The story of Noah began as an oral tradition. It was transmitted orally for a very long time before it was ever committed to writing.
Well obviously, no one claims it was written in Noah’s lifetime. But that has nothing to do with anything. The
Iliad was also based off of oral history, that doesn’t mean it actually written by several different authors centuries after the time of Homer, and then erratically spliced together.
Which is more “obviously ridiculous” here?
1 The notion that a story that was told orally for generations before being committed to writing might have 2 slightly different variations as to details.
I’m not sure what you’re trying to say here. Yes, oral history may be committed to written form differently by different authors, though no competent editor would splice together works with obvious contradictions (as JEDP scholars claim exist in the Pentateuch).
In any case, this begs the question, that the Pentateuch was actually written by multiple authors is the claim you’re trying to justify. But there’s no good reason to think that there were, certainly not on the basis of the flood story. Have you ever made a general statement and then followed it up by specifications? Well guess what, modern biblical scholarship says that you’re actually several different people.
or
2 The notion that a man built a boat and put 14, or at least 2, of every single species of animal on the face of the earth into that boat, and then waited things out for 40 or more days while the entire earth was covered in a flood? Afterwards, those animals and people started the whole process of re-populating the entire planet.
Really now, which one is more "obviously ridiculous" (to use your own term)?
Father, you’re better than this. Whether or not Genesis is historically accurate has nothing, at all, to do with its textual origins. You know that full well.
The only remotely logical argument I can draw from this is that since I believe the flood story (which you say is ridiculous), I should also be willing to believe the JEDP theory (because it’s less ridiculous?). Well if the JEDP theory were divinely revealed I’d accept it, but it isn’t, so there’s no parity between the two.
That said, there’s nothing unbelievable about the flood story. The flood could well have been merely anthropologically universal, killing every human being besides Noah’s family, but not covering every inch of ground on the Earth. Nor is there any reason to believe that Noah used modern species classifications.
I don’t even know where to start explaining the utter foolishness of the idea the Adam wrote anything at all, much less that he wrote part of the bible.
I’ve never heard that theory and I’m not defending it as such, but what precisely is the issue with it? If as you say, Genesis is actually the product of a redactor, who’s to say that he didn’t use texts written by Adam himself? I mean sure there’s no evidence for it, but there’s no evidence for any of JEDP theory.