You’re implying a false dichotomy.
That is, that if you reject JEPD you reject the study of how the Bible came to be.
Nonsense.
The JEPD method is exactly that: the study of how the Bible came to be in its present form.
Therefore, it is not a “false dichotomy”
I truly wish that people would actually learn the meaning of terms before they go throwing those terms at people in nonsensical ways, such as this.
This assumes that JEPD theory is correct when there’s no real evidence for it
I have to stop you right there.
This is something the Catholic Church has been studying for 240 years! You say that “there’s no evidence of it” when the reality is that at the present time (I’m not claiming all of those years) the Church accepts this method and regards it as perfectly legitimate and even goes so far as to make official Church teaching.
If what you claim is true (that there’s no real evidence) then it’s one of the greatest conspiracies in human history.
Obviously, by endorsing and teaching this JEPD method, the Church feels that there is more than enough evidence to support it.
that still stands beyond subjective breaking apart of the narratives to display where you think one of the letters inserted his narrative over the other. Naturally, who did what and how many times and where depends on who you ask, to disastrous results.
We are dealing with ancient texts. It’s only natural that there be some disagreement among scholars as to the details. Scripture scholars have no problem with this. It is not an exact science.
Not everything in the Enlightenment era was bad, but you lauded the length of time it has been around as though that provides credence to it, when lots of bad things came about in the Enlightenment era.
AGAIN with the genetic fallacy. Give it up. You’re going nowhere.
It has credence because the method has been around for 240 years, and the present-day situation is based on
240 years of ongoing scholarship. That actually means something.
This issue has been discussed and debated for over 2 centuries now. If you think that somehow you know better than 2 centuries of collective scholarship by the Catholic Church, you have another thing coming.
know, you were saying the length of time was enough for the Church to look at it and accept it, but I think it’s totally fair to say this is very much a simplification of a complex topic, ie how the Church responds to skeptical critique in academia.
The response of the Church has been to endorse this method and to make it part of the Church’s teaching.