An Old Testament KnoWhy for Gospel Doctrine Lesson 3B: The Creation (Moses 1:27-42; 2-3) (JBOTL03B), 11 January 2018
Question: LDS teachings and scripture clearly imply that Moses learned of the Creation and the Fall in vision and was told to write what he saw. However, most modern scholars find evidence that the book of Genesis as we have it today was produced at a much later date than Moses could have lived. Can these views be reconciled?
Summary: Scholars have assembled impressive evidence that the first five books of the Bible were compiled in their current form at a relatively late date from multiple, overlapping sources of varying perspectives — and almost certainly with differing degrees of inspiration. This idea should not trouble believing readers of the Book of Mormon, who know that inspired editors wove separate, overlapping records covering many hundreds of years into a single work of scripture. In addition, the idea that Moses may not have written all that is attributed to him firsthand is not incompatible with the belief that he, along with other major Old Testament figures, were actual historical persons. Many of the Bible’s sources may go back to authentic traditions (whether oral or written) that are associated with figures such as Moses as authorities, even if they were not the direct authors. As a further witness of the reality of these figures, we have accounts of the Prophet having seen many of them personally. Moreover, we have the same witness within the Joseph Smith’s Bible translation efforts, the Book of Mormon, the book of Abraham, and several revelations in the Doctrine and Covenants. We are fortunate both to know that these lengthy additions to the record of the Old Testament are authentic reports of events originally experienced by ancient prophets and that they were also directly translated in our day by a modern prophet.
The full article may be found at the Interpreter Foundation website: KnoWhy OTL03B — Did Moses Write the Book of Genesis?
Karen says
So, did he record the events he saw?
Jeffrey M. Bradshaw says
Thanks for your question, Karen. It would be very difficult to know, short of revelation, whether Moses captured everything in Moses 1 the five books attributed to him in writing or if all or part of it were transmitted orally in the beginning.
Interestingly, Moses 1:42 reads: “These words were spoken unto Moses in the mount … And now they are spoken unto you.” Does this verse imply that the vision of Moses was only spoken and not written down at the time? Maybe, but I’m not sure. Elsewhere scripture mentions experiences and words that were too sacred to be written.
Andrew Carvalho says
Moses was instructed to write these things
There were no computers back then to save a document so later editions would have came from other authors recalling original text