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Discussing Fundamental Questions in Bible Study

Reviewing: “To This Very Day: Fundamental Questions in Bible Study,” By Rav Amnon Bazak. Maggid Books. 2020. English. Hardcover. 492 pages. ISBN-13: 978-1592645152.

In a Twilight Zone episode titled “Nothing in the Dark,” the protagonist Wanda Dunn is an old woman who has an irrational fear of death. She thinks that everyone coming to her door is a potential angel of death. She spends her life in a dark basement apartment in an abandoned tenement, shutting the world out.

She eventually allows in a wounded police officer who pleads for her help. Played by a young and handsome Robert Redford, the older woman finds out that the kind and dashing man is, in fact, the angel of death. He tells her that it is not him she is afraid of; instead, she is afraid of the unknown. And that, in fact, she should not be afraid.

That episode, and its theme of confronting one’s worst fear, is a fitting metaphor for “To This Very Day: Fundamental Questions in Bible Study,” an extraordinary book that deals with many theological notions that people are often terrified to confront.

In this English translation of his original book, Rabbi Amnon Bazak of Yeshivat Har Etzion deals with many questions that have been raised within the field of academic Bible study. Many within the Orthodox world equate academic Bible study with the documentary hypothesis. While that is only partially true, there is much more to academic Bible study than the theories originated by Julius Wellhausen.

The book aims to portray the unique approach that has arisen in the current generation among Bible scholars, who come to Tanach study with deep, serious belief on the one hand, and according to the prevailing methodology of the Bible, criticism on the other hand.

The term ”Bible criticism” is enough to make many Orthodox Jews apoplectic. However, as Bazak writes, while these writer’s opinions may not fall within normative Jewish thought, they nonetheless raise legitimate questions. In fact, many of these questions have been dealt with in traditional sources, often going as far back as Ramban, ibn-Ezra, Ralbag and others. While many of these questions go back a thousand years, what Bazak has masterfully done is gathered all of these views into a single collection.

From that, there are two approaches when dealing with Bible criticism––either condemn it as forbidden or engage it directly in order to answer their questions, which in turn can give a person a much deeper and more appreciative understanding of Tanach. Even for those that are not bothered by the questions from Bible criticism, they likely know someone who is and may be able to engage them in an honest discussion.

The critical point that must be understood is that the challenges posed by critical Bible theory are not a threat to the believer. Instead, as Bazak astutely writes, it is a means for a more in-depth understanding of God’s words as revealed in the Bible.

Each of the twelve chapters shows that Bazak is a man of intense and deep faith and brilliance. He tackles numerous challenging questions and answers them in a most sophisticated manner. Never having to resort to apologetics or ad hominem attacks on those who challenge traditional Jewish beliefs, Bazak provides sophisticated answers to these challenging questions.

Some of the topics include the authorship of the Torah and Tanach, verses added to the Torah at a later date, Tanach and archeology, Tanach and literature of the ancient near east, the reliability of the Masoretic text, the sins of biblical figures and more.

Every chapter in the book is brimming with fascinating insights, but the chapter on Torah and archeology is particularly enlightening. One frequent complaint from Bible critics is that there is no evidence of the Jews in Egypt, leaving Egypt or of their sojourn in the Sinai desert. For most people, it is a difficult question to answer, given that most of us lack a thorough understanding of biblical archeology and Egyptian history.

Bazak shows that theories based on argumentum ad ignorantiam, an argument from ignorance, which asserts that a proposition is true because it has not yet been proven false or a proposition is false because it has not yet been proven right, must be treated with some reservation.

He shows how in fact, in the last generation, several studies have appeared that noted a very close correlation between the Torah’s description of slavery in Egypt and the Exodus and what we know of Egyptian culture at the time. Furthermore, the biblical account of slavery in Egypt extensively uses words and expressions that archeological discoveries have made familiar. Bazak concludes that rather than being a challenge to the Torah, archeology can nonetheless contribute to an understanding of and an appreciation for Tanach.

There are two ways to deal with external challenges to our faith. One can be afraid and insular like Wanda Dunn, or one can engage with these challenges. Bazak has shown that rather than be terrified and dismissive of academic Bible study, one can encounter it, and like our forefather Yaakov, come out of the battle victorious.

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