Reviewed by: Revelation and Authority: Sinai in Jewish Scripture and Tradition by Benjamin D. Sommer Danny Mathews benjamin d. sommer, Revelation and Authority: Sinai in Jewish Scripture and Tradition (AYBRL; New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015). Pp. xviii + 419. $50. Sommer’s study can be viewed as an extensive fleshing out of the implications of Abraham Joshua Heschel’s claim: “As a report about revelation, the Bible itself is a midrash” (Between God and Man: An Interpretation of Judaism [New York: Simon & Schuster, 1959] 77). In short, the Jewish Bible itself is a record of various human voices engaged in dialogue and debate and hence is to be aligned with rabbinic literature under the larger category of Oral Torah. The argument is based on a close analysis of the distinct interpretations of revelation advocated by J, E, and P in the Sinai account in Exodus 19–24 and its counterpart in Deuteronomy. S. adopts the source-critical conclusions of the so-called Neo-Documentary Hypothesis school (Menahem Haran, Baruch J. Schwartz, and especially Joel S. Baden). E is the earliest layer and preserves the most ambiguity about what exactly happened at Sinai in terms of the speaker (Moses? God?), what was spoken (actual words? non-verbal sounds such as thunder?), and the extent of the Decalogue that is actually revealed to the people. E’s main goal is to ensure that one cannot know for certain what exactly happened at Sinai. In contrast, according to P, the revelation at Sinai consists solely of a blueprint of the sanctuary, which in turn will be the true location of the ongoing revelation [End Page 127] of law. While E leans toward a “stenographic” theory of revelation, P advocates a “participatory” theory, according to which all revelation is the result of human mediation and interpretation of a divine communication. J, the most fragmentary source, is characterized by fascinans, that is, a desire for a close encounter with God, as well as providing narrative context for law. Deuteronomy represents the first commentary on the Sinai account and eliminates the ambiguities by portraying the Decalogue as the sole revelation that is distinctly and clearly heard by the entire people without mediation, a view that is later rejected by the scribal addition of Deut 5:5—this feature of including both commentary and revision leads S. to describe Deuteronomy as a rabbinic text (pp. 70–71). While the view of revelation advocated by P and J is “minimal” because it is given only to human mediators, D presents a “maximal” view in which everyone hears the unmediated, clear, and distinct words of God. These sources also differ with regard to the issue of whether the revelation of Sinai was a one-time event or an ongoing process. For E, the revelation occurred once. For P, it is an ongoing process involving a number of human mediators that took place before Sinai, for example, in the Passover instructions in Exodus 12, and during and after Sinai at the tent of meeting. D, however, presents a very sophisticated view of Sinai as a one-time event that is transcendentally accessible to each new generation. Moreover, D inscribes an apparent contradiction between the rhetorical claim of the fixity of law that is revealed only once (Deut 4:2; 13:1) and the actual practice of presenting earlier laws that have been systematically revised and updated. Both claims are implied in Deuteronomy’s frequent use of the term “today.” Although the sources vary with respect to the specific details, all agree on the actual event of the revelation itself and especially the inseparable linking of that revelation to a call for obedience to God’s will for living out the commands. S. adopts Franz Rozenzweig’s distinction between the transcendent command (Gebot) and a specific law (Gesetz) formulated by human interpretation and links this with his understanding of D’s view of law to make a theologically profound and elegant claim that the actual event at Sinai “produces . . . a sense of commandedness, and by observing mitzvoth the Jew reconstructs the experience of revelation and moves from the human to the divine point of view. . . . God communicated for a moment at...
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