How about the many times that the points don’t agree with the consonantal text?Jason Hare wrote: ↑Thu Sep 23, 2021 4:10 pmIf there were such a dichotomy, I would agree with you. We need to consider the grammar, syntax, context, word usages, etc. This is, however, a false dichotomy. The choice is not between the points and all of these things.kwrandolph wrote: ↑Thu Sep 23, 2021 3:01 pm That means that instead of depending on medieval theologians to recognize what the text says, I need to look at grammar, syntax, context, word meanings to discover what the text says. Yes, it’s not uncommon that those clues give a different reading than how the Masoretes, based on medieval Hebrew, understood the text.
LOL! The attitude is mutual.Jason Hare wrote: ↑Thu Sep 23, 2021 4:10 pm In fact, I have a feeling that real mastery of biblical Hebrew grammar cannot be grasped without the points. I have not seen that your mastery of the grammar is strong enough to teach the language and present it to the next generation of Hebrew readers.
How would you distinguish between a Qal and a Piel in most forms in unpointed texts such as the DSS and earlier?Jason Hare wrote: ↑Thu Sep 23, 2021 4:10 pm The fact that you don't distinguish between qal and piel in most forms doesn't speak well for your non-systematic system.
In all other languages I’ve studied, a change in form indicates a change in function. Do you know the difference in function between Qal and Piel? Do you have any idea of which contextual clues would indicate whether a verb is Qal or Piel? The participle derivatives indicate that the Piel exists apart from the Qal—what are the functional differences in the uses of the Piel participles vs. the Qal participles? How many times did the Masoretes incorrectly point a Qal as a Piel and visa versa? Did the Piel originally have certain forms that are not recognized today?
As for accidence, how much of that is caused by incorrect for meaning pointing? As for phonology, what’s wrong with admitting that Biblical era pronunciations have been irretrievably lost? However, there are clues that the writing was originally a syllabary, not a true alphabet, in which every consonant was followed by a vowel.Jason Hare wrote: ↑Thu Sep 23, 2021 4:10 pm Until you can provide a functional substitute for the traditional grammar that covers accidence and phonology, your system is only your own.
And you don’t insert any theology in your statements? When you wrote “Seeing the Bible as the product of human invention, just like the Iliad and the Aenid,…” how is that not a theological statement? Are you hypocritical when you post your theology and expect people to agree with you, but object when others post their theology? I don’t expect you to agree with my theology, but I expect you to be adult enough not to be offended when others post their theology, just as I’m not offended when you post your theology even though I disagree with it.Jason Hare wrote: ↑Thu Sep 23, 2021 4:10 pm I don't agree with the rabbis theologically, either. But, I don't make theological agreement part of my argument for every discussion that I involve myself in.
History comes into play. The claim that Moses wrote Torah is first and foremost a historical claim. It is a historical claim made in the text of Tanakh itself. Whenever I made mention of that historical claim, I meant it as a historical claim, not a theological claim. True, that historical claim has theological implications, but where have I brought out the theological implications? It is a linguistic and literary argument that there are evidences in Genesis that indicate that the compiler of Genesis used older documents to compile Genesis. Do you object to historical, linguistic and literary arguments in these posts?Jason Hare wrote: ↑Thu Sep 23, 2021 4:10 pm I don't need to agree with someone's theology, nor do I generally care about what people believe individually. We can settle discussions apart from theological matters. There's no reason that I need to agree with someone's theology when the question is on how to understand the language of a text. It's either well presented and well argued, or it isn't. Theology shouldn't come into play.
By the way, other than quoting one of your theological statements, where have I made a single theological statement in this response?
Karl W. Randolph.