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Historical criticism, higher criticism, or the historical-critical method is a branch of literary analysis that investigates the origins of a text. As applied in biblical studies it investigates the books of the Bible and compares them to other texts written at the same time, before, or recently after the text in question. In Classical studies, the new higher criticism of the nineteenth century set aside "efforts to fill ancient religion with direct meaning and relevance and devoted itself instead to the critical collection and chronological ordering of the source material."[1] Thus higher criticism, whether biblical, classical, Byzantine or medieval, focuses on the sources of a document to determine who wrote it, when it was written, and where. For example, higher criticism deals with the synoptic problem--the question of how Matthew, Mark, and Luke relate to each other. In some cases, such as with several Pauline epistles, higher criticism confirms the traditional understanding of authorship. In other cases, higher criticism contradicts church tradition (as with the gospels) or even the words of the Bible itself (as with 2 Peter).
The Dutch scholars Desiderius Erasmus (1466? - 1536) and Benedict Spinoza (1632 –1677) are usually credited as the first to study the Bible in this way[2]. When applied to the Bible, the historical-critical method is distinct from the traditional, devotional approach.[3] In particular, while devotional readers concern themselves with the overall message of the Bible, historians examine the distinct messages of each book in the Bible.[3] Guided by the devotional approach, for example, Christians often combine accounts from different gospels into single accounts, whereas historians attempt to discern what is unique about each gospel, including how they are different.[3]
The historical-critical method to studying the Bible is taught nearly universally in Western nations, including in most seminaries.[3] Conservative, evangelical schools, however, often reject this approach, teaching instead that the Bible is inerrant and that it reflects explicit divine inspiration.[3]
The phrase higher criticism is used in contrast with lower criticism (or textual criticism), the endeavour to determine what a text originally said before it was altered (through error or intent).
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The phrase "higher criticism" became popular in Europe from the mid-18th century to the early 20th century, to describe the work of such scholars as Jean Astruc (mid-18th cent.), Johann Salomo Semler (1725–91), Johann Gottfried Eichhorn (1752–1827), Ferdinand Christian Baur (1792–1860), and Julius Wellhausen (1844–1918).[4] In academic circles today, this is the body of work properly considered "higher criticism", though the phrase is sometimes applied to earlier or later work using similar methods.
Higher criticism originally referred to the work of German biblical scholars of the Tübingen School. After the path-breaking work on the New Testament by Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834), the next generation - which included scholars such as David Friedrich Strauss (1808–74) and Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–72) - in the mid-nineteenth century analyzed the historical records of the Middle East from Christian and Old Testament times in search of independent confirmation of events related in the Bible. These latter scholars built on the tradition of Enlightenment and Rationalist thinkers such as John Locke, David Hume, Immanuel Kant, Gotthold Lessing, Gottlieb Fichte, Georg Hegel and the French rationalists.
These ideas were imported to England by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and, in particular, by George Eliot's translations of Strauss's The Life of Jesus (1846) and Feuerbach's The Essence of Christianity (1854). In 1860 seven liberal Anglican theologians began the process of incorporating this historical criticism into Christian doctrine in Essays and Reviews, causing a five year storm of controversy which completely overshadowed the arguments over Darwin's newly published On the Origin of Species. Two of the authors were indicted for heresy and lost their jobs by 1862, but in 1864 had the judgement overturned on appeal. La Vie de Jésus (1863), the seminal work by a Frenchman, Ernest Renan (1823–92), continued in the same tradition as Strauss and Feuerbach. In Catholicism, L'Evangile et l'Eglise (1902), the magnum opus by Alfred Loisy against the Essence of Christianity of Adolf von Harnack and La Vie de Jesus of Renan, gave birth to the modernist crisis (1902–61). Some scholars, such as Rudolf Bultmann, have used higher criticism of the Bible to "demythologize" it.
The questions of higher criticism are widely recognized (though to varying extents) by Orthodox Jews and many traditional Christians as legitimate questions, yet they often find the answers given by the higher critics unsatisfactory or even heretical. In particular, religious conservatives object to the rationalistic and naturalistic presuppositions of a large number of practitioners of higher criticism, which lead to conclusions that conservative religionists find unacceptable.
Many conservative Bible scholars practice their own form of higher criticism within their own supernaturalist and confessional frameworks. However, most traditional Christian exegetes examine the Bible chiefly through the Bible itself, believing that clear places in scripture give the best help in explaining the less clear places. Hence their exegetics, to one degree or another, depend upon lower criticism.
Other biblical scholars object that the evidence uncovered by higher criticism itself undermines the use of supernaturalist and confessional frameworks within the methodology. Meanwhile, religiously liberal Christians and religiously liberal Jews typically maintain that belief in God has either a very limited role or none at all in the authoring of, for instance, the Pentateuch or the Pauline Epistles.
Pope Leo XIII (1810–1903) condemned secular biblical scholarship in his encyclical Providentissimus Deus;[5], but in 1943 Pope Pius XII gave license to the new scholarship in his encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu: "[T]extual criticism ... [is] quite rightly employed in the case of the Sacred Books ... Let the interpreter then, with all care and without neglecting any light derived from recent research, endeavor to determine the peculiar character and circumstances of the sacred writer, the age in which he lived, the sources written or oral to which he had recourse and the forms of expression he employed." [6]
Today the modern Catechism states: "In order to discover the sacred authors' intention, the reader must take into account the conditions of their time and culture, the literary genres in use at that time, and the modes of feeling, speaking and narrating then current. For the fact is that truth is differently presented and expressed in the various types of historical writing, in prophetical and poetical texts, and in other forms of literary expression."[7]
The foundation for Protestant historical-criticism included the movement of rationalism and Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677). Rationalism held that reason is the determiner of truth, and later rationalists also rejected the authority of Scripture. Spinoza did not regard the Bible as divinely inspired - instead it was to be evaluated like any other book.[8]
Around the end of the 18th century Johann Gottfried Eichhorn, "the founder of modern Old Testament criticism", produced works of "investigation of the inner nature of the Old Testament with the help of the Higher Criticism". Friedrich Daniel Ernst Schleiermacher also influenced the development of Higher Criticism.
A group of German biblical scholars at Tübingen University formed the Tübingen school of theology under the leadership of Ferdinand Christian Baur, with important works being produced by Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach and David Strauss. In the early 19th century they sought independent confirmation of the events related in the Bible through Hegelian analysis of the historical records of the Middle East from Christian and Old Testament times.[9][10]
Their ideas were brought to England by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, then in 1846 George Eliot translated David Strauss's sensational Leben Jesu as the Life of Jesus Critically Examined, a quest for the historical Jesus. In 1854 she followed this with a translation of Feuerbach's even more radical Essence of Christianity which held that the idea of God was created by man to express the divine within himself, though Strauss attracted most of the controversy.[9] The loose grouping of Broad Churchmen in the Church of England was influenced by the German higher critics. In particular, Benjamin Jowett visited Germany and studied the work of Baur in the 1840s, then in 1866 published his book on The Epistles of St Paul, arousing theological opposition. He then collaborated with six other theologians to publish their Essays and Reviews in 1860. The central essay was Jowett's On the Interpretation of Scripture which argued that the Bible should be studied to find the authors' original meaning in their own context rather than expecting it to provide a modern scientific text.[11][12]
Today, many Evangelical Protestants oppose the methods of the higher criticism, and hold that the Bible is divinely inspired and incapable of error, at least in its original form.[3][13] According to the Westminster Confession of Faith (an historical Presbyterian document), "The infallible rule of interpretation of scripture is the scripture itself..." WCF 1.9
As an example of the influence of higher criticism on contemporary thought, consider the treatment of Noah's Ark in various editions of the Encyclopedia Britannica. In the first edition, in 1771, the story of Noah and the Ark is treated as essentially factual, and the following scientific evidence is offered, "...Buteo and Kircher have proved geometrically, that, taking the common cubit as a foot and a half, the ark was abundantly sufficient for all the animals supposed to be lodged in it..., the number of species of animals will be found much less than is generally imagined, not amounting to an hundred species of quadrupeds... ." By the eighth edition, however, the encyclopedia says of the Noah story, "The insuperable difficulties connected with the belief that all other existing species of animals were provided for in the ark are obviated by adopting the suggestion of Bishop Stillingfleet, approved by Matthew Poole...and others, that the Deluge did not extend beyond the region of the earth then inhabited..." By the ninth edition, in 1875, there is no attempt to reconcile the Noah story with scientific fact, and it is presented without comment. In the 1960 edition, in the article Ark, we find the following, "Before the days of "higher criticism" and the rise of the modern scientific views as to the origin of the species, there was much discussion among the learned, and many ingenious and curious theories were advanced, as to the number of animals on the ark..."[14]
According to the preface of the New American Bible[15],
Higher criticism is divided up into sub-categories, including primarily source criticism, form criticism, and redaction criticism.
Source criticism is the search for the original sources which lie behind a given biblical text. It can be traced back to the 17th century French priest Richard Simon, and its most influential product is undoubtably Julius Wellhausen's Prolegomena zur Geschichte Israels (1878), whose "insight and clarity of expression have left their mark indelibly on modern biblical studies."[16]
Redaction criticism studies "the collection, arrangement, editing and modification of sources", and is frequently used to reconstruct the community and purposes of the author/s of the text.[17]
Form criticism breaks the Bible down into sections (pericopes, stories) which are analyzed and categorized by genres (prose or verse, letters, laws, court archives, war hymns, poems of lament, etc.). The form critic then theorizes on the pericope's Sitz im Leben ("setting in life"), the setting in which it was composed and, especially, used.[18] Tradition history is a specific aspect of form criticism which aims at tracing the way in which the pericopes entered the larger units of the biblical canon, and especially the way in which they made the transition from oral to written form. The belief in the priority, stability, and even detectability, of oral traditions is now recognised to be so deeply questionable as to render tradition history largely useless, but form criticism itself continues to develop as a viable methodology in biblical studies.[19]
Radical Criticism, around the end of the nineteenth century, typically tried to show that none of the Pauline epistles are authentic; that Paul is nothing but a controverted authorial token. This group of scholars often postulated the ahistoricity of Jesus and the apostles.
Scholars of higher criticism have sometimes upheld and sometimes challenged the traditional authorship of various books of the Bible.[20] Details of the arguments regarding this issue are addressed more specifically in the articles about each book.
Book | Author according to tradition |
Author according to scholarship |
---|---|---|
Torah (Pentateuch, Books of Moses, i.e., Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Deuteronomy and Numbers) | Moses, c 1300 BC | Documentary hypothesis: Four independent documents (the Jahwist, Elohist, Deuteronomist and the Priestly source), composed between 900-550 BC, redacted c 450 BC, possibly by Ezra
Supplementary models (e.g. John Van Seters): Torah composed as a series of authorial expansions of an original source document, usually identified as J or P, largely during the 7th and 6th centuries BC, final form achieved c. 450 BC. Fragmentary models (e.g. Rolf Rendtorff, Erhard Blum): Torah the product of the slow accretion of fragmentary traditions, (no documents), over period 850-550 BC, final form c. 450 BC. Biblical minimalism: Torah composed in Hellenistic-Hasmonean period, c. 300-140 BC. |
Joshua | Joshua with a portion by Phinehas or Eleazar | Deuteronomist using material from the Jahwist and Elohist |
Judges | Samuel | Deuteronomist |
Ruth | Samuel | A later author, writing after the time of David |
1 Samuel | Samuel, Gad, and Nathan | Deuteronomist as a combination of a Jerusalem source, republican source, the court history of David, the sanctuaries source, and the monarchial source |
2 Samuel | ||
1 Kings | Perhaps Ezra | Deuteronomist |
2 Kings | ||
1 Chronicles | Ezra | The Chronicler, writing between 450 and 435 BC, after the Babylonian captivity |
2 Chronicles | ||
Ezra | Ezra | The Chronicler, writing between 450 and 435 BC, after the Babylonian captivity |
Nehemiah | Nehemiah using some material by Ezra | The Chronicler, writing between 450 and 435 BC, after the Babylonian captivity |
Tobit | A writer in the second century BC | |
Judith | Eliakim (Joakim), the high priest of the story | |
Esther | The Great Assembly using material from Mordecai | An unknown author writing between 460 and 331 BC |
1 Maccabees | A devout Jew from the Holy Land. | An unknown Jewish author, writing around 100 BC |
2 Maccabees | Based on the writing of Jason of Cyrene | An unknown author, writing in the second or 1st century BC |
3 Maccabees | An Alexandrian Jew writing in Greek in the first century BC or first century AD | |
4 Maccabees | Josephus | An Alexandrian Jew writing in the first century BC or first century AD |
Job | unknown[21] | anonymous, possibly by two different authors, one writing the prose section and the other the poetic section, 5th century BC.[22] |
Psalms | Mainly David and also Asaph, sons of Korah, Moses, Heman the Ezrahite, Ethan the Ezrahite and Solomon | Various authors recording oral tradition. Portions from 1000BC to 200BC. |
Proverbs | Solomon, Agur son of Jakeh, Lemuel and other wise men | An editor compiling from various sources well after the time of Solomon |
Ecclesiastes | Solomon | A Hebrew poet of the third or second centuries BC using the life of Solomon as a vista for the Hebrews' pursuit of Wisdom. An unknown author in Hellenistic period from two older oral sources (Eccl 1:1-6:9 which claims to be Solomon, Eccl 6:10-12:8 with the theme of non-knowing) |
Song of Solomon | Solomon | Unknown, scholarly estimates vary between 950 BC to 200 BC[22] |
Wisdom | Solomon | An Alexandrian Jew writing during the Jewish Hellenistic period |
Sirach | Jesus the son of Sirach of Jerusalem | |
Isaiah | Isaiah | Three main authors and an extensive editing process:[22] Isaiah 1-39 "Historical Isaiah" with multiple layers of editing, 8th cent. BCE Isaiah 40-55 Exilic(Deutero-Isaiah), 6th century BCE Isaiah 56-66 post-exilic(Trito-Isaiah), 6th-5th century BCE |
Jeremiah | Jeremiah | unknown, possibly Baruch ben Neriah[23]. This book has some affinities with the Deuteronomist author |
Lamentations | Jeremiah | Disputed and perhaps based on the older Mesopotamian genre of the "city lament", of which the Lament for Ur is among the oldest and best-known |
Letter of Jeremiah | Jeremiah | A Hellenistic Jew living in Alexandria |
Baruch | Baruch ben Neriah | An author writing during or shortly after the period of the Maccabees |
Ezekiel | Ezekiel | Disputed, with varying degrees of attribution to Ezekiel |
Daniel | Daniel, sixth century BC | An editor/author in the mid-second century BC, using older folk-tales for the first half of the book |
Hosea | Hosea, mid eight century BC | An unknown author, writing in the eight century BC or later[22] |
Joel | Joel | unknown |
Amos | Amos, eight century BC | An unknown author, writing after the sixth century BC[22] |
Obadiah | Obadiah | An unknown author, writing in the sixth century BC or later[22] |
Jonah | Jonah | Possibly a post-exilic (after 530 BC) editor recording oral traditions passed down from the eighth century BC |
Micah | Micah | The first three chapters by Micah and the remainder by a later writer |
Nahum | Nahum | An unknown author, writing in the sixth century BC or later[22] |
Habakkuk | Habakkuk | An unknown author, writing in the sixth century BC or later[22] |
Zephaniah | Zephaniah | Disputed; possibly a writer after the time period indicated by the text |
Haggai | Haggai, late sixth cent. BC | An unknown author, writing in the fifth century BC or later[22] |
Zechariah | Zechariah | Zechariah (chapters 1-8); the later remaining designated Deutero-Zechariah, were possibly written by disciples of Zechariah |
Malachi | Malachi or Ezra | Possibly the author of Deutero-Zechariah |
According to New Testament scholar Bart Ehrman, of the 27 books of the New Testament, only 8 books are authentic (Romans, Galatians, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon and Revelation). The other 19 books are either misattributed writings, homonymous (same name) or pseudepigraphic (false name).[24]
Book | Author according to tradition |
Author according to scholarship |
---|---|---|
Gospel of Mark | Mark, follower of Peter; mid 1st century | anonymous, perhaps Mark, follower of Peter; mid to late 1st century; the first written gospel |
Gospel of Matthew | The Apostle Matthew | An unknown author who borrowed from both Mark and a source called Q, late 1st century |
Gospel of Luke | Luke, companion of Paul | Luke or an unknown author who borrowed from both Mark and a source called Q, late 1st century |
Gospel of John | Apostle John | An unknown author with no direct connection to the historical Jesus; John 21 finished after death of primary author by follower(s); the last written gospel[25][26] |
Acts of the Apostles | Luke, companion of Paul | Luke or an unknown author who also wrote the Gospel of Luke |
Romans, 1 & 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Epistle to Philemon | Paul the Apostle, see Pauline epistles | Paul |
Ephesians | Paul the Apostle | Paul or edited dictations from Paul |
Colossians | Paul the Apostle | Disputed; perhaps Paul coauthoring with Timothy |
2 Thessalonians | Paul the Apostle | pseudepigraphal, perhaps an associate or disciple after his death, representing what they believed was his message[27] |
1 & 2 Timothy, Titus, see Pastoral epistles | Paul the Apostle | pseudepigraphal, perhaps someone associated with Paul, writing at a later date see Authorship of the Pauline epistles |
Epistle to the Hebrews | Paul the Apostle(disputed) | An unknown author, but almost certainly not Paul[28], c 95 |
James | James the Just | pseudepigraphal; a writer in the late first or early second centuries, after the death of James the Just[29] |
1 Peter | Apostle Peter, before 64 (Peter's martyrdom) | pseudepigraphal or perhaps Silas, proficient with Greek writing, 70-90 |
2 Peter | Apostle Peter, before 64 | pseudepigraphal, likely not Peter[30], perhaps as late as c 150 AD, the last-written book of the Bible |
1 John | Apostle John | An unknown author with no direct connection to the historical Jesus, late 1st century, possibly the author of the Gospel of John |
2 John, 3 John | Apostle John (sometimes disputed) | An unknown author with no direct connection to the historical Jesus, final Editor of John 21, c 100-110, possibly the author of the Gospel of John |
Jude | Jude the Apostle or Jude, brother of Jesus | A pseudonymous work written between the end of the first century and the first quarter of the 2nd century[31] |
Book of Revelation | Apostle John(sometimes disputed) | distinct author, perhaps John of Patmos (not the same author as the Gospel of John or 2 & 3 John) see Authorship of the Johannine works |
Both higher and lower forms of criticism are carried out today with the religious writings of many religions, including Hinduism, Buddhism and Confucianism.
Modern higher criticism is just beginning for the Qur'an. This scholarship questions some traditional claims about its composition and content, contending that the Qur'an incorporates material from both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament; however, other scholars argue that it cites examples from previous texts, as the New Testament did to the Old Testament.
Islamic history records that Uthman collected all variants of the Qur'an and destroyed those that he did not approve of.