No, "cow", but a little beef. What Johnson puts forward here is generally referenced as the Graf-Wellhausen developmental hypothesis. It most certainly is widely accepted by many scholars today. But it has never been universally received. So, what is the beef? If anyone writes that it is "unanimously agreed", they are ignoring those who disagree with them. Such a person is not truthful, and thus it calls the rest of their statements into question as to how truthful they are in presenting that material. On the whole I don't have a problem with the larger argument that Johnson presents. It seems to fairly accurately present the theory at an easy to understand level for the lay reader, but it is also worth noting that it has less acceptance today than it once did, and given what is at least overstated hyperbole regarding the theories level of acceptance, I doubt that Johnson wrestles with those criticisms very well.
he didn't "write it," i did. i was transcribing his lecture. everybody makes mistakes, but rather than edit it so that you never knew he made it, i did the honest thing and left it in. the lecturers at the Teaching Company speak before a very small group, however, they rapidly "perform" 4-6 lectures in a row. they all make mistakes, yet they are still the best lectures series that i've ever heard.
And those are just "Enlightenment" figures that argued against the developmental theory. Succeeding generations have produced even more critiques. That said, it must be admitted that Wellhausen is widely regarded, and even among his critics it is generally not the whole but only particular portions or conclusions with regard to its application that are disputed, but it is certainly not the only theory that is in vogue among biblical scholars and to present it as such requires Johnson to participate in a distortion of both the truth and of history.
regarding;
Other equally notable scholars were far from being convinced of the merits of many aspects of the evolutionary position that had been set out so plausibly by Wellhausen. Eduard Riehm attacked the view that the Priestly Code was the latest part of the Pentetuech, observing that the Deuteronomic legislation presupposed acquaintance with it. Dillmann placed the Priestly Code considerably prior to Deuteronomy in terms of development, and assigned the bulk of the Holiness Code, to which he accorded the designation S(iani), to an even earlier date. Baudissin placed the Law of Holiness in the pre-Deuteronomic period, while Kittel held that the Priestly literature had existed for a prolonged time as a document of ecclesiastical law, available only to the priests at first but subsequently made public by force of circumstance.
iirc from Friedman, you have TWO Priestly sources. Friedman puts "P" before "D." However, the FINAL writer/editor/redactor is identifiable to the time of Ezra and Nehemiah. Ezra was a product of the priestly class, thus if ALL of the "P" stuff is assigned to him, your dates will be out of whack.
where they agree is:
The basic point is that the 5 books of Moses came into being over a long period of time through a complex process…
MY purpose here is to introduce what "Scholars" say on some of these issues and hopefully my brothers ans sisters in the Islamic faith can discuss said issues without relying on less studied individuals.
:wa: