Egypt), but otherwise he is very balanced.
Dever, despite his secular humanism, is very much against the 'Minimalist' school of interpretation, and presents some powerful arguments against the Minimalist case. His scholarship is well recognized, and he is also very easy to read.
Hoffmeier is an evangelical Christian who is a lot more Old Skool than Kitchen, and whose views are more conservative as a result. He is not a specialist as far as I know, but he presents a very well articulated grasp of the available evidence and interpretations from relevant specialists in the field. His book on the Sinai and Wilderness traditions comes well recommended by Kitchen, who wrote the foreward.
Then there's Alan Montgomery, whom I mention because of his own interesting view (which shares some points of contact with Bimson). He is not a specialist, and as a Bachelor of Science (Hons), isn't even a trained Biblical scholar. But he does demonstrate an excellent grasp of the different views of the Exodus in his article
here, and quotes and cites relevant authorities and specialists. His article is definitely worth a read.
Taking the Exodus as a case in point (one of the most contested historical accounts in the Bible), here are the different perspectives on the Exodus among the works I've listed:
* Dever: As mentioned above, Dever believes that the Exodus is largely non-historical, though containing a kernel of truth.
* Kitchen: Kitchen makes a very detailed and well supported case for the late date (see the well referenced Wiki article on Kitchen
here).
* Hoffmeier: Hoffmeier presents the case for the early and late dates, and prefers the early date (a good review of his work is
here).
* Provan/Long/Longman: Provan, Long and Longman present the evidence for both an early and late exodus, but do not appear to make a solid decision either way.
* Montgomery: Montgomery makes a case for an early Exodus, based on a modified version of the 'new' or 'revised' chronology. His article is innovative, and makes good use of primary and secondary sources, as well as relevant authorities.
See also
this page on the main G&S site.