Did Moses Write the Pentateuch?

No. Below is evidence for non-Mosaic authorship.

Anachronisms

Several anachronisms indicate post-Mosaic authorship:

  • Deuteronomy 34:1-12 describes Moses' own death, burial and mourning period
  • Uses phrase "to this day" about Moses' burial location (Deut 34:6)
  • References no prophet like Moses "to this day" (Deut 34:10)
  • Genesis 36:31 mentions Edomite kings "before any king reigned over Israelites," which assumes knowledge of an Israelite monarchy (c. 1050 BCE)
  • Mentions Philistines (Exodus 13:17) who arrived c. 1200 BCE
  • References city of "Dan" (Genesis 14:14) which was renamed from "Laish" long after Moses
  • Uses term "Hebrew" as language designation which emerged much later

Multiple Sources

The Documentary Hypothesis proposes that the Pentateuch was compiled from four main source documents (J, E, D, and P) written by different authors over several centuries. These sources were eventually combined and edited into the final form of the Torah we have today, explaining the duplications, contradictions, and varying styles found throughout the text.

Different Divine Names

Different sections consistently use different names for God:

  • Genesis 1:1-2:3 uses "Elohim" exclusively
  • Genesis 2:4-3:24 uses "YHWH Elohim"
  • Exodus 6:2-3 has God say he was known as "El Shaddai" to the patriarchs but not as "YHWH"
  • The E source uses "Elohim" until Exodus 3
  • The J source uses "YHWH" from the beginning

Duplicate Stories

Multiple versions of the same stories with different details:

  • Two creation accounts (Genesis 1:1-2:3 and 2:4-25)
  • Two flood narratives with different numbers of animals (Gen 6:19-20 vs 7:2-3)
  • Three wife-sister stories (Gen 12:10-20, 20:1-18, 26:6-11)
  • Two versions of the Covenant Code (Exodus 20-23 and 34)
  • Two accounts of water from rock (Exodus 17:1-7 and Numbers 20:1-13)
  • Duplicate naming stories (Beersheba in Gen 21:31 and 26:33)
  • Two versions of Hagar's expulsion (Gen 16:1-14 and 21:8-21)
  • Multiple explanations for names like Israel (Gen 32:28 and 35:10)

Language and Style

Linguistic evidence points to later authorship.

Late Hebrew Forms

The text contains Hebrew words and grammatical forms that developed long after Moses' time:

  • Persian loanwords like "pardes" (paradise) in Song 4:13
  • Aramaic loanwords like "dat" (law) in Deuteronomy 33:2
  • Late form "ani" instead of early "anoki" for "I" in Leviticus
  • Use of "hu" as feminine pronoun in Genesiswhich emerged much later
  • Late spelling of "Jerusalem" as "Yerushalayim" in Genesis 14:18
  • Persian-period terms like "pitgam" (decree) in Genesis
  • Late construct forms in Exodus and Leviticus

Jesus & Mosaic Authorship

Jesus believed in the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch.

New Testament References

  • Jesus refers to "Moses' writings" (John 5:46-47)
  • Jesus cites "Moses said" when quoting Exodus (Mark 7:10)
  • Paul attributes Deuteronomy to Moses (Romans 10:5)
  • The Pharisees refer to "the Law of Moses" (John 8:5)

Historical Jewish Sources

  • Philo treats Moses as author of the Pentateuch
  • Josephus attributes the first five books to Moses
  • The Talmud considers Moses the author
  • Dead Sea Scrolls reference "the book of Moses"