It
is alleged by modern critics that, while Deuteronomy was the work of some
anonymous writer in the reigns of Josiah and Manasseh, the ritual portions of
Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers were the work of Ezra and the priests in Babylon.
Thus, practically, the greater part of the Pentateuch is assumed to be
post-exilic, and therefore not written by Moses; and this in spite of the fact
that the claims of the whole Bible necessitate the Mosaic authorship.
On the other hand, it is admitted by the same modern
critics that the prophets lived and wrote in the reigns of those kings with
whose reigns they are respectively associated.
But the Pentateuch is full of technical terms and legal
phraseology; and has its own peculiar vocabulary. The constant reference to
these by all the prophets proves conclusively that the Pentateuch as a whole
must have had a prior existence; and must have been well known by the prophets,
and understood by those who heard the prophetic utterances and read the
prophetic writings.
Throughout all the books of the prophets such references to
the Pentateuch have been noted in the margin of The Companion Bible
with the brief indication "Reference to Pentateuch",
followed by the passages referred to. It is not claimed that none have been
overlooked : so that the number will be greater rather than less.
It would occupy too much space here to give the table which
had been prepared. Any reader can collect the whole from the notes, and arrange
them in the order of chapters and verses of the Pentateuchal books.
An examination of these references will show that
altogether 1,531 have been noted, and are distributed as follows : G Thus D It is also remarkable that the references to technical,
legal, and ritual terms are more numerous than to those relating to historical
events. The latter would necessarily be better known and remembered; but the
former could not have been thus referred to unless the ritual itself (less
easily remembered) had existed in writing, and thus been generally known and
understood. It is evident that it would have been perfectly useless for the
prophets to write and quote aught but what was well known, or could be easily
referred to and verified.
Regard must also be had to the fact that the canonical
order of the prophetic books is not the same as their chronological order; for
Malachi (the latest prophet) refers (Malachi 1: